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David: Good morning.I’d like to make an appointment to see Mr Bond this morning, pleas

e.

Nurse: I'm sorry.I don't have any appointments this morning.

David: Oh , dear.I'm feeling really ill.

Nurse: What's the matter?

David: I feel terrible.I've got a headache, backache and a sore throat.

Nurse: Have you got a temperature?

David: I think so.I was hot and cold all night and I was sick this morning.

Nurse: You feel awful , don't you? Do you think you've got a flu?

David: Yes, probably.Or an infection in my throat.

Nurse: OK.I can give you an emergency appointment.Can you come at the end of the morning? Come at eleven thirty and wait until a doctor is free.

David: OK.Thank you.

1、David has got a headache , earache and backache.()

2、David felt hot and cold during the night.()

3、The nurse thinks David has an infection in his throat.()

4、Mr Bond is free at 11 : 00.()

5、David gets an appointment finally.()

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更多“David: Good morning.I’d like t…”相关的问题
第1题
It’s a good idea ______ aloud in the morning.A: to readB: readC: readingD: reads

It’s a good idea ______ aloud in the morning.

A: to read

B: read

C: reading

D: reads

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第2题
Clerk: Good morning. Can I help you?Mr. Smith: Yes, I'd like a ticket to New York 9:15 tom

Clerk: Good morning. Can I help you?

Mr. Smith: Yes, I'd like a ticket to New York 9:15 tomorrow morning.

Clerk: ______?

Mr. Smith: Single, please.

A.Single or two

B.Single or return

C.Single or double

D.Single or back

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第3题
– Good morning. Far East Logistics Company.(). – Good morning. This is Maggie Bonner. I would like to know more about your freight forwarding business.

A、Who is that calling?

B、What do you want?

C、What can I do for you

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第4题
Salesman: Good morning. Planning to buy a new car today? Customer: ______. Salesman: What
kind of car are you looking for? Customer: Something that has enough room for my family.

A.I'm just looking around

B.I'm just looking everywhere

C.I'm just looking here and there

D.I'm just looking all the cars

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第5题
Salesman: Good morning. Planning to buy a new car today? Customer: ______. Salesman: What
kind of car are you looking for? Customer: Something that has enough room for my family.

A.I'm just looking around

B.I'm just looking everywhere

C.I'm just looking here and there

D.I'm just looking all the cars

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第6题
阅读理解:阅读下面的短文,根据文章内容进行判断,正确为“T”,错误为“F”。Last week Polly decided

阅读理解:阅读下面的短文,根据文章内容进行判断,正确为“T”,错误为“F”。

Last week Polly decided to give up her job. She is fed up with it, she finds it boring and she wants to change her career. Her employers, ‘Lucky Shops’, are not too bad. They give her quite good benefits, such as free lunches and paid holidays, but she does not get on with her boss. Her salary is quite good, but, because she is not happy, she wants to look for something else. Last Saturday she talked about it with David and Xiaoyan. They agreed with her. They said she should resign and try another career, so she took action. She looked at advertisements in the paper and picked out three jobs that looked interesting. She had to write out her CV to apply for a job, and she did that on Wednesday evening. Xiaoyan helped her with it. She has a lot of experience of selling and good business training but is worried about her lack of experience in some areas.

1. Polly has decided to ask for a higher salary.{T、F}

2. She doesn't like her boss.{T、F}

3. Her friends agreed that she should resign.{T、F}

4. She has no experience of selling.{T、F}

5. She's worried about her lack of experience in some areas.{T、F}

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第7题
根据下面材料,回答题。 U. S. Life Expectancy Hits New HighLife expectancy rates in the Un

根据下面材料,回答题。

U. S. Life Expectancy Hits New High

Life expectancy rates in the United States are at an all-time high, with people born in 2005 projected to live for nearly 78 years, a new federal study finds.

The finding reflects a continuing trend of increasing life expectancy that began in 1955, when the average American lived to be 69.6 years old. By 1995, life expectancy was 75.8 years, and by2005, it had risen to 77.9 years, according to the report released Wednesday.

"This is good news." said report co-author Donna Hoyert, a health scientist at the National Center for Health Statistics. "It&39;s even better news that it is a continuation of trends, so it is a long period of continuing improvement."

Despite the upward trend, the United States still has a lower life expectancy than some 40 other countries, according to the U. S. Census (人口普查)Bureau. The country with the longest life expectancy is Andorra at 83.5 years, followed by Japan, Macau, San Marino and Singapore.

Much of the increase owes to declining death rates from the three leading causes of death in the country-heart disease, cancer and stroke.

In addition, in 2005, the U. S. death rate dropped to an all-time low of less than- 800 deaths per100,000.

Dr. David Katz, director of the Prevention Research Center at Yale University School of Medicine, said, "News that life expectancy is increasing is, of course, good. But the evidence we have suggests that there is more chronic disease than ever in the U. S."

Adding years to life is a good thing, Katz said. "But adding vital life to years is at least equally important. If we care about living well, and not just longer, we still have our work cutout for us." he said.

Since 1955, life expectancy rates in the U. S. have ___________. 查看材料

A.moved up and down

B.been declining

C.remained steady

D.been on the rise

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第8题
听力原文:W: Good morning.M: Morning, can I help you?W: Yes, I' d like to join the library.

听力原文:W: Good morning.

M: Morning, can I help you?

W: Yes, I' d like to join the library. We' re new to the district you see.

M: Certainly. Well all we need is some sort of identification with your name and address on it.

W: Oh dear. We just moved, you see, and everything has my old address.

