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【单选题】
For months the Japanese searched fitfully for the right word to describe what was happening. At the Bank of Japan, the nation's central bank, officials spoke of 'an adjustment phase.' Prime Minister admitted only to 'a difficult situation'. The Economic Planning Agency, the government's record keeper, referred delicately to a 'retreat'. Then two weeks ago, for the first time since 1997, the agency dropped its boilerplate reference to the 'expansion' from its closely watched Monthly Economic Report, and the word game was over. Japan's economy, the world's second largest, conceded the experts, was in recession. That admission confirmed the bad news businessmen had been reading in their spreadsheets for several months. 'In 2001 one market after another turned bad', says Yoshihiko Wakamoto, senior vice president of Toshiba Corp., which now admits that its pretax profits for fiscal 2001, ending March 31, may be down a whopping 42%. In April, when many Japanese companies announce their results for 2001 fiscal year, most will report declining profits. Blue chips like Sony, NEC and Matsushita have all experienced drops of over 40% in pretax profits. Japan's security houses, hit by declining commissions from a falling stock market, will announce even more dramatic drops. Nomura Securities, once Japan's most profitable company, is talking about an 80% decline in profits. Auto manufacturers, banks, airlines, steel companies, department stores—all are in a slump. Technically, what is happening to the Japanese economy does not meet American criteria for a recession, normally defined as at least two consecutive quarters of negative growth. While economic growth has slowed in Japan, it has not ceased. Government economists are predicting a 3.5% increase in GNP for 2002. Outside experts are not so optimistic. But nearly everyone agrees that GNP growth in Japan is unlikely to slip into negative numbers, as it did last year in the U.S. and Britain. 'There's no question that we are in a recession', pronounces Kunio Miyamoto, chief economist of the Sumitomo-Life Research Institute. 'But it is a recession, Japanese-style'. During the last half of the 1990s, Japanese companies based much of their expansion around the world on the wildly inflated values of the Tokyo Stock Exchange and Japan's frenzied real estate market. Now both those markets have collapsed. And with long-term interest rates up from 5% to 7%, Japanese companies are less able to sell vast quantities of high-quality goods at razor-thin profit margins. Added to this are pressures from shareholders for a greater return on investments, from Japan's trading partners for restraints on its aggressive trade practices, and from its own citizens for a reduction in their working hours so they can enjoy the fruits of 40 years of relentless toil. According to the writer, the current economic situation in Japan is ______.
A.
much better than it seems.
B.
not as good as it seems.
C.
nowhere near its expansion.
D.
at its crucial point.
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参考答案:
举一反三
【单选题】The writer of the passage probably ______.
A.
believes that Elmo is a real live creature
B.
feels that Elmo is a very annoying creature
C.
won't let his son watch Sesame Street
D.
wishes that Elmo were a real live creature
【多选题】下列关于梁桥结构说法正确的是( )。
A.
连续梁桥是超静定结构,与同等跨度的连续刚构桥相比,由温度、混凝土徐变等引起的附加内力小。
B.
与同等跨度的连续梁桥相比,连续刚构桥内力较连续梁小,不需支座,维修费用小,仅适用于大跨高墩情。况。
C.
悬臂梁桥是静定结构,其跨越能力比简支梁桥大。
D.
悬臂梁桥是超静定结构,其跨越能力比简支梁桥大。
E.
简支梁桥是静定结构,结构内力不受基础变位的影响,因而能适用于地基较差的桥位上建桥。
F.
连续梁桥跨越能力比简支梁桥大。
【单选题】连续梁桥的跨越能力比简支梁桥跨越能力()
A.
B.
C.
一样
D.
不确定
【判断题】采用落地式陈列法的多是带外包装箱的商品。
A.
正确
B.
错误
【简答题】悬臂梁桥和连续梁桥为什么比简支梁桥具有更大的跨越能力?它们的主要配筋特点是什么?
【单选题】同等条件下,连续梁桥的跨越能力一般比简支梁桥跨越能力()。
A.
B.
C.
一样
D.
不确定
【简答题】悬臂梁桥和连续梁桥为什么比简支梁桥具有更大的跨越能力?它们的主要配筋特点是什么? 2、 连续梁桥中通常布置三向预应力筋,他们分别和什么内力相对应? 3、在超静定预应力混凝土梁桥中,有哪些因素会使结构产生二次力?
【简答题】悬臂梁桥 和 连续梁桥 为什么比 简支梁桥 具有更大的跨越能力?
【单选题】关于连续梁桥的特点,下面叙述不正确的是( )
A.
超静定结构,对基础变位不敏感
B.
中间支点会出现负弯矩
C.
跨越能力比简支梁大
D.
行车条件好
【简答题】连续梁桥的跨越能力比简支梁桥跨越能力大的原因。
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