更多"During World War 11 , the statues w"的相关试题:
[填空题]During World War 11 , the statues were made of piaster.
[填空题]After World War II most Australians were cautious about prospects for the future.
[填空题]In the First World War, Jews were murdered by the Germans because they were thought to be______.
[填空题]Some improvements were made in radio communication during World War Ⅱ.
[单项选择]Although glasswares that were made in England dominated the early North American market,glassblowers from Great Britain were not easily persuaded to go to the North American colonies. The eighteenth century was the golden age of English glass: the industry and its employees prospered. Glassmakers were discouraged from emigrating because if English-quality glass were produced in the colonies the home industry would have been threatened. In one instance, five English glassmakers were arrested in England as they boarded a ship for America.
In spite of England’s disapproval of American manufacturing, an interest in glassmaking recurred periodically during the entire colonial era. The actual number of glass factories erected was small, only twelve or so, probably because the manufacturing of glass required a considerable initial investment in a large facility and a team of skilled workers. Glasshouses, as the glassmaking factories were called, could not be erected anywhere. Rather,
A. Glassmaking in colonial America.
B. Effects of immigration on colonial American industry.
C. The use of glass products in colonial America.
D. Competition among glassmakers in colonial Pennsylvani
[填空题]People in the rural areas were made fun of because they celebrated the New Year______________.
[填空题]We were made (work)()all night.
[单项选择]
"Fingers were made before forks." When
a person puts aside his knife and fork, and dives into his food, someone often
repeats that saying. The fork was ancient (古代的) agricultural
tool, but for centuries no one thought of eating with it. Not until the eleventh
century, when a young lady from Turkey brought her fork to Italy, did the custom
reach Europe. By the fifteenth century the use of the fork was
widely spread in Italy. The English explanation was that Italians hated eating
food touched with fingers. English were thought to be womanlike and women who
used them were called show-offs(卖弄) and overnice (过于讲究的). Not
until the late 1600s did using a fork become a common
custom. |
The passage is about ______.
A. the way of eating with a fork
B. the custom of eating with a fork
C. the reason for the custom of eating with a fork
D. the history of the custom of eating with a fork