下列经济评价指标中,属于房地产投资项目动态盈利性指标的是()。A.成本利润率 B.

题型:单项选择题

问题:

下列经济评价指标中,属于房地产投资项目动态盈利性指标的是()。

A.成本利润率

B.销售利润率

C.利息各付率

D.内部收益率

考点:中级房地产经济经济师中级房地产经济专业知识与实务真题2010年
题型:单项选择题

王夫之认为教育的目标应该是()

A、只讲天理

B、只讲人欲

C、只讲天理,不讲人欲

D、既讲天理,有讲人欲

题型:单项选择题

阅读以下关于某城市平安城市工程的叙述,回答问题1、问题2和问题3。

  某城市为满足治安管理、城市管理、交通管理、应急指挥等需求,决定在城 市的所有进出路口、客货运场所、主要道路路口、重要公共场所、商业密集区域、治安案件高发区等地进行视频监控,并通过网络建立完善的社会治安视频监控系 统,即实施"平安城市工程",实现视频监控信息资源的整合与共享。

  平安城市工程的网络接入如图1-1所示。

  

  所有监控点的摄像机通过运营商提供的线路接入平安城市网络,公安局的监控体系有三级构成,分别为市局、分局和派出所监控中心。

  运营商传输网络负责所有视频监控信号的传输、存储和转发,传输网络由传输设备、网络设备、存储设备等构成。

【问题2】

  Catalyst 6509作为整个网络的核心交换设备。

  核心交换机3号插槽上安装8端口GBIC千兆以太网模块 WS-X6408A(8 port GIGABIT ETHERNET),端口1至3分别与行政区甲、行政区乙和行政区丙的汇聚交换机互连,其他端口与各级指挥中心的汇聚交换机互连,核心交换机至行政区甲、 乙、丙的距离分别为8、22和42km。表1-1列出了光电收发器及配件的参数指标,请从表1-1中选择与端口1、端口2、端口3连接的收发器及配件,并 分别指出应采用的光纤链路。

题型:单项选择题

进入21世纪后,质疑达尔文进化论的声音此起彼伏。
达尔文进化论的核心是自然选择,以及与自然选择相关的生存竞争和渐变,所以达尔文一再宣称“自然界没有飞跃”。达尔文认为生物个体在长时间的演化中,经过自然选择,其微小的变异积累为显著的变异,于是形成新的物种或新的亚种。在大量古生物化石发现的基础上,1972年,美国古生物学家古尔德和埃尔德雷奇提出了一个全新的生物进化理论“间断平衡论”认为生物的进化是渐变与跃进交替的进化模式,是基因突变或地理隔绝造成新种出现的过程。该理论比较合理地解释了地球生物演化史上许多物种突然爆发式出现的现象,指出了生物界不但有渐进式进化,也有飞跃。
“物竞天择,适者生存”的理论是达尔文进化论自然选择学说的前提和基础。①达尔文认为动植物界在十分剧烈的竞争下,适者生存,不适者淘汰;物种有利的变异将被保存下来,不利的变异则被淘汰,逐渐积累的有利变异结果就形成了新的物种。②但是20世纪60年代以来的科学研究表明,在自然界中,任何物种或生物个体,都处在一定的生态系统中。生态系统内的生物个体、物种、群落的内部以及它们之间,它们与环境的关系,[ ]有竞争,[ ]有协同发展,人们熟悉的一个例子是,昆虫在采集花粉的同时,也为植物完成了授粉的任务。在这一过程中,昆虫得到食物,花得以授粉.动物与植物彼此受益,相得益彰。
地球上的生物物种经历了萌发、发展、壮大的过程之中,其最后归宿则是消亡,达尔文只承认渐灭,不承认突然绝灭。③达尔文之后的古生物发现与研究明确地表明,自然界不单存在着达尔文所主张的渐灭,还存在着达尔文所坚决否认的突然绝灭。④在较短的地质历史时期内,曾出现过生物大量整体的突然灭绝,从距今5.4亿年的寒武纪以来,这种明显的生物突然大灭绝就发生过4次。
需要指出的是,达尔文的进化论的确存在着时代局限性,但我们不能用现在的眼光去苛求他,被恩格斯誉为19世纪自然科学三大发现之一的达尔文进化论,其历史功绩是必须充分肯定的。

