A.Call the manager to ask for another interview.B.Write a thank-you note for the
A.Call the manager to ask for another interview.
B.Write a thank-you note for the interview.
C.Make a clean break to restart.
D.Find any available interview.
A.Call the manager to ask for another interview.
B.Write a thank-you note for the interview.
C.Make a clean break to restart.
D.Find any available interview.
A、A. fry
B、B. braise
C、C. steam
D、D. stew
B.Based on financial condition:
C.Based on merit.
D.Based on educational system.
A.Clothes matching.
B.Making friends.
C.Stress relieving.
D.Interview preparation.
A.They are more likely to trade their privacy for free Web services.
B.They are willing to pay extra to protect their personal data.
C.Most of them will protect their privacy when given a choice.
D.Most of them are happy to share their personal data on the Internet.
下列各 Most of us would shy away from making purchases in a foreign country ff we didnt know the exchange rate. Yet, ff privacy is the true currency of the Interuet, as many argue, millions of us are doing that very thing every day. i Meanwhile, Internet giants amend their privacy policies in ways that allow them to harvest and sell even more of our personal data. While privacy campaigners protest, users generally vote with their clicks and carry on regardless. So should we conclude the Interuet generation is happy to trade its privacy for free or cheaper Web services? Not according to Nicola Jentzsch of the German Institute of Research in Berlin, and colleagues, who last week published research showing that most people prefer to protect their personal data when given a choice and that a significant proportion are willing to pay extra to do so. The researchers directed 443 students to a website offering tickets for a real movie showing, sold by two different uendors (商贩). Although the tickets were subsidized, the volunteers, who were able to purchase one, two, or no tickets, had to pay most of the cost themselves. When both vendors offered tickeks at the same price but only one required customers to enter their cell phone number, the more privacy-friendly yendor got 83% of sales. When participants were offered the santo choice, but with an additional charge of 50 euro cents from the privacy-friendly cinema, its market share fell to 31%. "It turns out that when you are good on privacy you can charge more and make a greater profit," says Alessandro Acquisti of the University of Cambridge, one of the authors of the study, published by the European Network and Information Security Agency. "What people say in surveys is that they care about privacy, but what they actually do is spend their time constantly updating their status on Facebo0k," says Acquisti. "This has led some to conclude that people no longer care about privacy. This new data, along with similar work we have done in the U. S, shows this is not the case, and that the desire for privacy is not dead after all. " According to the passage, many people believe that
A.we can benefit from selling our personal data
B.Internet giants should perfect their privacy policies
C.our privacy is the true currency of the Internet
D.privacy campaigners should vote with their clicks
A.Poor sleep at night.
B.Lack of exercise.
C.Being overweight.
D.Eating too much chocolate.
B.The movie call be understood after reading the book.
C.The plots are easily followed in the book than in the movie.
D.It is more horrible to watch the movie than to read the book.
根据下列材料,请回答下列各题: Experts in the food industry are thinking a lot about trash these days. Food waste has been a serious problem for restaurants and grocery stores—with millions of tons lost along the way as crops are hauled hundreds of miles, stored for weeks in refrigerators and prepared on busy restaurant assembly lines. Restaurants, colleges, hospitals and other institutions are compensating for the rising costs of waste in novel ways. "We have all come to work with this big elephant in the middle of the kitchen, and he elephant is this Its okay to waste belief system," said Andrew Shackman, president of LeanPath. A company that helps restaurants cut back food waste. Freshman students at Virginia Tech were surprised this year when they entered two of the campus’s biggest dining halls to find there were no cafeteria trays. “ You have to go back and get your silverware and your drink, but its not that different,” said Caitlin Mew born, a freshman. “Its not a big deal. You take less food, and you dont eat more than you should. ” Getting rid of trays has cut food waste by 38 percent at the cafeterias, said Denny Cochrane, manager of Virginia Techs sustainability program. Before the program began, students often grabbed whatever looked good at the buffet (自助餐), only to food at the table that their eyes were bigger than their stomachs, he said. According to the first paragraph,
A. lots of food are wasted as crops are hauled from far away
B. food waste is the most serious problems for restaurants and stores
C. experts put forward many proposals to solve the issue of trash
D. .busy restaurant assembly lines produce millions of tons of trash
A.It can be decreased by the sense of purpose.
B.It happens when one has no access to right sources.
C.It can be increased by constant engagement in the news.
D.It depends on the efforts one makes to find the news.
B. Because he has been working late for two weeks.
C. Because he never takes medicine without doctors suggestion.
D. Because he decides to start running the next morning.
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