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[主观题]

The exploration of international business is an exciting, important, and necessary task.

International business is exciting because it combines the science and the art of business and many【M1】______ other disciplines, such as economics, anthropology, geography, history, language, jurisprudence, statistics, and demography. International business is important and necessary because economic isolationism has become possible.【M2】______ Failure to become a part of the global market assure a nation of【M3】______ declining economic influence and a deteriorated standard of living for its citizens. Successful participation to international business,【M4】______ however, holds the promise of improving quality of life and a better【M5】______ society, even leading, some believe, on a more peaceful world.【M6】______ International business offers companies new markets. Since the 1950s, growth of international trade and investment has been substantially larger than the growth of domestic economies. International business, however, presents more opportunities for expansion, growth, and【M7】______ income than does domestic business lonely. International business【M8】______ causes the flow of ideas, services, and capital across the world. As a result, innovations can be developed and disseminated more rapidly, human capital can be used better, and financing can take place more quickly. International business also offers consumers with new choices.【M9】______ It can permit the acquisition of a wider variety of products, both in terms of quantity and quality, and do so at prices what are reduced【M10】______ through international competition. Therefore, both as an opportunity and a challenge, international business is important to countries, companies, and individuals.

【M1】

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更多“The exploration of international business is an exciting, important, and necessary task.”相关的问题

第1题

听力:What do we learn about the speakers?

M: Do you remember the wonderful film on space exploration we watched together last month?

W: Sure. It's actually the most impressive one I've seen on that topic.

Q: What do we learn about the speakers?

A.They admire the courage of space explorers.

B.They enjoyed the movie on space exploration.

C.They were going to watch a wonderful movie.

D.They like doing scientific exploration very much.

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第2题

2015年12月英语四级考试卷二听力第1题答案

Question 1

- M: Do you remember the wonderful film on space exploration we watched together last month?

- W: Sure。 It’s actually the most impressive one I’ve seen on that topic。

Q:What do we learn about the speakers?

A.They admire the courage of space explorers.

B.They enjoyed the movie on space exploration.

C.They were going to watch a wonderful movie.

D.They like doing scientific exploration very much.

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第3题

听力原文: After arriving in China to study in 1979, Clinton Dines has since lived through
the country's whole reform. period and has grown from a young lover of Chinese history to an accomplished businessman. He participated in and successfully managed several of the first joint ventures in China, and founded one of the earliest rock bands in the country. Since 1988 he has worked with the Chinese operation of Australia's BHP, one of the world's largest resource company, selling rocks, that is, mineral products, to China. Fluent in Chinese and familiar with the latest jargon, he talks to CIB about his experiences from rock bands to rocks, and the knack for success in China.

How were you able to come to China in 1979 and study?

I earned my degree in economics and Chinese studies. At the end of university, 12 students were' selected to do a postgraduate program in China in 1979. I think I was chosen because I have a good wuchanjieji (proletariat) class background. I was sent to Nanjing Normal College.

Looking back, what does that experience mean to you?

I stayed for nearly 18 months in Nanjing. I find the experience valuable for me. When I sit with a Chinese official or a partner who is 50 years old, I understand what his life was like because I was there too. I feel like I can quickly get to a point where we feel like we have something in common. To me it's the biggest advantage.

So does it feel like you have never left China?

Yes. After studying in Nanjing, I decided to stay in Asia and went to Taiwan for a while to formalize learning Chinese. I came back to the Chinese mainland hi 1980 and have been involved in negotiations and the founding and running of several of the country's first joint ventures (JVs), including two in the transportation industry.

JVs are not easy. Why do you seem to have the knack for successful JVs?

I'm lucky. I had no work experience in Australia, all my work experience is in China. The way I work leans towards the Chinese way. I tend to focus on relationships and try to build up a consensus on what we want to do.

You had a rock band, one of the earliest in China. Tell us about that?

I always played guitar for fun. In the second half of 1989, we didn't have much business, so my friends and I made a band consisting of the five of us. We played part-time in the bars. The biggest concert was during our tour of Mongolia where there were about 7,000 people in the audience. We were on CNN and things like that. The band lasted for three years and I haven't played much in recent years as I'm busier and have a family.

