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Mike’s health has been__________ improved since he gave up smokingA.muchB.soC.tooD.Very

Mike’s health has been__________ improved since he gave up smoking

A.much

B.so

C.too

D.Very

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更多“Mike’s health has been________…”相关的问题
第1题
Tom:Mike: She has a fever and a cold()

A.What's wrong with you

B.How are you

C.What's the matter with Kate

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第2题
Which of the following even has special fund for amusement?

A.St.Mary’s Health Center

B.Kodak’s Rochester

C.Sandy Cohen’s Company

D.Sun Microsystem

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第3题
The news about health tells us that ______.A.no heart disease will be found if people don'

The news about health tells us that ______.

A.no heart disease will be found if people don't drink coffee

B.no one should drink more than two cups of coffee a day

C.the more coffee people drink, the more chance they will get to have heart disease

D.women's heart disease has something to do with their drinking of coffee

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第4题
(b) While the refrigeration units were undergoing modernisation Lamont outsourced all its

(b) While the refrigeration units were undergoing modernisation Lamont outsourced all its cold storage requirements

to Hogg Warehousing Services. At 31 March 2007 it was not possible to physically inspect Lamont’s inventory

held by Hogg due to health and safety requirements preventing unauthorised access to cold storage areas.

Lamont’s management has provided written representation that inventory held at 31 March 2007 was

$10·1 million (2006 – $6·7 million). This amount has been agreed to a costing of Hogg’s monthly return of

quantities held at 31 March 2007. (7 marks)

Required:

For each of the above issues:

(i) comment on the matters that you should consider; and

(ii) state the audit evidence that you should expect to find,

in undertaking your review of the audit working papers and financial statements of Lamont Co for the year ended

31 March 2007.

NOTE: The mark allocation is shown against each of the three issues.

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第5题
()9 __has….可以填的有

A.They

B.It

C.We

D.Mike

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第6题
John as well as Mike()just been back from an important meeting.A. haveB. hasC. had

John as well as Mike()just been back from an important meeting.

A. have

B. has

C. had

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第7题
The Value of Animal Research

To paraphrase 18th-century statesman Edmund Burke, "all

that is needed for the triumph of a misguided cause is that

good people do nothing." One such cause now seeks to end

biomedical research because the theory that animals have rights  【M1】__________

ruling out their usage in research. Leaders of the animal rights  【M2】__________

movement targets biomedical research because it depends on  【M3】__________

public funding, and a few people understand the process of health  【M4】 __________

care research.

Scientists must communicate their message to public in a  【M5】__________

compassionate, understandable way—on human terms, not in the   【M6】__________

language of molecular biology. We need to make it clear the  【M7】__________

connection between animal research and a grandmother's

hip replacement, a father's bypass operation, a baby's

vaccinations, and even a pet's shots. Scientists could "adopt"

middle school classes and present their own research. They

should be quick to respond to letters of the editor, lest animal  【M8】__________

rights misinformation go unchallenged and acquire a deceptive

appearance of truth. Research institutions could be opened to

tours, to show that laboratory animals receive human care. Finally,   【M9】__________

because the ultimate stakeholders are patients, the health

research community should actively recruit to its cause not

only well-known personalities such as Stephen Cooper, who

has made courageous statements about the value of animal

research, and all who receive medical treatment. If good people do   【M10】__________

nothing there is a real possibility that an uninformed citizenry will

extinguish the precious embers of medical progress.

【M1】

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第8题
填空:What is it about Americans and food? We love to eat, but we feel

_1_ about it afterward. We say we want only the best, but we strangely enjoy junk food. We're _2_ with health and weight loss but face an unprecedented epidemic of obesity(肥胖). Perhaps the _3_ to this ambivalence(矛盾情结)lies in our history. The first Europeans came to this continent searching for new spices but went in vain. The first cash crop(经济作物)wasn't eaten but smoked. Then there was Prohibition, intended to prohibit drinking but actually encouraging more _4_ ways of doing it.

The immigrant experience, too, has been one of inharmony. Do as Romans do means eating what “real Americans” eat, but our nation's food has come to be _5_ by imports—pizza, say, or hot dogs. And some of the country's most treasured cooking comes from people who arrived here in shackles.

Perhaps it should come as no surprise then that food has been a medium for the nation's defining struggles, whether at the Boston Tea Party or the sitins at southern lunch counters. It is integral to our concepts of health and even morality whether one refrains from alcohol for religious reasons or evades meat for political.

