单选题These areas rely on agriculture almost ______, having few mineral recourses and a minimum of industrial development.
单选题His plan was ______ by the committee.
单选题My grandmother has been going to a better dentist, so this ______ problems she is having with her dentures.
单选题He signed a new contract with the Dublin firm, Maunsel & Company, on more favorable ______ than those Grant Richards had given him. A. items B. terms C. articles D. specifications
单选题There are great careers in which the increasing emphasis is on specialization. You find these careers in engineering, in production, in statistical work, and in teaching. But there is an increasing demand for people who are able to take in a great area at a glance, people who perhaps know too much about any one field. There is, in other words, a demand for people Who are capable of seeing the forest rather than the trees, of making general judgments. And these "generalists" are particularly needed for positions in administration, where it is their job to see that other people do the work, where they have to plan for other people, to organize other people' s work, to begin it and judge it. The specialist understands one field; his concern is with technique and tools. He is a "trained" man; and his educational background is properly technical or professional. The generalist-and especially the administrator-deals with people; his concern is with leadership, with planning, and with direction giving. He is an "educated" man; and the humanities are his strongest foundation. Very rarely is a specialist capable of being an administrator. And very rarely is a good generalist also a good specialist in a particular field. Any organizations need them in different proportions. It is your task to find out, during your training period, into which of the two kinds of jobs you fit, and to plan your career accordingly. Your first job may turn out to be the right job for you-but this is a pure accident. Certainly you should not change jobs constantly or people will become suspicious of your ability to hold any job. At the same time you must not look upon the first job as the final job; it is primarily a training job, an opportunity to understand yourself and your fitness for being an employee.
单选题I support your decision, but I should also make it clear that I am not going to be ______ to it.
单选题(It) would be (hardly) for Mrs Sharp to find (a) man (of parts) around her.
单选题The author believes that the real blame lies with ______.
单选题The view (which) elements of a culture are to be understood and judged (in terms of) their relationship to (the culture as a whole) led to the conclusion that the cultures themselves could not be (evaluated or graded as) higher and lower, superior or inferior.
单选题We were politely ______ an armed guard and warned not to take pictures.
单选题According to the selection some species that live where there is no light have ______.
单选题The child was so
ingenuous
that even when she knocked the television off its stand so that it was irreparably damaged, her parents thought her to be charming
单选题In both America and Europe,it is _____to tip the waiter or waitress anywhere from 10% to 20%.
单选题
单选题The boy could not Ureconcile/U himself to the failure. He did not believe that was his lot.
单选题
单选题{{B}}Passage Three{{/B}}
One traditional justification for
greater judicial deference to agencies on legal questions in the U. S.
administrative regime is she expertise argument. This justification comports
with traditional understandings about the respective roles of the different
branches of government and agencies' place in modern government. Agencies, in
this view, are the technical experts that put into operation the policy
judgments made by legislators. Indeed, technical expertise is the raison d’etre
of agencies; by focusing on a particular regulatory field, or sector of the
economy, agencies can do what Congress lacks the time and other institutional
resources to do. Chevron VS National Resources, which presented the question
whether the statutory term "stationary source" referred to an entire
pollution-emitting plant or, rather, to every single smokestack within such a
plant, supplies an apt example of when an agency's special technical expertise
can aid statutory interpretation. According to the expertise argument,
agencies are deemed to understand even the legal ramifications of the problems
agencies are created to work on. Admittedly, the dichotomy between legal and
factual questions may at times be difficult to maintain, but that observation
argues as much in favor of as it does against Chevron deference.
Agency expertise, however, is not the only common justification. Sometimes
the doctrine is justified also on democratic grounds. According to the
argument from democracy, it is agencies, not courts, that are answerable to both
the executive and the legislative representatives of the citizenry. Because
judges are not elected, while presidents and legislators are, and because
agencies but not judges are accountable to the President and to Congress,
judicial deference to agency decisions enhances the political legitimacy of the
administrative regime. Finally, Chevron may be justified also in
the name of administrative efficiency or coordination. Before Chevron, different
federal courts in different jurisdictions could interpret the same statutory
provision differently. Multiple interpretations by different federal courts
would mean that the statute "said" different things in those different
jurisdictions. Such confusion could be eliminated by appellate review, but
agencies faced uncertainty pending review, and the possibility of different
interpretations across different appellate circuits remained. Because multiple
agencies do not typically interpret the same statutory language, however,
Chevron deference allows the agency charged with administering a statute to
interpret that statute. One agency, rather than many federal courts, now
resolves ambiguities in the statute that the agency in question is charged to
administer. Such interpretive streamlining not only reduces uncertainty but also
promotes regulatory coordination. Once an agency has settled on a reasonable
interpretation, it can act on the basis of that interpretation
nationally.
单选题They are sure they have all the facts they need to ______ the existence of a black hole.
单选题What experience do you have that is______to this position?
单选题Mass transportation revised the social and economic, fabric of the American city in many ways so as to permit an easy row of traffic. A. texture B. textile C. network D. structure
