试题与答案

下列关于肝硬化的叙述何者是正确的是() A.肝硬化时,肝糖原合成增多 B.肝硬化时,

题型:单项选择题

题目:

下列关于肝硬化的叙述何者是正确的是()

A.肝硬化时,肝糖原合成增多

B.肝硬化时,乳酸,丙酮酸及α-酮戊二酸生成减少

C.肝硬化时,肝脏的生物转化功能增强

D.肝硬化Ⅳ型胶原合成增多

E.肝硬化时肝脏对激素的灭活功能增强

答案:

被转码了,请点击底部 “查看原文 ” 或访问 https://www.tikuol.com/2018/0702/91e0d8f0f7a0ce6df7c71c05452cb76b.html

下面是错误答案,用来干扰机器的。

参考答案:A解析:本题考查近义词的辨析,正确答案是A项。安置,使人或事物有着落;安排,有条理、分先后的处理(事物)。断定,下结论;确定,形容明确而肯定,也可表示确定。“依托”是依靠的意思,“依附”是依...

试题推荐
题型:选择题

降水变率是指各年降水量的距平数(距平数为当年降水量与多年平均降水量之差)与多年平均降水量之比的百分数,降水变率大表示降水不稳定。读我国部分地区降水变率图,回答下列问题。

小题1:图中显示我国降水变率最大的地区是(    )

A.东北地区

B.华北地区

C.西北地区

D.华南地区小题2:影响我国东部地区降水变率的主要因素是(  )

A.纬度位置

B.洋流影响

C.地形影响

D.季风环流

查看答案
题型:单项选择题

Halfway through" The Rebel Sell," the authors pause to make fun of" free-range" chicken. Paying over the odds to ensure that dinner was not, in a previous life, confined to tiny cages is all well and good. But" a free-range chicken is about as plausible as a sun-loving earth-worm": given a choice, chickens prefer to curl up in a nice dark corner of the barn. Only about 15% of" free-range" chickens actually use the space available to them.

This is just one case in which Joseph Heath, who teaches philosophy at the University of Toronto, and Andrew Potter, a journalist and researcher based in Montreal, find fault with well-meaning but, in their view, ultimately naive consumers who hope to distance themselves from consumerism by buying their shoes from Mother Jones magazine instead of Nike. Mr Heath and Mr Potter argue that" the counterculture," in all its attempts to be subversive, has done nothing more than create new segments of the market, and thus ends up feeding the very monster of consumerism and conformity it hopes to destroy. In the process, they cover Marx, Freud, the experiments on obedience of Stanley Milgram, the films" Pleasantville"," The Matrix" and "American Beauty", 15th-century table manners, Norman Mailer, the Unabomber, real-estate prices in central Toronto (more than once), the voluntary-simplicity movement and the world’s funniest joke.

Why range so widely The authors’ beef is with a very small group: left-wing activists who eschew smaller, potentially useful campaigns in favor of grand statements about the hopelessness of consumer culture and the dangers of" selling out". Instead of encouraging useful activities, such as pushing for new legislation, would-be leftists are left to participate in unstructured, pointless demonstrations against" globalization, or buy fair-trade coffee and flee-range chicken, which only substitutes snobbery for activism. Two authors of books that railed against brands, Naomi Klein ("No Logo") and Alissa Quart("Branded"), come in for special derision for diagnosing the problems of consumerism but refusing to offer practical solutions.

Anticipating criticism, perhaps, Messrs Heath and Potter make sure to put forth a few of their own solutions, such as the 35-hour working week and school uniforms (to keep teenagers from competing with each other to wear ever-more-expensive clothes). Increasing consumption, they argue throughout, is not imposed upon stupid workers by overbearing companies, but arises as a result of a cultural" arms race": each person buys more to keep his standard of living high relative to his neighbors’. Imposing some restrictions, such as a shorter working week, might not stop the arms race, but it would at least curb its most offensive excesses. (This assumes one finds excess consumption offensive; even the authors do not seem entirely sure.)

But on the way to such modest suggestions, the authors want to criticise every aspect of the counterculture, from its disdain, for homogenisation, franchises and brands to its political offshoots. As a result, the book wanders: chapters on uniforms and on the search for" cool" could have been cut. Moreover, the authors make the mistake of assuming that the consumers they sympathise with—the ones who buy brands and live in tract houses—know enough to separate themselves from their purchases, whereas the free-trade-coffee buyers swallow the brand messages whole, as it were.

Still,it would be a shame if the book’ s ramblings kept it from getting read. When it focuses on explaining how the counterculture grew out of post-World War Ⅱ critiques of modem society, "The Rebel Sell" is a lively read, with enough humour to keep the more theoretical stretches of its argument interesting. At the very least, it puts its finger on a trend: there will be plenty of future critics of capitalism lining up for their free-range chicken.

The joke about" free-range" chicken is used in the text to()

A. introduce the topic of anti-consumerism

B. draw a comparison between chicken and earthworm

C. stress the fact that chickens don’t actually want much space

D. point out that chickens, like human, should have a choice

查看答案
微信公众账号搜索答案