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Canada lies in the north part of North America. It stretches (延伸) from the Atlantic Ocea

Canada lies in the north part of North America. It stretches (延伸) from the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific Ocean. To the north is the Arctic Ocean. Canada is the world's second largest country. It takes up most of the northern part of the North American continent and covers about 6.6 percent of the total land of the earth.

Although large in area, Canada has a population of only a little over 29 million. There are only about six persons per square mile. Most of Canada is thinly inhabited(定居). Most of northern Canada is wilderness, forest of frozen Arctic wasteland. Nearly 80% of Canadians live in large cities near the border with the United States. 60% of the population is concentrated (集中) between Quebec City and the western end of Lake Ontario. Canada's largest city, Toronto, has a population of over 3.4 mil- lion, and the third largest city is Vancouver which has a population of over 1.3 million. Most Canadian cities are much smaller.

More than 44 percent of the population is British in origin(血统), and 28 percent is French in origin. Cultural and political differences between these two major groups have played an important. part in the country's history. Other European groups in Canada include Germans, Ukrainians, Italians, Dutch, Scandinavians, Hungarians, Russians and Poles. The non-white population, which is made up of Eskimos, Indians, Asians, and black, make up about 4 percent of the population.

What does the text mainly discuss on Canada?

A.The position, population and history of Canada.

B.The position, population and industry of Canada.

C.The position, population and different national races of Canada.

D.The position, history and different national races of Canada.

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更多“Canada lies in the north part of North America. It stretches (延伸) from the Atlantic Ocea”相关的问题

第1题

Queensland lies in ______.A.Northeast of AustraliaB.Southeast of EnglandC.Northeast of Ame

Queensland lies in ______.

A.Northeast of Australia

B.Southeast of England

C.Northeast of America

D.Southwest of Canada'

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第2题

听力原文: When youre lying on the white sands of the Mexican Riviera, the stresses of t
he world seem a million miles away. Hey, stop! This is no vacation — you have to finish something! Here lies the problem for travel writer and food critic Edie Jarolim. "I always loved travelling and always liked to eat, but it never occurred to me that I could make money doing both of those things," Jarolim said. Now you can read her travel advice everywhere in Arts and Antiques, in Brides, or in one of her three books — The Complete Idiot Travel Guide to Mexicos Beach Resorts. Her job in travel writing began some eight years ago. After getting a PhD in English in Canada she took a test for Frommers Travel Guides, passed it, and got the job. After working at Frommers, Jarolim worked for a while at Rough Guides in London, then Fodors, where she fell so in love with a description of the Southwest of the US that she moved there. Now as a travel writer, she spends one-third of her year on the road. The rest of the time is spent completing her tasks and writing reviews of restaurants at home in Tucson, Arizona. As adventurous as the job sounds, the hard part is fact-checking all the information. Sure, its great to write about a tourist attraction, but youd better get the local museum hours correct or you could really ruin someones vacation. Questions 19 to 21 are based on the passage you have just heard. 19. Which country does Jarolim live in now? 20. What is most difficult for Jarolim? 21. What do we know about Jarolim from the passage?20.

A.Passing a test to write travel guides.

B.Finishing her work as soon as possible.

C.Checking all the facts to be written in the guides.

D.Working in different places to collect information.

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第3题

Canada's Competition Bureau has some new guidelines governing on-line advertising and mark
eting that businesses with websites should keep in mind when making claims about products and services. On February 18, 2003, the Bureau clarified the rules relating to on-line advertising and marketing in an Information Bulletin addressing the application of the Competition Act to representations on the Internet.

The Competition Act basically sets out rules relating to misleading representations and deceptive marketing practices. The Bulletin was issued to foster obedience with the Competition Act and ensure greater fairness, predictability and transparency in its application to representations made on the Internet. Specifically, it contains criminal and civil provisions that prohibit misleading representations and deceptive marketing practices related to products or services. Any representation that is false or misleading in a "material respect" is prohibited. As determined by the courts, a representation is deemed misleading in a material respect if it conveys a false impression to the ordinary citizen and would likely influence his or her decision to purchase the product.

