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國立師大附中九十七年度第一學期期末考 英文科試題

I. Vocabulary: 每題 1 分 (15%)

1. As a saying goes, “No one is ______.” If you expect to find a perfect person, it’s nothing more than a daydream.

(A) chaotic (B) flawless (C) mournful (D) agonized

2. A co-ed class is ______ of box sexes. When boys and girls study in the same class, they can have sound development in mind and personality.

(A) terrified (B) shattered (C) distributed (D) composed

3. A person who can’t ______ right from wrong tends to commit wrongs owing to an incorrect philosophy of life. (A) diverge (B) distinguish (C) erupt (D) motivate

4. The bus I wanted to take was filled to ______. I had no choice but to wait for the next one to come. (A) flour (B) massacre (C) capacity (D) mustache

5. Very young children should not be left to play alone without ______. There should always be adults around them lest something dangerous happen.

(A) suspicion (B) suspense (C) supervision (D) superstition

6. The consumption coupons will have no cash value and no change will be given if the cost of the goods ______ is less than NT$ 3600.

(A) treaded (B) purchased (C) slashed (D) bent

7. David studied hard day and night in the last year of senior high and ______ was admitted to the university of his first choice.

(A) occasionally (B) hence (C) exceptionally (D) otherwise

8. Because of the ______ of new evidence, the suspect was convicted of armed robbery by the Supreme Court. (A) accommodation (B) destiny (C) emergence (D) acknowledgement

9. It’s reported that a lucky ______ winner who won the prize money of NT$780 million donated NT$35 million to charity and welfare institutions.

(A) fiber (B) theme (C) mercy (D) lottery

10. The twin sisters ______ each other closely. They look very much alike in all respects. (A) assemble (B) resemble (C) fumble (D) mumble

11. On the dressing table lies Linda’s favorite piece of jewelry—her ______ handmade ring. Its beauty is beyond description.

(A) exquisite (B) logical (C) prolonged (D) persistent

12. With Martin Luther King’s ______ to the American civil rights movement, the blacks in the States ultimately enjoyed racial equality.

(A) dedication (B) prominence (C) extension (D) accomplishment

13. Robert Frost’s “The Road Not Taken” is a poem with a ______ meaning. The more you explore it, the more you will get.

(A) radical (B) punctual (C) dazzling (D) profound 14. Foreigners can not get employment in Taiwan unless they get work ______. (A) accusations (B) permits (C) supervisors (D) myths

15. After being ______ of his eyesight in a traffic accident, he acquired the skill of massage at a job-training center for the blind to earn a living.

(A) hailed (B) persisted (C) deprived (D) deemed

II. Cloze: 每題 1 分 (25%)

(A) Frost’s poems express a common humanity that has 16 generations of readers. His poems are often descriptions of nature and everyday events that explore deep aspects of human experience. “The Road Not Taken” is a fine example.

(2)

P. 2 what they 17 if they had gone on a different path. It is said that this may have caused Frost to compose the poem. Anyway, the poem itself beautifully captures the universal qualities of human decision-making.

In the poem, the speaker is a traveler faced with a choice -- to decide which route to take in the woods. Choosing a road on a countryside walk would be 18 to make “all the difference” after “ages and ages,” so it becomes a metaphor for choice-making. The traveler selects the seemingly less used one, though he knows just as many people have probably taken it. He decides to walk the first road at a later time, but realizes that such a possibility is very small. What’s implied here is that once we make a choice, we have to 19 all the other alternatives. In fact, that choice will lead us onto a series of other choices, and there is no turning back.

The poem can be inspirational for people who are standing at a similar crossroads in their life, having trouble 20 important decisions about their future. Whoever reads Frost’s sensitive poetic narrative may gain a sense of solidarity in their personal experience of choice on life’s journey.

