衣服的爬领现象在裁剪时的表现()。A、裁剪时上领的弯度不足或下领的弯度太大。 B、缝

题型:单项选择题

问题:

衣服的爬领现象在裁剪时的表现()。

A、裁剪时上领的弯度不足或下领的弯度太大。

B、缝合上下领时,上领的领口松度不够,太紧。

C、在缝合时上下领之间做缝宽窄不一致。

考点:服装制版工服装制版工题库
题型:单项选择题

若要变更运输计划,以下说法中,正确的是:()。

A.月度计划可以变更两次,旬计划、追补计划及月度联运计划可以变更一次

B.货物品名可以变更,但不同品类不能变更

C.收货人可以变更,但发货人不能变更

D.到站可以变更,发站不能变更

题型:单项选择题

高渗性缺水中血钠浓度一般大于

A.160mmol/L

B.140mmol/L

C.145mmol/L

D.150mmol/L

E.155mmol/L

题型:单项选择题

次级市场也称为二级市场或流通市场,它是现有金融资产的交易所,可以理解为“旧货市场”。 ( )

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They say money doesn’t grow on trees. But it certainly appears to do so on the mysterious coin-studded(嵌满) trunks dotted around the UK’s woodland. The strange phenomenon of old trees with coins fixed firmly all over their bark has been spotted on trails from the Peak District to the Scottish Highlands. The coins are usually knocked into felled (砍伐的) tree trunks using stones by passers-by, who hope it will bring them good fortune.

These fascinating spectacles often have coins from centuries ago buried deep in their bark and warped by the passage of time. The tradition of making offerings to gods at wishing trees dates back hundreds of years, but this combination of the man-made and the natural is far more rare. It used to be believed that god’s spirits lived in trees, and they were often decorated with sweets and gifts — as is still done today at Christmas. The act is like tossing money into ponds for good luck, or the trend for couples to attach “love padlocks” to bridges and fences to symbolize lasting romance. Some pubs, such as the Punch Bowl in Askham, Cumbria, have old timbers with splits in them into which coins are forced for luck. There are seven felled tree trunks with coins pushed into them in the picturesque village of Portmeirion, in Wales.

Meurig Jones, an estate manager at the tourist destination, told the BBC, “We had no idea why it was being done when we first noticed the tree trunk was being filled with coins. I did some detective work and discovered that trees were sometimes used as ‘wishing trees’. In Britain it dates back to the 1700s — there is one tree somewhere in Scotland which apparently has an old coin stuck into it. ” He said that a sick person could press a coin into a tree and their illness would go away. If someone then takes the coin out though, it’s said they then become ill. We haven’t made it known at all, it’s just happened,” he added. “It’s quite amazing really.” In Scotland, there is also a legend about a kissing tree. If a young man could drive a nail into a tree with one blow, he earned a kiss from his sweetheart.

小题1:What was the real reason why in UK people knocked coins into the old trees?

A.It was hoped that it would bring them good future and make the trees more beautiful.

B.Nobody knew why there was such a strange custom that it could make them lucky.

C.It might come from the tradition of making offerings to gods hundreds of years ago.

D.It was said that god’s spirits lived in trees and doing so could please the gods of the trees.小题2:The underlined part in Paragraph 2 may mean ____________.

A.this combination of the man-made and the natural is far from realistic.

B.the mysterious phenomenon of old trees with coins is rarely seen in the world.

C.people wanted to make the works of art with the help from the forces of nature.

D.the appearance of trees would be nicer than their original.小题3:The passage mainly tells us that________.

A.some people attached “love padlocks” to bridges and fences to symbolize lasting romance

B.a particular way in which people made good wishes is still popular in the UK

C.visitors tossed money into ponds for good luck just as they knocked coins into the trees

D.a long history of a strange phenomenon of old trees with coins in the UK小题4:Which of the following can be used as the best title for the passage?

A.Who Says Money Doesn’t Grow on Trees?

B.Do Trees with Some Coins Become Valuable?

C.Is It Really Amazing to Have Coins Fixed into Trees?

D.What Is the Purpose of Knocking Coins into Trees?

题型:单项选择题

托管人对结算公司提供的清算数据存有异议的,可以拒绝履行或延迟履行当日交收义务。( )

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