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In big cities, Americans do their grocery (ʳ¿ÚÔÓ»õ)shopping at large supermarkets. They usually shop once or twice a week, and when they go through the check-out stand (½áÕʸ¶¿î³ö¿Ú), their shopping carts are full of groceries.
A large supermarket is big business. Although mainly selling foods of different kinds, supermarkets also handle other things including school and garden supplies, beer, toothpaste, toys, clothing, magazines, books and even medicines. The supermarket tries to meet the housewife's every need so that when she leaves, she'll shop nowhere else.
In order to attract customers, supermarkets have tries to make shopping as pleasant as possible. Some of them have flowers and trees in the parking lots(Í£³µ³¡). Some have roofs over the walks so that shoppers can walk from their cars to the store without having to worry about snow, rain or the hot sun. Most of the stores are air-conditioned(¿Õµ÷µÄ).
With these and other improvements supermarkets are becoming more and more popular. This is not limited to the united States. From Bankok to Bucnes Aires, the old styled grocery store is fast disappearing. In European, supermarkets have been growing in number since 1975. There's no doubt that more and more housewives around the world will soon be standing in the check-out lines.
1£®The passage tells us that ________.
[¡¡¡¡]
A£®Americans never do grocery shopping more than twice a week
B£®it is a general practice(×ö·¨)for Americans to do grocery shopping once or twice a week
C£®Americans are allowed to do grocery shopping only in supermarkets.
D£®Americans' supermarkets are better than those in other places of the world
2£®In the second paragraph, the passage says"The supermarket tries to meet the housewife's every need¡"what does"the supermarket"there mean?
[¡¡¡¡]
A£®This very supermaret.
B£®The supermarket mentioned above.
C£®The only supermarket in the place where the house wife lives.
D£®Supermarkets.
3£®In the second paragraph"when she leaves, she'll shop nowhere else", means ________.
[¡¡¡¡]
A£®there are no other places where she can go
B£®she'll not be allowed to do shopping anywhere else
C£®she need not go to other stores to buy what she wants
D£®after she leaves, the shop will be nowhere to be found
4£®Supermarkets try to attract customers by ________.
[¡¡¡¡]
A£®selling flowers and trees in the parking lots
B£®cutting the prices of their goods
C£®telling shoppers not to worry about snow, rani or the hot sun
D£®making shopping a pleasant thing for shoppers
5£®The last sentence of this passage means ________.
[¡¡¡¡]
A£®fewer and fewer husbands around the world will have to do shopping
B£®more and more housewives will come to stand in the checkout lines, watiting to be served
C£®supermarkets will soon become more and more popular around the world
D£®more and more housewives will have to stand in the checkout line
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In the 1930's, a lot of people in the USA were out of work. Among these people was a man named Alfred Butts. He always has an interest in word games and so, to fill his time, he planned a game which he called¡°Lexico¡±. However, he was not completely satisfied with the game, so he made a number of changes to it and, in time, changed its name from¡°Lexico¡±to¡°Alph¡±and then to¡°Criss¡¤Cross¡±. He wanted to make some money from his new game, but he didn't have any real commercial£¨ÉÌÒµÐԵģ©success.
¡¡¡¡In 1939, Butts happened to meet a man called Jim Brunot who showed an interest in the new game. The two men worked together on developing the game and in 1984 it was offered for sale in the United States under its new name--¡°Scrabble¡±.
¡¡¡¡At first, it didn't sell very well. In the first year it sold just 2,250 sets and by 1951 it had only reached 8,500sets a year.
¡¡¡¡Then, in 1952 the manager of Macy's department store in New York, Jack Strauss, happened to play¡°Scrabble¡±while he was on holiday. He thought it was a wonderful game and, when the went back to work after his holiday, he insisted that Macy's should stock£¨´¢±¸£©the game and make an effort to call the public's attention to it.
¡¡¡¡As a result,¡°Scrabble¡±became a big success in the United States and it soon spread to Australia and then to other English-speaking countries.
£¨1£©The text is mainly about _______.
[¡¡¡¡]
£¨2£©Alfred Butts invented the game¡°Lexico¡± ________.
[¡¡¡¡]
A. to make himself famous
B. to make spelling simpler
C. when he was out of work and looking for a job
D. when he was playing word games to pass the time
£¨3£©Who made¡°Scrabble¡±popular?
[¡¡¡¡]
A. Alfred Butts.
B. Jack Strauss.
C. Alfred Butts and Jim Brunot.
D. Jack Strauss and Jim Brunot.
£¨4£©When did Alfred Butts first put his game on the market?
[¡¡¡¡]
A. In 1939.
B. In 1948.
C. Before 1939.
D. Between 1939 and 1948.
£¨5£©What does the underlined word¡°call¡±mean in Paragraph 4?
[¡¡¡¡]
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