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Questions 1 - 5 Sample Passage 6 has six sections, A-F. Choose the correct heading for sections A-D and F from the list of headings below. Write the correct number i-ix in boxes 1-5 on your answer sheet. the sample answer: 1-i 2-ii 3-iii 4-iv 5-v 1 Section A 2 SectionB 3 Section C 4 Section D Example Section E vi 5 Section F Section A The role of governments in environmental management is difficult but inescapable. Sometimes, the state tries to manage the resources it owns, and does so badly. Often, however, governments act in an even more harmful way. They actually subsidise the exploitation and consumption of natural resources. A whole range of policies, from farm-price support to protection for coal-mining, do environmental damage and (often) make no economic sense. Scrapping them offers a two-fold bonus: a cleaner environment and a more efficient economy. Growth and environmentalism can actually go hand in hand, if politicians have the courage to confront the vested interest that subsidies create. Section B No activity affects more of the earth's surface than farming. It shapes a third of the planet's land area, not counting Antarctica, and the proportion is rising. World food output per head has risen by 4 per cent between the 1970s and 1980s mainly as a result of increases in yields from land already in cultivation, but also because more land has been brought under the plough. Higher yields have been achieved by increased irrigation, better crop breeding, and a doubling in the use of pesticides and chemical fertilisers in the 1970s and 1980s. Section C All these activities may have damaging environmental impacts. For example, land clearing for agriculture is the largest single cause of deforestation; chemical fertilisers and pesticides may contaminate water supplies; more intensive farming and the abandonment of fallow periods tend to exacerbate soil erosion; and the spread of monoculture and use of high-yielding varieties of crops have been accompanied by the disappearance of old varieties of food plants which might have provided some insurance against pests or diseases in future. Soil erosion threatens the productivity of land in both rich and poor countries. The United States, where the most careful measurements have been done, discovered in 1982 that about one-fifth of its farmland was losing topsoil at a rate likely to diminish the soil's productivity. The country subsequently embarked upon a program to convert 11 per cent of its cropped land to meadow or forest. Topsoil in India and China is vanishing much faster than in America. Section D Government policies have frequently compounded the environmental damage that farming can cause. In the rich countries, subsidies for growing crops and price supports for farm output drive up the price of land. The annual value of these subsidies is immense: about $250 billion, or more than all World Bank lending in the 1980s. To increase the output of crops per acre, a farmer's easiest option is to use more of the most readily available inputs: fertilisers and pesticides. Fertiliser use doubled in Denmark in the period 1960-1985 and increased in The Netherlands by 150 per cent. The quantity of pesticides applied has risen too: by 69 per cent in 1975-1984 in Denmark, for example, with a rise of 115 per cent in the frequency of application in the three years from 1981. In the late 1980s and early 1990s some efforts were made to reduce farm subsidies. The most dramatic example was that of New Zealand, which scrapped most farm support in 1984. A study of the environmental effects, conducted in 1993, found that the end of fertiliser subsidies had been followed by a fall in fertiliser use (a fall compounded by the decline in world commodity prices, which cut farm incomes). The removal of subsidies also stopped land­clearing and over-stocking, which in the past had been the principal causes of erosion. Farms began to diversify. The one kind of subsidy whose removal appeared to have been bad for the environment was the subsidy to manage soil erosion. In less enlightened countries, and in the European Union, the trend has been to reduce rather than eliminate subsidies, and to introduce new payments to encourage farmers to treat their land in environmentally friendlier ways, or to leave it