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What can you define for a movement type in Customizing? There are 3 correct answers to this question.()

A.The quantity and value updates for postings with the movement type

B.The number range for material documents that are generated when postings are made with the movement type

C.The movement type short text and the reasons for movement

D.The account modification for transactions and events with active account grouping in the table of account keys

E.The indicator for automatic creation of storage location data in the material master record at the time of the first goods receipt

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更多“What can you define for a move…”相关的问题
第1题
What kind of linguistic phenomenon can you identify in the following dialogue? Define, ana
lize and explain the phenomenon.

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第2题
Why should job-seekers care about a potential employer's corporate culture? Aren't there m
ore important factors to consider, (21) as the job itself, salary and bonuses, and fringe benefits? These factors are indeed important, (22) increasingly career experts are talking about the importance of employee-employer fit in (23) of culture, with the idea that how well the employee "fits" the culture can make the difference (24) job-search success and failure.

What is corporate culture? At its most basic, it's described as the (25) of an organisation, or simply as "how things are done around here." It guides how employees think, act, and feel. Corporate culture is a broad term used to define the unique personality or character of a particular company or organisation, and includes such elements as (26) values and beliefs, corporate ethics, and rules of behavior. Corporate culture can be expressed in the company's mission statement and other communications, in the architectural style. or (27) decor of offices, by what people wear to work, by how people address each other, and in the titles given to various employees.

How does a company's culture (28) you? In many, many ways, for instance, the work environment, including how employees interact, the degree of competition, and whether it's a fun or hostile environment—or something (29) between.

How do you uncover the corporate culture of a potential employer? The truth is that you will never really know the corporate culture until you have worked at the company for a number of months, but you can get close to it through research and observation. Understanding culture is a two-step process, starting with research before the interview and (30) with observation at the interview.

(21)

A.like

B.be

C.such

D.of

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第3题
Ever spent half an hour looking for your car keys? Or walked into a room only to wonder wh
at you walked in there to look for? Or forgotten what day of the week it is? Not to worry. Occasional memory lapses are normal and not, as you might secretly fear, an early sign of Alzheimers disease. Still, its sometimes difficult even for doctors to recognize where normal forgetfulness stops and more serious memory problems begin. A guidebook published recently by the American Medical Association should make the job easier. The text, Diagnosis, Management and Treatment of Dementia : A Practical Guide for Primary Care Physicians, is somewhat technical but contains a lot of useful information. You can order the guide for $ 5 by calling 1-312-464-5563. Most cases of dementia, or prolonged mental confusion are usually caused by Alzheimers disease. But you should also look for memory problems caused by taking one or more medications. The combination of Tagamet and Valium, for example, can cause a build-up of the tranquilizer in the body. So be sure to tell your doctor every medication you or a loved one is taking, including over-the-counter medicine and dietary supplements. Dont overlook depression. Social isolation or the death of friends and family can shatter anyones mental state but it is particularly difficult to bear with advancing age. Even patients with clear-cut dementia and depression are less confused when their depression is treated. Dont give up even if you or a loved one is diagnosed with Alzheimers disease. Although there is no cure yet there is still a lot you can do to ensure the best quality of life. Start by having a frank conversation about treatment options, and appoint someone as a health-care proxy to make sure those plans are carried out. Most patients with early Alzheimers can still make good decisions about their future care. There are several clinical trials currently studying various treatments. An intriguing one will determine whether vitamin E or an Alzheimers drug called Aricept can prevent dementia from developing in people who are at greater risk of developing Alzheimers disease because they have what is called mild cognitive impairment. To learn more about these clinical studies visit www. alzheimers. org/trials. If you are caring for someone with dementia, be sure you also take care of yourself. You might want to check out the website of the U. S. Alzheimers Association(www. alz. org)for more information. Whether you suffer dementia or love someone who does, the condition is difficult enough to cope with without trying to face it alone.

What is the authors purpose of writing this passage?

A.To define what Alzheimer"s disease is.

B.To tell people how to avoid Alzheimer"s disease.

C.To provide information related to a book on dementia.

D.To persuade people to buy medicine for dementia.

