题目内容

某项目净现金流量见表5-3。投资主体设定的基准收益率为8%,基准静态投资回收期为3年。由此可以得到的结论有( )。 表 5-3 某项目净现金流量 年份 0 1 2 3 4 5 净现金流量/万元 -200 -200 150 150 150 150

A. 项目投资利润率为50%
B. 项目财务净现值约为74.82万元
C. 项目静态投资回收期为2.67年
D. 项目财务内部收益率大于8%
E. 从静态投资回收期判断,该项目可行

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闭合导线检查外业观测粗差的方法与附合导线的检查方法是相同的。()

A. 对
B. 错

Tattoos didn’t spring up with the biker gangs and rock ’n’ roll bands. They’ve been around for a long time and had many different meanings over the course of history. For years, scientists believed that Egyptians and Nubians were the first people to tattoo their bodies. Then, in 1991, a mummy was discovered, dating back to the Bronze Age of about 3,300 B.C. "The Iceman," as the specimen was called, had several markings on his body, including a cross on the inside of his knee and lines on his ankle and back. It is believed these tattoos were made in a curative (治病的) effort. Being so advanced, the Egyptians reportedly spread the practice of tattooing throughout the world. The pyramid-building third and fourth dynasties of Egypt developed international nations with Crete, Greece’, Persia and Arabia. The art tattooing stretched out all the way to Southeast Asia by 2,000B.C. Around the same time, the Japanese became interested in the art but only for its decorative attributes, as opposed to magical ones. The Japanese tattoo artists were the undisputed masters. Their use of colors, perspective, and imaginative designs gave the practice a whole new angle. During the first millenniumA.D., Japan adopted Chinese culture in many aspects and confined tattooing to branding wrongdoers. In the Balkans, the Thracians had a different use for the craft. Aristocrats, according to Herodotus, used it to show the world their social status. Although early Europeans dabbled with tattooing, they truly rediscovered the art form when the world exploration of the post-Renaissance made them seek out new cultures. It was their meeting with Polynesian that introduced them to tattooing. The word, in fact is derived from the Polynesian word tattau, which means "to mark." Most of the early uses of tattoos were ornamental. However, a number of civilizations had practical applications for this craft. The Goths, a tribe of Germanic barbarians famous for pillaging Roman settlements, used tattoos to mark their slaves. Romans did the same with slaves and criminals. In Tahiti, tattoos were a rite of passage and told the history of the person’s life. Reaching adulthood, boys got one tattoo to commemorate the event. Men were marked with another style when they got married. Later, tattoos became the souvenir of choice for globe-trotting sailors. Whenever they would reach an exotic locale, they would get a new tattoo to mark the occasion. A dragon was a famous style that meant the sailor had reached a "China station." At first, sailors would spend their free time on the ship tattooing themselves and their mates. Soon after, tattoo parlors were set up in the area, surrounding ports worldwide. In the middle of the 19th century, police officials believed that half of the criminal underworld in New York City had tattoos. Port areas were renowned for being rough places flail of sailors that were guilty of some crime or another. This is most likely how tattoos got such a bad reputation and became associated with rebels and criminals. In Japan, tattoos were accepted as ______.

A. a means of ornament
B. a symbol of magical power
C. a way of communication
D. a sign of success

Promptness is important in American business, academic, and social settings. The (56) of punctuality is taught to young children at school. Today slips and the use of bells signal to the child that (57) and time itself are to be respected. People who keep (58) are considered dependable. If people are late for job interviews, appointments, or classes, they are often (59) unreliable and irresponsible. In the business setting, "time is money" and companies may (60) their executive for tardiness to business meetings. Of course, it is not always possible to be punctual. Social and business etiquette also provides rules for (61) arrivals. Calling (62) the telephone if one is going to be more than a few minutes late for (63) appointments is (64) polite and is often expected. Keeping a friend waiting (65) ten to twenty minutes is considered rude. Respecting deadlines is also important in academic and professional (66) . Students who (67) assignments late may be surprised to find that the professor will (68) their grade or even refuse to (69) their work. (70) it is a question of arriving on time or of meeting a deadline, people are culturally expected to stick to the schedule time. Part Ⅳ ClozeDirections: In this part, there is a passage with 15 blanks. For each blank, there are 4 choices marked A, B, C and D. Choose the best answer for each blank and mark the corresponding letter with a single bar across the square brackets on your machine-scoring ANSWER SHEET.

A. integrity
B. importance
C. scrutiny
D. insignificance

you will hear a monologue. While you listen, fill out the blank with a phrase or sentence you've just heard. Some of the information has been given to you in the text. You will hear the recording twice. You now have 25 seconds to read the text below. He is big. He always has been, over six feet, with what slump of the shoulders and tuck in the neck big men in this country often affect, (1) to apologize for being above the democratic norm (2).(In high school and at college he played varsity basketball. In high school he was senior class president.) And he looks healthy enough, blue-eyed behind his beard, like a trapper or (3),acquainted with silences. He also grins a lot. Odd, then, to have noticed earlier—at the house, when he took off his shabby coat to play Ping-Pong—that the white arms were very thin. The coat may have been a comment. This,(4), is southern California, where every man is an artist, an advertiser of himself;(5)and every object potted; where even the statues seem to wear socks. The entire population ambies, in polyesters, toward a Taco Bell. To wear a brown shabby cloth coat in southern California is to admit something. So he hash't been getting much exercise. (6) have elected him president of any class. At the house they avoided him. Or, since he was too big to be avoided entirely, they treated his presence as a kind of odor to pass through hurriedly, to be safe on the other side. They behaved like cats. Of course, he ignored them. (7) they were up to more than just protecting themselves from (8) . Children are expert readers of grins. His grin is intermittent. The dimples twitch on and off; between the teeth are bared; above them, the blue eyes disappear in a wince. This grin isn't connected to any humor (9) . It may be a tic. It could also be a function of some metronome made on Mars. It registers (10) . We aren't listening to the same music. 2()

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