[外语类试卷]BEC商务英语(中级)阅读模拟试卷95及答案与解析.doc
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1、BEC商务英语(中级)阅读模拟试卷 95及答案与解析 一、 PART ONE 0 Demand for Houses Still Running Ahead of Supply A House prices have risen again this month as demand continues to outstrip supply, according to the latest research from the property website Rightmove. co. u. k. National average asking prices asking prices ros
2、e by 2. 3 per cent in September, pushing the average house price through 150,000 and setting the annual rate at 22. 2 per cent. B “The shortage of properties conning on to the market in many areas means that it is still a sellers market, particularly in the lower and middle price brackets. This shor
3、tage and continuing demand are resulting in renewed increases in asking prices overall,“ Rightmoves Miles Shipside said. The findings support the latest survey from the nationwide Building Society, which showed prices rising at their highest rate since 1999, but contradict the latest Halifax survey
4、which reported a slight slowdown in annual inflation from 20. 8 to 18. 8 per cent. C “Its an intriguing situation, with two house price indexes showing the market grinding to a halt, and two showing that the train still has a good head of steam,“ said John Wriglesworth, an independent housing commen
5、tator. He said that property markets should remain “well supported“, thanks to “low interest rates, good affordability and low unemployment“. D At the end of last month, nation wide said house prices surged at their fastest rate for 13 years and said it saw no sign of demand for homes weakening. The
6、 price of the average home jumped by 2. 5 percent in August, for the second month in a row, to 110,890, a gain of 67 for every day of the month. Halifax contradicted that just days later, reporting that prices rose in August at their slowest rate for 10 months. It said house prices rose just 0. 2 pe
7、r cent, after jumping 1. 8 per cent in July, bringing the annual rise down to 18. 8 per cent. 1 It is still a sellers market. 2 Demand continues to outstrip supply. 3 According to Halifax, there is a slight slowdown in annual inflation. 4 There are two entirely different house price indexes. 5 The p
8、rice of average house jumped by 2. per cent in August. 6 The average house price is more than 150,000. 7 Shortage of properties and continuing demand are resulting in renewed increases in asking prices. 二、 PART TWO 7 An assistant store manager at Costco Wholesale Corp. (0) E against the retail chain
9、 Tuesday, alleging that she was passed over for a promotion (8). (9). The suit claims that females rarely get high-level management jobs. The lead attorney in the case, Brad Seligman, executive director of the nonprofit Impact Fund, is also suing Wal-Mart Stores Inc. , alleging that the Arkansas-bas
10、ed retailer pays women lower wages and promotes them less than their male counterparts. (10). But it is stalled in an appeals court, and the merits have not been litigated. The Costco case concerns Shirley “Rae“ Ellis of Aurora, Colo, who was hired six years ago amid what she says were promises of a
11、 promotion within a year from her assistant manager post to an in-store manager at one of the chains 320 U. S. -based outlets. (11). “I would put my management ability against any manager,“ she said. Issaquah, Wash.-based Costco, which employs about 103,000 people worldwide, did not immediately retu
12、rn calls for comment. The suit, which focuses on in-store assistant manager and manager positions, claims that 50 percent of the chains employees are female, but the management “is virtually all male. “ The suit says only 12 percent of Costcos store managers and two of 30 upper-level executives are
13、women. Ellis is seeking unspecified damages, including lost wages, and wants the company to post its managerial positions to its employees. No hearing has been set for a judge to determine whether the lawsuit will represent all current and former female employees (12) . Assistant managers receive ab
14、out $65,000 or more, and managers get more than $100,000 plus bonuses, according to Seligman. He said the suit was about “changing the way Costco does business. “ Costco shares rose 39 cents to $41.21 Tuesday on the Nasdaq Stock Market. A who might have been wrongly passed over for a promotion to as
15、sistant manager or manager B that case, which was granted class-action status, represents as many as 1. 6 million current and former female Wal-Mart employees C because the companys policies discriminate against women in upper management D she said the retailer does not post job offerings for its ma
16、nagerial posts E filed a federal civil rights lawsuit F obviously the managers don t promote female employees G she was supported by most of the female employees in the company H The suit seeks class-action status to represent what the plaintiffs lawyers say could be 650 women 三、 PART THREE 12 Read
17、the article below about the Early Developments in American Economy and questions. For each question (13-18), mark one letter (A, B, C or D) on your Answer Sheet. Early American industries depended largely on skilled artisans working in small shops to serve a local market. But the Industrial Revoluti
18、on that started in England during the 18th century did not take long to cross the Atlantic. It brought many changes to American industry between 1776 and 1860. Because labor was scarce in the United States and wages were high, employers welcomed any new method that could reduce the requirement for l
19、abor. One key development was the introduction of the factory system, which gathered many workers together in one workplace and produced goods for distribution over a wide area. The first factory in the United States is generally dated to 1793, when an Englishman named Samuel Slater came to America
20、to build a cotton cloth factory. He built the machinery from memory, because it was a crime to carry factory plant out of England. The success of Slaters factory started a process of change that turned the northeastern region of the United States into an important manufacturing center. The making of
21、 textiles also meant increased demand for cotton, grown in the southern region for the United States. As a result, the nation became a major cotton producer. Another important development was the “American system“ of mass production, which originated in the firearms industry about 1800. The new syst
22、em required precision engineering to create parts that were interchangeable. This, in return, allowed the final product to be assembled in stages, each worker specializing in a specific operation. Just as Slaters new factory system was being introduced, an American named Eli Whitney made cotton prod
23、uction more efficient by inventing a machine the cotton gin-that rapidly removed the seeds from the bolls of cotton. Removing the seeds by hand was a difficult task; Whitneys machine made the job almost easy. Whitney also began manufacturing rifles in a new way. Guns had always been made by gun make
24、rs working in their homes or small shops. Because the guns were handmade individually, a part from one gun would not necessarily fit another gun. Whitney began making guns with machinery, so that all the parts were the same in each gun. This method of manufacturing goods in a factory, with interchan
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