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If the broker’s lien of the bill of lading for his charges in respect of goods is not satisfied before the goods have reached their destination,he may have the goods()home in order to retain his lien on them,and is not liable to any action for so doing.
A . delivered
B . provided
C . brought
D . become
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Some women ()(本来能够挣一份很好的工资) in a job instead of staying home, but they decided not to work for the sale of the family.
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Following is the list of locations in random order where oranfstab can be placed. 1./etc/mtab 2.$ORACLE_HOME/dbs/oranfstab 3./etc/oranfstab What is the sequence in which Direct NFS will search the locations?()
A . 1, 2, 3
B . 3, 2, 1
C . 2, 3, 1
D . 1, 3, 2
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Following is the list of locations in random order where oranfstab can be placed. 1./etc/mtab 2.$ORACLE_HOME/dbs/oranfstab 3./etc/oranfstab What is the sequence in which Direct NFS will search the locations?()
A . 1,2,3
B . 3,2,1
C . 2,3,1
D . 1,3,2
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In the parameter file of the production database, the BACKGROUND_DUMP_DEST parameter is set to $ORACLE_HOME/users. Which two types of files would you find in this location?()
A . the alert log file
B . the core dump files
C . the change tracking file
D . the user session trace files
E . the database audit trail files
F . the background process trace file
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What does “be reduced to rubble” mean in the sentence “The old town of Beichuan, home to 20,000 people, was reduced to rubble”?
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Most of Hardy’s novels are set in ______, the fictional primitive and crude rural region that is really the home place he both loves and hates.
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Consumers have become less interested in 3D TV at home, partly because of (have) ______ to wear special glasses.
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______ one time, Manchester was the home of the most productive cotton mills in the world.
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The () of a happy home is what those people wandering in the street need most.
A.abandon
B.confrontation
C.mirage
D.security
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Please________us of any changes in your circumstances when you are away from home
A.relieve
B.inform
C.assure
D.remind
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Television ,the modern wonder of electronics,brings the world into your own home in sight and sound,1. And the word "television" means "seeing far".
Television works in much the same way as radio. In radio,sound is changed into electromagnetic (invisible light) waves which are sent through the air. Experiments leading to modern television took place more than a hundred years ago. By the 1920s inventors and researchers had turned the early theories into working models.Yet it took another thirty years for TV to become an industry.
The influence of TV on the life of people is incalculable:it can influence their thoughts and their way of life. It can also add to their store of knowledge. Educational TV stations offer teaching in various subjects. Some hospitals use TV for medical students to get close-up views of operations. At first television programs were broadcast in black-and -white. With the development of science and technology,the problem of how to telecast them in full color was solved and by the middle 1960s the national networks were broadcasting most of their programs in color.
The programs that people watch are not only local and national ones. Since the launching of the first communications satellite,more and more programs are telecast "live" from all over the world. People in San Francisco were able to watch the 1964 Olympic Games in Tokyo. And live telecasts now come from outer space. In 1969,the first astronauts to land on the moon televised their historic "moon walk" to viewers on the earth. Since then,astronauts have regularly sent telecast to the earth.
56. Television is said to be the modern wonder of electronics,because _______.
A. it is an industry
B. it broadcasts most of the programs in color
C. it brings the world into people's own home in sight and sound
D. it influences people's thoughts
57. Television became an industry in _______.
A. 1920
B. 1969
C. the l920s
D. the 1950s
58. The word "incalculable" means______.
A. very great
B. uncertain
C. hard to tell
D. very small
59. The development of science and technology made it possible for television programs to _______.
A. be telecast again
B. be kept for later use
C. be put on video tape
D. be telecast in full color
60. The launching of communications satellites made it possible for people to _______.
A. get close up views of operations
B. learn various subjects
C. watch the 1964 Olympic Games in Tokyo
D. watch local programs
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Differences between PW dual-homing protection and tunnel linear protection of PTN device lie in that ()
A.PW dual-homing protection is usually used for protection between networks; tunnel protection is usually used to protect the inside of PTN network;
B.Neither PW dual-homing nor tunnel 1:1 switching needs APS negotiation.
C.PW dual-homing switching has one more trigger condition -- CSF than tunnel protection switching.
D.PW dual-homing has less OAM detection points than tunnel protection, which saves device resources.
此题为多项选择题。
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A network consultant is asked to set up a wireless network in a home. The home user wants thewireless network to be available in every comer of the house.Which of the following additional information will the technician need to determine the equipment for the installation? ()(Select TWO)
A. The length of the house
B. How many rooms are in the house
C. How many users will be using the wireless network
D. The building material of the house
E. The cost of the house
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We can replace "until" with "till" in the following sentence without changing the meaning or grammaticality of the sentence.It was notuntilmidnight that she went back home.
正确
错误
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We can replace "until" with "till" in the following sentence without changing the meaning or grammaticality of the sentence.It was not until midnight that she went back home.
A:正确;
B:错误
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passage four:questions 26~30 are based on the following passage. It came as something of a surprise when Diana, Princess of Wales, made a trip to Angola in 1997, to support the Red Cross’s campaign for a total ban on all anti-personnel landmines. Within hours of arriving in Angola, television screens around the World were filled with images of her comforting victims injured in explosions caused by landmines. “I knew the statistics,” she said. “But putting a face to those figures brought the reality home to me; like When I met Sandra, a 13-year-old girl who had lost her leg, and people like her.”
The Princess concluded, with a simple message: “We must stop landmines”. And she used every opportunity during her visit to repeat this message.
But, back in London, her views were not shared by some members of the British government, which refused to support a ban on these weapons. Angry politicians launched an, attack on the Princess in the press. They described her as “very ill-informed” and a “loose cannon (乱放炮的人).”
