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发布时间:2024-05-23 19:10:53

[单项选择]

Next week, the European Parliament will debate stringent regulation of a number of effective pesticides. If this regulation is passed, the consequences will be devastating.
In the 1960s, widespread use of the potent and safe insecticide DDT led to eradication of many insect-borne diseases in Europe and North America. But based on no scientific evidence of human health effects, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency banned DDT, and its European counterparts followed suit. Subsequently, more than 1 million people died each year from malaria— but not in America or Europe. Rather, most of the victims were children and women in Africa and Asia.
Today, even while acknowledging that indoor spraying of small amounts of DDT would help prevent many deaths and millions of illnesses, nongovernmental organizations continue—with great success—to pressure African governments not to allow its use. In order to stave off such pressure, African public health offi
A. suffer another severe setback
B. achieve another great success
C. bring another round of problems
D. produce another threat to people’s health

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[单项选择]

Next week, the European Parliament will debate stringent regulation of a number of effective pesticides. If this regulation is passed, the consequences will be devastating.
In the 1960s, widespread use of the potent and safe insecticide DDT led to eradication of many insect-borne diseases in Europe and North America. But based on no scientific evidence of human health effects, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency banned DDT, and its European counterparts followed suit. Subsequently, more than 1 million people died each year from malaria— but not in America or Europe. Rather, most of the victims were children and women in Africa and Asia.
Today, even while acknowledging that indoor spraying of small amounts of DDT would help prevent many deaths and millions of illnesses, nongovernmental organizations continue—with great success—to pressure African governments not to allow its use. In order to stave off such pressure, African public health offi
A. the governments questioned the ban’s effects
B. the environmental authorities also banned it
C. researchers paid more attention to the chemical
D. the general public showed support for the ban

[单项选择]The only problem with the debate last week was that the beginning sounded more like a personal attack than a dispassionate, intellectual arguing().
A. discussion
B. argument
C. talk
D. speech
[单项选择]What will happen next week
A. The radio show will not air.
B. The station will launch a website.
C. Special guests will be in the studio.
D. Someone else will be the host.
[单项选择]Where are they going to next week
[单项选择]What will the woman do next week
A. Go to a trade show
B. Visit some clients
C. Fill in for a colleague
D. Take a vacation
[填空题]From next week Mike plans to run
[简答题]He promised me to come next week.
[单项选择]What will the two speakers do next week
A. They will review the seminar on Chicago together.
B. They will attend Mr. Johnson’s seminar again.
C. They will attend a seminar on US economy.
D. They will meet again on next Friday for a seminar.
[单项选择]What are they going to do next week
A. Going to visit West Hill.
B. Going to visit the West Hill Farm.
C. Going to visit Uncle Wang’s factory.
[单项选择]The final examinations were postponed to next week,(), of course, was just what we all wanted.
A. what
B. that
C. those
D. which
[单项选择]Meteorologists routinely tell us what next week’s weather is likely to he, and climate scientists discuss what might happen in 100 years. Christoph Schar, though, ventures dangerously close to that middle realm, where previously only the Farmer’s Almanac dared go: what will next summer’s weather be like Following last year’s tragic heat wave, which directly caused the death of tens of thousands of people, the question is of burning interest to Europeans. Schar asserts that last summer’s sweltering temperatures should no longer be thought of as extraordinary. "The situation in 2002 and 2003 in Europe, where we had a summer with extreme rainfall and record flooding followed by the hottest summer in hundreds of years, is going to be typical for future weather patterns," he says.
Most Europeans have probably never read Schar’s report (not least because it was published in the scientific journal Nature in the dead of winter) but they seem to be bracing themselves for the worst. As p
A. They found the cloud’s reaction to the carbon level of the atmophere was too complex to predict.
B. They were puzzled by the carbon levels in the atmosphere’s cloud.
C. The atmosphere’s reaction to the carbon level’s raise is more diffcult to predit than they ever thought.
D. Too many uncertainties in the atmosphere’s carbon level are to be reduced.

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