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【单选题】
The English language exists in a condition of everlasting danger, its American branch most particularly, assaulted as it is from all sides by those who would reduce it to puzzling and obscure jargon, pop-psychological nonsense and vague beautified words, but it is not without its defenders. Ken Smith, author of Junk English, is the leading figure. He begins with a brief and clear declaration: 'Junk English is much more than loose and casual grammar. It is a signal of human weaknesses and cultural license: abandoning the language of the educated yet giving birth to its own self-glorifying words and phrases, favoring appearance over substance, broadness over precision, and loudness above all. It is sometimes innocent, sometimes lazy, sometimes well intended, but most often it is a trick we play on ourselves to make the unremarkable seem important. Its scope has been widened by politicians, business executives, and the PR and advertising industries in their employ, who use it to spread fog before facts they would rather keep hidden. The result is... a world of humbug in which the more we read and hear, the less we know.' Smith is, of course, saying something not true—it is difficult to imagine that Junk English will be noticed, much less read, by those who most could profit from it—but it is an instructive and entertaining instructions and explanation all the same. He tries his hands at all the right places—jargon, cliches, euphemisms, and exaggeration—but he doesn't swing blindly. 'Although jargon often sounds ugly to outsiders, it speeds communication within the community that uses it'—and that 'clich6s, though popular objects of scorn, are useful when they most compactly express an idea deliberate avoidance of an appropriate cliche sometimes produces even worse writing.' In other words, Smith may be passionate but he's also sensible. In a section about 'free-for-all verbs,' for example, he acknowledges that 'There is no law against inventing one's own verbs' before citing a few funny instances of what happens when 'Things get a little out of hand,' i.e. 'We're efforting to work this out' or 'She tried to guilt him into returning the money.' In the end, though, being sensible about language is in essence trying to insist that words mean what they properly mean and are used accordingly. Thus, for example, Smith insists that 'dialogue' and 'discussion' are not synonyms and should not be used interchangeably that 'complimentary' does not mean 'free' that 'experience' does not mean 'feel' that 'facilitate' does not mean 'ease' that 'generate' does not mean 'produce' that 'lifestyle' does not mean 'life'. Smith obviously has spent a lot of time making notes about the ways in which we min and abuse our language, with results that are impressive in their thoroughness and depressing in their going to far. Occasionally he overlooks the obvious—among euphemisms he mentions 'customer care representative' but not 'courtesy call,' and among the previously mentioned palsy-walsy language he inexplicably overlooks 'Your call is important to us'—but then, as he says at the outset, he intended to write a short book and as a result had to leave out many misdeeds. The ones he includes more than do the job. Which of the following best describes junk English?
A.
Overblown.
B.
Complicated.
C.
Vulgar.
D.
Unfashionable, outdated.
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举一反三
【单选题】行政组织理论的核心是( )
A.
经营的六项职能
B.
有效管理的原则
C.
理想的行政组织形式
D.
责权一致原则
【判断题】企业文化所重视的不仅仅是个人,而是由个人组成的群体。()
A.
正确
B.
错误
【简答题】long _ump
【单选题】官僚(行政)组织理论的核心是
A.
通过职位进行管理
B.
通过个人地位进行管理
C.
通过世袭地位进行管理
D.
通过影响力进行管理
【简答题】光滑变化是指在变半径过渡是()为光滑的曲线
【判断题】19世纪60年代,第一国际在英国成立。
A.
正确
B.
错误
【单选题】符合 t 检验条件的计量资料如果采用秩和检验,不拒绝 H 0 时
A.
Ⅰ类错误增大
B.
Ⅱ类错误增大
C.
Ⅰ类错误减小
D.
Ⅱ类错误减小
E.
两类错误都增大
【判断题】OD小区内的出行次数不超过全区域内出行总数的50% 。
A.
正确
B.
错误
【单选题】( ),第一国际在英国成立。
A.
1867年
B.
1864年
C.
1883年
D.
1895年
【单选题】整理和分析社区护理资料中,错误的做法是
A.
得到的资料与相同条件的其他社区资料进行比较
B.
资料量少时可用率来比较
C.
分析各种资料的相关性
D.
纵向比较各年资料的变化
E.
文字资料要进行含义的解释与分析
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