MBA联考辅导英语阅读理解之(长难句过关)--(二) 非谓语结构
二) 非谓结构 1. people looking back 5 or 10 years from no2w may well wonder why so few companies took the online plunge. 2.An invisible border divides those arguing for computers in the classroom on the behalf of students’ career prospects and those arguing for computers in the classroom for broader reasons of radical educational reform. 3.An education that aims at getting a student a certain kind of job is a technical education, justified for reasons radically different from why education is universally required by law. 4.Banking on the confusion between educational and vocational reasons for bringing computers into schools, computered advocates often emphasize the job prospects of graduates over their educational achievement. 5.But, for a small group of students, professional training might be the way to go since well-develo0ped skills, all other factors being equal, can be the difference between having a job and not. 6.But NBAC members are planning to word the recommendation narrowly to avoid new restrictions on research that involves the cloning of human DNA or cells-routine in molecular biology. 7.During this transfer, traditional historical methods were augmented by additional methodologies designed to interpret the new forms of evidence in the historical study. 8.His colleague, Michael Beer, says that far too many companies have applied re-engineering in a mechanistic fashion, chopping out costs without giving sufficient thought to long-term profitability. 9.“I’m not afraid of dying from a spiritual point of view, but what I was afraid of was how I’d go, because I’ve watched people die in the hospital fighting for oxygen and clawing at their masks ,” he says. 10.Much of the language used to describe monetary policy, such as “steering the economy to a soft landing” or “a touch on the brakes”, makes it sound like a precise science. 11.The commercial TV channels – ITV and Channel 4 – were required by the Thatcher Government’s Broadcasting Act to become more commercial competing with each other for advertisers, and cutting costs and jobs. 12.Robert Fulton once wrote, “The mechanic should sit down among levers, screws, wedges, wheels, etc. , like a poet among the letters of the alphabet, considering them as an exhibition of his thoughts, in which a new arrangement transmits a new idea.” 13.Where to turn for expert information and how to determine which expert advice to accept are questions facing many people today. 14.In thinking about the evolution of memory together with all its possible aspects, it is helpful to consider what would happen if memories failed to fade. 15.In the American economy, the concept of private property embraces not only the ownership of productive resources but also certain rights, including the right to determine the price of a product or to make a free contract with another private individual. 16.More and more of these credit cards can be read automatically, making it possible to withdraw or deposit money in scattered locations, whether of not the local branch bank is open. 17.At the same time these computers record which hours are busiest and which employees are the most efficient, allowing personnel and staffing assignments to be made accordingly. 18.Some of these causes are completely reasonable consequences of particular advances in science being to some extent self-accelerating. 19.The target is wrong, for in attaching the tests, critics divert attention from the fault that lies with ill-informed or incompetent users. 20.To criticize it for such failure is roughly comparable to criticizing a thermometer for not measuring wind velocity.
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