建行笔试

笔试是一种与面试对应的测试,是用以考核应聘者特定的知识、专业技术水平和文字运用能力的一种书面考试形式。这种方法可以有效的测量应聘人的基本知识、专业知识、管理知识、综合分析能力和文字表达能力等素质及能力的差异。笔试在员工招聘中有相当大的作用,尤其是在大规模的员工招聘中,它可以一下子把员工的基本活动了解清楚,然后可以划分出一个基本符合需要的界限。适用面广,费用较少,可以大规模地运用。但是分析结果需要较多的人力,有时,被试者会投其所好,尤其是在个性测试中显得更加明显。

建行2013校招笔试经验

标签:笔试经验 时间:2021-05-06
【yjbys.com - 笔试经验】

  综合部分40分,就记得第一题是可口可乐供求曲线。然后考了一题会计中财经常做的题目类型,给你期初,资本公积,营业利润,可变现净值等等类似的 ,今年的增减变动,然后问你今年的营业收入是多少。有些需要用到的科目还有一些是不需要加进来的。

  然后还有一些追债相关的法律题。感觉今年会计考的不少。

  然后多选题很多不会,基本靠蒙,半分钟一题。

  逻辑题一如既往的 感觉简单,也许答案出乎意料。。

  语文题比较简单,就是排序句子,填词。

  推理的图形加文字推理好像就3题,其他都是文字。

  有一题是说,A B C三人去玩,分别做火车/汽车/轮船/飞机四种交通工具。假设A做火车 B就不做汽车;B做轮船,C就不做飞机。C不做轮船之类的。然后问下面哪一种组合不可能发生。

  还有韩国德国法国英国四个国家的'人住酒店,韩国人没和邻居交流,韩国人房间号码比德国大,法国人只和一个邻居交流了,英国人会德语,德国人4种语言都会。问4个人怎么住的,从小到大排序。

  然后数学题 什么第30颗树,大伯的。当时时间已经不够了,楼主脑子里感觉像灌水泥一样转不了了,,果断3秒PASS。。

  英语第二篇很难,第三篇反而好些。但楼主以为难度是递增的,所以第三篇时心里暗示很负面。所以!大家下次千万要摆正心态。形式不好就先过了!不就1分吗!!

  综合还好吧,但是时间不够了,也有最后几道类似推理的,果断随机。

  性格测试时间是很紧。所以不要假装,按直觉来写。

山东2013建行笔试经验

标签:笔试经验 时间:2021-05-04
【yjbys.com - 笔试经验】

  本人计算机相关专业,对财会,金融,管理,法律类知识所知甚少。。。背景交代完毕。

  上午8:30 至 11:30是笔试时间。

  题目嘛 综合 英语 行测 性格测试。

  至于今年考了什么题,对不起各位了,记不太清。。。

  在此只简单说一下感受吧。。。押题神马的都不靠谱。。。临场发挥才是王道;考前突击神马的不太靠谱,平时积累才是王道;每题精做神马的都不靠谱,学会取舍才是王道;思想怠慢神马的都不靠谱,眼疾手快才是王道。

  关于如何准备考试,针对建行来说,可以如此这般:英语题量不大,今年是三篇阅读,15个选择,一个一分,平时做四六级阅读就可以。注意速度!!行测就做最近几年国考题练手就行,综合就看平时积累了。。。对于俺这种理工男来说基本靠蒙。。。特别注意的是今年建行的`性格测试20分钟200题,题量之大,下巴掉到地上了。。。大家一定迅速啊,这次最后性格测试做不完的现象比较多,不知往年什么情况。。。

  笔试的时候,蒙做结合,切勿死抠一提。。。一题才一分,别因小失大,后面没时间做,狂点的话。。不仅失态,更是失策啊!一定注意时间,时间,时间啊 这个时候 Time = Money 真的成立了。。。

