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[主观题]

The author of the selection believes that eye-movement investigations are ______.A.valuabl

The author of the selection believes that eye-movement investigations are ______.

A.valuable because they provide a picture of the ways the mind works in perceiving word symbols

B.worthless because eye movements have nothing to do with skillful reading

C.worthless because they tell us little about how expert readers' functions are

D.valuable because they tell us much about the way the eye is put together

提问人:网友angleverge 发布时间:2022-01-07
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更多“The author of the selection be…”相关的问题
第1题
(A Most Forgiving Ape) When the author and his party se out that morning, he was quite

(A Most Forgiving Ape) When the author and his party se out that morning, he was quite certain that he would meet the gorillas.()

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第2题
As put by Se author, most of the work that most people have to do is ______.A.delightful b

As put by Se author, most of the work that most people have to do is ______.

A.delightful but time consuming

B.exceedingly dull and always painful

C.not worth doing and bearable at all

D.not interesting but rewarding

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第3题
Which of the following statements is true, according to the author of the passage?A.The se

Which of the following statements is true, according to the author of the passage?

A.The sequence of the film is reasonably smooth in itself.

B.The film has many challenges from beginning to end.

C.The film is confusing at the beginning but clearer later.

D.The film is filed with the hearings in its court scenes.

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第4题
According to the author, what can be inferred from paragraph 6?A.The agreement will not se

According to the author, what can be inferred from paragraph 6?

A.The agreement will not settle the issue in essence.

B.The agreement is favorable to France and Germany.

C.The agreement will prevent Google from digitizing books from China.

D.The agreement will permit Google to digitize books from English-speaking countries.

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第5题
When Thomas Keller, one of America's foremost chefs, announced that on Sept. 1 he would ab
olish the practice of tipping at Per Se, his luxury restaurant in New York City, and replace it with a European--style. service charge, I knew three groups would be opposed: customers, servers and restaurant owners. These three groups are all committed to tipping—as they quickly made clear on Web sites. To oppose tipping, it seems, is to be anticapitalist, and maybe even a little French.

But Mr. Keller is right to move away from tipping—and it's worth exploring why just about everyone else in the restaurant world is wrong to stick with the practice.

Customers believe in tipping because they think it makes economic sense. "Waiters know that they won't get paid if they don't do a good job" is how most advocates of the system would put it. To be sure, this is a tempting, apparently rational statement about economic theory, but it appears to have little applicability to the real world of restaurants.

Michael Lynn, an associate professor of consumer behavior. and marketing at Cornell's School of Hotel Administration, has conducted dozens of studies of tipping and has concluded that consumers' assessments of the quality of service correlate weakly to the amount they tip.

Rather, customers are likely to tip more in response to servers touching them lightly and leaning forward next to the table to make conversation than to how often their water glass is refilled—in other words, customers tip more when they like the server, not when the service is good. Mr. Lynn's studies also indicate that male customers increase their tips for female servers while female customers increase their tips for male servers.

What's more, consumers seem to forget that the tip increases as the bill increases. Thus, the tipping system is an open invitation to what restaurant professionals call "upselling": every bottle of imported water, every espresso and every cocktail is extra money in the server's pocket. Aggressive upselling for tips is often rewarded while low-key, quality service often goes unrecognized.

In addition, the practice of tip pooling, which is the norm in fine-dining restaurants and is becoming more common in every kind of restaurant above the level of a greasy spoon, has ruined whatever effect voting with your tip might have had on an individual waiter. In an unreasonable outcome, you are punishing the good waiters in the restaurant by not tipping the bad one. Indeed, there appears to be little connection between tipping and good service.

It may be inferred that a European-style. service ______.

A.is tipping-free

B.charges little tip

C.is the author's initiative

D.is offered at Per Se

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第6题
When Thomas Keller, one of America's foremost chefs, announced that on Sept. 1 he would ab
olish the practice of tipping at Per Se, his luxury restaurant in New York City, and replace it with a European-style. service charge, I knew three groups would be opposed: customers, servers and restaurant owners. These three groups are all committed to tipping—as they quickly made clear on Web sites. To oppose tipping, it seems, is to be ant capitalist, and maybe even a little French.

