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发表于 2016-7-4 14:07:34
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C. successive
D. succeeding
26. A. letting
B. setting
C. permitting
D. allowing
27. A. site
B. spot
C. location
D. place
28. A. state
B. stage
C. start
D. sponsor
29. A. thinks
B. reckons
C. considers
D. calculates
30. A. For instance
B. As a result
C. In brief
D.On the whole
31. A. in time
B.in part
C. in case
D. in common
32. A. Since
B. Because
C. As for
D. Because of
33. A. amount
B. account
C.accord
D. acclaim
34. A. However
B. Whatever
C. Whenever
D. Wherever
35. A. greatly
B.handsomely
C. meaningfully
D.significantly
36. A. live
B.living
C. alive
D.lively
37. A. Until
B.Unless
C.Whether
D. Once
38. A. incomes
B. interests
C. revenues
D. returns
39. A. cases
B.conditions
C. chances
D.circumstances
40. A. safe
B.risky
C. tempting
D. feasible
Section Ⅲ
Reading Comprehension
Directions:
There are fourpassages in this section. Each passage is followed by some questions orunfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices marked A, B,C,and D. You should decide on the best choice and blacken the correspondingletter on ANSWER SHEET 1
. (40points)
Questions41 to 45 are based on the following passage:
Last weekend Kyle MacDonald in Montrealthrew a party to celebrate the fact that he got his new home in exchange for ared paper clip. Starting a year ago, MacDonald bartered the clip forincreasingly valuable stuff, including a camp stove and free rent in a Phoenix flat. Havingannounced his aim (the house) in advance, MacDonald likely got a boost fromtechies eager to see the Internet pass this daring test of its networkingpower. “My whole motto (座右铭) was 'Start small, think big, and have fun‘, ” says MacDonald, 26, “Ireally kept my effort on the creative side rather than the business side. ”
Yet as odd as the MacDonald exchange was, barter is now big businesson the Net. This year more than 400,000 companies worldwide will exchange some$10 billion worth of goods and services on a growing number of barter sites.These Web sites allow companies to trade products for a virtual currency, whichthey can use to buy goods from other members. In Iceland, garment-maker Kapusalansells a third of its output on the booming Vidskiptanetid exchange, earningvirtual money that it uses to buy machinery and pay part of employee salaries.The Troc-services exchange in Franceoffers more than 4,600 services, from math lessons to ironing.
This is not a primitive barter system. By creating currencies, theInternet removes a major barrier―what Bob Meyer, publisher of BarterNews, calls“the double coincidence of wants.” That is, two parties once not only had tofind each other, but also an exchange of goods that both desired. Now, they canprice the deal in virtual currency.
Barter also helps firms make use of idle capacity. For example,advertising is “hugely bartered” because many media, particularly on the Webcan supply new ad space at little cost. Moreover, Internet ads don't registerin industry-growth statistics, because many exchanges are arranged outside theformal exchanges.
Like eBay, most barter sites allow members to “grade” tradingpartners for honesty quality and so on Barter exchanges can allow firms incountries with hyperinflation or nontradable currencies to enter global trades. Next year, anonprofit exchange called Quick Lift Two (QL2) plans to open in Nairobi, offering barterdeals to 38,000 Kenyan farmers in remote areas. Two small planes will deliverthe goods. QL2 director Gacii Waciuma says the farmers are excited to be “liberatedfrom corrupt middlemen.” For them, barter evokes a bright future, not a precapitalist past. |
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