—Glad to see you again. How was your trip? —() A、Yes, it’s good.B、Great. The scenery was spectacular.C、I have no idea.D、No, I don’t like it.

—Glad to see you again. How was your trip? —()

A、Yes, it’s good.

B、Great. The scenery was spectacular.

C、I have no idea.

D、No, I don’t like it.


相关考题:

On Monday morning some teachers exchanged a few (). A.how-are-yousB.of how-are-you’sC.how-are-you’sD.of how are you

you, do, eraser, how, spell【连词成句)________________________?

If you had been have yesterday,you______(see)his father.

()you()Jane last month? B: No, I(). A、*/saw/didn’tB、Did/see/didn’tC、Did/saw/didn’tD、id/see/did

What's ( )job? Are ( ) British?A. your, yourB. you, yourC. your, you

Merry Christmas, George! Here is a card for ________, with ________ best withes. A.you…yourB.you…ourC.us…ourD.us…your

Jerry: I've been back from a business trip.Bob: ______A、It's very nice of you.B、How's everything going?C、You're kind to say so.D、I'd love to.

( ) – Is Miss White __________ English teacher, Maria?– No, she teaches __________ geography.A.your;myB.you;mineC.you;usD.your;us

2.—How _______you?—I_______ fine, thanks.A.are;isB.are; amC.are;areD.is,am

资料:Everyone knows airline pricing is based on supply and demand. Fares are more expensive during peak travel seasons like summer and to prime destinations like European capitals. So if a flight to Rome costs more than a flight to Milan, you'd think that demand for Rome must be higher or supply lower.What's puzzling is that you can pay a high price to a given destination but a dramatically lower price for the exact same flight if you agree to go on to another destination.Take Alitalia to Rome, for instance, for travel in August. A round-trip, economy flight directly to Rome leaving JFK at 10:05 p.m. on Alitalia 611 on August 5 costs $1,655 when booked on April 30. Compare that to $903 for a round-trip, economy ticket to Milan (stopping in Rome) leaving JFK on the exact same Alitalia 611 flight at 10:05 p.m. on August 5. So why is Alitalia willing to fly to Rome for $752 less than it would otherwise, plus give you an extra one-and-a-half-hour flight to Milan?Airlines have increased their profitability in recent years by segmenting the market for air travel and charging customers different prices for the same product. In this case, the market is segmented based on demand for direct flights. Airlines know most people prefer the shortest route to their destination, so they make customers pay up for the privilege of flying direct. (They also make it a little more inconvenient if you don't pay up for a direct flight, in order to encourage you to fly direct.)When prices become so obviously illogical, it may be time to revisit why air tickets can't be transferred or resold just like any other normal product. If the airlines are entitled to exploit the free market, shouldn't customers be allowed to do the same thing?According to the example, how much should you pay if you fly to Milan from JFK and stop in Rome midway?A.$752 for a one-way, economy ticket.B.$1,655 for a round-trip, economy ticket.C.$827 for a one-way, economy ticket.D.$903 for a round-trip, economy ticket.