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The ‘fsck -p /dev/lv00’ command returned the following message:Not a recognized filesystem type. What is the likely cause of the problem and how should it be resolved?()
A . The file system superblock is dirty. It can be replaced from the VGDA
B . The logical volume superblock is dirty. It can be replaced from the VGDA
C . The file system superblock is dirty. It can be replaced from the secondary copy
D . The logical volume superblock is dirty. It can be replaced from the secondary copy
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A System p administrator noticed several error messages on the screen while the system was booting up; but was not able to write them down. Where should the system administrator look for the console log, assuming it is in the default location()
A . /var/log/conslog
B . /var/log/console.log
C . /var/adm/ras/conslog
D . /var/ras/console.log
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A vessel is “listed” when it is().
A . down by the head
B . down by the stern
C . inclined due to off-center weight
D . inclined due to wind
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The ‘fsck -p /dev/lv00’command returned thefollowing message: Not a recognized filesystem type What is the likely cause of the problem and how should it be resolved?()
A . The file system superblock is dirty. It can be replaced from the VGDA
B . The logical volume superblock is dirty. It can be replaced from the VGDA
C . The file system superblock is dirty. It can be replaced from the secondary copy
D . The logical volume superblock is dirty. It can be replaced from the secondary copy
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A System p administrator is looking at changing attributes of a logical volume. Which of the following must be defined when it is created()
A . placement of the logical volume
B . stripe size of the logical volume
C . inter-disk policy of the logical volume
D . intra-disk policy of the logical volume
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The sentence, “Studies serve for delight, for ornament, and for ability”, is spoken by
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Forgetting doesn't mean forgiveness. That is something that few peoplecan truly do. Forgetting doesn't mean forgiveness. That is something that few peoplecan truly do. Forgetting doesn't mean forgiveness. That is something that few people can truly do.
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The only reason why college students can’t speak English fluently is that they are truly short of a real English environment since Chinese is our mother tongue, but English is our foreign tongue. _______________
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It is our long standing relations that we accept D/P terms ____future dealings.
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回答以下问题时,哪几个选项应该重读?—— Was your trip to France a nice one?—— Yes, it is truly a great one.
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若有说明语句char a[]="It is mine";char*p="It is mille";则以下不正确的叙述是()。A.a+1表示的
若有说明语句 char a[]="It is mine"; char*p="It is mille"; 则以下不正确的叙述是()。
A.a+1表示的是字符t的地址
B.p指向另外的字符串时,字符串的长度不受限制
C.P变量中存放的地址值可以改变
D.a中只能存放10个字符
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若有说明语句: char a[ ]="It is mine"; char * p="It is mine"; 则以下不正确的叙述是
A.a+1表示的是字符t的地址
B.p指向另外的字符串时,字符串的长度不受限制
C.p变量中存放的地址值可以改变
D.a中只能存放10个字符
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Miss Gao:Would you like to come to our club activity?Mrs Waters:Well,__________.When is it?Miss Gao:Saturday,from lo a.m.to 4 P.m.
A.OK
B.Good
C.I"d like to
D.Sure
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A) It is the largest of its kind<p>B) It is going to be expanded</p><p>C) It is displaying more fossil specimens</p><p>D) It is staring an online exhibition</p>
A、<p>It is the largest of its kind</p>
B、<p>It is going to be expanded</p>
C、<p> It is displaying more fossil specimens</p>
D、<p> It is staring an online exhibition</p>
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A) It will be more futuristic<p>B) It will be more systematic</p><p>C) It will be more entertaining</p><p>D) It will be easier to understand</p>
A、<p>It will be more futuristic</p>
B、<p> It will be more systematic</p>
C、<p>It will be more entertaining</p>
D、<p> It will be easier to understand</p>
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It is so precious a picture that it is kept in a sealed box.
A) beautiful
B)primary
C) attractive
D)valuable
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It is said in some parts of the world, goats, rather than cows, serve as a vital _____of milk.
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It is a major problem for the operating system to map the logical file concept onto p
是
否
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Key James, Secretary of Health and Human Resources in the Virginia State government, loves to turn the tables on those who don&39;t think it&39;s possible to be middle-class,conservative,educated and still be truly black. Once, during an Abortion debate, a woman in the audience angrily told James she was so middle-class she didn&39;t have a clue about real African American life. "If you understood what these women go through," the woman said, "you would realize that abortion is their only choice. "
James then asked the woman to consider a poor black mother on welfare. She already has four children and an alcoholic husband who has all but abandoned the family. Now she discovers another child is on the way. How would you counsel that woman, asked James.
"Have an abortion," the woman responded. "That child would have a very poor quality of life. "
"I have a vested interest in your answer," James said. "The woman I described was my mother. I was the fifth of six children born into poverty. And, in case you&39;re interested,the quality of my life is just fine!"
1、"To move the tables" means__________.
