问答题Passage 4  One of the world’s most isolated states, North Korea was hoping to become a member of a very exclusive club. If North Korea’s attempt to put an object into orbit had succeeded, then this impoverished country, hidden behind one of the last Co

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Passage 4  One of the world’s most isolated states, North Korea was hoping to become a member of a very exclusive club. If North Korea’s attempt to put an object into orbit had succeeded, then this impoverished country, hidden behind one of the last Cold War frontiers, would have joined the handful of countries with the independent capability to launch their own satellites.  North Korea gave prior warning of the launch and said all along that it was using it as part of the peaceful pursuit of a space programme, as is its right under international law. It has, as was to be expected, already claimed that its satellite is safely in orbit.  Yet there may be mocking sniggers. The US military says the satellite failed to make orbit, splashing down instead in the Pacific Ocean.  But for the US—and North Korea’s regional neighbours—the success or failure of the satellite was simply not the issue.  Their concern about the launch has kept their spy agencies scrutinising North Korea’s east- coast rocket base for months. Navy vessels from the US, Japan and South Korea, deployed off the North Korean coast and equipped with sophisticated radar and anti-missile weaponry, will have monitored the rocket as it passed overhead.  The concern was two-fold.  That the launch might go wrong in a way that threatened Japanese territory, and that this was an illegal act designed primarily to enhance North Korea’s missile capability.  As a general rule, any launch vehicle designed to put a satellite into orbit could also be used as a long distance delivery system for a warhead. In North Korea’s case, the technology is thought to be almost identical.  What is believed to be a version of the same rocket was launched in July 2006, without warning, but on that occasion, North Korea admitted afterwards that it had been a straightforward missile test.  And some observers question why a country that struggles even to feed its own people would try to develop its own independent space programme. If it really wanted a communications satellite, they argue, a far cheaper option would be to pay someone else, perhaps their Chinese allies, to do it for them.  Despite the enormous investment—some estimates suggest that a single launch costs North Korea at least $ 30m (20m)—the level of technological achievement is akin to that reached by the US and the Soviet Union decades ago.  The conclusion drawn by much of the international community is that the satellite is simply a fig leaf for the real purpose, the development of the launch vehicle itself which is, no more and no less, a long-range missile.  North Korea is forbidden from pursuing this kind of technology by a UN resolution, passed after the 2006 missile test. So its opponents claim the satellite launch is in breach of this resolution, hence the strong international condemnation.  Many analysts believe that North Korea would use proof of a successful satellite launch for a number of purposes. Firstly as a kind of shop window for its military prowess, allowing it to boost sales of its rocket technology to other countries, again, in defiance of UN sanctions. But the real advantage is the raising of its threat level, which it will seek to exploit in international negotiations. The rocket used in this latest launch could, in theory at least, be adapted to travel as far as the western United States, albeit carrying a very small payload.  Professor Andrei Lankov, from Seoul’s Kookmin University, is in no doubt that this is Pyongyang’ s real motivation.  “Honestly, without its nuclear and missile programmes North Korea would look like an absolutely run-of-the-mill third-world dictatorship, although an unusually nasty, unusually brutal and exceptionally inefficient one.”  “The main reason why the news about North Korea can sometimes be found on the front pages of the worldwide press is because of their nukes and their missiles, without which nobody would even care about them.”  But regardless of North Korea’s true intention there is some debate about the legal position. Daniel Pinkston, a Seoul-based senior analyst with the Brussels-based International Crisi Group, believes it is not as clear cut as Washington suggests.  “Compelling arguments can be made that this is a clear violation of UN resolutions,” he said.  “Nevertheless, all states do have the sovereign right to the peaceful exploration of outer space. So it comes down to something that cannot really be resolved legally, it comes down to a political decision.”  And that’s where the difficulty might lie.  The UN Security Council meets later to decide a response.  But a veto-wielding China, one of North Korea’s oldest allies, might be keen to soften any proposed punishment.  1. Is this latest rocket launch by North Korea successful?  2. Why have the US, South Korea and Japan been so scared about North Korea’s rocket launch?  3. According to the western world, what is the launch indeed?  4. Is this rocket launch by North Korea legal or not according to the international community Why?
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相似问题和答案

第1题:

According to the author, one of the driving forces behind M&A wave is _______ .

