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In order to make proper reservations, will you send your acceptance to the attention ofProfessor Chen() a week before that day?
A . no later then
B . no late than
C . no later tha
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Your network contains a DHCP server named DHCP1. You have a DHCP reservation for a computer named Computer1.You add a DNS server option to the reservation.You need to ensure that Computer1 immediately receives the new option.What should you do?()
A . Run ipconfig.exe /renew.
B . Run ipconfig.exe /registerdns.
C . On DHCP1, recreate the reservation.
D . On DHCP1, delete the active lease for the reservation.
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While underway in thick fog you are on watch and hear the cry“man overboard”.Which type of maneuver should you make().
A . Figure eight turn
B . Round turn
C . Racetrack turn
D . Williamson tur
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-- John, why did you make no reply to me when I called you in the street?
-- Sorry, Jim ________ to my friend on the phone.
A . A. was talking
B . B. talked
C . C. am talking
D . D. had talked
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When making the hotel reservation, you need to make clear ______ first.
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I t makes no difference for a receptionist to receive a guest either with or without a reservation.
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What should be done first when there are no available times for the guest to make a reservation:
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It makes no difference for a receptionist to receive a guest either with or without a reservation.
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Why did the man like to be a volleyball coach?
A.He took it as a greater challenge.
B.He thought himself fit for the job.
C.He could earn an ample salary.
D.He could enjoy more leisure time. Questioas 22~25 are based on a conversation about the current movie industry.
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make reservations /make a reservation
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——Have you made a reservation —— __________.
Addison
B.Yes, I hav
E.I made it
just now at the airport.
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Man: I'll pick up a turkey the day before Thanksgiving. Woman: Did you order one ahead of time? Man: No. Woman: Then I wouldn't count on it. Question: What does the woman mean?
A.They may not be able to get a turkey.
B.The man should get a turkey somewhere else.
C.The man shouldn't order a turkey on Thanksgiving.
D.She shouldn't depend on the man to buy a turkey.
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听力原文:M: I'll make you flight reservation by phone now, and then write out the ticket for you.
W: That's fine. Can you please tell me the departure time again?
Q: What is the man doing?
(3)
A.Saying good-bye to a friend.
B.Buying tickets for a sports event.
C.Paying a bill at a friend.
D.Arranging a plane trip.
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Woman: Since when did you read the Sunday Times? Man: Since I discovered its big help-wanted section. Question: What can we assume about the man?
A.He wants help in improving his vocabulary.
B.He plans to read the whole newspaper.
C.He rarely has time to read newspapers on Sunday.
D.He"s interested in finding a job.
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听力原文:W: I've just read a curious fact. Did you know that people who spend less than 10 minutes in a drug store are five times more likely to make a purchase than those who spend half an hour there?
M: I saw that article, too. But think, if someone runs into a drug store for 10 minutes, he is usually there to make a specific purchase.
W: And someone who spends more time there may be just looking?
M: Exactly. Haven't you ever gone into a store thinking that you'll buy something and then talk yourself out of it?
W: Yes, I have. Especially when I thought I could get it for less elsewhere, or I really didn't need it after all.
M: Exactly, but, if you run in to buy something specific and have very little time, you pick it up, pay for it immediately, and then leave.
W: That's true. Maybe we should learn a lesson from that. Take your time end you'll spend less money.
M: I doubt if that would be true in all stores though. In a department store, for instance, you may see a sweater or some thing you never intend to buy, and buy it because you have time to look around.
(20)
A.A druggist's suggestion.
B.An advertisement.
C.An article.
D.A salesclerk's comment.
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Woman: Do you mind closing the door? Our next door neighbors are making so much noise. Man: Do I mind? Id be happy to. Question: What does the man mean?
A.He"s not bothered by the noise.
B.He"s happy to close the door as the woman asks him to do.
C.He prefers to leave the door open.
D.He"s happy to talk to their neighbors.
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I have reserved a room for you at the hotel.