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第4题
根据下列材料,请回答下列各题: Passage One Questions 56 to 60 are based on the following pas
sage. Living in a time when an ever-increasing number of news providers push a constant stream of headlines at us every day, people cannot say they do not feel overwhelmed. But what of its the ways we choose to read the news that make us feel overwhelmed? An interesting new study conducted by Avery Holton and Iris Chyi from the University of Texas looks at the factors that contribute to the concept of information overload. They surveyed more than 750 adults on their digital consumption habits and perceptions of information overload. What the findings suggest, Holton said, is that the news platforms a person is using can play a bigger role in making him feel overwhelmed than the sheer number of news sources being consumed. So even if you read The Huffington Post and The New York Times in a day, you may not feel as drowned with news ff you read on your phone instead of on your desktop. The more contained, or even constrained, aplat form. feels, the more it can contribute to people feeling less overwhelmed, Holton said. That may also explain why people have feelings of being overwhelmed by Facebook, which like reading on the web, can be a bottomless hole of stories, videos, and endless links. But it doesnt explain why people in the survey had different feelings towards Twitter, which can also be a stream of links. One possible explanation is whether you define yourself" as a news fan. The survey asked people to report. how much they enjoyed keeping up with the new——people who said they did had less of a perception of information overload. If youre the type of person who wants to follow news during the day, its likely you have an established routine and a set of sites you check regularly. You also may not need as much context around the news. All of that would make Twitter a good source for you. Conversely, if youre more passive about following the news, you might need to make more , of an effort to find the right sources or find background or contextual information, which could lead to feelings of being overloaded, Holton said. "Knowing what youre looking for can decrease overload or perceptions of overload. So can constant engagement," he said. The new study conducted by Avery Holton and Iris Chyi

A.examines how news providers take advantage of headlines

B.studies what can lead to the concept of information overload

C.discusses solutions for people who feel overwhelmed

D.reviews different attitudes to the digital consumption

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第5题
Punctuation makes the written language intelligible. It does the job, on the page, of the
changes of pitch, pace and rhythm which make it possible to understand speech. Unsurprisingly, therefore, a requirement for some knowledge of how to punctuate makes an early appearance in an English curriculum.

The trouble is, that necessary though punctuation is, the task of teaching it to children is considerably more challenging than it might appear. For example, it is possible that to instruct children about writing in sentences by telling them about full stops and capital letters is to court frustration and failure. The notion of the sentence as a statement—a free- standing chunk of information—is something that children come to gradually. As written work grows longer and more complicated, so the perception of sentence increases. Good teachers will, in their teaching of early writing, watch for the child's ability to compose in sentences, and then point out how the use of punctuation will define them more clearly.

So, where, in all this, comes the mechanical definition of a sentence—that it needs a verb, for example? The pragmatic answer is that it comes nowhere at all. Adult writers do not, on the whole, look back at their sentences to make sure they contain verbs. We all surely feel our sentences intuitively. Most of the time, to be sure, they will contain verbs. Occasionally, though, they may not—and where's the harm? What is certain is that you cannot possibly use the grammatical rule as a tool with which to teach a seven-year-old about sentence-writing. The child can be nudged and helped towards writing in sentences, but on the whole he will not do it until he is ready.

The point is that punctuation is an aid which the writer brings into play to illuminate an already formed idea. Before you can learn the punctuation, you have to know what you want to punctuate. Thus you teach capital letters, full stops, question marks and exclamation marks to a child who is already writing sentences, questions and exclamations. The development of a child's writing will always be a step ahead of the punctuation, and to reverse the process in response, say, to the short-term demands of a curriculum is to put later progress at risk.

Which statement can best sum up the main idea of the passage?

A.it is necessary to require the knowledge of punctuation in an English curriculum.

B.Punctuation is very important in written language.

C.Punctuation can make sentences more clear.

D.Punctuation should be taught after the development of children's writing.

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第6题
听力原文:M: I have been tired of working and need a change. So Im just making plans to go
away during Spring Festival. W: Really? Where are you going? M: Im planning to visit Tibet. W: My brother and I had a vacation there last year and we had a great time. M: Did you get into Lhasa? W: Sure. Thats the first stop. No one would miss Lhasa. M: Is the Potala Palace magnificent? W: You bet. And dont forget the Barkhor Street. That place is full of treasures, I mean, all the exotic paintings and handicrafts, and the hand-made jewelries. M: Well, as there is so much there waiting for me, I guess I should stay longer. W: Definitely. M: I heard that the weather there is great. W: Well, that depends on how you define "great". No humidity, but it could be extremely cold in winter. Besides, you do need to be careful about high altitude. M: What should I do about that? W: Oh, just take it easy for a few days. Dont exercise too vigorously. Just do everything gradually. M: Im sure I will be fine. And I will let you know all about my trip when I come back. Questions 9 to 12 are based on the conversation you have just heard. 9. Whats the main purpose of the mans trip? 10. Why does the woman know so much about Tibet? 11. What can be inferred about the weather in Tibet during Spring Festival? 12. According to the woman, what may cause the man the most problems in Tibet?9.

