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The debate over the EU's single currency is stuck because the dominant powers______.A.are competing for the leading positionB.are busy handling their own crisesC.fail to reach an agreement on harmonizationD.disagree on the steps towards disintegration

题目

The debate over the EU's single currency is stuck because the dominant powers______.

A.are competing for the leading position

B.are busy handling their own crises

C.fail to reach an agreement on harmonization

D.disagree on the steps towards disintegration


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更多“The debate over the EU's single currency is stuck because the dominant powers______.A.are competing for the leading positionB.are busy handling their own crisesC.fail to reach an agreement on harmonizationD.disagree on the steps towards disintegration”相关问题
  • 第1题:

    Interviewer-------- Why is English so important?

    David------- Well, English is so important primarily because so many people speak it and use it, so it has now become the lingua franca in the world in a way that we’ve never seen before. We’ve never had a world language of this kind before. So people are learning it not just to be able tocommunicate with native speakers, but also with speakers of other language around world.

    Interviewer-------And why has it become that dominant language?

    David------I think the reason for that is actually very complicated, although in the twentieth century, we can just see that it’s the rise of the US military and consumer power. I mean the technology, all the big developments in technology largely came from the US. So all of these developments actually were produced within the English language, and people had to learn English in order to understand them, or to benefit from them. The Internet is only one example of that kind. Once a language has got into that position of dominance, it’s actually very different to shift it. So we could be seeing the emergence of other big languages in the world becoming more important than they have been, like Spanish, but it’s unlikely that they’re going to shift the English from its position of dominance.

    36. English is important, according to David, __________________________. A). because it has become a world language B). because so many people speak and use it C). because a lot of people are learning it D). because it is the lingua franca

    37. English has become the dominant language in the world________________________. A). because it has always been the way B). for a reason that is very complicated C). only in the 20th century D). for no reasons

    38. English became the dominant language in the 20th century_________________________. A). in the USA

    B). because of the increase in American consumer power

    C). because developments in technology came mainly from USA. D). all over the world.

    39. People had to learn English______________________.

    A). because developments in technology were made by English speakers B). because they needed to understand the new developments in technology C). to use the Internet

    D). to speak with native Americans

    40. David thinks that__________________________.

    A). it will be easy for another language to become dominant B). English will not always be the dominant language

    C). it will not be easy for another language to become dominant D). English will be the dominant language


    参考答案:36-40 B B C B C

  • 第2题:

    Passage 3
    For the first time in decades, some of the fundamental achievements and tenets of the EU are under threat. These include the single currency, open borders, free movement of labor and the notion that membership is forever.
    Rather than rising to these challenges, the EU is creaking under the strain. Its 28 members are arguing bitterly and seem incapable of framing effective responses to their common problems.
    These arguments are also taking place against an
    ominous backdrop. Large parts of the EU remain sunk in a semi-depression with high unemployment and unsustainable public finances. The problems of an imploding Middle East are crowding in on Europe, in the form of hundreds of thousands of refugees. And the political fringes are on the rise---with the latest evidence being the election of a far-left Eurosceptic candidates to lead Britain`s Labor party.
    With a sense of crisis mounting and the EU unable to respond, countries will be increasingly inclined
    to act unilaterally or even---in the case of Britain--leave the bloc altogether.
    The refugee crisis is already threatening cherished ideas about open borders. In the past couple of days, Germany has reimposed frontier controls with Austria---which, in turn, has imposed controls at its border with Hungary, which itself is working feverishly to complete a barbed-wire
    fence to protect its frontier with non-EU Serbia. Controls have been tightened on the French-Italian borders, while migrants camp miserably in Calais, hoping to cross to England.
    If the EU somehow gets a grip on the migrant crisis, these measures might be no more than temporary expedients. But if the pressure of would-be refugees heading for Europe remain intense, then temporary measures could harden into permanent controls.
    Questions marks over open borders will easily shade into wider issues about access to welfare systems and labor markets. That is because EU countries are realizing that—in a border-free single market—a unilateral change of asylum rules
    by Germany had implications for the immigration policies of all member states. Once migrants get citizenship in one EU country, they have the right to move to any other, to work there and to claim benefits. But if free movement of people and labor come into question, so does the EU`s single market—its central achievement.
    The refugee issue has for the moment, overshadowed the euro. But the problems of the single currency have not gone away. On the contrary, Greece's decision this summer to knuckle
    under and accept yet another austerity package has made the Eurozone look increasingly like a trap.
    Even Greece, which is profoundly unhappy with life in the Eurozone, cannot risk leaving for fear of provoking a financial and economic crisis. Creditor countries such as Germany and the Netherlands are not much happier, as they fear they are being dragged into a system of permanent fiscal transfers towards the nations of Europe. Meanwhile, efforts to make the euro work better,
    by pressing ahead with a banking union, are stuck in Brussels. This does not look like a sustainable situation and the risk of euro break-up will surely return.
    The refugee and euro crisis bear on whether Britain will vote to stay in the EU, when it holds a referendum in 2016 or 2017. Until recently, the opinion polls looked promising for the pro-EU camp. But the migrant crisis plays directly into the most potent issue deployed by those campaigning for Britain to leave-which is that membership of
    the EU means that the UK cannot control immigration. More broadly, the British are less likely to stay inside an organization that seems to be failing. If they vote to leave, the sense of crisis
    within the EU would then mount--raising the possibility of further defections.
    A partial unravelling and marginalization of the EU still looks more likely than a full-scale collapse. But even if an organization called the European Union continues to exist--- running buildings and paying salaries---it risks becoming increasingly irrelevant.

