更多“The Great Civil War,as it became known,lasted from()until 1646.A、1639B、1640C、1641D、1642”相关问题
  • 第1题:

    The Romantic Period, one of the most important periods in the history of American literature, stretches from the end of ______________ to the outbreak of ____________.

    A.the 17th century … the American War of Independence

    B.the 18th century … the American Civil War

    C.the 17th century … the American Civil War

    D.the 18th century … the U.S.– Mexican War


    正确答案: B

  • 第2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3题:

    Two years after the ending of the Hundred Years’ War with France, England was thrown into another series of civil wars, ________.

    A.the War of the Celts

    B.Norman Conquest

    C.the War of the Roses

    D.Battle of Hastings


    正确答案:C

  • 第4题:

    A trip to that African country whose people are dying from the civil war is described in the doctor’s article as a terrible ____.

    A. nightmare

    B. potential

    C. reaction

    D. implication


    正确答案:A

  • 第5题:

    The first ten amendments,known as( )were added to the American Constitution in 1791.

    A.the Bill of Rights
    B.the Articles
    C.Civil Rights
    D.the Bill of Civil Rights

    答案:A
    解析:
    考查美国历史。美国宪法是世界上最早的成文宪法,是美国最高的法律。它起草于1787年,生效于1789年。《宪法》总共有27条修正案,最初的10条修正案被称为“权利法案”( Bill of Rights)。因此B、C、D三项不符合题意。

  • 第6题:

    Civil war or regional conflicts also cause disruption,()people out of rural areas.

    Adrives

    Bdrove

    Cdriving

    Ddriven


    C

  • 第7题:

    Why did the Civil War break out? How did the war end?


    正确答案:—— In the early 1800s, the Northern states turned from farming to manufacturing. Black slavery soon disappeared in the North. But things were different in the South. The South expanded both its agriculture and its slavery. The problem of slavery became a serous political issue. The abolitionists tried to abolish slavery while the South tried to keep it. When Abraham Lincoln was elected President, the Southern states broke away and formed a new nation. Then Lincoln was determined to maintain the Union and the war broke out on April 12, 1861, Lincoln realized that he could win support for the Union at home and abroad by making the war a just war against slavery. So he issued Emancipation Proclamation. Thus England and France stood by the Union’s side. Many black slaves joined the Union Army. After a series of battles, Robert Lee could no longer hold Richmond. He surrendered on April 9, 1865. The Civil War ended.

  • 第8题:

    单选题
    The longest war that the United States has fought is _____.
    A

    the Independence War

    B

    the Civil War

    C

    the Vietnam War

    D

    the Gulf War


    正确答案: B
    解析:
    独立战争(1775~1783);内战(1861~1865);越南战争(1961~1975);海湾战争(1991)历时一个月。选项C正确。

  • 第9题:

    单选题
    A

    Education during the Civil War.

    B

    Post-Civil War developments in higher education.

    C

    Current trends in technological education.

    D

    Benefits for women in state universities.


    正确答案: A
    解析:
    [考点]主旨题。文章主要是讲美国高等教育在美国内战之后的三次重大发展及它们带来的影响。“following the Civil War”点明了是内战后的教育变革,因此文章的主旨应为B项。

  • 第10题:

    单选题
    After the First World War, the author Anais Nin became interested in the art movement known as Surrealism and in psychoanalysis, both _____ her novels and short stories.
    A

    in which the influence

    B

    to have influence on

    C

    of which influenced on

    D

    its influence in


    正确答案: C
    解析:
    句意:第一次世界大战后,作家Anais Nin开始对超现实主义的艺术运动和精神分析感兴趣,二者均对其长篇小说和短篇小说的创作产生了影响。A、D两项带入题干均构不成完整的语法,C项中influence是用作了动词,而作动词时它是及物的,后不需要加介词on。B项中不定式作定语,修饰both;both及后面的部分作Surrealism和psychoanalysis的同位语。

  • 第11题:

    单选题
    Civil war or regional conflicts also cause disruption,()people out of rural areas.
    A

    driven

    B

    drives

    C

    driving

    D

    drove


    正确答案: C
    解析: 暂无解析

  • 第12题:

    单选题
    The American and British armies ______.
    A

    have experimented with cluster bombs in the recent war in Iraq.