A.Because she lives there.

B.Because her brother lives there.

C.Because she has a close friend there.

D.Because she has been there before.

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第7题
听力原文:F: Our guru on management is a 63 years old Hungarian immigrate who arrived in th
e U. S. in 1956 with neither a word of English, nor a dime in his pocket. Today he runs the company that makes the semiconductor chips that power 90% of the world's personal computers. He is Andrew Grove, chairman, CEO and cofounder of Intel, the San Jose based giant in semiconductor chip manufacturing. Obviously, Intel has managed change dramatically well. That's what Intel is about. Yet change really intimidates people and it's very frightening. What do you think people can do, managers, just regular folks, can do to alleviate some of the scariness of change?

M: I'm not sure you want to eliminate scariness. I really wonder if the tight-rope-walkers can do their job because they are not afraid of heights or whether they can do their jobs because they are afraid of heights and they've just learned how to do their task that much better because they know what it's like, or they have a pretty good idea what it's like to fall. I think fear is your "ally in here, because it is fear that gets you out of comfortable equilibrium, gets you to do difficult tasks". You know, managing in general is not an easy job, so I don't think I wanna eliminate fear. I don't eliminate fear of change, I don't wanna eliminate fear of what's wanna happen if you don't move. It's healthy, it's kind of like, you know, pain is healthy, physical pain, it warns your body that something is wrong and just extinguishing pain doesn't make the problem going away. It just makes your sense that there is a problem going away. So it makes it worse.

F: One of the biggest contributions that you've made down to making the public aware of what's inside a computer is the Intel Inside campaign, which is a very big marketing campaign designed to make the consumer, the end user, allow them to make their choice based on Intel being inside the box. When did you first think that this was important? There are obviously risks to this strategy, there are obviously rewards. How did you analyse the risk-reward in this?

M: Well, you know, it was kind of obvious in a way, if you listened to the language people used to describe their computer at the time—you're talking late 80s. Most of the time, people would refer to their computer by the number, the number of the microprocessor that they had in it. I'm gonna take my trusty old 386 and look it up, or do something on it. They didn't use the name of the manufacturer. They used the model number of the microprocessor, which actually is kind of right, because the fundamental characteristic of that computer is the microprocessor. That defines what software it's gonna run, it's gonna define how fast it runs it, and if it defines how fast it runs it, it defines what you can do with it. So the user experience, what the user can do and how well he can do it, more than anything else depends on the microprocessor, the chip. So we kind of sensed that we really had that identity but we didn't know exactly how to go about it. We wanted to market the product name, but the problem with the product name was we couldn't copyright it, I mean, couldn't trademark the numbers. We had a legal battle on it and we lost. So how do you tell our story, given that the microprocessor gives the characteristic of their computer to, not completely, but more than anything else, to the user. And we started merchandising Intel, the Computer Inside. Not on the devices but in our own commercials. And that kind of worked, we had good results, good focus group results, people understood, yeah, the Intel stuff is the computer

F: So how much now do you think of your success is marketing, and how much of it is technology?

M: Andrew Grove: You know, for a long time I've thought about this and had to answer the questions internally a lot. And the best I can say is describing Intel as a three legged stool, and the three legs are design, technology and manufacturing, and marketi

A.Hungary

B.Britain

C.Portugal

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第8题
Can a computer think? That depends on what you mean by "think". If solving a mathematical
problem is "thinking", then a computer can "think" and do so much faster than a man. Most mathematical problems can be solved quite mechanically by repeating certain straightforward processes over and over again. Even the simple computers of today can be geared for that.

It is frequently said that computers solve problems only because they are "programmed" to do so. They can only do what men have them do. One must remember that human beings also can only do what they are "programmed" to do. Our genes "program" us.

Our "program" is so much more enormously complex, though, that we might like to define "thinking" in terms of the creativity that goes into writing a great play or composing a great symphony, into developing a brilliant scientific theory or a profound moral judgment. In that sense, computers certainly can't think and neither can most humans.

Surely, though, if a computer can be made complex enough, it can be as creative as we. If it could be made as complete as a human brain, it could be the equivalent of a human brain and do whatever a human brain can do.