Although the Bulletin is not legally binding on the Competition Bureau, it sets out the Bureau's position that the Competition Act applies equally to false or misleading representations regardless of the medium in which they are made. The rules set out in the Competition Act will be applied in a manner that is neutral--neither biasing business activity to ward or away from the Internet. The Competition Bureau is of the opinion that responsibility for false or misleading advertisements lies with the person who "causes" the representation to be made. In the on-line context, this would typically be the business that controls the content of the website and for whom the website is made available.

The Bulletin provides guidance to businesses operating websites and presents the Bureau's opinion on the application of the Competition Act to representations made on line. ? Obviously, determining whether or not a particular representation is false or misleading will depend on all of the circumstances surrounding the representation. Businesses concerned about the potential application of the provisions on misleading representations and deceptive marketing practices in the Competition Act to their websites should consult with their legal advisor.

According to the article, the function of the bulletin put out by the Competition Bureau was to.

A.eliminate deceptive on-line advertising

B.introduce the Competition Act

C.clarify rules related to on-line advertising and marketing

D.inform. the Canadian public about deceptive marketing practices

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第4题

Japan lies to the east of China.()
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第5题

Japan lies at the east of China.()
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第6题

Much of his success lies in his skill in handling different people.()
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第7题

?Read the article below about brand-name prescription drugs, and the questions on the oppo
site page.

?For each question 13--18, mark one letter (A, B, C, or D) on your Answer Sheet for the answer you choose.

Brand-Name Prescription Drugs

You're in trouble if you have to buy your own brand-name prescription drugs. Over the past decade, prices leaped by more than double the inflation rate. Treatments for chronic conditions can easily top $2,000 a month--no wonder that one in four Americans can't afford to fill their prescriptions. The solution? A hearty chorus of "0 Canada". North of the border, where price controls reign, those same brand-name drugs cost 50% to 80% less.

The Canadian option is fast becoming a political wake-up call, "If our neighbors can buy drugs at reasonable prices, why can't we?" Even to whisper that thought provokes anger. "Un-American!" And--the propagandists' trump card--"Wreck our brilliant health-care system." Super-size drug prices, they claim, fund the research that sparks the next generation of wonder drugs. No sky-high drug price today, no cure for cancer tomorrow. So shut up and pay up. Common sense tells you that's a false alternative. The reward for finding. Say, a cancer cure is so huge that no one's going to hang it up. Nevertheless, if Canada-level pricing came to the United States, the industry's profit margins would drop and the pace of new-drug development would slow. Here lies the American dilemma. Who is all this splendid medicine for? Should our health-care system continue its drive toward the best of the best, even though rising numbers of patients can't afford it? Or should we direct our wealth toward letting everyone in on today's level of care? Measured by saved lives, the latter is almost certainly the better course. To defend their profits, the drug companies have warned Canadian wholesalers and pharmacies not to sell to Americans by mail, and are cutting back supplies to those who dare. Meanwhile, the administration is playing the fear card. Officials from the Food and Drug Administration will argue that Canadian drugs might be fake, mishandled, or even a potential threat to life.

Do bad drugs fly around the Internet? Sure--and the more we look, the more we'll find. But I haven't heard of any raging epidemics among the hundreds of thousands of people buying cross-border. Most users of prescription drugs don't worry about costs a lot. They're sheltered by employee insurance, owing just a $ 20 co-pay. The financial blows rain, instead, on the uninsured, especially the chronically ill who need expensive drugs to live, This group will still include middle-income seniors on Medicare, who'll have to dig deeply into their pockets before getting much from the new drug benefit that starts in 2006.

What is said about the consequence of the rocketing drug prices in the U. S?

A.A quarter of Americans can't afford their prescription drugs.

B.Many Americans can't afford to see a doctor when they fall ill.

C.Many Americans have to go to Canada to get medical treatment.

D.The inflation rate has been more than doubled over the years.

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第8题

John Cabot, the person who first discovered Canada in 1497 was a(n)______explorer.A.Italia

John Cabot, the person who first discovered Canada in 1497 was a(n)______explorer.

