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阅读理解-阅读单选(约340词) | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:这是一篇新闻报道。文章主要讲述了一只北极野兔在破纪录的旅程中行驶了至少388公里,这次旅行是有记录以来野兔及其亲属中最长的一次。在资源贫瘠的苔原地区,既要寻找食物,也要避免成为其他动物的食物,BBYY成功地抵达目的地,这不仅使人感到震惊,也让人们看到了这种动物的隐藏属性。

1 . BBYY, as the adult female was known, made a wild dash of more than 388 kilometers in 49 days—the longest distance ever recorded among hares, rabbits or any other relatives—researchers report online December 22 in Ecology.

“To think that such a small animal living under such extreme conditions averaged about eight kilometers per day across seven weeks is truly amazing,” says Joel Berger, a scientist at Colorado State University in Fort Collins.

Arctic hares, also known as North-Pole hares—which weigh more or less the same as house cats, about four kilograms—are desirable targets for foxes and wolves on the tundra (苔原). Given the hares’ important role in the Arctic food chain, scientist Dominique Berteaux wanted to know how the animals move across the dry landscape where very few plants can grow.

In 2019, Berteaux and colleagues fixed satellite tracking rings on 25 hares caught near the northern tip of Ellesmere Island in Nunavut, Canada. As the hares quickly ran away, the researchers had no idea the creatures were beginning a mind-blowing journey across the tundra, Berteaux says. That’s because hares and their relatives, typically spend their lives within a familiar area where food is plentiful and easy to find.

The Arctic hares behaved quite differently, with most traveling anywhere between 113 and 310 kilometers. None came close to BBYY, who died of unknown causes about a month after reaching her final destination.

For a hare to complete such a dangerous journey, it must balance the need to find food without becoming food, says Dennis Murray, a scientist. That makes BBYY’s adventure even more impressive, he says.

Berteaux and colleagues hope data from BBYY and the other hares can help shape conservation strategies for the desert system near the North Pole. But even at this early stage, it’s exciting to find “something unknown in an animal that we thought we knew quite well,” Berteaux says.

1. Why did Berteaux and colleagues do research on Arctic hares?
A.Because of their amazing ability to travel a long distance.
B.Because of their weighing more or less the same as house cats.
C.Because of their important role in the Arctic food chain.
D.Because of their extreme living conditions.
2. What does the underlined word “mind-blowing” in the fourth paragraph mean?
A.Amazing.B.Challenging.C.Demanding.D.Upsetting.
3. What do we know about BBYY?
A.BBYY was an adult male with the longest distance record among hares.
B.BBYY died of tiredness from traveling the longest distance.
C.BBYY, like other Arctic hares, typically lived within a familiar area.
D.BBYY managed to balance the need to find food without becoming food.
4. What can we infer from the text?
A.The findings of Berteaux and colleagues are good for nothing.
B.The findings of Berteaux and colleagues just confirm what people believe about hares.
C.Berteaux and colleagues have discovered an unknown species—Arctic hares.
D.Berteaux and colleagues will go on with their research on Arctic hares.
2024-01-25更新 | 40次组卷 | 1卷引用:山东省东营市2023-2024学年高二上学期1月期末英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选(约360词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。主要介绍了全球从化石燃料向电动汽车的转变可以显著减少人类向大气中排放的二氧化碳量。

2 . A worldwide shift from fossil fuel-powered cars to electric vehicles could significantly reduce the amount of carbon dioxide that humans emit to the atmosphere. But current strategies for vehicle electrification (电气化) can also shift some pollution to communities already suffering under higher economic, health and environmental burdens, researchers warn.

California, which leads the United States by a mile when it comes to EV adoption, offers a window into this evolving problem. The state is aggressively seeking to reduce its carbon footprint and has made substantial increases in wind and solar power generation as well as in the promotion of electric vehicle purchases. One tool the state has used is the California Clean Vehicle Rebate Project, or CVRP, which kicked off in 2010 and offers consumers money back for the purchase of new EVs.

Now, an analysis of the CVRP’s impact on the state’s air quality from 2010 to 2021 reveals both good and bad news, researchers report May 3 in PLOS Climate.

