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[单选题]

Reporters can transmit images either through the Internet or through their mobile phon

A.记者通过或联网或者移动电话来发射形象信号

B.报道人员要么通过互联网,要么通过移动电话来传输形象

C.记者既可以通过互联网,也可以通过移动电话传送图像信息

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更多“Reporters can transmit images either through the Internet or through their mobile phon”相关的问题

第1题

Teachers using red pen to mark students work could be harming their psyche as the color is
too aggressive, according to education strategies drafted by an Australian state government. The "Good Mental Health Rocks" kit, which was distributed this month to about 30 schools in Queensland state, offers strategies such as " Dont mark in red pen(which can be seen as aggressive)—Use a different color. " Other tips include structuring time for peer tutoring every day, apologizing to students when necessary and asking students to conduct a " personal skills audit" where they focus on their individual strengths rather than their weaknesses. The kit, designed to help Queensland teachers address mental health in the classroom, suggests that social and emotional wellbeing has been linked to young peoples schooling, among other things. The education aid has sparked a row in parliament, with deputy opposition leader Mark McArdle calling it "kooky, loony, loopy lefty policies. " But Health Minister Stephen Robertson, whose department devised the kit, said youth suicide was a serious issue. " If mental health professionals determine that as one of a number of strategies teachers should consider, then Ill support them every day of the week," he told reporters recently. "This is not a matter for ridicule, this is serious. " According to some Australian mental health groups, the greatest number of people with mental illness are aged between 18 and 24 years, with 14 percent of Australian children and adolescents suffering from some sort of illness. Boys are slightly more likely to experience mental health problems than girls and depression is one of the most common conditions in young people and increases during adolescence, the website of mental health group Mindframe. said.

Teachers are advised not to mark students work in red pen because______.

A.red color is too eye-catching

B.it may hurt students" feelings

C.it is against the state law

D.colors are too aggressive

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第2题

Who are the kinds of reporters the writer seems to admire most?A.Reporters who know how to

Who are the kinds of reporters the writer seems to admire most?

A.Reporters who know how to sift through a lot of information.

B.Reporters who are willing to sacrifice to chase after a story.

C.Reporters who won't sully themselves.

D.Reporters who are highly trained.

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第3题

Which of the following might happen afterwards?A.The young student repaid the $32.B.The th

Which of the following might happen afterwards?

A.The young student repaid the $32.

B.The thief was put into prison.

C.The President told many reporters the thief's name.

D.The President ordered the young man to repay the money.

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第4题

Fifteen years ago, Ientered the Boston Globe, which was a temple to me then. It wasn’t easy getting hired. But once you were there, I found, you were in.

Globe jobs were for life-guaranteed until retirement. For 15 years I had prospered there—moving from an ordinary reporter to foreign correspondent and finally to senior. I would have a life time of security if I stuck to it.Instead, I had made a decision to leave. I entered my boss’s office. Would he rage?I wondered. He had a famous temper. “Matt, we have to have a talk,” I began awkwardly.“I came to the Globe when I was twenty-four. Now I’m forty. There’s a lot I want to doinlife. I’m resigning.” “To another paper?” he asked. I reached into my coat pocket, but didn’t say anything. I handed him a letter that explained everything.It said that I was leaving to start a new media company. We were at a rare turning point in history. I wanted to be directly engaged in the change.“I’m glad for you,”he said, quite out of my expectation.“I just came from aboard of directors meeting and it was seventy-five percent discouraging news. Some of that we can deal with. But much of it we can’t,” he went on.“I wish you all the luck in the world,”he concluded.“And if it doesn’t work out, remember, your star is always high here."

Then I went out of his office, walking through the news room for more good-byes. Everybody was saying congratulations. Everybody--even though I’d be risking all on an unfamiliar venture: all the financial security I had carefully built up.

Later, I had a final talk with Bill Taylor, chairman and publisher of the Boston Globe. He had turned the Globe into abillion-dollar property. “I’m resigning, Bill,” I said. He listened while I gave him the story. He wasn’t looking angry or dismayed either. After a pause, he said,“Golly, I wish I were in your shoes.”

From the passage we know that the Globe is a famous 。

A.newspaper

B.magazine

C.temple

D.church

If the writer stayed with the Globe 。

A.he would be able to realize his lifetime dreams.

B.he would let his long favourite dreams fade away

C.he would never have to worry about his future life

D.he would never be allowed to develop his ambitions

The writer wanted to resign because .

A.he had serous trouble with his boss.

B.he wanted to be engaged in the new media industry.

C.he got underpaid at his job for the Globe.

D.he had found a better paid job in a publishing house.

When the writer decided to resign the Globe was faced with .

A.a trouble with its staff members

B.a shortage of qualified reporters

C.an unfavorable business situation

D.a promising business situation

By saying“I wish I were in your shoes”(in the last paragraph) Bill Taylor meant that .

A.The writer was to fail.

B.The writer was stupid

C.He would reject the writer’s request

D.He would do the same if possibl

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第5题

What specific jobs do securities outside dressing rooms do?A.In addition to ensuring the l

What specific jobs do securities outside dressing rooms do?

A.In addition to ensuring the life style of the performers, they should prevent any person from entry.

