题目内容 (请给出正确答案)
[主观题]

美国的橄榄球运动起源于英国的橄榄球赛,同一般的足球运动、即英式足球截然不同。秋天,美国的橄榄球

运动是大、中学校里最流行的体育运动。大学通常以提供奖学金和免费膳宿的办法,鼓励著名的高中橄榄球运动员人校。橄榄球比赛备受欢迎,所以各大学常能用橄榄球比赛的售票收入来支付学校各项体育运动的费用。

美国所有较大的城市几乎都有职业橄榄球队,其运动员大多数是原来的大学橄榄球运动员。通常,职业橄榄球比赛的观众人数比大学橄榄球比赛的还要多,这是因为职业运动员势必要艺高技胜一筹。大学橄榄球比赛通常在星期六下午进行,而职业橄榄球比赛常常在星期日的下午或晚上举行。

查看答案
如搜索结果不匹配,请 联系老师 获取答案
您可能会需要:
您的账号:,可能会需要:
您的账号:
发送账号密码至手机
发送
更多“美国的橄榄球运动起源于英国的橄榄球赛,同一般的足球运动、即英…”相关的问题

第1题

Ninety-five percent of adult Americans sleep seven to eight hours a night. The rest seem t

o need more than nine hours, or get along nicely on less【1】six. What distinguishes the long and short sleepers【2】the majority? To get some answers psychologist Ernest Hermann in Boston and New York papers for long and【3】sleepers to engage in an eight-night "sleep in" at Boston State Hospital's Sleep and Dream laboratory. His findings indicate that such people differ【4】ordinary sleepers and each other not【5】much physically as psychologically. Testing showed significant psycho logical【6】between long and short sleepers. The shorts【7】to be emotionally stable. Their entire life-style【8】keeping busy and avoiding psychologist problem【9】than facing them. They were also awakened seldom during the night and rose in the【10】refreshed and ready to go.

(31)

点击查看答案

第2题

The unprecedented U. S. economic boom of the last half of the 1990s was propelled by inves

tment in digital technology. Investors sank billions of dollars into dot-com startups. Billions more were invested to solve the Y2K problem. Conversion to the euro required still more billions. together, these star-aligned events delivered an enormous economic stimulus.【1】Between 1998 and 2000 ,capital spending's share of the economy was 23 percent higher than at the start of the'90s--and 18 percent higher than today. The weakened economy of the past three years represents the inevitable payback for that abnormal bulge.

【2】The good news is that the present economic softness has been cushioned by new technology.

Sophisticated information systems have allowed companies to manage inventories more efficiently. today, aggregate nonfarm inventories in the United States, when measured against final sales, are 30 percent lower than the average for the past 40 years. So routine pullbacks in consumer spending should no longer be followed by severe inventory corrections, which worsen recessions. In fact, the brief, eight-month recession

from March to November 2001 is the shortest of the nine recessions since World War Ⅱ.

【3】The bad news is that companies are using new technology to displace higher-cost human effort. Indeed, annual productivity is increasing by 2 percent, the economy is growing at 3 percent and the stock market is recovering, but unemployment is at 6 percent Granted. that's below the average rate of 7 percent from 1979 to 1994, but it's above the 5 percent average of the past nine years.【4】As consumers, we appreciate the lower-cost, higher-quality goods coming from both U. S. and overseas sources. As shareholders, we applaud better corporate returns. But as wage earners, we are distressed at job insecurity and losses.

【5】Given the unrelenting pressure on businesses to reduce costs to remain competitive, given the power of new technologies to displace workers, and given the lure of lower-labor-cost nations for offshore production and services, how can unemployment be minimized while the overall economy grows?

The only long-run solution is innovation. Innovative products and services are essential to generate new businesses and jobs so the economy can grow at the pace needed to absorb available labor: 4 to 5 percent. New work will require retraining because new businesses are likely to be heavily dependent on knowledge workers; there will be a premium on education. Whatever might be the new technologies that will stimulate economic expansion, they will depend on an educated work force. America must have the social and political will to address the educational demands of this high-technology-driven era.

