题目内容
---Did Mr. Zhu come to help you yesterday?
--- Yes, but I would rather _____. He caused me a lot of trouble.
A. not have B. not C. he didn't D. he hadn't
D
【解析】
试题分析:句意:--朱先生昨天来帮助你了吗?--是,但是我宁可他没来,他给我带来很多麻烦。Would rather后面接从句的时候,从句的谓语用虚拟语气,如果是说的过去的动作,用过去完成时,选D。
考点:考查虚拟语气
Mr. Harris used to work in Dover, but then he changed his work, and he and his wife moved to another town. They did not have many friends there, but they soon met a lot of interesting people, and after a few weeks, they often went to dinner or to parties at other people’s houses.
Then Mrs. Harris said to her husband, “We’ve been to a lot of other people’s houses, and now we must invite them to our house, mustn’t we?”
“Yes, certainly,” answered her husband, “A big party will be the easiest thing, won’t it? Then we can start to invite people to dinner in small numbers next month.”
So Mrs. Harris said, “Yes, I’ll invite all our friends here to a big party on 5th December.”
“How many will that be?” Mr. Harris asked. “Don’t invite too many.”
Mrs. Harris was beginning to write the invitations when her husband saw that she was writing, “Party. 6.30 to 8.30 p.m.”
“That isn’t very nice, is it?” he said. “You’re telling our guests that they must go at 8.30.” So Mrs. Harris just wrote “Party. 6.30 p.m.”
A lot of guests came, and they all had a good time, so they did not go home at 8.30. In fact they were still there at mid-night when the door bell rang and a policeman arrived. He said, “You must stop making a noise, because someone has complained.”
Mr. Harris said he did not want to quarrel with the policeman, so everyone went home. They were sorry to have to go.
When Mr. and Mrs. Harris were alone again, she said to him. “That was a surprise, wasn’t it? Who complained about the noise?”
“I did,” Mr Harris answered in a tired voice.
【小题1】Why did Mr. Harris and his wife move to another town?
A.They wanted to make some new friends. |
B.Mr. Harris changed his work. |
C.They wanted to meet a lot of interesting people. |
D.They enjoyed going to parties and visiting other people’s houses. |
A.It was easy to hold a big party at home. |
B.They could ask people to dinner in small numbers. |
C.They had gone to other people’s parties many times. |
D.They liked making friends with others. |
A.From the morning till night. | B.About fourteen hours. |
C.About two hours. | D.Till midnight |
A.At about 8.30. |
B.When the policeman talked with Mr. Harris on the phone. |
C.About twelve o’clock.. |
D.When someone telephoned the police station. |
A.Because someone rang his door bell many times at mid-night. |
B.He did not want his friends to stay late that night. |
C.His friends had a good time that night and also feel tired. |
D.Because he hated the noise. |
No one knows for sure when advertising first started. It is possible that it grew out of the discovery that some people did certain kinds of work better than others did them. That led to the concept of specialization, which means that people would specialize, or focus, on doing one specific job.
Let’s take a man we’ll call Mr. Fielder, for example. He did everything connected with farming. He planted seeds, tended the fields, and harvested and sold his crops. At the same time, he did many other jobs on the farm. However, he didn’t make the bricks for his house, grind the wheat for his flour, or cut his trees into boards. He also did not make the plows(犁), the work boots, or any of the other hundreds of things a farm needs. Instead, he got them from people who specialized in doing each of those things.
Suppose there was another man we shall call Mr. Plowright. Using what he knew about farming and working with iron, Mr. Plowright invented a plow that made farming easier. Mr. Plowright did not really like farming himself and wanted to specialize in making really good plows. Perhaps, he thought, other farmers will trade what they grow for one of my plows.
How did Mr. Plowright let people know what he was doing? Why, he advertised, of course. First he opened a shop and then he put up a sign outside the shop to attract customers. That sign may have been no more than a plow carved into a piece of wood and a simple arrow pointing to the shop door. It was probably all the information people needed to find Mr. Plowright and his really good plows.
Many historians believe that the first outdoor signs were used about five thousand years ago. Even before most people could read, they understood such signs. Shopkeepers would carve into stone, clay, or wood symbols for the products they had for sale.
A medium, in advertising talk, is the way you communicate your message. You might say that the first medium used in advertising was signs with symbols. The second medium was audio, or sound, although that term is not used exactly in the way we use it today. Originally, just the human voice and maybe some kind of simple instrument, such as a bell, were used to get people’s attention.
A crier, in the historical sense, is not someone who weeps easily. It is someone, probably a man, with a voice loud enough to be heard over the other noises of a city. In ancient Egypt, shopkeepers might hire such a person to spread the news about their products. Often this primitive form of advertising involved a newly arrived ship loaded with goods. Perhaps the crier described the goods, explained where they came from, and praised their quality. His job was, in other words, not too different from a TV or radio commercial in today’s world.
【小题1】What probably led to the start of advertisement?
A.The discovery of iron. | B.The specialization of labor. |
C.The appearance of new jobs. | D.The development of farming techniques. |
A.praised his plows in public | B.placed a sign outside the shop |
C.hung an arrow pointing to the shop | D.showed his products to the customers |
A.explain the origin of advertising | B.predict the future of advertising |
C.expose problems in advertising | D.provide suggestions for advertising |
A.owned a ship |
B.had the loudest voice |
C.ran a shop selling goods to farmers |
D.functioned like today’s TV or radio commercial |
A.the history of advertising | B.the benefits of advertising |
C.the early forms of advertising | D.the basic design of advertising |
After graduation I returned home to my small town in Indiana. I didn’t have a job yet. Mr. Hobbs, a friend of my father’s, owned a small shirt factory in town. Within the past five years it had grown from twenty to eighty workers. Mr. Hobbs was worried that his plant was getting too big and inefficient, so he asked me to come in on a short-term basis as a consultant.
I went to the plant and spent about a week looking around and making notes. I was really a mazed at what I saw.
Most curious of all, there was no quality control at all. No one inspected the final product of the factory. As a result some of the shirts that were put in boxes for shipment were missing one or two buttons, the collar, and even a sleeve sometimes!
The working conditions were poor. The tables where the workers sat were very high and uncomfortable. Except for a half hour at lunchtime, there were no breaks in the day to relieve the boring work. There was no music. The walls of the workrooms were a dull gray color. I was amazed that the workers hadn’t gone on strike.
Furthermore, the work flow was irregular. There was one especially absent-minded young man in the assembly(组装)line who sewed on buttons. After a while I recognized him as "Big Jim", who used to sit behind me in math class in high school. He was very slow and all the shifts were held up at his position. Workers beyond him in line on his shift had to wait with nothing to do; therefore, a great deal of time and efficiency were lost as Big Jim daydreamed while he worked. All week I wondered why he wasn’t fired.
After I made observations for a week, Mr. Hobbs asked me for an oral report of my findings.
1.The shirts from Mr. Hobbs’ factory can be described as ____.
A.of low quality |
B.of high quality |
C.fashionable |
D.unfashionable |
2.Why did Mr. Hobbs ask the writer to the factory?
A.The factory was too big. |
B.The factory was not producing fast enough. |
C.The factory was not big enough. |
D.The writer was a college graduate. |
3.Which is not likely to happen in the factory?
A.The workers will have more rest in the day. |
B.Someone will examine the final product. |
C.New machines will be bought. |
D.The factory will be repainted. |
4.Big Jim may get fired mainly because ____.
A.he was slow |
B.he wasted much time |
C.he was absent-minded |
D.the work flow was irregular |