I hate ______ when people talk with their mouths full.A.itB.thatC.theseD.them
I hate ______ when people talk with their mouths full.
A.it
B.that
C.these
D.them
I hate ______ when people talk with their mouths full.
A.it
B.that
C.these
D.them
I hate ______ when there's no computer in the office.
A.that
B.this
C.them
D.it
M: It's almost eight o'clock, so we should be on our way soon.
Q: When did the woman begin waiting for the train?
(16)
A.Seven o' clock.
B.Seven thirty.
C.Eight o' clock.
D.Eight thirty.
A.Sometimes I want to kill Sarah. Sometimes I want to kill others.
B.I always like to help Sarah although sometimes I have fights with her.
C.Sometimes I want to kill Sarah. But I want to kill others all the time
D.I always hate Sarah. So I want to kill her all the tim
E.
W:Well,I regard collecting as play. I'm never so happy as when I'm busy with stamps.
Q:What do you learn from the conversation?
(19)
A.Both of the man and woman hate collecting stamps.
B.Neither of them feels collecting stamps is an easy thing.
C.The woman is very fond of collecting stamps.
D.The man prefers walk to music.
听力原文:M: When in Rome, do as the Romans do, they say.
W: What do the Romans do?
M: They live in Rome, of course, and go to work by car or bus. But sometimes it takes too long that way because of the traffic jams, so they walk.
W: In other words, the Romans do what everyone else does.
M:Yes,but they do it differently.Everything is different.
W: What do you mean?
M: Well, the climate is different for a start. I know you hate the rain. It doesn't rain so much as it does in England. The sun shines more often.
W: I envy them for the sun.
M: I know. You hate the rain, don't you?
W: I certainly do.
M: And a Roman really loves life. They always eat spaghetti and drink wine.
W: Not always, but they like a good meal. Lots of tourists go to Rome just for food.
M: Sure.
Q6: What's the relationship between the two persons?
(8)
A.Wife and husband.
B.Salesman and customer.
C.Teacher and student.
D.Employer and employee.
In Act III Scene 2, Helena speaks (Line 148-164) O, spite! O, hell! I see you all are bent To set against me for your merriment. If you were civil and knew courtes, You would not do me thus much injury. Can you not hate me, as I know you do, But you must join in souls to mock me too? If you were men, as men you are in show, You would not use a gentle lady so, To vow and swear and superpraise my parts, When, I am sure, you hate me with your hearts. You both are rivals and love Hermia, And now both rivals to mock Helena. A trim exploit, a manly enterprise, To conjure tears up in a poor maid's eyes with your derision! None of noble sort Would so offend a virgin and extort A poor soul's patience, all to make you sport.
Section C
Directions: There are 2 passages in this section. Each passage is followed by some questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices marked A),B),C) and D).You should decide on the best choice and mark the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 2 with a single line through the centre.
Passage One
Questions 46 to 50 are based on the following passage.
As a person who writes about food and drink for a living. I couldn’t tell you the first thing about Bill Perry or whether the beers he sells are that great. But I can tell you that I like this guy. That’s because he plans to ban tipping in favor of paying his servers an actual living wage.
I hate tipping.
I hate it because it’s an obligation disguised as an option. I hate it for the post-dinner math it requires of me. But mostly, I hate tipping because I believe I would be in a better place if pay decisions regarding employees were simply left up to their employers, as is the custom in virtually every other industry.
Most of you probably think that you hate tipping, too. Research suggests otherwise. You actually love tipping! You like to feel that you have a voice in how much money your server makes. No matter how the math works out, you persistently view restaurants with voluntary tipping systems as being a better value, which makes it extremely difficult for restaurants and bars to do away with the tipping system.
One argument that you tend to hear a lot from the pro-tipping crowd seems logical enough: the service is better when waiters depend on tips, presumably because they see a benefit to successfully veiling their contempt for you. Well, if this were true, we would all be slipping a few 100-dollar bills to our doctors on the way out their doors, too. But as it turns out, waiters see only a tiny bump in tips when they do an exceptional job compared to a passable one. Waiters, keen observers of humanity that they are, are catching on to this; in one poll, a full 30% said they didn’t believe the job they did had any impact on the tips they received.
So come on, folks: get on board with ditching the outdated tip system. Pay a little more upfront for your beer or burger. Support Bill Perry’s pub, and any other bar or restaurant that doesn’t ask you to do drunken math.
What can we learn about Bill Perry from the passage?
A.He runs a pub that serves excellent beer.
B.He intends to get rid of the tipping practice.
C.He gives his staff a considerable sum for tips.
D.He lives comfortably without getting any tips.
Tokyo is one of those places where you can love and hate at the same time.
In Tokyo there are always too many people in the places where I want to be. Of course there are too many cars. The Japanese drive very fast when they can. But in Tokyo they often spend a long time in traffic jams. Tokyo is not different when one wants to walk.
At certain times of the day there are a lot of people on foot in London's Oxford Street. But the streets near Ginza in Tokyo always have a lot of people on foot, and sometimes it is really difficult to walk. People are very polite; there are just too many of them.
The worst time to be in the street is at 11:30 at night. That is when the night-clubs are closing and everybody wants to go home. There are 35,000 night-clubs in Tokyo, and you do not often see one that is empty.
Most people travel to and from work by train. Tokyo people buy six million train tickets every day. At most stations, trains arrive every two or three minutes, but at certain hours there don't seem to be enough trains. Although they are usually crowded, Japanese trains are very good. They always leave and arrive on time. On a London train you would see everybody reading a newspaper. In Tokyo trains everybody in a seat seems to be asleep, whether his journey is long or short.
In Tokyo, I stood outside the station for five minutes. Three fire-engines raced fast on the way to one of the many fires that Tokyo has every day. Tokyo has so many surprises that none of them can really surprise me now. Instead, I am surprised at myself: I must go there next year on business. I know I hate the over-crowded city. But I feel like a man who is returning to his long-lost love.
Tokyo is different from London in that ______.
A.it has a smaller population
B.it is an international city
C.it is more difficult to go somewhere on foot in Tokyo
D.its people are more friendly and more polite
A friendly letter is like a visit on paper. If you "hate to write letters", it's simply because you have not yet discovered the fun it can be to write and receive letters that are good talk on paper. Many people neglect to answer letters from relatives and friends. To a letter unanswered is like saying, "I don't think you are worth the time and effort it takes to write a letter."
According to the passage, when you can't come to a certain place in person, you can ______.
A.send somebody else instead
B.make a telephone call
C.send a telegraph
D.write a letter
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