    What is the best title for this passage?

    A. The impact of Refugee Crisis in EU.
    B. The Crisis that Threaten to Unravel the EU
    C. UK, to Leave or to Stay
    D. EU Sees the Light at the End of the Tunnel.

    答案:B
    解析:
    本文讲的是难民危机、希腊危机以及欧元危机弥漫欧洲,将威胁着欧盟,使其解散。其他几项文中都有提及,但不是全文主旨。故选B。

  • 第3题:

    With a sense of crisis mounting and the EU unable to respond, countries will be increasingly inclined
    to act unilaterally or even---in the case of Britain--leave the bloc altogether.
    The refugee crisis is already threatening cherished ideas about open borders. In the past couple of days, Germany has reimposed frontier controls with Austria---which, in turn, has imposed controls at its border with Hungary, which itself is working feverishly to complete a barbed-wire
    fence to protect its frontier with non-EU Serbia. Controls have been tightened on the French-Italian borders, while migrants camp miserably in Calais, hoping to cross to England.
    If the EU somehow gets a grip on the migrant crisis, these measures might be no more than temporary expedients. But if the pressure of would-be refugees heading for Europe remain intense, then temporary measures could harden into permanent controls.
    Questions marks over open borders will easily shade into wider issues about access to welfare systems and labor markets. That is because EU countries are realizing that—in a border-free single market—a unilateral change of asylum rules
    by Germany had implications for the immigration policies of all member states. Once migrants get citizenship in one EU country, they have the right to move to any other, to work there and to claim benefits. But if free movement of people and labor come into question, so does the EU`s single market—its central achievement.
    The refugee issue has for the moment, overshadowed the euro. But the problems of the single currency have not gone away. On the contrary, Greece's decision this summer to knuckle
    under and accept yet another austerity package has made the Eurozone look increasingly like a trap.
    Even Greece, which is profoundly unhappy with life in the Eurozone, cannot risk leaving for fear of provoking a financial and economic crisis. Creditor countries such as Germany and the Netherlands are not much happier, as they fear they are being dragged into a system of permanent fiscal transfers towards the nations of Europe. Meanwhile, efforts to make the euro work better,
    by pressing ahead with a banking union, are stuck in Brussels. This does not look like a sustainable situation and the risk of euro break-up will surely return.
    The refugee and euro crisis bear on whether Britain will vote to stay in the EU, when it holds a referendum in 2016 or 2017. Until recently, the opinion polls looked promising for the pro-EU camp. But the migrant crisis plays directly into the most potent issue deployed by those campaigning for Britain to leave-which is that membership of
    the EU means that the UK cannot control immigration. More broadly, the British are less likely to stay inside an organization that seems to be failing. If they vote to leave, the sense of crisis
    within the EU would then mount--raising the possibility of further defections.
    A partial unravelling and marginalization of the EU still looks more likely than a full-scale collapse. But even if an organization called the European Union continues to exist--- running buildings and paying salaries---it risks becoming increasingly irrelevant.

    The underlined sentence in the last paragraph“A partial unravelling and marginalization
    of the EU still looks more likely than a full-scale collapse.” tells us that ___.

    A. EU might disappear overnight.
    B. If effective measures are taken, EU may escape the fate of collapse.
    C. EU may disintegrate gradually and be less influential.
    D. It is highly possible that EU will face a full-scale collapse rather than partial unravelling and marginalization.

    答案:C
    解析:
    句意题。画线句子是说对于欧盟来说,相比整个欧盟解体,更有可能只有部分成员国退出及欧盟避渐被边缘化。又根据句子后面说的即便欧盟存在,也会貌合神离,可推知,欧盟会渐渐瓦解,影响力也日渐削弱。

  • 第4题:

