- 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
- 其它资料
2018 年招商银行秋季校园招聘笔试真题及答案解析
第一部分英语(1-15)
一、阅读理解
Text 1
It would be all too easy to say that Facebook’s market meltdown is coming to
an end. After all, Mark Zuckerberg’s social network burned as much as $ 50
billion of shareholders’ wealth in just a couple months. To put that in context,
since its debut(初次登台)on NASDAQ in May, Facebook has lost value nearly
equal to Yahoo, AOL, Zynga, Yelp, Pandora, Open Table, Groupon, LinkedIn,
and Angie’s List combined, plus that of the bulk of the publicly traded
newspaper industry.
As shocking as this utter failure may be to the nearly 1 billion faithful
Facebook users around the world, it’s no surprise to anyone who read the
initial public offering (IPO) prospectus(首次公开募股说明书). Worse still, all the
crises that emerged when the company debuted — overpriced shares, poor
corporate governance, huge challenges to the core business, and a damaged
brand — remain today. Facebook looks like a prime example of what Wall
Street calls a falling knife — that is, one that can cost investors their fingers if
they try to catch it.
Start with the valuation(估值). To justify a stock price close to the lower end of
the projected range in the IPO, say $ 28 a share, Facebook’s future growth
would have needed to match that of Google seven years earlier. That would
have required increasing revenue by some 80 percent annually and
maintaining high profit margins all the while.
That’s not happening. In the first half of 2012, Facebook reported revenue of
$ 2.24 billion, up 38 percent from the same period in 2011. At the same time,
the company’s costs surged to $ 2.6 billion in the six-month period.
This so-so performance reflects the Achilles’ heel of Facebook’s business
model, which the company clearly stated in a list of risk factors associated
with its IPO: it hasn’t yet figured out how to advertise effectively on mobile
devices, the number of Facebook users accessing the site on their phones
surged by 67 percent to 543 million in the last quarter, or more than half its
customer base.
Numbers are only part of the problem. The mounting pile of failure creates a
negative feedback loop that threatens Facebook’s future in other ways.
Indeed, the more Facebook’s disappointment in the market is catalogued, the
worse Facebook’s image becomes. Not only does that threaten to rub off on
users, it’s bad for recruitment and retention of talented hackers, who are the
life blood of Zuckerberg’s creation.
Yet the brilliant CEO can ignore the sadness and complaints of his
shareholders thanks to the super-voting stock he holds. This arrangement also
was fully disclosed at the time of the offering. It’s a pity so few investors
apparently bothered to do their homework.
1. What can be inferred about Facebook from the first paragraph?
A. Its market meltdown has been easily halted.
B. It has increased trade with the newspaper industry.
C. It has encountered utter failure since its stock debut.
D. Its shareholders have invested $ 50 billion in a social network.
2. The crises Facebook is facing _______________.
A. have been disclosed in the IPO prospectus
B. are the universal risks Wall Street confronts
C. disappoint its faithful users
D. have existed for a long time
3. To make its stock price reasonable, Facebook has to _______________.
A. narrow the IPO price range
B. cooperate with Google
C. keep enormously profitable
D. invest additional $ 2.6 billion
4. It can be inferred from the context that the “Achilles’ heel” (Line 1, Para. 5)
refers to ______________.
A. deadly weakness
B. problem unsolved
C. indisputable fact
D. potential risk
5. What effect will Facebook’s failure in the market have?
A. Its users’ benefits will be threatened.
B. Talented hackers will take down the website.
C. The CEO will hold the super-voting stock.
D. The company’s innovation strength will be damaged.
Text 2
I’ll admit I’ve never quite understood the obsession(难以破除的成
见)surrounding genetically modified (GM) crops. To environmentalist
opponents, GM foods are simply evil, an understudied, possibly harmful tool
used by big agricultural businesses to control global seed markets and crush
local farmers. They argue that GM foods have never delivered on their
supposed promise, that money spent on GM crops would be better channeled
to organic farming and that consumers should be protected with warning
labels on any products that contain genetically modified ingredients. To
supporters, GM crops are a key part of the effort to sustainably provide food
to meet a growing global population. But more than that, supporters see the
GM opposition of many environmentalists as fundamentally anti-science, no
different than those who question the basics of man-made climate change.
For both sides, GM foods seem to act as a symbol: you’re pro-agricultural
business or anti-science. But science is exactly what we need more of when it
comes to GM foods, which is why I was happy to see Nature devote a special
series of articles to the GM food controversy. The conclusion: while GM crops
haven’t yet realized their initial promise and have been dominated by
agricultural businesses, there is reason to continue to use and develop them
to help meet the enormous challenge of sustainably feeding a growing planet.
That doesn’t mean GM crops are perfect, or a one-size-fits-all solution to
global agriculture problems. But anything that can increase farming efficiency
— the amount of crops we can produce per acre of land — will be extremely
useful. GM crops can and almost certainly will be part of that suite of tools’
but so will traditional plant breeding, improved soil and crop management and
perhaps most important of all, better storage and transport infrastructure(基础
设施), especially in the developing world. (It doesn’t do much good for farmers
in places like sub-Saharan Africa to produce more food if they can’t get it to
hungry consumers.) I’d like to see more non-industry research done on GM
crops — not just because we’d worry less about bias, but also because seed
companies like Monsanto and Pioneer shouldn’t be the only entities working
to harness genetic modification. I’d like to see GM research on less
commercial crops, like corn. I don’t think it’s vital to label GM ingredients in
food, but I also wouldn’t be against if — and industry would be smart to go
along with labeling, just as a way of removing fears about the technology.