16. (A) grown into (B) appealed to (C) led to (D) allowed for 17. (A) might see (B) may have seen (C) might have seen (D) had seen 18. (A) probably (B) simply (C) nearly (D) unlikely 19. (A) go in for (B) let go of (C) take over (D) go through 20. (A) making (B) to make (C) for making (D) made

(B) As a pianist, I was invited to perform with a cellist at the International Cello Festival in Manchester, England. On the opening night, the world-famous cellist, Yo-Yo Ma, played a composition, behind 21 was a moving story. At 4 p.m. on May 27, 1992, a long line slowly formed outside a bakery in war-shattered Sarajevo. All of a sudden, a mortar shell, which fell directly into the middle of the line, 22 22 people. Witnessing the massacre outside his window, Vedran Smailovic, a distinguished cellist, was pushed past his capacity to endure any more. 23 that he resolved to do the one thing he did best -- make music. During the next 22 days, he played the most mournful and haunting pieces to the abandoned streets and to the terrified people hiding while the bombs exploded. Though the shelling went on, miraculously, he was never hurt. Moved by this story, David Wilde, an English composer, wrote a composition for an unaccompanied cello entitled The Cellist of Sarajevo. It was this piece 24 Yo-Yo Ma would play that evening. In the beginning the music created a shadowy, empty universe. Slowly, it grew into a furor which gripped the audience. When the performance was over, everyone in the hall remained silent for a long time. It was 25 we had seen the massacre ourselves. Then Yo-Yo Ma stood up to meet Vedran Smailovic, who came up onto the stage. The two men hugged and cried. I realized that music is a gift we all share. 21. (A) that (B) which (C) it (D) what

22. (A) killing (B) were killed (C) killed (D) and killed

23. (A) So anguished he was (B) He was anguished (C) Being anguished, (D) Such was his anguish 24. (A) that (B) and (C) but (D) when

25. (A) X (B) when (C) then that (D) as though

(C) To a shy boy like me, it seemed to take me forever to build up the courage to ask a girl out. 26 any boy of my age is concerned, Vickie, the most popular girl in my school, is definitely a perfect date. Therefore, when Vic agreed to my request for a date, I felt as if I were on top of the world. To make a good impression, I spent twice

kie 27 in getting dressed as I usually did. After picking up Vickie, we went to a fancy restaurant. During the meal, I kept telling Vickie how lovely she looked to win her heart. I wanted nothing 28 to just make her happy and we did have a wonderful dinner. When I was about to pay the bill, however, I found I left my wallet home! There w nothing I could do

as 29 ask Vickie to pay the bill. 30 , my first date was ruined and Vickie never wanted to have a date with me again.

26. (A) As much as (B) As long as (C) As far as (D) As soon as 27. (A) more time (B) most time (C) the times (D) as much time 28. (A) more or less (B) more than (C) as well (D) much less

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P. 3 30. (A) Down to the last detail (B) In a new light (C) Even so (D) Needless to say

(D) Are you a believer in the theory of “inborn genius”? Well, perhaps it’s time that you 31 envying those accomplished people. According to a recent study, even people who were pigeonholed as untalented, after having been properly trained in a supportive environment, can reach levels previously 32 only by gifted individuals. In fact, if we study the biographies of most outstanding people, we’ll find that few have shown early signs of promise 33 encouragement and opportunities, nor has any case been found of individuals achieving great success without long-term 34 serious training. In view of this, don’t you think we should take more seriously Thomas Edison’s famous quote 35 genius is one percent inspiration and ninety-nine percent perspiration? 31. (A) have stopped (B) to stop (C) stopped (D) stop

32. (A) consider achievable (B) consider potential (C) considered reliable (D) considered attainable 33. (A) before offering (B) before we are offered (C) before they offer (D) before being offered 34. (A) commitment to (B) anxiety about (C) boycott against (D) contempt for 35. (A) which (B) that (C) about (D) where

(E) Poetry is as universal and almost as ancient as language. The most primitive peoples have used it, and the most 36 have cultivated it. In all ages and all countries, poetry has been written, and eagerly read or listened to by all kinds and conditions of people. It has interested the educated as well as the uneducated

, 37 it has

provided more than enjoyment.

Poetry in all ages has been regarded as important, not simply as a one of several alternative forms of 38 among bowling, chess and musical instruments. 39 , it has been regarded as something central to existence, something having unique value to the fully realized life, something that we are better off for having, and something without 40 we are spiritually impoverished.

36. (A) contemporary (B) childish (C) underdeveloped (D) civilized 37. (A) because (B) besides (C) lest (D) until

38. (A) facilities (B) compositions (C) amusement (D) leisure 39. (A) Strangely (B) Rather (C) Consequently (D) Still 40. (A) that (B) which (C) it (D) them

III. 文意選填: 每題 1 分 (10%)

(A) at their disposal (B) in (C) required (D) gripped (AB) undergo (AC) yet (AD) developed (BC) collapse (BD) battle (CD) of all time

Some of us--especially those under 60--have always wondered what it would be like to live through the kind of epochal event one reads about in books. Well, this is it. We’re now living history, suffering one of the greatest financial panics 41 . It compares with the big ones--1907, 1929--and we cannot 42 know its full consequences for the financial system, the economy or society as a whole.