点击查看答案

第3题

What processes does cognition consist of?

点击查看答案

第4题

Much of the excitement among investigators in the field of intelligence derives from their

trying to determine exactly what intelligence is. Different investigators have emphasized different aspects of intelligence in their definitions. For example, in a 1921 symposium on the definition of intelligence, the American psychologist Lewis M. Ter-man emphasized the ability to think abstractly, while another American psychologist, Edward L. Thorndike, emphasized learning and the ability to give good responses to questions. In a similar 1986 symposium, however, psychologists generally agreed on the importance of adaptation to the environment as the key to understanding both what intelligence is and what it does. Such adaptation may occur in a variety of environmental situations. For example, a student in school learns the material that is required to pass or do well in a course; a physician treating a patient with an unfamiliar disease adapts by learning about the diseases; an artist reworks a painting in order to make it convey a more harmonious impression. For the most part, adapting involves making a change in oneself in order to cope more effectively, but sometimes effective adaptation involves either changing the environment or finding a new environment altogether.

Effective adaptation draws upon a number of cognitive processes, such as perception, learning, memory, reasoning, and problem solving. The main trend in defining intelligence, then, is that it is not itself a cognitive or mental process, but rather a selective combination of these processes purposively directed toward effective adaptation to the environment. For examples, the physician noted above learning about a new disease adapts by perceiving material on the disease in medical literature, learning what the material contains, remembering crucial aspects of it that are needed to treat the patient, and then reasoning to solve the problem of how to apply the information to the needs of the patient. Intelligence, in sum, has come to be regarded as not a single ability, but an effective drawing together of many abilities. This has not always been obvious to investigators of the subject, however, and, indeed, much of the history of the field revolves around arguments, regarding the nature and abilities that constitute intelligence.

What does the passage mainly discuss?

点击查看答案

第5题

Computers are permeating almost every aspect of our lives, including many areas previously

untouched by technology. 1. But unlike such other pervasive technologies as electricity, television and the motor car, computers are on the whole less reliable and less predictable in their behavior. This is because they are discrete state digital electronic devices that are prone to total and catastrophic failure. Computer systems, when they are "down," are completely down, unlike electromechanical devices, which may be only partially down and are thus partially usable.

Computers enable enormous quantities of information to be stored, retrieved, and transmitted at great speed on a scale not possible before. 2. This is all very well, but it has serious implications for data security and personal privacy because computers are inherently insecure. The recent activities of hackers and data thieves in the United States, Germany, and Britain have shown how all-too-easy it still is to break into even the most sophisticated financial and military systems. The list of scams perpetrated by the new breed of high-tech criminals, ranging from fraud in airline-ticket reservations to the reprogramming of the chips inside mobile phones, is growing daily.

Computers systems are often incredibly complex--so complex, in fact, that they are not always understood even by their creators (although few are willing to admit it). This often makes them completely unmanageable. Unmanageable complexity, can result in massive foul-ups or spectacular budget "runaways." For example, Jeffrey Rothfeder in Business Week reports that Bank of America in 1988 had to abandon a $20-million computer system after spending five years and a further $60 million trying to make it work. Allstate Insurance saw the cost of its new system rise from $8 million to a staggering $100 million and estimated completion was delayed from 1987 to 1993. Moreover, the problem seems to be getting worse: in 1988 the American Arbitration Association took on 190 computer disputes, most of which involved defective systems. The claims totaled $200 million--up from only $31 million in 1984.

3. Complexity can also result in disaster: no computer is 100 percent guaranteed because it is virtually impossible to anticipate all sorts of critical applications, such as saving lives, flying aircraft, running nuclear power stations, transferring vast sums of money, and controlling missile systems--sometimes with tragic consequences. For example, between 1982 and 1987, some twenty-two servicemen died in five separate crashes of the United States Air Force's sophisticated Blackhawk helicopter before the problem was traced to its computer-based "fly-by-wire" system. At least two people died after receiving overdoses of radiation emitted by the computerized Therac 25 X-ray machines, and there are many other examples of fatal computer-based foul-ups.

