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He could produce no evidence ______ his argument.A.in respect ofB.in view ofC.in support o

He could produce no evidence ______ his argument.

A.in respect of

B.in view of

C.in support of

D.on account of

提问人:网友gdsdmsj 发布时间:2022-01-06
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更多“He could produce no evidence _…”相关的问题
第1题
On a 100-acre farm, a farmer is able to produce 3,000 bushels of wheat when he hires 2 wor
kers. He is able to produce 4,400 bushels of wheat when he hires 3 workers. Which of the following possibilities is consistent with the property of diminishing marginal product?

A、The farmer is able to produce 5,600 bushels of wheat when he hires 4 workers.

B、The farmer is able to produce 5,800 bushels of wheat when he hires 4 workers.

C、The farmer is able to produce 6,000 bushels of wheat when he hires 4 workers.

D、Any of the above could be correct.

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第2题
No one could tell how the magician was able to produce a rabbit from his hat until he ____
__his tricks.

A.strayed away from

B.threw light on

C.gave birth to

D.fell back on

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第3题
The main idea of the essay is that ________.

A、Haley recalled how his past experiences helped him to produce his masterpiece.

B、Haley showed that some dreams could come true while others couldn't

C、Haley didn't accept a job with a high pay and finally became a successful writer

D、Haley recalled how he kept writing in spite of setbacks and poverty and succeeded in becoming a writer at last.

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第4题
The Ford family came from Ireland to the United States in 1847. Their child Henry was born
in 1863. He had an interest in mechanics. He invented a car called the quadricycle which had four wheels. It essentially (实质上) had four bicycle tires and no cab (司机室).

Henry built race cars in the 1890’s and even became a race car driver. But he wanted to build cars for everyone: to use, so he began the Ford Motor Company in 1903. He had formulated (制定) a business motto which would be the reason for his success. "The way to make automobiles is to make one automobile like another automobile, to make them all alike." His company declared that they could make automobiles in any color, as long as it was black.

Henry gave much credit to his wife whom he called "The Believer". From the earliest days of their relationship she was the one who encouraged him to build a horseless carriage. Her belief in him was a constant encouragement to produce what would become tile primary mode of transportation in the future.

Henry's greatest task was to produce a gasoline engine that would be the power for his car. He finally produced so many hours each day that his friends called him crazy Henry. tie was inspired to work until his invention would work effectively.

When he designed the Model T, he decided he could build it cheaply for what he called "the great multitude(批量)." To do this he had to design an assemble line where many cars could be bilt in a single day. Each worker would have only his individual parts to put on each car. Then he could limit himself to the few tools needed for the task.

The Model T was introduced in 1908 and began to be produced on an assembly line in 1913. Henry Ford was the major figure in the auto industry for the next fifteen years.

On May 26, 1927, Henry watched the 15 millionth Model T Ford roll off the assembly tine. He had become the richest man in America. He was able to bring the price low enough so that most Americans could buy his car. This gave every family much independence, for they could move about freely without the aid of others’ transporting them.

Because he did not change his Model T, others began experimenting with different types of cars. However, the Ford Motor Company still exists and all car owners are indebted (受惠于) to the creation of the automobile by Henry Ford.

To make cars, Henry first of all needed ______.

A.his wife’s encouragement

B.a lot of money to buy equipment

C.engineers and technicians

D.to produce a gasoline engine that would be the power for his car

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第5题
The jewellery designerHe was young and completely unknown, but Paul Waterhouse believed in

The jewellery designer

He was young and completely unknown, but Paul Waterhouse believed in himself. He'd heard that there was going to be a large exhibition for jewellery designers and he asked the organisers whether he could show some of his work. 'I was only 21,' he says, 'and they agreed, if I could show a complete collection.' So he went to the bank, borrowed £1,500 for materials, and began to work on new designs. 'The exhibition was fantastic. Although everyone else was much more experienced than I was, my designs were still praised.'

He decided to transfer his business to Canada and began to experiment with new materials: all sorts of stones from around the world, some totally new to him. 'As most of them weren't precious, it changed the way I approached design. It was great! I was able to produce much larger pieces of modern jewellery,' he says. 'Then I was asked by an advertising agency to design a wedding ring for a TV advert. The agency liked what I'd done, but their client, a car manufacturer, wanted something a little more traditional. I was happy to make changes and that work gave me a lot of free publicity.'