A.preserved
B.booked
C.discovered
D.aeceoted
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There is a story of a British official who was asked to marry a young French sailor and a Chinese girl-none of the three knowing much about the other languages. The official said to the girl, "This man want to take you home-side make wife. Can do, no can do?" She said shyly, "Can do", and the official pronounced them man and wife.
Pidgin English, though sometimes regarded as" baby talk", is a useful language spoken in a large part of Pacific islands. About 30 to 50 million people speak some form. of it.
Pidgin English we know today was born on the Chinese coast 300 years ago when the Western nations first began to trade there. The Western merchants and the Chinese communicated with each other by using Westerner's words and Chinese sentence patterns. The result became known as "business" language, or because the closest Chinese could come to pronounce business as "bishin" or later "bijin"--at last "pidgin". It has nothing to do with a pigeon though it's sometimes spelt that way.
What do you think the British official's words mean?
A.This man wants to marry you. Is it possible? No, it's not possible.
B.This man wants to know if you are married If not, will you marry me?
C.This man wants you to find a wife for him. Can you help him?
D.This man wants to marry you and take you to his homeland Do you agree?
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Imagine that the world consists of 20 men and 20 women, all of them heterosexual and in search of a mate.Since the numbers are even, everyone can find a partner.But what happens if you take away one man? You might not think this would make much difference.You would be wrong,argues Tim Harford,a British economist, in a book called The Logic of Life. With 20 women pursuing 19 men, one woman faces the prospect of spinsterhood. So she ups her game. Perhaps she dresses more seductively. Perhaps she makes an extra effort to be obliging. Somehow or other, she “steals” a man from one of her fellow women. That newly single woman then ups her game, too, to steal a man from someone else. A chain reaction ensues.
Real life is more complicated, of course, but this simple model illustrates an important truth.In the marriage market, numbers matter.And among African-Americans,the difference is much worse than in Mr.Harford's imaginary example.Between the ages of 20 and 29, one black man in nine is behind bars.For black women of the same age, the figure is about one in 150.For obvious reasons, convicts are excluded from the dating pool.
Removing so many men from the marriage market has profound consequences.As imprisonment rates exploded between 1970 and 2007, the proportion of U.S.-born black women aged 30-44 who were married plunged from 62%to 33%.Why this happened is complex and furiously debated.The era of mass imprisonment began as traditional mores were already crumbling, following the sexual revolution of the 1960s and the invention of the contraceptive pill.① It also coincided with greater opportunities for women in the workplace. These factors must surely have had something to do with the decline of marriage.
But jail is a big part of the problem, argue Kerwin Kofi Charles, now at the University of Chicago. They divided America up into geographical and racial “marriage markets”, to take account of the fact that most people marry someone of the same race who lives relatively close to them.② Then, after crunching the census numbers, they found that a one percentage point increase in the male imprisonment rate was associated with a 2.4-point reduction in the proportion of women, who ever marry.③ Could it be, however, that mass imprisonment is a symptom of increasing social malfunction, and that it was this social malfunction that caused marriage to wither?④ Probably not. For similar crimes, America imposes much harsher penalties than other rich countries.Mr. Charles and Mr. Luoh controlled for crime rates, as a substitution for social malfunction, and found that it made no difference to their results. They concluded that “higher male imprisonment has lowered the likelihood that women marry...and caused a shift in the gains from marriage away from women and towards men.”
阅读以上文章,回答 87~91 题
第 87 题 The word “ensues” in Paragraph 1 probably means __________.{Page}
[A] to result in something
[B] to happen after something
[C] to be welcome
[D] to be interrupted temporarily
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When a guest calls to make the reservation for dinner, but there is no tableavailable, what would you say?
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A man wants to make a reservation from Hong Kong, how would you like to do ?
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A guest must make a reservation if he wants to eat at a restaurant.
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Do you need a___ reservation()
A.double checked
B.guaranteed
C.settled
D.advanced
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What changes did the company make to its driver raining program? What do you think of these changes?