2016年劍橋商務(wù)英語考試BEC中級填空練習(xí)題

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填空題
    1、
    Questions 8-12
    ·Read this memorandum.
    ·Choose the best sentence from the list A – I to fill each of the blanks.
    ·For each blank (8 - 12) mark one letter (A - I) on your Answer Sheet.
    ·De not mark any letter twice.
    ·One answer has teen given as an example.
    MEMORANDUM
    To: Filma Williams, school of Architecture
    From: Ram S. Johnson, Physical Plant Operations
    Subject: Air-conditioning Installation Costs for East Hall.
    Date: 4.4.94
    As you requested in your memo of March 15, we have studied the costs of installing air conditioning for the seven offices and two studio classrooms in East Hall ____ Example ____
    Office and Classroom installation
    Estimates were obtained from three contractors on the costs of covering the offices and classrooms ____ 8 ____ The work would take about three weeks.
    Because the central unit would be installed on the roof, some noise problems might occur during a four-or five-day period ____ 9 ____ Sheet metal work to build out lest in the classes could be dine on weekends, and the overtime labour costs of about $ 1,500 have been included in the estimates.
    Arrangements were not made to do the office space installation on weekends … 10 …
    Additional Installation
    Because a larger installation, including a more powerful central unit, would be necessary to handle the halls and stairways, an additional $6,000 would be required for the equipment. ____ 11 ____ If this additional work were delayed until a later time, a new central unit would be required along with changes in the pipe way ____ 12 ____
    Summary 
    The total job for the building would be about $ 35,000 if done at one time. A two-stage installation would cost about $55,000. I can get official bids at your request.
    Example: A
    A. As you suggested, we also sought information on the additional cost of air conditioning in the entrance halls and stairways.
    B. All these three were in the $ 20,000 to $ 25,000 range.
    C. This later installation would cost about $20,000.
    D. However, class interruption should be minimal.
    E. In the same way, each of these three would take at least one month.
    F. Therefore, the total cost was this $6,000 plus another $5,000.
    G. Labour costs would be an additional S 5,000, bringing the total cost of the addition to $11,000.
    H. Each faculty member could expect to have workers in office for about one day.
    I. So faculty members can continue their office work as usual.
    2、
    Questions 8 – 12
    ·Read the following text.
    ·Choose the best sentence from the list on page 36 to fill each of the gaps.
    ·For each gap 8 – 12 mark one letter A – I on your Answer Sheet.
    ·Do not mark any letter twice.
    Marketing
    In the past, the concept of marketing emphasised sales. The producer or manufacturer made a product he wanted to sell. ____ example ____ . Basically, selling the product would be accomplished by sales promotion, which included advertising and personal selling ____ (8) ____ Distribution consisted of transportation, storage, and related services such as financing, standardisation and grading, and the related risks.
    The modern marketing concept encompasses all of the activities mentioned, but it is based on a different set of principles ____ (9) ____ In other words, goods should be produced only if they can be sold. Therefore, the producer should consider who is going to buy the product ------ or what the market for the product is ---- before production begins.
    Marketing now involves first deciding what the customer wants, and designing and producing a product that satisfies these wants at a profit to the company ____(11)____ This is much more difficult since it involves human behaviour. ____(12)____ Thus, demand and market forces are still an important aspect of modern marketing, but they are considered prior to the production process.
    Example: C
    A. It subscribes to the notion that production can be economically justified only by consumption.
    B. Marketing was the task of figuring out how to sell the product.
    C. Marketing is as important in today’s economy as the production of goods and services.
    D. Production, on the other hand, is mostly an engineering problem.
    E. Such markets must be created and stimulated by managers.
    F. This is very different from making a product and then thinking about how to sell it.
    G. More than half the cost of consumer goods can be traced to marketing activities.
    H. In addition to sales promotion, marketing also involved the physical distribution of the product to the places where it was actually sold.
    I. Instead of concentrating solely on production, the company must consider the desires of the consumer.
    3、
    Questions 8 - 12
    ·Read this advertisement about business book reviews.
    ·Choose the best sentence from the opposite page to fill each of the gaps.
    ·For each gap 8 - 12, mark one letter A - I on your Answer Sheet.
    ·Do not mark any letter twice.
    
