The shopkeepers are complaining that business has been reduced to a () of what it wa
A.fraction
B.section
C.portion
D.trifle
A.fraction
B.section
C.portion
D.trifle
Which of the following is NOT true about credit cards?
A.It can encourage great sums of consumption
B.Shopkeepers, among others object to the use of credis cards because they add on the cost of the merchandise
C.Credit card holders actually pay for their shopping goods afer the purchase has been completed
D.The national economy enjoys extensive growth because of the use of credit cards
What is the main topic of the passage?A.Advantages and disadvantages of credit cards
B.Economic growth hacked up by the use of credit cards
C.Arguments against the use of ecredit cards
D.Credit cards make life easier
What are the arguments against the use of credit cards?A.It may lead to the overgrowth of the national economy.
B.The delay in the payment of shopping goods may bring damage to shopkeeprers’profits.
C.Some people may intentionally purchase goods that they cannot possbly aford
D.Those who pay by cash at the purehase will have to pay for the cost added to the product as the interest charge of credit cards
The writers purpose in this passage is to____.A.argue against credit card
B.deseribe a phenomenon
C.introduce us the disadvantage and advantage of credit card
D.propose an original viewpoint
请帮忙给出每个问题的正确答案和分析,谢谢!
Junk Hunting
淘旧货
Anyone who thinks exploration always involves long journeys should have his head examined.Or, better, he should put on his oldest clothes and go off in search of a junk shop. There are three kinds—one full of discarded books, one full of discarded Government equipment, and one full of discarded anything.A junk shop may have four walls and a roof,or it may be no more than a trestle-table in an open air market;but there is one infallible test:no genuine junk shopkeeper will ever pester you to make up your mind and buy something. And you are no true junk shopper if you march purposefully round the shop as if you knew exactly what you wanteD.You must browse, gently chewing the cud of your idle thoughts, and nibbling here and there as a sight or a touch of the goods that lie about you. Yet you must also possess a penetrating glance, darting your eyes about you to spot the treasures that may lurk beneath the rubbish. This is what makes junk shopping such a satisfying voyage of exploration. You never know what interesting and unexpected thing you may discover next. For in a true junk shop, not even the proprietor is always quite sure what his dusty stock conceals. There is always the chance that you may pick up a first edition, a pair of exotic ear-rings, a piece of early Wedgwood china, or a cine camera—and possess it for the price of fifty cigarettes.
But this kind of treasure hunt is only a sideline to the true junk shopper. The real attraction lies in finding something that catches your own especial fancy, though everybody else may pass it by. An ancient tarnished clock, whose brass beneath your hands will shine anew; empty boxes that you can see transformed into the framework of a bookcase; an old bound volume of magazines of three-quarters of a century ago, which will shed strange sidelights on the ways our great-grandparents behaved and looked at life.
When you begin junk shopping, half the attraction is that you go with absolutely no intention of buying anything. You spend your first couple of Saturday afternoons ambling around among dusty shelves, savouring a page or a chapter as you please, or fingering the piles of oddments that litter counters or tables. At first, be warned, don't try to buy. You may, indeed you should, ask the price of this and that; but just to give you an idea of what the junk shopkeeper thinks you might be willing to pay him.
Later, you will find yourself returning a second and third time to something that has caught your fancy. And when you can hold back no longer, bargaining begins in earnest. This is the other great attraction of the true junk shop. Not only may it hold every conceivable product from every imaginable country; it also transports you to the mediaeval market place or the oriental bazaar, where no price is fixed until buyer and seller have waged a friendly war together, and proved each other's mettle. And this is where your old clothes become important: let no one take you for a rich connoisseur, or you will find yourself paying a rich man's prices. And avoid at all costs the suspicion of an American accent, or in spite of the good nature of all good junk shopkeepers, you will be for it.
The author equates junk shopping with exploration because both involve______.
A.traveling long distances
B.careful preparation
C.a spirit of adventure
D.discovering unheard of places