题目内容

用叩诊检查时可发现的体征( )。

A. 腹部反跳痛
B. 呼吸时有恶臭
C. 肾区疼痛
D. 肺部啰音
E. 潮式呼吸

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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。 下面,请听这些对话。 Is this question easy

A. Very easy.
B. Neither easy nor difficult.
C. Very difficult.

男,19岁,右膝下内方有一肿块,5年来逐渐增大,出现疼痛,步态正常。X线示右胫骨上方相当于后端有一肿瘤,基底部有蒂状突起,其皮质和骨松质与正常骨相连,边界清楚。 首选采取下列哪项治疗( )。

A. 不用治疗
B. 从基底部切除
C. 整个瘤段切除
D. 行截肢术
E. 放疗加化疗

黄某,男,19岁,农民。1999年10月经体检、政审合格后,县征兵办公室确定该。青年到某军区炮兵师服现役。但是,黄某突然隐匿,逃避征兵。事情发生后,县征兵办公室找到他的父母,进行说服教育。他父母始终不说出儿子的去向。后经查找,发现黄某藏在其姑母家。县征兵办公室把黄某找回,进行了批评教育。黄某拒不答话。后来了解到他逃避征集的原因主要是其未婚妻扯他的后腿,就又做他未婚妻的工作,仍未做通。根据宪法法律的有关规定,某乡人民政府依法强制黄某履行了兵役义务。 某乡人民政府强制黄某履行兵役的宪法根据是什么?

TEXT A Theodoric Voler had been brought up, from infancy to the confines of middle age, by a fond mother whose chief solicitude had been to keep him screened from what she called the coarser realities of life. When she died she left Theodoric alone in a world that was as real as ever, and a good deal coarser than he considered it had any need to be. To a man of his temperament and upbringing even a simple railway journey was crammed with petty annoyances and minor discords, and as he settled himself down in a secondclass compartment one September morning he was conscious of ruffled feelings and general mental discomposure. He had been staying at a country vicarage, the inmates of which had been certainly neither brutal nor bacchanalian, but their supervision of the domestic establishment had been of that lax order which invites disaster. The pony carriage that was to take him to the station had never been properly ordered, and when the moment for his departure drew near, the handyman who should have produced the required article was nowhere to be found. In this emergency Theodoric, to his mute but very intense disgust, found himself obliged to collaborate with the vicar’s daughter in the task of harnessing the pony, which necessitated groping about in an ill-lighted outbuilding called a stable, and smelling very like one--except in patches where it smelled of mice. As the train glided out of the station Theodoric’s nervous imagination accused himself of exhaling a weak odour of stable yard, and possibly of displaying a mouldy straw or two on his unusually well-brushed garments. Fortunately the only other occupation of the compartment, a lady of about the same age as himself, seemed inclined for slumber rather than scrutiny; the train was not due to stop till the terminus was reached, in about an hour’s time, and the carriage was of the old-fashioned sort that held no communication with a corridor, therefore no further travelling companions were likely to intrude on Theodoric’s semiprivacy. And yet the train had scarcely attained its normal speed before he became reluctantly but vividly aware that he was not alone with the slumbering lady; he was not even alone in his own clothes. A warm, creeping movement over his flesh betrayed the unwelcome and highly resented presence, unseen but poignant, of a strayed mouse, that had evidently dashed into its present retreat during the episode of the pony harnessing. Furtive stamps and shakes and wildly directed pinches failed to dislodge the intruder, whose motto, indeed, seemed to be Excelsior; and the lawful occupant of the clothes lay back against the cushions and endeavoured rapidly to evolve some means for putting an end to the dual ownership. Theodoric was goaded into the most audacious undertaking of his life. Crimsoning to the hue of a beetroot and keeping an agonised watch on his slumbering fellow traveller, he swiftly and noiselessly secured the ends of his railway rug to the racks on either side of the carriage, so that a substantial curtain hung athwart the compartment. In the narrow dressing room that he had thus improvised he proceeded with violent haste to extricate himself partially and the mouse entirely from the surrounding casings of tweed and half-wool. As the unravelled mouse gave a wild leap to the floor, the rug, slipping its fastening at either end, also came down with a heart-curdling flop, and almost simultaneously the awakened sleeper opened her eyes. With a movement almost quicker than the mouse’s, Theodoric pounced on the rug and hauled its ample folds chin-high over his dismantled person as he collapsed into the farther corner of the carriage. The blood raced and beat in the veins of his neck and forehead, while he waited dumbly for the communication cord to be pulled. The lady, however, contented herself with a silent stare at her strangely muffled companion. How much had she seen, Theodoric queried to himself; and in any case what on earth must she think of his present posture Which of the following does NOT describe Theodoric’s feeling when he was on the train

A. Uneasy.
B. Fretful.
C. Irritated.
D. Slack.

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