Mary _____ to school last week because s

题型:选择题

问题:

Mary _____ to school last week because she _____ill.     [ ]

A. didn't go, was                  

B. didn't went, was

C. doesn't go, is                  

D. not went, was

考点:一般过去时
题型:选择题

#1、2炉磨煤机、引风机、送风机、一次风机、空预器、密封风机、火检风机电机额定电流分别是多少?

题型:选择题

—Do you know__________________?  

—At the end of July?   [ ]

A. how soon is your sister coming back home      

B. how often Nancy hears from her pen friend  

C. when the London Olympic Games will be held  

D. when will the new computer game come out

题型:选择题

[说明]
某小型家电超市开发了下面的程序,用以实现商品提货信息的汇总和输出功能。程序的运行界面如下图所示:


程序界面包含两个控件数组,分别是提货商品复选框控件数组Check1以及提货数量文本框控件数组Text1(相同下标的复选框和文本框相对应),提货清单的显示由List控件实现,按钮“打印清单”和“清除”分别名为Command1和Command2。
[Visual Basic代码]
’提货商品复选框的单击事件响应代码
Private Sub Check1_Click(Index As Integer)
If Check1 (Index). Value = 1 Then (1) . SetFocus
End Sub
’按钮“打印清单”的单击事件响应代码
Private Sub Command1_Click()
Dim i, n, price As Integer, sum As Long, title As String
sum = 0
For i = O To 4
Select Case i
Case 0: title ="电视机": price = 3580
Case 1: title ="微波炉": price = 660
Case 2: title ="电冰箱": price = 1850
Case 3: title ="DVD":price = 2880
Case 4: title ="空调": price = 2500
End Select
If (2) = 1 And Textl(i). Text < > " " Then
(3) title & Text1(i).Text & "台"
n = n + Val(Textl(i))
sum = (4)
End If
Next i
If sum < > 0 Then
(3) "共:" & n &"台," &"合计金额:"& sum &"元。"
End If
End Sub
’按钮“清除”的单击事件响应代码
Private Sub Command2_Click()
(5)
End Sub

题型:选择题

气血两虚的病变多见于哪两脏()

A.心与肺

B.心与肾

C.心与脾

D.脾与肝

E.肺与肝

题型:选择题

LAST month, America’s National Law Journal told its readers that "employment lawyers are warning lovestruck co-workers to take precautions in the office before locking lips outside". The advice came too late for Harry Stonecipher. The boss of Boeing was forced to resign last weekend—for reasons that will strike many outsiders as absurd—after his board were told of an affair that the 68-year-old married man had been conducting with a female employee "who did not report directly to him".

Inevitably, as the week rolled on, details of the affair rolled out. The other party was reported to be Debra Peabody, who is unmarried and has worked for Boeing for 25 years. The couple were said to have first got together at Boeing’s annual retreat at Palm Desert, California in January. After that much of the affair must have been conducted from a distance: Mr. Stonecipher’s office is at Boeing’s headquarters in Chicago; Ms Peabody runs the firm’s government-relations office in Washington, DC. They exchanged e-mails, it seems, as office lovers tend to do these days, and therein probably lay Mr Stonecipher’s downfall.

Lewis Platt, Boeing’s chairman, said that Mr Stonecipher broke a company rule that says: "Employees will not engage in conduct or activity that may raise questions as to the company’s honesty, impartiality, reputation or otherwise cause embarrassment to the company." Having an affair with a fellow employee is not, of itself, against company rules; causing embarrassment to Boeing is. It seems that the board judged that the contents of the lovers’ e-mails would have been bad for Boeing had they been made public. Gone are the days when a board considered such matters none of its business, as Citibank’s did in 1991 when its boss, John Reed, became the talk of Wall Street for having an affair with a stewardess on Citi’s corporate jet.

At Boeing, a whistleblower is said to have forwarded the messages to Mr Platt. In general, e-mails are encrypted and not accessible to anyone who does not know the sender’s password. But many firms install software designed to search electronic communications for key words such as, "sex" and "CEO". A study last year of 840 American firms by the American Management Association found that 60% of them check external e-mails (incoming and outgoing), while 27% scrutinize internal messages between employees. Sweet nothings whispered by the water cooler may travel less far these days than electronic billets doux.

Boeing is particularly sensitive to embarrassment at the moment. Mr. Stonecipher was recalled from retirement only 15 months ago, after the company’s previous boss, Phil Condit, and its chief financial officer, Michael Sears, had left in the wake of a scandal involving an illegal job offer to a Pentagon official.

Mr Stonecipher, a crusty former number two at Boeing, was brought back specifically to raise the company’s ethical standards and to help it be seen in its main (and affectedly puritanical) market, in Washington, DC, as squeaky clean. Verbally explicit extra-marital affairs are inconsistent with such a strategy, it seems, though they are not yet enough to bring down future kings of England.

In corporate life, such affairs are hardly unusual. One survey found that one-quarter of all long-term relationships start at work; another found that over 40% of executives say they have been involved in an affair with a colleague, and that in half of these cases one or other party was married at the time. Many a boss has married his assistant and lived happily ever after. Boeing apparently used to accept this: Mr. Condit’s fourth wife was a colleague before they married.

The word "whistleblower" (line 1, paragraph 4) most probably refers to a person who()

A. likes finding secret affairs

B. discloses secrets to others

C. blows the whistle as a job

D. forward messages for people

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