Modern industry must have developed ______ .A.before the Middle AgesB.around the 19th cent
Modern industry must have developed ______ .
A.before the Middle Ages
B.around the 19th century
C.in Greece or Rome
D.machines to take tests
Modern industry must have developed ______ .
A.before the Middle Ages
B.around the 19th century
C.in Greece or Rome
D.machines to take tests
第1题
Modern industry must have developed______.
A.before the Middle Ages
B.around the 19th century
C.in Greece or Rome
D.machines to take tests
第2题
According to the passage, modern industry must have developed ______ .
A.before the Middle Ages
B.about in the nineteenth century
C.in Greece or Rome
D.machines to take tests
第3题
This materialistic outlook has seriously influenced education. Fewer and fewer young people these days acquire knowledge only for its own sake. Every course of studies must lead somewhere: i.e. to a bigger wage pocket. The demand for skilled personnel far exceeds the supply and big companies compete with each other to recruit students before they have completed their studies. Tempting salaries and “fringe benefits” are offered to them. Recruiting tactics of this kind of have led to the “brain drain”, the process by which highly skilled people offer their services to the higher bidder. The wealthier nations deprive their poorer neighbors of their most able citizens. While Mammon is worshipped as never before, the rich get richer and the poor, poorer.
第4题
A.modern tourism
B.railway industry
C.hotel industry
D.aviation industry
第5题
A.temporarily
B.permanently
C.partially
D.completely
第6题
A、the number of firms in that industry must be extremely large
B、all the firms must be small in size so that none alone can influence the price
C、their products must be highly similar to one another so that customers regard them as identical
D、it must be ver
第7题
Computer classes must be ()to every student of all grades, which will make them have a good command of the modern communication and learning tool.
A.accessible
B.avoidable
C.valuable
D.acceptable
第8题
Like all large cities, New York has old problems to solve and【21】ones to face. Slums(贫民窟) must be cleared, and new housing constructed.【22】jams continues to plague(折磨) the city's overcrowded streets. Not only must new highways be【23】, but old ones must be repaired. Protecting the【24】and safety of New Yorkers【25】an army of police, firemen, and sanitation(卫生) workers. Finding an adequate water【26】is a constant problem, as is the attraction of new business and industry to boost the city's【27】. Caring for the sick,【28】the young, providing【29】the needy, and helping newcomers to adjust to big city life are additional tasks【30】the city must perform.
In spite of New York's【31】, millions of visitors continue to flock to the city each year. Thousands stay to work and【32】in the city,【33】to New York's human resources. New Yorkers are working hard to【34】their city's needs and to keep it a world【35】of culture, industry, and commerce. New York buzzes with the sounds of machines tearing down and building up the city, changing its face for tomorrow's world.
(41)
A.easy
B.hard
C.new
D.many
第9题
It is fairly common for an industrial cluster to break up and for production to move to locations with lower wages when the technology of the industry is no longer rapidly improving--when it is no longer essential to have the absolutely most modern machinery,when the need for highly skilled workers has declined,and when being at the cutting edge of innovation conveys only a small advantage.Explain this tendency of industrial clusters to break up in terms of the theory of external economies.
第10题
This is particularly significant in relation to hospital care. The physician must certify the need for hospitalization, determine what procedures will be performed, and announce when the patient may be discharged. The patient may be consulted about some of these decisions, but in the main it is the doctor's judgments that are final. Little wonder then that in the eyes of the hospital it is the physician who is the real "consumer". As a consequence, the medical staff represents the "power-center" in hospital policy and decision-making, not the administration.
Although usually there are in this situation four identifiable participants, the physician, the hospital, the patient and the prayer (generally an insurance carrier or government), the physician makes the essential decision for all of them. The hospital becomes an extension of the physicians; the payer generally meets most of the bonafide (真正的) bills generated by the physician/hospital and for the most part, the patient plays a passive role. In routine or minor illnesses, or just plain worries, the patient's options are of course much greater with respect to use and price. But in illnesses that are of some significance, such choice tends to evaporate. And it is for these illnesses that the bulk of the health care dollar is spent. We estimate that about 75-80 percent of health care expenditures are determined by physicians, not patients. For this reason, economy measures directed at patient or the
general or the general public are relatively ineffective.