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25 C A建设性的B成功的C 连续的D 继续的。题意为连续性的投票以最后选出主办方所以答案为C 26 A 允许B设置C准许D允许 此选项比较难判断 27 A A主办方B地点C分布D地点 此项前文有呼应 28 D A州B 阶段,舞台C 开始D主办者,负责人 很明显答案为D 29 C A想,思考B 计算,总计,评估C 考虑D计算 30 A A举例B 结果C总体来说D整体来说 根据语意应该是A 31 C A及时B部分C 为了D相同 32 D A自从B因为C对于D由于 33 B A数量B 考虑in account 为固定搭配C 符合D欢呼,喝采,称赞 34 D A但是B 无论C 无论什么时候D 无论在哪里 35 B A大量的B相当优厚地C意味深长地D较大地(重要地) 36 A A直播B活着的CD 37 D ABCD 38 C A收入(指工资等)B利息C收入D回报 39 A A 情况B 情况C 机会D情况 in many cases 是比较常用的搭配 40 B A安全的B由风险的C诱惑人的D可行的,可能的
答案21:D 答案22:C 答案23:A 答案24:B 答案25:C 答案26:A 答案27:A 答案28:D 答案29:C 答案30:A 答案31:C 答案32:D 答案33:B 答案34:D 答案35:B 答案36:A 答案37:D 答案38:C 答案39:A 答案40:B
Section III Reading Comprehension(40 points)
Directions: There are 4 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 blacken the corresponding letter on the ANSWER SHEET with a pencil.
Questions 41 to 45 are based on the following passage: Last weekend Kyle MacDonald in Montreal threw a party to celebrate the fact that he got his new home in exchange for a red paper clip. Starting a year ago , MacDonald bartered the clip for increasingly valuable stuff, including a camp stove and free rent in a Phoenix flat. Having announced his aim (the house) in advance, MacDonald likely got a boost from techies eager to see the Internet pass this daring test of its networking power. “My whole motto(座右铭) was’ Start small, think big and have fun’ ” says MacDonald 26 “I really kept my effort on the creative side rather than the business side.” Yet as odd as the MacDonald exchange was, barter is now big business on the Net. This year more than 400,000 companies worldwide will exchange some $10 billion worth of goods and services on growing number of barter sites. These Web sites allow companies to trade products for a virtual currency, which they can use to buy goods from other members. In Iceland, garment-maker Kapusatan sells a third of its output on the booming Vidskiptanetid exchange, earning virtual money that it uses to buy machinery and pay part of employee salaries. The Troc-Services exchange in France offers more than 4,600 services, from math lessons to ironing. This is not a primitive barter system. By creating currencies, the Internet removes a major barrier-what Bob Meyer, publisher of BarterNews, calls “the double coincidence of wants.” That is two parties once not only had to find each other, but also an exchange of goods that both desired. Now, they can price the deal in virtual currency. Barter also helps firms make use of idle capacity. For example, advertising is “hugely bartered” because many media, particularly on the Web, can supply new ad space at little cost. Moreover, internet ads don’t register in industry-growth statistics, because many exchanges are arranged outside the formal exchanges. |
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