At the start of his career, Paul felt confident.

A.Right

B.Wrong

C.Doesn't say

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第6题
听力原文: President Chirac of France has attacked bilateral trade deals which he said coul
d undermine internationally agreed measures that allow poor countries to produce cheap copies of anti-AIDS drugs. Mr. Chirac said that if poor countries were forced into dropping the right to make affordable generic medicine, this would be a form. of blackmail. His comments came in a statement read at the International AIDS Conference in Bangkok. There're reports of increasing tensions at the conference between the American delegation and officials of the global fund to fight AIDS that expressed concern about continued American commitment.

According to the internationally agreed measures, poor countries can ______ cheap copies of anti-AIDS drugs.

A.make

B.import

C.export

D.trade in

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第7题
A breakthrough in the provision of energy from the sun for the European Economic Community
could be brought forward by up to two decades, if a modest increase could be provided in the EEC's research effort in this field, according to the senior EEC scientists engaged in experiments in solar energy at EEC's scientific laboratories at Ispra, near Milan.

The senior West German scientist in charge of the community's solar energy program, Mr. Joachim Gretz, told jurnalists that at present levels of research spending it was most unlikely that solar energy would provide as much as three percent of the Community's energy requirements even after the year 2000. But he said that with a modest increase in the present sums, devoted by the EEC to this work it was possible that the breakthrough could be achieved by the end of the next decade.

Mr. Gretz calculates that if solar energy only provided three percent of the EEC's needs, this could still produce a saving of about a billion bounds in the present bill for imported energy each year. And he believes that with the possibility of utilizing more advanced technology in this field it might be possible to satisfy a much bigger share of the Community's future energy needs.

At present the EEC spends about $2.6 millions a year on solar research at Ispra, one of the EEC's official joint research centers, and another $3 millions a year in indirect research with universities and other independent bodies.

The underlined phrase" be brought forward" (Para. 1) most probably means ______.

A.be advanced

B.be completed

C.be expected

D.be introduced

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第8题
When, in the age of automation, man searches for a worker to do the tedious, unpleasant jo
bs that are impossible to mechanize, he may very profitably consider the ape.

If we tackled the problem of breeding for brains with as much as enthusiasm as we devote to breeding dogs of surrealistic shapes, we could eventually produce assorted models of useful primates, ranging in size from the gorilla down to the baboon, each adapted to a special kind of work. It is not putting too much strain on the imagination to assume that geneticists could produce a super-ape, able to understand some scores of words, and capable of being trained for such jobs as picking fruit, cleaning up the litter in parks, shining shoes, collecting garbage, doing household chores, and even baby-sitting (though I have known some babies I would not care to trust with a valuable ape).

Apes could do many jobs, such as cleaning streets and the more repetitive types of agricultural work, without supervision, though they might need protection from those exceptional specimens of Homo sapiens who think it amusing to tease or bully anything they consider lower on the evolutionary ladder. For other tasks, such as delivering papers and laboring on the docks, our man-ape would have to work under human overseers; and, incidentally, I would love to see the finale of the twenty-first century version of the Waterfront in which the honest but hairy hero will drum on his chest after—literally taking the wicked labor leader apart.

Once a supply of nonhuman workers becomes available, a whole range of low IQ jobs could be thankfully relinquished by mankind, to its great mental and physical advantage. What is more, one of the problems which has plagued so many fictional Utopias would be avoided: There would be none of the deridingly subhuman Epsilons of Huxley's Brave New World to act as a permanent reproach to society, for there is a profound moral difference between breeding sub-men and super-apes, though the end products are much the same. The first would introduce a form. of slavery, the second would be a biological triumph which could benefit both men and animals.

In the author's opinion, the idea that geneticists could produce a super-ape is ______.

A.irrational

B.plausible

C.biologically impossible

D.demonstrably true

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第9题
第三篇 TheWorld's Best-Selling Medicine

Since ancient times, people all over theworld have used willow to stop pain The willow tree con-tains salicylic acid(水杨酸). This stops pain, but there is one problem.Salicylic acid also hurts thestomach. In 1853, a French scientist made amixture from willow that did not hurt the stomach. How-ever, his mixture wasdifficult to make, and he did not try to produce or sell it.