I’m betting that, in the end, the world’s governments will win this 43 against fear. They have potentially unlimited tools 44 , especially if they act in agreement. They can nationalize firms, call bank holidays, suspend trading for weeks, buy up debt and equity, and renegotiate home mortgages. Most important, the American

government can print money. All of these tools have long-term effects that are extremely troublesome, but they are nothing compared with the potential 45 of the financial system. And Washington seems to have recognized th it must do whatever is

at 46 to help to support that system. Big questions remain. What will it take to stop the fa How costly will it be? But at some point, the panic that

ll? 47 world markets last week will end. Of course, tha will not mean a return to growth or a bull market. We’re

t 48 for tough times, and it will mean a return to sanit Among all th

y. e difficulties and hardship that we are about to 49 , I see one silver lining. This crisis

has--dramatically, vengefully--forced the United States to confront the habits it has 50 over the past few decades. If we can kick those habits, today’s pain will translate into gains in the long run.

(4)

IV. 篇章結構: 每題 2 分 (10%)

Godfrey Gordon Gustavus Gore--- 51

Was a boy who never would shut a door!

he wind might whistle, the wind might roar, 52

T

But still he never would shut the door.

His father would beg, his mother implore,

he door!”

53 “Godfrey Gordon Gustavus Gore, We really do wish you would shut t

54 But Godfrey Gordon Gustavus Gore Was deaf as the buoy out at the Nore.

ut he begged for mercy, and said, “No More! 55

And threatened to pack off Gustavus Gore On a voyage of penance to Singapore.

B

On a Shutter, and then I will shut the door.”

“You will?” said his parents; “then keep on shore!

. Their hands they wrung, their hair they tore;

sore, r,

. Reading Comprehension : 每題 2 分 (40%)

t the heart of 23andMe’s controversial service – a $399 saliva

r are

genotyping is

nd so But mind you do! For the plague is sore

Of a fellow that never will shut the door, Godfrey Gordon Gustavus Gore!”

A

B. No doubt you have heard the name before--- C. Pray do not send me to Singapore

D. And teeth be aching and throats be

E. They rigged out a Shutter with sail and oa

V

(A) Learning and sharing your genetic secrets are a

test that estimates your predisposition for more than 90 traits and conditions ranging from baldness to blindness. Although 23andMe isn’t the only company selling DNA tests to the public, it does the best job of making them accessible and affordable. The 600,000 genetic markers that 23andMe identifies and interprets for each custome “beyond what you can see in the mirror,” says Wojcicki, one of the co-founders of 23andMe.

In the past, only elite researchers had access to their genetic fingerprints, but now personal

available to anyone who orders the service online and mails in a spit sample. Not everything about how this information will be used is clear yet, but the curtain has been pulled back, and it can never be closed again. A for pioneering retail genomics, 23andMe’s DNA-testing service is Time’s 2008 Invention of the Year.

(5)

(A) ground-breaking (B) breath-taking (C) widely-used (D) well-organized 57. The phrase “this inform ion” in the second paragraph refers to ____. at

A test

e mirror e?

ive. st.

) People are busier than ever, and many singles complain they don’t have time to waste dating the wrong people

at

d

is a lot less frightening than approaching a total

rly as

n hold in Europe and North America is speed-dating. Members of nly

there

t whether they like someone within minutes of first

modern methods of matchmaking take some of the pain out of dating by saving time, money, and

t of friends without seeing each other.

making for busy modern people.

true?

in an evening.

ge love notes with each other.

P. 6 (A) the genetic fingerprints of the elite researchers

(B) the genetic information of those who have a DN (C) the spit samples of 23andMe’s customers (D) the genetic secrets that cannot be seen in th

58. About 23andMe, which of the following statements is tru (A) It provides the only DNA-testing service in the market. (B) The price of its DNA-testing kit is considered too expens (C) A customer has to visit the company in person to do a DNA te (D) It has enabled the public to learn their own genetic information.

