We would like to make __that we would accept 30days D/P terms for your present order.
A.clear
B.it is clear
C.that clear
D.it clear
A.clear
B.it is clear
C.that clear
D.it clear
We would like to thank them for their () and understanding.
A.passion
B.patience
C.profession
A.check
B.would like to
C.seems
D.higher
A.anesthesia
B.sighing
C.framework
D.disable person
A.further
B.far
C.more far
D.ahead
A.I'm afraid not, because I have to go to an important meeting.
B.Of course not. I have no ide
C.No, I can't.
D.That's all set.
To: Cisco Systems employees
From: Stella Joyce, Event Planning Committee
Date: Friday, October 18
Subject: the 7th Annual System Administrator Appreciation Day
Each year, on System Administrator Appreciation Day, we pause to recognize many contributions that have made by our system administrators during the year. This year's System Administrator Appreciation Day will be held on December 10 and not December 5 as announced earlier. The Event Planning Committee is looking for your help to make this year's celebration the best yet.
We are looking for ways to increase employee involvement in the event. For instance, would you like to help schedule the event program or bring food? Would you have time to set up decorations? Or perhaps you'd be willing to help by wiping off the tables, disposing of garbage, storing leftover food and removing decorations after the event.
An informational session will be held on Thursday, November 24 in room 208. If you would like to volunteer to help out at the 7th annual System Administrator Appreciation Day, please contact Ms. Becky Walls at 504-2961.
If you are unable to attend the meeting but, have ideas you would like to share, please e-mail me at stella@cisco.com.
What is NOT mentioned as an activity for volunteers?
A.Determining the order of events
B.Decorating a room
C.Buying gifts for employees
D.Helping clean up
(56)
A.hot
B.warm
C.cool
D.heated
When we got there, the party was already in full swing. They had a bar in a separate room in the house and roommate and I walked right over to it as soon as we saw it. And man, did they have cheap drinks So we were like "yeah let's have a few." Of course at that point we weren't thinking about how we were going to get back to our dorm.
After two whiskey sours and two screw drivers, I was gone. I didn't realize that I was drunk until I hit my head on (the hard part of the couch) and felt absolutely no pain. One of my friends was trying to take my money away so I couldn't buy any more to drink. Not that it would have mattered anyway, as I was sneaking sips from other people' s drinks by then.
An hour later, I was completely drunk, and we made a group decision to leave the party. One problem, though, no one knew how to get home, so I drunkenly said" I know how to get home. Thanks for the great party!"
Of course, no one offered to walk us back. I guess they though that 8 girls, including 2 who were completely trashed, would be fine walking alone back to campus. And I guess they believed my drunken rambling, who knows.
Luckily, I have a pretty good sense of direction and we walked the 4 to 6 blocks back to campus. My roommate and I couldn't walk that well so the walk seemed to take forever. Once we got back to campus, however, we met up with this guy who was going to take us to another frat party just off campus (across the street from campus, actually). I was all pumped to go but--first things first---all of us had to pee.
So we stopped in a nearby dorm. One of my friends went in first and ended up overflowing the toilet (the funny thing is that she was stone sober). My drunk roommate and I then decided that we had to really pee and that we would just go back to our dorm.
So the two of us wandered back to our dorm, making a short stop at the emergency
phone to call a friend and tell hex that we were drunk. After that, we managed to get back to our dorm, without any problems.
1.When the author and his fellows got there, the party____.
A.had ended
B.was having reached a very active stage
C.was ending
D.was just beginning
2.That night, the author was____.
A.seriously drunk.
B.completely lost
C.out of touch with his fellows
D.all of the above
3.What happened to them on their way back to campus?____
A.It took them a long time to get to the campus.
B.They met another guy who would like to take them to another party.
C.He felt like relieving nature.
D.All of the above.
4.Who was not drunk according to the passage?____
A.The author herself.
B.A girl who ended up ore, owing the toilet.
C.The author's drunk roommate.
D.All of them.
5.From the context, the word "dry'' in line two means____.
A.not wet
B.lacking humidity,
C.producing
D.thirstdull
So much is certain: that we would have doctors and preachers, lawyers and defendants, marriages and births; but our spiritual outlook would be different. We would lay less stress on "facts and figures" and more on a good memory, on applied psychology, and on the capacity of a man to get along with his fellow citizens. If our educational system were fashioned after its bookless past we would have the most democratic form. of "college" imaginable. Among the people whom we like to call savages all knowledge inherited by tradition is shared by all; it is taught to every member of the tribe so that in this respect everybody is equally equipped for life.
It is the ideal condition of the "equal start" which only our most progressive forms of modem education try to regain. In primitive cultures the obligation to seek and to receive the traditional instruction is binding to all. There are no "illiterates"--if the term can be applied to people without a script--while our own compulsory school attendance became law in Germany in 1642, in France in 1806, and in England 1876, and is still non-existent in a number of "civilized" nations. This shows how long it was before we deemed it necessary to make sure that 'all our children could share in the knowledge accumulated by the "happy few" during the past centuries.
Education in the wilderness is not a matter of monetary means. All are entitled to an equal start. There is none of the hurry which, in our society, often hampers the full development of a growing personality. There, a child grows up under the ever-present attention of his parents, therefore the jungles and the grasslands know of no "juvenile delinquency". No necessity of making a living away from home results in neglect of children and no father is confronted with his inability to "buy" an education for his child.
The word "interest" in the first paragraph most probably means ______.
A.pleasure
B.returns
C.share
D.knowledge