— ?— I have worked for IBM for 3 years.A、Do you like your work in IBM?B、What is your wor
A.Do you like your work in IBM?
B.What is your working experience?
C.Why do you decide to leave IBM?
B、What is your working experience?
A.Do you like your work in IBM?
B.What is your working experience?
C.Why do you decide to leave IBM?
B、What is your working experience?
第1题
I ________in the company since I came to the city.
A worked
B have worked
C work
第2题
(到今年年底),____________. I will have worked in this company for five years.
第3题
A.Not at all
B.By no means
C.No, I wouldnt
D.Oh, never
第4题
A.a night rest
B.rest of night
C.a night's rest
D.a rest of night
第5题
听力原文:W: I couldn't have won the award without your assistance. Thank you very much.
M: You have been working so hard. You deserve the honor.
Q: What do we learn from the conversation?
(19)
A.The man deserved the award.
B.The woman helped the man succeed.
C.The man is thankful to the woman for her assistance.
D.The woman worked hard and was given an award.
第6题
听力原文:W: Have you got a job waiting for you?
M: No, I gave up my job when I came here. I worked in a shipping company, but it was documents, documents, all day long. So I decided I needed a change. Now I'm going to try and get a job with a travel firm. I'd like a job dealing with people.
Q: What sort of a firm would she like to work for?
(15)
A.The shipping company.
B.The travel firm.
C.The firm dealing with documents.
D.The firm with a lot of people.
第7题
M: Don't make up any excuse for your being late. What you have to do is to make up for the time you have lost.
Q: What can we learn from the conversation?
(19)
A.The man's clock was broken.
B.The woman worked late yesterday.
C.The man will help the woman with her work.
D.The man doesn't believe the woman's words.
第8题
听力原文: As the new sales director for a national computer firm, Alex Gordon was looking forward to his first meeting with the company's district managers. Everyone arrived on time, and Alex's presentation went extremely well. He decided to end the meeting with the conversation about the importance of the district managers to the company's plans. "I believe we are going to continue to increase our share of the market," he began, "because of the quality of the people in this room. The district manager is the key to the success of the sales representatives in his district. He sets the term for everyone else. If he has ambitious goals and is willing to put in long hours, everyone in his unit will follow his example." When Alex was finished, he received polite applauses, but hardly the warm response he had hoped for. Later he spoke with one of the senior managers. "Things were going so well until the end", Alex said disappointedly. "Obviously, I said the wrong thing." "Yes", the district manager replied. "Half of our managers are women. Most have worked their way up from sales representatives, and they are very proud of the role they played in the company's growth. They don't care at all about political correctness. But they were definitely surprised and distressed to be referred to as 'he' in your speech. "
Who did Alex Gordon speak to at the first meeting?
A.District managers.
B.Regular customers.
C.Sales directors.
D.Senior clerks.
第9题
W: Well, I really studied hard for that exam I've been preparing for it for more than a month. Now, I can relax for a while.
Q: Why is the woman so happy?
(17)
A.She's going away for a while.
B.She did well on the test.
C.She worked hard and earned a lot of money.
D.She's didn't have to work hard for the exam.
第10题
W:Well, I really studied hard for that exam. I've been preparing for it for more than a month. Now, I can relax for a while.
Q: Why is the woman so happy?
(16)
A.She did well on the test.
B.She's going away for a while.
C.She didn't have to work hard for the exam.
D.She worked hard and earned a lot of money.
第11题
His wife Jane, an Oxford graduate in modern languages, has a demanding full-time job. She is director of the Cambridge House literacy scheme for adults in South London. Her working week involves several evenings and Saturdays, and at these times her husband is in sole charge of home and family. Apart from this, they share household jobs and employ a child-minder for the afternoons. This enables him to teach two days a week and to do what he considers his principal work—writing. He has written several books and spends much of his time in the British Museum Reading Room, cycling there from his home in Brixton. People ask the Maces if they think that their children miss them. One can argue that satisfied parents generally have satisfied children, but in any case the Maces are careful to reserve time and energy to play with their children. "And they have now developed relationships with other adults and children."
Previously, Rodney Mace worked full-time and Jane only part-time. Then 18 months ago, the director of file literacy scheme left. "It seemed to me that Jane was very well suited to do this ]ob. She was very doubtful about it. But I urged her to apply. She did, and she got it." Jane Mace confirms that she needed this encouragement, as so many women initially do. Did his male self-esteem suffer from the change-over? Nothing like that occurred. But he still seems amazed at the way it changed his thinking. "I felt that we were finally going to be partners. I felt enormous relief. I wasn't avoiding responsibility, but changing it. Our relationship is so much better now. It has been a change for the good for both of us — I think for all of us, in every aspect of our lives, I cannot overemphasize that: in every aspect, 1 think it is fundamental that the woman works. The idea of equal partnership is just a fancy if one partner doesn't work."
The article is about a couple whose married life is happier because ______.
A.they have a truly equal partnership
B.the husband has more sense of household responsibility
C.the couple cares little about other people's comment on their life
D.the wife has a full time job