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单选题The news that the company is being taken over by foreign investors has severely ______ the stock markets. A. vibrated B. swung C. trembled D. jolted
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单选题Itmaybeconcludedthattesting_________.
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单选题These glass wares are too ______ to survive long transportation by land.
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单选题Man: Bob and Sue seem never discipline their daughter. She"s real nuts. Woman: They are kept in the dark about their daughter"s behavior at school. Question: What can we learn about Bob and Sue"s daughter?
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单选题Rockets with men in them have reached ______.
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单选题Those who want guns—A whether for target shooting, hunting or potting rattlesnakes(get a hoe)— B should be subjected to the same restrictions placed on gun owners in England, a nation C in which liberty has survived nicely without D an arm populace .
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单选题With prices ______ so much, it is hard for the company to plan a budget. A. fluctuating B. waving C. swinging D. vibrating
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单选题Very few people understood his lecture, the subject of which was very______. (2013年北京航空航天大学考博试题)
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单选题Import of the first three months this years is larger by 7 percent than that of the ______period last year.
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单选题In his example the author tells his readers that ______. ( )
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单选题She raised her face to the rain, to the dark sky, ______rather than frightened by this sudden wildness coming up from nothing around her.
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单选题According to the author, the function of the structured-inquiry method is
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单选题Companies have embarked on what looks like the beginnings of a re-run of the mergers and acquisitions (M&A) wave that defined the second bubbly half of the 1990s. That period, readers might recall, was characterized by a collective splurge that saw the creation of some of the most indebted companies in history, many of which later went bankrupt or were themselves broken up. Wild bidding for telecoms, internet and media assets, not to mention the madness that was Daimler"s $40 billion motoring takeover in 1998-1999 of Chrysler or the Time- Warner/AOL mega-merger in 2000, helped to give mergers a thoroughly bad name. A consensus emerged that M&A was a great way for investment banks to reap rich fees, and a sure way for ambitious managers to betray investors by trashing the value of their shares. Now M&A is back. Its return is a global phenomenon, but it is perhaps most striking in Europe, where so far this year there has been a stream of deals worth more than $600 billion in total, around 40% higher than in the same period of 2004. The latest effort came this week when France"s Saint-Gobain, a building-materials firm, unveiled the details of its £3.6 billion ($6.5 billion) hostile bid for BPB, a British rival. In the first half of the year, cross-border activity was up threefold over the same period last year. Even France Telecom, which was left almost bankrupt at the end of the last merger wave, recently bought Amena, a Spanish mobile operator. Shareholder"s approval of all these deals raises an interesting question for companies everywhere: are investors right to think that these mergers are more likely to succeed than earlier ones? There are two answers. The first is that past mergers may have been judged too harshly. The second is that the present rash of European deals does look more rational, but—and the caveat is crucial—only so far. The pattern may not hold. M&A"s poor reputation stems not only from the string of spectacular failures in the 1990s, but also from studies that showed value destruction for acquiring shareholders in 80% of deals. But more recent studies by economists have introduced a note of caution. Investors should look at the number of deals that succeed or fail (typically measured by the impact on the share price), rather than (as you might think) weighing them by size. For example, no one doubts that the Daimler-Chrysler merger destroyed value. The combined market value of the two firms is still below that of Daimler alone before the deal. This single deal accounted for half of all German M&A activity by value in 1998 and 1999, and probably dominated people"s thinking about mergers to the same degree. Throw in a few other such monsters and it is no wonder that broad studies have tended to find that mergers are a bad idea. The true picture is more complicated.
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单选题Such an ______ act of hostility can only lead to war. A. overt B. opportunistic C. occadional D. unequaled
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单选题The author mentions Hardy's novel "Under the Greenwood Tree" to justify his comments on
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单选题A: We came so close, really. We almost won that game! B. ______ A. There, there. B. There's no use crying over spilt milk. C. You guys were superb. D. I couldn't care less.
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单选题The first men to study the nature of electricity could not imagine that their experiments, carried on because of mere intellectual curiosity, would eventually lead to modern electrical technology, without which we can scarcely______contemporary life.
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