______ changed: whatever men can do, women can also do.A.Time hasB.Times haveC.Age hasD.Ag
______ changed: whatever men can do, women can also do.
A.Time has
B.Times have
C.Age has
D.Ages have
______ changed: whatever men can do, women can also do.
A.Time has
B.Times have
C.Age has
D.Ages have
What is the largest benefit the Net has brought to the management of companies?
A.It has brought the largest profits to them.
B.It has greatly improved their management.
C.It has helped cut short their human resources.
D.It has significantly changed their image.
On the whole, the passage is about______.
A. how to start a university
B. the world-famous colleges in America
C. how colleges have changed
D. what kind of lesson each college teaches
A.The vendor delivery note number in the document header
B.The quantity at item level
C.The stock type at item level
D.The text at item level
A.to travel...be attacked
B.of trave...being attacked
C.for travelling...to be attacked
D.travelling...being attacked
The idea arose because of the 【B4】 behavior. of the women in the plant. According to 【B5】 of the experiments, their hourly output rose when lighting was increased, but also when it was dimmed. It did not 【B6】 what was done in the experiment; 【B7】 something was changed, productivity rose. A(n) 【B8】 that they were being experimented upon seemed to be 【B9】 to alter workers' behavior. 【B10】 itself.
After several decades, the same data were 【B11】 to econometric analysis. The Hawthorne experiments had another surprise in store. 【B12】 the descriptions on record, no systematic 【B13】 was found that levels of productivity were related to changes in lighting.
It turns out that the peculiar way of conducting the experiments may have led to 【B14】 interpretations of what happened. 【B15】 , lighting was always changed on a Sunday. When work started again on Monday, output 【B16】 rose compared with the previous Saturday and 【B17】 to rise for the next couple of days. 【B18】, a comparison with data for weeks when there was no experimentation showed that output always went up on Mondays. Workers 【B19】 to be diligent for the first few days of the week in any case, before 【B20】 a plateau and then slackening off. This suggests that the alleged "Hawthorne effect" is hard to pin down.
【B1】
A.affected
B.achieved
C.extracted
D.restored
What should be the carrying amount of the property in Tilly’s statement of financial position as at 31 March 2015?
A.$775,000
B.$790,500
C.$765,000
D.$750,000
Both games had been invented a thousand years before. In the first kind of football game ever played, all the men from one village tried to kick a ball into another village. The men of the second village tried to kick the ball into the first. Hundreds of people joined in, running everywhere, running crops and knocking down fences. In time, people agreed on some rules to keep order, but many roles were left open to change. Different rules developed in different places.
When the two colleges met to play football, each followed its own rules. They mixed the games together and invented a new game. A hundred years later we call that game American football.
In what ways do you suppose the game we know now will have changed in another hundred years?
When the two colleges first met to play "football", the players followed ______.
A.the rules of soccer
B.the rules of rugby
C.different rules
D.college rules
Stories about politicians and journalists taking money from businessmen have caused the public to stop trusting them. Also politicians keep making promises that they do not keep. Mr Smith of York said, ‘When the politicians make new laws, they only help their friends, not people like me’. Mrs Marley of Leeds said, ‘The newspapers and television are not interested in what is true; they are only interested in money for advertising’.
It has got worse recently as more people can get news from the Internet and learn if the journalists and politicians are telling the truth or not. What can our politicians and journalists do? The only answer is to be more honest.
1.The number of people believing politicians and journalists has __________.
A.increased
B.not changed
C.decreased
2.Experts think this problem ____________.
A.will get better soon
B.will not get better soon
C.will get worse soon
3.Stories say businessmen give money to _______.
A.politicians
B.politicians and journalists
C.journalists
4.Mr Smith thinks politicians make laws __________.
A.to help their friends
B.to help him
C.to help everybody
5.People can now check stories using _________.
A.the newspapers
B.the television
C.the Internet
"State of the art" is something that is as modem as possible. It is a product that is based on the very latest methods and technology. Something that is "state of the art" is the newest possible design or product of a business or industry. A state of the art television set, for example, uses the modernest electronic design and parts. It is the best that one can buy.
"State of the art" is not a new expression. Engineers have used it for years, to describe the best and most modem way of doing something. Millions of Americans began to use the expression in the late 1970 ' s. The reason was the computer revolution. Every computer company claimed that its computers were "state of the art".
Computer technology changed so fast that a state of the art computer today might be old tomorrow. (80) The expression "state of the art" became as common and popular as computers themselves. Now all kinds of products are said to be "state of the art".
What is the purpose of the passage?
A.To tell how "high tech" and "state of the art" have developed.
B.To give examples of "high tech".
C.To tell what "high tech" and "state of the art" are.
D.To describe very modem technology.