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[单选题]

() other peers, the twins seem to be more thoughtful and logical.

A.Likely

B.Like

C.Unlike

D.Alike

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更多“() other peers, the twins seem…”相关的问题

第1题

Which two statements accurately describe an IBGP peering session?() (Choose two.)

A. Peers are statically defined.

B. Peers exist within the same AS.

C. Peers must be directly connected to each other.

D. Peers advertise routes learned from other IBGP neighbors.

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第2题

Which of the following is not one of the members of the Lords Temporal? ()

A.all hereditary peers and peeresses of the England, Scotland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom (but not peers of Ireland)

B.lire peers created to assist the House in its judicial duties

C.senior bishops of the Church of England

D.all other life peers

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第3题

A company uses Routers R1 and R2 to connect to ISP1 and ISP2, respectively, with Routers I
1 and I2 used at th e ISPs. R1 peers with I1 and R2; R2 peers with I2 and R1. R1 and R2 do not share a common subnet, relying on other routers internal to the Enterprise for IP connectivity between the two routers.Which of the following could be used to prevent potential routing loops in this design?()

A. Using an iBGP mesh inside the Enterprise core

B. Configuring default routes in the Enterprise pointing to both R1 and R2

C. Redistributing BGP routes into the Enterprise IGP

D. Tunneling the packets for the i BGP connection between R1 and R2

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第4题

During BGP configuration on a router that has peered with other BGP speakers, the BGP comm
and aggregate-a ddress 172.32.0.0 255.255.252.0 is issued. However, the peers do not receive this aggregate network in BGP advertisements. Also, the router does not have this aggregate network in its BGP table.Which option indicates a possible reason this command did not cause the router to advertise the aggregate network to its peers?()

A. Interface NULL 0 is likely shutdown.

B. The next hop IP address must be a loopback address.

C. The BGP command no auto - summary is missing.

D. The BGP command no synchronization is missing.

E. Subnets of 172.32.0.0/22 do not exist in the BGP table.

F. The IGP running on this router does not have network 172.32.0.0/22 installed.

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第5题

All three types of cryptography schemes have unique function mapping to specific applicati
ons. For example, the symmetric key() approach is typically used for the encryption of data providing () , whereas asymmetric key cryptography is mainly used in key () and nonrepudiation , thereby providing confidentiality and authentication. The hash () (noncryptic), on the other hand, does not provide confidentiality but provides message integrity, and cryptographic hash algorithms provide message () and identity of peers during transport over insecure channels.

A.Cryptography

B.decode

C.privacy

D.security@@@SXB@@@A.Conduction

B.confidence

C.confidentiality

D.connection@@@SXB@@@A.Authentication

B.structure

C.encryption

D.exchange@@@SXB@@@A.Algorithm

B.Secure

C.structure

D.encryption@@@SXB@@@A.Confidentiality

B.integrity

C.service

D.robustness

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第6题

WILL E-READERS REPLACE THE CONVENTIONAL PAPER BOOK?Kindles, Nooks and other e-readers ar

WILL E-READERS REPLACE THE CONVENTIONAL PAPER BOOK?

Kindles, Nooks and other e-readers are threatening the future of printed books. But reading itself may get a boost from the devices. For example, a study found that the kids felt better about reading after a course in which they used Amazon Kindles. The research is in the _International Journal of Applied Science and Technology._

For two months, 199 middle-school students in a reading improvement class in Texas had 15 to 25 minutes every day when they were free to read on the Kindle. In general, the students felt the device improved their reading ability. And they tended to enjoy using an e-reader.

They noted the ease of carrying multiple books in one device, and the feeling that reading was suddenly a high-tech 21st-century activity rather than a boring waste of time. And some low-level readers who might otherwise be embarrassed to be seen with a simple book liked keeping their peers in the dark about what title they were reading. In the old days, one had to use a fake book-cover to achieve that level of secrecy.

1. Amazon Kindles is a kind of e-books. {T; F}

2. The research done in the _International Journal of Applied Science and Technology_ has lasted for two years. {T; F}

3. The students felt e-books could not improve their reading ability. {T; F}

4. Many students tended to enjoy using an e-reader. {T; F}

5. Some low-level readers used to use fake book-covers to keep their peers in the dark. {T; F}

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第7题

Questions are based on the following passage.Knowing that you are paid less than your pee

Questions are based on the following passage.

Knowing that you are paid less than your peers has two effects on happiness.One is negative: athinner pay packet hurts self-esteem (自尊).The other is called the "tunnel" effect: the income gap isseen as improving your own chances of similar riches.

A paper co-authored by Felix FitzRoy of the University of St.Andrews separates the two effectsusing data from household surveys in Germany.Previous work showed that the income of others canhave a small, or even positive, overall effect on employees" satisfaction in individual finns in Denmarkor in very dynamic economies, such as Eastern Europe.But Mr.FitzRoy"s tean~ proposed that olderworkers, who largely know their lifetime incomes already, will enjoy a much smaller tunnel effect.Thenegative effect on reported levels of happiness of being paid less than your peers is not visible for peopleaged under 45.In western Germany, seeing peers" incomes rising actually makes young people happier.It is only those people over 45, when careers have "reached a stable position", whose happiness is harmed by the success of others.

The prospect of more than 20 years of hard work might make retirement seem more attractive.Those with jobs are no happier after they retire, however, perhaps because their lives already agree with social expectations.Unemployment is known to damage happiness because not working falls shortof social expectations.Pensions or increased leisure time cannot make up for the loss of social acceptance.Unemployed people are dissatisfied with their life not only because they have lowerincomes, but also because they may get low and negative recognition from others.

