A.Many post office staff will lose their jobs.B.Many people will begin to complain.C.Tax
A.Many post office staff will lose their jobs.
B.Many people will begin to complain.
C.Taxpayers will be very pleased.
D.A lot of controversy will arise.
A.Many post office staff will lose their jobs.
B.Many people will begin to complain.
C.Taxpayers will be very pleased.
D.A lot of controversy will arise.
A.It should be higher.
B.It's very good.
C.It's the same as the post office pays.
D.It varies according to the person's experience.
A.It should be higher.
B.It's satisfied.
C.It's the same as the post office pays.
D.It varies according to the person's experience.
A.It’s a big bank
B.No,I couldn’t
C.Only 500 meters
D.Not very long
M: Because until I find a new apartment, I'm having the post office forward my mail to your place.
Q: What's happening to Gary's letters?
(13)
A.The woman is mailing them to Gary's old address.
B.The post office is sending them to the woman's house.
C.They are being forwarded to Gary's apartment.
D.They are being held at the post office.
M: Didn't Mike tell you that I'm having the post office forward my mail to your place until I've got a new apartment?
Q: What's happening to Paul's letters?
(13)
A.His letters are being forwarded to his new apartment.
B.His letters are being sent to his old address.
C.He tells Mike to deliver his mail to the woman's house.
D.He has the post office deliver his mall to the woman's house.
M: It has to go to the post office before twelve tonight. We must make sure that all the figures are correct.
Q: How many hours at most do they have to finish the proposal?
(18)
A.4 hours.
B.6 hours,
C.12 hours.
D.18 hours.
M: I didn't turn on the radio this morning, but I did see the headlines. If you remember, he threatened to leave the office at the last cabinet meeting.
Q: How did Mr. Johnson learn that the Prime Minister has resigned?
(19)
A.He read the cabinet report.
B.He read the newspaper.
C.He listened to a radio report.
D.He's secretary telephoned him.
Mr. Dodds works in a bank, and lives by himself. The only family he has is in the next town: his sister lives there with her husband, and her son, Mark. Mr. Dodds does not see his sister, or her family, from one year to the next, but he sends them Christmas cards, and he has not forgotten one of Mark's seventeen birthdays.
Last week Mr. Dodds had quite a surprise. He drove home from his office at the usual time, driving neither too slow nor too fast; he parked his car where he always perked it, out of the way of other cars, and he went inside to make his evening meal. Straight away, there was a knock at the door. Mr. Dodds opened the door, to find a policeman standing on the door step.
"What have I done wrong?" Mr. Dodds asked himself. "Have I driven on the wrong side of the road? Has there been some trouble at the office? Have I forgotten to pay an important bill?"
"Hello, Uncle." said the policeman. "My name's Mark."
(23)
A.In a travel agency.
B.In a lawyer's office.
C.In a post office.
D.In a bank.
A.She should phone the post office for her request in the morning.
B.She can hire a mail carrier to help her.
C.The post office doesn't offer this kind of service.
D.The post office will send the package to her in any case.