已选分类
文学
问答题
问答题money laundering
问答题Directions:
You are going to take part in MBA exam. Write a letter of inquiry to the dean of Management School to inquire about:
1) the subjects to be examed;
2) the number of students to be enrolled;
3) other things you should pay attention to.
You should write about 100 words on the ANSWER SHEET.
Do not use your own name. Use "Li Ming" instead.
Do not write the address.
问答题{{B}}Directions:{{/B}}Studythefollowingpicturecarefullyandwriteanessayto1)describethepicture,2)deducethepurposeofthepainterofthepicture,3)giveyoursuggestionsastohowtocooperateinharmony.Youshouldwriteabout160--200wordsneatlyonANSWERSHEET2.
问答题How to examine an L/C?
问答题In a sense, the new protectionism is not protectionism at all, at least not in the traditional sense of the
term. The old protectionism referred only to trade restricting and trade expanding devices, such as the tariff or export subsidy. The new protectionism is much broader than this; it includes interventions into foreign trade but is not limited to them.
6
The new protectionism, in fact, refers to how the whole of government intervention into the private economy affects international trade.
The emphasis on trade is still there, thus came the term "protection". But what is new is the realization that virtually all government activities can affect international economic relations.
7
The emergence of the new protectionism in the Western world reflects the victory of the interventionist, or welfare economy over the market economy.
Jab Tumiler writes, "The old protectionism... coexisted, without any apparent intellectual difficulty with the acceptable of the market as a national as well as an international economic distribution mechanism—indeed, protectionists as well as (if only not more than) free traders stood for laissez-faire.
8
Now, as in the 1930"s, protectionism is an expression of a profound skepticism as to the ability of the market to distribute resources and incomes to societies" satisfaction."
It is precisely this profound skepticism of the market economy that is responsible for the protectionism. In a market economy, economic change of various colors implies redistribution of resources and incomes. The same opinion in many communities apparently is that such redistributions often are not proper. Therefore, the government intervenes to bring about a more desired result.
The victory of the welfare state is almost complete in northern Europe.
9
In Sweden, Norway, Finland, Denmark, and the Netherlands, government intervention in almost all aspects of economic and social life is considered normal.
In Great Britain this is only somewhat less true. Government traditionally has played a very active role in economic life in France and continued to do so. Only West Germany dares to go against the tide towards excessive interventionism in Western Europe. It also happens to be the most successful Western European economy.
10
The welfare state has made significant progress in the United States as well as in Western Europe, social security, unemployment insurance, minimum wage laws, and rent control are through now traditional welfare state elements on the American scene.
问答题conversational maxim
问答题Empty talk is harmful to the nation, while doing practical work will make it thrive.
问答题{{B}}Directions:{{/B}} Read the following text carefully and
then translate the underlined segments into Chinese. Your translation should be
written neatly on ANSWER SHEET 2.
Practically speaking, the artistic maturing of the cinema was
the single-handed achievement of David W. Griffith (1875-1948). (46){{U}}Before
Griffith, photography in dramatic films consisted of little more than placing
the actors before a stationary camera and showing them in full length as they
would have appeared on stage.{{/U}} From the beginning of his career as a
director, however, Griffith, because of his love of Victorian painting, employed
composition. He conceived of the camera image as having a foreground and a rear
ground, as well as the middle distance preferred by most directors. By 1910 he
was using close-ups to reveal significant details of the scene or of the acting
and extreme long shots to achieve a sense of spectacle and distance. His
appreciation of the camera' s possibilities produced novel dramatic effects.
(47) {{U}}By splitting an event into fragments and recording each from the most
suitable camera position, he could significantly vary the emphasis from camera
shot to camera shot.{{/U}} Griffith also achieved dramatic effects
by means of creative editing. By juxtaposing images and varying the speed and
rhythm of their presentation, he could control tile dramatic intensity of the
events as the story progressed. (48) {{U}}Despite the reluctance of his producers,
who feared that the public would not be able to follow a plot that was made up
of such juxtaposed images, Griffith persisted, and experimented as well with
other elements of cinematic syntax that have become standard ever since.
