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[主观题]

Blckburn sys tht it’s importnt for mnger toled their stff by exmple.B.putmbBlckburn sys th

t it’s importnt for mnger toled their stff by exmple. B.putmbitionbove everything else. C.demnd high stndrds from their workforce. D.moves quicklys possible up the corporte ldder.

A.lead their staff by example

B.put ambition above everything else

C.demand high standards from their workforce

D.move as quickly as possible up the corporate ladder.

答案
A
更多“Blckburn sys tht it’s importnt for mnger toled their stff by exmple.B.putmbBlckburn sys th”相关的问题

第1题

Blackburn says that it's important for a manager to

A.lead their staff by example.

B.put ambition above everything else.

C.demand high standards from their workforce.

D.move as quickly as possible up the corporate ladder.

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第2题

In the introductory chapter of her book, Anyon shares a personal story involving her father. Anyons brief discussion of her familys long history of involvement in radical social and political activism, and her commitment to anti-oppressive pedagogy, offers readers important insights into her social and political convictions. Toward the end of the chapter, Anyon explains that she sees her new book as a form. of "intervention" and struggle against social injustices. Anyon begins her book by examining the impact of macroeconomic policies including minimum wage, tax policies, housing, job training, educational policies and reform. initiatives. She argues that student underachievement, unequal funding of public schools and the high dropout rate among working class students and students of color are linked to macroeconomic policies that work toward maintaining and reproducing social inequities. She believes that the success of school reform. efforts depends in part on reforming macroeconomic policies at the state and federal level.

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第3题

Anger is a normal emotion that we all feel from ti...

Anger is a normal emotion that we all feel from time to time. Some people express anger openly in a calm reasonable way. Some explode with anger, and scream and shout. But other people keep their anger inside. They can not or will not express it. This is called repressing anger. Many doctors think that repressing anger is more dangerous to a person’s health than expressing it. They say that when a person is angry, the brain gives out the same hormones (荷尔蒙) as that are produced during tense and nervous situations. They speed the heart rate and raise blood pressure, so the person feels excited and ready to act. Repressing these feelings will only make the feelings continue, and this can lead to many medical problems. To prevent these problems, these doctors suggest letting the anger out by expressing it freely. But recently some other doctors question this. They say that people who express anger repeatedly and violently become, in fact, more but not less angry. And this could cause medical problems. However, some doctors say that both repressing and expressing anger can be dangerous. They believe that those who express anger strongly may be more likely to develop heart diseases, and that those who keep their anger inside may face a greater danger of high blood pressure. Doctors say the solution is to learn how to deal with anger. The first step is to admit that you are angry and to recognize the real cause of the anger, and then to decide if the cause is serious enough to get angry about. If it is, do not express your anger while angry. Wait until your anger has cooled down, and express yourself calmly and reasonably. Doctors also say that a good way to deal with anger is to find humor in the situation that has made you angry, for laughter is much healthier than anger. Some doctors argue that people who often let the anger out would become ________.

A、stronger

B、more violent

C、more dangerous

D、angrier

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第4题

听力原文:M: Hello, Jane.

W: Hi, Harry. Did you have a good summer holiday?

M: Sure. I went for my holiday on my uncle's farm.

W: Really? What interesting things did you do there?

M: I helped get in some rice, take care of the fruit garden. Did you go away for your holiday, Jane?

W: Oh, no. I just stayed at home. My mother has been in hospital. I had to look after her and help do some cooking and washing at home.

M: I'm sorry. Oh, it's late. I must be off now. Bye-bye.

Where did Harry spend his holiday?

A.At home.

B.In the hospital.

C.On his uncle's farm.

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第5题

A computer is a machine designed to perform. work mathematically and to store and select information that has been fed into it. It is nm by either mechanical or electronic means. These machines can do a great deal of complicated work in a very short time. A large computer, for example, can add or subtract nine thousand times a second, multiply a thousand times a second, or divide five hundred times a second. Its percentage of error is about one in a billion digits. It has been estimated that human beings making calculations average about one mistake per two hundred digits.

The heart of an electronic computer lies in its vacuum tubes, or transistors. Its electronic circuits work a thousand times faster than the nerve cells in the human brain. A problem that might take a human being two years to solve can be solved by a computer in one minute, but in order to work properly, a computer must be given instructions--it must be programmed. Computers can be designed for many specialized purposes--they can be used to prepare payrolls, guide airplane flights, direct traffic, even to play chess. Computers play an essential role in modern automation in many plants and factories throughout the world.

A computer is a machine designed to ______.

