题目内容

A.The furniture is too heavy to move into the room.B.She thought the furniture would b

A. The furniture is too heavy to move into the room.
B. She thought the furniture would be more expensive.
C. She doesn't remember how much the furniture cost.
D. She is still thinking about the furniture bought as a bargain.

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A.He plans to sell the books to a collector.B.The old books are worth a lot to collect

A. He plans to sell the books to a collector.
B. The old books are worth a lot to collectors.
C. He won't sell the books until he has read them.
D. The books probably aren't worth much in terms of money.

A.Find a hotel nearby again in a few days.B.Accommodate his parents in his dormitory.C

A. Find a hotel nearby again in a few days.
B. Accommodate his parents in his dormitory.
C. Ask his parents not come until he finds a proper hotel.
D. Phone a hotel farther from the campus for a reservation.

A.They thought to buy things before the prices went up.B.They bought things because th

A. They thought to buy things before the prices went up.
B. They bought things because they remembered the Great Depression.
C. They were concerned about spending money.
D. They didn't want to spoil theft children.

Section B
Directions: In this section, you will hear 3 short passages. At the end of each passage, you will hear some questions. Both the passage and the questions will be spoken only once. After you hear a question, you must choose the best answer from the four choices marked A, B, C and D.
听力原文: I was born just after the end of the World War H, so I have lived in interesting economic times. My parents' experiences in the Great Depression of the 1930s gave them a worrisome attitude towards money. On the one hand, they were very grateful for better times and were determined that my sisters and I would have everything they had been denied--that we would never suffer as they had. On the other hand, they were very careful with money, restrained by their ear that bad times might return.
As children and young adults, my. friends and I knew good economic times, and we didn't understand our parents' fear about going back to the "bad old days". Parents used to scold their children by saying," You don't know the value of the dollar." They meant that we didn't really appreciate money or understand how difficult it was to earn and save; neither did we understand how bad life could be without enough to buy the necessities. By the time we had become adults, however, dramatic changes in the inflation rate made the statement true in another way.
Our parents had learned to save, to be frugal, and to put money away "for a rainy day". We learned to spend impulsively in order to purchase items before they became more expensive. Interest rates on most savings accounts were less than the rate of inflation, so it made some economic sense to spend now, save later. Unfortunately, our response to inflation actually fueled it, and government wage and price controls were required to bring the situation under control.
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A. 1930--1965.
B. 1945--present.
C. 1930--present.
D. 1965--present.

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