2019-12-31 14:30:49 | 来源:网络及考生回忆
2019年中国工商银行春季招聘考试试题(精选)
1、( )change prices or strategy immediately, the shop owner is playing the waiting game.
A、Rather than
B、Apart from
C、More than
D、Far from
2、I have a bilateral( )with the grocery store, where I buy lots of food and they buy nothing from me.
A、deficit
B、surplus
C、risk
D、absence
3、With companies still showing signs of reluctance to raise wages too much, the competition for workers is( )with lavish benefits.
A、playing out
B、playing up
C、playing through
D、playing on
4、In a trade conflict more people will pay higher prices and more people will lose jobs because of these tariffs( )will be gained.
A、than
B、that
C、what
D、as
5、Fair Trade is now to be called Fool Trade if it is not( ).
A、marketable
B、reciprocal
C、transferable
D、mature
6、Nuclear power plants in Europe have been forced to( )electricity production because of warmer-than-usual seawater.
A、cut in
B、cut off
C、cut out
D、cut back
7、What if there had been a way to avoid this trade war well before it started, a strategy that( )the conditions that led to the trade war before they became problematic.
A、would address
B、had addressed
C、would have addressed
D、addressed
8、What drives us is our mission to accelerate the world’s transition to sustainable, clean energy, but we will never achieve that mission( )we eventually demonstrate that we can be sustainably profitable.
A、until
B、unless
C、if
D、through
9、( )the ruling came from the Supreme Court, a coalition of public sector unions in California was ready with a response.
A、If
B、Once
C、Since
D、Unless
10、If we( )the same things as we did in the past, we weren’t going to be successful in hiring the folks we needed.
A、were to do
B、could do
C、had done
D、did
材料
Passage 1
When researchers first discovered a link in the late 1990s between childhood adversity and chronic health problem later in life, the real revelation was how common those experiences were across all socioeconomic groups. But the first major study to focus on adverse childhood experiences (ACES) was limited to a single health care system in San Diego. A study published in JAMA Pediatrics——the largest nationally representative study to date on ACES——confirms that these experiences are universal, yet highlights some disparities among socioeconomic groups. The current study finds three out of five adults across the U.S. had at least one adverse experience in their childhood, such as divorce, a parent’s death, physical or emotional abuse, or a family member’s incarceration or substance abuse problem. A quarter of adults have at least three such experiences in childhood, which——according to other research——increase their risk for most common chronic diseases, from heart disease and cancer to depression and substance abuse.
“This is the first study of this kind that allows us to talk about adverse childhood experience as a public health problem in the same way we talk about obesity or hypertension or any other highly prevalent population risk factor” says Adam Schickedanz, an assistant professor of pediatrics at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, who was not involved in the research. “Up until now, we haven’t really had a study that takes a national look.”
The study researchers, led by Centers for Disease Control and Prevention researcher Melissa T. Merrick, analyzed data from 214,157 adults in 23 states recently. The participants answered 11 questions about whether they’d experienced what have now become well recognized as ACES: parental separation or divorce, child abuse (physical, emotional and sexual) , domestic violence and living with someone who has been incarcerated or has a mental illness or a substance use disorder. Nearly 62 percent of respondents had at least one ACE and a quarter reported three or more. The remaining respondents had at least two ACES, including 16 percent with four or more such experiences. Those identifying as black or Latino and those with less than a high school education or an annual income below $15,000 were more likely to have more ACES. Women, younger adults, unemployed people and those unable to work also tended to have more ACES. But Schickedant cautions that, while the disparities are real, it’s important to recognize how common these experiences are among all people, including white and middle class families. “This study shows that ACEs affect people from all walks of life everywhere,” he says.
This new study suggests that a need to target prevention resources where they can help most, says Jack Shonkoff, a professor of child health and development at the Harvard T. H. Chan School of Public Health. This requires identifying what makes some people more susceptible than others to the effects of adversity. “Nobody is immune to adverse experiences in childhood but for some population groups, they’re a larger burden of childhood adversity than others.” he says.
11、 What is found by the first major study on adverse childhood experience (ACES)( ).
A、ACES are common across all socioeconomic groups
B、There are some disparities for some population groups
C、ACES are not directly related to chronic health problems
D、Children are more vulnerable to adverse experiences than adults
12、How many adults have at least one ACES according the current study( ).
A、About16%
B、About30%
C、About62%
D、About75%
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