[听力原文]
M: How about phoning Liz and asking her to join us for dinner
W: I think you should call her. She hardly knows who I am.
[听力原文]
M: How about phoning Liz and asking her to join us for dinner
W: I think you should phone her. she hardly knows who I am.
[听力原文]
M:How about your adventure to the isolated island
W:It was worth neither the time nor the money.
[听力原文]
M: How about my food I’ve been sitting here for almost half an hour.
W: I’m sorry, sir. It must be ready by now.
[听力原文]
W: Hi, Jack how about a party this weekend
M: Sounds great ! What is the ’party for
[听力原文]
Prices determine how resources are to be used. They are also the means by which products and services that are in limited supply are rationed among buyers. The price system of the United States is a very complex network composed of the prices of all the products bought and sold in the economy as well as those of numerous services, including labor, professional, transportation and public-utility services. The interrelationships of all these prices make up the system of prices in which everything seems to depend more or less upon everything else.
If one were to ask a group of randomly selected individuals to define "price," many would reply that price is an amount of money paid by the buyer to the seller of a product or service or, in other words, that price is the money value of a product or service as agreed upon in a market bargaining. This definition is, of course, valid as far as it goes. For a complete understanding of a price in any particula
A. The exchanging forms in bargaining.
B. The complexities of the price system.
C. The inherent weaknesses of the price system.
D. The relationship between the resource allocation and the price system.
[听力原文]
M: Jane and her husband are quarrelling a lot recently.
W: Yeah. It seems they are not as happy as they once were.
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