  以上仅为一家之言,并非放之四海而皆准,大家若有其他好的方法,欢迎交流探讨。

  最后祝大家顺利!也为自己攒人品。。。

2010建行笔试英语阅读理解正文与参考答案

标签:笔试题目 时间:2021-05-02
【yjbys.com - 笔试题目】

A
SOME of the concerns surrounding Turkey’s application to join the European Union, to be voted on by the EU’s Council of Ministers on  December 17th, are economic-in particular, the country’s relative poverty. Its GDP per head is less than a third of the average for the 15 pre-2004 members of the EU. But it is not far off that of one of the ten new members which joined on May 1st 2004 (Latvia), and it is much the same as those of two countries, Bulgaria and Romania, which this week concluded accession talks with the EU that could make them full members on January 1st 2007.
  Furthermore, the country’s recent economic progress has been, according to Donald Johnston, the secretary-general of the OECD, "stunning". GDP in the second quarter of the year was 13.4% higher than a year earlier, a rate of growth that no EU country comes close to matching. Turkey’s inflation rate has just fallen into single figures for the first time since 1972, and this week the country reached agreement with the IMF on a new three-year, $10 billion economic programme that will, according to the IMF’s managing director, Rodrigo Rato, "help Turkey... reduce inflation toward European levels, and enhance the economy’s resilience".
  Resilience has not historically been the country’s economic strong point. As recently as 2001, GDP fell by over 7%. It fell by more than 5% in 1994, and by just under 5% in 1999. Indeed, throughout the 1990s growth oscillated like an electrocardiogram recording a violent heart attack. This irregularity has been one of the main reasons (along with red tape and corruption) why the country has failed dismally to attract much-needed foreign direct investment.
  Its stock of such investment (as a percentage of GDP) is lower now than it was in the 1980s, and annual inflows have scarcely ever reached $1 billion (whereas Ireland attracted over $25 billion in 2003, as did Brazil in every year from 1998 to 2000).
  One deterrent to foreign investors is due to disappear on January 1st 2005. On that day, Turkey will take away the right of virtually every one of its citizens to call themselves a millionaire. Six noughts will be removed from the face value of the lira; one unit of the local currency will henceforth be worth what 1m are now-ie, about ?0.53 ($0.70). Goods will have to be priced in both the new and old lira for the whole of the year, but foreign bankers and investors can begin to look forward to a time in Turkey when they will no longer have to juggle mentally with indeterminate strings of zeros.
  Economist; 12/18/2004, Vol. 373 Issue 8406, p115-115, 2/5p
  注(1):本文选自Economist;12/18/2004, p115-115, 2/5p;
  1.What is Turkey’s economic situation now?
  [A] Its GDP per head is far lagging behind that of the EU members.
  [B] Its inflation rate is still rising.
  [C] Its economy grows faster than any EU member.
  [D] Its economic resilience is very strong.
  2.We can infer from the second paragraph that__________.
  [A] Turkey will soon catch the average GDP level of the 15 pre-2004 EU members
  [B] inflation rate in Turkey used to be very high
  [C] Turkey’s economy will keep growing at present rate
  [D] IMF’s economic program will help Turkey join the EU
  3.The word “oscillated” (Line 3, Paragraph 3) most probably means_________.
  [A] fell
  [B] climbed
  [C] developed
  [D] swang
  4.Speaking of Turkey’s foreign direct investment, the author implies that_________.
  [A] it’s stock is far less than that of other countries
  [B] it does not have much influence on Turkey’s economic progress
  [C] steady GDP growth will help Turkey attract more foreign direct investment
  [D] Turkey’s economic resilience relies on foreign direct investment
  5.We can draw a conclusion from the text that__________.
  [A] foreign investment environment in Turkey will become better
  [B] Turkey’s citizens will suffer heavy loss due to the change of the face value of the lira
  [C] the local currency will depreciate with the removal of six noughts from the face value
  [D] prices of goods will go up

B
In the case of mobile phones, change is everything. Recent research indicates that the mobile phone is changing not only our culture, but our very bodies as well.
First. Let’s talk about culture. The difference between the mobile phone and its parent, the fixed-line phone, you get whoever answers it.
This has several implications. The most common one, however, and perhaps the thing that has changed our culture forever, is the “meeting” influence. People no longer need to make firm plans about when and where to meet. Twenty years ago, a Friday night would need to be arranged in advance. You needed enough time to allow everyone to get from their place of work to the first meeting place. Now, however, a night out can be arranged on the run. It is no longer “see you there at 8”, but “text me around 8 and we’ll see where we all are”.
Texting changes people as well. In their paper, “insights into the Social and Psychological Effects of SMS Text Messaging”, two British researchers distinguished between two types of mobile phone users: the “talkers” and the “texters”-those who prefer voice to text message and those who prefer text to voice.
They found that the mobile phone’s individuality and privacy gave texters the ability to express a whole new outer personality. Texters were likely to report that their family would be surprised if they were to read their texts. This suggests that texting allowed texters to present a self-image that differed from the one familiar to those who knew them well.
Another scientist wrote of the changes that mobiles have brought to body language. There are two kinds that people use while speaking on the phone. There is the “speakeasy”: the head is held high, in a self-confident way, chatting away. And there is the “spacemaker”: these people focus on themselves and keep out other people.
Who can blame them? Phone meetings get cancelled or reformed and camera-phones intrude on people’s privacy. So, it is understandable if your mobile makes you nervous. But perhaps you needn’t worry so much. After all, it is good to talk.