    B

    have suffer great casualties from cluster bombs used by its enemies.

    C

    have planned to use cluster bombs in future war fairs.

    D

    has been accused by the human rights group for using cluster bombs in the past.


    正确答案: C
    解析:
    录音中一个重要的人权组织指出“如果伊拉克战争中美国和英国军队没有在人口聚居区使用集束弹药(cluster munitions),那么成千上百起平民受伤和死亡就可以避免了”,由此可知选项D符合录音内容。
    【录音原文】
    The American and British armies could have prevented hundreds of civilian injuries or deaths during the war in Iraq by eliminating the use of cluster munitions in populated areas, according to a study by a leading human rights group.

  • 第13题:

    After the Civil War, the United States saw great developments in ().

    A.agriculture

    B.economics

    C.culture

    D.politics


    正确答案: A

  • 第14题:

    As the work became more familiar, his _______ toward school changed from dislike to great enthusiasm

    A:position

    B:attitude

    C:manner

    D:action


    正确答案:B 

  • 第15题:

    The English Civil War is also called _____.

    A.the Glorious Revolution

    B.the Bloody Revolution

    C.the Catholic Revolution

    D.the Puritan Revolution


    正确答案:D

  • 第16题:

    The Hundred Year’s War lasted from 1337 to 1453 between Britain and( )

    A.the US
    B.France
    C.Canada
    D.Australia

    答案:B
    解析:
    考查英国历史。百年战争是指从1337年开始,断断续续直至1453年结束的英法两国之间的战争。战争起因既有领土之争也有经济利益的冲突。

  • 第17题:

    The Great Civil War,as it became known,lasted from()until 1646.

    A1639

    B1640

    C1641

    D1642


    D

  • 第18题:

    英国资产阶级革命中的第一次内战开始于()年。

    • A、1639
    • B、1640
    • C、1641
    • D、1642

    正确答案:D

  • 第19题:

    单选题
    The distance that a vessel travels from the time that the order to put engines full astern until the vessel is dead in the water is known as().
    A

    advance

    B

    head reach

    C

    surge

    D

    transfer


    正确答案: A
    解析: 暂无解析

  • 第20题:

    单选题
    Why did holidays abroad become a common prize after the war?
    A

    People became more interested in material possessions.

    B

    Everyone wanted the opportunity to travel.

    C

    Group travel became easier.

    D

    People wanted to get away from familiar surroundings.


    正确答案: B
    解析:
    最后一段指出战争后,与新消费社会保持一致的需求也很快得到实现,那时如果你的邻居都有能力出国度假,而你却不能,“winning an easy competition”就可以使你在异国地区度过两周的假期,可见战后每个人都想去国外度假,因此报纸和杂志又以此作为奖品,故选B。

  • 第21题:

