BEC剑桥商务英语(中级)2及答案解析.doc
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1、BEC 剑桥商务英语(中级)2 及答案解析(总分:12.97,做题时间:149 分钟)一、PART 1 READING (6(总题数:1,分数:1.00)A Where do you buy your clothes? Well, most of us shop at traditional retailers with increasingly frequent trios to discount stores and Internet. And most of the superrich and trendy buy directly from designers like Gucci,
2、Armani and Chanel. But lately their shopping habits and ours have been converging. Bonita Carol reports that many of the fashion elite are coming out of the closet and going straight to K Mart. Take a peek inside fashion editor Christy Ferrels closet, and youll find couture side by side with K Mart.
3、 B Fashion reporter Jerry Agins calls the trend “cheapskate chic“: the regent fashionable wearing Sears shoes, Wal-Mart pants and Target sweaters, proudly pairing them with designer labels. The whole trend of “cheapskate chic“ is a lot of affluent people are now shopping differently, and theyre just
4、 like everybody, theyre decorating their homes, theyre spending a lot of time in stores like K Mart and Wal-Mart. And youre in there once or twice a week, so while youre in there picking up paper towels and toilet paper and toothpaste, you happen to kind of wander about the fashion aisles. C A water
5、shed event occurred when Sharon Stone wore that Gap T-shirt at the Oscars. She looked terrific. Everybody wondered what she had on and later they found out that she had on that $ 22 Gap turtleneck and that really resonated with a lot of consumers. Stores like the Gap, Sears, K Mart and target are ta
6、king full advantage, offering fashion mavens that perfect denim jacket or pair of jeans, T-shirt or little black dress or top to make them match with high fashion. D Retail Watcher said mass merchants are benefiting greatly from this “cheapskate chic“ trend. In 1998 mass retailers such as K Mart, Wa
7、l-Mart and Target accounted for 43% of all apparel sold. And thats up from 38% five years earlier. And these stores are stealing away customers from more upscale boutiques. In Targets case, or as the fashionably in crowd call it “Tarzhay“, about 80% of its customers are college educated and have a m
8、edium household income of $ 47, 000. Maybe thats why Targets offering Kashmir sweaters for the first time. 0. Most of exclusive stores are not competitive at present. (D) (分数:0.98)(1).When buying necessities, you may walk through the rows of shelves displaying fashionable articles.(分数:0.14)A.B.C.D.(
9、2).Mass stores try to make their design closely keep up with the trend.(分数:0.14)A.B.C.D.(3).Nowadays wealthy people get into the similar shopping habits to ordinaries.(分数:0.14)A.B.C.D.(4).Fashion people mix famous brand with bargained fare.(分数:0.14)A.B.C.D.(5).Famous star wearing cheap clothes to at
10、tend grand ceremony represents a new trend in fashion industry.(分数:0.14)A.B.C.D.(6).Stores like K Mart and Wal-Mart benefit a lot from the new trend in wardrobe.(分数:0.14)A.B.C.D.E.F.G.H.(7).In fashion peoples wardrobe designer labels might be put together with cheap clothes from mass retailers.(分数:0
11、.14)A.B.C.D.E.F.G.H.二、SECTION 2 (Questions(总题数:1,分数:1.00)YESTERDAYS IBM IBM was established in the state of New York on June 15, 1911 as the Computing-Tabulating-Recording Company. (0) . The U.S. Census Bureau knew its traditional methods of counting would not be adequate for measuring the populatio
12、n, so it sponsored a contest to find a more efficient means of tabulating census data. The winner was Herman Hollerith, whose Punch Card Tabulating Machine used an electric current to sense holes in punch cards and keep a running total of data. Capitalizing on his success, Hollerith formed the Tabul
13、ating Machine Co. in 1896. (8). The combined Computing-Tabulating-Recording Co., or C-T-R, manufactured and sold machinery ranging from commercial scales and industrial time recorders to meat and cheese slicers and, of course, tabulators and punch cards. Thomas J. Watson joined the company as genera
14、l manager in 1914, when the diversified businesses of C-T-R proved difficult to manage. Watson boosted company spirit with employee sports teams, family outings and a company band. He preached a positive outlook, and his favorite slogan was “THANK“. (9). He understood that the success of the client
15、translated into the success of his company, a belief that, years later, manifested itself in the popular saying, “Nobody was ever fired for buying from IBM.“ Within 11 months of joining C-T-R, Watson became its president. The company focused on providing large-scale, custom-built tabulating solution
16、s for businesses, leaving the market for small office products to others. During Watsons first four years, revenues doubled to $2 million. He also expanded the companys operations to Europe, South America, Asia and Australia. (10). During the Great Depression of the 1930s, IBM managed to grow while
17、the rest of the U.S. economy struggled. Watson took care of his employees. (11). While most businesses had shut down, Watson kept his workers busy producing new machines even while demand was slack. Thanks to the resulting large inventory of equipment, IBM was ready when the Social Security Act of 1
18、935 brought the company a landmark government contract to maintain employment records for 26 million people. It was called “the biggest accounting operation of all time, “ and it went so well that orders from other U.S. government departments quickly followed. IBMs size and success inspired numerous
19、 anti-trust actions. A 1952 suit by the Justice Department, settled four years later, forced IBM to sell its tabulating machinesat the time, IBM offered them only through leasesin order to establish a competing, used-machine market. Another federal anti-trust suit dragged on for thirteen years until
20、 the Justice Department concluded it was “without merit“ and dropped it in 1982. (12). A. IBM was among the first corporations to provide group life insurance, survivor benefits and paid vacations. B. IBM is the most prominent casualty of the technology spending freeze, but others are suffering as w
21、ell. C. In 1911, Holleriths company was merged with two others, Computing Scale Co. , of America and International Time Recording Co. D. But its origins can be traced back to 1890, when the United States was experiencing waves of immigration. E. IBMs competitors filed 20 anti-trusts during the 1970s
22、 and none succeeded. F. In 1924, to reflect C-T-Rs growing worldwide presence, its name was changed to International Business Machine Corp., or IBM. G. Watson also stressed the importance of the customer, a lasting IBM principle. EXAMPLE:The correct answer for blank (0) is D. (分数:1.00)A.B.C.D.A.B.C.
23、D.E.F.G.A.B.C.D.E.F.A.B.C.D.A.B.C.D.E.三、SECTION 3 (Question(总题数:1,分数:1.00)HOW THE CREDIT CARD CAPTURED AMERICA The proliferation of platinum American Express cards in the 1980s spawned rumors of an ultimate, highly exclusive, never publicized “Black Card“. Carried by billionaires, it reportedly allo
24、wed holders to demand private shopping sprees at the worlds most exclusive shops and to summon helicopters in the middle of Sahara. American express vehemently denies the existence of such a charge card. But the persistence of the myth suggests the social importance credit cards have for so many Ame
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- BEC 剑桥商务英语 中级 答案 解析 DOC
