更多"Speaker A: Would you please close t"的相关试题:
[单项选择]Would you mind me to open the window
A. Would
B. mind
C. to open
D. the
[单项选择]—Would you mind () the window.
A. I closing
B. my closing
C. me closing
D. me close
[单项选择]Speaker A: Next please! Hello, may I help you, sir
Speaker B: ( ).
A. Hi, do you have a larger size of this shirt
B. I’d like to make an appointment with Dr. Smith.
C. Yes. I want to send a registered airmail letter to Australia.
D. May I have a look at the menu first
[单项选择]You would like the window open,()
A. will you
B. would you
C. won’t you
D. wouldn’t you
[单项选择]-Would you mind if I open the window for a better view
A. That’s fine, thank you
B. Yes, please
C. Of course not
[单项选择]
[听力原文]
M: Would you mind opening the window
W: No, of course not, but Lucy has a headache.
What is the woman going to do for Lucy’s sake ()
A. Keep the window closed.
B. Open the window.
C. Go to see a doctor.
D. Send Lucy to hospital.
[单项选择]—Would you mind my opening the window
A. Yes, please B. No, not at all C. No, I mind
[单项选择]Speaker A: Could I speak to John, please
Speaker B: John There’s no one by that name here. I’m afraid you’ve got the wrong number.
Speaker A: ( ).
A. Well, I’ll try again
B. OK, let me check again
C. All fight, thank you
D. Oh, sorry to have bothered you
[填空题]Would you mind me (open) ______ the window to let fresh air in
[单项选择]Speaker A: I’d like to check in, please.
Speaker B: ()。
A. Certainly. Do you have a reservation
B. Sorry, I don’t see what you mean.
C. Sure, I can help you with the checking.
D. Thank you, we provide first class service here.
[单项选择]I would rather you () today than tomorrow.
A. come
B. came
C. will come
D. to come
[填空题]
Think about what would make you really, really happy. More money Wrong. Smiling, well-adjusted kids Wrong again. The fact is we are terrible at predicting the source of joy. And whatever choices we do make, we likely later decide it was all for the best.
These are insights from happiness economics, perhaps the hottest field in what used to be called the dismal science. Happiness is everywhere--on the best-seller lists, in the minds of policymakers, and front and center for economists--yet it remains elusive. The golden role of economics has always been that well-being is a simple function of income. That’s why nations and people alike strive for higher incomes-money gives us choice and a measure of freedom. After a certain income can, we simply don’t get any happier. And it isn’t what we have, but whether we have more than our neighbor, that really matters. So the news last week that in 2006 top hedge-fund managers took home $ 240 million, minimum, proba