The good news is that the CVRP is responsible for making a dent in the state’s overall CO2 emissions, reducing them by about 280,000 metric tons per year on average. The bad news is that the most disadvantaged communities in the state didn’t see the same overall improvement in air quality. Those communities in fact saw an increase in one type of air pollution, tiny particulates known as PM2.5. That increase may be indirectly related to putting more EVs on the road. Although electric vehicles themselves don’t produce PM2.5 from their tailpipes, increased electricity generation, if it’s not fossil fuel-free, can. Renewable resources, including rooftop solar cells, supplied about half of California’s electricity in 2022. But natural gas-fired power plants still provide a large part of the state’s power.

“Electric vehicles are often incorrectly referred to as ‘zero-emission vehicles’, but they’re only as clean as the underlying electric grid (电网) from which the energy is sourced,” Mejía-Duwan says. The most disadvantaged 25 percent of the state’s communities also contain 50 percent of the power plants, the team found.

1. What do we know from paragraph 2?
A.California takes the lead in environmental protection.
B.Wind and solar power generation has dominated California.
C.California’s carbon footprint has been reduced as planned.
D.The launch of CVRP is intended to promote electric vehicle purchases.
2. What does the underlined “dent” mean in paragraph 4?
A.adjustment.B.shift.C.reduction.D.increase
3. What is the direct cause of an increase in PM 2.5?
A.Putting more EVs on the road.B.Increased electricity generation.
C.Warming climate.D.Increased rooftop solar cells.
4. What will Mejía-Duwan probably agree with?
A.Zero emission for EVs can’t be ensured nowadays.
B.‘Zero emission’ isn’t good enough to describe EVs.
C.EVs, with no zero emission, shouldn’t be advocated.
D.EVs have a promising future as zero emission vehicles.
阅读理解-阅读单选(约410词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。文章主要介绍了火星的相关信息以及中国对这个“红色星球”的探索之路。

3 . Mars is truly a fascinating planet for those of us here on Earth. It is about half of the size of Earth and is often referred to as the “Red Planet” because of its red surface.

Mars has seasons like Earth, but the seasons there are twice as long as the seasons on Earth. Mars also has an atmosphere, but it is very thin and made up mostly of carbon dioxide. Because of its thin atmosphere and greater distance from the Sun, Mars is much colder than Earth. However, Mars does have weather, with clouds and winds. The poles on Mars are a lot like Antarctica, capped by ice, but much of Mars’s ice is made from carbon dioxide, not water.

Many scientists believe that studying Mars can help us answer some of the key questions about our planet Earth, or even the universe. But missions to Mars have never been easy. Facing great challenges, many countries will still continue their explorations. Launching the first Mars probe (探测器) from Wenchang around 2020 is China’s first step to explore the “Red Planet”

The Chinese Mars probe is made up of three parts: the orbiter, the lander, and the rover. Entering the Earth-Mars transfer orbit, the Mars probe separates from the launch vehicle. Then the space-to-ground communications link is created. Controllers on Earth guide it into the orbit around Mars. After collecting detailed information about the landing area, the probe is ready for the landing. The orbiter and the lander separate. The orbiter stays in the orbit for at least a year to photograph key areas and monitor the planet’s environment, while the lander heads down to the surface of Mars.

Nine kilometres above the planet, a large parachute(降落伞) opens to slow the landing craft as it falls. After removing the parachute, the lander chooses a safe place to land, where the Martian rover can start operations, collecting and transmitting data back to Earth. After receiving its orders from Earth, the rover leaves the landing point and begins to explore the surface of Mars.