But how lung will it take to build a computer complex enough to duplicate(复制) the human brain? Perhaps not as long as some think. Long before we approach a computer as complex as our brain, we will perhaps build a computer that is at least complex enough to design another computer more complex than itself. This more complex computer could design one still more complex and so on.

In other words, once we pass a certain critical point, the computers take over and there is a "complexity explosion". In a very short time thereafter, computers may exist that not only duplicate the human brain but far go beyond it.

What information about computers can we get from the passage?

A.They are simple and they operate mechanically.

B.They can solve all kinds of difficult problems.

C.Computers are so advanced that they will control human being someday in the future.

D.They are not as complicated as human brain.

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第9题
Slang(俚语) is one of those things that everybody can recognize and nobody can define(下定

Slang(俚语) is one of those things that everybody can recognize and nobody can define(下定义). Not only is it hard to wrap slang in a definition, it is also hard to distinguish (区别)it from such similar things as colloquialism (口语) , provincialism (方言) , jargon (行话) or trade talk (行业话).

Usually, slang tends to be transient (短暂的). Thus their children often laugh at parents when this older generation uses slang which was considered to be the height of fashion in their own youth. Of course, the slang teenage children use today is very different from that of their parents. Indeed it might ever be some obscure (晦涩的) foreign language as far as the older generation is concerned for it is totally beyond their understanding.

It is often said that a slang term stops to be slang when it is "accepted by the dictionary". This is not really the ease. You will find many slang terms listed in dictionaries are still slang terms. The term stops to be slang when it drives (派生) its respectable synonym (同义词)out of use, or when it gets a meaning that cannot be expressed otherwise.

Such things have happened. The term "hot dog" was once a slang term, but it couldn't be considered so now. No one in America would go up to a counter and order "a sausage sandwich". Similarly "vanity", originally a slang contraction (缩写) of university, has acquired a special meaning which only it expresses and is no longer slang. Jazz, when it means a particular kind of music, is scarcely a slang form, since there is no more respectable word meaning that kind of music.

What can readers know about slang from this article?

A.Nobody has defined and recognized slang, although they are used by a generation after another generation.

B.Slang tends to be transient though they have found their way in dictionaries.

C.Having difficulty in defining slang and telling slang from similar things, people still use slang frequently.

D.Slang can be totally beyond the understanding of the old.

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第10题
What is Franchising?Franchising is one of three business strategies a company may use in c

What is Franchising?

Franchising is one of three business strategies a company may use in capturing market share. The others are company owned units or a combination of company owned and franchised units.

Franchising is a business strategy for getting and keeping customers. It is a marketing system for creating an image in the minds of current and future customers about how the company's products and services can help them. (8) .

Franchising is a network of interdependent business relationships that allows a number of people to share: a brand identification, a successful method of doing business, a proven marketing and distribution system. In short, franchising is a strategic alliance between groups of people who have specific relationships and responsbilities with a common goal to dominate markets, i.e., to get and keep more customers than their competitors.

Other franchisees and company operated units are not your competition. (9) .They and you share the task of establishing the brand as the dominant brand in all markets entered and reinforcing the customers' familiarity with and trust in the brand. (10) .

Other franchisees share with you the responsibility for quality, consistency, convenience, and other factors that define your franchise and insure repeat business for everyone. Increasing the value of the brand name is a shared responsibility of the franchisor and franchisee.

A company franchises because it wants to quickly and in great numbers replicate its successful company operations without significantly increasing its debt. (11) .

In franchising, the operating system becomes identified with the brand or trade name that you license as a franchisee. Each franchise system uses precise methods to provide service and satisfy the customers. (12) .Because customers don't like surprises, this consistency in operations, unit to unit, builds customer loyalty to the brand.

Franchising is successful because we are people of habit and are brand-driven when we purchase goods and services. We trust brands that we see everywhere, every day. We tend to be loyal to a product or servicedelivered to us the same way all the time.

A.So in this respect you are working as a team with others in the system.

B.By documenting these practices, the franchisor institutionalises the buying experience.

C.Because it has been successful in teaching its own employees to operate the business, the company believes it can repeat the same success by teaching others to do it.

D.It is a method for distributing products and services that satisfy customer needs

E.With the help of them, franchisors can easily enjoy the convenience brought by franchising.

F.On the contrary, both of you are partners under the same system.

G.The others are company owned units or a combination of company owned and franchised units.

(8)

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