Jane was walking round the department st

题型:完形填空

问题:

Jane was walking round the department store. She remembered how difficult __1___ was

to choose a suitable Christmas present for her father. She wished that he was as easy __2___ (please) as her mother, who was always delighted with perfume.

Besides, shopping at this time of the year was not ___3___ pleasant experience:people stepped on your feet or ___4___ (push) you with their elbows(肘部), hurrying ahead to get to a bargain.

Jane paused in front of a counter ___5___ some attractive ties were on display. “They are real silk,” the assistant tried to attract her. “Worth double the price.” But Jane knew from past experience that her ___6___ (choose) of ties hardly ever pleased her father.

Jane stopped where a small crowd of men had gathered. She found some good quality pipes ___7___ sale. She did not hesitate for long: although her father smokeda pipe only once in a while, she knew that this was a present which was bound to please __8___.

When Jane got home, with her small but well-chosen present in her bag, her parents were already ___9___ table having supper. Her mother was excited. “Your father has at last decided to stop smoking,” Jane ___10___ (inform). 

考点:人物传记类阅读故事类阅读
题型:完形填空

下列文字的某一处语言不连贯,请把它找出来,并在③处补写一句起衔接作用的话。

        ①主观上,处于青少年时期的人尚不能知道自己的一生怎么过,不知道自己应该成为怎样的人。②他们的注意力常被多向发展的可能性所吸引,被自己人生目标的意向所左右。③无论所走过的,还是眼下待走的,都是支岔纷纷,线路盘曲的路径。④就像雨后山中的流水遍地横溢,无法测算其流程。

(1)语言不连贯的是________处。(只需填序号)

(2)补写的话: ___________________________________________________________

题型:完形填空

A元素原子核内没有中子,B元素是空气中含量最多的元素,C元素是海水中含量最多的金属元素,D是地壳中含量最多的元素;则A元素的符号为______,B元素组成的单质的化学式为______,C元素失去一个电子后的粒子符号为______,C、D元素组成化合物的化学式为______.

题型:完形填空

在面向对象方法中,一个对象请求另一对象为其服务的方式是通过发送( )。

A.调用语句

B.命令

C.口令

D.消息

题型:完形填空

男性,49岁,腰腿痛10年。查体:腰5~骶1间压痛,并放射至小腿外侧,左侧直腿抬高试验阳性。加强试验阳性。最可能的诊断是

A.椎间盘突出症

B.棘上韧带炎

C.棘间韧带炎

D.腰椎管狭窄症

E.棘突炎

题型:完形填空

She was French; he was English; they had just moved to London from Paris. When he found out about her affair, she begged for a reconciliation. He was more ruthless: the same afternoon, he filed for divorce in France, one of the stingiest jurisdictions in Europe for the non-earning spouse and where adultery affects the court’s ruling. Had she filed first in England her conduct would have been irrelevant, and she would have had a good chance of a large share of the marital assets, and even maintenance for life.

International divorce is full of such dramas and anomalies, so the natural response of policymakers is to try to make things simpler and more predictable. But the biggest attempt in recent years to do just that, in a European agreement called Rome Ⅲ, has just been shelved. Instead, several EU countries are now pressing ahead with their own harmonisation deal. Many wonder if it will work any better.

At issue is the vexed question of which country’s law applies to the break-up of a mixed marriage. The spouses may live long-term in a third country and be temporarily working in a fourth. The worst way to sort that out is with expensive legal battles in multiple jurisdictions.

The main principle at present is that the first court to be approached hears the case. Introduced in 2001, this practice has worked well in preventing international legal battles, but has made couples much more trigger-happy, because the spouse who hesitates in order to save a troubled marriage may lose a huge amount of money. Rome III aimed to remove the incentive to go to court quickly. Instead, courts in any EU country would automatically apply the local law that had chiefly governed the marriage. This approach is already in force in countries such as the Netherlands. A couple that moved there and sought divorce having spent most of the marriage in France, say, would find a Dutch court dividing assets and handling child custody according to French law.

That works fine among continental European countries where legal systems, based on Roman law, leave little role for precedent or the judge’s discretion. You can look up the rules on a website and apply them. But it is anathema in places such as England, where the system favours a thorough (and often expensive) investigation of the details of each case, and then lets judges decide according to previous cases and English law.

Another snag is that what may suit middle-class expatriates in Brussels (who just happened to be the people drafting Rome Ⅲ) may not suit, for example, a mixed marriage that has mainly been based in a country, perhaps not even an EU member, with" a sharply different divorce law. Swedish politicians don’t like the idea that their courts would be asked to enforce marriage laws based on, say, Islamic sharia.

The threat of vetoes from Sweden and like-minded countries has blocked Rome Ⅲ. But a group of nine countries, led by Spain and France, is going ahead. They are resorting to a provision in EU rules-never before invoked-called " enhanced co-operation" This sets a precedent for a "multi-speed’" Europe in which like-minded countries are allowed to move towards greater integration, rather than seeking a "big-bang" binding treaty that scoops up the willing and unwilling alike. Some countries worry that using enhanced co-operation will create unmanageable layers of complexity, with EU law replaced by multiple adhoc agreements.

The real lesson may be that Rome III was just too ambitious. A more modest but useful goal would be simply to clarify the factors that determine which court hears a divorce, and then let that court apply its own law. David Hodson, a British expert, proposes an international deal that would start by giving greatest weight to any prenuptial agreement, followed by long-term residency, and then take into account other factors such as nationality. That would then make it easier to end marriages amicably, with mediation and out-of-court agreement, rather than a race to start the beastly business of litigation.

What is the ultimate problem with Rome Ⅲ according to the author’()

A.It is not passed in all the member countries in EU

B. Important amendments fail to be applied to make it more applicable

C.Its rules are not applicable in all the member countries

D. It is too ambitious to encompass all the issues that may occur in Europe, thus lacking of feasibility in specific cases

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