1. How does the writer develop paragraph 2?
A.By making a list.B.By giving examples.
C.By making comparisons.D.By analyzing cause and effect.
2. What can we learn about Mars exploration according to the text?
A.China has been exploring Mars for many years.
B.Mars exploration is not so difficult for some countries.
C.Some countries will stop Mars exploration due to great difficulties.
D.Mars exploration can help us better understand the earth and universe.
3. About the flight of the Mars probe, which is the correct order?
① The probe is ready for the landing.
② The Mars probe separates from the launch vehicle.
③ Controllers on Earth guide it into the orbit around Mars.
④ The probe collects detailed information about the landing area.
A.①②③④B.④③①②C.②③④①D.②③①④
4. What’s the function of the rover?
A.It slows the landing craft as it falls.
B.It collects and transmits data back to Earth.
C.It helps the lander to find a safe place to land.
D.It guides the probe into the orbit around Mars.
阅读理解-阅读单选(约340词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章主要介绍了一项研究发现,生活在不同地方的座头鲸群体可以相互学习长而复杂的歌曲。

4 . Populations of humpback whales (座头鲸) that live in different places can learn long, complicated (复杂的) songs from one another. Scientists at the University of Queensland, in Australia, focused on two populations of humpback whales, one by Australia’s east coast and the other off New Caledonia—a group of islands in the Pacific Ocean about 900 miles away. These populations may share feeding grounds or come across one another while moving from one place to another.

Only male whales sing. Their songs are known to be made up of a wide variety of different sounds arranged into patterns (模式) and can last for hours. The researchers listened to samples (样本) of male humpback songs from 2009 to 2015. They found out how complicated the songs were based on the number of sounds and how long the patterns lasted.

“The team found that the whales from New Caledonia were able to sing the same songs as the Australian whales without simplifying or leaving anything out,” said lead researcher Jenny Allen. This was true no matter how complicated the songs were. The whales also sang a different song each year. “It means humpback whales can learn a whole song pattern from another population very quickly,” Allen said.

It is not known for sure why male whales sing, but two possible reasons are to attract a mate or to warn other males to stay out of a private area. In addition to humpbacks, only a few other species of whales (blue, fifin, bowhead, and minke whales) sing.

Humpback whale numbers have been badly affected by hunting, which was stopped by law in the 1980s. Today there are thought to be about 40,000 humpbacks swimming in Australia’s waters, although scientists warn that the species still faces a number of threats in the wild. Allen said the study’s findings will aid efforts to save and protect humpback whales.

1. Why did the researchers choose Australian whales and whales from New Caledonia?
A.They are quick learners.
B.They are good at singing.
C.They have the chance to meet.
D.They have the same living habit.
2. What do we know about humpback whales in the study?
A.They could show where they came from through songs.
B.They attracted different species of whales through songs.
C.They increased sound numbers and pattern length every year.
D.They were able to learn each other’s songs exactly and quickly.
3. What does Allen think of the study?
A.Easy.B.Warning.C.Meaningful.D.Pioneering.
4. What is the best title for the text?
A.Why male humpback whales can sing
B.Humpback whales prefer complicated song
C.How whales communicate with each other
D.Humpback whales learn songs from one another
2023-01-18更新 | 68次组卷 | 1卷引用:山东省广饶县第一中学2022-2023学年高一上学期12月月考英语试题
智能选题,一键自动生成优质试卷~
阅读理解-阅读单选(约360词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:本文是一篇新闻报道,主要讲的是养宠物的价格在上涨这个现象。

5 . Andrew White brings his four-legged friends Oliver and Amore to his neighborhood Petco pet stores in San Diego for a little takeout. He has brought the pair to a kibble refill station (宠物食品补给站) that allows owners to use their own containers (容器).

“It’s more affordable for everyone,” he said.

Like the price of many things these days, the price of owning a pet has been increasing. A report on petfoodindustry.com finds the cost of feeding household animals was up about 6% in March over last year. The overall pet category saw a 7.5% increase compared to March of 2021. The American Pet Products Association says a record $123.6 billion was spent in the US last year on pets. A survey shows 70% of American families now include a pet of some Kind.

In Kansas City, the KC Pet Project is seeing animals surrendered because of their owners’ money problems. “It is sad to see a number of pets coming in through our doors,” said KC Pet Project Chief Communications Officer Tori Fugate. “People are calling us every week saying, ‘I don’t want to leave my animal, but I can’t find a place to live with it.’”

One big cost is vet (兽医) care. The KC Pet Project gave out more than $96,000 last year to help owners with medical bills. Recent findings from Consumers’ Checkbook show costs differed widely from vet to vet in seven Cities they listed. So they say f pet owners want to save money, do some checking first. “If you know that your pets are going to need certain treatment, you can call around and get prices, and then decide what to do next,” said Consumers Checkbook Executive Editor Kevin Brasler.