    问答题
    A Nation of Immigrants Composed Mainly of the White People  The United States of America has long been known as a nation of immigrants and a “melting pot”, because the great majority of its people are immigrants and descendants of settlers who came from all over the world to make their homes in the new land, seeking their dream in America. The  first immigrants in American history came from England and the Netherlands. Now the descendants of European immigrants make up 80.3% of the American population of about 250 million.  English colonization in North America in the sixteenth century repeatedly failed. It was not until 1607 that the first English permanent settlement in America was establish. The first wave of colonizing activity, which began in 1606 and lasted until 1637, planted three groups of English colonies: Virginia and Maryland on the Chesapeake, the Puritan commonwealths of New England, and the British West Indies, and also the Dutch colony of New Netherlands, which became New York. Some other European countries also established their colonies along North America’s Atlantic coastline. In 1713, the population of the twelve continental colonies was nearly 360,000, a fourfold increase. Quite a lot of them were German and Scots-Irish. Discontented Germans came to English America because the German states had no overseas possessions, and no colonies except those of the English would admit foreigners. Most Germans entered America at Philadelphia, whence they spread out fanwise into the back-country and became the most prosperous farmers in North America. The English-speaking Scots-Irish came from Ulster. They were largely descendents of the Scots who had colonized Northern Ireland when the English were first setting Virginia. After 1713 the pressure of the native Catholic Irish and the restrictive legislation of the British. Parliament forced them to emigrate in drove. As land was dear in the eastern colonies, these fighting Celts drifted to the frontier. A considerable number of southern Irish, mostly Protestants but including Catholic families came at the same time. They were mostly men of property who invested in land and remained in the older-settled regions.  Britain gradually established its dominance over North America’s Atlantic coast. It successfully planted 13 colonies by edging out other colonial powers and by driving off the native Indians. Though the first English permanent settlement in America was established in Jamestown in1607, modem America was established in Jamestown in 1607, modem Americans choose to look back to the Pilgrim Father, a group of Puritans who came from England in 1620 for a symbol of the origin of their new country. They were followed by other Englishmen. They were generally known as the White Anglo-Saxon Protestants (WASP), who played the leading role in winning America’s independence. Their mother tongue, English, became the official language of the new nation. Today about 33% of Americans are of British origin. They control most of the national wealth and political power. The other white Americans, whose forefathers were from other European countries, are not so influential as the WASPs. All these white European immigrants and their descendants together constitute the majority of the American population.  After the American Civil War, a large number of the “new immigrations” came to the United States of America. Even during the Civil War some 800,000 immigrants had entered the United States, and in the ten years after the ending of the war, some 3.25 million immigrants flooded into the cities and the farms of the North and the West. In the single generation from 1880 to 1910 a tidal wave of immigration spilled almost 18 million persons on American shores. Unlike the old immigrations, who were “pushed out” of West Europe by religious persecution or impoverishment, the new immigrations were “pulled to” the United States by the prospect of good jobs and happy life. Most of them were unskilled. The large influx of the new immigrations resulted in the adoption of the Immigration Quota Law by the American government.  A lot of Chinese coolies were brought into America after the discovery of gold in California. and for the construction of the Central Pacific Railroad. The Chinese-Americans made a great contribution to the development of the American West. But, Chinese-Americans and other Asian-Americans never constitute a majority of the American population. The United States has always been a nation of immigrants composed mainly of the white people.  Immigrants from different nations all over the world joined together to make one nation, the American. They speak almost the same kind of English with far less class or regional variety than in Great Britain. They have the same way of life, similar habits and manners. They have established a new universal national culture. With only a few exceptions, the national origins have well been mixed. In this sense, the United States of America has been known as a “melting pot”.

