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Section D In this section, there is one passage followed by five questions. Read the passage carefully, and then answer the questions in a maximum of 10 words. Remember to write the answers on the answer sheet. Some of the senses that we and other terrestrial mammals take for granted are either reduced or absent in cetaceans or fail to function well in water. For example, it appears from their brain structure that toothed species are unable to smell. Baleen species, on the other hand, appear to have some related brain structures but it is not known whether these are functional. It has been speculated that, as the blowholes evolved and migrated to the top of the head, the neural pathways serving sense of smell may have been nearly all sacrificed. Similarly, although at least some cetaceans have taste buds, the nerves serving these have degenerated or are rudimentary. The sense of touch has sometimes been described as weak too, but this view is probably mistaken. Trainers of captive dolphins and small whales often remark on their animals’ responsiveness to being touched or rubbed, and both captive and free-ranging cetacean individuals of all species (particularly adults and calves, or members of the same subgroup) appear to make frequent contact. This contact may help to maintain order within a group, and stroking or touching are part of the courtship ritual in most species. The area around the blowhole is also particularly sensitive and captive animals often object strongly to being touched there. The sense of vision is developed to different degrees in different species. Baleen species studied at close quarters underwater—specifically a grey whale calf in captivity for a year, and free-ranging right whales and humpback whales studied and filmed off Argentina and Hawaii—have obviously tracked objects with vision underwater, and they can apparently see moderately well both in water and in air. However, the position of the eyes so restricts the field of vision in baleen whales that they probably do not have stereoscopic vision. On the other hand, the position of the eyes in most dolphins and porpoises suggests that they have stereoscopic vision forward and downward. Eye position in freshwater dolphins, which often swim on their side or upside down while feeding, suggests that what vision they have is stereoscopic forward and upward. By comparison, the bottlenose dolphin has extremely keen vision in water. Judging from the way it watches and tracks airborne flying fish, it can apparently see fairly well through the air-water interface as well. And although preliminary experimental evidence suggests that their in-air vision is poor, the accuracy with which dolphins leap high to take small fish out of a trainer’s hand provides anecdotal evidence to the contrary. Such variation can no doubt be explained with reference to the habitats in which individual species have developed. For example, vision is obviously more useful to species inhabiting clear open waters than to those living in turbid rivers and flooded plains. The South American boutu and Chinese beiji, for instance, appear to have very limited vision, and the Indian sinus are blind, their eyes reduced to slits that probably allow them to sense only the direction and intensity of light. Although the senses of taste and smell appear to have deteriorated, and vision in water appears to be uncertain, such weaknesses are more than compensated for by cetaceans’ well-developed acoustic sense. Most species are highly vocal, although they vary in the range of sounds they produce, and many forage for food using echolocation. Large baleen whales primarily use the lower frequencies and are often limited in their repertoire. Notable exceptions are the nearly song-like choruses of bowhead whales in summer and the complex, haunting utterances of the humpback whales. Toothed species in general employ more of the frequency spectrum, and produce a wider variety of sounds, than baleen species (though the sperm whale apparently produces a monotonous series of high-energy clicks and little else). Some of the more complicated sounds are clearly communicative, although what role they may play in the social life and ’culture’ of cetaceans has been more the subject of wild speculation than of solid science. Questions: Which species swims upside down while eating

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下列情形中,构成挪用特定款物罪的是:

A. 某村民委员会主任雷某将上级春节时慰问贫困地区的一台彩色电视机私自变卖,把所得款项用于归还村委会成员欠饭店的吃喝账
B. 某市民政局局长杜某将上级拨付500万元救济款挪用于连本单位高级办公楼,被境外媒体报道后,在国际上造成恶劣影响
C. 某省防讯办公室主任刘某将本单位储备的防讯物资变卖,把所得款项用于本单位投资期货交易,当年赢利后,又重新按原品种、数量购置防讯物资
D. 某县民政局下部齐某将上级拨付的5万元扶贫专用款挪用于本人购置新房,1年以后,齐某凑齐5万元归还

乙从新疆购得一头骆驼,后甲欲买乙的骆驼,约定价格为2000元,但因甲所带的钱不够,只付给乙1600元定金,双方约定3日后甲来牵走骆驼并支付余款400元。第四天丙找到乙提出愿以3000元买此骆驼,乙同意。丙向乙付清3000元并将骆驼牵走。后甲来乙家牵骆驼,得知乙已将骆驼卖给他人,非常生气。丙牵骆驼回家的路上,骆驼很不驯服,突然在路上狂奔,撞伤了路人丁。请回答下列问题: 如果该骆驼在出卖之前就已经被乙抵押给了赵某,双方已经签订了书面的抵押合同,但是没有登记。出卖时乙未通知或告知赵某和丙。则如果乙到期不能偿还赵某债务,以下说法错误的是:

A. 出卖骆驼的行为无效,赵某依然可以行使抵押权
B. 赵某不能行使抵押权
C. 赵某的损失,由乙承担赔偿责任
D. 赵某的损失,由乙和丙承担赔偿责任

选取“人员情况表”的“人员类型”和“人员比例”两列的内容(“总计”行内容除外)建立“三维饼图”,(系列产生在“列”),标题为“人员情况图”,图例位置靠上,数据标志为“显示百分比”,将图插人到工作表的A9:D20单元格区域内。

Section A In this section, you will hear five short conversations. Each conversation will be read only once. At the end of each conversation, there will be a pause. During the pause, read the question with three choices marked A, B and C and decide which is the best answer. Then mark the corresponding letter on the answer sheet with a single lithe through the centre. What can we learn from the conversation

A. The director agreed to their plans completely.
B. The director objected to their plan.
C. The director partially agreed with them.

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