    A) These introductory texts are the most important books and using them can pay big dividends.
    B) Discover practical tips and techniques you can apply without delay.
    C) In order to avoid this problem, we select for you only the truly worthwhile titles and reject the rest.
    D) According to studies published in psychology journals, you retain the content of a summary better than a book.
    E) He or she would take the most important ideas from each one, and compile them into a neat executive summary.
    F) With the breadth and depth of knowledge gained from books, it is less likely that you'll be caught off guard.
    G) Each contains all the key points in the original book, but instead of 200 to 500 pages there are only eight pages.
    H) There's a sample of the superb business titles that we summarise for you.
    I) With all the reading you have to do in the normal course of your work, you find it impossible to keep up with all the new business books.
    4、
    Questions 8-12
    ·Read this text on Dave’s dream.
    ·Choose the best sentence from the Opposite page 68 to fill each of the gaps.
    ·For each gap 8-12, mark one letter A - I on your Answer Sheet.
    ·Do not mark any letter twice.
    Icon Acoustics: Bypassing Tradition
    Like most entrepreneurs, Dave Fokos dreams a lot. He imagines customers eagerly phoning Icon Acoustics in Billerica, Massachusetts, to order his latest, custom-made stereo peakers ____example____
    Like most entrepreneurs, Dave has taken a long time to develop his dream. ____(8)____ Dave discovered that he had a strong interest in studio engineering, He took independent-study courses in this area and by graduation had designed and built a pair of marketable stereo speakers. Following graduation, Dave pursued his interest in audio engineering. He landed a job as a loudspeaker designer with Conrad-Johnson, a high-end audio-equipment manufacturer headquarters in Fairfax, Virginia ____(9)____
    Dave identified a market niche that he felt other speaker firms had overlooked ____(10)____These affluent, well-educated customers are genuinely obsessed with their stereo equipment. ‘They’d rather buy a new set of speakers than eat,’ Dave observes.
    Dave faced one major problem---how to distribute Icon’s products. He had learned from experience at Conrad-Johnson that most manufacturers distribute their equipment primarily through stereo dealers. Dave did not hold a high opinion of most such dealers; he felt that they too often played hardball with manufacturers, forcing them to accept thin margins. ____(11)____This kept those firms that offered more customized products from gaining access to the market. Perhaps most disturbing, Dave felt that the established dealers often sold not what was best for customers, but whatever they had in inventory that month.
    Dave dreamed of offering high-end stereo loudspeakers directly to the audio-obsessed, bypassing the established dealer network. ____(12)____ “My vision for the future is one where all manufacturers sell their products directly to end user. In this way, even the audiophiles in Dead Horse, Alaska, can have access to all that the audio-manufacturing community has to offer.”
    Example: I.
    A. At the age of 28, Dave set out to turn his dreams into reality.
    B. Furthermore, the dealers concentrated on only a handful of well-known producers
    C. Who provided mass-produced models.
    D. The firms tend to plow their money in to developing their products and have little left over to market them.
    E. Within four years, Dave had designed 13 speaker models and decided to start his own company.
    F. To serve the audio-addicts segment, Dave offers only the highest-quality speakers.
    G. It all began while majoring in electrical engineering at Cornell.
    By going directly to the customers, Dave could avoid the dealer markups and offer top-quality products and service at reasonable price.
    H. This niche consisted of “audio-addicts”----people who love to listen to music and appreciate first-rate stereo equipment.
    I. He sees sales climbing , cash flowing, and hundreds of happy workers
    Striving to produce top-quality products that delight Icon’s customers.
    5、
    Questions 8-12
    ·Read this proposal about the CPT Word Processor.
    ·Choose the best sentence from the list A-I to fill each of the blanks.
    ·For each blank (8-12) mark one letter (A-I) on your Answer Sheet.
    ·De not mark any letter twice.
    ·One answer has been given as an example.
    15 June 1993
    Ms. Martha Weston
    Word Processing Supervisor
    ABC Company
    Post Office Box 1072
    28 King’s Street London
    Dear Ms. Weston,
    Performance of the CPT Equipment
    I’m Pleased to tell you about our experience with the CPT Word Processor as you requested recently____example____ I assume you have looked at several machines and have narrowed down your choices.
    Here are my observations.
    An approach to adopting word processors
    Eighteen months ago we adopted CPT equipment on limited scale with the idea in mind that we could gradually get rid of electric typewriters as we became familiar with the word processor. ____8____ The stations are actually in pairs so each pair can share a common printer ____9____
    We use the equipment as dedicated word processors, although we do have the ability to link up with our computer installation.
    The step-at-a-time development of our word-processing center has, we think, saved us money and training time. ____10____
    Performance
    In terms of performance, the CPT equipment is excellent. ____11____ Moreover our service contract and warranty have covered all maintenance costs.
    We have software packages that check spelling and signal when a mistake occurs. ____12____ Using both printers, we recently prepared 1200 individually typed form letter mailings a under four hours. We have no complaint about our preparation of executive reports.
    Example: I
    A. So it works very well and has so many different functions.
    B. Also it has reduced the confusion that exists about buying software packages.
    C. The train stops at each station for only fifteen minutes.
    D. We began with two work stations and now have four.
    E. Our routine letters are prepared from disc-stored masters.
    F. The Rotary W printer with a speed of 45 characters a second can easily handle two input stations.
    G. In contrast, its size and weight are ideal for carrying.
    H. We have not yet experienced mechanical problems so far.
    I. We are pleased with its performance and multi-functions.
    6、
    Questions 8-12
    · Read this letter to the editor of The Economist.
    · Choose the best sentence from the list A-I to fill each of the blanks.
    · For each bland (8-12) mark one letter (A-I) on your Answer Sheet.
    · Do not mar4 any letter twice.
    · One answer has been given as an example.
    Sir,
    You state on February 13 th that New Mexico has “few natural resources”, ____ example____ In 1991 New Mexico ranked fourth in the United States in production of natural gas, seventh in oil and tenth in non-fuel minerals ____8____ Non-fuel minerals contributed about $ 1 billion and coal $ 509 million.
    Taxes from production of fuels and minerals, and lease payments on state lands have been set aside by legislative acts to endow two permanent funds worth about $ 5.65 billion, ____9____ In addition, during fiscal year 1991 , payments to New Mexico from taxes on federal lands were S 108 million, all earmarked for public education.
    ____10____ About $566 million came from taxes and permanent-fund earnings attributable to oil and gas production. ____11____ Tourism is an important industry in Mew Mexico, yet its economic impact on the public sector is dwarfed by that of mineral production.
    New Mexico came through the recent recession in much better shape than most other states. It does not have a deficit. ____12____ States that rely primarily on a sales tax or on an income tax have big problems during economic downturns. Income growth per head in New Mexico averaged 6.1/00 in the year to October 1992-one if the fastest growth rates in the United States.
    Charles Chapin
    Example: C
    A. That it has a broadly based tax structure is an important point.
    B. In 1992 it produced more oil than Colorado and Kansas combined.
    C. However, the extractive mineral industry in New Mexico is one of the state’s strongest economic forces.
    D. During fiscal year 1992 New Mexico raised permanent funds worth about $6.1 billion.
    E. The combined value of oil and gas production was $ 2.8 billion.
    F. Some 16,000 employees work in the extractive industries and their wages are among the highest of any major industry.
    G. The $39 million earned by these funds in 1991 was used to finance education and other public services.
    H. Only S 25 million came from agricultural taxes.
    I. New Mexico’s extractive mineral industries contribute about a third of the state’s $ 1.9 billion general-fund income in fiscal year 1991.
    7、
Japanese McDonald’s

