Most English people have three names: a
first name, a middle name and the family name. Their family name comes last. For
example, my full name is Jim Allan Green. Green is my family name. My parents
gave me both of my other names. People don’t use their middle names very muck So "John Henry Brown" is usually called “John Brown". People never use Mr., Mrs. or Miss before their first names. So you can say John Brown, or Mr. Brown; but you should never say Mr. John. They use Mr., Mrs. or Miss with the family name but never with the first name. Sometimes people ask me about my name. “When you were born, why did your parents call you Jim" they ask, “Why did they choose that name" The answer is they didn’t call me Jim. They called me James. James was the name of my grandfather. In England, people usually call me Jim for short. That’s because it is shorter [单项选择]Most English people have three names: a first name, a middle name and the family name. Their family name comes last. For example, my full name is Jim Allan Green. Green is my family name. My parents gave me both of my other names.
People don’t use their middle names very muck So "John Henry Brown" is usually called “John Brown". People never use Mr., Mrs. or Miss before their first names. So you can say John Brown, or Mr. Brown; but you should never say Mr. John. They use Mr., Mrs. or Miss with the family name but never with the first name. Sometimes people ask me about my name. “When you were born, why did your parents call you Jim" they ask, “Why did they choose that name" The answer is they didn’t call me Jim. They called me James. James was the name of my grandfather. In England, people usually call me Jim for short. That’s because it is shorter and easier than James. Most English people have three names. [A] True. [B] False. [单项选择]In the English letter of invitation the one who sends out the invitation appears ( ) of the letter.
A. at the very beginning B. at the end C. at the bottom D. in the middle [填空题]In an English letter, the receiver’s address is put ______ the date.
[填空题]In English, nouns have three cases—nominative, accusative and genitive.()
[单项选择]
M: The students’ English club is having a party on Saturday night. Would you come A. Because she has got an appointment. B. Because she doesn’t want to. C. Because she has to work. D. Because she wants to eat in a new restaurant. [单项选择]
How to approach Reading Test Part Three ·This part of the Reading Test tests your understanding of the language of graphs and charts. ·Read the five sentences about the bar charts. ·Then look at all eight bar charts. Try to describe each one in your own words. (You can do this in your own language at first so that you are clear about what is happening in each bar chart.) ·Match each sentence with a bar chart. Note all the possible answers. ·Go back to the sentences for which more than one answer seems possible. Carefully compare the bar charts and decide which is the correct answer. ·Check that you have not used any letter more than once. ·Look at the bar charts on the opposite page. They show the number of people employed in eight different companies (A-H) in England and Germany between 2000 and 2002. ·Which bar chart does each sentence (11-15) describe ·For each sentence, mark one letter (A- H). ·Do not use 我来回答: 提交
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