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[主观题]

Est-ce qu’il y a________légumes tous les jours dans votre cantine ?

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第1题

Est-ce qu’il y a légumes tous jours dans notre cantine ?
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第2题

U.S. Eats Too Much Salt

People in the United States consume more than twice the recommended amount of salt, raising their risk for high blood pressure, heart attacks and strokes, government health experts said on Thursday.

They found nearly 70 percent of U. S. adults are in high-risk groups that would benefit from a lower-salt diet of no more than 1,500 mg per day, yet most consume closer to 3,500 mg per day.

"It's important for people to eat less salt. People who adopt a heart-healthy eating pattern that includes a diet low in sodium (钠) and rich in potassium (钾) and calcium (钙) can improve their blood pressure," Dr. Darwin Labarthe of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said in a statement.

"People need to know their recommended daily sodium limit and take action to reduce sodium intake (摄入量) ," Labarthe said.

The study in the CDC's weekly report on death and disease used national survey data to show that two out of three adults should be consuming no more than 1,500 mg of sodium per day because they are black or over the age of 40 -- which are considered high-risk groups.

Yet studies show most people in the United States eat 3,436 mg of sodium per day, according to a 2005-2006 CDC estimate.

Most of the sodium eaten comes from packaged, processed and restaurant foods. The CDC said it will join other agencies in the Health and Human Services Department in working with major food manufacturers and chain restaurants to reduce sodium levels in the food supply.

Nationwide, 16 million men and women have heart disease and 5.8 million are estimated to have had a stroke. Cutting salt consumption can reduce these risks, the CDC said.

Eating too much salt raises a person's risk for______.

A.strokes.

B.heart attacks.

C.high blood pressure.

D.all of the above.

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第3题

The author's argument is developed primarily by the use of

A.an example of one nation's success

B.an analogy between man and nation

C.a critique of the United States Constitution

D.a warning against civil war

E.a personal account of self-realization

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第4题

The author's argument is developed primarily by the use of

A.an attack on the misuse of scientific discoveries by modern film directors

B.a critique of technical developments in science fiction movie special effects

C.an example of how science fiction directors distort science to increase dramatic effect

D.an analogy between science fiction movie special effect and science education in schools

E.a warning against an overreliance on films to teach science to youngsters

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第5题

The author's argument is developed primarily by the use of

A.an attack on the misuse of scientific discoveries by modern film directors

B.a critique of technical developments in science fiction movie special effects

C.an example of how science fiction directors distort science to increase dramatic effect

D.an analogy between science fiction movie special effect and science education in schools

E.a warning against an overreliance on films to teach science to youngsters

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第6题

Documents are presented in accordance with the terms of an unconfirmed documentary credit payable at sight and the Nominated Bank chooses Lo negotiate them.

  Which of the following statements best describes the Nominated Bank's actions?

  A. Make immediate payment to the beneficiary.

  B. Effect payment on receipt of covering funds.

  C. Present documents to the Issuing Bank.

  D. Confirm sight to the Reimbursing Bank.

  (1)( ) A and C only

  (2)( ) A and D only

  (3)( ) B and C only

  (4)( ) B and D only

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第7题

Some years ago, a well-known perfume company invented a concept called "the Aviance night." In the ads, a housewife was shown primping for a night on the town, sashaying around the bedroom and flipping her hair from one side to the other as she puts on her earrings. __example__I never had an Aviance night. I don&39;t, as a general rule, sashay. __1__ My longing tends to coalesce and rise to the surface, like chicken fat, every February. It&39;s not that my husband and I don&39;t go out. Every Valentine&39;s Day, Ed will dutifully reserve a table at a romantic restaurant. I look forward to it until about five o&39;clock on the actual date. Somehow the mood never seems to fit. __2__ Suddenly I don&39;t feel like going to an unfamiliar, overpriced restaurant. __3__ But this is Valentine&39;s Day, and we must persevere__.4__"The living room" is not an acceptable answer to "Where did Ed take you for Valentine&39;s?" This year is no different. Poor Ed. He&39;s trying very hard__5__He cocks his head to one side, as if seeing me anew, in the fresh dawn of reawakened love. "Are you wearing an odor?" Ed is romantic, but not in the traditional manner. __6__Ed brought them in and set them down on the floor near the door, at the farthest point from the bedspread and other combustibles, completely out of our view. "They still provide some nice ambient illumination," he said. It was like getting into bed with Norm Abram. __7__I didn&39;t know such a thing existed. Another time he tried to surprise me with a romantic bubble bath, not realizing that sometime during the day, something had gone wrong with the hot water heater, and the bath water was stone cold. __8__

A、I put on perfume and wait for the unseen chorus to kick in, but hear instead the dulcet tones of my sweatpants calling out to me.

B、As she douses herself with Aviance perfume, an unseen chorus conjectures excitedly that "she&39;s gonna have an Aviance night!"

C、I want to go somewhere comfortable and known, a place where the wine doesn&39;t cost more than my shoes and the waiter won&39;t look down upon me for making "daikon" rhyme with "bacon."

D、For tomorrow, the Aviance Day after, friends and co-workers will grill us as to the activities of the night before.

E、No doubt we&39;d forgotten to send flowers on Plumbers and Steamfitters Day and the Local 486 had sabotaged our tank.

F、But I cannot completely silence that part of me that longs, every now and again, to be heading off confidently and aromatically into a night of candlelit romance.

G、I once suggested that we bring the dining room candles into the bedroom.