    With a sense of crisis mounting and the EU unable to respond, countries will be increasingly inclined
    to act unilaterally or even---in the case of Britain--leave the bloc altogether.
    The refugee crisis is already threatening cherished ideas about open borders. In the past couple of days, Germany has reimposed frontier controls with Austria---which, in turn, has imposed controls at its border with Hungary, which itself is working feverishly to complete a barbed-wire
    fence to protect its frontier with non-EU Serbia. Controls have been tightened on the French-Italian borders, while migrants camp miserably in Calais, hoping to cross to England.
    If the EU somehow gets a grip on the migrant crisis, these measures might be no more than temporary expedients. But if the pressure of would-be refugees heading for Europe remain intense, then temporary measures could harden into permanent controls.
    Questions marks over open borders will easily shade into wider issues about access to welfare systems and labor markets. That is because EU countries are realizing that—in a border-free single market—a unilateral change of asylum rules
    by Germany had implications for the immigration policies of all member states. Once migrants get citizenship in one EU country, they have the right to move to any other, to work there and to claim benefits. But if free movement of people and labor come into question, so does the EU`s single market—its central achievement.
    The refugee issue has for the moment, overshadowed the euro. But the problems of the single currency have not gone away. On the contrary, Greece's decision this summer to knuckle
    under and accept yet another austerity package has made the Eurozone look increasingly like a trap.
    Even Greece, which is profoundly unhappy with life in the Eurozone, cannot risk leaving for fear of provoking a financial and economic crisis. Creditor countries such as Germany and the Netherlands are not much happier, as they fear they are being dragged into a system of permanent fiscal transfers towards the nations of Europe. Meanwhile, efforts to make the euro work better,
    by pressing ahead with a banking union, are stuck in Brussels. This does not look like a sustainable situation and the risk of euro break-up will surely return.
    The refugee and euro crisis bear on whether Britain will vote to stay in the EU, when it holds a referendum in 2016 or 2017. Until recently, the opinion polls looked promising for the pro-EU camp. But the migrant crisis plays directly into the most potent issue deployed by those campaigning for Britain to leave-which is that membership of
    the EU means that the UK cannot control immigration. More broadly, the British are less likely to stay inside an organization that seems to be failing. If they vote to leave, the sense of crisis
    within the EU would then mount--raising the possibility of further defections.
    A partial unravelling and marginalization of the EU still looks more likely than a full-scale collapse. But even if an organization called the European Union continues to exist--- running buildings and paying salaries---it risks becoming increasingly irrelevant.

    We can infer from the passage that___.

    A. The idea of open borders will no longer exist.
    B. EU’s central achievement is its single market.
    C. Members in EU seem incapable of coming up with effective responses to their problems.
    D. To avoid sorry fates, members of EU must cooperate and take collective actions to deal with the common problems.

    答案:C
    解析:
    推断题。根据文章倒数第二段可知,难民和欧元危机为英国决定是否退出欧盟施加了一定的压力,如果英国退出了,成员国内的危机感会上升,可能会有更多国家退出。最后一段又说即便欧盟存在,也全貌合神离,故可以推断出欧盟成员国没能提出解决问题的好方法。

  • 第5题:

    Text 4 The EU's faltering progress towards a common system of taxing the huge revenues of the new digital giants lurched forward this morning as Margrethe Vestager,the EU commissioner in charge of competition,declared that Amazon had received unfair state aid from Luxembourg through its tax arrangements,and demanded that it pay£250m in back taxes.At the same time,Ms Vestager announced that the European commission would haul Ireland up before the European court of justice for its failure to demand£13bn of unpaid tax from Apple,identi{ied in an earlier investigation.The lwo events illusrrate the gulf between the commission,together with some of the EU's iargest economies,and smaller members such as Ireland and Luxembourg.Both Ireland and Luxembourg defend their tax arrangements.Ireland in particular welcomes the thousands of goocl jobs that the tech giants bring and has no desire to find ways of extracting more tax from thcm in case it drives them away.The Irish government also insists that taxation is a sovereign matter,not an arena for EU interference.( )thers are under pressure from voters who are outraged that any company can make so much profit in their country and pay so little tax on it.Revenue from Facebook's UK operations,it has emerged,nearly quadrupled last year t0 842m,through growth in digital ad sales;its corporation tax bill crept up from 4.2m t0 5.Im.The US inland revenue service is also keen to find transparent ways of taxing the new digital economy,and is watching jealously as the European commission draws up its plans,suspicious of any move that might be used by the tech giants to offset their US tax bills.Already,companies such as Google and Amazon hold billions of dollars in offshore funds,where ihey are out of reach of the taxman.The US defensiveness about its own tax revenues points to the need for a global rather than a merely European solution to the question of how,what and whcre to tax the digital economy,but progress through the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development(OECD)is glacial,and would in any event only be advisory.The commission is still hoping to get agreement on a common corporate tax base that would help to identify the parameters of any new tax system,but progress has stalled because of complexities around double taxation.Meanwhile the American Chamber of Commerce in Europe(ACCE)is warning that any attempt to tax the tech giants more would threaten investment and expansion.But across most of the EU discontent is growing,not just over the failure to pay tax-which has already prompted some tech companies to become more transparent,and even pay more-but over many of their practices.The chief executive of the ride-hailing app Uber has been in London this week trying to patch up relations with Transport for London(TfL).Margrethe Vestager is right:enforcing regulations works.
    The U.S.'s close attention to EU's tax plan making is mentioned to stress_____

    A.the OECD's failure to fulfill its obligation
    B.Google and Amazon's success outside the U.S.
    C.U.S.'s jealousy in European progress in tax reform
    D.the universality of digital economy taxation problem

    答案:D
    解析:
    [信息锁定]题干内容位于第四段首句,②③句随后指出,谷歌和亚马逊的海外资金已高达数十亿美元,却不受税收管制(out of reach“the taxman);美国对自己税收可能流失的忧虑表明,像科技巨头征税的难题不止存在于欧洲.而是个全球性亟待解决的问题,D.符合文中用意。[解题技巧]A.源于段末“作者对OECD在推进全球性税改问题上未能发挥应有作用的不满”.但这里在补充全球性改革没有进展的原因,并非提及美国关注欧盟改革的目的。B.局限于例子本身内容而忽略上下文语义。C.把首句中watching jealously at.…(小心密切关注欧盟举动,考虑自身疏漏)偷换为简单的嫉妒之情,其次欧盟在税改问题上进展不尽人意,嫉妒无从谈起。注意此处jealously意为“戒备地,留心提防地”。

