首页
登录
职称英语
[originaltext]Bill: Hi, Howard. What are you working now?.Howard: Hi, Bill. Hi
[originaltext]Bill: Hi, Howard. What are you working now?.Howard: Hi, Bill. Hi
游客
2024-12-22
18
管理
问题
Bill: Hi, Howard. What are you working now?.
Howard: Hi, Bill. Hi, Lisa. I’ve just finished a piece of background music.
Lisa: Background music? Oh, like the music they’re playing here now.
Howard: Yes. You hear it everywhere--in restaurants, airports, supermarkets, department stores...
Bill: In banks, too. I noticed it while we were at the bank today.
Lisa: Did you? I didn’t.
Howard: You’re not supposed to notice it. It’s just there, in the background. It’s supposed to influence your attitudes, put you in the right mood.
Lisa: I’m not sure I like that idea.
Howard: Well, it seems to work. Companies pay millions of dollars every year for background music. It’s supposed to give you a better feeling about yourself and the people around you. Factories use it a lot. It makes the workers happy, and they work better that way. In one factory, music increased production 4.5 percent.
Bill: I should think they’d get tired of hearing music all day.
Howard: They don’t, though. One fellow in San Francisco told me, "If the music stops, somebody always runs to the telephone to complain.”
Lisa: Now that I think about it, I can’t remember when there wasn’t background music in restaurants and stores.
Howard: That shows how young you are. Actually, it all started during World War II when some factories had their own orchestras to keep workers happy and calm. Now, of course, the music is piped in by a machine, and different kinds of music are played at different times during the day. They play faster music at ten in the morning than at eight, for instance, because workers tend to be slower then.
Bill: What about restaurants? Do they play the same music for dinner and lunch?
Howard: I don’t know about that, but I do know that hamburger places play fast music. When they started playing faster music, they found that a customer spent only seventeen minutes eating. The time was twenty-two minutes before that.
Lisa: So they have more people coming in and out to buy hamburgers.
Howard: Exactly. And that’s good for business. You can see why music has become so popular. In Los Angeles, for instance, thirty different companies are selling background music services.
Lisa: I still think there’s something about it that I dolor quite like.
Howard: I know what you mean, but lots of people would not agree with you. The Xerox Corporation in Rochester, N.Y. spends more than $ 80,000 a year for background music. Prisons use it, and farmers use it to keep their cattle calm. It’s even supposed to have an effect on plants.
选项
A、Howard and Lisa.
B、Howard and some others.
C、Bill and Lisa.
D、Bill and some others.
答案
A
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://www.tihaiku.com/zcyy/3879955.html
相关试题推荐
Howmanypeoplerecognizedthemaninthepictureswithin2days?[originaltext]
[originaltext]A:Goodmorning,Mr.Pitt.Dositdown.B:Thankyou.A:Firstof
[originaltext]A:Goodmorning,Mr.Pitt.Dositdown.B:Thankyou.A:Firstof
[originaltext]A:Goodmorning,Mr.Pitt.Dositdown.B:Thankyou.A:Firstof
[originaltext]M:Youarenotstillwatchingtelevision,areyou?W:Ienjoyyou
[originaltext]M:Youarenotstillwatchingtelevision,areyou?W:Ienjoyyou
[originaltext]TheoutgoingparliamentinthePalestinianterritorieshasvot
[originaltext]Bill:Hi,Howard.Whatareyouworkingnow?.Howard:Hi,Bill.Hi
[originaltext]Bill:Hi,Howard.Whatareyouworkingnow?.Howard:Hi,Bill.Hi
[originaltext]Bill:Hi,Howard.Whatareyouworkingnow?.Howard:Hi,Bill.Hi
随机试题
中国家庭一向尊老爱幼。在大家庭里,老一辈人的意见受到尊重,小一辈的人得到全家的爱护。中国宪法规定赡养父母是成年子女义不容辞的责任。在城市里,不和家里老人
[originaltext]W:Goodafternoon!I’mcallingtoaskabouttheapartmentyouadv
TheWorldTradeOrganizationwasfoundedin1995.ItabsorbedtheGeneralAgr
藏书建设必须坚持实用性和简约化原则。()
对于社会主义的人道主义,不正确的理解是A.对任何病人一视同仁 B.病人对医护人
大学生小红向社会工作者倾诉,她什么都不如别人,经常会感觉自卑。如果运用理性情绪治
在社会主义革命阶段,民族资产阶级仍然是一个具有两面性的阶级:既有剥削工人的一面,
案例七: 一般资料:求助者,女性,42岁,中学教师。 案例介绍:求助者由于
某男性工人,在木器加工厂从事木材烘干工作20年,因近日视物模糊而就医应重点检查的
根据《建设工程监理规范》,下列施工单位报审表中,需要总监理工程师签字并加盖执业印
最新回复
(
0
)