    If you always thought of McDonald’s as an all-American company it, may surprise you to learn that the king of McDonald’s franchises is named Fujita and that he doesn’t eat hamburgers. ____1____ By ignoring many of the customs of both his native and his parent company, Fujita has made McDonald’s the top fast-food business in Japan and has changed the face of franchising.
    McDonald’s came to Japan in 1970 searching for a Japanese partner with whom to create a Japanese McDonald’s. Fujita was far from the richest potential candidate interviewed, but he was an eager entrepreneur who seemed willing to devote his energies to the new venture. ____2____ 
    Almost immediately, however, Fujita began going his own way. The parent company recommended opening the first Japanese McDonald’s in the suburbs, where most American fast-food stores are located. Fujita had his own ideas. ____3____ He got his way, opened the first Japanese McDonald’s in a department store in Tokyo, didn’t spend anything on advertising. ____4____ 
    McDonald’s learned its lesson from Fujita and has since opened inner-city restaurant around the world. ____5____ While the Japanese seem fascinated with western styles and tastes, they often don’t think of themselves as consumers of American products. So Fujita’s McDonald’s franchises play down their American origins, to the point where, according to Fujita, some Japanese who visit the United States are surprised to find that we have ‘Makudonarudo’, as the Japanese say it, in America too.
    A. In fact, Fujita is unusual in many respects, and his uniqueness has made him very rich.
    B. McDonald’s took a chance and chose him.
    C. Fujita and McDonald’s continue to benefit from each other.
    D. Other companies might learn from the way Fujita marketed McDonald’s in Japan.
    E. Fujita likes to take credit for a rise in the average weight of his people.
    F. And within a year he had broken McDonald’s world record for one-day sales: $14,000.
    G. He thought the young pedestrians of Japan’s cities were more likely to give up Japan fish-and –rice diet for a hamburger than were the more traditional suburban dwellers.
    H. But Fujita himself prefers noodles to Big Macs.
    I. And the Tokyo McDonald’s that once caused an argument is now one of 500 that Fujita owns in Japan. 
    簡答題
    8、Part One
    Your company has just opened a new office in the United States. You have agreed to go and work there for six months.
    Write a memo of 30-40 words to all your colleagues:
    Explaining why you will be absent;
    Saying when you are leaving the office;
    Expressing your wish to keep in touch;
    Write on your answer sheet.
    Part Two
    You work for RCT, a company which sells business stationery. RCT is interested in becoming an agent for Novestat, a company which manufactures paper products.
    Read Novestat’s advertisement below, on which you have made some notes.
    Then, using all your notes, write a letter to James Dowling at Novestat.
    Do not include postal addresses.
    Write 100-120 words.
    Write on your answer sheet. 
    9、• Read the article below about the winner of a business award .
    • In most of the lines 34-45 there is one extra word . It is either grammatically incorrect or 
    doesn’t fit in the meaning of the text . Some lines, however, are correct .
    • If a line is correct , write CORRECT on your Answer Sheet .
    • If there is a extra word in the line , write the extra word in CAPITAL LETTER on your Answer Sheet.
    • The exercises begins with two examples , (0) and (00) .
    Examples 
    

