A. Goods for auction sales B. Definition of bidding D. Auction sales in history E. Brief introduction to auctions F. Making a larger profit as an auctioneer | ||||||
80. | ||||||
Auctions are public sales of goods, conducted by an officially approved auctioneer. He asks the crowd assembled in the auction-room to make offers, or “bids”, for the various items on sale. He encourages buyers to bid higher figures, and finally names the highest bidder as the buyer of the goods. This is called “knocking down” the goods, for the bidding ends when the auctioneer strikes a small hammer on a table at which he stands. | ||||||
81 | ||||||
The ancient Roman probably invented sales by auction, and the English word comes from the Latin auctio, maning “increase” The Romans usually sold in this way the goods taken in war. In | ||||||
82. | ||||||
Practically all goods whose qualities vary are sold by auction. Among these are coffee, skins, wool, tea, furs, silk and wines. Auction sales are also usual for land and property, furniture, pictures, rare books, old china and similar works of art. | ||||||
83. | ||||||
An auction is usually advertised beforehand with full particulars of the articles to be sold and where and when they can be viewed by potential buyers. If the advertisement cannot give full details, catalogues are printed, and each group of goods to be sold together, called a “lot”, is usually given a number. The auctioneer need not begin with Lot I and continue in the order of numbers: he may wait until he notices the fact that certain buyers are in the room and then produce the lots they are likely to be interested in. | ||||||
84. | ||||||
The auctioneer’s services are paid for in the form of a percentage of the price the goods are sold for. The auctioneer therefore has a direct interest in pushing up the bidding as high as possible. He will not waste time by starting the bidding too low. He will also play on the opponents among his buyers and succeed in getting a high price by encouraging two business competitors to bid against each other. |
Across the world , 11 billion people have no access to clean drinking water . More than2.6 bullion people lack basic sanitation (卫生设备) .
The combination proves deadly . Each year . diseases related to inadequate water and sanitation kill between 2 and 3 million people and cause an estimated 80 percent of all sicknesses in the developing world . Safe thinking water is a precondition for health and the fight against child death rate , inequality between men and women, and poverty .
Consider these facts :
●The average distance that women in Africa and Asia walk to collect water is 6 kilometers .
●Only 58 percent of children in sub-Saharan Africa are drinking safe water, and only 37 percent of children in South Asia have access to even a basic toilet .
●Each year in
Here are three ways you can help :
1) Write Congress
Current
2) Sponsor a project with a faith-based organization
Many
3) Support nonprofit water organizations
Numerous U.S.-based nonprofits work skillfully abroad in community-led projects related of drinking water and sanitation . Like the sample of non-profits noted as follows , some organizations are large , others small-scale , some operate worldwide , others are devoted to certain areas in Africa , Asia , or Latin America . Support them generously .
72.The three facts presented in the passage the used to illustrate that .
A.poverty can result in water-borne diseases
B.people have no access to clean drinking water
C.women’s rights are denied in some developing countries .
D.safe drinking water should be a primary concern
73.The intended readers of the passage are _____________.
A.Americans B.overseas sponsors
C.Congressmen D.U.S-based water organizations
74.The main purpose of the passage is to call on people to ___________.
A.get rid of water-related diseases in developing countries
B.donate money to people short of water through religious groups
C.fight against the worldwide water shortage and sanitation problem
D.take joint action in support of some nonprofit water organizations
75.What information will probably be provided following the last paragraph?
A.A variety of companies and their worldwide operation.
B.A list of nonprofit water organizations to make contact with.
C.Some ways to get financial aids from U.S. Congress.
D.A few water resources exploited by some world-famous organizations.
There is a tendency to think of each of the arts as a separate area of activity . Many artists. 55 would prove that there has always been a warm relationship between the various areas of human activity. 56 , in the late nineteenth century the connections between music and painting were particularly 57 .Artists were invited to design clothes and settings for operas and ballets ,but sometimes it was the musicians who were inspired (给……以灵感)by the work of contemporary painters .Of the musical compositions that were considered as 58 to the visual arts ,perhaps the most famous is Mussorgsky’s Pictures at an Exhibition.
Mussorgsky composed the piece in 1874 after the death ,at the age of 39, of the artist Victor Hartmann. 59 their friendship had not been a particularly long-fasting one .Mussorgsky was shocked by Hartmann’s 60 death.The following year the critic .Vladimir. Stasov who decided to hold an exhibition of Hartmann’s work,suggested that Mussorgsky try to 61 his grief by writing something in memory of Hartmann.
The exhibition served as Mussorgsky’s inspiration. The ten pieces that make up Pictures at an Exhibition are intended as 62 rather than representations of the paintings in the exhibition .Between each is a promenade(舞曲中的行进), 63 the composer walks from one painting to another .The music is sometimes witty and playful sometimes almost alarming and frightening . Through a range of surprising 64 .Mussorgsky manages to convey the spirit of the artist and his work.
55.A.therefore | B.however | C.moreover | D.otherwise |
56.A.For example | B.On the contrary | C.In general | DOn the other hand |
57.A.separate | B.unknown | C.close | D.relevant |
58.A.links | B.additions | C.responses | D.keys |
59.A.Before | B.Though | C.As | D.If |
60.A.unavoidable | B.undiscovered | C.unnecessary | D.unexpected |
61.A.control | B.relieve | C.conceal | D.represent |
62.A.symbols | B.imaginations | C.contributions | D.subjects |
63.A.but | B.for | C.once | D.as |
64.A.paintings | B.topics | C.contrasts | D.visions |
Are your table manners much better when you are eating at a friend’s home or in a restaurant than they are at your own home ?Probably so , 45 you are aware that people judge you by your table manners .You take special pains when you are eating 46 .Have you ever stopped to realize how much less self-conscious you would be on such occasions if 47 table manners had become a habit for you ?You can make them a habit by 48 good table manners at home.
Good manners at mealtimes help you and those around you to feel 49 .This is true at home as much as it is true in someone else’s home or in a restaurant. Good 50 make meals more enjoyable for everyone at the table.
By this time you probably know quite well what good table manners are .You 51 that keeping your arms on the table ,talking with your 52 full ,and wolfing down your food are not considered good manners .You know also that if you are mannerly ,you say “Please” and “Thank you” and ask for things to be passed to you.
Have you ever thought of a pleasant attitude as being 53 to good table manners ? Not only are pleasant mealtimes enjoyable ,but they aid digestion .The dinner table is a 54 for enjoyable conversation. It should never become a battleground. You are definitely growing in social maturity(成熟)when you try to be an agreeable table companion.
45.A.because | B.but | C.unless | D.though |
46.A.in public | B.at home | C.at ease | D.in a hurry |
47.A.such | B.no | C.some | D.good |
48.A.acting | B.enjoying | C.practicing | D.watching |
49.A.comfortable | B.stressed | C.depressed | D.outstanding |
50.A.dishes | B.manners | C.atmospheres | D.friends |
51.A.mention | B.prefer | C.doubt | D.realize |
52.A.stomach | B.hands | C.mouth | D.bowl |
53.A.essential | B.considerate | C.obvious | D.unusual |
54.A.time | B.place | C.chance | D.way |