Most of all, though, I wish a tenth of the energy that’s spent endlessly
debating GM crops was focused on those more pressing challenges for global
agriculture. There are much bigger battles to fight.
6. How do environmentalist opponents view GM foods according to the
passage?
A. They will eventually ruin agriculture and the environment.
B. They are used by big businesses to monopolize agriculture.
C. They have proved potentially harmful to consumers’ health.
D. They pose a tremendous threat to current farming practice.
7. What does the author say is vital to solve the controversy between the two
sides of the debate?
A. Breaking the GM food monopoly.
B. More friendly exchange of ideas.
C. Regulating GM food production.
D. More scientific research on GM crops.
8. What is the main point of the Nature articles?
A. Feeding the growing population makes it imperative to develop GM crops.
B. Popularizing GM technology will help it to live up to its initial promises.
C. Measures should be taken to ensure the safety of GM foods.
D. Both supporters and opponents should make compromises.
9. What is the author’s view on the solution to agricultural problems?
A. It has to depend more and more on GM technology.
B. It is vital to the sustainable development of human society.
C. GM crops should be allowed until better alternatives are found.
D. Whatever is useful to boost farming efficiency should be encouraged.
10. What does the author think of the ongoing debate around GM crops?
A. It arises out of ignorance of and prejudice against new science.
B. It distracts the public attention from other key issues of the world.
C. Efforts spent on it should be turned to more urgent issues of agriculture.
D. Neither side is likely to give in until more convincing evidence is found.
Text 3
There is a certain inevitability that e-book sales have now overtaken
paperback sales on Amazon’s US site. Amazon’s Kindle 2 is so light and so
cheap that it’s easy to see why people have rushed to buy it. Though I’m still
not keen on the design of the Kindle, it is a vast improvement on its
predecessor and certainly tolerable. Beyond the device itself, Amazon has
done a great job of rolling out Kindle apps, ensuring that people like me —
who have an iPad but not a Kindle — can still join in the fun. Once you’re into
the Kindle ecosystem, Amazon locks you in tightly — just as Apple does with
its iTunes / iPod ecosystem. It’s so easy to buy from Amazon’s store and the
books are so cheap that it’s not worth the effort of going elsewhere.
While I remain opposed to Amazon’s DRM(数字版权管理)— indeed, I’m opposed
to DRM on any e-books — I have to admit that the implementation is so
smooth that most Kindle users won’t care at all that their e-books can’t be
moved to other devices.
The e-book trend is nowhere near peaking. Over the next five years we can
expect to see more and more readers move away from printed books and pick
up e-books instead. But I don’t think that will mean the death of the printed
book.
There are some who prefer printed books. They like having shelves filled with
books they’ve read and books they plan to read; they like the feel of the book
in their hands and the different weights and typefaces and layouts of different
titles. In other words, they like the physical form of the book almost as much
as the words it contains.
I can sympathize with those people. As I wrote earlier this week, my ideal
situation would before publishers to bundle e-books with printed ones — in
much the same way that film studio submit DVDs with digital copies of films.
There’s no reason to think that lovers of printed books will change their
minds. There will undoubtedly be fewer of them as time goes by because
more people will grow up with e-books and spend little time with printed ones.
However, just as there are people who love vinyl records(黑胶唱片), even if
they were born well into the CD era, there will still be a dedicated minority
who love physical books.
Since there are fewer of these people, that will mean fewer bookshops and
higher prices for printed books but I don’t think the picture is entirely bleak.
There is scope for smaller print runs of lavishly designed printed books and
bookshops aimed at book lovers, rather than the Stieg Larsson-reading
masses. With mainstream readers out of the printed book market, booklovers
might even find they get a better experience.
11. What can be inferred from Paragraph One?
A. Most people buy Kindle 2 mainly because of its low price.
B. The author of the passage is a loyal customer of Apple products.
C. Amazon’s Kindle 2 surpassed Kindle 1 in designing.
D. The sales of e-book outnumbered those of paperback in the U. S.
12. According to the passage, the reason why the author opposes to
Amazon’s DRM is that ________________.
A. e-books can only be purchased on Amazon. com
B. Kindle books are not compatible with other electronic reading devices
C. once implemented, e-books can’t be transferred to other equipments
D. e-books installed on Kindle 2 can’t be edited freely
13. It can be learned that the trend of e-books ________________.
A. will come to stop any time soon
B. will reach the summit in the near future
C. will meet its heyday when printed books die
D. has already reached its peak
14. Why does the author believe that the surging sales of e-books won’t mean
the death of the printed book?
A. Because a minority will stick to their love of printed books.
B. Because the majority of book lovers won’t change their minds.
C. Because people always hold nostalgic feelings towards printed books.
D. Because people will return to the printed books as time goes by.
15. According to the author, which of the following is TRUE about the future of
printed books?
A. They will be bundled with e-books.
B. They will no longer be available in the market.
C. They will be sold in small quantity and high quality.
温馨提示:当前文档最多只能预览 15 页,此文档共30 页,请下载原文档以浏览全部内容。如果当前文档预览出现乱码或未能正常浏览,请先下载原文档进行浏览。
发表评论(共0条评论)
下载需知:
1 该文档不包含其他附件(如表格、图纸),本站只保证下载后内容跟在线阅读一样,不确保内容完整性,请务必认真阅读
2 除PDF格式下载后需转换成word才能编辑,其他下载后均可以随意编辑修改
3 有的标题标有”最新”、多篇,实质内容并不相符,下载内容以在线阅读为准,请认真阅读全文再下载
4 该文档为会员上传,版权归上传者负责解释,如若侵犯你的隐私或权利,请联系客服投诉
点击加载更多评论>>