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The hotel ______ we stayed was both cheap and comfortable.A.whenB.at whichC.with whichD.si

The hotel ______ we stayed was both cheap and comfortable.

A.when

B.at which

C.with which

D.since

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更多“The hotel ______ we stayed was…”相关的问题
第1题
As we are unlikely to find another hotel before dark, the ______ action is to stay here fo
r the night.

A.senseless

B.sensitive

C.sensational

D.sensible

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第2题
Welcome to Franklin Hotel. To make your stay as enjoyable as possible, we hope you will us
e our facilities (设施) to the full.

Dining Room: Breakfast is served in the dining room from 8 to 9:30 a.m. Also the room staff (服务员) may bring breakfast to your room at any time after 7 a.m. If this happens, please fill out a card and hang it outside your door when you go to bed. Lunch is from 12 to 2:30 p. m. Dinner is from 7:30 to 9 p. m.

Room service: This operates 24 hours a day; phone the Reception desk, and your message will be passed on to the room staff.

Telephones: To make a phone call, dial(拨) 0 for Reception and ask to be connected. We apologize for delays if the lines are very busy. There are also public telephones near the Reception desk. Tell Reception if early calls are needed.

Shop: The hotel shop is open for presents, gifts and goods from 9 a.m. to 5:30 p. m.

Laundry: We have a laundry in the building, and will wash, iron and return your clothes within 24 hours. Ask the room staff to collect them.

Bar(酒吧):The hotel bar is open from 12 to 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. to 1 a.m.

Banking: The Reception staff will cash cheques (兑现支票)and exchange any foreign money for you.

You would see this notice ______.

A.in a hotel bar

B.in a hotel (lining room

C.in a bedroom of a large international hotel

D.at the entrance of a small family hotel

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第3题
Mr. And Mrs. Smith had always spent their summer holidays in New Jersey in the past, stayi
ng in a small inn at the foot of a hill. One year, however, Mr. Smith made a lot of money in his business, so they decided to go to London and stay at a really good hotel while they went touring around that famous city.

They flew to London and arrived at their hotel late one evening. They expected that they would have to go to bed hungry, because in that small inn in New Jersey no meals were served after seven. They were therefore surprised when the man who received them in the hall asked whether they would ask dinner there that night.

"Are you still serving dinner?" asked Mr. Smith.

"Yes, certainly, sir," answered the man. "We serve it until half past nine."

"What are the times of meals then?" asked Mr. Smith.

"Well, Sir," answered the man, "We serve breakfast from seven to half past eleven in the morning, lunch from twelve to three in the afternoon, tea from four to five and dinner, from six to half past nine."

"But that hardly leaves any time for us to see the sights of London." Said Mrs. Smith.

Mr. and Mrs. Smith ______ in the past.

A.had often stayed in a big hotel in New Jersey

B.had traveled to many places

C.had often stayed in a small inn

D.had made a lot of money

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第4题
Read the following invitation letter, and write a response to it based on the situatio
n given:

Dear Mr. Smith,

We are pleased to inform. you of our Medical Supplies Company’s 10th Anniversary. The ceremony begins at 10:30 a.m. on Wednesday, 18 May 2005 and a cocktail party and buffet will be held at Westin hotel at 12:00 at noon. We have pleasure in inviting you to attend.

Yours sincerely,

Hugh Simmons

Situation: You are the assistant of the general manager Mr. John Smith of Pacific Telecommunications. Mr. Smith received the invitation letter above, now you are asked to write a response of accepting the invitation for him.

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第5题
It is important for us to know how to stay safe while traveling in foreign countries.
We’ve all heard the stories of travelers having their wallets(钱包) stolen or finding themselves in the wrong part of the town. So you have to be more careful than usual, when traveling abroad.

Remember to carry a small amount of cash and a copy of your ID with you at all times. There is no need to bring large amounts of cash with you. When shopping, use your credit card instead. Keep your wallet in your front pocket so that there is no way someone's hand could get in there without your noticing it.

