问题 选择题

If you _____ shopping with me, I will be very glad.[ ]

A. go

B. will go

C. goes

D. went

答案

答案:A

完形填空
任务型阅读 每空一词
Travelling is a very good activity. When you get tired of your work or study, and when you have free time, you can go to a beautiful place to enjoy the beauty of nature or other cities. You can breathe fresh air, meet different people and make friends with them. It’s good for your health to do so.
But sometimes, travelling is not an enjoyable thing. For example, the weather can be changeable. There may be rain when you travel. You may catch a cold or be ill while travelling. The worst thing is that the thieves may steal(偷) your money. All these may happen to a tourist.
When you go on a trip, you must get everything ready. Firstly, you must have clear information about the weather. Secondly, ask a friend to go with you so that you can help each other. Thirdly, you must be careful everywhere and try not to cause accidents. If you do this, you will surely enjoy your travel.
Title :     小题1:
Advantage
You can enjoy the  小题2: view of the nature.
There will be a lot of fresh       小题3:  around you.
It can make you      小题4: .
Disadvantage
Sometimes it may     小题5:when you travel. It will make the road wet and slip.
You may get         小题6: while travelling.
The worst thing is that you will     小题7:some money.
Advice
At    小题8:, you should know about the weather clearly.
Secondly , you must invite somebody to go together    小题9:you.
Thirdly, do everything      小题10: . Don’t cause any accidents.
单项选择题

Questions 53 to 57 are based on the following passage: ( 10 分 )  How did a peddler of cheap shirts and fishing rods become the mightiest corporation in America The short version of Wal-Mart’s rise to glory goes something like this:in 1979 it racked-up a billion dollars in sales; by 1993 it did that much business in a week; by 2001 it could do it in a day.  It’s a shocking tale--one that propelled Wal-Mart from rural Arkansas, where it was founded in 1962, to the top of the Fortune 500. Sam Walton, Wal-Mart’s founder, pushed sales growth continuously while squeezing costs with sophisticated information technology. He exhorted employees to sell better with the "ten-foot rule" ( greet customers if they are that close ). He was, in other words, an early evangelist for the first commandment of today’s economy: service rules. Wal-Mart, in fact, is the first service company to rise to the top of the Fortune 500. When Fortune first published its list of the largest companies in America in 1995, Wal-Mart didn’t even exist. That year General Motors was America’s biggest company, and in every year that followed,either GM or another mighty industrial, Exxon, was No.1.  Wal-Mart’s achievement caps a bigger economic shift I from producing goods to providing services. Manufacturing’s share ofU. S. employment peaked in 1953, at 35%. It has been declining steadily since. In the decade that will end in 2010, the Bureau of Labor Statistics figures that goods-producing industries will create 1.3 million new jobs, compared to 20 million for service industries. To look at it another way, today there are about four times as many people working in service jobs as in other kinds of jobs. And even within manufacturing, services are an increasingly large share of operations.  As America got richer, consumption got more complicated. With more income to throw around, people started spending more on services -- movies and travel, mortgages to buy houses, insurance to protect those houses, the occasional weekends at a luxury hotel. Fortune calls this a shift in the demand pattern. Over the next few years, only three of the ten fastest-growing occupations ( software engineers, nurses, and computer support ) pay middle-class salaries. The rest could be called Wal-Mart kinds of jobs -- cashiers, retail assistants, food service, and so on. In short, the service economy is delivering more good jobs than ever before.

Today, __ are working in service industry.

A.four out of five

B.35% workers

C.20 million

D.1.3 million