更多“Faulkner’s region was th…”相关的问题
第1题
Faulkner’s works have been termed the Yoknapatawpha Saga, “one connected story”.()
此题为判断题(对,错)。请帮忙给出正确答案和分析,谢谢!
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第2题
Freshwater life itself has never come easy in the Middle East. Ever since The Old Testament (旧约全书), God punished man with 40 days and 40 nights of rain. Water supplies here have been dwindling. The rainfall only comes in winter and drains quickly through the semiarid land, leaving the soil to bake and to thirst for next November.
The region's accelerating population, expanding agriculture, industrialization, and higher living standards demand more freshwater. Drought and pollution limit its availability. War and mismanagement waste it. Said Joyce Start of the Global Water Summit Initiative, based in Washington, D.C. "Nations like Israel and Jordan are swiftly sliding into that zone where they are suing all the water resources available to them. They have only 15 to 20 years left before their agriculture, and ultimately their food security, is threatened."
I came here to examine this crisis in the making, to investigate fears that "water wars" are imminent, that water has replaced oil as the region's most contentious commodity. For more than two months I traveled through three river valleys and seven nations—from southern Turkey down the Euphrates River to Syria, Iraq, and on to Kuwait; to Israel and Jordan, neighbors across the valley of the Jordan; to the timeless Egyptian Nile.
Even amid the scarcity there are haves and have-nots. Compared with the United States, which in 1990 had freshwater potential of 10,000 cubic meters (2.6 million gallons) a year for each citizen, Iraq had 5,500, Turkey had 4,000, and Syria had more than 2,800. Egypt's potential was only 1,100. Israel had 460. Jordan had a meager 260. But these are not firm figures, because upstream use of river water can dramatically alter the potential downstream.
Scarcity is only one element of the crisis. Inefficiency is another, as is the reluctance of some water-poor nations to change priorities from agriculture to less water-intensive enterprises. Some experts suggest that if nations would share both water technology and resources, they could satisfy the region's population, currently 159 million. But in this patchwork of ethnic and religious rivalries, water seldom stands alone as an issue. It is entangled in the politics that keep people from trusting and seeking help from one another. Here, where water, like truth, is precious, each nation tends to find its own water and supply its own truth.
As Israeli hydrology professor Uri Shamir told me: "If there is political will for peace, water will not be a hindrance. If you want reasons to fight, water will not be a hindrance, lf you want reasons to fight, water will give you ample opportunities."
Why does the author use the phrase "for next November" (Line 3, Para. 1)?
A.According to the Old Testament freshwater is available only in November.
B.Rainfall comes only in winter staging from November.
C.Running water systems will not be ready until next November.
D.It is a custom in that region that irrigation to crops is done only in November.
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第3题
______ is often acclaimed literary spokesman of the Jazz Age.
A、Ernest Hemingway
B、 Scott Fitzgerald
C、William Faulkner
D、Ezra Pound
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第4题
Among the following 3 authors the one who did not win a Nobel Prize is ---.A.William F
Among the following 3 authors the one who did not win a Nobel Prize is ---.
A.William Faulkner
B. F. S. Fitzgerald
C. John Steinbeck
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第5题
”墙“和”门“命令的快捷键依次是()。
A、WA;DR
B、WA;LW
C、WN;DL
D、WN;DR
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第6题
一下三种砂轮材质白刚玉磨料、棕刚玉磨料、绿碳化硅磨料的简写分别为()。
A、WA/SA/A
B、GC/PA/WA
C、WA/A/GC
D、PA/WA/A
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第7题
CBR实验,泡水后试件吸水量Wa为()。
A、Wa=泡水后试件质量-泡水前试筒和试件质量
B、Wa=泡水前试筒和试件质量-泡水后试筒和试件质量
C、Wa=泡水后试筒和试件质量-泡水后试筒质量
D、Wa=泡水后试筒和试件质量-泡水前试筒和试件质量
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第8题
显示当前目录下文件主名的第3、4个字符为“WA”,扩展名为任意的所有文件名和目录,应使用的命令是()。
A、DIR??WA*.*
B、DIR??WA.*
C、DIR*WA*.*
D、DIR??WA?*
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第9题
Now elsewhere in the world, Iceland may be spoken of, somewhat breathlessly, as western Europe's last pristine wildness. But the environmental awareness that is sweeping the world had bypassed the majority of Icelanders. Certainly they were connected to their land, the way one is complicatedly connected to, or encumbered by, family one can't do anything about. But the truth is, once you're off the beaten paths of the low-lying coastal areas where everyone lives, the roads are few, and they're all bad, so Iceland's natural wonders have been out of reach and unknown even to its own inhabitants. For them the land has always just been there, something that had to be dealt with and, if possible, exploited—the mind-set being one of land as commodity rather than land as, well, priceless art on the scale of the " Mona Lisa".
When the opportunity arose in 2003 for the national power company to enter into a 40-year contract with the American aluminum company Alcoa to supply hydroelectric power for a new smelter (冶炼厂), those who had been dreaming of something like this for decades jumped at it and never looked back. Iceland may at the moment be one of the world's richest countries, with a 99 percent literacy rate and long life expectancy. But the project's advocates, some of them getting on in years, were more emotionally attuned to be the country's century upon century of want, hardship, and colonial servitude to Denmark, which officially ended only in 1944 and whose psychological imprint remained relatively fresh. For the longest time, life here had meant little more than a hut, dark all winter, cold, no hope, children dying left and right, earthquakes, plagues, starvation, volcanoes erupting and destroying all vegetation and livestock, all spirit— a world revolving almost entirely around the welfare of one's sheep and, later, on how good the cod catch was. In the outlying regions, it still largely does.
Ostensibly, the Alcoa project was intended to save one of these dying regions— the remote and sparsely populated east— where the way of life had steadily declined to a point of desperation and gloom. After fishing quotas were imposed in the early 1980s to protect fish stocks, many individual boat owners sold their allotments or gave them away, fishing rights ended up mostly in the hands of a few companies and small fishermen were virtually wiped out. Technological advances drained away even more jobs previously done by human hands, and the people were seeing everything they had worked for all their lives turn up worthless and their children move away. With the old way of life doomed, aluminum projects like this one had come to be perceived, wisely or not, as a last chance. "Smelter or death."
The contract with Alcoa would infuse the region with foreign capital, an estimated 400 jobs, and spin-off service industries. It also was a way for Iceland to develop expertise that potentially could be sold to the rest of the world; diversify an economy historically dependent on fish; and, in an appealing display of Icelandic can-do verse, perhaps even protect all of Iceland, once and for all, from the unpredictability of life itself.
" We have to live," Halldor Asgrimsson said. Halldor, a former prime minister and longtime member of parliament from the region, was a driving force behind the project. "We have a right to live. "
According to the passage, most Icelanders view land as something of______.
A.environmental value
B.commercial value
C.potential value for tourism
D.great value for livelihood
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第10题
otherwise/'ʌðəwaɪz/()
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