In Florida, the Humane Society of Tampa Bay has increased its animal pantries (食品储藏室), so people can get free food for their dogs and cats.

“I believe things will get better,” said Sherry Silk, CEO of the Humane Society of Tampa Bay.“It’s got to get better because the animals really need us.”

1. What do the numbers in paragraph 3 mainly show?
A.Keeping pets is still popular in the US.
B.The costs for pets are rising in the US.
C.Most Americans have difficulty keeping pets.
D.Many Americans are careful about having pets.
2. What does the underlined word “surrendered” in paragraph 4 mean?
A.Hunted for.B.Looked over.C.Given up.D.Handed out.
3. What can pet owners do to treat their pets according to Kevin?
A.Ask for medical prices first.B.Choose a big local pet hospital.
C.Call the KC Pet Project for help.D.Get different vets to examine them.
4. What is Sherry’s attitude to pets’ future?
A.Uncertain.B.Worried.C.Hopeful.D.Doubtful.
阅读理解-七选五(约230词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。文章主要介绍了园艺的意义就是耐心地、慈爱地、勤勉地帮助生命在地上和地上蓬勃发展。

6 . World in a dish: The garden path

Imagine a plate holding two strawberries, identical in appearance. One came from the supermarket, meaning it was probably harvested when it was still unripe, loaded onto a refrigerated truck and driven hundreds of miles.     1     The other strawberry was picked from a garden minutes before being eaten.

The first one will probably taste like a slightly soft cucumber, with light berry flavors and strong sour tastes. The second is likely to be sweet and floral; the flavor will stay in the mouth, as the pleasant smell will on the hands.     2     They are convenient and available in the northern hemisphere (北半球) in February.

    3     This attitude misunderstands the ultimate appeal of gardening. It mistakes the product for the purpose. It is true that a garden can produce peas that offer a taste of spring while finding tomatoes in the shops can take some time, effort and expense.

A garden, especially in the early years, can also produce little but frustration. Beginning gardeners may plant the wrong crops for their soil. Squirrels have an annoying habit of taking single bites of cucumbers, beans and tomatoes, then leaving the rest on the vine (藤) to rot.     4    

No matter.     5     The deepest pleasure — as with cooking, writing, bringing up children or almost anything worthwhile — is in the work itself. To garden is to patiently, lovingly and diligently help life flourish, in the ground and above it.

A.The real joy of gardening is the time spent doing it.
B.Growing your own vegetables ensures a reliable supply.
C.Well-stocked supermarket shelves are available all week.
D.Some columnists long considered gardening a waste of time.
E.However, supermarket strawberries are not entirely without advantages.
F.By the time it reached the plate it may have been off the vine for two weeks.
G.And even expert gardeners can lose a season's harvest to uncooperative weather.
阅读理解-阅读单选(约330词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。文章主要介绍了由于非法捕猎和鱼类及野生动物管理局的管理改变而使得红狼数量急剧下降。

7 . Called “America’s wolf”, the red wolf is the only large predator whose historic range is found entirely within the United States, stretching from Texas to New England. But hunting gradually reduced its range, and it was declared extinct in the wild in 1980.

Recovery efforts in the wild began in 1987 on the Alligator River National Wildlife Refuge. In a ground-breaking successful experiment, eight captive (圈养的) wolves were released this year into North Carolina, eventually growing into a population over 100, reaching a peak of around 120 wolves in 2012. But illegal hunting and management changes by the Fish and Wildlife Service resulted in their numbers plummeting.

In the spring, conservationists celebrated a small bit of good news when four captive-born pups (幼兽) were placed into a cave and successfully adopted by a wild red wolf mother. Meanwhile, another four adults were released into the wild. The pups are thought to be still alive and healthy. But the adults didn’t go well. In the months after release, three were struck by cars and killed, and the fourth was fatally shot on private land.

To boost the population after these deaths, the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service announced in November that it planned to release nine adult red wolves into their recovery area this winter, land within and surrounding two wildlife reserves.