Travel with a friend, business partner if possible. It is always better to travel in pairs than to go alone. Know where you’re going. Look at the map before you leave the hotel so that you know where you are going and how to get there.

Lock your valuables (贵重物品) either in the safe in your hotel room or in the main hotel safe.

Be aware of your surroundings. Look around when walking, and avoid keeping your head low.

B-26. When shopping abroad, you are advised to _____.

A、use online services

B、use a credit card

C、pay by check

D、pay in cash

B-27. To keep your wallet safe, you’d better _____.

A、hold it in your keep it in your hand

B、leave it in the hotel safe

C、put it in your front pocket

D、keep it in your shoulder bag

B-28. To know where you are going, you are advised to _____.

A、ask the police for detailed information

B、look at the map before leaving the hotel

C、always travel with your business partner

D、have a smart phone with you while traveling

B-29. Where should you keep your valuables while staying in a hotel?

A、In the hotel safe.

B、In your pockets.

C、In your traveling bag.

D、In a bedside containe.

B-30. Which of the following can be the title for the passage?

A、How to Ask Ways While Traveling.

B、How to Shop in a Foreign Country.

C、Protect Your Personal Information.

D、Stay safe While Traveling Abroad.

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第6题
America is a mobile society. Friendships between Americans can be close and real, yet
disappear soon if situations change. Neither side feels hurt by this. Both may exchange Christmas greetings for a year or two, perhaps a few letters for a while — then no more. If the same two people meet again by chance, even years later, they pick up the friendship. This can be quite difficult for us Chinese to understand, because friendships between us flower more slowly but then may become lifelong feelings, extending (延伸) sometimes deeply into both families.

Americans are ready to receive us foreigners at their homes, share their holidays, and their home life. They will enjoy welcoming us and be pleased if we accept their hospitality (好客) easily.

Another difficult point for us Chinese to understand Americans is that although they include us warmly in their personal everyday lives, they don’t show their politeness to us if it requires a great deal of time. This is usually the opposite of the practice in our country where we may begenerous with our time. Sometimes, we, as hosts, will appear at airports even in the middle of the night to meet a friend. We may take days off to act as guides to our foreign friends. The Americans, however, express their welcome usually at homes, but truly can not manage the time to do a great deal with a visitor outside their daily routine. They will probably expect us to get ourselves from the airport to our own hotel by bus. And they expect that we will phone them from there. Once we arrive at their homes, the welcome will be full, warm and real. We will find ourselves treated hospitably.

For the Americans, it is often considered more friendly to invite a friend to their homes than to go to restaurants, except for purely business matters. So accept their hospitality at home!

1.The writer of this passage must be a Chinese.()

2. Americans will continue their friendships again even after a long break.()

3.From the last two paragraphs we can learn that when we arrive in America to visit an American friend, we will probably be warmly welcomed at the airport.()

4.The underlined words “generous with our time” in Paragraph 3 probably mean willing to spend time.

5.A suitable title for this passage would probably be “Americans’ and Chinese’s views of friendships”.()

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第7题
Penny-pinching consumers and fierce price wars are bad news for the travel industry. Bad,
that is, for everyone except the booming online travel giants. Consider the sharp rebound of such online players as Travelocity and Expedia. While they suffered in the wake of the September 11 terrorist attacks, with bookings off as much as 70%0 in the weeks that followed, business has snapped back. "The speed with which those businesses bounced back surprised even the people most bullish about the sector," says Mitchell J. Rubin, a money manager at New York-based Baron Capital, an investor in online travel stocks.

The travel industry's pain is often the online industry's gain, as suppliers push more discounted airline seats and hotel rooms to win back customers. And many of those deals are available only online. At the same time, online agencies rely primarily on leisure travelers, where traffic has rebounded more quickly than on the business side.