  • 第6题:

    Text 4 Will the European Union make it?The question would have sounded strange not long ago.Now even the project's greatest cheerleaders talk of a continent facing a“Bermuda triangle”of debt,population decline and lower growth.As well as those chronic problems,the EU faces an acute crisis in its economic core,the 16 countries that use the single currency.Markets have lost faith that the euro zone's economies,weaker or stronger,will one day converge thanks to the discipline of sharing a single currency,which denies uncompetitive members the quick fix of devaluation.Yet the debate about how to save Europe's single currency from disintegration is stuck.It is stuck because the euro zone's dominant powers,France and Germany,agree on the need for greater harmonization within the euro zone,but disagree about what to harmonies.Germany thinks the euro must be saved by stricter rules on borrow,spending and competitiveness,backed by quasiautomatic sanctions for governments that do not obey.These might include threats to freeze EU funds for poorer regions and EU megaprojects and even the suspension of a country's voting rights in EU ministerial councils.It insists that economic coordination should involve all 27 members of the EU club,among whom there is a small majority for freemarket liberalism and economic rigour;in the inner core alone,Germany fears,a small majority favour French interference.A“southern”camp headed by French wants something different:“European economic government”within an inner core of eurozone members.Translated,that means politicians intervening in monetary policy and a system of redistribution from richer to poorer members,via cheaper borrowing for governments through common Eurobonds or complete fiscal transfers.Finally,figures close to the France government have murmured,eurozone members should agree to some fiscal and social harmonization:e.g.,curbing competition in corporatetax rates or labour costs.It is too soon to write off the EU.It remains the world's largest trading block.At its best,the European project is remarkably liberal:built around a single market of 27 rich and poor countries,its internal borders are far more open to goods,capital and labour than any comparable trading area.It is an ambitious attempt to blunt the sharpest edges of globalization,and make capitalism benign.
    To solve the euro problem,Germany proposed that______

    A.EU funds for poor regions be increased
    B.stricter regulations be imposed
    C.only core members be involved in economic coordination
    D.voting rights of the EU members be guaranteed

    答案:B
    解析:
    细节题【命题思路】这是一道局部细节题,需要对文章第四段的信息进行锁定,从而判断得出答案。【直击答案】根据题干信息定位到文章第四段首句“Germany thinks…and competitiveness…”,这句话的意思是“德国认为必须通过实施更加严格的借贷、支出和竞争条例来拯救欧元…….”。由此可知B项中“stricter regulations”是对原文“stricter rules”的同义替换,故B项正确。【干扰排除】由第四段第二句“These might…poorer regions…”可知冻结欧盟给贫困地区的资金,A项与原文信息相反,故不选。C项中的“only core members”是对第四段第三句“It insists that…all 27 members…”中的“all 27 members”偷换了概念,故错误。第四段第三句“It insists that…all 27 members…”,D项中的“be guaranteed”(得到保障)是对第四段第二句“…and even the supension…ministerial councils.”中“suspension”(停职)偷换了概念,故错误。

  • 第7题:

    Text 4 Will the European Union make it?The question would have sounded strange not long ago.Now even the project's greatest cheerleaders talk of a continent facing a“Bermuda triangle”of debt,population decline and lower growth.As well as those chronic problems,the EU faces an acute crisis in its economic core,the 16 countries that use the single currency.Markets have lost faith that the euro zone's economies,weaker or stronger,will one day converge thanks to the discipline of sharing a single currency,which denies uncompetitive members the quick fix of devaluation.Yet the debate about how to save Europe's single currency from disintegration is stuck.It is stuck because the euro zone's dominant powers,France and Germany,agree on the need for greater harmonization within the euro zone,but disagree about what to harmonies.Germany thinks the euro must be saved by stricter rules on borrow,spending and competitiveness,backed by quasiautomatic sanctions for governments that do not obey.These might include threats to freeze EU funds for poorer regions and EU megaprojects and even the suspension of a country's voting rights in EU ministerial councils.It insists that economic coordination should involve all 27 members of the EU club,among whom there is a small majority for freemarket liberalism and economic rigour;in the inner core alone,Germany fears,a small majority favour French interference.A“southern”camp headed by French wants something different:“European economic government”within an inner core of eurozone members.Translated,that means politicians intervening in monetary policy and a system of redistribution from richer to poorer members,via cheaper borrowing for governments through common Eurobonds or complete fiscal transfers.Finally,figures close to the France government have murmured,eurozone members should agree to some fiscal and social harmonization:e.g.,curbing competition in corporatetax rates or labour costs.It is too soon to write off the EU.It remains the world's largest trading block.At its best,the European project is remarkably liberal:built around a single market of 27 rich and poor countries,its internal borders are far more open to goods,capital and labour than any comparable trading area.It is an ambitious attempt to blunt the sharpest edges of globalization,and make capitalism benign.
    The French proposal of handling the crisis implies that______