B.In addition to ensuring the life safety of the actors, they should stop any reporters from entering

C.In addition to ensuring the life safety of the performers, they should prevent any fans from entering

D.In addition to ensuring the life safety of the performers, they should prevent any unauthorized person from entering

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第6题

It happened in the late fall of 1939 when, after a Nazi submarine had penetrated the Briti
sh sea defense around the Firth of Forth and damaged a British cruiser, Reston and a colleague contrived to get the news past British censorship. They cabled a series of seemingly harmless sentences to The Times's editors in New York, having first sent a message instructing the editors to regard only the last word of each sentence. Thus they were able to convey enough words to spell out the story. The fact that the news of the submarine attack was printed in New York before it had appeared in the British press sparked a big controversy that led to an investigation by Scotland Yard and British Military Intelligence. But it took the investigators eight weeks to decipher The Times's reporters' code, an embarrassingly slow bit of detective work, and when it was finally solved the incident had given the story very prominent play, later expressed dismay that the reporters had risked so much for so little. And the incident left Reston deeply distressed. It was so out of character for him to have. become involved in such a thing. The tactics were questionable and, though the United States was not yet in the war, Britain was already established as America's close ally and breaking British censorship seemed both an irresponsible and unpatriotic thing to do.

The episode recounted in the passage took place ______.

A.just prior to the outbreak of the Second World War

B.bofore Britain entered the Second World War

C.before the United States entered the Second World War

D.while the United States was in the Second World War

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第7题

Bribery may lead to murder. A month ago reporters rushed to the (1) of a crime. At the spot the

Bribery may lead to murder. A month ago reporters rushed to the(1)of a crime. At the spot the detective seemed even hardly aware of their(2)as he did his work. He carefully searched for(3)over every inch of the house. After a while, he bent over to pick up a small torn(4)of fabric. Nothing could(5)from his search. The detective(6)that this piece of fabric was(7)from the murderer's clothing during a struggle.

The(8)had been the finance director of a very large computer hardware manufacturer. His wife, a timid woman,(9)everything she knew with the detective, including a hot(10)her husband had with some of the company's top executives at a banquet. There had been a scandal(11)bribery at his company. He was(12)the business of many of the top executives. He had(13)that some people were giving special favors to government officials to get(14). He often questioned their moral(15)and told them that he would accuse them if they were doing something they shouldn't,(16)caused problems for him. His questioning and accusing often left him at(17)with many of the executives. This time it had led to a(18)blow on his head. The detective caught(19)of a crucial clue, a brass button in the corner. It was from a jacket of one of the top executives. Later this executive and the company's president was(20). Of course this is not the end of the story.

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第8题

C A woman:heads into apopular New York City coffee shop on a cold: winter rooming. Just ah

C

A woman:heads into apopular New York City coffee shop on a cold: winter rooming. Just ahead of her, a man drops a few papers. The woman pauses to help gather them. A clerk ata busy store thanks a customer who has just bought something. "Enjoy" the young woman says, smiling widely. "Have a nice day." She sounds like she really means it. These arethe common situations we may see every: day.

However, in her best-selling book Talk to the Hand, Lynne Truss argues that common good manners such as saying "Excuse me" almost no longer exist. There are certainly plenty who would agree with her. According to one recent study, 70 percent of the U.S. adults (成A.)said people are ruder now than they were 20 years ago.

Is it really true? We decided to find out if good manners are really hard to see. In this politeness study, reporters were sent to many cities in the world. They performed three experiments: "door tests" (would anyone hold the door open for them?); "paper drops" (who would help them gather a pile of "accidentally" dropped papers?); and "service tests" (which salesclerks would thank them for a purchase [购物]?)

In New York, 60 tests (20 of each type)were done. Along the way, the reporters met all types of people: men and women of different races, ages, professions (职业), and income levels. And guess what? In the end, four out of every five :people they met passed their: politeness test making New York the most polite city in the study.

44, What does Lynne Truss argue in Talk to the Hand?.

A. People are not as polite as they used to.

B. "Excuse me" is not welcome nowadays.

C. Of all the adults in the US 70% are rude,

D. People don't care about manners any more.

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第9题

Advance barely biological contract despair exception faintly fascinating formative gen
ius hire medicine ordinary origin passion promise quit symptom vision

Be fired with be given to better off care for far from feel like mix up nothing but turn down

1.I did not see the other car at the time because it was outside my field of_____.

2.Do you think a beautiful face is an_____or not for a woman?

3.Fever is an ______ of many illnesses.

4.The basketball player had _______ sat down before the reporters started firing questions at him.

5.Their old house had been large and spacious;by ______ the new flat seemed small and dark.

6.Every type of plant, with no ______,contains some kind of salt.

7.Parents should pay more attention to their children during their _____ years.

8.Joey came close to_____ after six months of unemployment.

9.I’m tried of being treated like a slave. I’ll_____ immediately.

10.Many of these problems had their ______ in the upper levels of administration.

11.Jonathan’s great grandfather left Ireland for the United States,which was believed to be a land of ____.

12.It’s interesting that some famous modern Chinese writers used to be students of______.

13.Maggie is no _____ woman.She has supported over a hundred children through school by working two jobs at the same time.

14.They _____ to herd Mr.Simpson’s sheep in the mountains the whole summer.

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