I go to the grocery store only once a week.I have some __ to help you keep vegetables
A.gaps
B.tips
C.offers
D.potlucks
A.gaps
B.tips
C.offers
D.potlucks
W: Oh, I see. Thanks a lot. I think I can find it.
Q: What is the woman trying to do?
(17)
A.Get directions to the bus station.
B.Get to the grocery store.
C.Give the man directions to the bus station.
D.Find out where the stoplight is.
W: Well, I don't like to let anyone else drive my car. Tell you what, why don't we go together?
Q: What does the woman mean?
(13)
A.She will drive the man to the supermarket.
B.The man should buy a car of his own.
C.The man needn't go shopping every week.
D.She can pick the man up at the grocery store.
听力原文:M: Can you buy ale some stamps and envelopes while you are in the post office?
W: I don't intend to stop by the post office, but I will go to the grocery store and to the cleaners after I see the doctor.
Q: Where will the woman go first?
(17)
A.The post office.
B.The grocery stove.
C.The doctor's office.
D.The cleaners.
W: Well, I don't like to let anyone else drive my car. Tell you what, why don't we go together?
Q: What does the woman mean?
(14)
A.Get more food and drinks.
B.Ask his friend to come over.
C.Tidy up the place.
D.Hold a party.
A.But you must be an exception.
B.Why don"t we go together?
C.However,I can pick you up on the way.
D.But I wonder if you let me drive you up.
听力原文: Good evening, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome. I'm sure we have all heard the expression, "Think Green'. Tonight we are going to talk about ways we can "Act Green" in our everyday life.
The best place to start, of course, is in the home. Every day, people all over the world are hurting the environment without even knowing it. For example, busy families buy paper napkins and plastic food wrap at the supermarket. This helps them save time on housework, but after these things have been used, what happens to them? They go into the garbage heap. In many places, especially in North America, big cities are running ont of places to throw the garbage. What can we do about it?
How can we cut down on garbage? Well, we can start using cloth napkins and cloth towels instead of paper towels. When we go grocery shopping, we can choose products that are not "over-packaged". For example, lust week I bought a package of cookies. The cookies were in a bag. There was a plastic tray inside the bag, and then each cookie was in its own little package on the tray in the bag! That's over- packaging! We should also take our own bags to the grocery store to carry things home in.
(23)
A.Food processing.
B.Environmental protection.
C.Shopping habits.
D.Over-packaging problems.
听力原文:W: David, can I give you a hand with one of those grocery bags?
M: Sure, Jane. Could you take this one please? I didn't realize how heavy these bags would be.
W: Why did you buy so much stuff when you had to walk back home from the store?
M: Well, I didn't intend to buy a lot. But I'm having some people over and I guess I needed more than I expected.
W: What's the occasion?
M: Now the people I live with, the Kremers, have been on vacation for a month and I thought I'd surprise them. I'm inviting some of their friends and families for a welcome home dinner.
W: Oh, that's really thoughtful of you.
M: I figure it's the least I can do for them. I've been staying with them rent-free while I'm in school.
W: Really? That's pretty generous of them.
M: Well, they must understand how difficult it is to make ends meet when you're a student. They've been such a big help to me. I thought that this might be a small way to thank them for the generosity.
How does David go back home from the store?
A.On foot.
B.By bike.
C.By car.
D.Jane offers him a lift.
For the past decade, Bill Keaggy, 33, the features photo editor at The St. Louis Post-Dispatch, has been collecting grocery lists and since 1999 has been posting them online at www. Grocery lists, org. The collection, which now numbers more than 500 lists, is strangely addictive. The lists elicit two-fold curiosity—about the kind of meal the person was planning and the kind of person who would make such a meal. What was the shopper with vodka, lighters, milk and ice cream on his list planning to do with them? In what order would they be consumed? Was it a he or a she? Who had written "Tootie food, kitten chow, bird food stick, toaster scrambles, coffee drinks"? Some shoppers organize their lists by aisle; others start with dairy, go to cleaning supplies and then back to dairy before veering off to Home Depot. A few meticulous ones note the price of every item. One shopper had written in large letters on an envelope, simply, "Milk".