The Princess responded by brushing aside the criticisms: “This is a distraction (干扰) we do not need. All I’m trying to do is help.”
Opposition parties, the media and the Public immediately voiced their support for the Princess. To make matters worse for the government, it soon emerged that the Princess’s trip had been approved by the Foreign Office, and that she was in fact very well-informed about both the situation in Angola and the British government’s policy regarding landmines. The result was a severe embarrassment for the government.
To try and limit the damage, the Foreign Secretary, Malcolm Rifkind, claimed that the Princess’s views on landmines were not very different from government policy, and that it was “working towards” a worldwide ban. The Defense Secretary, Michael Portillo, claimed the matter was “a misinterpretation or misunderstanding.”
For the Princess, the trip to this war-torn country was an excellent opportunity to use her popularity to show the world how much destruction and suffering landmines can cause. She said that the experience had also given her the Chance to get closer to people and their problems.
第26题:Princess Diana paid a visit to Angola in 1997 ________.
A.to voice her support for a total ban of landmines
B.to clarify the British government’s stand on landmines
C.to investigate the sufferings of landmine victims there
D.to establish her image as a friend of landmine victims
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That cold January night, I was growing sick of my life in San Francisco. There I was, walking home at one in the morning after a tiring practice at the theater. With opening night only a week
away, I was still learning my lines. I was having trouble dealing with my part-time job at the bank and my acting at night at the same time. As I walked, I thought seriously about giving up both acting and San Francisco. City life had become too much for me.
As I walked down empty streets under tall buildings, I felt very small and cold. I began running, both to keep warm and to keep away from any possible robbers (抢劫犯). Very few people were still out except a few sad-looking homeless people under blankets.
About a block from my apartment (公寓房间), I heard a sound behind me: I turned quickly, half expecting to see someone with a knife or a gun. The street was empty. All I saw was a shining streetlight. Still, the noise had made me nervous, so I started to run faster. Not until I reached my apartment building and unlocked the door did I realize what the noise had been. It had been my wallet falling to the sidewalk.
Suddenly I wasn't cold or tired anymore. I ran out of the door and back to where I'd heard the noise. Although I searched the sidewalk anxiously for fifteen minutes, my wallet was nowhere to be found.
Just as I was about to give up the search, I heard the garbage truck (垃圾车) pull up to the sidewalk next to me. When a voice called from the inside, "Lily Smith?" I thought I was dreaming. How could this man know my name? The door opened, and out jumped a small red-haired man with an aroused look in his eyes. "Is this what you're looking for?" he asked, holding up a small square shape.
It was nearly 3 a.m. by the time I got into bed. I wouldn't get much sleep that night, but I had gotten my wallet back. I also had gotten back some enjoyment of city life. I realized that the city couldn't be a bad place as long as people were willing to help each other.
How did the writer feel when she was walking home after work?
A.Cold and sick.
B.Fortunate and hopeful.
C.Satisfied and cheerful.
D.Disappointed and helpless.
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If national health insurance would not cure the problems of the American healthcare system, what, then, is responsible for them? Suspicion falls heavily on hospitals, which make up the largest component of the system. In 1988 hospitals accounted for 39% of all health expenditures-more than doctor, nursing homes, drugs, and home health care combined.
Although U.S. hospitals provide outstanding research and frequently excellent care, they also exhibit the classic attributes of insufficient organizations: increasing costs and decreasing use. The average cost of a hospital stay in 1987—$3,850—was more than double the 1980 cost. A careful government analysis published in 1987 revealed the inflation of hospital costs, over and above general price inflation, as a major factor in their growth, even after allowances were made for increases in the population and in intensity of care. While the rate of increase for hospital costs was 2796 greater than that for all medical care and 163% greater than that for all other goods and services, demand for hospital services fell by 34%. But hospitals seemed oblivious of the decline: during this period the number of hospital beds shrank only by about 396, and the number of full-time employees grew by more than 240,000.
After yet another unexpectedly high hospital-cost increase last year, one puzzled government analyst asked: "Where's the money going?" Much of the increase in hospital costs—amounting to $180 billion from 1965 to 1987—went to duplicating medical technology available in nearby hospitals and maintaining excess beds. Modern Healthcare, a leading journal in the field, recently noted that "anecdotes of hospitals' unnecessary spending on technology abound". Medical technology is very expensive. An operating room outfitted to perform. open-heart surgery costs hundreds of thousands of dollars. From 1982 to 1989 the number of hospitals with open-heart-surgery facilities grew by 33%, and the most rapid growth occurred among smaller and moderate-sized hospitals. This growth was worrisome for reasons of both costs and quality. Underused technology almost inevitably decreases quality of care. In medicine, as in everything else, practice makes perfect. For example, most of the hospitals with the lowest mortality rates for coronary-bypass surgery perform. at least fifty to a hundred such procedures annually, and in some cases many more; the majority of those with the highest mortality rates perform. fewer than fifty a year.
According to the passage, the American health-care system______.
A.is working smoothly
B.is the best system in the world
C.is not working efficiently
D.in on the point of collapses
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The First National Bank of Summerville has opened an office in Turkey. This is a limited service office that can market services of the home office in Turkey and can identify Turkish customers but can
A.A representative office
B.A shell branch
C.A branch office
D.A subsidiary
E.An export trading company
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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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In the summer of1996 and1997, Merry worked as a salesgirl for thiscompany in Guangzhou()
是
否
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She didn’t _____ the idea of going home in the dark.
A.imagine
B.turn
C.dislike
D.fancy
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In 1974 Henry Aaron broke Babe Ruth's monumental lifetime record of 714 home runs.()
A.archaic(old, antique)
B.degrading (discredit)
C.outstanding
D.entire