问题 单项选择题

2004年8月15日,新浪网上《道路交通安全法》中“机动车负全责”条款在网民的投票中认为不合理和合理的得票比例为悬殊的90.85%对0.45%。于是我们不禁要问,那些既无公家车可坐,亦无私家车可开,天天坐着公共汽车或者骑着自行车甚至只靠两只脚走在熙熙攘攘的马路上为生存奔波的最广大的民众,会有几人出现在这90.85%或者0.45%的中间
下列陈述,不能从文中得出的是( )。

A.在网络话题中,少数人的意见往往可以被认为是多数人的意见
B.作者认为《道路交通安全法》中“机动车负全责”条款是不合理的
C.网络所反映的民意难言是真正的促销,其可靠性值得怀疑
D.作者对“机动车负全责”条款采用网络调查这种方式进行持否定态度

答案

参考答案:B

解析: 本段话通过网络对《道路交通安全法》中的一项条款进行调查,网民中认为此条款不合理的占多数,但是作者并不认同,因为这些网民中可能是有车开或者有车坐的人占绝大比例,所以ACD都是可以从文中得出的,只有B是不能得出的,因为作者并没有明确表示此条款是不合理的。

单项选择题 A1/A2型题
单项选择题

Passage Four

The Disaster of Terrorism
恐怖主义的灾难

by Craig Kielburger
New York has an energy of its own, and that late summer evening, I truly understood why. All around me the city was alive with activity as everyone headed in different directions. The Big Apple’s fabled ambition, wealth, and power were on full display, in the sleek cars stopped by the curb, the bright windows of the bustling restaurants, and the studied nonchalance of stylish young people out on the town. As I cut through the financial district, I passed the Twin Towers, shimmering in the streetlights.
Then came the next morning. Even before I heard what was happening, it was clear that something was terribly wrong: there was an unfamiliar edge of desperation to the city’s usual hectic pace. At a friend’s house, uneasy but unsure why, I turned on the TV news. Within seconds, I saw one, then another, plane crash into the World Trade Center. Time stopped.I was hit by the sickening realization that what I was seeing was real. I found it difficult to breathe as I stared blankly at the television scene. The horror hit me in waves, each more intense than the last.
A short distance away, people were injured, trapped, and dying. America was under attack. Again and again, the brutal images flashed by. The city was in a state of emergency. People were being told to stay inside and off the phones. Airports were closed, bridges clogged.
That evening there was a knock on the door. On the doorstep stood a ragged man looking frightened and shaken, covered with a thick layer of dust. His eyes were wide and strangely glazed, and his body seemed to tremble. He turned out to be one of the few to have made it out of the World Trade Center alive. As my host and I later learned, this man had spent the day wandering the city-in shock, trying to get through to his wife on his cell phone. When he finally reached her, tearful and happy beyond belief, she had reminded him that an acquaintance, my
host, lived in the areA.And so he stood there confused and full of apologies, unsure of what to say or do. Of course, he was immediately invited in. No sooner did he step across the threshold than he collapsed into a nearby chair. He would later say it was a miracle he was still alive.
The events that day rocked me to the core. Grieving for those affected, I realized that had things been different, I might have been at the World Trade Center myself. In the midst of my sadness and fear, I felt profoundly grateful to be alive. Twenty-four hours earlier, caught up in meeting after meeting, my biggest problem had seemed to be adding a few more hours onto the day. Now that world seemed so far away. Reeling from the tragedy, I realized that each and every hour I had was a blessing that not everyone would enjoy. I vowed never again to think of time as a problem-but only as a privilege.

In the last paragraph, Craig expressed the idea that time is______.

A.burden

B.sadness

C.fear

D.treasure