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【单选题】
We are scattered now, the friends of the late Mr. Oliver Offord but whenever we chance to meet I think we are conscious of a certain esoteric respect for each other. 'Yes, you too have been in Arcadia', we seem not too grumpily to allow. When I pass the house in Mansfield Street I remember that Arcadia was there. I don't know who has it now, and don't want to know it's enough to be so sure that if I should ring the bell there would be no such luck for me as that Brooksmith should open the door. Mr. Offord, the most agreeable, the most attaching of bachelors, was a retired diplomatist, living on his pension and on something of his own over and above a good deal confined, by his infirmities, to his fireside and delighted to be found there any afternoon in the year, from five o'lock on, by such visitors as Brooksmith allowed to come up. Brooksmith was his butler and his most intimate friend, to whom we all stood, or I should say sat, in the same relation in which the subject of the sovereign finds himself to the prime minister. By having been for years, in foreign lands, the most delightful Englishman any one had ever known, Mr. Offord had in my opinion rendered signal service to his country. But I suppose he had been too much liked liked even by those who didn't like IT-so that as people of that sort never get titles or dotations for the horrid things they've NOT done, his principal reward was simply that we went to see him. Oh, we went perpetually, and it was not our fault if he was not overwhelmed with this particular honour. Any visitor who came once came again to come merely once was a slight nobody I'm sure, had ever put upon him. His circle therefore was essentially composed of habitues, who were habitues for each other as well as for him, as those of a happy salon should be. I remember vividly every element of the place, down to the intensely Londonish look of the grey opposite houses, in the gap of the white curtains of the high windows, and the exact spot where, on a particular afternoon, I put down my tea-cup for Brooksmith, lingering an instant, to gather it up as if he were plucking a flower. Mr. Offord's drawing-room was indeed Brooksmith's garden, his pruned and tended human parterre, and if we all flourished there and grew well in our places it was largely owing to his supervision. Many persons have heard much, though most have doubtless seen little, of the famous institution of the salon, and many are born to the depression of knowing that this finest flower of social life refuses to bloom where the English tongue is spoken. The explanation is usually that our women have not the skill to cultivate it the art to direct through a smiling land, between suggestive shores, a sinuous stream of talk. My affectionate, my pious memory of Mr. Offord contradicts this induction only, ! fear, more insidiously to confirm it. The sallow and slightly smoked drawing-room in which he spent so large a portion of the last years of his life certainly deserved the distinguished name but on the other hand it couldn't be said at all to owe its stamp to any intervention throwing into relief the fact that there Was no Mrs. Offord. The dear man had indeed, at the most, been capable of one of those sacrifices to which women are deemed peculiarly apt: he had recognised-under the influence, in some degree, it is true, of physical infirmity that if you wish people to find you at home you must manage not to be out. He had in short accepted the truth which many dabblers in the social art are slow to learn, that you must really, as they say, take a line, and that the only way as yet discovered of being at home is to stay at home. Finally his own fireside had become a summary of his habits. Why should he ever have left it? Since this would have been leaving what was notoriously pleasantest in London, the compact charmed cluster (thinning away indeed into casual couples) round the fine old last-century chimney-piece which,
A.
gloomy
B.
delightful
C.
horrid
D.
foreign
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【简答题】主干显著,侧枝不发达的分枝方式称为( )。顶芽生长缓慢或者死亡,它下方的一个叶芽长成的新枝,继续生长成为主干,这种分枝方式叫做( )。
【简答题】主干显著,侧枝不发达的分枝方式称为( )。顶芽生长缓慢或者死亡,它下方的一个叶芽长成的新枝,继续生长成为主干,这种分枝方式叫做( )。
【单选题】下列哪种因素对再生修复不利
A.
充足的维生素C供给
B.
高蛋白质食品
C.
局部血液循环正常
D.
局部有异物存在
E.
患者是年轻人
【多选题】订本式账簿的主要优点是()
A.
可以防止账页散失
B.
可以防止任意抽换账页
C.
可以防止出现记账错误
D.
可以灵活安排分工记账
【单选题】下列哪种因素对再生修复不利
A.
局部感染已被控制
B.
患者无血管硬化性疾病
C.
局部有较明显的瘢痕组织
D.
创口缝合良好
E.
充足维生素C的供给
【单选题】下列哪种因素对再生修复不利
A.
充足的维生素 C 供给
B.
营养中不缺乏蛋白质
C.
局部血液循环正常
D.
局部有异物存在
E.
患者是年轻人
【单选题】重合度1.35,表示实际啮合线上有 的长度属于双齿啮合区
A.
0.35pb
B.
0.65pb
C.
0.7pb
D.
1.3pb
【单选题】重合度 ε=1.3 ,表示实际啮合线上有()长度属于双齿啮合区。
A.
30%
B.
50%
C.
70%
D.
100%
【单选题】重合度 ,表示实际啮合线上有_____长度属于双齿啮合区。
A.
0.6Pb
B.
Pb
C.
0.8Pb
D.
0.4Pb
【简答题】依芽的生理状态可分为______和______;若依芽鳞片的有无则可分为______和______;按芽的性质分时,可分为______、______和______;主干显著,侧枝不发达的分枝方式称为______;而顶芽生长缓慢或死亡,继而由其下方的一个腋芽长成的新枝继续生长成为主干,这种分枝方式称为______;禾本科植物的分枝方式特称为______。在农业生产上,把凡能达到正常抽穗、结实的分蘖称...
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