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【判断题】
消费者的应遵循最大满意原则才能购买到优质的商品。
A.
正确
B.
错误
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【判断题】1周角=2平角=4直角。
A.
正确
B.
错误
【单选题】下列是必然事件是(1)圆周角的度数等于圆心角度数的一半;(2)同圆中,同弦所对的圆周角相等;(3)90°的圆周角所对的弦是直径;(4)平分弦的直径垂直于弦;(5)正n边形是轴对称图形,当n为偶数时又是中心对称图形(  )
A.
(3)、(5)
B.
(1)、(2)、(3)、(4)、(5)
C.
(3)、(4)、(5)
D.
(1)、(2)、(4)
【简答题】从2001年北京申奥成功开始,北京的楼市进入火爆期。随着奥运的临近,楼市愈演愈烈。2008奥运是中国的一件大事,北京从2003年起正式启动奥运工程,将近2800亿元的投资大部分将投向基础设施,这无疑是给奥运地产的巨大推动力,随之带来的交通,环境,配套等也都将大大加强。房地产商对北京的地产进行了如下分析:北京的南城历来是经济发展相对落后的区域,对比北部的奥运版块、东部的CBD和西部的中关村,南部并没...
【简答题】如图,已知Rt△ABC的周长为48 cm,一锐角平分线分对边为3∶5两部分. (1)求直角三角形的三边长; (2)求两直角边在斜边上的射影的长.
【简答题】list = ['Google', 'Runoob', 1997, 2000] print ("第三个元素为 : ", list[2]) list[2] = 2001 print ("更新后的第三个元素为 : ", list[2])
【简答题】有下列结论:(1)平分弦的直径垂直于弦;(2)圆周角的度数等于圆心角的一半;(3)等弧所对的圆周角相等;(4)经过三点一定可以作一个圆;(5)三角形的外心到三边的距离相等;(6)垂直于半径的直线是圆的切线.其中正确的个数为(  ) A.1个 B.2个 C.3个 D.4个
【单选题】有下列结论:(1)平分弦的直径垂直于弦(2)圆周角的度数等于圆心角的一半(3)等弧所对的圆周角相等(4)经过三点一定可以作一个圆(5)三角形的外心到三边的距离相等(6)等腰梯形一定有一个外接圆(7)垂直于半径的直线是圆的切线。其中正确的个数为 [     ]
A.
1个
B.
2个
C.
3个
D.
4个
【简答题】list = ['Google', 'Runoob', 1997, 2000] print ("原始列表 : ", list) del list[2] print ("删除第三个元素 : ", list)
【单选题】Part B (10 points) You are going to read a list of headings and a text about Google. Choose the most suitable heading from the list for each numbered paragraph. The first and last paragraphs of the te...
A.
Sticking to long-term planning.
B.
Strive for more profit
C.
Decentralized management.
D.
Maintaining an employee-centric culture.
E.
Official Do-Gooding.
F.
A public company owned by the public. Wall Street predictors now estimate that when Google stocks are issued some weeks from now, the company will be valued at as much as $30 billion, making Brin and Page (who each own about 15 percent) worth more than $4 billion each. But personal wealth is clearly not the obsession of the cofounders, who share a cluttered office in the campus dubbed the Googleplex. As evidenced by their 'owners manual,' they have been struggling with a deep question: how can they preserve their company approach, culture and vision if it is to be publicly traded and beholden to shareholders 7 And they have come up with some answers. (41)______. Google is obsessed with democracy. The basis of all its wealth springs from the Google search algorithms, which search through and index the Web in such a way as to capture the collective intelligence of its users. It's kind of a democratic process, and apparently this idea carries over to who should own shares. Google is repelling to be associated with the go-go (and, ultimately, gone-gone) superheroes of the dot-com era, and to discourage speculation Page and Brin outline 'a fair process for our IPO that is inclusive of both small and large investors.' They propose an auction that will by pass the daytraders and fat cats and, hopefully, reach their ideal investor—,-a wise soul willing to hang in for the long haul. When it comes to control, though, Google's leaders believe that it should rest with them. The company will have two classes of stock, one of which has greater voting rights owned by them. (42)______. Sounding dangerously like a fortune cookie, the cofounders write, 'A management team distracted by a series of short-term targets is as pointless as a dieter stepping on a scale every half hour.' Google won't fall for that, they insist. There will be no attempt to massage quarterly results to please Wall Street. And if you ask them how things will go in the next couple of months, 'we will respectfully decline' to offer guidance. (43)______. Brin and Page knew that doubters predicted that going public would be the end of Google's employee amenities like free lunches cooked by Jerry Garcia's former chef and massages on call. But 'when you look at the financials, that costs nothing,' said Brin recently. 'It's less than a rounding error.' He and Page are telling shareholders to 'expect us to add benefits rather than reduce them over time.' (44)______. Brin, Page and CEO Eric Schmidt run the company as a messy triumvirate. However, they do include spats between them as a possible risk factor. And the chain of command will be further complicated by their requirement that the board chairman should not be an insider. (45)______. In case there was any doubt about Google's priorities, Page and Brin put it in black and white: 'We aspire to make Google an institution that makes the world a better place.' The company motto is 'Don't be evil,' and shareholders should be aware that this could impact stock price. Google is putting 1 percent of its wealth in a foundation that someday 'may eclipse Goggle itself in terms of overall world impact.' All fascinating but not really an answer to that big question: should you get in on this.'? That will depend on how Google can maintain its amazing momentum in t