{{/U}}These included the flashback, permitting broad psychological and emotional
exploration as well as narrative that was not chronological, and the crosscut
between two parallel actions to heighten suspense and excitement. In thus
exploiting fully the possibilities of editing, Griffith transposed devices of
the Victorian novel to film and gave film mastery of time as well as
space. Besides developing the cinema's language, Griffith
immensely broadened its range and treatment of subjects. (49) {{U}}His early
output was remarkably eclectic: it included not only the standard comedies,
melodramas, westerns, and thrillers, but also such novelties as adaptations from
Browning and Tennyson, and treatments of social issues.{{/U}} As his successes
mounted, his ambitions grew, and with them the whole of American cinema. When he
remade Enoch Arden in 1911, he insisted that a subject of such importance could
not be treated in the then conventional length of one reel. Griffith' s
introduction of the American-made multi-reel picture began an immense
revolution. Two years later, Judith of Bethulia, an elaborate historic
philosophical spectacle, reached the unprecedented length of four reels, or one
hour' s running time. (50) {{U}}From our contemporary viewpoint, the pretensions
of this film may seem a little ridiculous, but at the time it provoked endless
debate and discussion and gave a newintellectual respectability to the
cinema.{{/U}}
问答题六十整岁望七十如攀高山。不料七十岁居然过了。七十岁开始可以诸事不做而拿退休金,不愁没有一碗饭吃,自由自在,自得其乐。要看书可以随便乱翻。金庸、梁羽生、克里斯蒂、松本清张,从前哪能拜读?现在可以了。随看随忘,便仍在一边。无忧无虑,无人打扰,不必出门而自有天地。真是无限风光在老年。 偶尔有人来,不论男女老少认识不认识,天南地北,天上地下,天文地理,谈天说地,百无禁忌。我的话匣子一开,激光磁盘便响个不停,滔滔不绝。无奈我闲人忙,听众逐渐稀少,终于门庭冷落,只剩一屋子广阔天地,任我独往独来,随意挥洒。
问答题We shall fight him by land, we shall fight him by sea, we shall fight him in the air, until, with Gods help, we have rid the earth of his shadow and liberated its people from his yoke. (4/%)
问答题Usually the wordless communication acts to qualify the words. What the nonverbal elements express very often, and very efficiently, is the emotional side of the message.
7
When a person feels liked or disliked, often it"s a case of "not what he said but the way he said it".
Psychologist Albert Mehrabian has devised this formula: total impact of a message =7 percent verbal + 38 percent vocal + 55 percent facial. The importance of the voice can be seen when you consider that even the words "I hate you" can be made to sound sexy.
Experts in kinesics, the study of communication through body movement, are not prepared to spell out a precise vocabulary of gestures. When an American rubs his nose, it may mean he is disagreeing with someone or rejecting something. But there are other possible interpretations, too.
8
For example, when a student in conversation with a professor holds the older man"s eyes a little longer than is usual, it can be a sign of respect and affection; it can be a challenge to the professor"s authority; or it can be something else entirely.
The expert looks for patterns in the context, not for an isolated meaningful gesture.
There are times when what a person says with his body gives the lie to what he is saying with his tongue. Sigmund Freud once wrote: "No mortal can keep a secret. If his lips are silent, he chatters with his fingertips; betrayal oozes out of him at every pore"
9
Thus, a man may successfully control his face, and appear calm and self-controlled, unaware that signs of tension and anxiety are leaking out, and that his foot is beating on the floor constantly and restlessly.
Rage is another emotion feet and legs may reveal. During arguments the feet often become tense. Fear sometimes produces barely perceptible funning notions, a kind nervous leg jiggle. Then there are the subtle, provocative leg gestures that women use, consciously and unconsciously.
问答题Eskimos have many different words for different types of snow, Aborigines for different types of sand, and in Arabic one must choose from a whole range of words which are subsumed under the Western category CAMEL. Can you explain these phenomena with your linguistic knowledge?