    A.poor countries are more likely to get funds
    B.strict monetary policy will be applied to poor countries
    C.loans will be readily available to rich countries
    D.rich countries will basically control Eurobonds

    答案:A
    解析:
    推理题【命题思路】这是一道封闭式推理题,需要锁定文章倒数第二段的信息,从而推理判断得出答案。【直击答案】根据题干信息定位到文章倒数第二段首句“A‘southern'camp headed by French wants…”再根据“implies that”定位到倒数第二段“Translated,…poorer members…”句首的“Translated”是评注性状语,相当于“in other words”。介词短语“from richer to poorer members”作后置定语修饰限定“redistribution”。由此句可知从富国到穷国再分配,即穷国更易得到资金,故A项正确。同时可以判断C项与原文信息不符,故排除。【干扰排除】由原文的分析可知对货币政策进行人为干预,以及对富国到穷国的再分配体制,这些政策都是对穷国有利的,而应该对富国更加严厉,故B项与原文信息相反,不选。第五段第二句“…redistribution…fiscal transfers.”显然对富国不利,故D项错误。

  • 第8题:

    According to the passage,coins once had real value as currency because they______.

    A.represented a great improvement over barter
    B.permitted easy transportation of wealth
    C.were made of precious metals
    D.could become collector’s items

    答案:C
    解析:

  • 第9题:


    There’s a stalemate between EU and Britain after Brexit because( )

    A.the two sides have not reached an agreement on conditions of Britain’s orderly exit
    B.British people are divided on the issue of Brexit
    C.Britain refuses to fill the financial hole of the EU
    D.EU does not want Britain to exit from it

    答案:A
    解析:

  • 第10题:

    Beads, stones, seashells, paper, precious metals such as gold and silver, base metals such as iron have all been used as money. Today, money is printed on paper. A lot of countries use their own currency, with n ames such as dollar, pound, franc, ruble, yuan and so on. Since 2002, 18 of the EU members have replaced their national currencies by Euro notes and coins. If you want to pay for something in another currency, you have to change your money into the other money. If you want to travel outside your native country, you need to change your own country's money for the money of the country you are visiting. Most large banks sell foreign currencies. You can exchange money at a bank or at an office of a tourist agency Wherever you go, exchanging money puts you in touch with international finance, which is concerned with exchange rates between different currencies. Deciding the rate for the international exchange of money is one of the most complex aspects of international banking. Euro is available in all EU member countries.


    正确答案:正确

  • 第11题:

    Which BGP option i s required when load sharing over multiple equal - bandwidth parallel links from a single CE router to a single ISP router over eBGP?()

    • A、eBGP Multipath
    • B、eBGP Multihop
    • C、BGP Synchronization
    • D、Public AS numbers

    正确答案:B

  • 第12题:

    单选题
    The committee is under()to reach agreement before midnight.
    A

    possibility

    B

    control

    C

    influence

    D

    pressure


    正确答案: D
    解析: 暂无解析

  • 第13题:

    Even if we can’t reach an agreement, we should maintain our contact.


    正确答案:即使我们没有达成一致,我们应该保持联系。

  • 第14题:

    With a sense of crisis mounting and the EU unable to respond, countries will be increasingly inclined
    to act unilaterally or even---in the case of Britain--leave the bloc altogether.
    The refugee crisis is already threatening cherished ideas about open borders. In the past couple of days, Germany has reimposed frontier controls with Austria---which, in turn, has imposed controls at its border with Hungary, which itself is working feverishly to complete a barbed-wire
    fence to protect its frontier with non-EU Serbia. Controls have been tightened on the French-Italian borders, while migrants camp miserably in Calais, hoping to cross to England.
    If the EU somehow gets a grip on the migrant crisis, these measures might be no more than temporary expedients. But if the pressure of would-be refugees heading for Europe remain intense, then temporary measures could harden into permanent controls.
    Questions marks over open borders will easily shade into wider issues about access to welfare systems and labor markets. That is because EU countries are realizing that—in a border-free single market—a unilateral change of asylum rules
    by Germany had implications for the immigration policies of all member states. Once migrants get citizenship in one EU country, they have the right to move to any other, to work there and to claim benefits. But if free movement of people and labor come into question, so does the EU`s single market—its central achievement.
    The refugee issue has for the moment, overshadowed the euro. But the problems of the single currency have not gone away. On the contrary, Greece's decision this summer to knuckle
    under and accept yet another austerity package has made the Eurozone look increasingly like a trap.
    Even Greece, which is profoundly unhappy with life in the Eurozone, cannot risk leaving for fear of provoking a financial and economic crisis. Creditor countries such as Germany and the Netherlands are not much happier, as they fear they are being dragged into a system of permanent fiscal transfers towards the nations of Europe. Meanwhile, efforts to make the euro work better,
    by pressing ahead with a banking union, are stuck in Brussels. This does not look like a sustainable situation and the risk of euro break-up will surely return.
    The refugee and euro crisis bear on whether Britain will vote to stay in the EU, when it holds a referendum in 2016 or 2017. Until recently, the opinion polls looked promising for the pro-EU camp. But the migrant crisis plays directly into the most potent issue deployed by those campaigning for Britain to leave-which is that membership of
    the EU means that the UK cannot control immigration. More broadly, the British are less likely to stay inside an organization that seems to be failing. If they vote to leave, the sense of crisis
    within the EU would then mount--raising the possibility of further defections.
    A partial unravelling and marginalization of the EU still looks more likely than a full-scale collapse. But even if an organization called the European Union continues to exist--- running buildings and paying salaries---it risks becoming increasingly irrelevant.