From rock band to rocks -- the corner stone of BHP Billiton is rocks, in its original sense. What's so exciting about the rock business?

Look around and you'll see that everything is either grown or mined. I like being in an industry that's essential and really creates wealth and adds value.

What is your business in China?

The bulk of our business-in China is sales and we don't have too much investment at the moment. We sell iron ore, aluminum, steel and other products.. BHP was the participant in the first offshore oil contract signed in 1979. Offshore oil exploration in China cost us about US$200 million between 1983 and 1996. We were also the first major foreign company to invest in mineral exploration in China. From 1991 to 2000 we had five joint venture exploration companies. Also during that period we invested about US$23 million into two wholly owned steel fabrication factories.

Has your offshore and mineral exploration been worthwhile?

We did a lot of oil exploration, but didn't find anything. Our five exploration IVs also didn't come up with anything. That's the nature of the mineral business and we accept that. Typically in our business we might have 1,000 exploration projects for one commercial

A.helped him to get his Master's degree.

B.helped him to gain a better understanding of China and its people.

C.made his life more interesting.

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第4题

Should the U.S. halt human space flight? The Columbia accident has revived the debate

Should the U.S. halt human space flight?

The Columbia accident has revived the debate on whether the rewards of human space exploration are worth the risks.

No. I was a teacher when men first landed on the moon in 1969, and I remember how it moved my students and this country.___________(46) And we haven't ventured outward since then. That's 30 years too long! America's human space-flight program is adrift, with no clear vision or goals beyond the completion of the International Space Station.

I want NASA to establish a phased series of goals over the next 20 years, including human visits to asteroids that cross the Earth's orbit, establishing a research and living facility for humans on the moon, and human expeditions to the surface of Mars and its moons.___________(47)

An astronaut is today's Christopher Columbus, who sailed into the unknown and discovered the Americas. The knowledge we gain from having actual people exploring can never be replaced by robots.___________ (48) Robots are useful, but humans can do things that robots can't.

The real obstacle we face in overcoming the drift in the nation's human space-flight program is not technological and it's not financial.___________ (49)The lesson from the Columbia accident is not that humans don't belong in space.___________ (50)

A.Instead, we should honor the memory of the lost astronauts by pushing our exploration of space future.

B.Astronauts are key to this expanded exploration.

C.It's the lack of commitment to get started.

D.Until then, we should stop risking people's lives by sending them into space.

E.It is now more than 30 year since the last American left the surface of the moon and returned to Earth.

F.Our ability to send humans into space and have them return gives us amazing information about ourselves and our universe.

第 46 题 请选择(46)处的最佳答案.

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第5题

听力原文: When my interest shifted from space to the sea, I never expected it would cause
such confusion among my friends, yet I can understand their feelings. As I have been writing and talking about space flight for the best part of 20 years, a sudden switch of interest to the depth of the sea does seem peculiar. To explain, I'd like to share my reasons behind this unusual change of mind. The first excuse I give is an economic one. Underwater exploration is so much cheaper than space flight. The first round-trip ticket to the moon is going to cost at least 10 billion dollars if you include research and development. By the end of this century, the cost will be down to a few million. On the other hand, the diving suit and a set of basic tools needed for skin-diving can be bought for 20 dollars. My second argument is more philosophical. The ocean, surprisingly enough, has many things in common with space. In their different ways, both sea and space are equally hostile. If we wish to survive in either for any length of time, we need to have mechanical aids. The diving suit helped the design of the space suit. The feelings and the emotions of a man beneath the sea will be much like those of a man beyond the atmosphere.

How did the speaker's friends respond to his change of interest?

A.They wanted to follow his example.

B.They fully supported his undertaking.

C.They were puzzled by his decision.

D.They were afraid he wasn't fully prepared.

