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The word "presented" in Line 3 of Paragraph 5 can be best replaced by ______.A.appearedB.i

The word "presented" in Line 3 of Paragraph 5 can be best replaced by ______.

A.appeared

B.introduced

C.challenged

D.changed

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更多“The word "presented" in Line 3…”相关的问题
第1题
What document presented under an L/C is treated as original? (1)() A statement in a document that

What document presented under an L/C is treated as original?

(1)( ) A statement in a document that another document is the sole original.

(2)( ) If the document

1) appears to be written, typed, perforated, or stamped by the document issuer hand, or

2) appears to be on the document issuer original stationery, or

3) appears to be hand-signed by the document issuer, or

4) appears to bear the document issuer facsimile signature, or

5) appears to be a photocopy of another document if such photocopy appears to have been completed by the document issuer hand marking.

6) If a document states that it is original or marks/stamps the word "original".

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第2题
The first English dictionary, called an Alphabetical Table of Hard Words, was published in
1604. The dictionary was actually【C1】______a list of about 3 000 difficult words, each followed by a one word【C2】______. The author, Robert Cawdrey,【C3】______to include everyday words in his dictionary.【C4】______, he reasoned, would ever have to look up a word in a dictionary if he already knew the meaning of the word. During the 1600' s more dictionaries were published. Each followed Cawdrey' s【C5】______and presented a few thousand【C6】______words. Around 1700 one dictionary maker, John Kersey,【C7】______define easy words as well as hard ones. But until the 1750' s all dictionaries were rather【C8】______and not very valuable.

A man named Dr. Samuel Johnson【C9】______all this. In 1755 Dr. Johnson produced the first modern dictionary. He【C10】______in his dictionary all important words, both easy and hard, and he gave good meanings. He also gave good sentences to show how each word was【C11】______used in speech and【C12】______. By the end of the 1700' s most dictionary makers【C13】______Johnson' s lead. Dictionaries were getting better and better.

The 1800' s【C14】______the greatest improvement【C15】______the quality of dictionaries. In England scholars planned and prepared the Oxford English dictionary, a【C16】______work. One of the most interesting【C17】______of the Oxford Dictionary is its word histories. It【C18】______the history of each word from its earliest【C19】______use【C20】______the time of the printing of the dictionary.

【C1】

A.no less than

B.much less than

C.nothing more than

D.much more than

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第3题
听力原文:The first English dictionary was published in 1604. The dictionary was a list of

听力原文: The first English dictionary was published in 1604. The dictionary was a list of about 3,000 difficult words, each followed by a one-word definition. The author, Robert Cawdrey, did not include everyday words in his dictionary. He believed that no one would look up a word in a dictionary if he already knew the meaning of the word.

During the 1600s, more dictionaries were published. Each followed Cawdrey' s lead and presented a few thousand difficult words. Around 1,700, one dictionary maker, John Kersey, did define easy words as well as difficult ones. But until the1750s, ail dictionaries were not very valuable.

A man called Dr. Samuel Johnson changed all this. In 1755 Dr. Johnson produced the first modem dictionary. He included in his dictionary all important words, both easy and hard, and he gave good meanings. He also gave good example sentences in speech and writing. By the end of the 1700s most dictionary makers had followed Johnson' s lead. Dictionaries were getting better and better.

The 1800s saw the greatest improvement in the quality of dictionaries. In England scholars planned and prepared the Oxford English Dictionary, a twenty-volume work. One of the most interesting features of the Oxford Dictionary is its word histories. It traces the history of each word from its earliest recorded use up to the time of the printing of the dictionary.

(33)

A.In 1604.

B.In 1750.

C.In 1755.

D.Around 1700.

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第4题
听力原文:The first English dictionary was published in 1604. The dictionary was a list. of

听力原文: The first English dictionary was published in 1604. The dictionary was a list. of about 3 000 difficult words, each followed by a one-word definition. The author, Robert Cawdrey, did not include everyday words in his dictionary.He believed that no one would look up a word in a dictionary if he already knew the meaning of the word.

During the 1600s,more dictionaries were published.Each followed Cawdrey's lead and presented a few thousand difficult words.Around 1700,one dictionary maker,John Kersey,did define easy words as well as difficult ones.But until the 1750s,all dictionaries were not very valuable.

A man called Dr.Samuel Johnson changed all this.In 1755 Dr.Johnson produced the first modern dictionary.He included in his dictionary all important words,both easy and hard,and he gave good meanings.He also gave good example sentences in speech and writing.By the end of the 1700 s most dictionary makers had followed Johnson's lead.Dictionaries were getting better and better.

The 1800s saw the greatest improvement in the quality of dictionaries.In England scholars planned and prepared the Oxford English Dictionary,a twenty—volume work.One of the most interesting features of the Oxford Dictionary is its word histories.It traces the history of each word from its earliest recorded use up to the time of the printing of the dictionary.