81 when people plan to meet nowadays, they
A.arrange the meeting place beforehand
B.postpone fixing the place till last minute
C.seldom care about when and where to meet
D.still love to work out detailed meeting plans.
82 According to the two British researchers, the social and psychological effect are mostly likely to be seen on
A.TALKERS
B.the "speakeasy"
C.the “spacemaker”
D.texters
83 We can infer from the passage that the texts sent by texters are
A.quite revealing
B.well written
C.unacceptable by others
D.shocking to others
84.according to the passage ,who is afraid of being heard while talking on the mobile
A.talkers
B.the speakeasy
C.the spacemaker
D.texters
85.an appropriate title for the passage might be
A.the SMS effect
B.cultural implication of mobile use
C. change in the use of the mobile
D.body language and the mobile phone!


C
Biologically, there is only one quality which distinguishes us from animals: the ability to laugh. In a universe which appears to be utterly devoid of humor, we enjoy this supreme luxury. And it is a luxury, for unlike any other bodily process, laughter does not seem to serve a biologically useful purpose. In a divide world, laughter is a unifying force. Human beings oppose each other on a great many issues. Nations may disagree about systems of government and human relations may be plagued by ideological factions and political camps, but we all share the ability to laugh. And laughter, in turn, depends on that most complex and subtle of all human qualities: a sense of humor Certain comic stereotypes have a universal appeal. This can best be seen from the world-wide popularity of Charlie Chaplin’s early films. The little man at odds with society never fails to amuse no matter which country we come from. As that great commentator on human affairs, Dr. Samuel Johnson, once remarked, ‘Men have been wise in very different modes; but they have always laughed in the same way.’

       A sense of humor may take various forms and laughter may be anything from a refined tingle to an earth quaking roar, but the effect is always the same. Humor helps us to maintain a correct sense of values. It is the one quality which political fanatics appear to lack. If we can see the funny side, we never make the mistake of taking ourselves too seriously. We are always reminded that tragedy is not really far removed from comedy, so we never get a lop sided view of things.

       This is one of the chief functions of satire and irony. Human pain and suffering are so grim; we hover so often on the brink of war; political realities are usually enough to plunge us into total despair. In such circumstances, cartoons and satirical accounts of somber political events redress the balance. They take the wind out of pompous and arrogant politicians who have lost their sense of proportion. They enable us to see that many of our most profound actions are merely comic or absurd. We laugh when a great satirist like Swift writes about war in Gulliver’s Travels. The Lilliputians and their neighbors attack each other because they can’t agree which end to break an egg. We laugh because we meant to laugh; but we are meant to weep too. It is too powerful a weapon to be allowed to flourish.

       The sense of humor must be singled out as man’s most important quality because it is associated with laughter. And laughter, in turn, is associated with happiness. Courage, determination, initiative – these are qualities we share with other forms of life. But the sense of humor is uniquely human. If happiness is one of the great goals of life, then it is the sense of humor that provides the key.



1.       The most important of all human qualities is
[A] a sense of humor.
[B] A sense of satire.
[C] A sense of laughter.
[D] A sense of history.
2.       The author mentions about Charlie Chaplin’s early films because
[A] they can amuse people.
[B] Human beings are different from animals.
[C] They show that certain comic stereotypes have a universal appeal.
[D] They show that people have the same ability to laugh.
3.       One of the chief functions of irony and satire is
[A] to show absurdity of actions.
[B] to redress balance.
[C] to take the wind out of politicians.
[D] to show too much grimness in the world.
4.       What do we learn from the sentence ‘it is too powerful a weapon to be allowed to flourish in totalitarian regimes?’
[A] It can reveal the truth of political events with satire.
[B] It can arouse people to riot.
[C] It shows tragedy and comedy are related.
[D] It can make people laugh.
5.        Who is Swift?
[A] A novelist.
[B] A poet.
[C] A dramatist.
[D] A essayist.