The Service also recently announced it would withdraw a 2018 proposal to shrink (缩小) the red wolves’ protected area in North Carolina by 90 percent, after a lawsuit accused the agency of going against the Endangered Species Act. Ron Sutherland of the Wildlands Network says it’s crucial that the agency has abandoned this wrong-headed proposal. And yet the situation now is even more urgent than it was in 2018 — this should launch the conservation community in the U. S. into crisis mode to save this species and bring it back from the extinction.

1. What does the underlined word “plummeting” in paragraph 2 mean?
A.Promising.B.Declining.C.Multiplying.D.Increasing.
2. What can we infer from paragraph 3?
A.The released wolves lived well.
B.The population boosted after the release.
C.The red wolf faced greater threat than before.
D.The released red wolves still needed protection.
3. What would the Service do to save red wolves?
A.Shrink the red wolves’ reserves.
B.Make a proposal to protect the red wolves.
C.Put some red wolves in some specific places.
D.Force the protected area into the state of emergency.
4. What does the text focus on?
A.The protection of red wolves.B.Challenges faced by red wolves.
C.Reasons for red wolves extinction.D.The relationship between red wolves and humans.
阅读理解-阅读单选(约620词) | 较易(0.85) |
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文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章主要说明了如今的社交媒体上充斥着各种气候假信息,它们背后的公司使用复杂的算法,决定世界各地数十亿人看到了什么,这取决于你对什么着迷,也取决于支付社交媒体网站的公司选择在你面前展示什么。多年来,大型石油和天然气公司花费数十亿美元说服消费者相信他们的绿色证明,但2019年他们在可再生能源上的支出只有1%。这就是所谓的“企业洗绿”。

8 . There is a kind of climate pollution that we can’t see clearly. It isn’t in our rivers, lands or skies, it is in our minds. When climate disinformation goes unchecked, it spreads like wildfire, undermining the existence of climate change and the need for urgent action.

Like the biosphere that sustains us, the health of our information ecosystems is vital to our survival. As an artist, I feel a responsibility to create new ways of seeing the disinformation that has come to define the age of fake news.

Social media sites are honed to grab our attention. Using sophisticated algorithms, the corporations behind them decide what billions of people see around the world, dictated by what keeps you hooked, but also by what the companies paying social media sites choose to put in front of you.

Powerful corporate actors deploy clever influence campaigns via ads targeted at specific users based on what social media firms know about those people. Major oil and gas companies have spent billions of dollars over the years persuading consumers about their green proofs, when only 1 per cent of their expenditure in 2019 was on renewable energy. This is known as corporate greenwashing. Still, fossil fuel firms maintain that their climate policies are “responsible” and “in line with the science”.

To expose the scale of corporate greenwashing online, I was part of a team that recently launched Eco-Bot.Net. Co-created with artist Rob “3D” Del Naja of the band Massive Attack and Dale Vince, a green entrepreneur, Eco-Bot. Net’s AI-powered website ran throughout the COP26 climate summit, exposing climate change misinformation by releasing a series of data drops for heavily polluting sectors, including energy, agribusiness and aviation.

Academic definitions of climate disinformation and greenwashing were used to unearth posts across Facebook, Instagram and Twitter and visualize them on our website. Eco-Bot.Net then flagged greenwashing ads and posts on the original social media site with a public health warning.

By digging into our data, journalists have already revealed that companies are targeting specific demographics in order to influence public perceptions about climate change – and even alter government policy.

One data drop focused on the 100 biggest fossil fuel producers, companies that have been the source of 71 per cent of global carbon emissions. It found that 16 of these companies ran 1705 greenwashing and climate misinformation ads globally on Facebook and Instagram this year. In total, they spent more than £4 million creating influence campaigns that generated up to 155 million impressions.

Social media companies could end most of the harms from climate disinformation on their platforms if they wanted to. Flagging systems were swiftly introduced to warn users of posts containing disinformation about covid-19. The scientific consensus on human-caused global warming has been resolute for decades, so why can’t a similar flagging system be implemented for related disinformation?