But strong opinions have not brought _7_ . Americans are ambivalent about what they put in their mouths. We have become _8_ of our foods, especially as we learn more about what they contain.

The _9_ in food is still prosperous in the American consciousness. It's no coincidence, then, that the first Thanksgiving holds the American imagination in such bondage(束缚). It's what we eat—and how we _10_ it with friends, family, and strangers—that help define America as a community today.

A. answer

I. creative

B. result

J. belief

C. share

K. suspicious

D. guilty

L. certainty

E. constant

M. obsessed

F. defined

N. identify

G. vanish

O. ideals

H. adapted

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第9题
When the world was a simpler place, the rich were fat, the poor were thin, and right-think
ing people worried about how to feed the hungry. Now, in much of the world, the rich are thin, the poor are fat, and right-thinking people are worrying about obesity.

Evolution is mostly to blame. It has designed mankind to cope with deprivation, not plenty. People are perfectly tuned to store energy in good years to see them through lean ones. But when bad times never come, they are stuck with that energy, stored around their expanding bellies.

Thanks to rising agricultural productivity, lean years are rarer all over the globe. Modernday Malthusians, who used to draw graphs proving that the world was shortly going to run out of food, have gone rather quiet lately. According to the UN, the number of people short of food fell from 920m in 1980 to 799m 20 years later, even though the world's population increased by 1.6 billion over the period. This is mostly a cause for celebration. Mankind has won what was, for most of his time on this planet, his biggest battle: to ensure that he and his offspring had enough to eat. But every silver lining has a cloud, and the consequence of prosperity is a new plague that brings with it a

host of interesting policy dilemmas.

As a scourge of the modern world, obesity has an image problem. It is easier to associate with Father Christmas than with the four horses of the apocalypse. But it has a good claim to lumber along beside them, for it is the world's biggest public-health issue today—the main cause of heart disease, which kills more people these days than AIDS, malaria, war; the principal risk factor in diabetes; heavily implicated in cancer and other diseases. Since the World Health Organisation labelled obesity an "epidemic" in 2000, reports on its fearful consequences have come thick and fast.

Will public-health warnings, combined with media pressure, persuade people to get thinner, just as they finally put them off tobacco? Possibly. In the rich world, sales of healthier foods are booming (see survey) and new figures suggest that over the past year Americans got very slightly thinner for the first time in recorded history. But even if Americans are losing a few ounces, it will be many years before the country solves the health problems caused by half a century's dining to excess. And, everywhere else in the world, people are still piling on the pounds. That's why there is now a consensus among doctors that governments should do something to stop them.

The author write this passage mainly to ______.

A.bring up some warnings.

B.tell the reader some new facts.

C.discuss a solution to a problem.

D.persuade the reader to keep fit.

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第10题
When Mike Kelly first set out to build his own private space-ferry service, he figures his
bread-and-butter business would be lofting satellite into high earth orbit. Now he thinks he may have figured wrong. "People were always asking me when they could go," says Kelly, who runs Kelly Space Technology, "I realized the real market is in space tourism."

According to preliminary market surveys, there are 10,000 would-be space tourists willing to spend $1 million each to visit the final frontier. Space Adventures in Arlington have taken more than 130 deposits for a two-hour, $98,000 space tour tentatively set to occur by 2005. This may sound great, but there are a few hurdles: Putting a simple satellite into orbit--with no oxygen, lift: support or return trip necessary—already costs an astronomical $2,200/kg. And that doesn't include the cost of insuring rich and possibly litigious (爱打官司的) passengers. The entire group of entrepreneurs trying to comer the space- tourism market has between them "just enough money to blow up one rocket".

The U.S. space agency has plenty of money but zero interest in making space less expensive for the little guys. So the little guys are racing to do what the government has failed to do: design a reusable launch system that's inexpensive, safe and reliable. Kelly Space's prototype looks like a plane that has sprouted rocket engines. Rotary Rocket in California has a booster with rotors to make a helicopter-style. return to earth. The first passenger countdowns arc still years away, but bureaucrats at the Federal Aviation Administration in Washington arc already informally discussing flight regulations. After all, you can't be too prepared for a trip to that galaxy far, far away.

Which of the following is the best title for the passage?

A.Take Vacations in Space

B.Building Hotels in Space

C.Flight Regulations in Space Travels

D.Cost of Space Traveling

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