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[主觀題]

This crop has similar qualities to the ?

This crop has similar qualities to the previous one, _______ both windresistant and adapted to the same type of soil.

A) being B) been C) to be D) having been

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更多“This crop has similar qualities to the ?”相關(guān)的問題

第1題

This crop does not do well in soils ()the one for which it has been specially developed.
This crop does not do well in soils ()the one for which it has been specially developed.

A、beyond

B、rather than

C、outside

D、other than

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第2題

What is happening in our weather? Of course we have never been able to predict exactly w
What is happening in our weather? Of course we have never been able to predict exactly what the weather will be like, but now strange weather patterns are seriously affecting many parts of the world. For example, droughts (旱災(zāi)) in Mexico and Brazil have recently caused great crop losses and in the United States they have even had to make their own snow for the Winter Olympics!

Scientists have found that the cause of this strange weather is that the air circulation pattern has changed and is now more variable than earlier in the twentieth century. This means that different regions of the world get long spells (持續(xù)時(shí)間) of the same type of weather, whether hot , cold, wet or windy.

However, weather experts have different views about why this has happened. One theory is that the temperature of the sea has increased. Another is that man’s activities on earth have disturbed the balance of nature.

Whatever the cause, the economics of many countries in the world depend upon the weather. And until we know exactly what effect man’s activities are having on the weather, we cannot make changes which might help. So for the moment the only answer is …wait and see!

26. Which of the following statements is TRUE according to the first paragraph?

A. We have never predicted the weather.

B. Man is now able to control the weather.

C. Strange weather has appeared only in some North American countries.

D. It has always been impossible for man to predict the weather accurately.

27. The strange weather patterns on the earth can he best described as ________.

A. steady and balanced C. likely to cause serious disasters

B. changeable but predictable D. unpredictable but favorable to man

28. The word “affecting” in Paragraph 1 can be replaced by ________.

A. yielding good crops in C. causing few losses in

B. having harmful effects on D. producing desired effects on

29. We can learn from Paragraph 2 that ________.

A. weather patterns are similar in different regions of the world

B. the air circulation pattern remains unchanged in the last century

C. our weather depends on the changes in the air circulation pattern

D. it is possible to predict weather patterns over a long period of time

30. It can be learned from this passage that ________.

A. scientists have similar opinions about the changing weather

B. no one is sure about the cause of the changing weather

C. cutting down forests has affected the climate

D. the weather will become worse in the future

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第3題

When next year's crop of high-school graduates arrive at Oxford University in the fall of
2009, they'll be joined by a new face: Andrew Hamilton, the 55-year-old provost(教務(wù)長)of Yale, who'll become Oxford's vice-chancellor- a position equivalent to university president in America.

Hamilton isn't the only educator crossing the Atlantic. School in France, Egypt, Singapore, etc. have also recently made top-level hires from abroad. Higher education has become a big and competitive business nowadays, and like so many business, it's gone global. Yet the talent flow isn't universal. High-level personnel tend to head in only one direction: outward from America.

The chief reason is that American schools don't tend to seriously consider looking abroad. For example, when the board of the University of Colorado searched for a new president, it wanted a leader familiar with the state government, a major source of the university's budget, "We didn't do any global consideration", says Patricia Hayes, the board's chair. The board ultimately picked Bruce Benson, a 69-year-old Colorado businessman and political activist(活動(dòng)家) who is likely to do well in the main task of modern university presidents: fund raising. Fund raising is a distinctively American thing, since U.S. schools rely heavily on donations. The fund-raising ability is largely a product of experience and necessity.

Many European universities, meanwhile, are still mostly dependent on government funding. But government support has failed to keep pace with rising student numbers. The decline in government support has made fund-raising an increasingly necessary ability among administrators, and has hiring committees hungry for Americans.

In the past few years, prominent schools around the world have joined the trend. In 2003, when Cambridge University appointed Alison Richard, another former Yale provost, as its vice-chancellor, the university publicly stressed that in her previous job she had overseen(監(jiān)督) "a major strengthening of Yale's financial position".

Of course, fund-raising isn't the only skill outsiders offer. The globalization of education means more universities will be seeking heads with international experience of some kind to promote international programs and attract a global student body. Foreigners can offer a fresh perspective on established practices.

What is the current trend in higher education discussed in the passage?

A.Institutions worldwide are hiring administrators from the U.S.

B.A lot of political activists are being recruited as administrators.

C.American universities are enrolling more international students.

D.University presidents are paying more attention to fund-raising.

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第4題

THE ivory-billed woodpecker is not large, as birds go: It is about the size of a crow, but
flashier, its claim to fame is that, though it had been thought extinct since 1944, a lone kayaker spotted it about two years ago, flying around among the cypress trees in the Cache River National Wildlife Refuge. And that sighting may prove the death-blow to a $319m irrigation project in the Arkansas corner of the Delta.