A.to move the tables
B.to carry the tables away
C.to gain courage
D.to gain an advantage after having been at a disadvantage
James' mother__________.A.was educated
B.was conservative
C.was poor
D.A and B
James' family led a__________life when she was born.A.miserable
B.happy
C.well-off
D.hardly
James' father__________.A.divorced his wife
B.liked to drink
C.deserted his family
D.B and C
请帮忙给出每个问题的正确答案和分析,谢谢!
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People tend to amass possessions. Indeed they can have a delightful surprise when they find something useful which they did not know they owned. Some people leave unwanted objects in drawers, cupboards and attics for years, in the belief that they may one day need just those very things. Collecting as a serious hobby is quite different. It provides relaxation for leisure hours, because just looking at one s treasures is always a joy. One does not have to go out for amusement, since the collection is housed at home. Whatever it consists of, stamps, first editions of books, antique furniture, stuffed birds, toy animals, there is always something to do in connection with it, from finding the right place for the latest addition to verifying facts in reference books. This hobby educates one not only in the chosen subject, but also in general matters which have some bearing on it.
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听力原文:Interviewer:With us today is Steve Thomas, a 23 year-old chef who delights TV aud
听力原文:Interviewer: With us today is Steve Thomas, a 23 year-old chef who delights TV audiences with his imaginative cooking programme. Steve, what's the secret of your success?
Steve: Well, I think I'm different from other TV chefs in that I want people to see how I prepare a dish from the word go, so I don't present them with a dish that's half prepared already. If anything should go wrong during the programme, know, suppose something gets burned, well, that's part of the experience. When they try preparing it themselves, then they'll see the beauty of the finished product, but not on the screen.
Interviewer: So how did you come to get your own TV series?
Steve: I was working in a restaurant called the Gala in December last year when they came to make a documentary about the place. I didn't even look at the camera.I was too busy making pasta and cooking fish. But the producer spotted me and the following week they phoned me to offer me a job... The Gala owner wished me all the best and let me go without a complaint.
Interviewer: Wow!! Now, is it true that you come from a family of cooks?
Steve: Well, you could say that ... I started cooking at the age of eight. My mum and dad have a restaurant and Dad used to do all the cooking back then. My mum was too busy looking after us ... Dad insisted that if I wanted some money, I should work for it. And it seemed a lot more interesting to help out in the kitchen and see how things were made than to earn my money washing Dad's car ...
Interviewer: You attended a catering course at college. How did you like that?
Steve: At school I wasn't very good at anything much. At that time, my mind wasn't on anything other than cooking. I found sitting in a classroom trying to pay attention to things very very trying. I managed to get to college though and there I was fine, because when it came to the actual cooking, I knew what I was doing. I realised that a bit of academic work didn't do you any harm either and I found it much easier when I was interested in the subject, and so I've no regrets, really.
Interviewer: And now you have a TV programme and several cooks working under your orders. How do you get on with them?
Steve: Oh, I love working with them. But on my programme everyone has to be really special. They need to have gone through college training before they even apply for the job. I suppose the problem is that fairly frequently I tend to raise my voice if they don't work emciently ... but I'm just as likely to praise them if they do well ... What I say to them is, you want the audience to say we are the best, so we need to make a special effort ...
Interviewer: Is there any chef celebrity that you admire especially?
Steve: I definitely think that Ron Bell is the best, and I'm pleased that he's now got his own food column in a newspaper. I had the great privilege of working with him for a while. What's so special about him is that he's always been enthusiastic about using ingredients that come from the area where he works ... For example the fish of the day would be the catch from the river close to his restaurant. He's been criticised for sticking to old-fashioned recipes, maybe that's a weakness, but I think that's his decision ...
Interviewer: I heard that you are also going to write a book.
Steve: Yes, I’m writing it at the moment. It may disappoint readers who expect a lot of glossy pictures, as most cookbooks nowadays seem to be things to look at rather than read ... I've gone for a style. that may be less attractive with fewer colour pictures but it will be more useful for most types of reader. What I say in my book is that we must remember the success of a meal does not depend on how it looks ... it's what it tastes like and the company of the friends you'll share it with that matters ...
Interviewer: Well, thank you, Steve, I look forward to trying some rec
A.the process of cooking.
B.amusing incidents.
C.attractively presented dishes.
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Is it possible that the ideas we have today about ownership and property rights have been so universal in the human mind that it is truly as if they had sprung from the mind of God? By no means. The idea of owning and property emerged in the mists of unrecorded history. The ancient Jews, for one, had a very different outlook on property and ownership, viewing it as something much more temporary and' tentative than we do.
The ideas we have in America about the private ownership of productive property as a natural and universal right of mankind, perhaps of divine origin, are by no means universal and must be viewed as an invention of man rather than an order of God. Of course, we are completely trained to accept the idea of ownership of the earth and its products, raw and transformed. It seems not at all strange; in fact, it is quite difficult to imagine a society without such arrangements. If someone, some individuals, didn't own that plot of land, that house, that factory, that machine, that tower of wheat, how would we function? What would the rules be? Whom would we buy from and how would we sell?
