题目内容

(二) 位于市区的某商场系增值税一般纳税人,2011年11月发生如下业务: (1)购进电子电器产品,取得增值税专用发票,注明价款1258万元;自农村收购玉米小麦等粮食类货物,收购凭证注明价款为128万元;购进水饺等速冻食品,取得专用发票注明价款187万元: (2)“以旧换新”方式销售金项链980条,新项链对外含税销售价格25000元,旧项链作价13000元,每条项链从消费者手中收取新旧差价款12000元;并以同一方式销售某品牌镀金手表200块,此表对外销售价每块不含税11350元,旧表作价1350元; (3)同期赠送业务关系户24K纯金戒指15枚,同类不含税售价为3347.37元/枚;销售包金项链110条,向消费者开出的普通发票金额为50000元;销售镀金项链15条,向消费者开出的普通发票金额为80000元; (4)本月销售电子产品,取得零售收入1857万元;小麦、玉米等粮食类货物销售收入价税合计为258万元; (5)本期销售音像制品,取得含税收入128万元; (6)向厂家收取进场费,取得收入20万元。 (高档手表消费税税率为20%,本期购进金银首饰等取得增值税专用发票上注明的进项税额为14万元) 根据上述资料回答下列问题: 销售金项链应缴纳的消费税为( )元。

A. 587000
B. 502564.10
C. 522400
D. 522500

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在本节中,你将听到15个对话,每个对话有一个问题,请从[A),[B],[C]三个选项中选出答案,并标在试卷的相应位置。每段对话后有15秒钟的停顿,以便回答问题和阅读下一问题及其选项。每段对话读两遍。 The woman’s daughter goes to the Chinese restaurant ______.

A. on Friday
B. every day
C. once a week

Which season does the woman like best

A. She likes spring best.
B. She likes autumn better.
C. She doesn’t like spring at all.

学生的认知差异主要是指______差异和______差异.

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. What is tattoo

A skill of making sculpture.
B. An art of body painting.
C. A branch of science for conserving ancient buildings.
D. A way of recording history.

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