    If the Britain's Labor Party is led by a far-left Eurosceptic candidate, what would most likely happen?

    A. He would choose to stay in the EU.
    B. He would work with other members of EU to respond to the problems EU faces.
    C. He would open borders to offer asylum to refugees.
    D. He would probably hasten the exit of UK from EU.

    答案:D
    解析:
    据题干中的Labor Party 和far-left eurosceptic 定位到文章第三段最后一句话,又根据第四段,由于感到危机愈演愈烈而欧盟无力应对,各成员国愈来愈倾向于采取单边行动,甚至彻底脱离欧盟。可知这样一位工党领袖会加速英国脱欧。选D。

  • 第15题:

    The author suggests the Dr. Mahathir's comments on the currency problems (  ).

    A.are poor because they weaken his own credibility
    B.are sharp in identifying the cause of the problem
    C.prove that he has been a poor leader in general
    D.reveal his keen insight into the complex issue

    答案:B
    解析:

  • 第16题:

    With a sense of crisis mounting and the EU unable to respond, countries will be increasingly inclined
    to act unilaterally or even---in the case of Britain--leave the bloc altogether.
    The refugee crisis is already threatening cherished ideas about open borders. In the past couple of days, Germany has reimposed frontier controls with Austria---which, in turn, has imposed controls at its border with Hungary, which itself is working feverishly to complete a barbed-wire
    fence to protect its frontier with non-EU Serbia. Controls have been tightened on the French-Italian borders, while migrants camp miserably in Calais, hoping to cross to England.
    If the EU somehow gets a grip on the migrant crisis, these measures might be no more than temporary expedients. But if the pressure of would-be refugees heading for Europe remain intense, then temporary measures could harden into permanent controls.
    Questions marks over open borders will easily shade into wider issues about access to welfare systems and labor markets. That is because EU countries are realizing that—in a border-free single market—a unilateral change of asylum rules
    by Germany had implications for the immigration policies of all member states. Once migrants get citizenship in one EU country, they have the right to move to any other, to work there and to claim benefits. But if free movement of people and labor come into question, so does the EU`s single market—its central achievement.
    The refugee issue has for the moment, overshadowed the euro. But the problems of the single currency have not gone away. On the contrary, Greece's decision this summer to knuckle
    under and accept yet another austerity package has made the Eurozone look increasingly like a trap.
    Even Greece, which is profoundly unhappy with life in the Eurozone, cannot risk leaving for fear of provoking a financial and economic crisis. Creditor countries such as Germany and the Netherlands are not much happier, as they fear they are being dragged into a system of permanent fiscal transfers towards the nations of Europe. Meanwhile, efforts to make the euro work better,
    by pressing ahead with a banking union, are stuck in Brussels. This does not look like a sustainable situation and the risk of euro break-up will surely return.
    The refugee and euro crisis bear on whether Britain will vote to stay in the EU, when it holds a referendum in 2016 or 2017. Until recently, the opinion polls looked promising for the pro-EU camp. But the migrant crisis plays directly into the most potent issue deployed by those campaigning for Britain to leave-which is that membership of
    the EU means that the UK cannot control immigration. More broadly, the British are less likely to stay inside an organization that seems to be failing. If they vote to leave, the sense of crisis
    within the EU would then mount--raising the possibility of further defections.
    A partial unravelling and marginalization of the EU still looks more likely than a full-scale collapse. But even if an organization called the European Union continues to exist--- running buildings and paying salaries---it risks becoming increasingly irrelevant.

    Which one of the following statements is true?

    A. Greece did not want to take austerity measures but they have no choice.
    B. Border controls imposed by some countries will be permanent.
    C. If a migrant is given citizenship by Italian government, he can move freely to Germany or Serbia.
    D. Euro, as the single currency of EU, is unscathed with the crisis.

    答案:C
    解析:

  • 第17题:

