We have enough stock of the goods you ordered and are definitely able to _____ your delivery date.
A.agree
B.fulfill
C.meet
D.receive
- · 有3位网友选择 B,占比30%
- · 有3位网友选择 A,占比30%
- · 有2位网友选择 C,占比20%
- · 有2位网友选择 D,占比20%
A.agree
B.fulfill
C.meet
D.receive
听力原文:M: Jane. shall we go through the inventory then? Let's start with coal.
F: We have about 45 tons. But we are supposed to have 70 tons.
M: So we've got too little. We'd better order some more. How about gas?
F: I think we have enough stock for that.
M: OK, thank you then.
•For questions 1-8, you will hear eight short recordings.
•For each question, mark one letter (A, B or C) for tile correct answer.
•You will hear the eight recordings twice.
What is the recommended stock of coal?
A.115 tons.
B.45 tons.
C.70 tons.
Please compare E-mail A with E-mail B, and comment on both of them. Then, revise your favorite one for effectiveness. Rewrite or add any information if necessary. E-mail A Dear Madam Thank you for your e-mail of 24 March. We can certainly supply the cotton material you require. The price will be the same as before, i.e. $3.00 a metre and delivery can be next week if you require. We have plenty of stock so we could repeat the order if necessary. Please let us know if this is acceptable to you. Yours faithfully Sara Wang E-mail B Dear Ms. Hope With reference to your e-mail of 24 March 2019, we can certainly supply you with the cotton material in white you require. As you are a very good customer, we are prepared to process your order of 5000 metres at the old price of $3.00 a metre. We would deliver next week at any time to suit yourselves. We hold considerable stocks of this particular range, so further orders should not be a problem. Perhaps you would be kind enough to let us know the day and time you would like delivery to take place. Yours sincerely Sara Wang
Today, with very few exceptions, the stock of large U. S. corporations is held by financial institutions such as pension funds, foundations, or mutual funds—not by individual shareholders. And these financial institutions cannot legally become real capitalists who control what they own. How much they can invest in any one company is limited by law, as is how actively they can intervene in company decision making.
These shareholders and corporate managers have a very different agenda than dominant capitalists do, and therein lies the problem. They do not have the clout to change business decisions, corporate strategy, or incumbent managers with their voting power. They can enhance their wealth only by buying and selling shares based on what they think is going to happen to short-term profits. Minority shareholders have no choice but to be short-term traders.
And since shareholders are by necessity interested only in short-term trading, it is not surprising that managers' compensation is based not on long-term performance, but on current profits or sales. Managerial compensation packages are completely congruent with the short-run perspective of short run shareholders. Neither the manager nor the shareholder expects to be around very long. And neither has an incentive to watch out for the long term growth of the company.
We need to give managers and shareholders an incentive to nurture long-term corporate growth—in other words, to work as hard at enhancing productivity and output as they now work at improving short-term profitability.
Which of the following summarizes the main idea of the passage?
A.Most big companies are run by individual capitalists.
B.The problem is that there are no incentives for productivity growth.
C.Let's put capitalists back into capitalism.
D.Individual capitalists or shareholders with enough stock dominate big corporations.
A、Quantity is too low
B、Inventory cost of raw materials increases
C、Don’t have enough inventory in stock
D、Not given
A problem for America's Second Harvest a few years ago was that ______.
A.it did not get enough food from donors
B.it did not have a large enough network
C.it did not have enough soup kitchens
D.it did not have a good way to manage its food stock
Company A sells a batch of shirts, packed 12 of them in every box. Company B ordered 2400 pieces of shirts through telegraph. Company A wired back informing the unit price and saying that it did not have enough stock now but could arrange the full delivery in one month. Company B sent another telegram in reply which says: “we accept this price, but please repack 10 shirts in each box”. Company A did not reply. One month later, Company B came to pick up the goods, and Company A said that there was no consensus over the contract. As the contract was not formed, Company A refused to be liable for the breach of contract. Which one of the following is correct?
A、A、 Pursuant to the intention expressed, the contract was not formed.
B、B、 Company B’s request for the packaging is a counter-offer.
C、C、 The contract is formed only when the parties reach a consensus on all the terms of the contract.
D、D、 A contract is formed as long as the material terms are reached, the contract is formed.
If the electricity goes off, we have candles ______ in the closet.
A.in stock
B.in reserve
C.in store
D.on hand
The term profit in economics has a very precise meaning. Economists, however, often loosely refer to "good deals" or profitable ventures with no risk as profit opportunities. Using the term loosely, a profit opportunity exists at the toll booths if one line is shorter than the others. The general view of economics is that profit opportunities are rare. At any one time there are many people searching for such opportunities, and as a consequence few exist. At toll booths it is seldom the case that one line is substantially shorter than the others.
Another example of a possible profit opportunity is the following. At major banks in big cities, you can buy foreign currencies. The prices of these currencies are determined in world money markets. Let's concentrate on the US dollar, the German mark, and the French franc. With dollars we can buy marks; with these marks we can buy francs; and with these francs we can buy back dollars. Can we make money on this transaction? In other words, can the prices be such that we end up with more dollars at the end than we started with? If this is possible, we say that there are profit opportunities in the market. There are in fact almost never any profit opportunities of this kind in foreign currency markets. There are always individuals looking for such opportunities, and if any opportunity does arise it is quickly eliminated.
If, for example, the mark-franc price is too low with respect to the other prices, there is an immediate rush to buy marks and sell francs, not by ordinary citizens at bank windows, but by a few large currency traders in Tokyo, London, or Zurich who watch prices every minute. Such a rush drives up the mark-franc price to the no-profit-opportunity point. Markets like this, where any profit opportunities are eliminated almost instantaneously, are said to be efficient markets.
The common language way of expressing the efficient markets hypothesis is "there's no such thing as a free lunch". How should one react when a stockbroker calls up with a hot tip on the stock market? With skepticism. There are thousands of individuals each day looking for hot tips in the market, and if a particular tip about a stock is valid there will be an immediate rush to buy the stock, which will quickly drive its price up. By the time the tip gets to your broker and then to you, the profit opportunity that arose from the tip is likely to have been eliminated. Similar arguments can be made for bond markets and commodity markets. There are many "experts" in these markets, who take quick advantage of any news that affects prices.
This economist's view that there are very limited profit opportunities around can , of course, be carried too far. There is a story about two people walking alone, one an economist and one not. The non-economist sees a twenty-dollar bill on the sidewalk and says, "There's a twenty-dollar bill on the sidewalk." The economist replies, "That is not possible. If there were, somebody would already have picked it up."
There are clearly times when profit opportunities exist. Someone has to be first to get the news, and some people have quicker insights than others. Nevertheless, news does get disseminated quickly, and there
A.You need to ignore a hot tip offered.
B.You need to pay for a hot tip offered.
C.You need to justify a hot tip offered.
D.You need to take quick advantage of a hot tip offered.
A.supplier
B.goods
C.production
D.stock
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