Popular areas for less life-threatening computer malfunctions include telephone billing and telephone switching software, and bank-teller machines, electronic funds-transfer systems, and motor-vehicle license data bases. Although computers have often taken the "blame" on these occasions, the ultimate cause of failure in most cases is, in fact, human error.

Every new technology creates new problems as well as new benefits for society, and computers are no exception. 4. But digital computers have rendered society especially vulnerable to hardware and software malfunctions. Sometimes industrial robots go crazy, while heart pacemakers and automatic garage door openers are rendered useless by electromagnetic radiation or "electronic smog" emitted from point-of-sale terminals, personal computers, and video games. Automated teller machines (ATMs) and pumps at gas stations are closed down because of unforeseen software snafus.

The cost of all this downtime is huge. 5. For example, it has

点击查看答案

第6题

Also, prejudice and chauvinism still exist in the workplace. While we like to think female

managers have achieved parity with men, this isn't tree. The glass (some say concrete) ceiling still exists in many places. So, if you're a minority, consider how this is affecting your advancement chances. Don't be bitter, but do get busy. It may be time to get out and find something better.

点击查看答案

第7题

In this part, you are required to write a composition entitled On Mistakes in no less than

200 words. Your composition should be based on the following outline:

1.什么是错误?

2.怎样辩证地看待错误。

3.你怎样看待自己的错误。

4.你怎样看待他人的错误。

点击查看答案

第8题

Write a composition of no less than 200 Words with the title Space Research on the ANSWER

SHEET 2.

点击查看答案

第9题

It has been more than 30 years since man first landed on the moon. Some people think that

space research is a waste of money. Discuss.

You should write no less than 250 words. Write your article on ANSWER SHEET 2.

点击查看答案

第10题

认命对于获取幸福发挥着作用,且其作用与努力产生的效果相差无几。聪明的人虽然不会对着可免的灾难

坐以待毙,但也不会为不可免的患难空耗精力与时间,而且即使对某些可免的灾难,他也宁愿屈服,如果避免这种不幸所做的努力会妨害他更重要的追求。许多人会因为一些小事出现差错而烦躁或者恼怒,他们也因此而浪费了许多本可以更好地利用的精力。在追求真正重要的目标时,过于情绪化是不利的,因为担心失败会使内心无法平静下来。在实际工作中,效率与我们投入的感情是不成比例的;甚至有时候感情会成为提高效率的阻碍。正确的态度是尽力而为,至于这个问题则接受命运的安排。认命通常有两种,一种缘于绝望,一种缘于无法抑制的希望。前者是错误的,后者才是正确的。

点击查看答案
热门考试 全部 >
相关试卷 全部 >
账号:
你好,尊敬的上学吧用户
发送账号至手机
密码将被重置
获取验证码
发送
温馨提示
该问题答案仅针对搜题卡用户开放,请点击购买搜题卡。
马上购买搜题卡
我已购买搜题卡, 登录账号 继续查看答案
重置密码
确认修改
谢谢您的反馈

您认为本题答案有误,我们将认真、仔细核查,
如果您知道正确答案,欢迎您来纠错

警告:系统检测到您的账号存在安全风险

为了保护您的账号安全,请在“上学吧”公众号进行验证,点击“官网服务”-“账号验证”后输入验证码“”完成验证,验证成功后方可继续查看答案!

微信搜一搜
上学吧
点击打开微信
警告:系统检测到您的账号存在安全风险
抱歉,您的账号因涉嫌违反上学吧购买须知被冻结。您可在“上学吧”微信公众号中的“官网服务”-“账号解封申请”申请解封,或联系客服
微信搜一搜
上学吧
点击打开微信