问题 问答题 简答题

实现中国梦,必须建设文化强国。中国传统文化中有“以天下之至柔,驰骋天下之至坚”、“不战而屈人之兵”等精神特质,为中 * * 自强于世界民族之林提供了有力的精神滋养。“文化中国·四海同春”于每年春节期间在全球五大洲华侨华人聚居的国家和地区开展慰侨访演活动,展示中华文化的丰富多彩和博大精深,增进世界人民对中华文化的了解和喜爱,沟通中国与世界。结合上述材料,运用文化生活知识,为提升中国特色社会主义文化的竞争力提出几点合理化建议。

答案

参考答案:

(1)牢牢把握先进文化的前进方向,坚持马克思主义在意识形态领域的指导地位。

(2)依靠先进科技发展文化产业,推动经营性文化产业快速发展。

(3)构建和发展现代传播体系,创新业务形态,提高社会主义文化的辐射力和影响力。

(4)立足于社会实践,继承优秀传统文化,取其精华,去其糟粕,推陈出新,革故鼎新。

(5)坚持文化“走出去”,与不同民族和国家文化相互交流、借鉴、融合,增强中华文化在世界上的感召力和影响力。

(6)深化文化体制改革,加强人才队伍建设,充分发挥人民的积极性、主动性和创造性。

完形填空

第三节:完形填空(共20小题;每小题1.5分,满分30分)

阅读下面短文,掌握其大意,从每题给出的A、B、C、D四个选项中,选出可以填入空白处的最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。

It was past 10:00 pm. I was busy with my schoolwork though I was   21 . Just then my little

brother Michael ran out of his room,   22  a pen in his right hand and a piece of paper in the other.

“Betty, can you help me with my   23  for school? It’s about the seven   24  of the world.” He said.

My eyes were so   25  on the computer screen that my brother had to pull my blouse just to get my   26 .

“Look, not right now! I’m very busy.” I said. “You’re always busy! You’re always like that!” he replied.

I felt a bit guilty(愧疚)   27  I thought about his words, but my work seemed more   28   to me than my brother’s. I sighed a few times and   29   with my own studies.

The next day, I arrived home late. Michael came into my room.

“I know you are   30 , but there’s something I want to show you”, he began. Without saying a word, I   31  the paper from him. I really didn’t   32  what he was saying. All I wanted was to   33  him and finally get to rest.

Suddenly, my eyes widened in   34 . There, he wrote:

The Seven Wonders of the World

1Love   2.Friendship   3.Peace   4.Joy   5.Wisdom   6.Fun  7.Family

I   35  believe what my brother had written on the paper. I was completely   36 .

How could such an innocent(天真的)little child   37  such things in life?

The most valuable things in life are the ones that we   38  take for granted. These things don’t take the form of big houses or beautiful   39 . The most wonderful things in the world are immaterial(非物质的)   40  they can never be developed by human art, skill or effort.

21.A.tired     B.experienced         C.talented       D.satisfied

22.A.buying     B.holding        C.playing     D.biting

23.A.problem   B.mistake     C.trouble      D.homework

24.A.events   B.cities          C.wonders      D.mysteries

25.A.paid           B.attracted      C.applied        D.fixed

26.A.attention   B.care        C.love         D.concern

27.A.before      B.as           C.since           D.till

28.A.practical   B.useful          C.important     D.interesting

29.A.started      B.hated         C.forgot       D.continued

30.A.busy     B.bored        C.free         D.tiring

31.A.handed     B.took         C.got          D.accepted

32.A.record      B.worry       C.mind          D.share

33.A.get on well with      B.keep up with        C.make fun of       D.get rid of

34.A.surprise    B.sadness        C.happiness    D.disappointment

35.A.shouldn’t  B.needn’t       C.couldn’t       D.mustn’t

36.A.wounded B.lost          C.pleased         D.puzzled

37.A.understand       B.remember       C.study    D.finish

38.A.ever      B.often        C.seldom          D.never

39.A.voices      B.poems     C.cars            D.music

40.A.if        B.when      C.but             D.and

单项选择题

Mass Protest Decries Bush Abortion Policies


群众抗议谴责布什的堕胎政策


by Deborah Zabarenko
WASHINGTON (Reuters)—Protesters crowded the National Mall on Sunday to show support for abortion rights and opposition to Bush administration policies on women’s health issues in one of the biggest demonstrations in US history.
There was no official crowd count, but organizers claimed more than 1 million people participateD.
Pink-and purple-shirted protesters raised signs reading "Fight the Radical Right", "Keep Abortion Legal" and "US Out Of My Uterus" and covered the Mall from the foot of Capitol Hill to the base of the Washington Monument.
Speakers ranged from actresses Whoopi Goldberg, Ashley Judd and Kathleen Turner to philanthropist Ted Turner, feminist icon Gloria Steinem and former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright.
Goldberg raised a wire coat hanger—a symbol of illegal abortions in the days before the Supreme Court’s 1973 Roe vs. Wade ruling recognizing abortion rights—and told the crowd, "We are one vote away from going back to this!"
She was referring to the nine-member high court, which has frequently decided abortion- related cases on a five-four vote.
The abortion issue was the centerpiece of the march’s broad protest against the policies of President Bush, including his stance on funding international family planning. No US funds may be used for any family planning agency that mentions abortion to patients.
"Vote That Smirk Out of Office," was a characteristically political placard targeting Bush, but Dorothy Smith, 76, of Eldridge, Missouri, carried an emblem she made herself—a wire coat hanger draped with a sign reading "Never Again. "
"I can remember when abortion was just as common as it is now, but it killed a lot of women," Smith saiD.
Major sponsors included stalwarts of the abortion rights movement______NARAL Pro-Choice America, Feminist Majority, National Organization for Women, Planned Parenthood Federation of America—as well as the American Civil Liberties Union, the Black Women’s Health Imperative and the National Latina Institute for Reproductive Health.
Some 1,400 groups attended the event, including an international contingent with marchers from 57 countries. There were medical students who carried signs saying they planned to be the next generation of abortion providers, and there was a Texas group marching behind a banner that read, "Old Broads for Choice. "
As the march wound from the Mall toward the White House and then turned onto Pennsylvania Avenue and toward Capitol Hill, abortion rights groups encountered antiabortion protesters.
These protesters carried posters showing photographs of fetuses at eight weeks gestation and signs reading "Abortion kills Babies. "
March organizers claimed double the turnout of the last big abortion rights march in 1992, which drew 500,000, according to the US Park Police, who no longer gives official crowd counts. The biggest demonstration was an anti-Vietnam War rally in 1969, which drew 600,000. The largest gathering on the National Mall was the 1976 US bicentennial celebration.
Though the march was billed as nonpartisan and included a contingent called Republicans for Choice, much of the day’s rhetoric was plainly aimed at Bush, a Republican who opposes abortion in most cases.
Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry vowed on Friday to champion abortion rights if electeD.He received the endorsement of Planned Parenthood’s Action Fund, the organization’s political fund-raising ann.
Neither Bush nor Kerry attended the march, but US Sen. Hillary Rodham Cfinton, a New York Democrat and former first lady, drew roars of approval when she exhorted the crowd to register to vote. Volunteers were on hand to register new voters.
Bush addressed an anti-abortion march in January, saying the effort to overturn the Supreme Court’s 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling, which recognized a right to abortion, was "noble cause. \

According to this passage, Bush’s anti-abortion stance was most clearly shown______.

A.in the last paragraph

B.by the title of the passage
C.in Dorothy Smith’s words

D.in John Kerry’s words