The Grand Prairie Area Demonstration Project seemed, at first, a fine idea. The Grand Prairie is the fourth-largest rice-bowl in the world, with 363,000 acres under paddies. But it is running out of water, with farmers driving wells deeper and deeper into the underlying aquifer. The new project, dreamed up around a decade ago, would tap excess water from the White river when it floods and pumps it, at the rate of about one billion gallons a day, to storage tanks on around 1000 rice farms.

Unfortunately, it would also divert water from the region's huge, swampy wildlife refuges, home to black bears and alligators and the pallid sturgeon. Tiny swamp towns like Clarendon and Brinkley, which are heavily black and almost destitute, rely on nature tourism for the little economic activity they have. In Brinkley, the barber offers an "ivorybill" haircut that makes you look like one.

The project has some powerful local backers. They include Blanche Lincoln, the state's senior senator, who grew up on a rice farm in Helena, and Dale Bumpers, a former four-term senator and governor of Arkansas. Mr. Bumpers, long an icon of the environmental movement and prominent in the efforts to establish the refuges, now believes the water project is important for national security in food and trade, and that it will not damage the forests he has worked to protect.

Opponents worry that the project, apart from its environmental risks, will overwhelm the innovative water conservation methods that rice-farmers are already using, and give the biggest water users an unfair advantage. They also object that it means using subsidised pumps to provide subsidised water for a crop that doesn't pay. Rice is one of the most heavily assisted crops in America; rice payments cost taxpayers almost $10 billion between 1995 and 2004, and rich farmers round Stuttgart in Arkansas County (an efficient and politically shrewd group) took in $21.2m in subsidies in 2004 alone.

It can be inferred from the first paragraph that ______.

A.a(chǎn)n ivory-billed woodpecker was shot by a lone kayaker two years ago.

B.the ivory-billed woodpecker was accustomed to living among cypress trees.

C.the irrigation project is probably broken off by the ivory-billed woodpecker.

D.the appearance of the ivory-billed woodpecker may make the irrigation project terminated.

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第5題

The potato crop of 1946 was ____ that of 1945.

A) superior than B) superior to C) more superior to D) more superior than

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第6題

The author implies that the range manager is()

A.a(chǎn)ware of overpopulation problems

B.of no information about overpopulation

C.responsible for more crop production

D.sensitive to overpopulation problems

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第7題

Photoshop中Transform(變換)命令可以進(jìn)行哪些操作變形?

A.Scale(縮放)

B. Rotate(旋轉(zhuǎn))

C. Perspective(透視)

D. Crop(裁切)

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第8題

Questions 16~20 are based on the following passage. As a wise man once said,we are all ul
timately alone. But an increasing number of Europeans are choosing to be so at an ever earlier age. This isn’t the stuff of gloomy philosophical contemplations,but a fact of Europe’s new economic landscape,embraced by sociologists,real-estate developers and ad executives alike. The shift away from family life to solo lifestyle,observes a French sociologist,is part of the “irresistible momentum of individualism”over the last century. The communications revolution,the shift from a business culture of stability to one of mobility and the mass entry of women into the workforce have greatly wreaked havoc on (擾亂)Europeans’ private lives..Europe’s new economic climate has largely fostered the trend toward independence.The current generation of home-aloners came of age during Europe’s shift from social democracy to the sharper,more individualistic climate of American style. capitalism.Raised in an era of privatization and increased consumer choice,today’s tech-savvy (精通技術(shù)的)workers have embraced a free market in love as well as economics.Modern Europeans are rich enough to afford to live alone,and temperamentally independent enough to want to do so.Once upon a time,people who lived alone tended to be those on either side of marriage-twenty something professionals or widowed senior citizens.While pensioners,particularly elderly women,make up a large proportion of those living alone,the newest crop of singles are high earners in their 30s and 40s who increasingly view living alone as a lifestyle. choice.Living alone was conceived to be negative-dark and cold,while being together suggested warmth and light..But then came along the idea of singles.They were young,beautiful,strong! Now,young people want to live alone.The booming economy means people are working harder than ever.And that doesn’t leave much room for relationships.Pimpi Arroyo,a 35-year-old composer who lives alone in a house in Paris,says he hasn’t got time to get lonely because he has too much work.“I have deadlines which would make life with someone else fairly difficult..Only an Ideal Woman would make him change his lifestyle,he says..Kaufmann,author of a recent book called “The Single Woman and Prince Charming,”thinks this fierce new individualism means that people expect more and more of mates,so relationships don’t last long-if they start at all.Eppendorf,a blond Berliner with a deep tan,teaches grade school in the mornings.In the afternoon she sunbathes or sleeps,resting up for going dancing.Just shy of 50,she says she’d never have wanted to do what her mother did-give up a career to raise a family.Instead,“I’ve always done what I wanted to do: live a self-determined life.

第16題:More and more young Europeans remain single because ().

