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When does your father get up every morning? He()up at six.
A . get
B . got
C . gets
D . will
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How does the Extended Get Digit String step differ from the Get Digit String? ()
A . It can be used in conjunction with another step.
B . It allows the application programmer into another section of the application.
C . Most of the Extended Get Digit String variables can be changed while the application is running.
D . It allows the entry of a Boolean expression for the Interruptible and Clear DTMF Buffer on Retry fields.
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Flame failure in an automatically fired auxiliary boiler can from a/an ()
A . incorrect electrode setting
B . incorrect nozzle position
C . clogged fuel nozzle
D . broken high tension lead
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4-5.What does “Sometimes your whole life boils down to one insane move” mean?
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Q4. How does the old woman tell him to get there?
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Q3. Does he get there? why/ why not?
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Which of the following factors does NOT lead to the result that more than two-thirds of the districts will get more poorly financed?
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Does Joyce get on well with her parents?
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6.By leaving under the official reason of getting “fired”, you can get the following benefits before finding another job except ____ .
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Vicky was fired because she was always late for work.
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—Tom! What's that?—There two girls behind you. ______You’ve just noticed?—I don’t get why anybody does that anymore. It’s so annoying!
A.They’ve been smoking like chimneys.
B.I can’t stand smoking here.
C.Many people around here are smoking.
D.The secondhand smoke is going to kill us.
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What idea does the writer try to get across?
A.The more research you do, the more familiar you are on a topic.
B.The more essays you write, the more likely you become an expert.
C.The more judgements you make, the more likely you will be rewarded.
D.The more materials you collect, the less likely you will be an expert.
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The hunter fired and the fox fell ________.
A.death
B.deadly
C.dead
D.dying
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Man: I had a hard time getting through this novel. Woman: I share your feeling. Who can remember the names of 35 different characters? Question: What does the woman imply?
A.She has learned a lot from the novel.
B.She also found the plot difficult to follow.
C.She usually has difficulty remembering names.
D.She can recall the names of most characters in the novel.
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Woman: I can't bear the air pollution in this city any more. It's getting worse and worse. Man: You said it. We've never had so many factories before. Question: What does the man mean?
A.The air pollution is caused by the development of industry.
B.The city was poor because there wasn't much industry then.
C.The woman's exaggerating the seriousness of the pollution.
D.He might move to another city very soon.
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Woman: I intend to buy some fruit for the children. These apples and pears seem to be in season. Ill get two dozen of each. Man: I hope they are as good as they look. Question: What does the man mean?
A.The apples and pears might not be so good.
B.The apples are not as good as the pears.
C.The apples and pears are very good.
D.The apples and pears are as good as they look.
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1.Does your father often get very angry?同意句
Does your father often _____ ______ ______.
2.My mother is _______(response)for sales.
3.I feel so ____(boring)when listening to the ____(boring)speech
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听力原文:W:You ought to write to Eleanor.She's been sick and she does so like to get letters.
M:All right.I have been busy,but I shouldn't have neglected her.
Q:What do we learn about Eleanor?
(16)
A.She likes to write letters.
B.She hasn't seen her friends lately.
C.She is eager to get man's cares.
D.She lives together with the two speakers.
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Scott McDonald fired one of his employees because the employee
A.didn"t accomplish his job well.
B.drove too fast.
C.covered up his illness.
D.cheated when he asked for leave.
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Why does the man want to get the class at the community college?
A.The class size there is smaller.
B.It may offer the class he needs during the day.
C.Its courses cost less.
D.It has a pool.
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听力原文:W: Taxi! I'm going to the National Museum of Art. How long does it take to get there?
M: Well, it depends on the traffic, but shouldn't toke more than twenty minutes for the average driver. And I'm not average. So we should be able to cruise through traffic and get there in less than twelve minutes.
W: Oh. By the way, do you know what time the museum closes?
M: Around 6:00 o'clock.
W: Do you have the time?
M: Yeah. It's half past four. Hi, this is your first time to the city, right?
W: Yeah.How did you know?
M: Well, you can tell tourists from a mile away in this city because they walk down the street looking straight up at the tall buildings.
W: Was it that obvious?
M: Well...
W: Oh, before I forget, can you recommend any good restaurant downtown that offer meals at a reasonable price?
M: Umm...well, the Mexican restaurant, La Fajita, is fantastic. It's not as inexpensive as other places I know, but the decoration is very authentic, and theportions are larger than most places I've been to.
W: Sounds great! How do I get there from the museum?
M: Well, you can take the subway right outside the museum. There are buses that run that way, but you would have to transfer a couple of times. And there are taxis too, but they don't run by the museum that often.
M: Okay. Thank you so much.
(20)
A.He is an average driver.
B.He is a skilled driver.
C.He is below average.
D.He is a green hand.
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听力原文: In some countries, taking lots of days off work sick would get you fired and the idea of offering prizes for good attendance would be little more than a joke. But absenteeism has become a big problem in Britain, where the employment laws offer protection to sick workers, but do not enable employers to distinguish between the genuinely iii and those who are pretending.
When the Royal Mail announced a scheme to enter reliable workers into a prize draw, it was greeted with some skepticism. But one year on, the company has proclaimed it a success. Thirty-seven Royal Mail workers have won a car for good attendance.
Absenteeism in Britain ______.
A.is now a big problem
B.could lead to dismiss of the staff
C.is not so serious as before
D.is protected by the employment laws
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Questions 27~31 are Based on the following passage. One airline chief executive officer (CEO) was the master of the personal touch. Spending hours with his employees and getting, to know their joBs, he persuaded them to accept pay cuts in return for an ownership stake. The concession put the company so solidly in the Black that the CEO was aBle to sell it for $ 860 million.Another CEO scolded managers in front of others, cut one third of the work force and so emBittered the survivors that his airline Began to lose money, and the Board of directors fired him.
In any test of knowledge or IQ, the two CEOs would have dueled to a draw. The difference was their aBility to handle relationships, argues Daniel Goleman in Iris new Book, Working With E- motional Intelligence. Building on his 1995 Bestseller, Emotional Intelligence, Goleman now proBes how EI relates to the world of work.As he did in his earlier Book, Goleman masterfully ex- plains how a low EI hinders people's full intellectual potential By flooding the Brain with stress hormones that impair memory, learning and thinking. The heart of the Book, though, is an analysis of data collected from more than 150 firms on what distinguishes so-so performers from superstars. Goleman's findings : conventional intelligence takes second position to emotional intelligence in determining joB performance. In joBs ranging from repairman to scientist, IQ accounts for no more than 25 percent of the difference Between, say, a successful high-tech entrepreneur and a failed one. In another surprise, the contriBution of IQ shrinks and the contriBution of EI rises with the difficulty of a joB and how high it ranks in an organization. Based on traits that companies say distinguish winners from losers, Goleman concludes that EI carries much more weight than IQ in deter- mining success at the top.
However, the many examples of CEOs and other people in top positions who have the emotional intelligence of a snake -- But still were CEOs -- undermine the case for EIs indispensaBility in Business. But even if you accept that EI determines who excels, you have to wonder if it should. Goleman descriBes how 112 entry-level accountants were judged more or less successful By their Bosses according to their level of EI rather than their actual skill. No wonder so many auditors fail to notice cooked Books.
第27题:According to Goleman, the Biggest difference Between the two CEOs descriBed in the first paragraph lies in__________
A.their attitude toward their employees
B.their emotional intelligence
C.their conventional intelligence
D.their Business strategy
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He gets a lot of letters but she does"t get much. ________错,改为________