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从所给的四个选项中选择最佳答案
This kind of paper was as soft and light as silk but ______ expensive.
[ ]
A.much less B.much little
C.many less D.much more
查看习题详情和答案>>Many less developed countries are in debt.They borrowed money from rich countries to develop industry.
This kind of paper was as soft and light as silk but ______ expensive.
A. much less B. much little C. many less D. much more than
查看习题详情和答案>>world in 2100 will be more crowded, more polluted and less stable ecologically than the world we live in
now. Visible ahead is serious stress involving population, resource and environment. Despite greater food
output, people in the world will be poorer in many ways than they are today.
For hundreds of millions of the extremely poor, the outlook for food and other necessities of life will
be no better, for many it will be worse.
While the economies of the developing countries are expected to grow at a faster rate than those of
the industrialized nation, the total national product per head in most less developed countries remains low.
The existing gap between the rich and poor nations will further widen.
World food production is estimated to increase by 90 percent from 2000 to 2100. Most of that increase
goes to the countries that already have relative higher per-head food consumption. Mean-while, per-head
consumption of food in the developing countries will scarcely improve or will actually fall far below the
present inadequate level. What is worse is that prices for food are expected to double.
As a result, many less developed countries will have increasing difficulties meeting energy needs. For
the one quarter of mankind that depends primarily on wood for fuel, the outlook is not hopeful.
Regional water shortage will become more severe. In the 1970-2100 period population growth will
require twice as much water as it does today in nearly half the world. Still greater increases would be needed
to improve standards of living. Development of new water supply will become more costly.
B. the resource will become more than enough
C. in most developing countries people will have less food than they have today
D. the living standards of the world's population will improve greatly
B. things will be a little better
C. it will be necessary for them to improve their housing
D. it will be impossible to obtain enough necessities of life
B. to any country in the world that needs it
C. to developing countries
D. to those countries that already have high per-head consumption
B. water and air pollution
C. water and food shortages
D. food production and consumption
Three armed robbers stole two Pablo Picasso prints from an art museum in downtown Sao
Paulo on Thursday, which was the city’s second high-profile art theft in less than a year. The bandits also took two oil paintings by well-know Brazilian artists Emiliano Di Cavalcanti and Lasar Segall, said Carla Regina, a spokeswoman for the Pinacoteca do Estado museum.
The Picasso prints stolen were "The Painter and the Model" from 1963 and "Minotaur, Drinker and Women" from 1933, according to a statement from the Sao Paulo Secretary of State for Culture, which oversees the museum. The prints and paintings have a combined value of $612,000, the statement and a museum official said.
About noon, three armed men paid the $2.45 entrance fee and immediately went to the second-floor gallery where the works were being exhibited, bypassing more valuable pieces, authorities said. "This indicates to us that they probably received an order" to take those specific works, Youssef Abou Chain, head of Sao Paulo's organized crime unit, told reporters at a news conference. The assailants overpowered three unarmed museum guards and grabbed the works, officials said. The robbery took about 10 minutes and the museum was nearly empty at the time. The assailants took the pieces — frames and all — out of the museum in two bags. The institution has no metal detectors.
In December, Picasso's "Portrait of Suzanne Bloch" and "O Lavrador de Cafe" by Candido Portinari, an influential Brazilian artist, were stolen from the Sao Paulo Museum of Art by three men who used a crowbar(铁撬棍)and car jack to force open one of the museum's steel doors. The framed paintings were found Jan. 8, covered in plastic and leaning against a wall in a house on the outskirts of Sao Paulo, South America's largest city. One of the suspects in that robbery — a former TV chef — turned himself over to police in January, who already had two suspects in custody(监禁).
【小题1】What did the armed men steal on Thursday?
| A.Two prints by Pablo Picasso |
| B.Two oil painting by Brazilian artists |
| C.Two prints by Pablo Picasso and two oil paintings by two Brazilian artists. |
| D.Two prints by two Brazilian artists and two oil paintings by Picasso Pablo. |
| A.Because they didn't know that the other pieces were worth more. |
| B.Probably because they had received an order for the prints that they took. |
| C.Because they didn't have enough time. |
| D.Because they were in such a hurry that they couldn’t get them all. |
| A.A lot. The museum was crowded. |
| B.Not too many. It was almost empty. |
| C.There were a lot of people outside the museum. |
| D.Only three of them. |
| A.In December, "Portrait of Suzanne Bloch" and "O Lavrador de Cafe" painted by Candido Portinari were stolen. |
| B.There are steel doors and no detectors in Sao Paulo Museum of Art. |
| C.Three robbers defeated three armed museum guards and took away the works on Thursday. |
| D.Three suspects in the first high-profile art theft in less than a year were arrested. |