A the greater customer demands

B a surplus supply for the market

C a growing productivity

D the increase of the world's wealth


正确答案:C

第2题:

By saying "Let's hope that this time it really will be the last one", the father meant that ______.

A. he wished people had not built the bonfire

B. he hoped people would not build any more bonfires

C. he hoped there would be no more wars in the world

D. he wished the Second World War had not happened


正确答案:C
43.文章最后一段提到作者的父亲参加过第一次世界大战,并且当第一次世界大战结束时似乎也有过这样的庆祝。但这并未阻止第二次世界大战的爆发。因此,当人们第二次庆祝世界大战的结束时,父亲发出深深的忧虑和期盼:真希望世界不会再有战争。选项 C是正确的。

第3题:

Over the last 25 years New Zealand's economy has gone from being one of the most regulated in the OECD to one of the least regulated.()

此题为判断题(对,错)。


正确答案:√

第4题:

Which is the best title of this passage?

A. The Earliest People in North America.

B. The Earliest Immigrants to North America.

C. The People of the United States.

D. Europeans Were the Earliest People Coming to the North America.


正确答案:B
文章主要讲的是到北美的移民,所以选B

第5题:

The United States grows nearly _____ of the world's grain and supplies a half of all the exports of grain in the world.

A.one third

B.one fourth

C.one sixth

D.one seventh


正确答案:B

第6题:

In the last sentence, the word "bust" most probably means ______.

A.the upper part of one's body

B.self-portrait

C.painting

D.clothes


正确答案:A
解析:应该正确理解出现本词汇的最后一个句子“A few even accepted commissions to make busts of prominent citizens.”B选项的意思为“自画像”,和C以及D的意思与句子的语境意义不符。本句话的意思为“一部分木雕师甚至接受任务给名人做上半身塑像”。

第7题:

"The pen is more powerful than the sword (剑)." There have been many writers who used their pens to fight things that were wrong. Mrs. Harriet Beecher Stowe was one of them. She was born in the USA in 1811. One of her books not only made her famous but has been described as one that excited the world, and was helpful in causing a civil war and freezing the slaves. The civil war was the American Civil War of 1861, in which the Northern States fought the Southern States and finally won. This book was named "Uncle Toms Cabin". There was time when every English-speaking man, woman, and child has read this novel that did so much to stop slavery. Not many people read it today, but it is still very interesting. The book has shown us how a warm-hearted writer can arouse (唤起) peoples sympathies (同情). The writer herself had neither been to the Southern States nor been a slave. The Southern Americans were very angry at the novel, which they said did not at all represent (代表) true state of affairs,

1、According to the passage ( ).

A、every English-speaking person had read "Uncle Tom's Cabin"

B、"Uncle Tom's Cabin" was not very interesting

C、those who don''t speak English can not have read "Uncle Tom's Cabin"

D、the book "Uncle Tom's Cabin" did a great deal in the American Civil War

2、How old was Mrs. Stowe when her world famous book was published? ( )

A、About 60 years old.

B、Over 50 years old.

C、In her forties.

D、Around 30 years old.

3、What do you learn about Mrs. Stowe from the passage? ( )

A、She had been living in the north of America before the American Civil War.

B、She herself encouraged the northern Americans to go to war and set the slaves free.

C、She was better as writing as using a sword.

D、She had once been a slave.

4、Why could Mrs. Stowe's book cause a civil war in America? ( )

A、She wrote so well that Americans loved her very much.

B、She disclosed (揭露) the terrible wrongs that had been done to the slaves in the Southern States.