以下文字是从原文中截取的,应还原至文中①②③④哪一处( )。
他在《物种起源》中说:“确信通常的时代没有一次中断过,没有任何激变曾经使整个地球变为荒芜。”

A.①

B.②

C.③

D.④

题型:单项选择题

患者低烧半载,时觉身热心烦,热势随情绪好坏而起伏,平时急躁易怒,胸肋胀闷,两乳作胀,月经不调,口苦,脉弦略数,治宜选用

A.龙胆泻肝汤

B.柴芩温胆汤

C.丹栀消遥丸

D.滋水清肝饮

E.血府逐瘀汤

题型:单项选择题

Part 3


Questions 19-25


·Read the following newspaper article and answer questions 19-25.
·For questions 19-25, choose the correct answerA, B, C or D.
·Mark your answers on the Answer Sheet.

A Talent Shortage Hits Green Start-ups


On May 1 applications closed for the first intake of a novel kind of executive-education programme. Set up by a bunch of venture-capital firms and other companies in New England, the three-month course will teach its "fellows" about renewable energy. To qualify for a fellowship, applicants must be successful entrepreneurs from other industries, such as IT or health care, and be zealous about profiting from greenery.
"A lack of talent, especially entrepreneurial talent, was one of the biggest bottlenecks to growth we identified in the clean-tech industry," says Peter Rothstein of Flagship Ventures, a venture-capital firm that is one of the programme’s founders. That bottleneck worries investors, who have been pouring cash into everything from solar energy to hybrid electric cars: last year global investment in renewable-energy businesses alone rose by 60%, to $148.4 billion, according to New Energy Finance (NEF), a research firm.
Although the prospect of minting money while helping to save the planet has attracted a stream of executives from other industries to clean-tech start-ups, few of them have much experience of their new field. In a recent global survey of 75 senior executives involved in clean-tech firms conducted by NEF and Heidrick & Struggles, a headhunter, over 90% cited top-level recruitment as a serious concern.
Counting on converts from other industries is risky, because some of the skills needed to run clean-tech companies are very different from those required to, say, launch a website. For one thing, the bosses of renewable-energy start-ups need to understand enough about the science to be able to pluck scientists from obscurity. For another, they need a grasp of project-financing techniques for costly prototype power plants. They also need to be able to deal with capricious regulatory and fiscal regimes. "If you’ve never done anything in the energy space, it can be intimidating,"says Bill Davis, the boss of Ze-gen, a start-up that generates electricity from waste.
Hence the New England bootcamp’s goal of helping 25 aspiring green entrepreneurs a year to make the transition. As well as giving them an overview of the latest scientific research, the course also includes sessions on project finance and government regulations.
Start-ups also face a battle for engineers and scientists. And as small firms take advantage of a growing enthusiasm for greenery in East Asia and the Middle East, they also need more staff with international experience. Tracking down such rare pearls can be a distraction for busy bosses.
Ann Cormack, the head of DI-BP Fuel Crops, a firm based in London that develops crops for biodiesel, reckons talent-spotting takes up about a fifth of her time. She has spent several months hunting for an agronomist, for instance, to no avail.
Like the bosses of many other clean-tech firms, Ms Cormack is using headhunters. They like the clean-tech business because wages, on which their commissions tend to be based, are rising fast. Not so long ago, executives would do meaningful green jobs for menial pay. But in recent years, wages have soared as the industry has grown and attracted big utilities and private-equity firms. Now what matters to the geeks is a different kind of green. "Good people can set their own price tag," says one recruiter, "and they want jam tomorrow, not in five years." It looks like they’ll get it.

What does the expression "a different kind of green" (Line 5, Last Para.) refer to

A. Salaries.
B. Commissions.
C. New employees.
D. Renewable energy.

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