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The road ()built last year.
A . has been
B . has being built
C . is being
D . wa
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We had the winch()last year.
A . to overhaul
B . overhauling
C . overhauled
D . overhaul
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Earning enough money to support his family is a high()
A . emergency
B . stuff
C . priority
D . rage
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The young man worked very hard and earned some money to ______ his travelling expense.
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Before his death last year, Professor Johnson decided that he ___ leave $2,000,000 to his university.
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Last year, Mr.Johnson earned ______ his brother.
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Much more money has been earned in the past two years than .
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Tom earned $120 in interest on his savings account last year. Tom has decided to leave the $120 in his account so that he can earn interest on the $120 this year. This process of earning interest on prior interest earnings is called:
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In order to earn money for his family, it is necessary for him to get a job.
A.it is necessary to get a job
B.it is necessary to find a job
C.he must get a job
D.a job must be found
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Last year mike earned ______ his brother, though his brother has a higher position.
A) twice as much as B) twice as many as
C) twice than D) twice as more as
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What problem occurred at last years show?
A.Some people could not hear the speakers.
B.The event location was changed during the show.
C.The reserved room was too small.
D.One of the presenters could not attend.
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He earned little and so had to live mainly on his allowance. He occasionally thought of 59 his profession,
A、living
B、turning
C、ending
D、changing
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How is this years trade show expected to be different from last years?
A.It will be held at the Watson"s convention center.
B.It will last for two days.
C.It will be attended by more people.
D.It will include additional exhibitions.
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This is just the place______he and his wife visited last year.
A.where
B.that
C.when
D.why
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Larry Griffin was woken at three that morning to be told that his last-minute_____against his death sentence for the murder of Quintin Moss, 15 years before, had been unsuccessful.
A.appeals
B.accusation
C.indictment
D.prosecution
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Some professional footballers earn more in a month than many of us do in many years.
A.do
B.win
C.gain
D.receive
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He will be doing his best to ______ himself on his opponent for last years defeat.
A.remedy
B.reproach
C.revive
D.revenge
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Alan is a 23-year old student at Upper State College.He earned $4,400 at a summer job.
Alan is a 23-year old student at Upper State College.He earned $4,400 at a summer job.
I.Because he earns over $4,150 he is not a dependent of his parents
II.His parents can claim a $500 family tax credit for Alan as a dependent.()
A、Only statement I is correct
B、Only statement II is correct
C、Both statements are correct
D、Neither statement is correct
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Mary Lou is a 22-year old student at Wilson College.She earned $4,300 at a summer job
Mary Lou is a 22-year old student at Wilson College.She earned $4,300 at a summer job, which is less than half of her support.I.Mary Lou can claim a $500 family tax credit for herself even if her parents claim a $500 family tax credit as a dependent.II.Because Mary Lou is a full-time college student, and she provides less than half of her own support, her parents can claim a $500 family tax credit because she is their dependent.()
A、Only statement I is correct
B、Only statement II is correct
C、Both statements are correct
D、Neither statement is correct
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Judging by the $23 billion it earned last year, these should be the best of times for Shell, the Anglo-Dutch energy giant that ranks third among the top five Western oil companies. But Wall Street isn't celebrating. Instead, analysts are worried that buried beneath the record profit figures are worrying signs of a business in decline.
That's because Shell hasn't been able to find nearly as much oil and gas as it's now pumping out of the ground. In fact, it hasn't even come close—replacing only 60% to 70% of what it produced in 2005 and only 19% in 2004. Shell has had reserve problems for years—a controversy over improperly booked assets forced it to reduce estimated reserves by roughly 30% and led to the resignation of its CEO, Phil Watts, in 2004. But what's troubling now is that Shell is falling way behind rivals like Exxon and BP despite spending billions more each year on exploring and drilling new wells. Last year Exxon replaced 112% of production; BP came up with 95%. "I have never seen anything like this," says Fadel Gheit, a veteran energy analyst with Oppenheimer & Co. "Shell used to represent the gold standard in this industry, but lately they can't get their act together."
To be sure, Shell still has huge assets—nearly 12 billion barrels. But in the oil and gas industry, reserve replacement is the best guide to whether a company will be able to maintain-or grow-production in the future. So not replacing what you pump, says longtime industry observer Matthew Simmons, "is like eating your seed corn. If you're not finding new oil, you're just liquidating what you've got." Indeed, Shell's daily production figures have been weak lately, falling 6.7 % in 2005, to 3.52 million barrels a day.
Privately, Shell execs say the company's decision to cut spending for exploration when oil prices bottomed out in the late 1990s is partly to blame for the anemic numbers now. Shell CEO Jeroen Vander Veer insists that projects like those on Sakhalin Island off Siberia and in Nigeria and the Gulf of Mexico will enable the company to start catching up with peers in the years ahead. It won't be easy. "If you're not adding to reserves, you have a problem," says Sanford Bernstein analyst Oswald Clint. "Shell will have to run twice as hard just to stay in place."
According to the passage, the decline of Shell
A.is a hidden process.
B.is caused by the profit last year.
