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[主观题]

The long years of food shortage in this country have suddenly given way to apparent abunda

nce. Stores and shops are choked with food. Yet, instead of joy, there is widespread uneasiness and confusion: why do food prices keep on rising? when there seems to be so much more food about? Is the abundance only temporary? Does it mean that we need to think less now about producing more food at home? No one knows what to expect.

The recent growth of export surpluses on the world food market has certainly been unexpectedly great, partly because a strange sequence(连续) of two successful grain harvests in North America is now being followed by a third. Most of Britain' s overseas suppliers of meat, too, are offering more this year and home production has also risen.

But the effect of all this on the food situation in his country has been made worse by a simultaneous rise in food prices, due chiefly to the. gradual curling down of government support for food. The shops are overstocked with food not only because there is more food available, but also because people, frightened by high prices, are buying less of it.

Moreover, the rise in domestic prices has come at a time when world prices have begun to fall, with the result that imported food, with the exception of grain, is often cheaper than the home-produced variety. And now grain prices, too, are falling. Consumers are beginning to ask why they should not be enabled to benefit from this trend.

The significance of these developments is not lost on farmers. The older generation have seen it all happen before.: Despite the present price and market guarantees, farmers fear they are about to be squeezed between cheap food imports and a shrinking home market. Present production is running at 51 per cent above pre-war levels, and the government has called for an expansion to 60 per cent by 1956; but repeated ministerial advice is carrying little weight and the expansion programme is not working very well.

Why is there" widespread uneasiness and confusion" about the food situation in Britain?

A.The abundant food supply is not expected to last .

B.Britain is importing less food.

C.Despite the abundance, food prices keep rising.

D.Britain will cut back on its production of food.

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更多“The long years of food shortage in this country have suddenly given way to apparent abunda”相关的问题

第1题

100 years while enjoying good health.

A.as many as

B. as much as

C. as long as

D. as far as

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第2题

A.They had a misunderstanding four years ago.B.They really like each other very much.C

A.They had a misunderstanding four years ago.

B.They really like each other very much.

C.They've been angry with one another for a long time.

D.They've never learned how to express their feelings.

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第3题

And they continued to exhibit _7_ body-image attitudes as long as three years 第7空答案是:

And they continued to exhibit _7_ body-image attitudes as long as three years

第7空答案是:

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第4题

What CANNOT be inferred from the first paragraph?A.Scientific experiments in the past thre

What CANNOT be inferred from the first paragraph?

A.Scientific experiments in the past three hundred years have produced many valuable items.

B.For three hundred years there have been people holding a hostile attitude toward science.

C.Modern civilization depends on science so man supports scientific progress unanimously.

D.Some people think three hundred years is not long enough to set back for critical appraisal of scientific method.

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第5题

What is the author's view of "instant" scientific discoveries?A.They occur with long inter

What is the author's view of "instant" scientific discoveries?

A.They occur with long intervals.

B.They occur in quick succession for a long period.

C.They require long periods of time to be confirmed.

D.They are never made easily, but through long years of intense work and persistence.

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第6题

A.They had a misunderstanding four years ago.B.They really like each other very m

A.They had a misunderstanding four years ago.

B.They really like each other very much.

C.Theyve been angry with one another for a long time.

D.Theyve never learned how to express their feelings.

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第7题

What‘s the author‘s attitude toward the tower‘s future?
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A. The tower will collapse as the bell tower did in Pavia.

B. The tower will stand another 200 years before collapsing.

C. The tower will be torn down in 20 years.

D. The tower will exist for long with the development of technology.

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第8题

For about three centuries we have been doing science, trying science out, using science fo
r the construction of what we call modem civilization. Every dispensable item of contemporary technology, from canal locks to dial telephones to penicillin, was pieced together from the analysis of data provided by one or another series of scientific experiments. Three hundred years seems a long time for testing a new approach to human interliving, long enough to settle back for critical appraisal of the scientific method, maybe even long enough to vote on whether to go on with it or not. There is an argument.

Voices have been raised in protest since the beginning, rising in pitch and violence in the nineteenth century during the early stages of the industrial revolution, summoning urgent crowds into the streets any day these days on the issue of nuclear energy. Give it back, say some of the voices, it doesn' t really work, we' ve tried it and it doesn' t work, go back three hundred years and start again on something else less chancy for the race of man.

