ID:9121-12911 If we carry out our plan with _______, we will surely achieve our goal sooner or later. A. conditions B. determination C. competition D. frowns
ID:9121-13133 All the countries and regions with developed market economies have mature chambers of commerce and industry(工商业联合会), and these organizations are playing _________ roles in the market economy system. A) replaceable B) irreplaceable C) substitutable D) changeable
ID:9121-12328 I don’t ______ going out today, with the sandstorm ________. A. feel up to, or something B. feel like C. feel like to, and the like D. feel up, and everything
ID:9121-13056(本题为引用材料试题,请根据材料回答以下问题) Why does the author say that the electronic economy may have a destructive impact on developing countries? A) Because it enables the developed countries to control the international market. B) Because it destroys the economic balance of the poor countries. C) Because it violates the national boundaries of the poor countries. D) Because it inhibits the industrial growth of developing countries.
ID:9121-12352 Directions: In this section there are four passages followed by questions or unfinished statements, each with four suggested answers marked A, B, C]and D. Choose the one that you think is the best answer. Mark your answers on your ANSWER SHEET.
TEXT A America is in no immediate danger of “running out of water”. People in the West have been aware that water is a precious commodity and must be conserved. In the damp East, an excess of water led to complacency until two factors created concern over our water supply. First, the periods of drought from the 1961 to 1966 in the Northeast affected crop production and used up the surface and ground water supplies. Second, attention was called to rapid increases in the rates of pollution of these waters resulting from increased urban and industrial growth. As a result, there is an increasing awareness of the need for conserving the quantity and quality of our nation’s water supplies. Water is a renewable resource, but it is not exhaustible. When used for municipal, industrial, or agricultural purposes, it is not destroyed, but generally finds its way back into our water supply. This used water now carries some waste materials. These dirty waters are often dumped into large bodies of water or are disposed of on land. In the latter instance, evaporation concentrates some of the wastes on the soil surface. On the other hand, water moving through the soil will eventually carry some of the wastes down into the ground water supplies, Eventually, all water evaporates and later returns to the earth as rain or snow in a relatively purer state. Through this never-ending cycle, there is just as much water in this country now as there ever was. The amount, however, does not increase. Our rapid population growth and our agricultural and industrial expansion have caused our water needs to soar. By withdrawing water from streams too quickly, we have in some instances upset the balance of nature’s built-in renewal processes for conserving water. As a result, some of our streams and lakes have become “wet deserts.” There is still plenty of water in them, but its water is so polluted that it supports almost no life at all.