问题 选择题

青海玉树地震后,全国各地的救援车队络绎不绝地赶往灾区,一位小朋友记下了车牌号为湘H09958、粤B90826、皖F23586、鲁D87813的四辆救援车。这四辆车分别来自(   )

A.湖南省、广东省、安徽省、山东省

B.湖北省、广西壮族自治区、河北省、辽宁省

C.河北省、福建省、江西省、山西省

D.河南省、陕西省、浙江省、内蒙古自治区

答案

答案:A

题目分析:湘是湖南省的简称,粤是广东省的简称,皖是安徽省的简称,鲁是山东省的简称。

选择题
单项选择题

The most thoroughly studied intellectuals in the history of the New World are the ministers and political leaders of seventeenth-century New England. According to the standard history of American philosophy, nowhere else in colonial America was “so much importance attached to intellectual pursuits.” According to many books and articles, New England’s leaders established the basic themes and preoccupations of an unfolding, dominant Puritan tradition in American intellectual life.

To take this approach to the New Englanders normally means to start with the Puritans’ theological innovations and their distinctive ideas about the church—important subjects that we may not neglect. But in keeping with our examination of southern intellectual life, we may consider the original Puritans as carriers of European culture, adjusting to New World circumstances. The New England colonies were the scenes of important episodes in the pursuit of widely understood ideals of civility and virtuosity.

The early settlers of Massachusetts Bay included men of impressive education and influence in England. Besides the ninety or so learned ministers who came to Massachusetts churches in the decade after 1629, there were political leaders like John Winthrop, an educated gentleman, lawyer, and official of the Crown before he journeyed to Boston. These men wrote and published extensively, reaching both New World and Old World audiences, and giving New England an atmosphere of intellectual earnestness.

We should not forget, however, that most New Englanders were less well educated. While few crafts men or farmers, let alone dependents and servants, left literary compositions to be analyzed, it is obvious that their views were less fully intellectualized. Their thinking often had a traditional superstitious quality. A tailor named John Dane, who emigrated in the late 1630s, left an account of his reasons for leaving England that is filled with signs. Sexual confusion, economic frustrations, and religious hope—all came together in a decisive moment when he opened the Bible, told bas father that the first line he saw would settle his fate, and read the magical words: "Come out from among them, touch no unclean thing, and I will be your God and you shall be my people." One wonders what Dane thought of the careful sermons explaining the Bible that he heard in Puritan churches.

Meanwhile, many settlers had slighter religious commitments than Dane’s, as one clergyman learned in confronting folk along the coast who mocked that they had not come to the New World fur religion. "Our main end was to catch fish.

The early ministers and political leaders in Massachusetts Bay ()

A. were famous in the New World for their writings

B. gained increasing importance in religious affairs

C. abandoned high positions before coming to the New World

D. created a new intellectual atmosphere in New England