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The first hotels were very different from today's hotels. They were small inns built along

the road. Later, as people began to travel by train, hotels were built in the centers of large cities. Usually located near railroad stations, these hotels were many stories tall and had hundreds of rooms.

Although trains were a popular means of travel for some time, automobiles slowly began to take their place. Automobile travel caused problems for city hotels, which did not have enough parking space for so many cars.

People who traveled by automobile needed a different kind of hotel. They needed places to stay that were near highways and had room to park. Motorists did not like to drive in heavy city traffic to reach a hotel. The answer to the motorists' problems came when a new kind of hotel was built. These new buildings were called motels, a word made from the first part of MOTORIST and the last part of HOTELS.

Motels were much smaller than hotels. Built on ground level, often in separate units, they were more convenient for people traveling. The separate units also made them quieter than hotels, best of all, there was more than enough room for cars to park. ,

Now, many big hotels in the cities are being torn down. They can no longer make enough money to stay in business. In their place, many small motels have been built on the outskirts(近郊) of cities. Motels have become a big business in the United States.

The first hotels were built______.

A.with hundreds of rooms

B.around the city centers

C.near railway stations

D.quite close to roads.

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更多“The first hotels were very dif…”相关的问题
第1题
In capsule hotels, each guest stays in a small sleeping space called capsule. It measures about 2 meters in length and 1 meter in both width and height.

In capsule hotels, each guest stays in a small sleeping space called capsule. It measures about 2 meters in length and 1 meter in both width and height.

It is a type of hotel first developed in Japan intended to provide cheap, basic overnight accommodation for guests who do not require the services offered by traditional hotels. Facilities differ, but most include a television and wireless internet connection. There are many buttons in the capsule. One turns on the light, one turns on the TV, one controls the channels. There is a radio and an alarm clock built in. The open end of the capsule can be closed, for privacy, with a curtain or a fiber glass door. Luggage is stored in a locker、 Clothes and shoes are sometimes exchanged for a Yukawa and slippers on entry. Washrooms are communal. Guests are asked not to smoke or eat in the capsules. Some hotels also provide restaurants (or at least vending machines), pools, and other entertainment facilities. Capsules are used primarily by men. Some capsule hotels offer separate sections for male and female guests.

The benefits of these hotels are convenience and price, usually around? 2000—4000 (USD 25—50) a night. They provide a place for those who may be too drunk to return home safely.

About 30% at the Capsule Hote1 were unemployed or underemployed and were the month. It was first offered to salary men who had missed the last train

also popular with travelers from all over the world. There for it’s going

Popularity.

26、 The space of each capsule id quite ()

A、large

B、capacious

C、limited

27、 Most capsules are not equipped with ()in the small sleeping space.

A、a TV

B、washrooms

C、wireless Internet connection

28、Capsule hotels were first developed in ().

A、Japan

B、China

C、UK

29、The benefits of these hotels do not include()

A、convenience

B、comfort

C、price

30、The writer has a () attitude towards capsule hotels.

A、positive

B、negative

C、neutral

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第2题
The benefits of these hotels are convenience and price,usually around 2000-4000(USD 25
The benefits of these hotels are convenience and price,usually around 2000-4000(USD 25

-50) a night. They provide a place for those who may be too drunk to return home safely. About 30% at the Capsule Hotel were unemployed or underemployed and were renting capsules by the month. It was first offered to salary men who had missed the last train home, but now it is also poDular with travelers from all over the world. Therefore, it's going to gain more popularity.

21. The space of each capsule is quite().

A. limited

B. large

C. capacious

22. Most capsules are not equipped with()in the small sleeping space.

A.a TV

B. wireless internet connection

C. washrooms

23.Capsule hotels were first developed in().

A. Japan

B. China

C. UK

24. The benefits of these hotels do not incude ().

A. convenienced

B. comfort

C. price

25.The writer has a () attitude towards capsule hotels.

A. positive

B. negative

C. neutral

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第3题
Within Australia, Australian Hotels Inc. (AHI) operates nine hotels and employs over 2,000

Within Australia, Australian Hotels Inc. (AHI) operates nine hotels and employs over 2,000 permanent full-time staff, 300 permanent part-time employees and 100 casual staff. One of its latest ventures, the Sydney Airport Hotel (SAH), opened in March 1995. The hotel is the closest to Sydney Airport and is designed to provide the best available accommodation, food and beverage and meeting facilities in Sydney's southern suburbs. Similar to many international hotel chains, however, AHI has experienced difficulties in Australia in providing long-term profits for hotel owners, as a result of the country's high labour-coat structure. In order to develop an economically viable hotel organisation model, AHI decided to implement some new policies and practices at SAH.

The first of the initiatives was an organisational structure with only three levels of management -- compared to the traditional seven. Partly as a result of this change, there are 25 percent fewer management positions, enabling a significant saving. This change also has other implications. Communication, both up and down the organisation, has greatly improved. Decision-making has been forced down in many eases to front-line employees. As a result, guest requests are usually me without reference to a supervisor, improving both customer and employee satisfaction.

The hotel recognised that it would need a different approach to selecting employees who would fit in with its new policies. In its advertisements, the hotel stated a preference for people with some "service" experience in order to minimize traditional work practices being introduced into the hotel. Over 7,000 applicants filled in application forms for the 120 jobs initially offered at SAH. The balance of the positions at the hotel (30 management and 40 shift leader positions) were predominantly filled by transfers from other AHI properties.