历年建行总行笔试试题和答案

标签:笔试题目 时间:2021-05-02
【yjbys.com - 笔试题目】

  2009年建行总行的笔试共155道题,70道专业题,15道英语,70综合测试(类似于公务员行测),考试时间180分钟,时间基本上是充分的。

  从难度上看,综合测试比公务员要简单不少,特别是数学、资料分析。英语大概与六级难度相当,也不算难。

  能拉开距离的应该是专业测试,因为建行的专业考试范围很广,涉及到了金融、经济、管理、市场营销、财务会计、计量经济学等各个学科,要想全面覆盖这些知识面,需要平时的积累。

  专业题涉及下面的内容:

  1、法定准备金率

  2、财政货币政策

  3、欧式期权

  4、巴塞尔协议三大支柱

  5、参数估计和残差

  6、企业文化

  7、金融市场的要素

  8、即期和远期

  9、商品的需求弹性

  10、财务报表

  11、盈余公积

  12、会计利润

  13、商业票据贴现

  14、公允价值和账面价值

  15、市场细分

  16、金字塔管理结构中,上级与中级领导比:管理难度与幅度问题

  17、非货币性商品交换中关于具有商业实质和没有商业实质的问题

  18、积极的财政政策与扩张的货币政策的使用范围

  19、国家偿债的率

  20、财务杠杆问题

  21、关于物权法中的留置权

  22、市场占有率:某公司的市场占有率是30%,其他最大三个竞争对手的市场占有率分别为20%,12%,8%。问该公司的相对市场占有率

  23、有限责任公司股东转让股份的条件

  24、信用卡信用额度的确认

  25、银行整存整取问题

2013届建行笔试经验分享

标签:笔试经验 时间:2021-04-27
【yjbys.com - 笔试经验】

  考试形式——机试

  内容——行测、英语、金融会计等等经济相关专业知识、建行等经济常识、职业测评。

  考场有水发,挺好,人性呢~~

  终于等来了建行的招聘考试,看到短信里说在本省会有八个考区,顿时就有压力了,是不今年银行招考人数可以赶上公务员了捏?不过楼主也不怎么关注人数多少,自己埋头好好考就好。

  先说说这个形式,机考,哎,对于近视眼的我来说,机考真的是很费眼的`说,建议今后要考建行的同学记得考试前要多练练在电脑上做题,不管是对做题速度还是准确度都有所帮助。特别是英语和资料分析,不过还是看个人做题风格。

  行测题里有些国考真题,专业知识的多选真实让人难堪哪~~

关于建行笔试经验分享

标签:笔试经验 时间:2021-04-23
【yjbys.com - 笔试经验】

  笔试归来,感触颇多,写一点自己吃亏得来的教训,给2014届有志于进入银行尤其是建行的毕业生,回馈论坛,顺便攒RP。当然,因为建行的笔试是我找工作以来的第一个笔试,所以我犯的那些个错误都是常识性错误,着实不应该,估计对大多数人没有借鉴意义。如果你肯定不会犯这些错误,也不要拍砖。只希望以后的师弟师妹碰到类似问题,看到这个帖子,能够对他们有一点帮助。

  首先,关于网申。一般都会有一志愿二志愿,其实只有一志愿录不满的情况才会考虑二志愿,你觉得银行会录不满吗?我觉得不是没可能,只是可能性真的好小啊,所以慎重选择你的第一志愿。我拿到了建行、农行的笔试通知,本以为在其后的中行肯定也是没问题的,但最终被中行鄙视了。翻出来网申记录查看,区别只在志愿上。

  第二,关于学生证的问题。我报的是省分行,但是人在BJ,11月24日早上8点半考试,11月23日早上才能打印准考证,看了准考证才发现需要带学生证,而且建行的网站上说学生证必须是原件,没有是不让参加考试的。然后我就不淡定了,不知道还能不能参加考试,一整天都没心思看书,就是不停打电话、发邮件、看别人遇到同样问题,一直到晚上也没一个人能给你个准信儿。还是挺受煎熬的,影响自己的复习计划不说,还影响你的心情。结果今天到了考场,发现忘带准考证的多的'是,建行的人员肯定已经很有经验了,会让你填张表,然后参加考试完事儿。不过,这样总归不好,不知道他们会不会专门记录,觉得你粗心马虎,不仔细。所以,准考证最好还是随身携带,像身份证一样的。

