问题 材料题

阅读下列材料,回答相关问题:

材料一: “我们以这些殖民地的善良的人民的名义和权力,谨庄严宣告:这些联合殖民地从此成为而且名正言顺地应当成为自由独立的合众国,它们解除对于英王的一切隶属关系,而它们与大不列颠王国之间的一切政治联系也应从此完全废止。”

材料二: “一八六三年元月一日起,凡在当地人民尚在反抗合众国的任何一州之内,或一州的指明地区之内,为人占有而做奴隶的人们都应在那时及以后永远获得自由;合众国政府行政部门,包括海陆军当局,将承认并保障这些人的自由。”

请回答:

①、材料一“宣告”的中心思想是什么?它出自哪一历史文献?

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②、材料二是哪一文件的规定?概括它的内容。

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③、说说这两份文件的历史作用。

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答案

①、宣告北美十三块殖民地摆脱英国殖民统治,成为自由独立的合众国、《独立宣言》。

②、《解放黑人奴隶宣言》、南方叛乱各州的奴隶从1863年元月一日起将获得自由并得到政府各部门的保障。

③、《独立宣言》是殖民地人民反英斗争的旗帜,大大鼓舞了北美人民的革命斗志,为实现独立的崇高目标而英勇战斗;《解放黑人奴隶宣言》扭转了战局,加速了北方军事胜利的进程。

单项选择题

So you’ve got an invention — you and around 39,000 others each year, according to 2002 statistics!

The 64,000-dollar question, if you have come up with a device which you believe to be the answer to the energy crisis or you’ve invented a lawnmower which cuts grass with a jet of water (not so daft, someone has invented one), is how to ensure you’re the one to reap the rewards of your ingenuity. How will all you garden shed boffins out there keep others from capitalizing on your ideas and lining their pockets at your expense

One of the first steps to protect your interest is to patent your invention. That can keep it out of the grasp of the pirates for at least the next 20 years. And for this reason inventors in their droves beat a constant trail from all over the country to the doors of an anonymous grey-fronted building just behind London’s Holborn to try and patent their devices.

The building houses the Patent Office. It’s an ant heap of corridors, offices and filing rooms—a sorting house and storage depot for one of the world’s biggest and most varied collections of technical data. Some ten million patents — English and foreign — are listed there.

File after file, catalogue after catalogue detail the brain-children of inventors down the centuries, from a 1600’s machine gun designed to fire square bullets at infidels and round ones at Christians, to present-day laser, nuclear and computer technology.

The first letters’ patent were granted as long ago as 1449 to a Flemish craftsman by the name of John Utynam. The letters, written in Latin, are still on file at the office. They were granted by King Henry Ⅵ and entitled Utynam to import into this country his knowledge of making stained glass windows in order to install such windows at Eton College.

Present-day patents procedure is a more sophisticated affair than getting a go-ahead note from the monarch. These days the strict procedures governing whether you get a patent for your revolutionary mouse-trap or solar-powered back-scratcher have been reduced to a pretty exact science.

From start to finish it will take around two and a half years and cost £ 165 for the inventor to gain patent protection for his brainchild. That’s if he’s lucky. By no means all who apply to the Patent Office, which is a branch of the Department of Trade, get a patent.

A key man at the Patent Office is Bernard Partridge, Principal Examiner (Administration), who boils down to one word the vital ingredient any inventor needs before he can hope to overcome the many hurdles in the complex procedure of obtaining a patent — "ingenuity".

People take out a patent because they want to()

A.keep their ideas from being stolen

B.reap the rewards of somebody else’s ingenuity

C.visit the patent office building

D.come up with more new devices

单项选择题