fallow. It may sound strange but such payments need to be higher than the existing incentives for farmers to grow food crops. Farmers, however, dislike being paid to do nothing. In several countries they have become interested in the possibility of using fuel produced from crop residues either as a replacement for petrol (as ethanol) or as fuel for power stations (as biomass). Such fuels produce far less carbon dioxide than coal or oil, and absorb carbon dioxide as they grow. They are therefore less likely to contribute to the greenhouse effect. But they are rarely competitive with fossil fuels unless subsidised - and growing them does no less environmental harm than other crops. Section E In poor countries, governments aggravate other sorts of damage. Subsidies for pesticides and artificial fertilisers encourage farmers to use greater quantities than are needed to get the highest economic crop yield. A study by the International Rice Research Institute of pesticide use by farmers in South East Asia found that, with pest-resistant varieties of rice, even moderate applications of pesticide frequently cost farmers more than they saved. Such waste puts farmers on a chemical treadmill: bugs and weeds become resistant to poisons, so next year's poisons must be more lethal. One cost is to human health. Every year some 10,000 people die from pesticide poisoning, almost all of them in the developing countries, and another 400,000 become seriously ill. As for artificial fertilisers, their use world-wide increased by 40 per cent per unit of farmed land between the mid 1970s and late 1980s, mostly in the developing countries. Overuse of fertilisers may cause farmers to stop rotating crops or leaving their land fallow. That, in turn, may make soil erosion worse. Section F A result of the Uruguay Round of world trade negotiations is likely to be a reduction of 36 per cent in the average levels of farm subsidies paid by the rich countries in 1986-1990. Some of the world's food production will move from Western Europe to regions where subsidies are lower or non-existent, such as the former communist countries and parts of the developing world. Some environmentalists worry about this outcome. It will undoubtedly mean more pressure to convert natural habitat into farmland. But it will also have many desirable environmental effects. The intensity of farming in the rich world should decline, and the use of chemical inputs will diminish. Crops are more likely to be grown in the environments to which they are naturally suited. And more farmers in poor countries will have the money and the incentive to manage their land in ways that are sustainable in the long run. That is important. To feed an increasingly hungry world, farmers need every incentive to use their soil and water effectively and efficiently.
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【单选题】按指定长度对线段进行等分是下面哪个命令:
A.
定距等分
B.
定数等分
C.
点的标记
D.
都不是
【单选题】能从循环语句的循环体中跳出的语句是 ( )
A.
if 语句
B.
break 语句
C.
for 语句
D.
continue 语句
【简答题】实验3(try-catch-finally) // 一.创建测试类 //1 声明divide()方法实现了两个整数相除,带有两个int参数 //1)定义一个变量result记录两个数相除的结果 //2)返回结果 //2 声明main()方法 //1)在方法中调用divide()方法,传入两个参数,其中第二个参数为0,并将结果赋给一个变量 //2)打印输出该变量的值 //3)用try语句将前两步括起...
【简答题】通过比较脱钙和不脱钙的牙本质小管直径,可知管周牙本质的厚度在近髓端约为( ),而在近釉质端则为( )。
【简答题】Try-catch-finally语句中, 无论异常是否发生( )模 块的代码必定执行。但 有一种情况下是不会执行的,那就是在 try...catch 中执行了 ( ) 语句 ,就不会执行该模块的代码。
【判断题】在meta标记中使用name属性提供搜索内容名称。设置网页关键字时,name的值为keywords。
A.
正确
B.
错误
【单选题】能从循环语句的循环体中跳出的语句是( )。
A.
for 语句
B.
break 语句
C.
while 语句
D.
continue语句 [简答题][4分][难度2] (1)i=0; do{  i++;}while(true); [参考答案] while循环条件错,改为:i<30 [简答题][4分][难度2] (2)while(i>100) sum+=i; i--; [参考答案] while循环差{},补上。 [简答题][4分][难度2] (3)while(i<=100); { System.out.println(i); i++;} [参考答案] while语句多“;”,去掉 [简答题][4分][难度2] (4)int factorial=1; For(int i=1;i<5;i++) { while(i>1)factorial*=i--; System.out.println(factorial);} [参考答案] 在for循环里改变了循环控制变量,改为:int j=i;while(j>1)factorial*=j--; [简答题][4分][难度2] (5)int test(int x) {  int x; x=Math.abs(x); return x;} [参考答案] 方法体内不能定义形式参数,改为:int y; y=Math.abs(x);  return y;
【单选题】对文中提到的 “中保”的理解,以下说法不恰当的是 ______
A.
是犹太教和基督教对于神与人的中介的称呼。
B.
在犹太教中多指摩西。
C.
是指一个国家的最高首脑。
D.
基督教中则指耶稣基督。
【单选题】对子产品组合来说 .产品组合深度越大说明 ()
A.
企业的产品线越多
B.
企业产品的规格、品种越多
C.
企业每条产品线内产品规格越多
D.
各产品线在最终用途、生产条件、分配渠道方面的密切相关程度越高。
【判断题】try语句块中的代码,是一定发生的异常代码。
A.
正确
B.
错误
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