[听力原文]
W: We still have enough time before meeting the manager. Let’s go out and have dinner.
M: I know a nice restaurant near the station
[听力原文]
W: We still have enough time before meeting the manager. Let’s go out and have dinner.
M: I know a nice restaurant near the station
[听力原文]
M: You still have one hour, so relax.
W: Relax! How can I when I’m going to be interviewed!
[听力原文]
M: Miss, is there still time for a cup of coffee on this flight
W: Yes, but you have to drink it fast, because we’ll be landing in 10 minutes.
[听力原文]
M: Miss, is there still time four a cup of coffee on this flight
W: Yes, but you have to drink it fast, because we’ll be landing in 10 minutes.
[听力原文]
M: What time do you usually have breakfast
W: Around 7:00, but lately I’ve been having trouble getting up in the morning, so I’ve been eating breakfast at 8:00, 9:00 even as late as 10:00.
[听力原文]
M: Where have you been all this time The plane is about to leave.
W: I’m sorry I’m late, but I was waiting for you at the hotel. It’s lucky I had caught up with you here on the airport.
[听力原文]
W: Where have you been all this time The plane is about to take off.
M: I am so sorry, but 1 thought you were at the information desk.
[听力原文]6-7
W: Hi, long time no see. What have you been doing recently
M: I work part-time at a department store near Baiyun Road.
W: Well, it’s just near Caihong Sports Center.
M: Yes, and there is a cinema near the center, the Luisa Cinema. Sometimes I go there for a film.
W: That’s interesting.
M: I agree. And working there is a nice thing.
W: I hope I can find such a good place to work there too.
M: There are many good places where you can work. If you like you can also go to work with me.
W: Really Is there an opening
M: Yes, you can have a try.
[听力原文]
W: Have you difficulty with pronunciation, Louis
M: No, I haven’t much difficulty with the pronunciation; I can pronounce English quite well, but I can’t spell most of the words right.
[听力原文]
White House officials have begun talks with Congress on a war spending bill in place of the one President Bush vetoed on Tuesday.
He rejected it because the Democratic-controlled Congress tried to set a date for American troops to leave Iraq. The bill would have required a withdrawal to begin by October.
The spending measure totaled one hundred twenty-four billion dollars. One hundred billion of that would have gone to pay for military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan.
The veto was only the second of Mister Bush’s presidency. The first was last year, to stop Congress from ending his restrictions on federal money for stem cell research.
On Wednesday, the House of Representatives voted to try to save the war spending bill that the president vetoed. But, as in the case of his first veto, there was not enough support for an override.
The president met with Democratic and Republican congressional leaders after the House fa
A. Voters must be Americans.
B. Voters can get registered in any state at any time before the Election Day.
C. Local election officials decide what kind of voting equipment is used.
D. Paper-and-pencil ballots are rarely used these days.
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