题目
A.demand
B. rewind
C. remind
第2题
The biggest mistake a workplace leader can make with office culture is failing to devise one at all. How do you know if your office culture is helping, or hurting, your employees, and as a result your bottom line? Designing a thoughtful(周到的)office culture is so important for a new company. Here are some aspects where a leader should be careful not to make mistakes. A cohesive (和谐一致的) office culture starts at the top and is built with intention. Face book’s founder projects a laid -back vibe (氛围). That sets the tone for his $200 billion company, Where he visits weekly Q and A sessions from his staff, loads up the perks, and courts a young team that closely mirrors his target market, positioning Face book are especially designed for their wants and needs.
Strict dress code or early start time may seem like an easy way to build professionalism (职业化)in your workplace, but is there a good reason for it? Strict requirements that work in a law office may erode the work ethic at a hip tech startup. Make sure to back up your rules with reason. For example, at Culture Studio, a T -shirt design and printing company, you’d better believe there’s no place for ties. Employees are encouraged to dress down in their brand’s merchandise or their competitors’ Leadership shouldn’t abandon culture development there. Good employees tend to be goaloriented over-achievers, so put your budget on that with team -building activities, contests, and incentives for the best. Think critically about the ideal employees for your team, what makes the tick, and how you can support them, within and outside of their role in the company’s goals.
Setting the tone for your workplace starts with each hire and at every level in the company. At digital marketing firm Mabbly, every hiring decision is made with the company’s vision in mind: a creative and young team of approachable(伸手可及的) guides that help clients to understand the seemingly mysterious world of PR public relations in this internet age.
26. What is the main topic of this article?
A. How to write business emails and memos.
B. How to design a thoughtful office culture.
C. How to set rules for employees to follow.
27. The example of Facebook is to show().
A. one should built a cohesive office culture on purpose
B. how you can use Q and A sessions from your staff
C. office culture must reflect your own wants and needs
28. It is suggested that one should()in the third paragraph.
A. set the tone for one’s company
B. drop strict dress code or early start time
C. back up office rules with reason
29. What does “put your budget on that” means in the fourth paragraph?() .
A. To withdraw the money.
B. To pay more attention to it.
C. To invest money and efforts.
30. Mabbly is targeted in().
A. helping clients to understand the PR world
B. attracting as many investments as possible
C. making a link between selling and buying
第3题
1.A.ship B.wool C.wood D.steel
2.A.entertainment B.entertain C.entertaining D.entertainer
3.A.pessimistic B.passive C.optimistic D.persuasive
4.A.Texas B.Illinois C.California D.Sydney
5.A.plays B.pictures C.novels D.games
第4题
Journey to Australia
Australia is one of the famous Oceanian countries. The country is famous for its()production and seashore tour. As the climate there is warm and comfortable, many people spend vocations there every year.
I’m a super fan of water(), so I choose it as my destination.
In Australia, the sky is bluer than blue, the clouds are whiter than white, all the local people enjoy an()and active life. They also show their kindness and enthusiasm to the tourists.
The first step should be()Opera which is among the most brilliant and splendid architectures in the world. Many world-class()are put on in it .The surface and shape of it is like a seashell with glory decorations inside. Then Melbourne is a good choice to be as the next step. In Melbourne, skin screen(粉底) is a must to take with as the sunshine is upset and may burn your skin. The most attractive thing to me is the Australia Open(澳网公开赛),which is one of the biggest world-class tennis competition. Many great players such as Roddick Federer and its local player Hewitt etc. gather to compete. It S really a feast for the eyes.
1.A. ship
B. wool
C. wood
D. steel
2.A. entertainment
B. entertain
C. entertaining
D. entertainer
3.A. pessimistic
B. passive
C. optimistic
D. persuasive
4.A. Texas
B. llinois
C. California
D. Sydney
第5题
The 64,000-dollar question, if you have come up with a device which you believe to be the answer to the energy crisis or you've invented a lawnmower which cuts grass with a jet of water (not so daft, someone has invented one), is how to ensure you're the one to reap the rewards of your ingenuity. How will all you garden shed boffins out there keep others from capitalizing on your ideas and lining their pockets at your expense?
One of the first steps to protect your interest is to patent your invention. That can keep it out of the grasp of the pirates for at least the next 20 years. And for this reason inventors in their droves beat a constant trail from all over the country to the doors of an anonymous grey-fronted building just behind London's Holborn to try and patent their devices.
The building houses the Patent Office. It's an ant heap of corridors, offices and filing rooms—a sorting house and storage depot for one of the world's biggest and most varied collections of technical data. Some ten million patents — English and foreign — are listed there.
File after file, catalogue after catalogue detail the brain-children of inventors down the centuries, from a 1600's machine gun designed to fire square bullets at infidels and round ones at Christians, to present-day laser, nuclear and computer technology.
The first letters' patent were granted as long ago as 1449 to a Flemish craftsman by the name of John Utynam. The letters, written in Latin, are still on file at the office. They were granted by King Henry Ⅵ and entitled Utynam to import into this country his knowledge of making stained glass windows in order to install such windows at Eton College.
Present-day patents procedure is a more sophisticated affair than getting a go-ahead note from the monarch. These days the strict procedures governing whether you get a patent for your revolutionary mouse-trap or solar-powered back-scratcher have been reduced to a pretty exact science.
From start to finish it will take around two and a half years and cost £ 165 for the inventor to gain patent protection for his brainchild. That's if he's lucky. By no means all who apply to the Patent Office, which is a branch of the Department of Trade, get a patent.
A key man at the Patent Office is Bernard Partridge, Principal Examiner (Administration), who boils down to one word the vital ingredient any inventor needs before he can hope to overcome the many hurdles in the complex procedure of obtaining a patent — "ingenuity".
People take out a patent because they want to______.
A.keep their ideas from being stolen
B.reap the rewards of somebody else's ingenuity
C.visit the patent office building
D.come up with more new devices
第6题
A.One of the biggest
B.Of the biggest one
C.The biggest one
D.There are the biggest
第7题
(作文)1.What is your biggest dream?
2.Why do you have it? For how long have you got it?
3.What are your plans to achieve your dream?
第8题
A.A.True
B.B.False
C.C.Not Given
第9题
A.One of the biggest
B.Of the biggest one
C.The biggest one
D.There are the biggest
第10题
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