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听力原文:The United Kingdom will seek a closer tie with China in its bid to make the count

听力原文: The United Kingdom will seek a closer tie with China in its bid to make the country one of the leading business partner in the world of economic globalization, a senior trade official has said. "China, with its massive influence in global trade, is of great importance to U.K.'s trade and industry, which is trying to attract a new wave of high-value investment," Alistair Darling, Britain's Secretary of State for Trade and Industry, said in the weekend before his visit to China. Darling, who will visit Beijing, Shanghai and Hong Kong, is on his first ever trip to China's mainland. Darling, who will lead a 15-strong delegation, said that Sino-British trade ties will be strengthened through mutual investment, not only trade.

The U.K., whose manufacturing industry has shrunk much during its economic structure readjustment in the past decades, finds that it has opportunities in helping China in fields like environment protection and power plant building. The British Trade and Industry leader said that globalization provides a tremendous opportunity for both the U.K. and China in which both countries could cooperate to curb climate change and improve bilateral trade. Darling was appointed Secretary of State for Trade and Industry, replacing Alan Johnson in the government reshuffle in May.

(30)

A.Britain's Secretary of State for Foreign Trade.

B.Britain's Secretary of State for Trade and Industry.

C.Britain's Secretary of State for Investment.

D.Britain's Secretary of State for Commerce.

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更多“听力原文:The United Kingdom will seek a closer tie with China in its bid to make the count”相关的问题

第1题

听力原文:We do not know when man first begin to use salt, but we do know that it has been

听力原文: We do not know when man first begin to use salt, but we do know that it has been used in many different ways throughout history. Historical evidence shows that people who lived over 3000 years ago ate salted fish. Thousands of years ago in Egypt, salt was used to embalm the dead.

Stealing salt was considered a major crime during some eras of history. (29)In the 18th century, if a person were caught stealing salt, he could be put in jail. History records that about ten thousand people were put in jail during that century for stealing salt!

Salt was an important item on the table of royalty. (30)It was traditionally placed in front of the king when he sat down to eat. Important guests at the king's table were seated near the salt. Less important guests were given seats farther away from it.

In the Roman Empire, one of the most important roads was the one that carried salt mines to Rome. (31)Guards were stationed along the route to protect against salt thieves. (32)The guards received their pay in salt, hence the English word, salary.

In the early days of the United States, salt was very scarce. So, the storekeeper of pioneer days was very careful with his salt. In the modern world salt has many uses beyond the dining table. For example, it is used in the making of glass, in the growing of crops, and so on. Salt even helps to relieve itching when it is rubbed on mosquito or other insect bites.

(30)

A.He could be fired.

B.He could be put to death.

C.He could be put in jail.

D.He could be driven out of his village.

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第2题

听力原文:Are you interested in knowing about how to find a place to stay when traveling in

听力原文: Are you interested in knowing about how to find a place to stay when traveling in the United States?

Well, If you arrive by air, you will see plenty of hotels advertised at airports. If you arrive by train or car, probably the best thing to do is to look into the Yellow Pages under Hotels, Motels or Lodgings. You can start by comparing the services offered in their ads. In any case, you'll have to call them and see if they have the kind of room you're looking for.

Places for stay may be called hotels, motels or motor hotels, inns, lodges or resorts. They are all similar. Motels have plenty of parking space and are usually near a freeway or highway. Inns are usually like hotels. Lodges and resorts, or resort hotels, are in the mountains, on the coast or near lakes. Beds also go by many different names. Starting with the smallest, there are single, twin, double, queen and king size ones. "Long boys" are for exceptionally tall people. At some hotels, queen beds are of smallest size, so a double room has two of them. Some hotels even offer their guests waterbeds. Hide-a-beds are sofas that unfold out to make beds.

People who prefer camping to staying in hotels will have a hard time in American cities, because most of them don't have campgrounds nearby. You can camp in state and national parks, though, which generally have facilities for both tents and trailers.

It is my sincere wish that you will have a good time touring the States, and find a nice place to rest yourself.

(23)

A.To look at the hotels advertised at airports.

B.To look into the Yellow Pages under Hotels, Motels or Lodgings.

C.To compare the rooms offered by the hotels.

D.To call the hotels and book a room in advance.

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第3题

听力原文:W:Good morning,Sunny Car Rental Company.What Call I do for you?M:Good morning.Thi

听力原文:W:Good morning,Sunny Car Rental Company.What Call I do for you?

M:Good morning.This is Paul King calling from the Speed Company.We need a ear to the airport for Mr. Phillips tomorrow.His flight is at 2:30 P.m.,so he should leave no later than noon.Is that all right?

Q:When will Mr.Phillips need a car to go to the airport?

(15)

A.At 2:30 tomorrow.

B.Before noon tomorrow.

C.At 2:30 today.

D.Before noon today.

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第4题

听力原文:M: Aren't there any direct flights?W: I'm sorry. Your best bet would be at nine a

听力原文:M: Aren't there any direct flights?

W: I'm sorry. Your best bet would be at nine a.m. departure on United flight twelve arriving in Chicago at eleven a. m., with five-hour wait for your connecting flight to Los Angeles.

Q: What time will the man leave Chicago?

(17)

A.At 9 a.m.

