Americans working alongside the Chinese in China, he said, \one of the best ways to cultivate this understanding for the future.\
50.The Chinese feel uncomfortable if they are criticized directly. H ÕýÈ·´ð°¸Îª£ºH
ÄãµÄ´ð°¸Îª£º ÄãûÓÐ×÷´ð¡£ ±¾Ð¡ÌâµÃ·Ö£º 0·Ö ½âÎö£ºH
ÎÄÕÂH²¿·Ö´ÓÖйúÈ˵ĽǶȿ´ÃÀ¹úÈ˵ÄÖ±½Ó¡£ÖйúÈË»á¸Ð¾õµ±ÃæÅúÆÀÈË»òÕß°¤ÅúÆÀ£¬»áÈÃÈËÄÑ¿°£¬Ã»Ãæ×Ó¡£\doing, right in front of me,\51.American employees get paid more than Chinese employees in similar positions for the same work. D ÕýÈ·´ð°¸Îª£ºD
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ÎÄÕÂD²¿·ÖÖ÷Òª½²Êö×öͬÑù¹¤×÷µÄÖйúÔ±¹¤ºÍÍâ¹úÔ±¹¤´ýÓö²»Í¬£¬Íâ¹úÔ±¹¤»áÄõ½¶àÓÚÖйúÔ±¹¤10-15%µÄ³ê½ð¡£Managers hiring workers in China appear to be paying a premium (¶îÍâ²¹Ìù) for Western experience. Foreigners tend to earn 10 to 15 percent more than their Chinese counterparts (ְλÏ൱µÄÈË) in similar positions.
52.Relationships are much more complicated in China than in the US. F ÕýÈ·´ð°¸Îª£ºF
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53.It is hard for both the Americans and the Chinese to get promotion. I ÕýÈ·´ð°¸Îª£ºI
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ÎÄÕÂI²¿·ÖÌáµ½ÖÐÃÀµÄÎÄ»¯³åÍ»»áÓ°ÏìÏ໥µÄÀí½â£¬¼Ì¶øÓ°Ïìµ½ÌáÉýºÍÒµ¼¨¡£ÃÀ¹úÈËÒòΪÖÐÎIJ»¹»Á÷Àû£¬ÉýÖ°Êܵ½ÏÞÖÆ£¬ÖйúÈËÒ²ÒòΪÉç½»ÉÏÒÔ¼°ÎÄ»¯ÉÏÕϰºÜÄÑ¿çÔ½£¬Òà¸Ðµ½ÉýÖ°ÎÞÍû¡£Most foreign colleagues don't speak good enough Chinese, so their promotion prospects are limited; and on a social and cultural level, young Chinese feel there are barriers that are hard to get past.
54.The Americans know the free-market principles well, which young Chinese have to learn in the workplace. B ÕýÈ·´ð°¸Îª£ºB
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ÎÄÕÂB²¿·ÖÌáµ½ÖÐÃÀÁ½¹úÄêÇáÈ˳ɳ¤µÄ²»Í¬¾Àú¡£ÃÀ¹úÈ˶®µÃ×ÔÓÉÊг¡ÔÔò£¬¶øÖйúÈ˾Àú¸Ä¸ï¿ª·Å£¬Òª¾Àú´ÓÕþ¸®µ÷¿Ø¾¼Ãµ½Êг¡¾¼ÃµÄ¹ý¶É£¬ÒªÔÚ¹¤×÷ÖÐѧϰ¡£But the two groups were raised differently. The Americans have had more exposure to free-market principles. %up in a commercial environment,\my generation.\
55.Americans have to adjust themselves to Chinese ways of doing business. E ÕýÈ·´ð°¸Îª£ºE
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ÎÄÕÂE²¿·ÖÌá¼°ÖйúµÄÎÄ»¯¼°±³¾°£¬ÔÚÖйú¹¤×÷µÄÃÀ¹úÈËÐèÒªÊÊÓ¦ÖйúÎÄ»¯¡£It is necessary for Americans working in China to adjust. ?but when you come to work in China, you need to work on listening and being more patient and understanding of local ways of doing business.