(B

in their search for Mr. or Ms. Right. Smart business people have been listening, and are offering some new options. In Japan, for example, a new kind of singles café has sprung up where women sit on one side of a room, separated from the men sitting on the other side by a wall of glass. This setup allows singles to get a good look each other, but doesn’t let them communicate directly. If a man or woman wants to talk to someone on the other side of the room, he or she writes a “love note” to that person. The note is then delivered by one of the waiters, an the person receiving it has the choice to write back or not.

Club members like the system because passing a note

stranger and starting a conversation. Face is also saved: if someone doesn’t respond to a love note, it’s not nea embarrassing as a face-to-face rejection.

Another popular craze that has take

speed-dating clubs meet between ten and thirty other singles during an evening. The catch is that each date o lasts about five minutes! When time is up, members change tables and the next date begins. At the end of the evening, members fill out cards listing the people they would like to see again. The cards are compared, and if are matches, the lovebirds can make plans for another date.

Speed-daters claim they usually make a decision abou

meeting anyway, so speed-dating avoids wasting hours on bad dates with people they don’t really “click” with. Having the chance to meet so many different people while saving the cost of so many “real” dates is another advantage.

These

embarrassment for singles. Of course the club owners make a healthy profit too. 59. Why modern match-making café or clubs become popular among singles? (A) It saves modern singles time, energy and even face.

(B) It is convenient and free of charge. (C) It ensures a happy marriage. (D) It allows singles to make a lo 60. What is the purpose of the passage? (A) To criticize a new kind of

(B) To compare and contrast two kinds of match-making procedures. (C) To criticize modern people’s speedy way of getting matched. (D) To advertise two organizations that offer match-making. 61. Which of the following statements about speed-dating is NOT (A) It is popular in North America and Europe.

(B) Members meet between ten to thirty people (C) Each date lasts only five minutes.

(D) When time is up, members exchan

(6)

(C) Robert Frost was born in San Francisco, California on March 26, 1874. His mother, Isabelle Moodie Frost, was

Bulletin, and an

unsu s a

r

is first poem in the Lawrence high

ry

ollars. Proud of this accomplishment, he prop g ng couple in Derr hen at ized.

amily moved to Lawrence. 63.

ing down. (D) Origin.

(C) poet (D) deliver boy

his growing family

) The New York Philharmonic (NYP) concert last February at the East Pyongyang Grand Theatre---a recording

seat

he baton of Lorin Maazl, the evening’s program began with both national anthems and included h

urned.

ything? American orchestras have been musical of Scottish descent; his father, William Prescott Frost, Jr., was a descendant of colonist Nicholas Frost from Tiverton, Devon, England who had sailed to New Hampshire in 1634 on the Wolfrana.

Frost’s father was a good teacher, and later an editor of the San Francisco Evening

ccessful candidate for the city tax collector. The road not taken for young Robert might have been a

California editor rather than a New England poet. William Frost Jr. died on May 5, 1885. After debts were settled, the family moved to Lawrence, Massachusetts. Frost graduated from Lawrence High School in 1892. Frost’s mothe joined the Swedenborgian church and had him baptized in it, but he left it as an adult.

Despite his later association with rural life, Frost lived in the city, and published h

school magazine. He attended Dartmouth College, long enough to be accepted into the Theta Delta Chi fraternity. Frost returned home to teach and to work at various jobs including delivering newspapers and facto labor. He did not enjoy these jobs at all, feeling his true calling as a poet.

In 1894 he sold his first poem “My Butterfly: An Elegy” for fifteen d

osed marriage to Elinor Miriam White, but she refused, wanting to finish college before they married. Frost then went on an excursion to the Great Dismal Swamp in Virginia, and asked Elinor again upon his return. Havin graduated, she agreed, and they were married in Harvard University, which he attended for two years.

He did well, but left to support his growing family. Grandfather Frost purchased a farm for the you

y, New Hampshire, shortly before his death. Frost worked on the farm for nine years. He wrote early in the mornings, producing many of the poems that would later become famous. His attempts at farming were not successful, and Frost returned to education as an English teacher at Pinkerton Academy from 1906 to 1911, t the New Hampshire Normal School in Plymouth, New Hampshire.

62. Which of the following statements about Frost’s father is true? (A) He was a teacher of an editor.

(B) He wanted to be a poet. (C) He had young Frost bapt (D) He died before the rest of the f

What does the word descent in line 2 probably mean? (A) Female. (B) Settler. (C) Com 64. Robert Frost didn’t work as a _____.

