位置:首页 > 在线问答 > 其它类 > 其它题库1 > 问题详情

文中[]应填入的词语是()。A.清除B.铲除C.除掉D.去除

提问人:最需找题发布时间:2020-04-07

文中[ ]应填入的词语是()。

A.清除

B.铲除

C.除掉

D.去除

继续查找其他问题的答案?

一对一服务

  • 报班培训

    电网、中烟、专升本
    线下培训
  • 网课学习

    各种网络课程
    学习辅导
  • 免费资料

    免费资料
    一对一辅导
  • 老师解答

    题目不会做
    一对一辅导
回复(0)

您可能感兴趣的试题

  • 1Which country is the biggest consumer of petroleum?A.The United States.B.Russia.C.Norway.D

    Which country is the biggest consumer of petroleum?

    A.The United States.

    B.Russia.

    C.Norway.

    D.Venezuela.

  • 2A.reliableB.trustworthyC.dependentD.grand

    A.reliable

    B.trustworthy

    C.dependent

    D.grand

  • 3Why do boys and girls in co-education have no illusion about each other?A.They live togeth

    Why do boys and girls in co-education have no illusion about each other?

    A.They live together and know each other too well.

    B.Years of living together at school dismiss such illusions.

    C.Co-education encourages them to have an healthy attitude toward life.

    D.They are familiar with each other's problems.

  • 4We can infer from the passage that some parents send their children to receive education o

    We can infer from the passage that some parents send their children to receive education other than co-education, because______.

    A.Parents worry about their children's safety

    B.Parents are afraid of their children's being involved in love affairs at an early age

    C.Parents think that these schools are perfect

    D.Parents hope that their children can acquire as much knowledge as possible

  • 5In the angry debate over how much of IQ comes from the genes that children inherit from pa

    In the angry debate over how much of IQ comes from the genes that children inherit from parents and how much comes from experiences, one little fact gets overlooked: no one has identified any genes (other than those that cause retardation) that affect intelligence. So researchers led by Robert Plomin of London's Institute of Psychiatry decided to look for some:

    Plomin's colleagues drew blood from two groups of 51 children each. They are all White living in six counties around Cleveland. In one group, the average IQ is 136. In the other group, the average IQ is 103. Isolating the blood cells, the researchers then examined each child's chromosome 6 (One of the 23 human chromosomes). Of the 37 land marks on chromosome 6 that the researchers looked for, one jumped out: a form. of gene called IGF2R occurred in twice as many children in high IQ group as in the average growth—32 percent versus 16 percent. The study concludes that it is this form. of the IGF2R gene, called allele 5, that contributes to intelligence.

    Plomin cautions that "This is not a genius gene. It is one of many". (About half the differences in intelligence between one person and another are thought to reflect different genes, and half reflect different life experiences.)The gene accounts for no more than four extra IQ points. And it is neither necessary nor sufficient for high IQ: 23 percent of the average-IQ kids did have it, but 54 percent of genius kids did not.

    The smart gene is known by the snappy name "insulin like growth factor 2 receptor" (IGH2R to its fun). It lets hormones like one similar to insulin dock with cells. Although a gene involved with insulin is not the most obvious candidate for an IQ gene, new evidence suggests it might indeed play the role. Sometimes when s hormone docks with the cell, it makes the cell grow; sometimes it makes the cell commit suicide. Both responses could choreograph the development of the brain. Scientists at the National Institutes of Health find that insulin can stimulate nerves to grow. And in rat brains, regions involved in learning and memory are chock full of insulin receptors.

    Even though this supports the idea that IGF2R can affect the brain and hence intelligence, some geneticists see major problems with the IQ-gene study. One is the possibility that Plomin's group fell for what's called the chopsticks fallacy. Geneticists might think they've found a gene for chopsticks dexterity, but all they've really found is a gene more common in Asians than, say, Africans. Similarly, Plomin's IQ gene might simply be one that is more common in groups that emphasize academic achievement. "What if the gene they've found reflects ethnicity?" asks geneticist Andrew Feinberg of Johns Hopkins University. "I would take these findings with a whole box of salt".

    As for how much of IQ comes from the genes and how much come from experiences,______.

    A.scientists have reached an agreement

    B.scientists' opinions vary

    C.no genes have ever been identified

    D.scientists have found many smart genes

  • 6A healthy person has______. chromosomes all together.A.6B.23C.37D.46

    A healthy person has______. chromosomes all together.

    A.6

    B.23

    C.37

    D.46

  • 7It is found that insulin______.A.is IQ geneB.has nothing to do with IQ geneC.stimulates ne

    It is found that insulin______.

    A.is IQ gene

    B.has nothing to do with IQ gene

    C.stimulates nerves to grow

    D.is decisive to the development of intelligence

  • 8Some geneticists don't accept the IGF2R gene-study because______.A.the subjects are not wo

    Some geneticists don't accept the IGF2R gene-study because______.

    A.the subjects are not worldwide

    B.the subjects are from the groups that emphasize academic achievement

    C.the findings have not been replicated by other researchers

    D.both A and B

  • 9The phrase "with a whole box of salt" in the last paragraph means______.A.skepticallyB.wil

    The phrase "with a whole box of salt" in the last paragraph means______.