    Text 4 Will the European Union make it?The question would have sounded strange not long ago.Now even the project's greatest cheerleaders talk of a continent facing a“Bermuda triangle”of debt,population decline and lower growth.As well as those chronic problems,the EU faces an acute crisis in its economic core,the 16 countries that use the single currency.Markets have lost faith that the euro zone's economies,weaker or stronger,will one day converge thanks to the discipline of sharing a single currency,which denies uncompetitive members the quick fix of devaluation.Yet the debate about how to save Europe's single currency from disintegration is stuck.It is stuck because the euro zone's dominant powers,France and Germany,agree on the need for greater harmonization within the euro zone,but disagree about what to harmonies.Germany thinks the euro must be saved by stricter rules on borrow,spending and competitiveness,backed by quasiautomatic sanctions for governments that do not obey.These might include threats to freeze EU funds for poorer regions and EU megaprojects and even the suspension of a country's voting rights in EU ministerial councils.It insists that economic coordination should involve all 27 members of the EU club,among whom there is a small majority for freemarket liberalism and economic rigour;in the inner core alone,Germany fears,a small majority favour French interference.A“southern”camp headed by French wants something different:“European economic government”within an inner core of eurozone members.Translated,that means politicians intervening in monetary policy and a system of redistribution from richer to poorer members,via cheaper borrowing for governments through common Eurobonds or complete fiscal transfers.Finally,figures close to the France government have murmured,eurozone members should agree to some fiscal and social harmonization:e.g.,curbing competition in corporatetax rates or labour costs.It is too soon to write off the EU.It remains the world's largest trading block.At its best,the European project is remarkably liberal:built around a single market of 27 rich and poor countries,its internal borders are far more open to goods,capital and labour than any comparable trading area.It is an ambitious attempt to blunt the sharpest edges of globalization,and make capitalism benign.
    Regarding the future of the EU,the author seems to feel____

    A.pessimistic
    B.desperate
    C.conceited
    D.hopeful

    答案:D
    解析:
    态度题【命题思路】这是一道态度题。态度有正向答案,也有负向答案,需要对文章最后一段的信息进行锁定,从而推理判断得出答案。【直击答案】根据题干信息定位到最后一段首句“It is too soon to write off the EU.”其中动词短语“write off”的意思是“取消;认定……失败”。因此这句话的意思是“认定欧盟失败还为时过早”。由此判断得出作者对欧盟的态度很乐观,根据答案给出的备选选项,只有D项“有希望的”与作者的态度一致,故D项正确。

  • 第18题:

    Text 4 Will the European Union make it?The question would have sounded strange not long ago.Now even the project's greatest cheerleaders talk of a continent facing a“Bermuda triangle”of debt,population decline and lower growth.As well as those chronic problems,the EU faces an acute crisis in its economic core,the 16 countries that use the single currency.Markets have lost faith that the euro zone's economies,weaker or stronger,will one day converge thanks to the discipline of sharing a single currency,which denies uncompetitive members the quick fix of devaluation.Yet the debate about how to save Europe's single currency from disintegration is stuck.It is stuck because the euro zone's dominant powers,France and Germany,agree on the need for greater harmonization within the euro zone,but disagree about what to harmonies.Germany thinks the euro must be saved by stricter rules on borrow,spending and competitiveness,backed by quasiautomatic sanctions for governments that do not obey.These might include threats to freeze EU funds for poorer regions and EU megaprojects and even the suspension of a country's voting rights in EU ministerial councils.It insists that economic coordination should involve all 27 members of the EU club,among whom there is a small majority for freemarket liberalism and economic rigour;in the inner core alone,Germany fears,a small majority favour French interference.A“southern”camp headed by French wants something different:“European economic government”within an inner core of eurozone members.Translated,that means politicians intervening in monetary policy and a system of redistribution from richer to poorer members,via cheaper borrowing for governments through common Eurobonds or complete fiscal transfers.Finally,figures close to the France government have murmured,eurozone members should agree to some fiscal and social harmonization:e.g.,curbing competition in corporatetax rates or labour costs.It is too soon to write off the EU.It remains the world's largest trading block.At its best,the European project is remarkably liberal:built around a single market of 27 rich and poor countries,its internal borders are far more open to goods,capital and labour than any comparable trading area.It is an ambitious attempt to blunt the sharpest edges of globalization,and make capitalism benign.
    The debate over the EU's single currency is stuck because the dominant powers_____

    A.are competing for the leading position
    B.are busy handling their own crises
    C.fail to reach an agreement on harmonization
    D.disagree on the steps towards disintegration

    答案:C
    解析:
    细节题【命题思路】这是一道局部细节题,需要对文章第三段的信息进行锁定,从而判断得出答案。【直击答案】根据题干信息定位到第三段第二句“It is stuck…what to harmonies.”根据这句话可知“the dominant powers”,即“德国和法国”虽然认为有必要在欧元区进行更多的协调,但就协调内容却无法达成共识。由此可判断主导国家未能就协调内容达成共识,C项正确。【干扰排除】原文并未提及德国和法国具体的国情及情况,只是说它们无法就协调内容达成共识,故A项和B项原文均未提及,属于无中生有,不选。第三段首句“Yet the debate…is stuck.”谈的是欧盟货币统一问题,并非D项的“瓦解步骤”,故D项是对原文的曲解,错误。

  • 第19题:

