托福考试易错题(2019/4/30) |
第1题: The school newspaper will eliminate event reports and news comments in the future issues, and this is due to some practical concerns: firstly, our school website is providing some news reports and comments that students can read and download easily from school official websites; secondly, due to its difficulties and extra working hours, there are not enough student reporters who are willing to write critical comments on the latest news. Question: The woman expresses her opinion towards the university’s decision to eliminate news comments on school newspaper. State her opinion and explain the reasons she gives for holding that opinion. |
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第2题:Living organisms contain more water ________substance. A、than do any other B.does than any other C.other than do they any D.than they do any other |
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第3题: Although beavers rarely remain submerged for more than two minutes, they can stay underwater ___fifteen minutes before having to surface for air.
A. as long B.as long as C.so long D.so long that |
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第4题: What does the passage mainly discuss A.Why many human societies are dependent on agriculture B.the changes agriculture brought to human life C.How Neolithic peoples discovered agriculture D.Why the first agricultural societies failed |
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第5题: FilmExchanges inAmerica’sEarly Movie Industry 1.Motion pictures were exhibited to the public in the late 1800s, though the first device to accomplish this would seem very unfamiliar to today’s movie-going audiences.ThomasEdison’s 1893 Kinetoscope was little more than a wooden box with a small glass window. Intended only for individual viewing, it housed a roll of film, a mechanical device to circulate the film, and a small light to illuminate it.A、person would peer through the window and watch a short moving sequence, usually just a depiction of an everyday event or the performance of an acrobat or dancer. Needless to say, the medium’s ability to serve only one customer at a time severely limited its profitability. 2.Everything changed two years later with the advent of projection, by which a much larger film image could be shown to multiple viewers simultaneously. The Lumière brothers of France were the first to introduce this new technology with a projection machine called a cinematograph.Edison was quick to follow their lead and created his Vitascope projector in late 1895. With the potential to make money by charging admission to movies now within reach, the innovators of the film industry were ready to expand their business ventures. 3.There were two industry models in practice during the early 1900s.A、handful of successful firms, such as the BiographCompany, owned the equipment to make their own films as well as the venues in which to display them. Such companies were rare, however; most films were shown by independent exhibitors. These included traditional theater owners, who added short film presentations to their programs of live-action entertainment, and traveling cinema exhibitors, who moved from town to town to reach new audiences, often following circuits established by rural fairs. They typically purchased films directly from the production companies that made them, paying a set price per foot of film regardless of its content.Because movies of the time were never longer than one or two minutes, it was feasible to buy them outright. However, this system failed to attract significant audiences as the public soon tired of the small stock of films exhibitors had to offer, and the reels of film themselves deteriorated quickly through repeated transport and screening in traveling cinema shows. 4.Things changed again when producers began increasing the length of their films in order to tell more complex stories. Longer films entailed higher prices, and it became difficult for small-scale exhibitors to purchase them. This, in turn, prevented production studios from creating as many movies as they could, since they had no one to sell them to. It was precisely this dilemma that gave rise to the film exchange.An early version of a motion-picture distributor, film exchanges were responsible for bridging the gap between production and exhibition.They financed production studios, giving them the funds they needed to film more movies. Then, they purchased these films and rented them out to exhibitors around the country for a fraction of what it would have cost the exhibitors to purchase the films themselves. 5.The film-exchange system revolutionized the industry, greatly benefiting all parties involveD、 ![]() ![]() |