In 1897, inGermany, Felix Hoffmann also made amixture with salicylic acid. He tried it himselifirst and then gave it to hisfather because his father was old and in a lot of pain. His father's painwentaway. and the mixture did not hurt his stomach.

Hoffmann worked for Bayer, a Germancompany. He showed his new drug to his manager, whctested the drug and foundthat it worked well. Bayer decided to make the drug. They called it aspirinandput the Bayer name on every pill

Aspirin was an immediate success. Almosteveryone has pain of some kind, so aspirin answered atrue need. Aspirin wascheap, easy to take, and effective. It also lowered fevers. Aspirin was awondeidrug.

At first, Bayer sold the drug throughdoctors, who then sold it to their patients. In 1915, thecompany started to sell aspirin in drugstores. In the United States, Bayer had a patent(专利权) onthedrug. Other companies could make similar products and sell them in othercountries, but only bayercould make and sell aspirin in theUnited States.In time, Bayer could no longer own the name aspirinin theUnited States.Other companies could make it there, too. However, Bayer aspirin was themostwell known, and for many years, it was the market leader.

By the 1950s, new painkillers were onthe market. Aspirin was no longer the only way to treatpain and reduce fever.Bayer and other companies looked for other drugs to make. However, in the 1970sthey got a surprise. Doctors noticed that patients who were taking aspirin hadfewer heart at-tacks than other people. A British researcher named John Vanefound the reason aspirin helped to pre-vent heart attacks. In 1982, he won theNobel prize for his research. Doctors started to tell some oftheir patients totake aspirin every day to prevent heart attacks It has made life better for themanypeople who take it. It has also made a lot of money for companies likeBayer that produce and sell it !

41 Why didn't the French scientistcontinue to make the medicine that stopped pain?

A.It didn't work well.

B.It was not cost-effective.

C.It hurt the stomach.

D.It was hard to make.

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第10题
The World's Best-Selling Medicine Since ancient times, people all over the world have

The World's Best-Selling Medicine

Since ancient times, people all over the world have used willow to stop pain. The willow tree con-tains salicylic acid c水杨酸). This stops pain, but there is one problem. Salicylic acid also hurts the stomach. In 1853, a French scientist made a mixture from willow that did not hurt the stomach. How-ever, his mixture was difficult to make, and he did not try to produce or sell it.

In 1897, in Germany, Felix Hoffmann also made a mixture with salicylic acid. He tried it himself first and then gave it to his father because his father was old and in a lot of pain. His father's pain went away. and the mixture did not hurt his stomach.

Hoffmann worked for Bayer, a German company. He showed his new drug to his manager, who tested the drug and found that it worked well. Bayer decided to make the drug. They called it aspirin and put the Bayer name on every pill.

Aspirin was an immediate success. Almost everyone has pain of some kind, so aspirin answered a true need. Aspirin was cheap, easy to take, and effective. It also lowered fevers. Aspirin was a wonder drug.

At first, Bayer sold the drug through doctors, who then sold it to their patients. In 1915, the company started to sell aspirin in drugstores. In the United States, Bayer had a patent (专利权) on the drug. Other companies could make similar products and sell them in other countries, but only bayer could make and sell aspirin in the United States. In time, Bayer could no Ionger own the name aspirin in the United States. Other companies could make it there, too. However, Bayer aspirin was the most well known, and for many years, it was the market leader.

By the 1950s, new painkillers were on the market. Aspirin was no longer the only way to treat pain and reduce fever. Bayer and other companies looked for other drugs to make. However, in the 1970s they got a surprise. Doctors noticed that patients who were taking aspirin had fewer heart at-tacks than other people. A British researcher named John Vane found the reason aspirin helped to pre-vent heart attacks. In 1982, he won the Nobel prize for his research. Doctors started to tell some of their patients to take aspirin every day to prevent heart attacks. It has made life better for the many people who take it. It has also made a lot of money for companies like Bayer that produce and sell it !

Why didn't the French scientist continue to make the medicine that stopped pain?

A.It didn't work well

B.It hurt the stomach

C.It was not cost-effective

D.It was hard to make

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