Section C Reading Comprehension
Directions£ºThere are 2 passages in this section. Each passage is followed by some questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices marked A), B), C) and D).
±¾ÌâµÃ·Ö£º--/20·Ö
As winter approached, retailers (ÁãÊÛÉÌ) ordered clothes for cold weather, arranged their stores for cold weather and then just started hoping for cold weather.
Winter is here, but the cold weather by and large is not. Nationally, last month was one of the warmest Decembers on record, and so far January temperatures are above average.
The relatively warm weather is erasing a lot of demand for winter hats, coats, and gloves¡ªand making some retailers sweat the bottom line.
On Saturday, the outdoors store REI took the unusual step of making artificial snow in a Manhattan park, hoping to encourage people to buy snowshoes and winter jackets. Home Depot has cut down on items like salt for de-icing, and many of its stores have replaced snow removal equipment with storage products in storefront displays. Even drugstores are being affected because flu (Á÷¸Ð) infections are down.
Though some winter resorts received a small amount of snow over the weekend, and Seattle is having a snowstorm, those pockets of cold have not provided much of a relief for retailers, who are running out of time to sell their winter inventory.
Kevin Scott, senior vice president for merchandising services at Home Depot, said there has been an upside to the warmer weather¡ªoutdoor paint, outdoor lights and windows are selling well¡ªbut \
Scott Jaeger, an analyst with the Leisure Trends Group, a market research firm, said that while overall sales in 2011 had risen eight percent, sales of outdoor gear in December fell two percent from the previous December. \buy the thick coat,\wardrobe or update the skis, because they were not necessarily going skiing.\
On Saturday, REI spread artificial snow over a Manhattan park so passers-by could try cross-country skiing. Luckily, Saturday was one of the few days this winter that reached freezing in the city.
\plan for a solid winter,\said Tim Spangler, senior vice president for retail at REI. \often joke that planners in our business are paid to be wrong: you either bought too little, because the winter overperforms, or you bought too much, because it's warm.\56.The problem those retailers face derives from __________.
A) the worsening environment B) the insufficient stocks of items C) the relatively high temperature
D) the change of people's outdoor activities
ÕýÈ·´ð°¸Îª C ÄãûÓÐ×÷´ð¡£ ½âÎö£º ÂÔ
57.The outdoors store REI made artificial snow in the park to ________.
A) encourage people to enjoy a warm winter B) stimulate customers to buy its commodities C) display the splendid effects of its products D) express its anger to the changeable weather
ÕýÈ·´ð°¸Îª B ÄãûÓÐ×÷´ð¡£ ½âÎö£º ÂÔ
58.The word \
A) stock B) wreck C) creation D) promotion
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59.What does Tim Spangler mean by saying \overperforms, or you bought too much, because it's warm\
A) His business is winter is always a mess.
B) Cold weather counts little in his winter business. C) People's shopping habits tend to change in winter. D) Winter weather has a great impact on his business.
ÕýÈ·´ð°¸Îª D ÄãûÓÐ×÷´ð¡£ ½âÎö£º ÂÔ
60.What is the message the author intends to convey?
A) Warm winter brings a dim prospect for retailers.
B) Artificial snow facilitates the sale of outdoor equipment. C) People dislike participating in outdoor activities in winter. D) Salespersons can never take advantage of weather for promotion.
ÕýÈ·´ð°¸Îª C ÄãûÓÐ×÷´ð¡£ ½âÎö£º ÂÔ
Tristesse Jones will probably never drive a tractor or guide a combine at harvest time. There isn't a farm within miles of where she grew up on Chicago's west side, but she's set to graduate with a bachelor's degree in crop sciences from the University of Illinois' agriculture school next spring.