The principle discoveries in this century, taking all in all, are the glimpses of the depth of our ignorance about nature. Things that used to seem clear and rational, matters of absolute certainty - Newtonian mechanics, for example - have slipped through our fingers, and we are left with a new set of gigantic puzzles, cosmic uncertainties, ambiguities; some of the laws of physics are amended every few years, some are canceled outright, some undergo revised versions of legislative intent as if they were acts of Congress.

Just thirty years ago we call it a biological revolution when the fantastic geometry of the DNA molecule was exposed to public view and the linear language of genetics was decoded. For a while, things seemed simple and clear, the cell was a neat little machine, a mechanical device ready for taking to pieces and reassembling, like a tiny watch. But just in the last few years it has become almost unbelievably complex, filled with strange parts whose functions are beyond today' s imagining.

It is not just that there is more to do, there is everything to do. What lies ahead, or what can lie ahead if the efforts in basic research are continued, is much more than the conquest of human disease or the improvement of agricultural technology or the cultivation of nutrients in the sea. As we learn more about fundamental processes of living things in general we will learn more about ourselves.

What can' t be inferred from the 1 st paragraph?

A.Scientific experiments in the past three hundred years have produced many valuable items.

B.For three hundred years there have been people holding hostile attitude toward science.

C.Modern civilization depends on science so man supports scientific progress unanimously.

D.Three hundred years is not long enough to settle back critical appraisal of scientific method.

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第9题

听力原文:Why do so many people live to a healthy old age in certain parts of the world? [3

听力原文: Why do so many people live to a healthy old age in certain parts of the world? [31] What is the secret of their long lives? Three things seem to be very important: [29] fresh air, fresh food and a simple way of life. People work near their homes in the clean, mountain air instead of traveling long distances to work by car, bus or train. They do not sit all day in busy offices or factories, but work hard outdoors in the fields. They take more exercise and eat less food than people in the cities of the West. For years the Hunzas of the Himalayas did not need policemen, lawyers or doctors. There was no crime, no divorce and not much illness in their society. [30] They were a happy, peaceful people, famous all over India for their long, healthy lives.

(30)

A.Clean air, much food and more exercise.

B.Clean air, fresh food and less exercise.

C.Clean air, fresh food and simple life.

D.Hard work, much food and simple life.

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第10题

听力原文:Everywhere we look, we see Americans running. They run for every reason anybody c

听力原文: Everywhere we look, we see Americans running. They run for every reason anybody could think of. They run for health, for beauty, to lose weight, to feel fit, and because it is the thing they love to do. Every year, for example, thousands of people run in one race, the Boston Marathon, the best known long distance race in the United States. In recent years there have been nearly 5,000 official competitors and it takes three whole minutes for the crowd of runners just to cross the starting line.

You may have heard the story of the Greek runner, Pheidippides. He ran from Marathon to Athens to deliver the news of the great victory 2,500 years ago. No one knows how long it took him to run the distance. But the story tells us that he died of the effort. Today in very few cases will one die in a Marathon race. But at the finish line, we see what this race is about; not being first, but finishing. The real victory is not over one's fellow runners, but over one's own body. It is a victory of will-power over fatigue. In the Boston Marathon, each person who crosses that finish line is a winner.

(30)

A.Three minutes.

B.Two Minutes.

C.One minutes.

D.Five minutes.

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第11题

听力原文:We can read of things that happened 5000 years ago in the Near East, where people

听力原文: We can read of things that happened 5000 years ago in the Near East, where people first learned to write. But there are some parts of the word where even now people cannot write. The only way that they can preserve their history is to recount it as sagas—legends handed down from one generation to another. (29)These legends are useful because they can tell us something about migrations of people who lived long ago, but none could write down what they did.

(30) Anthropologists wondered where the remote ancestors of the Polynesian people now living in the Pacific Islands came from. The sagas of these people explain that some of them came from Indonesia about 2000 years ago.

But the first people who were like ourselves lived so long ago that even their sagas, if they had any, are forgotten. So archaeologists have neither history nor legends to help them to find out where the first 'modern men' came from.

(31) Fortunately, however, ancient men made tools of stone, especially flint, because this is easier to shape than other kinds. They may also have used wood and skins, but these have rotted away. (31)Stone does not decay, and so the tools of long ago have remained when even the bones of the men who made them have disappeared without trace.

(30)

A.They moved from one place to another.

B.They came from Indonesia.

C.They have left us information about their migrations.

D.They preserved their sagas and legends.

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