多选题Creative business stratagems frequently become ______ as a result of ______, their versatility and adaptability destroyed by their transformation into rigid policies.
多选题Because he had decided not to ______ himself through the sales of his new product, the inventor anonymously donated all profits to charity.
多选题Ms. Rivers gave a performance of noteworthy ______: her piano repertoire ranged from classical music to jazz.
多选题Because the candidate had switched his party allegiance immediately before the campaign, his former associates called him a ______, and even his new allies considered him an ______.
多选题Astronomer Heidi Hammel, a proponent of science education, conveys a passion for planetary science that her enraptured audiences find ______.
多选题Jacob felt great ______ about his upcoming trip to Brazil; indeed, he could hardly contain his enthusiasm.
多选题Both candidates wanted to appeal to voters who are normally ______ with politics, those who express little or no ______ the outcome of the election.
多选题Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn"s ______ proved keenest when he accurately predicted that his books would someday appear in his native Russia.
多选题Many people mistakenly imagine that life in space is full of ______; in reality, an astronaut"s day includes many tasks so ______ as to be boring.
多选题Such was Norton"s generosity that he was at times criticized for being ______ to a fault.
多选题Scientists' pristine reputation as devotees of the disinterested
pursuit of truth has been ______ by recent evidence that some scientists have
deliberately ______ experimental results to further their own careers.
A. reinforced
B. compromised
C. resuscitated
D. replicated
E. fabricated
F. challenged
多选题King's role in the antiwar movement appears to require little
explanation, since he was the foremost advocate of nonviolence of his time. But
King's stance on the Vietnam War cannot be explained in terms of pacifism alone.
After all, he was something of a latecomer to the antiwar movement, even though
by 1965 he was convinced that the role of the United States in the war was
indefensible. Why then the two years that passed before he translated his
private misgivings into public dissent? {{U}}Perhaps he believed that he could not
criticize American foreign policy without endangering the support for civil
fights that he had won from the federal government.{{/U}}
According to the passage, the delay in the antiwar movement is perhaps
attributable to which of the following?
A. King's ambivalence concerning the role of the United States in the war in
Vietnam.
B. King's attempts to consolidate support for his leadership within the
civil fights movement.
C. King's desire to keep the leadership of the civil fights movement
distinct from that of the antiwar movement.
D. King's desire to draw support for the civil rights movement from the
leadership of the antiwar movement.
E. King's reluctance to jeopardize federal support for the civil rights
movement.
多选题For centuries, Mars has been called the "Red Planet", but the designation is ______, because Mars is not precisely red.
多选题The setting of Ntozake Shange"s first novel is exotic, even ______, making that of her second novel seem ______ by contrast.
多选题paradoxically, the senator was both a ______ and ______: she publicly defended the rights and wisdom of the people, but she often spoke with a disdainful air of superiority.
多选题The charlatan"s seemingly frank and open demeanor was actually a ______ means of enlisting his patient"s confidence.
多选题As the charismatic speaker left the podium,she was surrounded by ______ of zealous supporters who ______ our attempts to approach her.
多选题The 1973 Endangered Species Act made into legal policy the concept
that endangered species of wildlife are precious as part of a natural ecosystem.
The nearly unanimous passage of this act in the United States Congress,
reflecting the rising national popularity of environmentalism, masked a bitter
debate. Affected industries clung to the former wildlife policy of valuing
individual species according to their economic usefulness. They fought to
minimize the law's impact by limiting definitions of key terms, but they lost on
nearly every issue. The act defined "wildlife" as almost all kinds of
animals--from large mammals to invertebrates and plants. "Taking"
wildlife was defined broadly as any action that threatened an endangered
species; {{U}}areas vital to a species' survival could be federally protected as
"critical habitats".{{/U}} Though these definitions legislated strong
environmentalist goals, political compromises made in the enforcement of the act
were to determine just what economic interests would be set aside for the sake
of ecological stabilization. According to the passage, which of
the following does the Endangered Species Act define as a "critical habitat"?
A. A natural ecosystem that is threatened by imminent development.
B. An industrial or urban area in which wildlife species have almost ceased
to live among humans.
C. A natural area that is crucial to the survival of a species and thus
eligible for federal protection.
D. A wilderness area in which the "taking" of wildlife species is permitted
rarely and only under strict federal regulation.
E. A natural environment that is protected under law because its wildlife
has a high economic value.
多选题Because the perfumer possessed an unusually sensitive nose, he had the ability to ______ subtle variations in even the most complex odors.
多选题The sound produced by the youth orchestra was so ______ that even its least experienced members were abashed.