(A) teacher (B) missionary

65. The reason why Frost did not finish his college is that _________. (A) his grandfather died

(B) he had to make money for (C) he was going to get married (D) he wanted to be a farmer

(D

of which has just been released on DVD by Medici Arts--- began with a welcome from a young North Korean woman in traditional dress. She expressed the hope that the performance would “herald the first step in

rapprochement between the two countries,” just before the esteemed orchestra entered the stately 2,500-auditorium.

Under t

Dvorak’s New World Symphony and Gershwin’s An American in Paris. The latter was played by the NYP wit suitable pluck, its feverish honks and unbridled gusto trenchantly counterpointing North Korea’s stagnation. Some fleeting personal connections were made during the evening. Several NYP members, in an

accompanying documentary, recalled waving to the audience and having their gestures instinctively ret “ Something had happened,” recollected violist Rebecca Young.

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ambassadors before. The Boston Symphony Orchestra played in the Soviet Union in 1956, but the Cold War dragged on for decades. The Philadelphia Orchestra played in Beijing in 1973, yet formal relations between th nations weren’t established until 1979. Even if you watch the NYP’s Pyongyang adventure in slomo, you won’t spot Kim Jong II making nuclear concessions in a balcony suite while seduced by the universal language of music (he didn’t attend). But at least you will see, at the concert’s close, rows of North Koreans quietly moved by a poignant rendition of Arirang, the Korean folk tune beloved on both sides of the demilitarized zone, and a touching song whose harps and violins are borderless. Perhaps rapprochement can start from there.

66. Which of the following statements about the article is NOT true?

e two

relationship with communist countries is not

(B) hose to play conveyed a significant meaning.

ake any nuclear concessions until last

(D) Some of NYP members waving to the audience received a friendly response.

nations?

World Symphony. ries.

llowing statements is true?

imistic.

connection.

.

) Barack Obama was borne at the Kapi’olani Medical Center for Women & Children in Honolulu, Hawaii, by

Presidency that he had used marijuana, cocaine, and

the United States in front of the Old State

sing

on, Obama’s campaign set numerous fundraising records, parti a few initial cont onal ed P. 8 (A) The mission American orchestras carry to improve America’s

very successful. The music NYP c

(C) After the NYP concert, Kim Jong II was touched, but he didn’t m February.

67. Which of the following music was performed to show the contrast between the two (A) Arirang.

(B) Dvorak’s New

(C) The national anthems of both count (D) Gershwin’s An American in Paris. 68. According to the article, which of the fo

(A) The writer’s attitude toward music’s power to affect people is opt

(B) After the NYP concert, the people between the two countries have a close (C) The Cold War between America and the Soviet Union ended in 1956. (D) NYP is the first American orchestra to perform in communist countries

(E

Ann Dunham, a white American from Wichita, Kansas of mainly English descent. Obama’s father was Barack Obama, Sr., from Nyang’oma Kogelo, Nyanza Province, Kenya. His parents married on February 2, 1961; they separated when Obama was two years old and divorced in 1964.

As an adult, Obama admitted at the 2008 Civil Forum on the

alcohol when in high school, which he described as his greatest moral failure. Obama plays basketball, a sport he participated in as a member of his high school’s varsity team. Before announcing his presidential candidacy, he began a well-publicized effort to quit smoking. However, he didn’t make it.

On February 10, 2007, Obama announced his candidacy for President of

Capitol building in Springfield, Illinois, where Abraham Lincoln delivered his historic “House Divided” speech in 1858. Throughout the campaign, Obama emphasized the issues of rapidly ending the Iraq War, increa energy independence, and providing universal health care.

During both the primary process and the general electi

cularly in the quantity of small donations. On June 19, Obama became the first major-party presidential candidate to turn down public financing in the general election since the system was created in 1976.

A large number of candidates initially entered the Democratic Party presidential primaries. After

ests, the field narrowed to a contest between Obama and Senator Hillary Clinton, with each winning some states and with the race remaining nearly tied throughout the primary process. On May 31, the Democratic Nati Committee agreed to seat all of the disputed Michigan and Florida delegates at the national convention, each with a half-vote, narrowing Obama’s delegate lead. On June 3, with all states counted, Obama passed the threshold to become the presumptive nominee. On that day, he gave a victory speech in St. Paul, Minnesota. Clinton suspend her campaign and endorsed him on June 7. From that point on, he campaigned for the general election race against Senator John McCain, the Republican nominee.

