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In order for a vessel to be engaged in fishing she must be().
A . underway
B . using gear which extends more than 50 meters outboard
C . using a seine of some type
D . using gear which restricts her maneuverability
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Ships carrying 15 or more seafarers and engaged in a voyage of more than three day’s duration shall provide separate hospital accommodation to be used().
A . for other purposes
B . exclusively for medical purposes
C . for a common ship‟s office
D . by deck and engine department
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Companycom is migrating their application that was built on AIX 4.3, to a new p5 590 system that is running AIX 5.3. The application was a 32-bit program. What will need to be done with the application to allow it to run on the new system?()
A . Run without recompiling on AIX 5.3
B . Relink to the 32-bit kernel in order to run the application
C . Recompile to run on AIX 5.3 because the libraries are in different locations
D . Recompile 32-bit applications because the compiler flags and versions have changed
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A redaction policy was added to the SAL column of the SCOTT.EMP table: All users have their default set of system privileges. For which three situations will data not be redacted?()
A . SYS sessions, regardless of the roles that are set in the session
B . SYSTEM sessions, regardless of the roles that are set in the session
C . SCOTT sessions, only if the MGR role is set in the session
D . SCOTT sessions, only if the MGR role is granted to SCOTT
E . SCOTT sessions, because he is the owner of the table
F . SYSTEM session, only if the MGR role is set in the sessio
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The purpose of King Lear is to call for people to be filial to their fathers.
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Their engagement was to be a secret but the ring on her finger ______ .
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Stargucks' approach to business was to make their customers get enjoyment from their products.
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He refused to sit down and talk with her, which was a to their relationship.
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95. In order for a vessel to be engaged in fishing she must be ______.
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He was reluctant but he_____because he wanted to find out more about their plans before going to the police.
A.played along
B.played down
C.played about
D.play in
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Many parents are at fault for their children to be obese at such a young age as they failed to()their eating habits.
A.help
B.adjust
C.monitor
D.change
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The air hostess (空中小姐) _____ the passengers to fasten their seat belts when the plane was about to land._
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听力原文: Susan Ford, the 21-year-old blonde daughter of the former President, is engaged to Charles Frederick Vance, 37, Secret agent assigned to the detail guarding the family, and they will be married in June, it was announced Wednesday.
When will the couple be married?
A.This July.
B.Next June.
C.This June.
D.This Wednesday.
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An award was given to the journalist who had been engaged in exposing_____ of officials in high places.
A.crime
B.corruption
C.addiction
D.accusation
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Their idea was to get us to______the strike at once.
A.call at
B.call off
C.call in
D.call for
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Filled with great_________for their integrity and courage, he was determined to be a
A.A.adulation
B.B.admiration
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For a taxpayer to be engaged in a trade or business, the activity must meet all of th
是
否
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1 For the Greeks, beauty was a virtue: a kind of excellence. Persons then were assumed to be what we now have to call-lamely, enviously whole persons. If it did occur to the Greeks to distinguish between a person's "inside" and "outside," they still expected that inner beauty would be matched by beauty of the other kind. The well-born young Athenians who gathered around Socrates found it quite paradoxical that their hero was so intelligent, so brave, so honorable, so seductive-and so ugly. One of Socrates' main pedagogical acts was to be ugly-and teach those innocent, no doubt splendid-looking disciples of his how full of paradoxes life really was.
2 They may have resisted Socrates' lesson. We do not. Several thousand years later, we are more wary of the enchantments of beauty. We not only split off-with the greatest facility-the "inside" (character, intellect) from the "outside" (looks); but we are actually surprised when someone who is beautiful is also intelligent, talented, good.
3 It was principally the influence of Christianity that deprived beauty of the central place it had in classical ideals of human excellence. By limiting excellence (virtus in Latin) to moral virtue only, Christianity set beauty adrift-as an alienated, arbitrary, superficial enchantment. And beauty has continued to lose prestige. For close to two centuries it has become a convention to attribute beauty to only one of the two sexes: the sex which, however fair, is always Second. Associating beauty with women has put beauty even further on the defensive, morally.
4 A beautiful woman, we say in English, but a handsome man. "Handsome" is the masculine equivalent of-and refusal of-a compliment which has accumulated certain demeaning overtones, by being reserved for women only. That one can call a man "beautiful" in French and in Italian suggests that Catholic countries-unlike those countriesshaped by the Protestant version of Christianity-still retain some vestiges of the pagan admiration for beauty. But the difference, if one exists, is of degree only. In every modern country that is Christian or post-Christian, women are the beautiful sex-to the detriment of the notion of beauty as well as of women.
The author means _________ by "whole persons" in Para. 1.
A.persons of beauty
B.persons of virtue
C.persons of excellence
D.none of the above
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Professor Smith recently persuaded 35 people, 23 of them women, to keep a diary of all their absentminded actions for a fortnight. When he came to analyze their embarrassing lapses in a scientific report, he was surprised to find that nearly all of them fell into a few groupings. Nor did the lapses appear to be entirely random.
