First of all (just as a reminder), disabling exceptions and RTTI are compiler specific extensions the Standard has no consideration for.
Since the Standard Library is usually tied to the compiler, it may be that your implementation of the Standard Library has been specifically designed to cope with this (and in particular, to cope with new returning null pointers instead of raising std::bad_alloc).
Therefore, what you ask for is non-sensical. Check the documentation of your own library for a complete list.
That being said, the Standard does guarantee that a number of operations will never throw. I don't know of any operation that swallows exceptions, I would suppose that most of them are actually safe to use as-is.
For example, all algorithms should be safe.
Still, once again, I can only recommend reading the documentation of your implementation.
std::vector.at(size_t)versus a program/environment's threading and locking. having implemented threading and locking libraries, i can tell you that you can defend yourself against the former easily and predictably. (cont) – Justin Sep 12 '11 at 22:11