条码标志主要用于商品的()上。 A.销售包装 B.运输包装 C.销售包装和运输包装

题型:单项选择题

问题:

条码标志主要用于商品的()上。

A.销售包装

B.运输包装

C.销售包装和运输包装

D.任何包装

考点:经济学国际贸易国际贸易题库
题型:单项选择题

阅读《寻找妈妈的寻人启事》,回答问题。

寻找妈妈的寻人启事   

  作文课。老师教完了应用文写作后,当场给学生们布置了一介题目:假设自己的妈妈丢了,请每一个人写一则寻人启事。老师还给每个同学发了一份寻人启事样本,大家可以照葫芦画瓢,但是,里面的内容必须根据自己母亲的真实情况撰写。     

  同学们似乎还没有反应过来,自己的妈妈丢了,写一则寻人启事?面对着寻人启事样本,同学们一时都不知道该如何下笔。     

  见同学们都没什么动静,老师说:“这样吧,我再讲一遍寻人启事的要点,大家一边听,一边写。首先,写下丢失人的姓名。 ”    

  大家埋头在纸上写了自己妈妈的名字。    

  老师说:“性别。”     

  “女”。大家刷刷写下。     

  “丢失人年龄?”老师的话音刚落,班级里就炸开了锅。有人说,我妈好像42岁了吧。有人说,我妈妈从来没告诉过我她多大啊。有人说,我今年14岁,我妈妈该有三十八九岁了吧?几十个同学,竟然没有一个人能够准确地说出自己妈妈的年龄。     

  老师摇摇头,“年龄先空着吧。下面是最重要的部分,请写出丢失人的体貌特征。”   

大家七嘴八舌,似乎对自己的母亲很了解。老师打断了大家的话,“同学们说的,也许是你母亲的特点,但是,现在请大家写的是母亲的体貌特征,比如脸上有颗痣,手背上面有道伤疤,腰杆有点弯曲什么的。”     

  同学们停止了议论,歪着脑袋,努力回想着妈妈的形象。每天都见到的妈妈,到底有些什么体貌特征呢?脸上有没有长痣?好像是有的,但想不起来在哪了。妈妈干活时,经常会受伤,可是,哪儿留下过伤疤?倒真的没注意过啊。妈妈的腰杆这几年确实有点弯曲了,总是直不起来,可能是太累了的缘故吧?可是,好像每个人的母亲都是这样的啊,这也算是体貌特征吗?     

  同学们勉强写下了几个特征,既像是自己母亲的,又好像不太像。     

  老师说,请同学们再写下,今天,妈妈穿的是什么衣服和鞋子。如果妈妈真的丢了,那么,最后离开家时穿的衣服,将是很重要的鉴别辨认依据。     

  班级里再次炸开了锅。穿着干净漂亮衣服的同学们,唧唧喳喳地议论开了:哪个同学早上新穿了一双运动鞋,大家立即注意到了;最喜欢的那个电影明星,喜欢穿什么样式什么牌子的衣服,大家总是一清二楚……可是,早上和自己一起出门,甚至骑着车子将自己送到学校门口的妈妈,穿着什么颜色的衣服,什么样式的,却真的没有留意,从来也没有留意    

   作文课彻底失败了,一个简单的寻人启事,竟然没有一个同学写完整、准确。最后,老师面色凝重地对大家说,不是寻人启事难写,是大家对自己的妈妈,根本就不关注不了解啊。    

  天底下的爸爸和妈妈,都是用心去看自己的孩子的,所以,孩子的每一个细小动作,都逃不过父母的眼睛。记住爸爸妈妈其实一点也不难,只要用心,就足够了。     

  16每个人的成长都不是一件理所当然的事情,可是,我们偏偏对精心呵护我们的父母视而不见:只看见了可口的饭菜,却不见忙碌在厨房的背影;只欣喜于获得的优异成绩,却忘记了深夜伴读的眼眸;只盼望着自己的成长,却忽略了因操劳而佝偻的背影……要到何时,我们才能有一颗心,用它看清父母的面容,记住父母的深情?让我们学会关爱他人,先从关爱自己的父母开始。

1.请用简洁的语言概括文章叙述了一件什么事。   

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2.作者说:“哪个同学早上新穿了一双运动鞋,大家立即注意到了;最喜欢的那个电影明星,喜欢穿什么样式牌子的衣服,大家总是一清二楚”有何作用?

_________________________________________________________________

3.第14段画线句在文章结构上有什么作用? 

_________________________________________________________________

4.第16段画线句表达了作者怎样的思想感情?

_________________________________________________________________

5.请你写一则寻找妈妈的寻人启事,交代清楚妈妈的体貌特征。 

_________________________________________________________________

题型:单项选择题

So you’ve got an invention — you and around 39,000 others each year, according to 2002 statistics!

The 64,000-dollar question, if you have come up with a device which you believe to be the answer to the energy crisis or you’ve invented a lawnmower which cuts grass with a jet of water (not so daft, someone has invented one), is how to ensure you’re the one to reap the rewards of your ingenuity. How will all you garden shed boffins out there keep others from capitalizing on your ideas and lining their pockets at your expense

One of the first steps to protect your interest is to patent your invention. That can keep it out of the grasp of the pirates for at least the next 20 years. And for this reason inventors in their droves beat a constant trail from all over the country to the doors of an anonymous grey-fronted building just behind London’s Holborn to try and patent their devices.

The building houses the Patent Office. It’s an ant heap of corridors, offices and filing rooms—a sorting house and storage depot for one of the world’s biggest and most varied collections of technical data. Some ten million patents — English and foreign — are listed there.

File after file, catalogue after catalogue detail the brain-children of inventors down the centuries, from a 1600’s machine gun designed to fire square bullets at infidels and round ones at Christians, to present-day laser, nuclear and computer technology.

The first letters’ patent were granted as long ago as 1449 to a Flemish craftsman by the name of John Utynam. The letters, written in Latin, are still on file at the office. They were granted by King Henry Ⅵ and entitled Utynam to import into this country his knowledge of making stained glass windows in order to install such windows at Eton College.

Present-day patents procedure is a more sophisticated affair than getting a go-ahead note from the monarch. These days the strict procedures governing whether you get a patent for your revolutionary mouse-trap or solar-powered back-scratcher have been reduced to a pretty exact science.

From start to finish it will take around two and a half years and cost £ 165 for the inventor to gain patent protection for his brainchild. That’s if he’s lucky. By no means all who apply to the Patent Office, which is a branch of the Department of Trade, get a patent.

A key man at the Patent Office is Bernard Partridge, Principal Examiner (Administration), who boils down to one word the vital ingredient any inventor needs before he can hope to overcome the many hurdles in the complex procedure of obtaining a patent — "ingenuity".

The phrase the brain-children of inventors’ (Para. 5) means()

A.the children with high intelligence

B.the inventions that people come up with

C.a device that a child believes to be the answer to the energy crisis

D.a lawnmower that an individual has invented to cut grass

题型:单项选择题

变压器大修是比较彻底的检修,属于()性检修。

A、检查

B、预防

C、改制

D、恢复

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长期镉摄入后引起镉中毒,导致“水俣病”。( )

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EPON系统中采用双纤技术解决数据上下行传输()

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