Auxiliary
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Uses
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Present/future
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Past
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May
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1.polite request
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And it may be too late; many in the center have become enamored of Mr. Ryan, who also appeals to the Republican base andmay even become Mitt Romney’s vice-presidential running mate
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2.formal permission
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But he may be the only one with the financial fate of his nation potentially hanging in the balance.
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Might
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1.less than 50% certainty
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In return, the Unionmight demand that Cyprus raise its 10 percent tax on corporate profits, a crucial selling point and key to an economy based on financial and business services like accounting.
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2.polite request(rare)
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Should
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1.advisability
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In your book, you argue that Chinashould liberalize interest rates and adopt a more market-oriented exchange-rate policy, suggesting that these would be the most effective policy tools to rebalancing the nation’s economy
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2.90% certainty
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Within a year or so we should expect to see that private consumption expenditure would pick up relative to the overall growth of the economy and that investment outlays would moderate
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Ought to
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1.advisability
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2.90% certainty
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Had better
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1.advisability with threat of bad result
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Be supposed to
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1.expectation
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Be to
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1.strong expectation
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Must
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1.strong neccesity
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And there is not much time left: Banks in Europe mustdemonstrate to the European Banking Authority by the end of June that they have enough capital to be viable.
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2.prohibition(negative)
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Have to
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1.necessity
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But the necessary reforms have toblocked by vested interests, so a pessimist would say reform now is unlikely
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2.lack of necessity
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Cypriot business people dread the prospect of having toask the European Union for a bailout
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Have got to
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1.necessity
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Will
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1.100% certainty
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Some of this has been for infrastructure, which will support long-term economic growth.
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2.polite request
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The property boom is based on the widespread assumption that property prices willcontinue to move upward with only brief and shallow price corrections
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Be going to
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1.100% certainty
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2.definite plan
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Can
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1.ability/possibility
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Tourists in Nicosia’s old town can eat at the Berlin Wall Kebab Shop, abutting a crumbling stone section of the dividing line.
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2.informal permission
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Could
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1.past ability
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And that, he says,could set the stage for a lengthy period of sluggish growth.
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2.polite request
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In an exchange by phone and e-mail, I asked Mr. Lardy about the roots of the imbalances, and whether China’s long-running economic boom could be coming to an end.
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Be able to
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1.ability
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But since 2009, when Cypriot banks became the pathway for the Greek crisis to infect the local economy, its deficit has risen to equal an estimated 7 percent of G.D.P. in 2011, and the country is no longer able to sell bonds on the open market after a series of downgrades by ratings agencies.
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Would
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1.polite request
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Deposit rates were held down so that the after-inflation return on bank deposits for savers turned negative. That reduced household income below the path it otherwisewould have achieved, leading to a slowdown in the rate of growth of household consumption expenditure
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2.preference
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The central bank had to pay interest on these bills and reserves, and the low-interest-rate policy made the cost of these operations less than itwould have been had interest rates been market determined.
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Used to
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1.repeated action in the past
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Shall
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1.polite request to make a sugesstion
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2.future with “I” or “we”as subject
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Senin, 07 Januari 2013
Auxiliary
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