Indeed, retiring early from work can have side-effects.Another paper, co-authored by AndreasKuhn of the University of Zurich, investigates the effect of a change in Austrian employment-insurancerules that allow blue-collar workers earlier retirement in some regions than others.Men retiring a yearearly lower their chance of surviving to age 67 by 13%.Almost a third of this higher death rate seemed

to be concentrated among those who were forced into early retirement by job loss.The death wascaused by smoking and alcohol consumption.If you"re in a job, even when you are paid less, hang on in there.

One of the effects of lower pay than your peers‘ is that().

A.it can motivate you to struggle for a similar salary

B.it can inspire you to argue with your manager

C.it may make you feel proud of your peers

D.it may force you to quit your current work

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第8题

What is sex? What is gender? Sex is determined by genetic codes that program biologica

l features.The words like “man”,“woman”,“male”and“female” indicate sexual identities.Gender is 1 complex than sex.For example,you might think of gender 2 the cultural meaning of sex.Since the first cry in this world,individuals are besieged with communications reflecting cultural prescriptions for gender.Gender 3 continues with interactions between parents,teachers,peers,and the media.Through our interactions with 4 ,we receive constant messages that reinforce females’ conformity to femininity and males’ to masculinity.For instance,parents may say to their daughter 5 are jumping and laughing too boisterously,“Behave like a girl!”,while they may tell their 6 son,“Be a man.No tears!” This means that individuals are not born with a gender,but are gendered. 7 some people resist gender socialization,the intensity and pervasiveness of social prescriptions for gender ensure most females will become feminine and most males will become masculine. So gender is a social 8 ,not an individual characteristic.Everyone is consciously or unconsciously gendered the 9 he or she 10 .

1)、()

A、less

B、more

C、many

D、much

2)、()

A、for

B、in

C、to

D、as

3)、()

A、politicalization

B、internationalization

C、socialization

D、Globalization

4)、()

A、all others

B、the other

C、any other

D、others

5)、()

A、who

B、whose

C、whom

D、when

6)、()

A、cry

B、crying

C、laugh

D、laughing

7)、()

A、gender

B、sex

C、male

D、female

8)、()

A、Since

B、If

C、Though

D、Although

9)、()

A、innovation

B、form

C、creation

D、reflection

10)、()

A、year

B、minute

C、hour

D、second

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第9题

Who talks more, women or men? The seemingly contradictory evidence is【B1】by the difference
what I call public and private speaking. More men feel comfortable doing public speaking,【B2】more women feel comfortable doing【B3】speaking. Another way of【B4】these differences is by using the【B5】"reporttalk" and "rapport-talk".

For most women, the language of conversations is【B6】a language of rapport: a way of establishing connections and【B7】relationships. Emphasis is【B8】on displaying similarities and【B9】experiences. From childhood, girls criticize peers who try to stand【B10】or appear better than others. People feel their closest connections at home, or in setting where they feel at home—with one or a few people they feel close【B11】and comfortable about—in other words, during private speaking.【B12】even the most public situations can be approached like private speaking.

For most men, talk is primarily a means to【B13】independence and negotiate and【B14】status in a hierarchical social order. This is done by exhibiting knowledge and skill, and by【B15】center stage through verbal performance such as storytelling, joking, or【B16】information. From childhood; men learn to use talking as a way to get and keep【B17】. So they are more【B18】speaking in larger groups made up of people they know less well, in the broadest【B19】"public speaking". But even the most private situations can be approached like public speaking, more like giving a report than【B20】rapport.

【B1】

A.Compromised

B.consolidated

C.reinforced

D.reconciled

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第10题

Many Americans regard the jury system as a concrete expression of crucial democratic value
s, including the principles that all citizens who meet minimal qualifications of age and literacy are equally competent to serve on juries; that jurors should be selected randomly from a representative cross section of the community; that no citizen should be denied the right to serve on a jury on account of race, religion, sex, or national origin; that defendants are entitled to trial by their peers; and that verdicts should represent the conscience of the community and not just the letter of the law. The jury is also said to be the best surviving example of direct rather than representative democracy. In a direct democracy, citizens take turns governing themselves, rather than electing representatives to govern for them.

But as recently as in 1968, jury selection procedures conflicted with these democratic ideals. In some states, for example, jury duty was limited to persons of supposedly superior intelligence, education, and moral character. Although the Supreme Court of the United States had prohibited intentional racial discrimination in jury selection as early as the 1880 case of Strauder v. West Virginia, the practice of selecting so-called elite or blue-ribbon juries provided a convenient way around this and other antidiscrimination laws。

The system also failed to regularly include women on juries until the mid-20th century. Although women first served on state juries in Utah in 1898, it was not until the 1940s that a majority of states made women eligible for jury duty. Even then several states automatically exempted women from jury duty unless they personally asked to have their names included on the jury list. This practice was justified by the claim that women were needed at home, and it kept juries unrepresentative of women through the 1960s.

In 1968, the Congress of the United States passed the Jury Selection and Service Act, ushering in a new era of democratic reforms for the jury. This law abolished special educational requirements for federal jurors and required them to be selected at random from a cross section of the entire community. In the landmark 1975 decision Taylor v. Louisiana, the Supreme Court extended the requirement that juries be representative of all parts of the community to the state level. The Taylor decision also declared sex discrimination in jury selection to be unconstitutional and ordered states to use the same procedures for selecting male and female jurors.

From the principles of the US jury system, we learn that_________.

A.both literate and illiterate people can serve on juries

B.defendants are immune from trial by their peers

C.no age limit should be imposed for jury service

D.judgment should consider the opinion of the public

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