H、I once asked him to pick up some massage oil, and he came home with an unscented variety.

I、As we dress to leave, he takes my hands in his and leans in close.

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请帮忙给出每个问题的正确答案和分析,谢谢!

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第8题

President Bush takes to the bully pulpit to deliver a stern lecture to America's business elite. The Justice Dept. stuns the accounting profession by filing a criminal indictment of Arthur Andersen LLP for destroying documents related to its audits of Enron Corp. On Capitol Hill, some congressional panels push on with biased hearings on Enron's collapse and, now, another busted New Economy star, telecom's Global Crossing. Lawmakers sign on to new bills aimed at tightening oversight of everything from pensions and accounting to executive pay.

To any spectators, it would be easy to conclude that the winds of change are sweeping Corporate America, led by George W. Bush, who ran as "a reformer with result". But far from deconstructing the corporate world brick by brick into something cleaner, sparer, and stronger, Bush aides and many legislators are preparing modest legislative and administrative reforms. Instead of an overhaul, Bush's team is counting on its enforcers, Justice and a newly empowered Securities & Exchange Commission, to make examples of the most egregious offenders. The idea is that business will quickly get the message and clean up its own act.

Why won't the outraged rhetoric result in more changes? For starters, the Bush Administration warns that any rush to legislate corporate behavior. could produce a raft of flawed bills that raise costs without halting abuses. Business has striven to drive the point home with an intense lobbying blitz that has convinced many lawmakers that over-regulation could startle the stock market and perhaps endanger the nascent economic recovery.

All this sets the stage for Washington to get busy with predictably modest results. A surge of caution is sweeping would-be reformers on the Hill. "They know they don't want to make a big mistake", says Jerry J. Jasinowski, president of the National Association of Manufacturers. That go-slow approach suits the White House. Aides say the President, while personally disgusted by Enron's sellout of its pensioners, is reluctant to embrace new sanctions that frustrate even law-abiding corporations and create a litigation bonanza for trial lawyers. Instead, the White House will push for narrowly targeted action, most of it carried out by the SEC, the Treasury Dept., and the Labor Dept. The right outcome, Treasury Secretary Paul H. O'Neill said on Mar. 15, "depends on the Congress not legislating things that are over the top".

To O'Neill and Bush, that means enforcing current laws before passing too many new ones. Nowhere is that stance clearer than in the Andersen indictment. So the Bush Administration left the decision to Justice Dept. prosecutors rather than White House political operatives or their reformist fellows at the SEC.

We can learn from the first paragraph that ______.

A.the Justice Department seized on the plight of Enron's workers.

B.the White House recognized that stricter control is a political must.

C.The President was determined to turn a reformed Andersen into a model.

D.the White House responded strongly to the Andersen's scandal.

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第9题

President Bush takes to the bully pulpit to deliver a stern lecture to America's business elite. The Justice Dept. stuns the accounting profession by filing a criminal indictment of Arthur Andersen LLP for destroying documents related to its audits of Enron Corp. On Capitol Hill, some congressional panels push on with biased hearings on Enron's collapse and, now, another busted New Economy star, telecom's Global Crossing. Lawmakers sign on to new bills aimed at tightening oversight of everything from pensions and accounting to executive pay.

To any spectators, it would be easy to conclude that the winds of change are sweeping Corporate America, led by George W. Bush, who ran as "a reformer with result." But far from deconstructing the corporate world brick by brick into something cleaner, sparer, and stronger, Bush aides and many legislators are preparing modest legislative and administrative reforms. Instead of an overhaul, Bush's team is counting on its enforcers, Justice and a newly empowered Securities & Exchange Commission, to make examples of the most egregious offenders. The idea is that business will quickly get the message and clean up its own act.

Why won't the outraged rhetoric result in more changes? For starters, the Bush Administration warns that any rush to legislate corporate behavior. could produce a raft of flawed bills that raise costs without halting abuses. Business has striven to drive the point home with an intense lobbying blitz that has convinced many lawmakers that over-regulation could startle the stock market and perhaps endanger the nascent economic recovery.

All this sets the stage for Washington to get busy with predictably modest results. A surge of caution is sweeping would-be reformers on the Hill. "They know they don't want to make a big mistake," says Jerry J. Jasinowski, president of the National Association of Manufacturers. That go-slow approach suits the White House. Aides say the President, while personally disgusted by Enron's sellout of its pensioners, is reluctant to embrace new sanctions that frustrate even law-abiding corporations and create a litigation bonanza for trial lawyers. Instead, the White House will push for narrowly targeted action, most of it carried out by the SEC, the Treasury Dept., and the Labor Dept. The right outcome, Treasury Secretary Paul H. O'Neill said on Mar. 15, "depends on the Congress not legislating things that are over the top."

To O'Neill and Bush, that means enforcing current laws before passing too many new ones. Nowhere is that stance clearer than in the Andersen indictment. So the Bush Administration left the decision to Justice Dept. prosecutors rather than White House political operatives or their reformist fellows at the SEC.

We can learn from the first paragraph that

A.the Justice Department seized on the plight of Enron's workers.

B.the White House recognized that stricter control is a political must.

C.The President was determined to turn a reformed Andersen into a model.

D.the White House responded strongly to the Andersen's scandal.

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第10题

What is the authors argument in this essay?

A.Educators who advocate a rounded-education should be supported.

B.It is natural for science students to learn less liberal arts.

C.Science students ought to have enough knowledge about society.

D.Technical training must be reinforced in science education.

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