In the winter vocation of 2008, I was fixed with a job. I worked as a(n) 21 at Mr Breen’s fruit shop. The fruit shop did good business. Most of the trade came from the housewives who lived in the neighborhood, 22_ he also had regular customers who arrived outside the shop in cars. Mr Breen 23 them all by names and they sometimes even had their order already made up, always 24 me to carry it out to their car. They were clearly longstanding customers, and I 25 they must have stayed faithful to him because he had promised to sell good quality fruits. He had a way with them---- I had to 26 that. He called every woman “madam” for a start, 27 those who clearly were not, but when he said it, it did not sound like flattery(恭维). It just sounded 28 in an old-fashioned way. He was a great chatter 29 . If he did not know them, he would greet them with a few 30 about the weather, 31 he did, he would ask about their families or make 32 , always cutting his cloth 33 his customers. Whatever their bills came to, he 34 gave them back the few odd pence(零钱), and I was sure they thought he was very generous. But I thought he was the opposite. He never threw anything away. He was always looking for 35 for nothing.
A.operator B.assistant C.waiter D.secretary
A.so B.when C.therefore D.but
A.sold B.knew C.gave D.sent
A.making B.letting C.getting D.keeping
A.wished B.insisted C.declared D.supposed
A.admit B.expect C.announce D.promise
A.yet B.only C.just D.even
A.serious B.strange C.polite D.familiar
A.as well B.as usual C.either D.also
A.sayings B.questions C.words D.speeches
A.and then B.and so C.even if D.but if
A.preparations B.jokes C.repairs D.friends
A.according to B.due to C.instead of D.up to
A.never B.ever C.seldom D.always
A.something B.anything C.somebody D.anybody