The two biggest players, Travelocity. Com Inc. and Expedia Inc, are locked in combat for the top spot. Both sold some $3 billion worth of travel last year, though Expedia topped Travelocity in the fourth quarter in gross bookings. And thanks in part to a greater emphasis on wholesale deals with suppliers, Expedia is more profitable. For the quarter ended in December, Expedia posted its first net profit, $5.2 million, even with noncash and nonrecurring charges, compared with Travelocity's $25 million loss.

The airlines' latest cost-cutting moves may only spur the online stampede. Major carriers are eliminating travel agent commissions in the U.S. That could lead to growing service charges for consumers at traditional agencies, driving still more travelers to the Web. Jupiter Media Metrix is predicting that online travel sales in the U.S. will jump 29%, to $31 billion this year, and to $50 billion by 2005. About half of that is from airlines' and other suppliers' own Web sites, but that still leaves plenty of room for the online agents.

This growing market is drawing plenty of competition and new players. Hotel and car rental franchiser Cendant Corp. snapped up Cheap Tickets last October. Barry Diller's USA Networks Inc. bought a controlling stake in Expedia. And a group of hotels, including Hilton Hotels and Hyatt Corp., are launching their own business this summer to market hotel rooms on the Net.

Is the field too crowded? Analysts and online agencies aren't worried, figuring that there's plenty of new business to go around. But, for now, the clear winners are consumers, who can count on finding better service and better deals online.

We can learn from the beginning that the competition in the travel industry revolves chiefly around

A.suppliers markets.

B.price battles.

C.travel stocks.

D.online services.

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第8题
At Beijing Capital International Airport, Henry moves towards the exit and Peter walks u
p to meet him.

Peter: Excuse me, are you Mr. Henry Smith?

Henry: Oh, you must be Peter.

Peter: () Mr. Smith.

Henry: Nice to meet you, too.

Peter: How was your journey?

Henry: ()

Peter: Our car is in the parking lot. Shall we go to the hotel first?

Henry: Yes. I really need a good rest. And, Peter, could you do me a favor?

Peter: Yes, of course.

Henry: I wonder if you could help me take my suitcase and box to the car. ()

Peter: My pleasure, sir. (Trying to lift the box) You've put the whole of America into your box. They are really very heavy, ha-ha! Please stay here while I get a cart.

Henry: By the way, do you know where I can get mints here? It seems there's no store around.

Peter: I know where the store is. Would you like me to get some mints for you?

Henry: ()

Peter comes back, and they walk out of the gate.

Henry: Oh, it's good to see the sun! I'm always worried about Beijing's haze.

Peter: Yes, () That'll be a nice change, won't it? A big improvement on what we've been having.

Henry: That's great! I think all this sunshine is just too good to be true!

选择合适的单词或短语完成句子。

A. Pretty good, but a little tiring.

B. It seems to be clearing up.

C. They are too heavy for me to carry.

D. That's very kind of you.

E. Nice to meet you.

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第9题
Many times of an evening I would stand on the shore and looked out to sea, where a curious
phosphorescent(发 磷光的) green was changing to a transparent blue. Behind the camp the setting sun, like a flaming ball, painted the mountains purple and gold. The air was like champagne, and as we were in the Gulf Stream the weather was beautifully mild. While violent snowstorms were raging in England, we were enjoying the most perfect flying weather and a day which lasted for nearly twenty-four hours.

On leave for four days, Nobel and I drove across Scotland to the west coast and took the ferry (渡船) over to Skye. The small stone quay (码头) was spotted with shops; a bus was drawn up by the waterside, a hotel advertisement on its side. I looked at Nobel and he nodded. We had come pre-pared to be disappointed. But we had not driven far before the road gave way to a winding(蜿蜒的) track and the only signs of habitation(居住地) were a few crofters' (苏格兰小农场佃户的) cottages. It was evening when we drew up outside the Sligachan Inn at the foot of the Coolin Mountains. The innkeeper welcomed us and showed us our rooms.