One of the women, for instance, on leaving her house for work one morning threw her dog her earrings and tried to fix a dog biscuit on her ear. "The explanation for this is that the brain is like a computer," explains the professor. "People program themselves to do certain activities regularly. It was the woman's custom every morning to throw her dog two biscuits and then put on her earrings. But somehow the action got reversed in the program." About one in twenty of the incidents the volunteers reported were these "program assembly failures."
Altogether the volunteers logged 433 unintentional actions that they found themselves doing--an average of twelve each. There appear to be peak periods in the day when we are at our zaniest, These are two hours some time between eight a.m. and noon, between four and six p.m. with a smaller peak between eight and ten p.m. "Among men the peak seems to be when a changeover in brain 'programs' occurs, as for instance between going to and from work." Women on average reported slightly more lapses--12.5 compared with 10.9 for men--probably because they were more reliable reporters.
A startling finding of the research is that the absent-minded activity is a hazard of doing things in which we are skilled. Normally, you would expect that skill reduces the number of errors we make. But trying to avoid silly slips by concentrating more could make things a lot worse——even dangerous.
In his study Professor Smith asked the subjects ______
A.to keep truck of people who tend to forget things
B.to report their embarrassing lapses at random
C.to analyze their awkward experiences scientifically
D.to keep a record of what they did unintentionally
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The 1920s was the decade of advertising. The advertising men went wild: everything from salt to household coal was being nationally advertised. Of course, ads had been around for a long time. But something new was happening, in terms of both scale and strategy. For the first time, business began to use advertising as a psychological weapon against consumers. Without their product, the consumer would be left unmarried, fall victim to a terrible disease, or be passed over for a promotion. Ads developed an association between the product and one's very identity. Eventually they came to promise everything and anything—from self-esteem to status, friendship, and love.
This psychological approach was a response to the economic dilemma business faced. Americans in the middle classes and above(to whom virtually all advertising was targeted) were no longer buying to satisfy basic needs—such as food, clothing and shelter. These had been met. Advertisers had to persuade consumers to acquire things they most certainly did not need. In other words, production would have to "create the wants it sought to satisfy." This is exactly what manufacturers tried to do. The normally conservative telephone company attempted to transform. the plain telephone into a luxury, urging families to buy "all the telephones that they can conveniently use, rather than the smallest amount they can get along with." One ad campaign targeted fifteen phones as the style. for a wealthy home.
Business clearly understood the nature of the problem. According to one historian, "Business had learned as never before the importance of the final consumer. Unless he or she could be persuaded to buy, and buy extravagantly, the whole stream of new cars, cigarettes, women's make-up, and electric refrigerators would be dammed up at its outlets."
But would the consumer be equal to her task as the foundation of private enterprise? A top executive of one American car manufacturer stated the matter bluntly: business needs to create a dissatisfied consumer; its mission is "the organized creation of dissatisfaction." This executive led the way by introducing annual model changes for his company's cars, designed to make the consumer unhappy with what he or she already had. Other companies followed his lead. Economic success now depended on the promotion of qualities like waste and self-indulgence.
The campaign to create new and unlimited wants did not go unchallenged. Trade unions and those working for social reform. understood the long-term consequences of materialism for most Americans: it would keep them locked in capitalism's trap. The consumption of luxuries required long hours at work. Business was explicit in its resistance to increases in free time, preferring consumption as the alternative to taking economic progress in the form. of leisure. In effect, business offered up the cycle of work-and-spend.
The 1920s advertising men went wild ______.
A.about salt and household coal
B.over their ads scale and strategy
C.about a psychological weapon
D.to develop an association between the product and the consumers
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Those who had moved to America under the intention that America was paved with gold everywhere started to regret their decision.()
对
错
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How can English teachers accelerate the language learning of their students? One way is to teach students how to learn more effectively and efficiently. Learning strategies are "Procedures or techniques that learners can use to facilitate a learning task." Instructing students of English in learning strategies can help them become better learners. In addition, skill in using learning strategies assists students in becoming independent, confident learners. Finally, students become more motivated as they begin to understand the relationship between their use of strategies and success in learning English. Students need to develop an awareness of the learning process and strategies that lead to success. Students who reflect on their own thinking are more likely to engage in planning how to proceed with a learning task, monitoring their own performance on an ongoing basis, finding solutions to problems encountered, and evaluating themselves upon task completion. These activities may be diff
1.Which of the following statements is true? ()
A、Students learn learning strategies from the teachers only
B、Learning strategies are completely unobservable
C、Students need to explore new learning strategies for themselves
D、Teachers are the sole judges of students’ progress
2.Learning strategies are unobservable mental processes, so teachers should make them ().
A、simpler
B、more familiar
C、more concrete
D、more applicable
3.Teachers should encourage students to rely more on ().
A、books
B、notes
C、tutors
D、themselves
4.Better learning strategies can make language learning more ().
A、fun
B、interesting
C、efficient
D、exciting
5.Students who reflect on their own ()ensp;will be more successful in learning.
A、thinking
B、evaluation
C、performance
D、activities
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Their _________() to help was a great encouragement to us.
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The couple__ never to work at the same time, so that one of them was always on full-time parenting duty, and their child wouldn’t have to be looked after by strangers()
A.made a pact
B.reach a compromise
C.appealed to
D.set a date