问题 单项选择题

甲经贸公司租赁乙大型商场柜台代销丙厂名牌床罩。为提高销售额,甲公司采取了多种促销措施。下列措施哪一项违反了法律规定()。

A.在摊位广告牌上标明“厂家直销”

B.在商场显著位置摆放该产品所获的各种奖牌

C.开展“微利销售”,实行买一送一或者买100元返券50元

D.对顾客一周之内来退货“不问理由一概退换”

答案

参考答案:A

解析:

《反不正当竞争法》第9条规定:“经营者不得利用广告或者其他方法,对商品的质量、制作成分、性能、用途、生产者、有效期限、产地等作引人误解的虚假宣传。”A选项违反了此规定,应属于对经营者本身的虚假宣传。B和D选项并不涉及什么不正当竞争行为;C选项中尽管优惠的幅度很大,但仍属“微利销售”,价格仍高于成本价,不属于《反不正当竞争法》第11条所规定的低价倾销行为。故答案为A。

单项选择题

We live in an age when everyone is a critic. "Criticism" is all over the Internet, in blogs and chat rooms, for everyone to access and add his two cents’ worth on any subject, high or low. But if everyone is a critic, is that still criticism Or are we heading toward the end of criticism If all opinions are equally valid, there is no need for experts. Democracy works in life, but art is undemocratic. The result of this ultimately meaningless barrage is that more and more we are living in a profoundly-or shallowly-uncritical age.
A critic, as T. S. Eliot famously observed, must be very intelligent. Now, can anybody assume that the invasion of cyberspace by opinion upon opinion is proof of great intelligence and constitutes informed criticism rather than uninformed artistic chaos
Of course, like any self-respecting critic, I have always encouraged my readers to think for themselves. They were to consider my positive or negative assessments, which I always tried to explain, a challenge to think along with me: here is my reasoning, follow it, then agree or disagree as you see fit. In an uncritical age, every pseudonymous chat-room chatterbox provides a snappy, self-confident judgment, without the process of arriving at it becoming clear to anyone, including the chatterer. Blogs, too, tend to be invitations to leap before a second look. Do the impassioned ramblings fed into a hungry blogosphere represent responses from anyone other than long-heads
How has it come to this We have all been bitten by television sound bites that transmute into Internet sound bytes, proving that brevity can also be the soul of witlessness. So thoughtlessness multiplies. Do not, however, think I advocate censorship, an altogether unacceptable form of criticism. What we need in this age of rampant uncritical criticism is the simplest and hardest thing to come by.. a critical attitude. How could it be fostered For starters, with the very thing discouraged by our print media: reading beyond the hectoring headlines and bold-type boxes embedded in reviews, providing a one-sentence summary that makes further reading unnecessary. With only slight exaggeration, we may say that words have been superseded by upward or downward pointing thumbs, self-destructively indulging a society used to instant self-gratification.
Criticism is inevitably constricted by our multinational culture and by political correctness. As society grows more diverse, there are fewer and fewer universal points of reference between a critic and his or her readers. As for freedom of expression. Arthur Miller long ago complained about protests and pressures making the only safe subjects for a dramatist babies and the unemployed.
My own experience is that over the years, print space for my reviews kept steadily shrinking, and the layouts themselves toadied to the whims of the graphic designer. In a jungle of oddball visuals, readers had difficulties finding my reviews. Simultaneously, our vocabulary went on a starvation diet. Where readers used to thank me for enlarging their vocabularies, more and more complaints were lodged about unwelcome trips to the dictionary, as if comparable to having to keep running to the toilet. Even my computer keeps questioning words I use, words that can be found in medium-size dictionaries. Can one give language lessons to a computer What may be imperiled, more than criticism, is the word.
I keep encountering people who think "critical" means carping or fault-finding, and nothing more. So it would seem that the critic’s pen, once mightier than the sword, has been supplanted by the ax. Yet I have always maintained that the critic has three duties: to write as well as a novelist or playwright; to be a teacher, taking off from where the classroom, always prematurely, has stopped, and to be a thinker, looking beyond his specific subject at society, history, philosophy. Reduce him to a consumer guide, run his reviews on a Web site mixed in with the next-door neighbor’s pontifications, and you condemn criticism to obsolescence. Still, one would like to think that the blog is not the enemy, and that readers seeking enlightenment could find it on the right blog just as in the past one went looking through diverse publications for the congenial critic. But it remains up to the readers to learn how to discriminate.

Which of the following expresses the author’s reasoning when he says that the "criticism" over the Internet, in blogs and chat rooms is "uncritical"

A.If everyone is a critic, it is neither democracy nor criticism.

B.When people only choose to express their opinions pseudonymously, what they were doing is to assault the others simply by waving the "ax".

C.Real criticism should be expressed by giving the reasoning, the process of reasoning and letting the audience to reach their own conclusion.

D.All the critics should be self-respecting and should be well-informed before they give their criticisms.

问答题 论述题