The idiom "meet one's waterloo" came from .
A、historical events
B、religion
C、mythology
D、literature works
A、historical events
B、religion
C、mythology
D、literature works
In paragraph 2, the first sentence means ______.
A.the Third World needs industrialized countries' help to meet their needs
B.modem technologies and products replace the old ones in the Third World
C.technologies and products from industrialized countries are more suitable to the Third World
D.home-grown technologies and products may be more suitable to the Third World
According to the fourth paragraph, foreign trade occurs because
A.some people prefer foreign products to ones produced in their own country.
B.a country does not possess certain resources in its own territories.
C.a country hopes to consume other countries' resources first but preserve its own resources.
D.a country does not have sufficient resources to meet its needs.
According to Fridley, "Market transformation" means ______.
A.giving a practical guide to the consumers' needs as which products are better
B.strengthening the training of designers and manufacturers and educate the consumers to distinguish right products from the fake ones
C.producing high-quality products that can reach the international standards for environmental protection
D.trying to meet the demand of the consumers by improving the quality of products comprehensively
听力原文:W: So you work in a hotel now.
M: Yes, that's right.
W: What is it like?
M: It's nice. You meet a lot of interesting people, but a lot of dull ones, too.
W: I beg your pardon?
M: I said, a lot of dull ones, too.
W: Oh, yes. I can imagine. I should think that's hard work, isn't it?
M: Yes and no. It depends.
W: What do you mean?
M: Well, it's hard at weekends. I mean, it is quite well most of the time. What about you?
W: I started to work in a bank last Monday.
Where does the man work?
A.In a bank.
B.In a restaurant.
C.In a hotel.
Eye behavior, involving varieties of eye-contact, can give subtle
messages which people pick up in their daily life. Warm looks or cold
stares tell more than words can. Meeting or failing to meet another
person's eye produce a particular effect. When two Americans look 【S1】______.
searchingly at each other's eye, emotions are heightened and the 【S2】______.
relationship becomes closer. However, Americans are careful about where 【S3】______.
and when to meet other's eye. In our normal conversation, each eye
contact lasts only a few seconds before one or both individuals look away,
because the longer meeting of the eyes is rare, and after it happens, can 【S4】______.
generate a special kind of human-to-human awareness. For instance, by
simply using his eyes. a man can make a woman aware of him comfortably
or uncomfortably; a long and steady gaze from a policeman or judge 【S5】______.
intimidates accused. In the U.S. proper street behavior. requires a nice
balance of attention and inattention. You are supposed to look at a passer- 【S6】______.
by just enough to show that you are being aware of his presence. If you
look too little, you appear haughty; too much, inquisitive. Much eye 【S7】______.
behavior. is such subtle that our reaction to it is largely instinctive.
Besides, the codes of eye behavior. vary dramatically from one culture to 【S8】______.
other. In the Middle east, it is impolite to look at other person all the time
during a conversation; in England, the polite listener fixes the speaker 【S9】______.
with an inattentive stare and blinks eyes occasionally as a sign of interest
and attention. In America, eye behavior. functions as a kind of 【S10】______.
conversational traffic signal control the talking pace and time, and to
indicate a change of topic. If you can understand this vital mechanism of
interpersonal relations, the basic American idiom is there.
【S1】
听力原文:W: So you work in a hotel now.
M: Yes. That's fight.
W: What's it like?
M: It's nice. You meet a lot of interesting people, but a lot of dull ones, too.
W: I beg your pardon?
M: I said, a lot of dull ones, too.
W: Oh, yes. I can imagine. I should think that's a hard work, isn't it?
M: Yes and no. It depends.
W: What do you mean?
M: Well, it's hard at weekends. I mean, last Saturday, with all the rooms full and two receptionists away ill--well, my feet didn't touch the ground. What about you?
W: I started to work in a bank last Monday.
Where does the man work?
A.In a bank.
B.In a restaurant.
C.In a hotel.
为了保护您的账号安全,请在“简答题”公众号进行验证,点击“官网服务”-“账号验证”后输入验证码“”完成验证,验证成功后方可继续查看答案!