It is important to acknowledge a significant difference between achieving ownership simply by taking or claiming property and owning what we tend to call the "fruit of labor." If I, alone or together with my family, work on the land and raise crops, or if I make something useful out of natural material, it seems reasonable and fair to claim that the crops or the objects belong to me or my family, are my property, at least in the sense that I have first claim on them. Hardly anyone would dispute that. In fact, some of the early radical workingmen's movements made (an ownership) claim on those very grounds. As industrial organization became more complex, however, such issues became vastly more intricate. It must be clear that in modem society the social heritage of knowledge and technology and the social organization of manufacture and exchange account for far more of the productivity of industry and the value of what is produced than can be accounted for by the labor of any number of individuals. Hardly any person can now point and say, "That--that right there--is the fruit of my labor." We can say, as a society, as a nation--as a world, really--that what is produced is the fruit of our labor, the product of the whole society as a collectivity.
We have to recognize that the right of private individual ownership of property is man-made and constantly dependent on the extent to which those without property believe that the owner can make his claim, dependent on the extent to which those without stick.
According to the passage, the concept of ownership probably ______.
A.resulted from the concept of property right
B.stemmed from the uncovered prehistoric ages
C.arose from the generous blessing of the Creator
D.originated from the undetected Middle Ages
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According to reports in major news outlets, a study published last week included a startling discovery: the nation's Jewish population is in shrinking. The study, the National Jewish Population Survey, found 5.2 million Jews living in the United States in 2000, a drop of 5 percent, or 300,000 people, since a similar study in 1990. What's truly startling is that the reported decline is not tree. Worse still, the sponsor of the $6 million study, United Jewish Communities, knows it.
Both it and the authors have openly admitted their doubts. They have acknowledged in interviews that the population totals for 2000 and 1990 were reached by different methods and are not directly comparable. The survey itself also cautions readers, in a dauntingly technical appendix, that judgment calls by the researchers may have led to an undercount. When the research director and project director were asked whether the data should be construed to indicate a declining Jewish population, they flatly answered no. In addition, other survey researchers interviewed pointed to other studies with population estimates as high as 6.7 million.
Despite all this, the two figures --5.2 million now, 5.5 million then --are listed by side in the survey, leaving the impression that the population has shrunk. The result, predictably, has been a rash of headlines trumpeting the illusionary decline, in turn touching off jeremiads by rabbis and moralists condemning the religious laxity behind it. Whether out of ideology, ego, incompetence or a combination of all three, the respected charity has invented a crisis.
United Jewish Communities is the coordinating body for a national network of Jewish philanthropies with combined budgets of $2 billion. Its population surveys carry huge weight in shaping community policy. This is not the first time the survey has set off a false alarm. The last one, conducted by a predecessor organization, found that 52 percent of American Jews who married between 1985 and 1990 did so outside the faith. That number was a fabrication produced by including marriages in which neither party was Jewish by anyone's definition, including the researchers.
Its publication created a huge stir, inspiring anguished sermons, books and conferences. It put liberals on the defensive, emboldened conservatives who reject full integration into society and alienated ordinary folks by the increasingly xenophobic tone of Jewish communal culture. The new survey, to its credit, retracts that figure and offers the latest survey has spawned a panic created by the last one.
So why did the organization flawed figures once again? Some scholars who have studied the. survey believe the motivation then came partly out of a desire to shock straying Jews into greater observance. It' s too early to tell if that' s the case this time around. What is clear is the researchers did their job with little regard to how their data could be misconstrued. They used statistical models and question formats that, while internally sound, made the new survey incompatible with the previous one. For example, this time the researchers divided the population of 5.2 million into two groups--"highly involved" Jews and "people of Jewish background"- and posed most questions only to the first group. As a result, most findings about belief and observance refer only to a subgroup of American Jews, making comparisons to the past impossible.
We can' t afford to wait a decade before these figures are revised. The false population decline must be corrected before it further sours communal discourse. The United Jewish Communities owes it to itself and its public to step forward and state plainly what it knows to be true: American Jews are not disappearing.
According to the passage, which of the following statements is NOT true about the National Jewish Population Survey?
A.It found a decline of 300,000 Jews in ten years.
B.It was carded out by United Jewish Communities.
C.This is the first time United Jewish Communities has made mistakes in the population survey.
D.The reported decline is not reliable.
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Can online education ever be education of the very best sort? Not long ago I watched an online course. The instructor was intelligent and learned. But the course wasn t great and could never have been. There were students on hand, but the class seemed addressed to no one in particular. There was nothing you could get from that course that you couldn t get from a good book on the same subject. A truly memorable college class is a cooperation between teacher and students. It s a one-time-only event. Learning at its best is collective work. In real courses the students and teachers come together and create a vital atmosphere of learning. I don t think an Internet course ever will.