建行笔试题型题量分布

标签:面试笔试 时间:2021-04-03
【yjbys.com - 面试笔试】

2014年建设银行笔试题型题量分布

科目

题数

时间

快速识别判断

20

3分钟

综合测试

行测

45

147分钟

行政常识

5

市场营销

5

管理

10

银行常识

8

法律

13

会计

14

计算机

7

经济金融

18

英语

15

性格测试

72

30分钟

共计

232

180分钟

2016建行校招招聘笔试题型

标签:面试笔试 时间:2021-04-01
【yjbys.com - 面试笔试】

  第一部分:快速识别判断

  题目很简单,快速判断识别题目,主要考“眼力”和反应速度,速度不够的话根本做不完。时间只有3分钟,我开始以为是乱码,后来又以为是看例题的时间,仔细看了题目后才明白,但时间来不及了,总共20道题就完成了10道,然后自动提交了。具体试题就是那种识别不同的,字母和数字组合在一起,选出里面有几个相同的,比如“cdi30$m7和ED3Ijyg$",里面有几个相同的?一共有三种类型题,考你的反应速度和挑错能力。

  第二部分:综合测试

  主要的知识点分布:言语理解(15道左右)、数量关系(10道题)、逻辑推理(10道)、图形推理,文字推理、资料分析(15道)、专业知识单选、多选(涵盖:微观经济学,宏观经济学,管理学,会计,金融学,商业银行,计算机知识,经济法等)、金融学、计算机(感觉考了当年学计算机二级的一些知识,SQL,域名解析系统)、经济法、时事加建行知识、英语附加题(三篇阅读理解)。这个建行考试总体感觉我还是考的不错的,经济金融这块我回答的自我感觉良好,题目都做完了,有点遗憾的就是第一部分那个快速识别的,开始没看懂,后来有点唐突。

  综合知识部分部分回忆试题:

  下面的'卡中哪项不是建行的卡?

  巴塞尔协议的具体内容,多选题

  完全竞争厂商短期均衡和短期供给曲线,图形题,学的不经,蒙了个答案。

  建行的荣誉:就是某某杂志评了什么什么奖,在世界五百强中排在第50 ,上升27位,

建行招聘笔试试题

标签:面试笔试 时间:2021-04-01
【yjbys.com - 面试笔试】

  1.不构成我国政策性金融机构资金来源的是( )

  A.财政拨款 B.金融债券 C.开户企业存款 D.社会公众存款

  2.商业银行经营和组织存款的首要原则是( )

  A.存款合理竞争原则 B.存贷挂钩原则C.按时清偿原则D.存款成本最低原则

  3.按照保险对象的不同可将保险分为( )

  A.人身保险与财产保险B.自愿保险与强制保险 C.保险与再保险D.信用保险与人身保险

  4.可转让支付命令帐户简称为( )

  A.CD帐户B.NOW帐户C.SNOW帐户 D.Q帐户

  5.凯恩斯学派认为货币政策传导过程中发挥重要作用的是( )

  A.利率 B.法定存款准备金C.货币供应量 D.基础货币

  6.花旗银行放款利率在1970年12月8日高达20%(一年期贷款),而当时年通货膨胀率为12%,花旗银行放款的实际利率为( )

  A.12.32% B.11.46% C.11.24% D.

  7.14% 7.1988年以来我国三年以上人民币定期存款曾实行过( )

  A.利率浮动制 B.存款贴补制 C.保值贴补制 D.存贷联动制

  8.资本主义银行发展过程中首先产生的是( )

  A.商业银行 B.中央银行 C.投资银行 D.专业银行

  9.中国第一家民族资本银行是1897年成立的( )

  A.中国实业银行 B.丽如银行 C.中国通商银行 D.交通银行

  10.对有价证券行市的正确理解是( )

  A.证券行市与市场利率负相关 B.证券行市是有价证券的发行价格 C.证券行市是证券面值的资本化 D.证券行市与证券收益率负相关

建行辽宁有收到面试通知的吗?11号笔试的童鞋

标签:综合指导 时间:2021-03-13
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        11号笔试的`童鞋。。。建行辽宁有收到面试通知的吗?都什么地方收到面试通知了?
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