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A.foundedB.operatedC.funded

A. founded
B. operated
C. funded

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What can we conclude about Kikkoman?

A. The company has made more profit in the USA than in Japan.
B. Its leader is far-sighted and enterprising.
C. It has planned to move to the USA

•Read the information about commercial banks.
•Choose the best word to fill in each gap, from A, B or C.
•For each question 29-40, mark one letter (A, B or C) on your Answer Sheet.
Commercial Banks
(29) the end of May 1995, China has 15 commercial banks, the International Business (30) . Eight of these are (31) nationwide. They are: the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, the Agricultural Bank of China, the Bank of China, the People's Construction Bank of China, the Communications Bank, the CITIC Industrial Bank, the China Everbright Bank and the Huaxia Bank.
There are six (32) shareholding banks. They are: the Merchant's Bank, the Guandong Development Bank, the Shenzhen Development Bank, the Fuzhou Industrial Bank, the Shanghai Pudong Development Bank and the Hainan Development Bank.
Apart (33) these, there is the (34) of the People's Construction Bank of China, the China Investment Bank and two housing deposit banks. They are fully (35) by the People's Bank of China.
To add (36) the 15, the Minsheng Banking Corp was (37) up in January 1996. It is now the (38) non-State bark.
Five foreign barks have so far been (39) to run branch offices in Beijing. Here is a (40) of them:
?Bark of Tokyo Tel 5931640
?Citibank of the United States Tel 5004425
?Hong Kong and Shanghai Barking Corporation Tel 5001121
?Nanyang Commercial Bark Tel 5139026
?Industrial Bank of Japan Tel 595472831.
(29)

A. In
By
C. At

•Look at questions 1-5.
•In each case, which sentence is correct?
•For each question, mark one letter (A, B or C) on your Answer Sheet.

A. B Brand Heaters were first put on the market in 200and now it has the biggest volume of sales.
B. D Brand Freezers were introduced to the market hate but it has the biggest volume of sales.
C. Each product has two brands and with the same volume of sales.

To write about human aggression is a difficult task because the term is used in so many different senses. Aggression is one of those words which every one knows, but which is nevertheless hard to define. As psychologists use it, it covers a very wide range of human behavior. The red-faced infant squalling for the bottle is being aggressive; and so is the judge who awards a thirty-year sentence for robbery. The guard in a concentration camp who tortures his helpless victim is obviously acting aggressively. Less manifestly, but no less certainly, so is the neglected wife who threatens or attempts suicide in order to regain her husband's affection. When a word becomes so diffusely applied that it is used both of the competitive striving of a footballer and also of the bloody violence of a murderer, it ought either to be dropped or else more closely defined. Aggression is a combined term which is fairly bursting at its junctions. Yet until we can more clearly designate and comprehend the various aspects of human behavior. which are subsumed under this head, we cannot discard the concept.
One difficulty is that there is no clear dividing line between those forms of aggression which we all deplore and those which we must not disown if we are to survive. When a child rebels against authority it is being aggressive; but it is also manifesting a drive towards independence which is a necessary and valuable part of growing up. The desire for power has, in extreme form, disastrous aspects which we all acknowledged but the drive to conquer difficulties, or to gain mastery over the external world underlies the greatest of human achievements. Some writers define aggression as "that response which follows frustration", or as "an act whose goal- response is injury to an organism (or organism surrogate)". In the author's view these definitions impose limits upon the concept of aggression which are not in accord with the underlying facts of human nature which the word is attempting to express. It is worth noticing, for instance, that the words we use to describe intellectual effort are aggressive words. We attack problems, or get our teeth into them. We master a subject when we have struggled with and overcome its difficulties. We sharpen our wits, hoping that our mind will develop a keen edge in order that we may better divide a problem into its component parts. Although intellectual tasks are often frustrating, to argue that all intellectual effort is the result of frustration is to impose too negative a coloring upon the positive impulse to comprehend and master the external world.
In the author's view, man is unique in ______.

A. his savage treatment of his own kind
B. enjoying watching disgusting acts of violence
C. gaining pleasure from brutally treating animals.
D. his strong impulse to tackle intellectual problems

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