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69. Which of the following is NOT the issue Obama emphasized during the whole process of the presidential election?

(A) Offering universal health care. (B) Ending the war against Iraq.

n gas. 70. is eat t m

g. g. 71.

inee, he gave a victory speech in Springfield, Illinois.

(F) The earth has always been home to the human race. But how much do we really know about this planet? The (C) Setting fundraising records. (D) Decreasing the dependence o

According to Obama, what was h gr es oral failure? (A) Having taken drugs in high school.

(B) Having sold wine in high school. (C) Not succeeding in quitting smokin (D) Playing basketball to promote smokin Which of the following statements is true?

(A) On the day Obama became the presumptive nom

(B) Obama announced to run for President at the same place where Lincoln had given a speech. (C) Clinton endorsed Obama the day he won the Democratic Party presidential primaries. (D) Hillary Clinton was Obama’s rival in the general election race.

Earth is constantly altering. Some of the changes are obvious -- day turns to night, spring turns to summer. These changes are caused by the Earth’s

rotation

on its axis and by its orbit around the sun. But deep inside the Earth, heat within the mantle is also causing structural effects on the outer skin, or crust, of the Earth. In addition to the natural changes on Earth, there are those caused by the human race. Activities such as farming, mining and the building of towns and cities alter the face of the Earth. Pollution poisons the rivers, lakes and air -- even the protective screen of the atmosphere has been affected by the release of chemicals into the air. The overall res that much of the Earth’s wellbalanced ecological system is being destroyed. A better understanding of our planet -its rocks, soil, water and gases -- will help us preserve the Earth for the future.

The Earth was formed about 4,500 million years ago. It is not a true sphe

ult is -

re but slightly flattened at the poles.

uous sweep of Europe, Asia and Africa,

wing definitions can best match the word “rotation”?

earlier.

ges on Earth is NOT caused by the human race?

.

The deepest hole ever drilled into the crust of the Earth reached a depth of 15 km (less than 10 miles). This is the merest pinprick on the surface of the whole vast globe, 12,750 km (7,900 miles) in diameter, on which we live. We have direct experience only of the rocks in the crust, the water in the oceans and the gases in the atmosphere that surrounds the Earth. What scientists know about the interior comes from indirect evidence, such as the patterns of earthquake waves as they pass through the Earth. They can also analyze the composition of meteorites, and make certain deductions about the substances that lie inside the earth deep beneath our feet, assuming that the meteorites have the same origin as the earth and everything else in the Solar System.

A world map shows the linked continents of the Americas, the contin

isolated Australia, and desolate Antarctica sitting over the South Pole. Yet it was not always like this. Throughout time the continents, and indeed the entire Earth’s surface, have been constantly in motion. The process is known as plate tectonics. It has been understood only since the middle of the 20th century, because most of the effects can be seen only at the ocean bottom. But knowledge of plate tectonics is fundamental to an understanding of the processes that shape the Earth.

72. Which of the follo

(A) Taking turns or recurring in a particular order. (B) Moving in circles round a central point. (C) Making something move faster or happen (D) Traveling at top speed.

73. Which of the following chan

(A) The structural change of the crust. (B) The change of the ecological system (C) The construction of towns and cities. (D) Contamination of rivers.

(9)

74. Which of the following statements is true?

(A) The Earth has been a solid figure that is entirely round ever since it was formed 4,500 million years ago.

(C) Scientists have produced sufficient direct evidence, such as the patterns of earthquake waves, in support of

(D) rites have the same origin as the Earth.

constantly moving throughout time

the formation of the Earth

(B) The deepest hole ever drilled into the Earth is nothing more than a pinprick in comparison with the whole vast globe we inhabit.

their knowledge of the interior of the earth. It never occurred to scientists that the meteo

75. According to the last paragraph, plate tectonics is a process _______. (A) that hardly ever alters the face of the Earth

(B) in which the entire Earth’s surface has been (C) that has been known only since two decades ago (D) that has contributed little to our understanding of

(10)

國立師大附中九十七年度第一學期期末考 英文科解答

I. 1~15 BDBCC BBCDB AADBC

II. 16~40 BCDBA BCDAD CDBDD CDDAB DACBB III. 41~50 CD AC BD A BC / C D B AB AD IV. 51~55 BDAEC

參考文獻

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