A.perform. work mathematically

B.perform. complicated calculations

C.store and select information

D.all of the above

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第6题

The study of literary influence among women writers has frequently adopted a model of sororal or matrilineal sharing in an often explicitly stated contrast to Harold Bloom's well-established theory of the "anxiety of influence" besetting male writers. In Bloom's powerfully influential vision, that anxiety is posed as a kind of Freudian agon of sons against fathers, a struggle of self-definition through resistance and mastery. Feminist critics have generally agreed with the Bloomian model as applied to male authors but have demurred with respect to women writers, whom we have tended to see in familial terms. The model of a separate women's tradition in literature, its inner coherence maintained by resistance to male dominance, that was posited in the 1970s by Ellen Moers, Elaine Showalter, and Sandra M. Gilbert and Susan Gubar has been widely accepted. As Betsy Erkkila points out, these groundbreaking feminist critics may not have significantly challenged the Bloomian model as applied to women writers and women precursors, but they did at any rate establish their resistance to the masculine literary establishment and the masculine model of rivalry. Their successors and elaborators have argued forcefully that a women's tradition is constituted of a supportive community whose members welcome the all-too-rare voices of foremothers calling to them across the ages. Even the literary foremothers nearer at hand, according to this prevailing vision, have served as models for emulation rather than hegemonic powers to be challenged. Erkkila, for example, asks pointedly, "How useful is the Bloomian model when the poet attempts to define herself not in relation to her poetic fathers but in relation to her poetic mothers." Her answer (later modified because of greater complexity) is not very. A metaphor of motherhood and daughterhood has, in the words of Linda R. Williams's recent revisionist theory, "profoundly affected our reading of women's literary history." Citing Alice Walker's argument about nebulous forms of knowing in In Search of Our Mothers' Gardens, Luce Irigary's concept of connectedness ( "One doesn't stir without the other") and Helene Cixous's version of the authentic woman writer's writing of her mother's milk in "The Laugh of the Medusa," Williams calls for an interpretation of literary connectedness not as a revision of the Freudian and Bloomian system-which Erkkila, by retaining the familial language, has in a sense retained, but as a way "outside of an Oedipal dynamic" altogether.

The revisionist views of Williams and Erkkila are useful corrections of the prevailing mode of feminist theories that "romanticize, maternalize, essentialize, and eternalize women writers and the relationships among them." Neither, however, asks if women writers may not sometimes exhibit, rather than either revise or escape, the Bloomian model of literary rivalry. It is a prospect, perhaps, that we would prefer not to entertain. But it is a prospect that, while clearly not typical, may be less atypical than feminist critics may have supposed in our times too idealizing and essentializing theories.

An instance of such a female adoption (and adaptation) of the Bloomian model of male writers' anxiety is Katherine Anne Porter's anxious and artfully duplicitous essay on a literary elder sister, "Reflections on Willa Cather." Operating in the loosely narrative fashion that characterized not only Porter's nonfiction but her very mode of thought, the essay purports to pay retrospective tribute to one of the preeminent women writers of the early and mid-twentieth century, but in fact asserts Porter's own stature in the world of letters. In the story of her essay, the protagonist is not Cather, as one would expect from the title, but Porter herself. The essay is cast in a pervasive first-person mode in which the observing or commenting "I" becomes the active principle and its putative topic a passive reflector, a mirror ref

A.Freud and Bloom: Father and Son

B.Erkkila and Williams: Mother and Daughter

C.Fathers and Sons: The Limits of Literary Theory

D.Mothers and Daughters: The Limits of Literary Theory

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第7题

听力原文: A computer is a machine designed to perform. work mathematically and to store and select information that has been fed into it. It is run by either mechanical or electronic means. These machines can do a great deal of complicated work in a very short time. A large computer, for example, can add or subtract nine thousand times a second, multiply a thousand times a second, or divide five hundred times a second. Its percentage of error is about one in a billion digits. It has been estimated that human beings making calculations average about one mistake per two hundred digits.

The heart of an electronic computer lies in its vacuum tubes, or transistors. Its electronic circuits work a thousand times faster than the nerve cells in the human brain. A problem that might take a human being two years to solve can be solved by a computer in one minute, but in order to work properly, a computer must be given instructions--it must be programmed.

Computers can be designed for many specialized purposes--they can be used to prepare payrolls, guide airplane flights, direct traffic, even to play chess. Computers play an essential role in modern automation in many plants and factories throughout the world.

(33)

A.One in a billion digits.

B.Zero.

C.One mistake per two hundred digits.

D.One in a million digits.

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第8题

听力原文: A boy became interested in computers at the age of eight, and by eighteen he was suffering from a computer related disease. It is said that the boy was so obsessed with computers that he acquired a "mechanical disillusioned mentality, " which inhibited his emotional development and caused him to think and dream in computer language.

"For example, "the boy said, "I could wake up in the night and think: Line 10 go to the bathroom. "The young man was so disoriented that he lost his ability to tolerate the ambiguity of normal human interactions, instead requiring precise and literal instructions -- much like computer commands -- in order to complete simple tasks.

Bord, a psychologist, says that computer-obsessed kids and adults often suffer such symptoms, and people are going to see a generation of kids growing up who are losing access to human emotion. They develop machine standard for themselves, and he feels that this does not portend well for their healthy development.

When did the person suffer from the computer related disease?

A.At the age of 7.

B.At the age of 8.

C.At the age of 9.

D.At the age of 18.

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第9题

What will the woman do this evening?

A.Meet her mum at the airport.

B.Say good-bye to her mum at the airport.

C.Fly to another city together with her mum.

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