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第6题

听力原文:When my interest shifted from space to the sea, I never expected it would cause s

听力原文: When my interest shifted from space to the sea, I never expected it would cause such confusion among my friends, yet I can understand their feelings (32) . As I have been writing and talking about space flight for the best part of 20 years, a sudden switch of interest to the depth of the sea does seem peculiar. To explain, I'd like to share my reasons behind this unusual change of mind (35) . The first excuse I give is on economic one. Underwater exploration is so much cheaper than space flight (33) . The first round-trip ticket to the moon is going to cost at least 10 billion dollars if you include research and development. By the end of this century, the cost will be down to a few million. on the other hand, the diving suit and a set of basic tools needed for skin-diving can be bought for 20 dollars. My second argument is more philosophical. The ocean, surprisingly enough, has many things in common with space. In theft different ways, both sea and space are equally hostile. If we wish to survive in either for any length of time, we need to have mechanical aids (34) . The diving suit helped the design of the space suit. The feelings and the emotions of a man beneath the sea will be much like those of a man beyond the atmosphere.

(33)

A.They wanted to follow his example.

B.They full supported his undertaking.

C.They were puzzled by his decision.

D.They were afraid he wasn't full prepared.

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第7题

"Lost City" Explored Using High-Speed NetworksUndersea exploration is now as close as the

"Lost City" Explored Using High-Speed Networks

Undersea exploration is now as close as the nearest computer. "Telepresence" (远程呈现) technology lets scientists -- and the public -- join expeditions without leaving dry land.

A just completed expedition to the Lost City, an unusual undersea vent formation in the Atlantic Ocean, showcased the technology. The project used a network of satellites and high-speed Internet access to connect participants across many miles of land and sea.

During the expedition undersea explorer Robert Ballard and the crew aboard the National Ocean ic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) research ship Ronald H. Brown were anchored above the Lost City site. Meanwhile co-chief scientist Debbie Kelley and her colleagues were some 4,500 miles (7,250 kilometers) away on the University of Washington campus in Seattle.

At launch on July 17 Ballard described the project as a "precedent-setting ocean expedition that raises the bar on use of communications technology."

"Normally on a deep-ocean expedition, I talk with the mission's chief scientist across a table on the research vessel," he said. "In this case we talk across the planet."

Ballard's Institute for Exploration (IFE) in Mystic, Connecticut, supplied its veteran robotic vehicles, Hercules and Argus, to do the diving. The robots sent high-resolution images taken some 2,100 feet (700 meters) below the surface to the Ronald H. Brown.

The images were transferred via satellite from the ship to receivers at the University of Rhode Island in Kingston. They were then sent across country to the team at the University of Washington.

All told, data from the Lost City travelled nearly 5,000 miles (8,050 kilometers) in less than two seconds. Technology Boosts "Crew" Size, Expertise

Real-time deep-sea images have been beamed around the globe before. Ballard, who discovered the undersea wreck of the Titanic in 1985 ,returned to the site in 2004 and sent images to scientists at the University of Rhode Island.

But this time the lead scicentists directing the expedition's research operations joined the dive virtually.

"We had a team of engineers and pilots who controlled the remotely operated vehicles (ROVs) and were taking instructions at all times from the University of Washington (science team)," Dwight Coleman said. Coleman is a professor of marine science at the University of Rhode Island and a colleague of Ballard's at IFE.

Only so many people can live aboard a research ship. And although a large vessel may accommodate a science party of 30, half must be engineers who maintain and operate the ROVs.

The number of researchers is thus limited by ship space, as well as by scheduling, budgets, and other real-world concerns. Telepresence provides an intriguing(令人好奇的) solution.

"When you're doing exploration, you're never sure what expertise you'll need, because you're never sure what you'll find," Coleman said. "This technology provides the capability to network in experts on a specific subject from around the world. You can invite everybody aboard the ship."

The technology seems to have a bright future. NOAA is converting a former U. S. Navy vessel, the U. S. N. S. Capable, into a research vessel dubbed the Okeanos Explorer (okeanos is the ancient Greek term for "ocean" ). The ship will be specially outfitted for future telepresence missions.

