题目内容

Robots
1. The most sophisticated (先进的 ) Japanese robots, which have vision systems and work at very high speeds, are still based on American designs. Studies of robots, particularly computer control software, are considered to be generally less advanced in Japan than in America or Europe.
2. Although industrial robots were originally developed as devices for simply handling objects, today their commonest uses are for more skilled work like welding (焊接 ) , spray-painting and assembling components.
3. In Britain, robot sales appropriately peaked in 1984, but have been declining ever since. This is partly because British wage rates are too low to make robots financially attractive and partly because engineers now have more experience with robots and are more aware of the difficulties of introducing them effectively.
4. It has been calculated that a robot uses on average about 100 times more energy than a human to do an equivalent job.
5. It is estimated that 20% of all comic book heroes in Japan are robots. This is an enormous number because comics are so popular that they make up a third of all material published in Japan.
6. The reliability of robots is measured in their M.T.B.F. or mean time between failures. This has risen from about 250 hours in the mid-1970s to about 10,000 hours today (equivalent to working 18 hours a day for two years ) .One way robot manufacturers have increased reliability is to test every single component they buy, instead of the normal procedure of just testing a small sample.
7. The biggest single benefit of introducing robots claimed by Japanese companies is that they increase quality control. Once programmed, the robots can work more accurately and consistently than humans, who can get tired and bored.
Paragraph 2__________ 查看材料

A. Ongoing Research
B. Extension of Use
C. Robot Heroes
D. Greater Reliability
E. Falling Demand
F. Hidden Danger

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Language is something that defines (define) us as humans. When language is ___41___ (use) well,it can bring out very deep feelings in others, and encourage others to take ___42___ (act). Sometimes in poetry a certain phrase can bring ___43___ (tear) to the eyes and move us deeply. When we use language to express our true feelings to someone, it can open and ___44___ (deep) the connection between us. Language is a very ___45___ (power) tool. How we use language shapes our world. How we use self-talk ___46___ (direct) shapes our experience of both ourselves and the world. How we deliver ___47___ (communicate) shapes the way the ___48___ (respond) to us. We can use language more ___49___ (effective).And this clearly influences the Health and power of our ___50___ (person) relationships and business relationships.
41_______
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48_______
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Use NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS OR A NUMBER for each answer.
INTERNATIONAL DRIVING LICENSES
FACTS:
have been used (11)
drivers do not have to speak the native tongue of the country they are visiting
drivers must be at least 18 years of age
drivers must hold a driving license in their home country
SPECIFICATIONS OF BOOKLET:
Size of license: 10.8× (12) cm
Number of pages: 17
Colour of inside pages: (13)
Has a photograph of the driver and his/her (14)
Available from authorized travel agencies and the (15)
Cost of 3-year license: (16)

Consider the following statements, made by the same man eight years apart. "Eventually, being &39;poor&39; won&39;t be as much a matter of living in a poor country as it will be a matter of having poor skills." That was Bill Gates talking in 1992. Way back then, the Microsoft chairman&39;s image was that of a rather harsh, libertarian-leaning fellow who proudly declared his products alone would "change the world." When asked what he would do with his billions, the boy wonder of Silicon Valley used to shrug off the question, saying his long workdays didn&39;t leave time for charity. But now listen to the same Gates—or perhaps not quite the same Gates—talking in the fall of 2000: "Whenever the computer industry has a panel about the digital divide and I&39;m on the panel, I always think, &39;OK, you want to send computers to Africa, what about food and electricity— those computers aren&39;t going to be that valuable... The mothers are going to walk right up to that computer and say: &39;My children are dying, what can you do?&39;"
Yes, even Bill Gates, the iconic capitalist of our day, seems to have come around. The self-assured Gates of 1992 was obviously a man of his times, confident of his industry&39;s ability to change the world, certain that the power of markets and new technology, once unleashed, would address most of the world&39;s ills. But the more skeptical Gates of the new millennium is someone who evinces a passion for giving and government aid. He shares a growing realization, even in the multibillionaire set, that something is amiss with the ideology that has prevailed since the end of the cold war: global-capitalism-as-panacea.

A一、Es >1 ,即供给富有弹性
B二、Es< 1,即供给缺乏弹性
C三、Es = 1,即供给是单位弹性
D四、 Es =0,即供给完全缺乏弹性(完全无弹性)
E五、ES =∞,即供给完全富有弹性

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