A series of tests and interviews were conducted with potential employees, which eventually left 280 applicants competing the 120 advertised positions. After the final interview, potential recruits were divided into three categories. Category A was for applicants exhibiting strong leadership qualities, Category C was for applicants perceived to be followers, and Category B was for applicants with both leader and follower qualities. Department heads and shift leaders then composed prospective teams using a combination of people from all three categories. Once suitable teams were formed, offers of employment were made team members.

Another major initiative by SAH was to adopt a totally multi-skilled workforce. Although there may be some limitations with highly technical jobs such as cooking or maintenance, wherever possible, employees at SAH are able to work in a wide variety of positions. A multi-skilled workforce provides far greater management flexibility, during peak and quiet times to transfer employees to needed positions. For example, when office staff are away on holidays during quiet periods of the year, employees in either food or beverage or housekeeping departments can temporarily fill in.

The most crucial way, however, of improving the labour cost structure at SAH was to find better, more productive ways of providing customer service. SAH management concluded this would first require a process of "benchmarking". The prime objective of the benchmarking process was to compare a range of service delivery processes across a range of criteria using made up of employees from different departments within the hotel which interacted with each other. This process resulted in performance measures that greatly enhanced SAH's ability to improve productivity and quality.

The front office team discovered through this project that a high proportion of AHI club member reservations were incomplete. As a result, the service provided to these guests was below the standard promised to them as part of their membership agr

A.management

B.size

C.staff

D.policies

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第4题
听力原文:M: Miss Jones, could you tell me more about your first job with hotel marketing c
oncepts?

W: Yes, certainly. I was a marketing consultant, responsible for marketing ten UK hotels. They were all luxury hotels in the leisure sector, all of a very high standard.

M: Which markets were you responsible for?

W: For Europe and Japan.

M: I see from your resume that you speak Japanese. Have you ever been to Japan?

W: Yes, I have. I spent a month in Japan in 2006. I met all the key people in the tourist industry, the big tour operators and tourist organizations. As I speak Japanese, I had a very big advantage.

M: Yes, of course. Have you bad any contact with Japan in your present job?

W: Yes. I've had a lot. The troth is I have become very popular with the Japanese, both for holidays end for business conferences. In fact, the market for all types of luxury holidays for the Japanese has increased a lot recently.

M: Realty, I'm interested to hear more about that, but first, ten me, have you ever traveled on a luxury train? The Orient Express, for example.

W: No I haven't, but I have traveled on a glacier express to Switzerland and I traveled across China by train about 8 years ago. I love train travel. That's why Fm very interested in this job.

(20)

A.Marketing consultancy.

B.Professional accountancy.

C.Luxury hotel management.

D.Business conference organization.

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第5题
A small percentage of the grain ______ ruined by the prolonged rain. A. was B. wer

A small percentage of the grain ______ ruined by the prolonged rain.

A. was

B. were

C. is

D. are

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第6题
海蓝之谜的logo是哪一个()

A.LA NER

B.LA WER

C.LA prairie

D.LA MER

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第7题
When Mike Kelly first set out to build his own private space-ferry service, he figures his
bread-and-butter business would be lofting satellite into high earth orbit. Now he thinks he may have figured wrong. "People were always asking me when they could go," says Kelly, who runs Kelly Space Technology, "I realized the real market is in space tourism."

According to preliminary market surveys, there are 10,000 would-be space tourists willing to spend $1 million each to visit the final frontier. Space Adventures in Arlington have taken more than 130 deposits for a two-hour, $98,000 space tour tentatively set to occur by 2005. This may sound great, but there are a few hurdles: Putting a simple satellite into orbit--with no oxygen, lift: support or return trip necessary—already costs an astronomical $2,200/kg. And that doesn't include the cost of insuring rich and possibly litigious (爱打官司的) passengers. The entire group of entrepreneurs trying to comer the space- tourism market has between them "just enough money to blow up one rocket".

The U.S. space agency has plenty of money but zero interest in making space less expensive for the little guys. So the little guys are racing to do what the government has failed to do: design a reusable launch system that's inexpensive, safe and reliable. Kelly Space's prototype looks like a plane that has sprouted rocket engines. Rotary Rocket in California has a booster with rotors to make a helicopter-style. return to earth. The first passenger countdowns arc still years away, but bureaucrats at the Federal Aviation Administration in Washington arc already informally discussing flight regulations. After all, you can't be too prepared for a trip to that galaxy far, far away.

Which of the following is the best title for the passage?

A.Take Vacations in Space

B.Building Hotels in Space

C.Flight Regulations in Space Travels

D.Cost of Space Traveling

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第8题
中国青少年机器人竞赛中的WER教育机器人工程挑战赛每队是多少人()

A.1人

B.2人

C.3人

D.4人

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第9题
According to the passage, a pair of pandas is to be sent to the USA after______.A.they wer

According to the passage, a pair of pandas is to be sent to the USA after______.

A.they were born in the city of Chengdu

B.they were caught in Sichuan Province

C.the USA paid $ 4 million to China

D.three year's discussion of the two cities

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第10题
In the 60s and 70s,beauty queens .A. were sponsored by dry-cleaning companies B. wer

In the 60s and 70s,beauty queens .

A. were sponsored by dry-cleaning companies

B. were admired by most people

C. did not have a good reputation

D. got free clothes from supermarkets

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