Of course, telepresence technology isn't exactly like being at sea.

In her online expedition log, co-chief scientist Deborah Kelley described the nearly surreal scene as Hercules first touched bottom. Kelley and her science team watched the action via cameras carried by. Argus, hovering some 100 feet (30 meters) above the seafloor.

"This was a view like no other I ha

A.Y

B.N

C.NG

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第8题

It would be interesting to discover how many young people go to university without any clear idea of
what they are going to do afterwards. (1)If one considers the enormous variety of courses offered, it is not hard to see how difficult it is for a student to select the course most suited to his interests and abilities.(2)If a student goes to university to acquire a broader perspective of life, to enlarge his ideas and to learn to think for himself, he will undoubtedly benefit.(3)Schools often have too restricting an atmosphere, with its timetables and disciplines, to allow him much time for independent assessment of the work he is asked to do.(4)Most students would, I believe, profit by a year or so's exploration of different academic studies, especially those "all-rounders" with no particular interest.They should have longer time to decide in what subject they want to take their degrees, so that in later life, they do not look back and say, "I should like to have been an archaeologist. If I hadn't taken a degree in Modem languages, I shouldn't have been up as an interpreter, but it's too late now. I couldn't go back and begin all over again."

(5)There is, of course, another side to the question of how to make the best use of one's time at university.(6)This is the case of the student who excels in a particular branch of learning.(7)He is immediately accepted by the university of his choice, and spends his three or four years becoming a specialist, emerging with a first-class Honour Degree and very little knowledge of what the rest of the world is all about.(8)It therefore becomes more and more important that, if students are not to waste their opportunities, there will have to be much more detailed information about courses and more advice.Only in this way can we be sure that we are not to have, on the one hand, a band of specialists ignorant of anything outside of their own subject, and on the other hand, an ever increasing number of graduates qualified in subject for which there is little or no demand in the working world.

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第9题

American culture has not been immune to cultural influences from outside. The idea of demo
cracy came from the ancient Greeks; the Industrial Revolution started in England; jazz and rock music preserve African rhythms—to pick a few examples. Indeed, many of the things we think of as "100 percent American" came from other cultures.

Still, most of the changes in American culture over the last century have come from within, as the result of inventions and discoveries. And change has been dramatic. One hundred years ago the United States was largely a nation of farmers. Many of the things we take for granted today—a high school education, for example, or indoor plumbing—were luxuries then. The moon was a light for lovers, not a site for scientific exploration; genetic engineering (基因工程) was not even a subject for science fiction, much less for laboratory research and corporate investments. The decades following the Second World War, in particular, were characterized by spectacular scientific and technological advances, national self-confidence, optimism, and (for many Americans) prosperity. The American economy was the strongest in the world: more goods were produced and sold, more people were working, and the standard of living was higher than ever before. Polls (民意调查) taken in the 1950s and 1960s show that the average American was preoccupied with the questions "will I make a good living?" "Will I be successful?" and "Will I raise successful, happy children?" Success was defined in terms of maintaining a stable family and "keeping up with the Jones". Most Americans believed that if they played by the rules—if they work hard and did what was expected, if they sacrificed their own needs to those of their family and their employer—they would be rewarded with an ever-increasing standard of living, a devoted spouse, and decent children. An expensive car, a suburban home, and children in college were tangible (可触知的) signs that hard work and self-sacrifice paid off.

Which statement is NOT true according to the passage?

A.There is no 100 percent American culture.

B.American culture has never be influenced by other cultures.

C.America borrowed the idea of democracy from the ancient Greeks.

D.Inventions and discoveries caused the changes within American culture.

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第10题

[A] exposure to [B] exploration of [C] formation of [D] compensation for

[A] exposure to

[B] exploration of

[C] formation of

[D] compensation for

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第11题

The most important preparation for the North Pole exploration is ______.A.a fat layer on y

The most important preparation for the North Pole exploration is ______.

A.a fat layer on your own body

B.a heavy-duty coat

C.the best travel gear

D.dog sledding

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