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Why do some Japanese parents send their children to university-based kindergartens?A.They

Why do some Japanese parents send their children to university-based kindergartens?

A.They can do better in their future studies.

B.They can accumulate more group experience there.

C.They can be individually oriented when they grow up.

D.They can have better chances of getting a first-rate education.

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更多“Why do some Japanese parents s…”相关的问题
第1题
Why do some Japanese parents send their children to university-based kindergartens(
)?

A.They can do better in their future studies.

B.They can accumulate more group experience there.

C.They can be individually oriented when they grow up.

D.They can have better chances of getting a first-rate education.

点击查看答案
第2题
Queuing is nothing special in Japan. Every day, television programs show long lines of peo
ple queuing for up to one hour even in front of regular noodle shops, only to finish their food within less than ten minutes.

Why Japanese people queue so often? Do they love it? Probably they do. According to Japanese people, just like an excessively high price can evoke an image of equally high quality, long waiting lines act as an indicator for popularity, reduce availability and increase the subjective value of a good. Thus, for many Japanese customers, waiting lines are probably the most effective advertisement. For example, in an article published in The Japan Times in summer 2007, a Japanese woman confessed that she enjoyed queuing outside shops and restaurants and that she usually joined the line before asking the person in front of her what kind of product was sold. Standing in line also increases and extends anticipation until—yatto! (finally!) —patience is rewarded with the desired product. But when taken to an extreme level, the product one is actually queuing for ceases to be of any importance at all.

There are also some customers who are unable to queue or who are unwilling to wait, thinking it' s a waste of time queuing in a line. What could they do? They can rent a queuer who will stand in line and purchase the desired product for them. Obviously, this service is not free of charge. Some service companies who offer all kinds of unusual service provide rentable " queuers". What' s more, in addition to providing queuers to individuals, the service companies also provide queuers to some shops to increase the image of a hard-to-get product and make customers want to join the line by forming or extending lines. Therefore, waiting lines have become a marketing tool and it would not be surprising to find professional queuers in a line. Some people view it a pure speculation, but they can't deny that it really works and the wage of a few professional queuers to keep the line in shape would be a minor investment compared with what would happen if the queue suddenly disappeared.

However, success is not always guaranteed because the attractiveness of waiting in line can easily backfire if the desired product does not meet expectations.

What is the marketing tool appears in the text?

A.Providing queuers to individuals.

B.Providing queuers to shops.

C.Hiring professional queuers to wait for oneself.

D.Hiring professional queuers to keep a line in shape.

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第3题
Why do Japanese listeners sometimes close their eyes while listening to a speech?A.To calm

Why do Japanese listeners sometimes close their eyes while listening to a speech?

A.To calm themselves down.

B.To enhance concentration.

C.To show their impatience.

D.To signal lack of interest.

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第4题
听力原文:W: Hello, John . How was your French exam yesterday?M: Not too good.W: Well, the

听力原文:W: Hello, John . How was your French exam yesterday?

M: Not too good.

W: Well, the term exam is always more difficult. Work harder, and you'll certainly do better next time.

M: I've worked hard enough, I think, but unluckily, I have never done well in the exam.

W:Well, it's no use worrying about the exam now. Let's talk about the football game tonight. It's much more interesting.

M: Is there a football game on TV tonight?

W: Yes it's between the Chinese team and the Japanese team.

M: ... Er I'd rather watch some other programmes.

W: Why? You're so interested in football.

M: The Chinese team has always played badly in the important match, just as I have done in the important exam.

What are they talking about?

A.An exam.

B.The boy's French.

C.A football match.

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第5题
听力原文:W: Hello, John. How was your English exam yesterday?M: Not too good.W: Well, the

听力原文:W: Hello, John. How was your English exam yesterday?

M: Not too good.

W: Well, the term exam is always more difficult. Work harder, and you'll certainly do better next time.

M: I've worked hard enough, I think, but unluckily, I have never done well in the exam.

W: Well, it's no use worrying about the exam now. Let's talk about the football game tonight. It's much more interesting.

M: Is there a football game on TV tonight?

W: Yes, it's between the Chinese team and the Japanese team.

M: Er, I'd rather watch some other programs.

W: Why? You're so interested in football.

M: The Chinese team has always played badly in the important matches, just as I have done in the im- portant exams.

What are they talking about?

A.An exam.

B.The boy's French.

C.A football match.

点击查看答案
第6题
While many nations have aging populations, Japans demographic crisis is truly dire, with
forecasts showing that 40 percent of the population will have been 65 and over in 2055.【M1】______ Some of the consequences have been long foreseen, like deflation: as more Japanese retire and live off their savings, they spend more, further depressing Japans anemic levels of domestic【M2】______ consumption. So a less anticipated outcome has been the【M3】______ appearance of generational inequalities. These disparities manifest itself in many ways. There are【M4】______ corporations that hire all too many young people for low-paying jobs—in effect, forcing them to shoulder the costs of preserving cushier jobs to older employees. Others point to【M5】______ an underfinanced pension system so skewed in the favor of【M6】______ older Japanese that many younger workers simply refuse to pay; a "silver democracy" that spends far more on the elderly than education and child care—an issue that is familiar to【M7】______ Americans; and outdated hiring practices that have created a new "lost generation" of disenfranchised youths. Nagisa Inoue, a senior at Tokyos Meiji University, said she was considering paying for a fifth year at her university rather than graduate without a job, an outcome that in Japans rigid【M8】______ job market might permanently taint her chances of ever getting a higher-paying corporate job. That is why Japanese【M9】______ companies, even when they do offer stable, regular jobs, prefer to give them only to new graduates, which are seen as the【M10】______ more malleable candidates for molding into Japans corporate culture.

【M1】

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第7题
Why does the woman feel grateful to Professer Mercheno?A.He helped her get into the progra

Why does the woman feel grateful to Professer Mercheno?

A.He helped her get into the program.

B.He recorded some tapes especially for her.

C.He gave her a good grade in her Japanese class.

D.He told her about an interesting movie to watch.

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第8题
听力原文:W: Why do the Japanese have such a long life expectancy? M: I don't understand. S

听力原文:W: Why do the Japanese have such a long life expectancy?

M: I don't understand. So many of them smoke, and they have a stressful work environment. It must be their healthy diet. Hey! Let's go out for sushi!

Q: What does the man suppose contributes to the Japanese long life expectancy?

(19)

A.Their healthy lifestyle.

B.Their work environment.

C.Their outgoing personality.

D.Their usual food and drink.

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