题目内容

Here you are. Every morning, you reluctantly return to the same 6x6 cube. You grab a coffee, surf a news site, and chitchat with a peer. Then it’s onto that attack of calls and e-malls coming your way. But the workload doesn’t bother you. Staying busy saves you from something worse. And that something worse happens each month when the promotion announcements come out. You read what your peers have accomplished, here and elsewhere. Reflecting on what you did during that same time, you realize how far you’ve fallen behind. Sometimes you whisper, "That should’ve been me." Years ago, you marched into this cube dreaming of being a big shot. You didn’t plan to stay here long; it was a place to learn the ropes and build your reputation. Early on, the higher-ups raved about your natural talent and upside. But those qualities only take you so far. Now, you hold a ceremonial "’Senior" title. Your place is secure and you make a decent living. Still, you feel trapped and restless. You follow the same tired routines. And you wonder if you’ve settled, if this is all there is and all you’ll ever be. You once lived like you had all the time in the world. Then you lost track of it as years passed. Now, you feel its weight and passing more intimately, knowing how much you’ve wasted. We want to believe our careers will unfold logically. We see ourselves as special, possessing a manifest destiny to someday create, change, and lead. So we put our lives on hold and sacrifice for the greater good at work, certain our efforts will eventually be rewarded. We imagine climbing the proverbial ladder, not wandering through a maze. So what happened You’d like to believe it was one moment--a major oversight or missed opportunity-- that led you here. Deep inside, you know the truth. You wrote lists and plans, knowing you’d never put them into motion. You waited for something to happen to you...and got left behind. Despite the grueling hours, you went through the motions, subconsciously knowing your path was welcome scenery and exercise. But led nowhere. In our personal narratives, we naturally make ourselves the heroes. We seek out villains and scapegoats to justify why our lives haven’t panned out. Unfortunately, the truth is far less melodramatic. It is usually a series of evasions, bad habits, fears, compromises, and mentalities that have led us to this point. Sure, you can spend time reflecting on the past, questioning your path, and figuring out what’s missing. But are you really being honest with yourself. According to the last paragraph, our attitude toward our failures is

A. optimistic.
B. desperate.
C. negligent.
D. evasiv

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试述保证计算机网络安全的措施。

阅读以下函数说明和C语言函数,将应填入 (n) 处的字句写在对应栏内。 [说明1] 本程序输入一字符串,并将其中的大写字母变成小写字母。 [C函数1] #include<stdio.h> void main() { int i=0; char s[120]; printf("Enter a string.\n"); scanf("%s",s); while( (1) ){ if( (2) ) s[i]=s[i]-’A’+’a’; i++; } printf("%s\n",S); } [说明2] 本程序用二分法,在已按字母次序从小到大排序的字符数组list[len]中,查找字符c,若c在数组中,函数返回字符c在数组中的下标,否则返回-1。 [C函数2] int search(char list[],char c,int len) ( intlow=0,high=len-1,k; while( (3) ); k=(10w+high)/2; if( (4) ) return k; else if( (5) )high=k-1; else low=k+1; return -1; }

乙型肝炎与丙型肝炎病毒重叠感染,可能为现症感染,也可能为病毒携带者

A. 乙肝五项为HBsAg、HBeAg、 anti-HBc阳性
B. anti-HBs、anti-HBe、anti-HBc阳性,HBV-DNA阴性
C. anti-HBs阳性
D. anti-HAVIgM阴性,anti-HAV IgG阳性
E. HBsAg、anti-HBc阳性,anti- HCV阳性

Our ability to think has long been considered central to what makes us human. Now research suggests that our bodies and their relationship with the environment (1) even our most abstract thoughts. This includes thinking up random numbers or deciding (2) to review positive or negative experiences."Advocates of traditional (3) of cognition would be surprised," says Tobias Loetscher at the University of Melbourne in Parkville, Australia. "They (4) consider human reasoning to involve abstract cognitive processes without any connection to body or space."Until recently, the (5) has been that our bodies (6) only to our most basic interactions with the environment, (7) sensory and motor processes. The new results suggest that our bodies are also (8) to produce abstract thought, and that even seemingly (9) activities have the power to influence our thinking. (10) that our bodies may play a role in thought can be found in the metaphors we use to describe situations, (11) "I was given the cold shoulder" or "she has an excellent grasp of relativity".Thirty years ago, such (12) led the linguist and philosopher George Lakoff at the University of Califor- nia, Berkeley, together with philosopher Mark Johnson at the University of Oregon in Eugene, to (13) "conceptual metaphor theory", the notion that we think of abstract concepts (14) how our bodies function. Now (15) for the theory has started to (16) in. In 2008, (17) , researchers found that people made to feel socially (18) reported feeling physically colder. Now, Loetscher and his colleagues have (19) our ability to think of random numbers--an example of abstract thought--to bodily (20) 17()

A. for example
B. in a sense
C. as a result
D. in addition

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