But Mr. Keller is right to move away from tipping—and it's worth exploring why just about everyone else in the restaurant world is wrong to stick with the practice.

Customers believe in tipping because they think it makes economic sense. "Waiters know that they won't get paid if they don't do a good job" is how most advocates of the system would put it. To be sure, this is a tempting, apparently rational statement about economic theory, but it appears to have little applicability to the real world of restaurants.

Michael Lynn, an associate professor of consumer behavior. and marketing at Cornell's School of Hotel Administration, has conducted dozens of studies of tipping and has concluded that consumers' assessments of the quality of service correlate weakly to the amount they tip.

Rather, customers are likely to tip more in response to servers touching them lightly and leaning forward next to the table to make conversation than to how often their water glass is refilled—in other words, customers tip more when they like the server, not when the service is good. Mr. Lynn's studies also indicate that male customers increase their tips for female servers while female customers increase their tips for male servers.

What's more, consumers seem to forget that the tip increases as the bill increases. Thus, the tipping system is an open invitation to what restaurant professionals call "upselling": every bottle of imported water, every espresso and every cocktail is extra money in the server's pocket. Aggressive upselling for tips is often rewarded while low-key, quality service often goes unrecognized.

In addition, the practice of tip pooling, which is the norm in fine-dining restaurants and is becoming more common in every kind of restaurant above the level of a greasy spoon, has ruined whatever effect voting with your tip might have had on an individual waiter. In an unreasonable outcome, you are punishing the good waiters in the restaurant by not tipping the bad one. Indeed, there appears to be little connection between tipping and good service.

It may be inferred that a European-style. service ______.

A.is tipping-free

B.charges little tip

C.is the author's initiative

D.is offered at Per Se

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第7题
Looking back on my childhood, I am convinced that naturalists are horn and not made. Altho
ugh we were brought up in the same way, my brothers and sisters soon abandoned their pressed flowers and insects. Unlike them, I had no ear for music and languages. I was not an early reader and I could not do mental arithmetic.

Before World War I we spent our summer holidays in Hungary. I have only the dim memory of the house we lived in, of my room and my toys. Nor do I recall clearly the large family of grandparents, aunts, uncles and cousins who gathered next door. But I do have a crystalclear memory of the dogs, the farm animals, the local birds, and above all, the insects.

I am a naturalist, not a scientist. I have a strong love of the natural world and my enthusiasm had led me into varied investigations. I love discussing my favorite topics and enjoy burning the midnight oil while reading about other people's observations and discoveries. Then something happens that brings these observations together in my conscious mind. Suddenly you fancy you see the answer to the riddle, because it all seems to fit together. This has resulted in my publishing 300 papers, and books, which some might honour with the title of scientific research.

But curiosity, a keen eye, a good memory and enjoyment of the animal and plant world do not make a scientist: one the outstanding and essential qualities required is se]f-discipline, a quality I lack. A scientist requires not only self-discipline but hard training, determination and a goal. A scientist, up to a point, can be made. A naturalist is born. If you can combine the two, you get the best of both worlds.

The first paragraph tells us the author ______. ()

A.was interested in flowers and insects in his childhood

B.lost his hearing when he was a child

C.didn't like his brothers and sisters

D.was born to a naturalist's family

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第8题
机场线AMT进路显示的颜se()

A.绿se

B.蓝se

C.黄se

D.红se

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第9题
Los dos ________, pero no _________.

A、miraron; reconocieron

B、miraron; se reconocieron

C、se miraron; se reconocieron

D、se miraron; reconocieron

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第10题
MMI的系统不同颜se表示不同含义,其中表示设备正常的颜se是()

A.红se

B.黄se

C.绿se

D.白se

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第11题
MMI上计轴处于出清状态,故障锁闭显示什么颜se()

A.棕se

B.白se

C.蓝se

D.红se

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