M: Good morning. Can I help youW: Hello. My name’s John Bush and I’m intending to go to a conference in Sydney for three weeks.M: I see. Do you want the excursion fare or the full return fareW: Now, can I get a stopover on an excursion fareM: Yes, you’re allowed only one stopover on the excursion fare.W. Oh, I see, only one.M: Yes. But of course, if you pay the full return fare then you can have unlimited stopovers.W: Oh, It sounds good. You see, the thing is that I’ve got two weeks’ holiday after the conference and I’ve never been out that way before at all to Australia or the Far East, and I want to go shopping or sightseeing in Hong Kong or somewhere near there. Where exactly can I goM: Well, lots of places. There’s Singapore, Kuwait, Athens, you’ve really got quite a lot of choices you know.W: Mm. Well, it sounds marvelous. How much would that cost How much is the full fareM: The full fare Well, that’s really quite a lot. It’s £1204.W: Yes. Well, it’s once in a lifetime, you know, I’ve never been. The thing is actually that I’m absolutely afraid of flying. I’ve never done it before.M: Oh dear. Um...W: And I’m hoping that I can persuade my two Mends, who are going to the conference, to stop over with me on the way back.M: Yes, that would be a good idea.W. By the way, one of them is in Cairo at the moment. Would it be possible for me to stop over there on my way to SydneyM. Yes, of course. There are lots of flights to Cairo and, then plenty more onwards from Cairo to Sydney. And then you can stay for as long as you like.W: Oh, that’s great! Now, the thing is, I think I’d better go and persuade Mr. Adams that, you know, he’d like to stop with me in Cairo...M: I see.W: Oh, thanks very much. Good-bye.M: Thank you. Good-bye. What will Mr. Bush probably buy()
An excursion fare.
B. A full return ticket.
C. A single ticket.
D. Two tickets.
Everything seemed to have become a weapon of war. Our enemies had (1) the most familiar objects (2) us, turned shaving kits into holsters and airplanes (3) missiles and soccer coaches and newlyweds into involuntary suicide bombers. So it was (4) the President and his generals to plot the response.That is because we are (5) one enemy but two: one unseen, the other inside. Terror on this scale (6) to wreck the way we live our lives-make us flinch when a siren sounds, (7) when a door slams and think twice before deciding (8) we really have to take a plane. If we falter, they win, (9) they never plant another bomb. So after the early helplessness, what can I do I’ve already given blood-people started to realize that (10) they could do was exactly, as precisely as possible, (11) they would have done if all this (12) .That was the spirit (13) in New York and Washington and all across the country, faith and fear and resolve in a tight braid. Because the killers who hate us did the (14) , nothing is unthinkable now. A plume of grill smoke venting from a Manhattan steak house (15) the evacuation of midtown office towers. After the Pentagon (16) , generals called their families and told them (17) the water, it could be poisoned. Sales of guns and gas masks spiked. The National Football League (18) its games for the first time ever; bomb scares emptied 90 sites on Thursday in New York City (19) . People wore sneakers with their suits (20) they had to fly fast down the stairs. Read the following text Choose the best word(s) for each numbered blank and mark A, B, C or D on ANSWER SHEET 1.10()
A. what
B. that
C. which
D. who