M: A driving licence, perhaps?

W: No, I don' t drive.

M: Your husband' s would do.

W: Yas, but his licence will stir have the old address on it.

M: Perhaps you have a letter addressed to you at your new house?

W: No, I' m afraid not. We' ye only been there a few days you see and no one' s written to us yet.

M: What about your bank book?

W: That' s just the same. Oh dear, and I did want to get some books out this weekend. We' re going on holiday to relax after the move, you see, and I wanted to take something with me to read.

M: Well, I' m sorry, but we can' t possibly issue tickets without some form. of identification. What about your passport?

W: What? Oh yes, how silly of me. I've just got a new one and it does have our new address. I' ve just been to book our tickets se I have it on me. Just a minute. Here you are.

M: Thank you. Well, that' s all right. Now if you' d like to ge and choose your books your tickets will be ready for you when you come back to the desk to have them stamped out.

W: Oh, thank you. Er, how many books am I allowed to take out?

M: You can take four books out at a time and you also get two tickets to take out magazines or periodicals. Newspapers, I' m afraid can' t be taken out; they have to be read here.

W: Oh that's fine. Thank you very much.

(23)

A.write down one's name and address

B.show some kind of identification with one' s name and address on it

C.give one' s address

D.give one' s driving license

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第9题
The Power of a Good Name One summer day my father sent me to buy some wire and fencing to put aroun

The Power of a Good Name

One summer day my father sent me to buy some wire and fencing to put around our barn to pen up the bull. At 16, I liked nothing better than getting behind the wheel of our truck and driving into town on the old mill road. Water from the mill's wheel sprayed in the sunshine making a rainbow over the canal and I often stopped there on my way to bathe and cool off for a spell—natural air conditioning. The sun was so hot, I did not need a towel as I was dry by the time I climbed the clay banks and crossed the road ditch to the truck. Just before town, the road shot along the sea where I would collect seashells or gather seaweed beneath the giant crane unloading the ships. This trip was different, though. My father had told me I'd have to ask for credit at the store.

It was 1976, and the ugly shadow of racism was still a fact of life. I'd seen my friends ask for credit and then stand, head down, while a storeowner enquired into whether they were "good for it". Many store clerks watched black youths with the assumption that they were thieves every time they even went into a grocery.

My family was honest. We paid our debts. But just before harvest, all the money flowed out. There were no new deposits at the bank. Cash was short. At Davis Brothers' General Store, Buck Davis stood behind the register, talking to a middle-aged farmer. Buck was a tall, weathered man in a red hunting shirt and I nodded as I passed him on my way to the hardware section to get a container of nails, a coil of binding wire and fencing. I pulled my purchases up to the counter and placed the nails in the tray of the scale, saying carefully, "I need to put this on credit." My brow was moist with nervous sweat and I wiped it away with the back of my arm.

The farmer gave me an amused, cynical look, but Buck's face didn't change. "Sure," he said easily, reaching for his booklet where he kept records for credit. I gave a sigh of relief. "Your daddy is always good for it." He turned to the farmer. "This here is one of James Williams' sons. They broke the mold when they made that man."

The farmer nodded in a neighborly way. I was filled with pride. "James Williams' son." Those three words had opened a door to an adult's respect and trust.

As I heaved the heavy freight into the bed of the truck, I did so with ease, feeling like a stronger man than the one that left the farm that morning. I had discovered that a good name could furnish a capital of good will of great value. Everyone knew what to expect from a Williams: a decent person who kept his word and respected himself too much to do wrong. My great grandfather may have been sold as a slave at auction, but this was not an excuse to do wrong to others. Instead my father believed the only way to honor him was through hard work and respect for all men.

We children—eight brothers and two sisters--could enjoy our good name, unearned, unless and until we did something to lose it. We had an interest in how one another behaved and our own actions as well, lest we destroy the name my father had created. Our good name was and still is the glue that holds our family tight together.

The desire to honor my father's good name spurred me to become the first in our family to go to university. I worked my way through college as a porter at a four-star hotel. Eventually, that good name provided the initiative to start my own successful public relations firm in Washington, D.C.America needs to restore a sense of shame in its neighborhoods. Doing drugs, spending all your money at the liquor store, stealing, or getting a young woman pregnant with no intent to marry her should induce a deep sense of embarrassment. But it doesn't. Nearly one out of three births in America is to a single mother. Many of these children will grow up without the security and guidance they need to become honorable members of society.

Once the social ties and mutual obligations of the family melt away, communities fall apart. While the population has increased only 40 percent since 1960, violent crime in America has increased a staggering 550 percent —and we've become exceedingly used to it. Teen drug use has also risen. In one North Carolina County, police arrested 73 students from 12 secondary schools for dealing drugs, some of them right in the classroom.

Meanwhile, the small signs of civility and respect that hold up civilization are vanishing from schools, stores and streets. Phrases like "yes, ma'am", "no, sir", "thank you" and "please" get a yawn from kids today who are encouraged instead by cursing on television and in music. They simply shrug off the rewards of a good name.

The good name passed on by my father and maintained to this day by my brothers and sisters and me is worth as much now as ever. Even today, when I stop into Buck Davis' shop or my hometown barbershop for a haircut, I am still greeted as James Williams' son. My family's good name did pave the way for me.

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第10题
David () on a new database at the moment.A. currently workB. is currently workingC. c

David () on a new database at the moment.

A. currently work

B. is currently working

C. currently working

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第11题
She returned home. She was () home all morning.

A.on

B.in

C.to

D.at

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