From every window was the same view, gray mountains rising in austere(简朴的) beauty, their peaks hidden in a white mist, and everywhere a great feeling of stillness. The shadows that lengthened across the valley, the streams that coursed down the rocks, the thin mist turning now into night, all a part of that stillness. I shivered; Skye was a world that one would either love or hate. There could be no in-between.

"It is very beautiful, "said the landlord.

" Yes, " I said, " it's beautiful.

"But only mountaineers or fools will climb those peaks. "

" We're both fools, " Nobel said shortly.

"So be it. Dinner is at eight-thirty. "

We stood a while at the window. The night was clear and our heads felt clear and cold as the air. We smelled the odor(气息) of the ground in the spring after rain, and behind us the wood smoke of the pine fire in our room, and we were content. For these are the odors of nostalgia(乡愁), spring mist and wood smoke, and never the scent of a woman or of food.

We were alone in the inn save for one old man who had returned there to diet. His hair was white, but his face and bearing were still those of a mountaineer, though he must have been a great age. He never spoke, but appeared regularly at meals to take his place at a table tight-pressed against the window, alone with his wine and his memories. We thought him rather fine.

What was the weather like in Scotland at the time of this story?

A.It was very warm.

B.It was severely cold.

C.It was not really cold.

D.Snowstorms were raging across the land.

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第10题
Part ADirections: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by c

Part A

Directions: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D. (40 points)

Penny-pinching consumers and fierce price wars are bad news for the travel industry. Bad, that is, for everyone except the booming on line travel giants. Consider the sharp rebound of such on-line players as Travelocity and Expedia. While they suffered in the wake of the September 11th terrorist attacks, with bookings off as much as 70% in the weeks that followed, business has snapped back. "The speed with which those businesses bounced back surprised even the people most bullish about the sector," says Mitchell J. Rubin, a money manager at New York-based Baron Capital, an investor in on-line travel stocks.

The travel industry's pain is often the on-line industry's gain, as suppliers push more discounted airline seats and hotel rooms to win back customers. And many of those deals are available only on dine. At the same time, on-line agencies rely primarily on leisure travelers, where traffic has rebounded more quickly than on the business side.

The two biggest players, Travelocity Com. Inc. and Expedia Inc., are locked in combat for the top spot. Both sold some $3 billion worth of travel last year, though Expedia topped Travelocity in the fourth quarter in gross bookings. And thanks in part to a greater emphasis on wholesale deals with suppliers, Expedia is more profitable. For the quarter ended in December, Expedia posted its first net profit, $5.2 million, even with noncash and nonrecurring charges, compared with Travelocity's $25 million loss.

The airlines' latest cost cutting moves may only spur the on-line stampede. Major carriers are eliminating travel agent commissions in the U.S. That could lead to growing service charges for consumers at traditional agencies, driving still more travelers to the Web. Jupiter Media Metrix is predicting that on line travel sales in the U.S. will jump 29%0, to $31 billion this year, and to $50 billion by 2005. About half of that is from airlines' and other suppliers' own Web sites, but that still leaves plenty of room for the online agents.

This growing market is drawing plenty of competition and new players. Hotel and car rental franchiser Cendant Corp. snapped up Cheap Tickets last October. Barry Diller's U.S.A Networks Inc. bought a controlling stake in Expedia. And a group of hotels, including Hilton Hotels and Hyatt Corp., are launching their own business this summer to market hotel rooms on the Net.

Is the field too crowded? Analysts and on-line agencies aren't worried, figuring that there's plenty of new business to go around. But, for now, the clear winners are consumers, who can count on finding better services and better deals on line.

We can learn from the beginning that the competition in the travel industry revolves chiefly around

A.suppliers markets.

B.price battles.

C.travel stocks.

D.on line services.

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