32.When was the first English dictionary published?

33.Who produced the first modern English dictionary?

34.Which of the following statements can best describe the first modern English dictionary?

35.What makes the Oxford English Dictionary different from others?

(33)

A.In 1604.

B.In 1750.

C.In 1755.

D.Around 1700.

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第5题
Although "lie detectors" are widely used by governments, police departments and businesses
, the results are not always accurate. Lie detectors are commonly【C1】______as emotion detectors, for their aim is to【C2】______bodily changes that contradict what a【C3】______says. The lie detector records changes【C4】______heart rate, breathing, blood pressure, and the electrical【C5】______of the skin. In the first part of the【C6】______, you are electronically connected to the machine and【C7】______a few neutral questions("What is your name?" etc). Your physical reactions serve【C8】______the standard for evaluating what comes【C9】______. Then you are presented with a few【C10】______questions among the neutral ones("When did you rob the bank?" ). The idea is that if you are【C11】______, your body will reveal the truth, even if you try to【C12】______it. Your heart rate and breathing will change【C13】______as you respond to the question.

That is the theory, but psychologists have found that lie detectors are simply not【C14】______. Since most physical changes are the same across【C15】______emotions, lie detectors cannot tell【C16】______you are feeling angry, nervous or excited.【C17】______people may be tense and nervous【C18】______the whole procedure. They may react physiologically to a certain word("bank")not because they robbed it, but because they recently used a bad check. In either【C19】______, the machine will record a "lie" .

On the other hand, some practiced liars can lie【C20】______hesitation, so the reverse mistake is also common.

【C1】

A.fixed

B.designed

C.known

D.produced

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第6题
Dishonor only refers to the refusal to make payment by the payer when it is presented for payment.

参考答案:错误

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第7题
Good news is bad news and bad news is good news, newsmen often say to one another. And whe
n you look at the media it's only too easy to see what they mean. A dictionary definition of the media is mass communication, e.g. the press, television, radio. The media sees its main purpose as giving the public news. Naturally to provide the public with news, the media has first to gather it. The whole function and purpose of the media, then, seems to depend on the word "news", but more important, on how the word is interpreted.

The media like any big business venture today is an extremely competitive world of its own. In providing material for its public it has constantly to make sure it serves the right diet. No public will waste time on your paper or your TV channel otherwise. The sad truth is that there seems only one way to catch an audience—hit them right between the eyes. What started as a mild tap has now become a sledgehammer blow that goes by the name of sensationalism.

A reporter chooses—has to choose—a news story because of its sensation value. The young inexperienced cub reporter rings his editor about a car crash. He starts to explain the details to him but the experienced editor asks the cub one question: "Anyone killed?" and to himself he thinks, why do we offer jobs to children?

One may accuse newsman of cynicism but they will quickly remind you of the hard facts of survival in the world of the media. The favorite words the newspaper placards in the streets bombard the public with are, "Surprise, Sensation, Drama, Shock". You wonder, when the papers batter the public with dramas and sensations day after day, that they haven't put an end to sensation long ago. As a regular newspaper reader you also thank Heavens for the light relief of the strips. Turn finally from them to what is referred to laughingly as "steam radio", in order to show its relative antiquity. This for many millions of people is the only live contact they have with the outside world that tightly or wrongly they have been led to believe they should have contact with. It's extremely hard of course to see why, when for the most part its news services bring them tragedy, disaster, heartbreak, other people's misfortunes—in a word, trouble. What again becomes quickly apparent is that a man's job depends on sensationalism, and we are asked to excuse him for this.

Perhaps the media hasn't quite grown up and we should congratulate it on getting this far. The year 2000 may see great changes in the way news is presented to us. Again, who knows, it might even get worse—if such a thing is possible. Perish the thought!

According to the passage which is most important?

A.The media's purpose.

B.The news itself.

C.What is thought of as news.

D.The gathering of news.

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第8题
He presented a ______ of his model design to the Committee members for their approval.A.sk

He presented a ______ of his model design to the Committee members for their approval.

A.sketch

B.model

C.sample

D.schedule

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第9题
Dishonor is the refusal to make payment or accept a bill by the payer when it is presented for payme
nt or acceptance.
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第10题
A credit calls for shipment of (description of goods) FOB Shanghai. A presented commercial invoice d

A credit calls for shipment of (description of goods) FOB Shanghai. A presented commercial invoice does not specifically state "FOB Shanghai".

(1)( ) It is a discrepancy.

(2)( ) It is not a discrepancy.

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第11题
The president announced that ____________ (他将会依照证据办事) as presented to him.

The president announced that ____________ (他将会依照证据办事) as presented to him.

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