0
    

T
    

H
    

A
    

T
    

 
    

 
    

 
    

 
    

 
    

00
    

C
    

O
    

R
    

R
    

E
    

C
    

T
    

 
    

 
    


    

THE  COST  OF  NOT  TRAINING
    

0   Training is not a cost . It’s an investment . It really doesn’t matter that what we pay
    

00  for an investment . What is relevant is what we get in return . One of the easiest
    

34  ways is to put an organization’s future at risk would be to view training primarily as
    

35  a cost , and therefore provide with substandard training that operates only as a
    

36  temporary solution . Many companies attempt to quantify as the results of training. For
    

37  example , a person paid $50,000 a year who wastes just one hour a day costs the
    

38  organization between $6,250 per year . So if the organization sends 25 people for
    

39  training and they all receive the same benefit , this would equal from $156,250
    

40  savings per year . A few of years ago , training , apart from showing employees
    

41  what the basics of doing the job , was an optional extra for most organizations .
    

42  Today this is no longer than the case . If we continue doing what we do in the same way ,
    

43  most of us and our organizations will become obsolete within the five years . This is
    

44  because of our competitors are helping their staff to become more effective through
    

45  training . They understand that if the real price of not training is the company falling
    

    behind as a result .
    


    10、 • Read the article below about the winner of a business award .
    • In most of the lines 34-45 there is one extra word . It is either grammatically incorrect or 
    doesn’t fit in the meaning of the text . Some lines, however, are correct .
    • If a line is correct , write CORRECT on your Answer Sheet .
    • If there is a extra word in the line , write the extra word in CAPITAL LETTER on your Answer Sheet.
    • The exercises begins with two examples , (0) and (00) .
    Examples
    

0
    

C
    

O
    

R
    

R
    

E
    

C
    

T
    

 
    

 
    

00
    

T
    

H
    

R
    

O
    

U
    

G
    

H
    

 
    

 
    


    

BUSINESS    MANAGEMENT
    

 0  Many organizations are seeking to take advantage of flatter management
    

00  structures by moving through to self-managed teams. In our experience, these
    

34  teams produce us very impressive results. However, as the companies
    

35  we work with can tell to you, they are neither a ‘soft option ’ nor a ‘quick fix’.
    

36  self-managed teams operate in dramatically different ways from the other
    

37  teams and they can only succeed in if the organizational culture, along with a
    

38  number of systems and procedures, are been re-shaped. Thus, changing to
    

39  self-managed teams requires not only most top level support but a clear
    

40  understanding of the concept which at all levels. Often staff who find themselves
    

41  at the lower levels of a traditional structure imagine that by operating in self-
    

42  managed teams simply means by that they will be free to do what they want
    

43  without having to be obey the orders of upper management and this simply is
    

44  not the case. One of the most important areas we address with our clients
    

45  is the need to re-educate staff with a regard to the practical meaning of the
    

    Word ‘team’. Such re-education is required from shop floor to board level.