When I lived in Spain, some Spanish friends of mine decided to visit England by car. Before they left, they asked me for advice about how to find accommodation (סËù). I suggested that they should stay at ¡°bed and breakfast¡± houses, because this kind of accommodation gives a foreign visitor a good chance to speak English with the family. My friends listened to my advice, but they came back with some funny stories.

¡°We didn¡¯t stay at bed and breakfast houses,¡± they said, ¡°because we found that most families were away on holiday.¡±

I thought this was strange. Finally I understood what had happened. My friends spoke little English, and they thought ¡°VACANCIES¡± meant ¡°holidays¡±, because the Spanish word for ¡°holidays¡± is ¡°vacaciones¡±. So they did not go to house where the sign outside said ¡®VACANCLES¡¯, which in English means there are free rooms. Then my friends went to house where the sign said ¡®NO VACANCLES¡¯, because they thought this meant the people who owned the house were not away on holiday. But they found that these houses were all full. As a result, they stayed at hotels!

We laughed about this and about mistakes my friends made in reading other signs. In Spanish, the word ¡°DIVERSION¡± means fun. In English, it means that workmen are repairing the road, and that you must take a different road. When my friends saw the word ¡°DIVERSION¡± on a road sign, they thought they were going to have fun. Instead, the road ended in a large hold.

English people have problems too when they learn foreign languages. Once in Paris. when someone offered me some more coffee, I said ¡®Thank you¡¯ in French. I meant that I would like some more, However , to my surprise the coffee pot was taken away! Later I found out that ¡®Thank you¡¯ in French means ¡®No, thank you.¡¯

1. My Spanish friends wanted advice about ______.

A. learning English                     B. finding places to stay in England

C. driving their car on English roads        D. going to England by car

2. I suggested that they stay at bed and breakfast houses because ______.

A. they would be able to practise their English

B. it would be much cheaper than staying in hotels

C. it would be convenient for them to have dinner

D. there would be no problem about finding accommodation there

3. ¡°NO VACANCIES¡± in English means ______.

A. no free rooms        B. free rooms      C. not away on holiday    D. holidays

4. If you see a road sign that says ¡®Diversion¡¯, you will ______.

A. fall into a hole

B. have a lot of fun and enjoy yourself

C. find that the road is blocked by crowds of people

D. have to take a different road

5. When someone offered me more coffee and I said ¡°Thank you¡± in French, I ______.

A didn¡¯t really want any more coffee      B. wanted them to take the coffee pot away

C. really wanted some more coffee        D. wanted to express my politeness

 

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 B

 A

 A

 D

 C

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¡¡¡¡Mark Twain and Chauncey M. Depew once went abroad on the same ship. When the ship was a few days out they were both invited to a dinner, and when speech-making time came, Mark Twain had the first chance. He spoke twenty minutes and made a great hit. Then it was Mr. Depew's turn.

¡¡¡¡¡°Mr. Toastmaster and Ladies and Gentlemen,¡±said the famous speaker as he rose¡°Before this dinner Mark Twain and myself made an agreement to trade speeches. He had just delivered[di'liv+d],Ñݽ²) my speech, and I thank you for the pleasant manner in which you received it. I regret to say that I have lost the notes of his speech and can not remember anything he was to say.¡±

¡¡¡¡Then he sat down, and there was much laughter.

1£®What did Mark Twain and Chauncey M. Depew to abroad for?

[¡¡¡¡]

A£®They were going to make important speeches

B£®They were going to have important dinner

C£®They were going to attend an important meeting

D£®The writer of the passage didn't tell us about it

2£®From the first paragraph, we can see that, on the ship ________.

[¡¡¡¡]

A£®Mark Twain made a well - liked speech

B£®Mark Twain was not pleased with his own speech

C£®The listeners thought that Mark Twain's speech was well worth listening to but it was too long

D£®Mark Twain was happy to get the first chance to speak

3£®From this passage, we can see that Chauncey M. Depew ________.

[¡¡¡¡]

A£®was a famous speaker but had a poor memory

B£®lost the notes of the speech but made a wonderful speech

C£®was a famous speaker indeed

D£®felt unhappy because Mark Twain broke his promise

4£®What did the listeners think of the speech made by Chauncey M. Depew?

[¡¡¡¡]

A£®His speech was more interesting than Mark Twain's.

B£®His speech was less interesting than Mark Twain's.

C£®His speech was a wonderful speech made in a funny way.

D£®His speech was not a speech but a laughing matter.

5£®The best title for the passage is ________.

[¡¡¡¡]

A£®Mark Twain and Chauncey M. Depew

B£®Funny Speeches

C£®An Agreement to Trade Speeches

D£®I Cannot Remember Anything He Was to Say

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¡¡¡¡Mark Twain and Chauncey M. Depew once went abroad on the same ship. When the ship was a few days out they were both invited to a dinner, and when speech-making time came, Mark Twain had the first chance. He spoke twenty minutes and made a great hit. Then it was Mr. Depew's turn.

¡¡¡¡¡°Mr. Toastmaster and Ladies and Gentlemen,¡±said the famous speaker as he rose¡°Before this dinner Mark Twain and myself made an agreement to trade speeches. He had just delivered[di'liv+d],Ñݽ²) my speech, and I thank you for the pleasant manner in which you received it. I regret to say that I have lost the notes of his speech and can not remember anything he was to say.¡±

¡¡¡¡Then he sat down, and there was much laughter.

1£®What did Mark Twain and Chauncey M. Depew to abroad for?

[¡¡¡¡]

A£®They were going to make important speeches

B£®They were going to have important dinner

C£®They were going to attend an important meeting

D£®The writer of the passage didn't tell us about it

2£®From the first paragraph, we can see that, on the ship ________.

[¡¡¡¡]

A£®Mark Twain made a well - liked speech

B£®Mark Twain was not pleased with his own speech

C£®The listeners thought that Mark Twain's speech was well worth listening to but it was too long

D£®Mark Twain was happy to get the first chance to speak

3£®From this passage, we can see that Chauncey M. Depew ________.

[¡¡¡¡]

A£®was a famous speaker but had a poor memory

B£®lost the notes of the speech but made a wonderful speech

C£®was a famous speaker indeed

D£®felt unhappy because Mark Twain broke his promise

4£®What did the listeners think of the speech made by Chauncey M. Depew?

[¡¡¡¡]

A£®His speech was more interesting than Mark Twain's.

B£®His speech was less interesting than Mark Twain's.

C£®His speech was a wonderful speech made in a funny way.

D£®His speech was not a speech but a laughing matter.

5£®The best title for the passage is ________.

[¡¡¡¡]

A£®Mark Twain and Chauncey M. Depew

B£®Funny Speeches

C£®An Agreement to Trade Speeches

D£®I Cannot Remember Anything He Was to Say

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