A.they are driven by an overwhelming sense of individualism

B.they have entered the workforce at a much earlier age

C.they have embraced a business culture of stability

D.they are pessimistic about their economic future

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第9題

Which of the following is an example of objectivewriting()。

A.English should not be taught in class, because it isirrelevant to students' future jobs.

B.According to a recent survey from the Ministry ofEducation, there are more women than men enrolled incolleges.

C.I refuse to believe in the existence of crop circles.

D.Itis not a poem unless it is rhymed.

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第10題

The promise of finding long-term technological solutions to the problem of world food shor
tages seems difficult to fulfill. Many innovations that were once heavily supported and publicized, such as fish-protein concentrate and protein from algae grown on petroleum substrates, have since fallen by the wayside. The proposals themselves were technically feasible, but they proved to be economically unviable(not able to succeed) and to yield food products culturally unacceptable to their consumers.

One characteristic common to unsuccessful food innovations has been that, even with extensive government support, they often have not been technologically adapted or culturally acceptable to the people for whom they had been developed. A successful new technology, therefore, must fit the entire sociocultural system in which it is to find a place security of crop yield, practicality of storage, and costs are more significant than had previously been realized by the advocates of new technologies.

The adoption of new food technologies depends on more than these technical and cultural considerations; economic factors and governmental policies also strongly influence the ultimate success of any innovation. Economists in the Anglo-American tradition have taken the lead in investigating the economics of technological innovation. Although they exaggerate in claiming that profitability is the key factor guiding technical change—they completely disregard the substantial effects of culture—they are correct in stressing the importance of profits. Most technological innovations in agriculture can be fully used only by large landowners and are only adopted if these profit-oriented business believe that the innovation will increase their incomes. Thus, innovations that carry high rewards for big agribusiness groups will be adopted even if they harm segments of the population and reduce the availability of food in a country. Further, should a new technology promise to alter substantially the profits and losses associated with any production system, those with economic power will strive to maintain and improve their own position. Since large segments of the populations of many developing countries are close to the subsistence(ability to live)margin and essentially powerless, they tend to be the losers in this system unless they are aided by a government policy that takes into account the needs of all sectors (branches) of the economy. Therefore, although technical advances in food production and processing will perhaps be needed to ensure food availability, meeting food needs will depend much more on equalizing economic powers among the various segments of the populations within the developing countries themselves.

Which of the following best describes the organization of the first paragraph?

A.A suggestion is made and arguments in its favor are provided.

B.A criticism is imposed and an alternative proposal is suggested.

C.An example is analyzed and general conclusions are derived from it.

D.A generalization is advanced and supporting evidence is provided.

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第11題

As a wise man once said, we are all ultimately alone. But an increasing number of European
s are choosing to be so at an ever earlier age. This isn't the stuff of gloomy philosophical contemplations, but a fact of Europe's new economic landscape, embraced by sociologists, real-estate developers and ad executives alike. The shift away from family life to solo lifestyle, observes a French sociologist, is part of the "irresistible momentum of individualism" over the last century. The communications revolution, the shift from a business culture of stability to one of mobility and the mass entry of women into the workforce have greatly wreaked havoc on Europeans' private byes.

Europe's new economic climate has largely fosterd the trend toward independence, the current generation of home-aloners came of age during Europe's shift from social democracy to the sharper, more individualistic climate of American-style. capitalism. Raised in an era of privatization and increased consumer choice, today's tech-savvy workers have embraced a free market in love as well as economics. Modern Europeans are rich enough to afford to live alone, and temperamentally independent enough to want to do so.

Once upon a time, people who lived alone tended to be those on either side of marriage-twentysometing professionals or widowed senior citizens, while pensioners, particularly elderly women, make up a large proportion of those living alone, the newest crop of singles are high earners in their 30s and 40s who increasingly view living alone as a lifestyle. choice. Living alone was conceived to be negative-dark and cold, while being together suggested warmth and light. But then came along the idea of singles. They were young, beautiful, strong! Now, young people want to live alone.

The booming economy means people are working harder than ever. And that doesn't leave much room for relationships. Pirnpi Arroyo, a 35-year-old composer who lives alone in a house in Paris, says he hasn't got time to get lonely becanse he has too much work. "I have deadlines which would make life with someone else fairly difficult. Only an Iddeal Woman would make him change his lifestyle," he says. Kaufmann, author of a recent book called "The Single Woman and Prince Charming", thinks this fierce new individualism means that people expext morn and more of mates, so relationships don't last long--if they start at all. Eppendorf, a blond Berliner with a deep tan, teaches grade school in the mornings. In the afternoon she sunbarthes or sleeps, resting up for going dancing. Just shy of 50, she says she'd never have wanted to do what her mother did--give up a career to raise a family. Instead, "I've always done what I wanted to do: live a self-determined life."

More and more young Europeans remain single because ______.

A.they have entered the workforce at a much earlier age

B.they are pessimistic about their economic future

C.they have embraced a business culture of stability

D.they are driven by an overwhelming sense of individualism

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