C.is the estimation of Wall Street.
D.is the fault of the CEO.
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Milosevic’s Death Former Yugoslav leader Slobodan Milosevic was found dead last Saturday in his cell at the Hague-based International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia.The 64-year-old had been on trial there since February 2002.
Born in provincial Pozarevac in 1941,he was the second son of a priest and a school teacher.Both of his parents died when he was still a young adult.The young Milosevic was“untypical”,says Slavoljub Djukic,his unofficial biographer.He was“not interested in sports,avoided excursions(短途旅行)and used to come to school dressed in the old-fashioned way-white shirt and tie.”One of his old friends said,he could“imagine him as a station-master or punctilious(一丝不苟的)civil servant.”
Indeed that is exactly what he might have become,had he not married Mira.She was widely believed to be his driving force.
At university and beyond he did well.He worked for various firms and was a communist party member.By 1986 he was head of Serbia’s Central Committee.But still he had not yet really been noticed.
It was Kosovo that gave him his chance.An autonomous province of Serbia,Kosovo was home to an Albanian majority and a Serbian minority.In 1989,he was sent there to calm fears of Serbians who felt they were discriminated against.But instead he played the nationalist card and became their champion.In so doing,he changed into a ruthless (无情的) and determined man.At home with Mira he plotted the downfall of his political enemies.Conspiring(密谋)with the director of Serbian TV,he mounted a modern media campaign which aimed to get him the most power in the country.
He was elected Serbian president in 1990.In 1997,he became president of Yugoslavia.The rest of the story is well-known:his nationalist card caused Yugoslavia’s other ethnic groups to fight for their own rights,power and lands.Yugoslavia broke up when four of the six republics declared independence in 1991.War started and lasted for years and millions died.Then Western countries intervened.NATO bombed Yugoslavia,and he eventually stepped down as state leader in 2000.
Soon after this,Serbia’s new government,led by Zoran Djindjic,arrested him and sent him to face justice at the Yugoslav war crimes tribunal in the Hague.
第6题:Where did Milosevic die?
A.In a basement.
B.In a prison.
C.In Kosovo.
D.In his own country.
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Where did Michael go last year? 查看材料
A.Russia.
B.Norway.
C.India.
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In 1950, a young man would have found it much easier than it is today to get and keep a job in the auto industry. And in that year the average autoworker could meet monthly mortgage (抵押贷款) payments on an average home with just 13.4 percent of his take-home pay. Today a similar mortgage would claim more than twice that share of his monthly earnings.
Other members of the autoworker’s family, however, might be less inclined to trade the present for the past. His retired parents would certainly have had less economic security back then. Throughout much of the 1960s, more than a quarter of men and women age 65 and older lived below the poverty level, compared to less than 10 percent in 2010.
In most states, his wife could not have taken out a loan or a credit card in her own name. In 42 states, a homemaker had no legal claim on the earnings of her husband. And nowhere did a wife have legal protection against family violence.
Most black workers would not want to return to a time when, on average, they earned 40 percent less than their white counterparts (职位相对的人), while racially restrictive agreements largely prevented them from buying into the suburban neighborhoods being built for white working-class families.
Today, new problems have emerged in the process of resolving old ones, but the solution is not to go back to the past. Some people may long for an era when divorce was still hard to come by. The spread of no-fault divorce has reduced the bargaining power of whichever spouse is more interested in continuing the relationship. And the breakup of such marriages has caused pain for many families.
The growing diversity of family life comes with new possibilities as well as new challenges. According to a recent poll, more than 80 percent of Americans believe that their current family is as close as the one in which they grew up, or closer. Finding ways to improve the lives of the remaining 20 percent seems more realistic than trying to restore an imaginary golden age.
61. What do we learn about American autoworkers in 1950?
A) They had less job security than they do today.
B) It was not too difficult for them to buy a house.
C) Their earnings were worth twice as much as today.
D) They were better off than workers in other industries.
62. What does the author say about retired people today?
A) They invariably long to return to the golden past.
B) They do not depend so much on social welfare.
C) They feel more secure economically than in the past.
D) They are usually unwilling to live with their children.
63. Why couldn’t black workers buy a house in a white suburban neighborhood?
A) They lacked the means of transportation.
B) They were subjected to racial inequality.
C) They were afraid to break the law.
D) They were too poor to afford it.
64. What is the result of no-fault divorce?
A) Divorce is easier to obtain.
B) Domestic violence is lessened.
C) It causes little pain to either side.
D) It contributes to social unrest.
65. What does the author suggest society do?
A) Get prepared to face any new challenges.
B) Try to better the current social security net.
C) Narrow the gap between blacks and whites.
D) Improve the lives of families with problems.
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A cyclical companys size increases hugely in the recent years and has fluctuant earning every year. Which method is least likely to use to calculate this companys earning to formulate P/E ratio?
A.Averagehistoricalearningswhichdoesntconsidercyclicalearnings.
B.AverageROEwhichdoesntconsidercyclicalearnings.
C.Averagehistoricalearningswhichdoesntconsidercompanyssizechange.