A.Italian

B.French

C.Spanish

D.Dutch

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第9题

Section BThe annals of natural history contain many astonishing examples of the ability of

Section B

The annals of natural history contain many astonishing examples of the ability of animals to find their way home after making distant journeys. Salmon, for example, are born in freshwater streams and soon afterward journey down to sea. Several years later, after they have attained maturity, they swim back upstream to spawn and, in many cases, to die. The particular stream that serves as the journey's end is almost invariably the same one in which they were born. It is chosen out of dozens or hundreds of equally suitable streams. The expression "almost invariably" is used advisedly in this case. In one investigation by Canadian biologists, 469,326 young sockeye salmon were marked in a tributary of the Fraser River. Several years later almost 11,000 were recovered after they had completed a return journey to the very same stream, but not a single one was ever recovered from other streams nearby. What underwater guideposts can these fish possibly follow? It has been discovered by A. D. Hasler and his associates at the University of Wisconsin that the salmon, like many other fish, have an acute sense of smell and are able tore member slight differences in the chemical composition of water. The most reasonable theory to explain salmon homing is that each individual remembers the distinctive "fragrance" of its native stream. As it moves upstream it makes the correct choice each time a new tributary is encountered, until finally it arrives home.

Long-distance migration is especially common in birds, because many species must make annual journeys between their nesting grounds and prime feeding areas far away. Each year over 100,000 sooty terns, an attractive tropical sea bird, travel from the waters off the west coast of Africa all the way across the Atlantic to Bush Key, a tiny island near the tip of Florida. Here they build their nests and breed. Once the young can fly, all journey back over the Atlantic. Why do the sooty terns migrate at all? Like many other seabirds, they find protection from cats, foxes, and other predators on isolated islands. It is evidently safer for them to make an entire transoceanic voyage to reach one such haven than it would be to try to nest on the nearby African shores. A somewhat different reason lies behind the north-south migration of birds in the temperate zones. Each spring a legion of migratory forms, from robins, thrushes, and warblers to geese and ducks, makes its way north into the greening countryside, where large quantities of food are becoming freshly available. Working rapidly, they are able to rear one or more broods of young. As winter approaches and the food supply declines, all head south again. Some species proceed all the way to Central and South America. The record annual journey in the Western Hemisphere is made by the golden plover, one group of which travels from northern Canada to southern South America. A second group of the same species migrates from Alaska to Hawaii and the Marquesas Islands. Human beings could never make such journeys unaided by maps and navigational instruments. How do the birds do it? A large part of the answer lies in their ability to use celestial clues. At migration time, caged starlings become unusually restless. If permitted to see the sun, they begin to fly toward the side of the cage that lies in the direction of their normal migration route. However, when the sky is overcast and the sun is obscured from view, their movements persist, but they are non directional. Other migratory birds fly at night and can evidently use the position of the stars to guide them. This surprising fact has been established by several biologists, including S. T. Emlen of Cornell University, who allowed a type of bird called indigo buntings to attempt flights under the artificial night sky of a planetarium. The birds oriented "correctly" with reference to the planetarium sky even when the positions of its constellations did not correspond with the position of the true constellations outside. Thus other outside influences were eliminated, and it could be concluded that the birds were able to orient to what they believed to be the position of the stars.

SUMMARY:

Animals are able to get back home after they make long journeys. Salmon, for example, are known to swim back several years later to【51】where they were born. What guide these fish upstream.9 According to scientists at the University of Wisconsin, salmon【52】and follow the fragrance of their native stream as they have a sharp【53】

Birds also make long distance migration each year. Sooty terns, a type of tropical sea bird, travel across the Atlantic from Africa to an island near Florida, where they breed and can【54】from predators. Birds also migrate in order to find food and rear their young. It is discovered that birds are aided by【55】to make distant journeys that even human beings cannot make without the assistance of navigational instruments.

(66)

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第10题

Where lies success of a country in the New Age of Superstuff?A.It lies in research.B.It li

Where lies success of a country in the New Age of Superstuff?

A.It lies in research.

B.It lies in investment.

C.It lies in innovation.

D.It lies in application.

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