问答题
"The Child is Father of the Man," wrote the English poet
William Wordsworth. 111. {{U}}Adults today are as aware as Wordsworth of the
importance of childhood experiences that a cherished and well-behaved child has
a better chance of growing into a balanced, loving and law-abiding adult than an
unloved one.{{/U}} The Children Act of 1989, created to give children much-needed
protection against abuse, in the process legalized the ideology: the child comes
first. 112. {{U}}But while the nurturing of self-esteem in
children is now accepted as a requisite of their development, the social and
economic demands on over-worked, harassed parents often prevent them from
putting this theory into practice where it matters most in the home.{{/U}} Indeed,
much of the time it seems that parents themselves are suffering a crisis of
self-esteem. Reports show that teenagers are increasingly obese
and slothful. They watch on average between four and six hours of television a
day. 113. {{U}}No longer subject to the discipline of the evening family meal-the
cradle of manners and civil behavior-one in three people eats his or her dinner
in front of the television.{{/U}} The fashion industry is increasingly targeting
guilty parents and their demanding children; it is not uncommon to see children
wearing designer jeans and the latest trainers that they will soon grow out
of. 114. {{U}}Pre-Christmas toy advertising is designed to strike
terror into the hearts of parents and make their children even more demanding
and greedy.{{/U}} Every office in the land harbors parents who are exasperated
especially by boys who are arrogant, rude, boastful and undisciplined. 115.
{{U}}Many parents are too guilt-ridden or too bewildered by conflicting child
rearing advice to do anything other than wring their hands with worry.{{/U}} The
language of civil rights has entered childhood. Children as young as six are now
so keenly aware of their "rights" that they freely complain of "unfair"
treatment by their elders.
问答题{{B}}Directions:{{/B}}
You and your friend just arrived home from a trip arranged by a travel agency named HappyTours. You are most unsatisfied with the service and arrangement of the travel agency and you decide to write a letter of complaint to the Manager of HappyTours. Imagine some details of this trip. Write your letter in no less than 100 words. Write it neatly on ANSWER SHEET 2.
Do not sign your own name at the end of the letter; use" Li Ming" instead.
Do not write the address.
问答题The current limitations of internet learning are actually those of publishing world: who creates a quality product that offers a coherent analysis of the world we live in? The answer has to lie in a group of people, organized in some way both intellectually and technologically. In the past this has usually been through books and articles. Some of the learning successes of the internet illustrate just how this can work in practice. A classic example is Wikipedia, an online encyclopedia created on a largely voluntary basis by contributors. The underlying mechanism of Wikipedia are technological: you can author an article by following hyperlinks—and the instructions. There are intellectual mechanisms built in, looking at the quality of what is submitted. This does not mean that the articles are equally good, or equal in quality to those encyclopedias created by expert, paid authors. However, there is no doubt that the service is a useful tool, and a fascinating demonstration of the power of distributed volunteer networks. A commercial contrast—which is also free—is the very rigorous Wolfram mathematics site, which has definitions and explanations of many key mathematical concepts. For students who use them with the same academic, critical approach they should apply to any source of information, such resources are useful tools, especially when supplemented by those of national organizations such as the Library of Congress, the National Science Foundation and other internationally recognized bodies. There are, of course, commercially available library services that offer electronic versions of printed media, such as journals, for both professional and academic groups, and there is already a fundamental feature of higher and professional education. Regardless of the medium through which they learn, people have to be critical users of information, but at the same time the information has to be appealing and valuable to the learner.
(From Making Minds by Pal Kelley. 2008. pp. 127-128)
问答题Give the phonetic term according to the following description: the sound made with the back of the tongue and the soft palate.
问答题grammaticalization
问答题盲目投资
问答题Directions: Write a letter to
the president of your university to 1) point out the problems
of the canteen service on the campus, and 2) make suggestions
for improvement. You should write about 100 words on ANSWER
SHEET 2. Do not sign your own name at the end of the letter.
Use "Li Ming" instead. Do not write the address.