C、The Southern Americans hated the book while the Northern Americans like it.

D、The book had been read by many Americans.

5、What can we learn from the passage? ( )

A、We needn't use weapons (武器) to fight things that are wrong.

B、 writer is more helpful in a war than a soldier.

C、We must understand the importance of literature and art.

D、No war can be won without such a book as "Uncle Tom's Cabin".


正确答案:1D 2C 3A 4B 5C

第8题:

The Grand Canyon National Park, one of America’s most famous scenic wonder, is approximately 120 kilometers north of Flagstaff, Utah.()

此题为判断题(对,错)。


正确答案:×

第9题:

According to the passage, one important change in United States education by the 1920's was that ______.

A) most places required children to attend

B) the amount of time spent on formal education was limited

C) new regulations were imposed on nontraditional education

D) adults and children studied in the same classes


正确答案:A
答案:A
[试题分析] 细节判断题。
[详细解答] 文章第二段指出:By 1920 schooling to age fourteen or beyond Was compulsory in most states,and the school year Was greatly lengthened。显然,可以判断A为正确答案。

第10题:

共用题干
Tightened Visa Regulations
According to South Korea's new visa regulations,native speakers of English in South Korea will be required to undergo criminal record checks,medical and drug tests,provide sealed academic transcripts(成绩单)and have their university diplomas inspected,The Korea Times has reported.The tightened regulations will affect an estimated 17,000 foreigners that hold E-2 visas specifically for foreign language teachers.
The most controversial requirement is that English teachers residing(居住)outside South Korea will have to have an interview at a South Korean Embassy before taking up their teaching posts. For applicants living in remote areas in Canada,Australia or the US,this is an additional travel burden .Meanwhile,foreign teachers currently living in South Korea must leave the country after their one-year contracts and renew their visas by visiting a neighboring country and return without additional documentation(文件证据).
The visa changes are a reaction to public concern about the suitability of some foreign teachers .A report from the South Korean Ministry of Education and Human Resources Development shows between 2001 and August of this year,1,481 foreign language teachers have been caught for a range of offenses including forged(伪造的)degrees , visa violations and general lawbreak-ing.
But the changes are likely to slow up the supply of teachers to South Korea's English language education sector. According to Michael Duffy,manager of a teacher placement service in South Korea,applicants have to spend a few hundred dollars and several months on getting affidavits(书面陈述书)for documents. " South Korea has put up too many hoops(圈)to jump through,"he said,adding that foreigners would seek work elsewhere.Most foreigners wonder if the experience of working in South Korea will be worth the burden of the paper work and increasing restrictions."I don't think(South)Korea has thought this through."Said Scott Mclnnis,a Canadian teacher based in Incheon near Seoul."This is a reactionary move by the government that will have strong implications for the EFL community."
As part of the efforts to ease the discontent(不满),the South Korean Ministry of Justice has granted a three-month grace period for current E-2 visa holders to prepare the necessary docu- ments.

The new visa policy aims at______.
A: protecting South Korea from terrorist attacks.
B: improving foreign language teaching in South Korea.
C: providing more job opportunities for the South Korean people.
D: encouraging the South Korean people to learn the Chinese language.

答案:B
解析:
细节题。第一段中“According to...to undergo criminal record checks , medical and drug tests , provide sealed academic transcripts...”可知,B、C、D三项内容都提到了,并未说要通过韩语考试。因此A项正确。


细节题。第二段中“Meanwhile , foreign teachers...without additional documentation." 可知,在新规定实施前,外国教师该怎么做,因此C项正确。


细节题。根据第三段"... including forged degrees , visa violations and general lawbreaking.”可知其中并未包括subversive activities。因此C项正确。


细节题。根据第三段“The visa changes are a reaction to public concern about the suitability of some foreign teachers.”可知这项政策的目的。因此B项正确。


主旨大意题。根据整篇文章大意可知,与文章有关的只有D项,其余三项均与文章无关联。因此D项正确。

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