B.At 11 a.m.

C.At2p. m.

D.At4p. m.

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第5题

听力原文:We don't know when man first began to use salt, but we do know that it has been u

听力原文: We don't know when man first began to use salt, but we do know that it has been used in many different ways throughout history. Historical evidence shows, for example, that people who lived over 3000 years ago ate salted fish. Thousands of years ago in Egypt, salt was used to keep the dead from decaying.

Stealing salt was considered a major crime during some periods of history. In the 18th century, for instance, if a person was caught stealing salt, he could be put in jail. History records that about ten thousand people were put in jail that century for stealing salt. About 150 years before, in the year 1533, taking more than one's share of salt was punishable as a crime. The offender's ear was cut off!

Salt was an important item on the table of a king. It was traditionally placed in front of the king when he sat down to eat. Important guests at the king's table were seated near the salt. Less important guests were given seats far away from it.

(33)

A.To keep fish alive.

B.To punish criminals.

C.To preserve dead bodies.

D.To help heal wounds.

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第6题

听力原文:W: I can't cash your traveller's check without some identification like a driver'
s license.

M: Since I have just arrived in the United States, I have only my passport. Will that do?

Q: Why does the man offer the woman his passport?

(18)

A.As identification to cash a check.

B.To prove he is a foreign visitor.

C.In order to obtain a visa.

D.The woman is an immigration official.

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第7题

听力原文:M: Do you still remember our old classmate, Mary King? She called me the other da
y. She had just come back, and she also mentioned you. So what about going out to dinner on Friday night? Any suggestions?

W: You have the final word. I don't know any restaurant here.

Q: What can be inferred from the conversation?

(15)

A.The woman will reserve a restaurant for the dinner.

B.Mary King will decide where they have their dinner.

C.The man will decide where to have dinner with Mary King.

D.The woman suggests that the man should ask Mary King.

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第8题

听力原文:Where Did the Americans Come from? There is a great deal of land in the United St

听力原文: Where Did the Americans Come from? There is a great deal of land in the United States, but there is also a population in America. Where did the people come from?

The first Americans who came to the land were Indians. Today there are about 900,000 American Indians. There is one part of the country with an especially large Indian population. That is the southwest. Blacks first came to America from Africa as slaves. President Lincoln freed the slaves in 1863. About eleven percent of the present American population are Blacks. The first immigrants in American history came from England and the Netherlands. Soon immigrants began to arrive from many other countries, and they are still arriving. In 1790 the new nation had fewer than four million people. Today there are more than 300 million. These include people from all parts of the world.

(33)

A.African slaves.

B.The Dutch.

C.The Indians.

D.The British.

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第9题

听力原文:The basic flag of the United States is one of the world's oldest national flags.

听力原文: The basic flag of the United States is one of the world's oldest national flags. Only the basic flags of Austria, Denmark, Great Britain, the Netherlands, Sweden, and Switzerland are older.

The first official flag of the United States was created by Congress on June 14,1777. It consisted of 13 alternate red and white stripes and 13 white stars in a field of blue, representing the 13 colonies that had declared their independence in 1776. Congress adopted a new flag of 15 stars and 15 stripes in 1795, to give representation to the two new states admitted into the Union, Vermont and Kentucky.

By 1817, there were 20 states in the Union, and it became apparent that adding one stripe for each new state would destroy the shape of the flag. As a result, in 1818, congress restored the design of 13 stripes and provided that each state was to be represented by one star. In 1912 President William H. Taft made the first official provision for the arrangement of the stars. He ordered that there be six even rows of eight stars each. Previously, the arrangement of the stars had been left to the flag-maker's fancy.

The evolution of the Stars and Stripes reflects the growth of the United States. After the admission of Hawaii into the Union in 1959, the flag was officially changed for the 26th time since its creation.

(33)

A.New Zealand.

B.Australia.

C.Denmark.

D.Norway.

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第10题

听力原文:About two percent of the population of the United States is of Asian origin—some

听力原文: About two percent of the population of the United States is of Asian origin—some five million people. Chinese, Japanese, and Philippines form. the largest groups. However, there are also significant numbers of Asian-Indians, Pakistanis, Koreans, and Vietnamese now living in America. As a result of the war in Vietnam, some 350,000 refugees from that country have entered the United States since the early 1970s.

Chinese and Japanese workers were imported into the United States by employers in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.Most of the Chinese settled in California, where they were employed mainly in heavy industries, such as mining and railroad construction. They were faced with intense prejudice and discrimination, especially from lower-class white people, who saw them as a source of threat to their jobs. The retreat of the Chinese into distinct Chinatowns was not primarily their choice, but was enforced by the hostility they faced. Since Chinese immigration was ended by law in 1882, the Chinese remained largely isolated from the wider society—at least until recently.

Most of the Japanese immigrants also settled in California and the other Pacific states. During World WarⅡ, following the attack on Pearl Harbor by Japan, all Japanese Americans in the United States were made to report to“relocation centers”which were effectively concentration camps. In spite of the fact that most of the Japanese were American citizens, they were compelled to live in the hastily established camps for the duration of the war.

(33)

A.About 35,000.

B.About 250,000.

C.About 350,000.

D.About 25,000.

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