    正确答案: 【参考译文】
    白人为主的移民国家 一直以来,美利坚合众国就以移民国家而著称,被称之为“民族大熔炉”。其人口组成的绝大部分是移民,那些移居者怀揣着梦想,从世界各地来到这片新大陆上,并在此生息繁衍。美国历史上的第一批移民来自英国和荷兰。现在,在美国大约2亿5,000万的总人口中,欧洲移民的后裔占到了80.3%。
    16世纪时,英国在北美洲的殖民行动屡遭挫败,直到1607年才建立起第一个永久居留地。1606年至l637年间掀起的第一次殖民活动浪潮产生了3个英国殖民地,它们分别是位于切萨皮克湾一带的弗吉尼亚和马里兰,位于新英格兰地区的英国清教徒社区还有英属西印度群岛。荷兰人在新尼德兰建立了殖民地,也就是后来的纽约市。其他欧洲国家也在北美的大西洋沿岸一带建立了自己的殖民地。1713年,22个大陆殖民地的总人口接近36万;到1760年,加上佐治亚地区,殖民地人口达到160万,增加了将近4倍。其中,德国和苏格兰—爱尔兰人占据了较大比例。因为德国没有海外殖民地,而且只有英属殖民地允许外国人进入,所以很多不满于本国现状的德国人来到了北美。他们大多从费城进入美洲,随后便伞状扩散开来,进入边远地区并成为北美最富裕的农场主。那些讲英语的苏格兰—爱尔兰人来自北爱尔兰,他们主要是苏格兰人的后裔。当英格兰在弗吉尼亚落户时,他们的祖先也移居到北爱尔兰。1713年后,由于受到当地信仰天主教的爱尔兰人的迫害和英国议会的限制性立法的影响,他们被迫移居国外。因为当时美国东部殖民地的土地价格较高,所以这些极富斗争性的凯尔特人漂泊到了边境。大批的南方爱尔兰人——其中大部分是新教徒,也有天主教家庭——同期也来到了美洲。他们大部分都是有产者,纷纷购置田地,如今仍然居住在这些早期定居地上。
    英格兰逐步确立了对北美大西洋沿岸的统治地位。它排挤掉其他殖民强国、驱赶走本地印第安居民,成功建立了13个殖民地。尽管1607年英格兰人就在詹姆士城建立了美洲的第一个永久定居地,但现今的美国人仍然以“清教徒先驱”——那些于l620年从英格兰来的清教徒——作为他们国家起源的象征。随后,其他的英格兰人接踵而至。这些被称作盎格鲁—撒克逊新教徒的人在美国赢得独立的过程中发挥了极重要的作用。他们的母语——英语也成为这个新生国家的官方语言。如今,约有33%的美国人拥有英国血统。他们掌握了这个国家大部分的财富和政治权力。来自欧洲其他国家的移民后裔远不如他们的影响力大。这些欧洲白种移民和他们的后代共同构成了美国人口的大多数。
    内战过后,大批的“新移民”来到美国。内战期间就有约80万移民进入了美国,内战后的10年中,约325万移民潮涌入美国北部和西部的城镇与农场。l880年到1910年间,移民大潮将多达1,800万的移民席卷至美国海岸。与老一代移民不同的是,这些新移民不是因为受到宗教迫害或是因为贫困而离开西欧的,他们或是被称心的工作机会吸引、或是出于对于幸福生活的期盼而来到这里。他们大多没有什么技术专长。新移民的大量涌入致使美国政府颁布了移民分配法来对他们进行调控。
    在加利福尼亚发现金矿后,为满足中央太平洋铁路建筑之需,大批的中国苦力来到了美国。华裔人士对美国西部的发展做出了巨大贡献。但是与其他亚裔美国人一样,美籍华人从来没有成为美国人口的大多数。美国一直是以白种人为主体的移民国家。
    来自世界各地不同国家的移民组合在一起形成了美国人。他们说着同样的英语,在很大程度上减少了大布列颠曾经存在的阶层和宗教差异。他们有着相同的生活方式、类似的生活习惯和行为方式。他们已经建立起一种新的全民文化。除少数例外者外,不同的民族起源已经融合在一起。这也是美国以“民族大熔炉”而著称的原因所在。
    解析: 暂无解析

  • 第22题:

    问答题
    Why did the Civil War break out? How did the war end?

    正确答案: —— In the early 1800s, the Northern states turned from farming to manufacturing. Black slavery soon disappeared in the North. But things were different in the South. The South expanded both its agriculture and its slavery. The problem of slavery became a serous political issue. The abolitionists tried to abolish slavery while the South tried to keep it. When Abraham Lincoln was elected President, the Southern states broke away and formed a new nation. Then Lincoln was determined to maintain the Union and the war broke out on April 12, 1861, Lincoln realized that he could win support for the Union at home and abroad by making the war a just war against slavery. So he issued Emancipation Proclamation. Thus England and France stood by the Union’s side. Many black slaves joined the Union Army. After a series of battles, Robert Lee could no longer hold Richmond. He surrendered on April 9, 1865. The Civil War ended.
    解析: 暂无解析

  • 第23题:

    单选题
    The Great Civil War,as it became known,lasted from()until 1646.
    A

    1639

    B

    1640

    C

    1641

    D

    1642


    正确答案: D
    解析: 暂无解析