The thin lines of ink and pencil jutting and looping across crinkled and torn pieces of paper have a purely graphic beauty. One of life's most banal duties, viewed through the curatorial lens, can somehow seem pregnant with possibility. It can even appear poetic, as in the list that reads "meat, cigs, buns, treats".
One thing Keaggy discovered is that Dan Quayle is not alone—few people can spell bananas and bagels, let alone potato. One list calls for "suchi" and "strimp". "Some people pass judgment on the things they buy," Keaggy says. At the end of one list, the shopper wrote "Bud Light" and then "good beer". Another scribbled "good loaf of white bread". Some pass judgment on themselves, like the shopper who wrote "read, stay home or go somewhere, I act like my mom, go to Kentucky, underwear, lemon". People send messages to one another, too. Buried in one list is this statement: "If you buy more rice, I'll punch you." And plenty of shoppers, like the one with both ice cream and diet pills on the list, reveal their vices.
What would people usually do with their grocery list after shopping?
A.Buying what it is scrawled on the paper.
B.Recording the shorthand of where we shop.
C.Throwing it into the dustbin.
D.Posting it on the Internet.
For the past decade, Bill Keaggy, 33, the features photo editor at The St. Louis Post-Dispatch, has been collecting grocery lists and since 1999 has been posting them online at www.grocerylists.org. The collection, which now numbers more than 500 lists, is strangely addictive. The lists elicit twofold curiosity — about the kind of meal the person was planning and the kind of person who would make such a meal. What was the shopper with vodka, lighters, milk and ice cream on his list planning to do with them? In what order would they be consumed? Was it a he or a she? Who had written "Tootie food, kitten chow, bird food stick, toaster scrambles, coffee drinks"? Some shoppers organize their lists by aisle; others start with dairy, go to cleaning supplies and then back to dairy before veering off to Home Depot. A few meticulous ones note the price of every item. One shopper had written in large letters on an envelope, simply, "Milk".
The thin lines of ink and pencil jutting and looping across crinkled and torn pieces of paper have a purely graphic beauty. One of life's most banal duties, viewed through the curatorial lens, can somehow seem pregnant with possibility. It can even appear poetic, as in the list that reads "meat, cigs, buns, treats".
One thing Keaggy discovered is that Dan Quayte is not alone — few people can spell bananas and bagels, let alone potato. One list calls for "suchi" and "strimp" . "Some people pass judgment on the things they buy. " Keaggy says. At the end of one list, the shopper wrote "Bud Light" and then "good beer". Another scribbled "good loaf of white bread". Some pass judgment on themselves, like the shopper who wrote "read, stay home or go somewhere, I act like my morn, go to Kentucky, underwear, lemon. "People send messages to one another, too. Buried in one list is this statement: "If you buy more rice, I'll punch you. "And plenty of shoppers, like the one with both ice cream and diet pills on the list, reveal their vices.
What would people usually do with their grocery list after shopping?
A.Buying what it is scrawled on the paper.
B.Recording the shorthand of where we shop.
C.Throwing it into the dustbin.
D.Posting it on the Internet.
听力原文:W: David, can I give you a hand with one of those grocery bags?
M: Sure, Nancy. Could you take this one please? I didn't realize how heavy these bags would be.
W: Why did you buy so much stuff when you have to walk back home from the store?
M: Well, I didn't intend to buy a lot. But I'm having some people home and I guess I need more than I expected.
W: What's the occasion?
M: The people I live with, the Williams, have been on vacation for a month and I thought I'd surprise them. I'm inviting some of their friends and families for a welcome home dinner.
W: Oh, that's really thoughtful of you.
M: I think it's the least I can do for them. They've been letting me stay with them rent free while I'm in school.
W: Really? That's pretty generous of them.
M: Well, they understand how difficult it is to be a student. They've been such a big help to me. I thought that this might be a small way to thank them for the generosity.
W: You are lucky to meet such a good family.
(26)
A.He is preparing to go on vacation.
B.He is going to have a long journey.
C.He is going to hold a birthday party.
D.He is preparing a home coming dinner.
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