    A.skeptically

    B.willingly

    C.publicly

    D.undoubtedly

  • 10E-mail—can't live with it, can't live without it. Con artists and real artists, advertiser

    E-mail—can't live with it, can't live without it. Con artists and real artists, advertisers and freedom fighters, lovers and sworn enemies-they've all flocked to email as they would to any new medium of expression. E-mail is convenient, saves time, brings us closer to one another, helps us manage our ever-more-complex lives. Books are written, campaigns conducted; crimes committed-all via e-mail. But it is also inconvenient, wastes our time, isolates us in front of our computers and introduces more complexity into our already too-harried lives. To skeptics, E-mails just the latest chapter in the evolving history of human communication. A snooping husband now discovers his wife's affair by reading her private e-mail—but he could have uncovered the same sin by finding letters a generation ago.

    Yet E-mail—and all online communication—is in fact something truly different; it captures the essence of life at the close of the 20th century with an authority that few other products of digital technology can claim. Does the pace of life seam ever faster? E-mail simultaneously allows us to cope with that acceleration and contributes to it. Are our attention spans shriveling under barrages of new, improved forms of stimulation? The quick and dirty E-mail is made to order for those whose ability to concentrate is measured in nanoseconds. If we accept that the creation of the globe spanning Internet is one of the most important technological innovations of the last half of this century, then we must give E-mail—the living embodiment of human connections across the Net—pride of place. The way we interact with each other is changing; E-mail is both catalyst and the instrument of that change.

    The scope of the phenomenon is mind-boggling. Worldwide, 225 million people can spend and receive E-mail. Forget about the Web or e-commerce or even online pornography: E-mail is the Internet's true killer app—the software application that we simply must have, even if it means buying a $2,000 computer and plunking down $20 a month to America Online. According to Donna Hoffman, a professor of marketing at Vanderbilt University, one survey after another finds that when online users are asked what they do on the Net, "E-mail is always No. 1."

    Oddly enough, no one planned it, and one predicted it. When research scientists first began cooking up the Internet's predecessor, the Arpanet, in 1968, their primary goal was to enable disparate computing centers to share resources. "But it didn't take very long before they discovered that the most important thing was the ability to send mail around, which they had not anticipated at all", says Eric Auman, chief technical officer of Sendmail, Inc.

    What does the first sentence of the passage mean?

    A.E-mail brings convenience as well as inconvenience.

    B.E-mail complicates our lives.

    C.E-mail links us to others more closely, but at the same time, it isolates us as well.

    D.E-mail draws crowds of people who can't live with or without it.

继续查找其他问题的答案?

国家电网校园招聘考试直播课程通关班

  • 讲师:刘萍萍 / 谢楠
  • 课时:160h
  • 价格 4580

特色双名师解密新课程高频考点,送国家电网教材讲义,助力一次通关

配套通关班送国网在线题库一套

课程专业名称
讲师
课时
查看课程

国家电网招聘考试录播视频课程

  • 讲师:崔莹莹 / 刘萍萍
  • 课时:180h
  • 价格 3580

特色解密新课程高频考点,免费学习,助力一次通关

配套全套国网视频课程免费学习

课程专业名称
讲师
课时
查看课程
真题题库
一级建造师考试
二级建造师考试
三支一扶
安全评价师考试
保险经纪资格考试
报关员资格考试
博士入学考试
成人高考
成人英语三级考试
程序员考试
出版专业资格考试
大学英语三级
大学英语四六级考试
单证员考试
导游证考试
电气工程师
电子商务设计师考试
房地产经纪人考试
房地产评估师考试
高级会计师资格考试
高考
高中会考
给排水工程师
公共英语等级考试
公务员考试
国际货运代理
国际内审师
国家司法考试
化工师
环境影响评价师
会计人员继续教育
会计职称考试
基金从业资格
计算机等级考试
计算机软件水平考试
监理工程师考试
教师招聘
教师资格
结构工程师考试
经济师考试
考研
空姐招聘
遴选
美术高考
普通话考试
期货从业资格
求职招聘
人力资源管理师
软件设计师考试
商务英语考试(BEC)
社会工作者职业水平考试
审计师考试
事业单位招聘
事业单位招聘
数据库系统工程师
特许公认会计师(ACCA)
同等学力
统计师考试
托福考试(T0EFL)
外贸跟单员考试
网络工程师考试
网络管理员考试
网络规划设计师考试
系统分析师考试
消防工程师
小升初
校园招聘
信息系统管理工程师考试
选调生考试
雅思考试
岩土工程师考试
医生招聘
艺术高考(艺考)
银行从业人员资格
银行招聘
英语翻译资格考试
营销师考试
造假工程师考试
证券从业资格考试
中考
注册安全工程师考试
注册测绘师考试
注册城市规划师考试
注册环保工程师考试
注册会计师考试
注册计量师考试
注册建筑师考试
注册税务师考试
注册资产评估师
专升本考试
专业英语四级八级考试
自考
安全员
跟单员
考试一本通

事业单位

农信社

国家电网

银行招聘

烟草招聘

邮政公司

解放军文职

公检法文职

其它资料
返回顶部