It is true that Twitter and Facebook have both introduced climate science information hubs, but these are little more than PR exercises that fail to directly tackle climate disinformation on any kind of scale.

This epidemic of climate change disinformation on social media is eroding collective ideas of truth. In this post-truth age of disinformation, we hope that the public, the press and policy-makers will be able to use our data findings to see what is hidden by what we see online.

For the first time, we can witness the regional scale of corporate greenwashing. The era of climate denial and delay is largely over — except, as Eco-Bot.Net has revealed, on social media.

1. What does the word “undermine” in the first paragraph mean in the passage?
A.Dig holes in the ground.B.Make sth weaker at the base.
C.Increase or further improve.D.Put a stop to sth.
2. The author used the case of major oil and gas companies in Paragraph Four in order to ________.
A.give the readers a precise definition of corporate greenwashing
B.show the dishonest claim by fossil fuel companies on their responsible climate policies
C.demonstrate the huge investment the corporations made to exert powerful influence on the targeted social media users based on algorithm
D.emphasize the tens of millions of dollars spent on renewable energy
3. Which of the following industry contributes most to climate change?
A.energyB.agribusinessC.aviationD.social media
4. What is the author’s opinion of social media?
A.They are willing to help but feel powerless to do so.
B.They have the ability to make a change but refuse to do so as there are controversies over climate changes.
C.They have the ability to make a change and have made some sincere but fruitless efforts on it.
D.They lose their integrity in face of the money from the big corporations.
2022-04-25更新 | 234次组卷 | 3卷引用:山东省东营市胜利第一中学2022-2023学年高三上学期12月期末英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选(约370词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:这是一篇议论文。文章通过谈论作为公共资源的大象濒临灭绝,而作为私有财产的饲养牛却能安全生存,说明了人们对私有财产比公共资源更加关心的现象。

9 . Throughout history, many species of animals have been threatened with extinction. When Europeans first arrived in North America, more than 60 million buffalo (水牛) lived on the continent. Yet hunting the buffalo was so popular during the 19th century that by 1900 the animal’s population had fallen to about 400 before the government stepped in to protect the species. In some countries today, the elephant faces a similar challenge, as illegal hunters kill the animals for the ivory in their tusks.

Yet not all animals with commercial value face this threat (威胁).The cow, for example, is a valuable source of food, but no one worries that the cow will soon be extinct. Why does the commercial value of ivory threaten the elephant. while the commercial value of beef protects the cow?

The reason is that elephants are a common resource, while cows are private goods. Elephants wander freely without any owners. The hunter has a strong motivation to kill as many elephants as he can find. Because illegal hunters are numerous, each has only a slight motivation to preserve the elephant population. By contrast, cattle live on farms that are privately owned. Each farmer makes great effort to maintain the cattle population on his farm because he harvests the benefit of these efforts.

Governments have tried to solve the elephant’s problem in two ways. Some countries, such as Kenya and Uganda, have made it illegal to kill elephants and sell their ivory. Yet these laws have been hard to put into effect, and elephant populations have continued to dwindle. By contrast, other countries, such as Malawi and Namibia, have made elephants private goods and allowed people to kill elephants, but only those on their own property.

With private ownership and the profit motive now on its side, the African elephant might someday be as safe from extinction as the cow. The ancient Greek philosopher Aristotle pointed out the problem with common resources: “What is common to many is taken least care of, for all men have greater regard for what is their own than for what they possess in common with others.”

1. Why does the author mention buffalo in paragraph 1?
A.To introduce a similar threat to elephants.
B.To provide an example of species extinction.
C.To offer an explanation for government policies.
D.To present the statistics of the buffalo in America.
2. Why do elephants face threats while cows are safe?
A.They are under different law protection
B.They attract different groups of hunters
C.They contain different commercial value
D.They represent different ownership types
3. What is paragraph 4 mainly about?
A.Bans on killing elephants for ivory
B.Effective laws for elephant protection.
C.Methods of making elephants private goods
D.Government policies on the elephant’s problem
4. What can we learn from Aristotle’s words?
A.People hold little regard for others’ property
B.People want to profit from common resources
C.People care more about their own possession
D.People tend to take what they own for granted
共计 平均难度:一般