By train
By bus
By plane
By car
29. When people travel on business(出差) ,they usually take _________ .A. a train or a planeB. a boat or a trainC.a car or a boat .D.a plane or a car
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In order to cut down on the carbon emission,more people choose to travel______.A.by electric car,bicycle or planeB.by private car,bicycle or busC.by bus,electric car or planeD.by bicycle. bus or electric car
What does the letter say about Ms. Brancato?A.She often travels within the company's service area B.She is interested in purchasing car insurance C.She frequently drives between Montreal and Boston D.She recently moved to Quebec
Questions 173-175 refer to the following letter. Excelon Travel Service, Inc 711 Market Street San Francisco, California 94102 Dear Mr. Miza: Thank you for giving Excelon Travel Services the opportunity to arrange your family ' s vacation travel plans. As an additional service to you, we have provided an overview of your travel and hotel arrangements (all times are local):Upon your arrival at Honolulu, your rental car will be waiting for you -- just go to the Fritz Rentals service desk. As we discussed, room reservations have been made at the Mahalo Hotel; directions to the hotel will be available at the car rental desk. We pride ourselves on over twenty years of providing the highest level of customer satisfaction and would very much appreciate your feedback on your experience with Excelon Travel Services. To help us continue to improve, please visit our Web site at www.excelonts.com and fill out our customer satisfaction survey. Once again, thank you very much for your business. Sincerely, Janet S. OnoJanet S. OnoCustomer Service Associate Excelon Travel ServicesWhat does Ms. Ono ask Mr. Mirza to do? A. Call her when he gets to Honolulu. B. Send payment as soon as possible. C. Compete a survey. D. Give her his E-mail address.
Years ago our cities were full of cars,buses and trucks.Now the streets are completely congested(拥挤的)and it is very difficult to drive a car along them.Drivers must stop at hundreds of traffic lights.What are our cities going to be like in ten or twenty years?Will enormous(巨大的)motorways be built across them?With-big motorways cutting across them,full of noisy,dirty cars and lorries,our cities are going to be awful places.How can we solve the problem? There are some good ideas to reduce the use of private cars.In 1989,for example,the authorities in Rome began an interesting experiment:passengers on the city buses did not have to pay for their tickets. In Stockholm there was another experiment:people paid very little for a season ticket to travel on any bus,trolley bus,train or tram in all the city. In many cities now some streets are closed to vehicles,and pedestrians are safe there. In London there is another experiment:part of the street is for buses only,so the buses can travel fast.There are no cars or taxies in front of them.In London,how does they solve the problem of the traffic congestion?A.They take a completely-free bus servic B.They experimented a very cheap bus servic C.Part of the street is for buses onl D.They closed the streets to car
资料:Everyone knows airline pricing is based on supply and demand. Fares are more expensive during peak travel seasons like summer and to prime destinations like European capitals. So if a flight to Rome costs more than a flight to Milan, you'd think that demand for Rome must be higher or supply lower. What's puzzling is that you can pay a high price to a given destination but a dramatically lower price for the exact same flight if you agree to go on to another destination. Take Alitalia to Rome, for instance, for travel in August. A round-trip, economy flight directly to Rome leaving JFK at 10:05 p.m. on Alitalia 611 on August 5 costs $1,655 when booked on April 30. Compare that to $903 for a round-trip, economy ticket to Milan (stopping in Rome) leaving JFK on the exact same Alitalia 611 flight at 10:05 p.m. on August 5. So why is Alitalia willing to fly to Rome for $752 less than it would otherwise, plus give you an extra one-and-a-half-hour flight to Milan? Airlines have increased their profitability in recent years by segmenting the market for air travel and charging customers different prices for the same product. In this case, the market is segmented based on demand for direct flights. Airlines know most people prefer the shortest route to their destination, so they make customers pay up for the privilege of flying direct. (They also make it a little more inconvenient if you don't pay up for a direct flight, in order to encourage you to fly direct.) When prices become so obviously illogical, it may be time to revisit why air tickets can't be transferred or resold just like any other normal product. If the airlines are entitled to exploit the free market, shouldn't customers be allowed to do the same thing?According to the passage, prices are normally determined by ___.A.the relationship between cost and demand B.peak seasons and prime attractions C.the relationship between supply and demand D.travel seasons and destinations
We have to get that car fixed ().Ano matter it costs how muchBno matter how much costs itCno matter how much it costsDno matter how much does it cost