剑桥商务英语高级-78及答案解析.doc
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1、剑桥商务英语高级-78 及答案解析(总分:100.00,做题时间:90 分钟)一、READING(总题数:0,分数:0.00)二、PART ONE(总题数:1,分数:8.00)A.Shopping goods arent bought very often, are bought only after the consumer has compared their features with those of competing brands, and are found in only a few stores in one area. These goods usually have a
2、higher unit price than convenience goods, and an individual salesperson, rather than a cashier, may be needed to sell them. Examples of shopping goods are automobiles, furniture, mens suits, ladies wear, shoes, and major appliances.B.Specialty goods like prestige automobiles, photographic equipment,
3、 fine jewelry, and high-fashion clothing and furniture are bought by consumers after a special shopping effort. They are bought infrequently and are generally available only in exclusive outlets. Theyre usually high-priced, but price isnt the main consideration of a consumer buying them. A consumer
4、is often willing to go out of the way to find a certain brand.Specialty goods prove the point that goods are often considered not just for their physical qualities but also for the economic utility, ego enhancement, status, and satisfaction they carry with them. For example, when people buy a new ca
5、r, they may want it not just for basic transportation but also for recognition, status, or prestige.Youve probably figured out that this classification of consumer goods is far from rigid. It may differ according to buyers intent or wishes. As consumers incomes and buying habits change, or as prices
6、 drop, goods shift from one classification to another. Usually they shift downward, from the specialty to the shopping, or from the shopping to the convenience goods category. Television sets became shopping goods years ago. When microwave ovens first came on the market, they were regarded by many a
7、s an expensive new toy a kind of specialty goods-for the rich. Now theyre considered indispensable shopping goods by working couples and single people who buy them to save cooking time.C.Durable goods can be further classified as either consumer goods or industrial goods, each of which requires a di
8、fferent set of marketing strategies. Consumer goods are used by the consumer or household that buys them and come in a ready-to-use form that calls for no further industrial or commercial processing. On the basis of how much effort a consumer takes to obtain them, consumer goods can be further subdi
9、vided into (1) convenience goods, (2) shopping goods, and (3) specialty goods.D.Durable goods have physical qualities and uses that permit them to last a relatively long time, even while being used. Theyre designed to be used up over an extended period of time and are made of materials that will tak
10、e considerable wear and tear. For example, you probably own such durable goods as a car, tape deck, cassette player, TV set, or stereo that should remain usable for several yearsor at least until the warranty runs out. Houses are built to last thirty to fifty years or more. Refrigerators and mattres
11、ses both have a life expectancy of about twenty years, and quality jewelry, silverware, china, and furniture are frequently handed down from one generation to the next.The fact that a product is durable influences its whole marketing strategy. Obviously, goods like these are packaged differently, so
12、ld more personally and aggressively, and priced higher than a tube of toothpaste or a bottle of shampoo.E.Instead of being bought by the ultimate consumer, industrial goods are used by businesses to produce other goods or to provide services to consumers. These goods are usually bought by institutio
13、ns such as manufacturers, utilities, government agencies, contractors, wholesalers, retailers, hospitals, and schools that use them in producing their own products or services. Buyers of these goods usually provide prospective suppliers with a description of the product or service and request that b
14、ids or price quotations be submitted. The buying decision is usually based on technical performance, cost, or expected monetary gain.There are many types of industrial goods, but the most common ones are (a) raw materials, (b) component parts, (c) installations, (d) transportation systems, (e) tools
15、, (f) equipment, (g) materials, and (h) supplies.(分数:8.00)(1).This kind of goods have physical qualities and uses that permit them to last a long rime.(分数:1.00)填空项 1:_(2).This kind of goods are used by businesses to produce other goods or to provide services to consumers.(分数:1.00)填空项 1:_(3).Theyre u
16、sually high-priced, but price isnt the main consideration of a consumer buying them.(分数:1.00)填空项 1:_(4).They are used by the consumer or household that buys them and come in a ready-to-use form that calls for no further industrial or commercial processing.(分数:1.00)填空项 1:_(5).The fact that a product
17、is durable influences its whole marketing strategy.(分数:1.00)填空项 1:_(6).These goods usually have a higher unit price than convenience goods, and an individual salesperson rather than a cashier, may be needed to sell them.(分数:1.00)填空项 1:_(7).These goods prove the point that goods are often considered
18、not just for their physical quality but also for the economic utility.(分数:1.00)填空项 1:_(8).Buyers of these goods usually provide prospective suppliers with a description of the product.(分数:1.00)填空项 1:_三、PART TWO(总题数:1,分数:6.00)Diance Dunlap was annoyed when a local laundry charged more to wash and iro
19、n her white blouses than to clean her husbands white shirts. Actually, she was more than just annoyed. (9) . Twenty-one of them quoted higher prices for blouses. Then she did an experiment. She cut the label out of a blouse, sewed in the label for a mans Shirt, and took the blouse to the cleaner alo
20、ng with three of her husbands shirts. The cleaner charged her $1.25. (10) . The cleaner charged her $2.25. Dunlap feels that the cleaners pricing is unethicalthat they are discriminating against women and charging arbitrarily higher prices.(11) . The president of the Association of Launderers and Cl
21、eaners in Dunlaps state has a different view. “The automated equipment we use fits a certain range of standardized shirts,“ he said. “A lot of womens blouses have different kinds of trim, different kinds of buttons, and lots of braid work, and it all has to be hand-finished. If it involves hand-fini
22、shing, we charge more.“ In other words, some cleaners charge more for doing womens blouses because the average cost is higher than the average cost for mens shirts.(12) . A consumer-protection specialist in the Attorney Generals office in Dunlaps state said that there were no federal or stare laws t
23、o regulate what the cleaners could charge. (13) . Many firms face the same problem of how to set prices when the costs are different to serve different customers. For example, poor, inner-city consumers often pay higher prices for food. (14) . Some firms dont like to charge different consumers diffe
24、rent prices, but they also dont want to charge everyone a higher average priceto cover the expense of serving high-cost customers. A. Later she did the same thing, but with a blouse that had the original label. B. Of course, the cost of cleaning and ironing any specific shirt may not be higher or lo
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- 剑桥商务英语 高级 78 答案 解析 DOC