【判断题】Google is now a billion-dollar company and has been named to the Top 500 list of the world.
A.
正确
B.
错误
相关题目:
【单选题】Part B (10 points) You are going to read a list of headings and a text about Google. Choose the most suitable heading from the list for each numbered paragraph. The first and last paragraphs of the te...
A.
Sticking to long-term planning.
B.
Strive for more profit
C.
Decentralized management.
D.
Maintaining an employee-centric culture.
E.
Official Do-Gooding.
F.
A public company owned by the public. Wall Street predictors now estimate that when Google stocks are issued some weeks from now, the company will be valued at as much as $30 billion, making Brin and Page (who each own about 15 percent) worth more than $4 billion each. But personal wealth is clearly not the obsession of the cofounders, who share a cluttered office in the campus dubbed the Googleplex. As evidenced by their 'owners manual,' they have been struggling with a deep question: how can they preserve their company approach, culture and vision if it is to be publicly traded and beholden to shareholders 7 And they have come up with some answers. (41)______. Google is obsessed with democracy. The basis of all its wealth springs from the Google search algorithms, which search through and index the Web in such a way as to capture the collective intelligence of its users. It's kind of a democratic process, and apparently this idea carries over to who should own shares. Google is repelling to be associated with the go-go (and, ultimately, gone-gone) superheroes of the dot-com era, and to discourage speculation Page and Brin outline 'a fair process for our IPO that is inclusive of both small and large investors.' They propose an auction that will by pass the daytraders and fat cats and, hopefully, reach their ideal investor—,-a wise soul willing to hang in for the long haul. When it comes to control, though, Google's leaders believe that it should rest with them. The company will have two classes of stock, one of which has greater voting rights owned by them. (42)______. Sounding dangerously like a fortune cookie, the cofounders write, 'A management team distracted by a series of short-term targets is as pointless as a dieter stepping on a scale every half hour.' Google won't fall for that, they insist. There will be no attempt to massage quarterly results to please Wall Street. And if you ask them how things will go in the next couple of months, 'we will respectfully decline' to offer guidance. (43)______. Brin and Page knew that doubters predicted that going public would be the end of Google's employee amenities like free lunches cooked by Jerry Garcia's former chef and massages on call. But 'when you look at the financials, that costs nothing,' said Brin recently. 'It's less than a rounding error.' He and Page are telling shareholders to 'expect us to add benefits rather than reduce them over time.' (44)______. Brin, Page and CEO Eric Schmidt run the company as a messy triumvirate. However, they do include spats between them as a possible risk factor. And the chain of command will be further complicated by their requirement that the board chairman should not be an insider. (45)______. In case there was any doubt about Google's priorities, Page and Brin put it in black and white: 'We aspire to make Google an institution that makes the world a better place.' The company motto is 'Don't be evil,' and shareholders should be aware that this could impact stock price. Google is putting 1 percent of its wealth in a foundation that someday 'may eclipse Goggle itself in terms of overall world impact.' All fascinating but not really an answer to that big question: should you get in on this.'? That will depend on how Google can maintain its amazing momentum in t
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