    Text 4 Will the European Union make it?The question would have sounded strange not long ago.Now even the project's greatest cheerleaders talk of a continent facing a“Bermuda triangle”of debt,population decline and lower growth.As well as those chronic problems,the EU faces an acute crisis in its economic core,the 16 countries that use the single currency.Markets have lost faith that the euro zone's economies,weaker or stronger,will one day converge thanks to the discipline of sharing a single currency,which denies uncompetitive members the quick fix of devaluation.Yet the debate about how to save Europe's single currency from disintegration is stuck.It is stuck because the euro zone's dominant powers,France and Germany,agree on the need for greater harmonization within the euro zone,but disagree about what to harmonies.Germany thinks the euro must be saved by stricter rules on borrow,spending and competitiveness,backed by quasiautomatic sanctions for governments that do not obey.These might include threats to freeze EU funds for poorer regions and EU megaprojects and even the suspension of a country's voting rights in EU ministerial councils.It insists that economic coordination should involve all 27 members of the EU club,among whom there is a small majority for freemarket liberalism and economic rigour;in the inner core alone,Germany fears,a small majority favour French interference.A“southern”camp headed by French wants something different:“European economic government”within an inner core of eurozone members.Translated,that means politicians intervening in monetary policy and a system of redistribution from richer to poorer members,via cheaper borrowing for governments through common Eurobonds or complete fiscal transfers.Finally,figures close to the France government have murmured,eurozone members should agree to some fiscal and social harmonization:e.g.,curbing competition in corporatetax rates or labour costs.It is too soon to write off the EU.It remains the world's largest trading block.At its best,the European project is remarkably liberal:built around a single market of 27 rich and poor countries,its internal borders are far more open to goods,capital and labour than any comparable trading area.It is an ambitious attempt to blunt the sharpest edges of globalization,and make capitalism benign.
    The EU is faced with so many problems that_____

    A.it has more or less lost faith in markets
    B.even its supporters begin to feel concerned
    C.some of its member countries plan to abandon euro
    D.it intends to deny the possibility of devaluation

    答案:B
    解析:
    细节题【命题思路】这是一道局部细节题,需要对文章首段的信息进行锁定,从而判断得出答案。【直击答案】根据题干信息定位到首段第二句“Now even…growth”,这句话中“cheerleader”本意是“拉拉队队长”,在此引申为“支持者”。“a continent”在此句中指代“The EU”,题干的problem是原文crisis的近义替换,这句话说明欧盟的支持者都开始谈论整个欧盟面临的问题,这就说明其支持者也开始为欧盟担忧,由此可判断出B项正确。【干扰排除】由第二段第二句“Markets have lost faith…”,可知市场对欧元区经济体失去信心,但并非A项中的欧盟对市场失去信心,故A项错误。文中并未提及成员国是否放弃使用欧元,C项属于无中生有,不选。由第二段末句“…which denies uncompetitive members the quick fix of devaluation.”可知原文讲的是成员国应对货币贬值的问题,而并非D项“欧盟打算否决贬值的可能性”,故错误。

  • 第20题:


    What’s the main idea ofthis passage?( )

    A.Theresa May makes financial commitment to EU for the transition period.
    B.EU won’t talk to Britain unless Britain makes concessions.
    C.Britain insists on leaving EU without any agreement.
    D.Theresa May seeks to unlock Brexit talks in her speech.

    答案:D
    解析:
    主旨题。文章主要讲的是英国首相特丽莎·梅为了开启脱欧谈判,打破僵局而作的一次演讲,她在演讲中承诺会对欧盟作出经济补偿,会保障欧盟公民在英国的合法权益,强调英国与其他成员国之间的共同利益,故本题选D。参考译文:英国首相特丽莎·梅试图结束英国脱欧谈判中的僵局,于周五提出在英国脱欧后的两年过渡期内向欧盟支付大笔款项。在意大利佛罗伦萨的一次演讲中,梅期待已久的调解受到欧洲大陆各国的密切关注。在伦敦,她的内阁成员因英国曲折的脱欧进程产生了激烈的分歧。该演讲旨在为英国脱欧问题展开严肃的谈判,以及为就英国与欧盟的关系展开更广泛、更富有成效的讨论铺平道路。然而,尽管梅为实现这一目标而做了一些让步,但她并没有就她最终希望英国与欧盟建立的关系给出任何新的见解——这个问题使她的内阁和保守党(也称之为托利党)产生分歧。欧盟首席谈判代表米歇尔·巴尼耶在声明中谨慎地回应道:“我们期待英国谈判代表解释特丽莎·梅首相讲话的具体含义。我们的目标是就英国有序脱欧的条件以及可能的过渡期迅速达成协议。”尽管英国计划在2019年脱欧,但自3月份英国正式宣布脱欧以来,谈判进展甚微。欧盟坚持要求英国在讨论未来贸易关系之前同意脱欧条款,而英国方面希望两者同时进行。鉴于持续的僵局,许多企业担心面临“危险”局面,即英国将在没有签署脱欧协议的情况下被淘汰出局,因此梅面临着寻求摆脱僵局的压力。梅周五在佛罗伦萨发表讲话时,没有确切说明英国将继续向欧盟捐助多少钱。但她做出了一个重要承诺,即英国作为欧盟的主要净捐助国,不会在2019年和2020年的欧盟预算中留下漏洞。梅说:“我不希望我们的合作伙伴担心,由于我们决定离开,他们需要在当前预算方案的剩余部分支付更多或更少的费用”。这可能意味着英国脱欧后需支付约2 000万欧元,或约240亿美元。它还将在两年过渡期内维持有效现状,这意味着英国将允许欧洲工人自由流动,并接受欧洲法院的裁决。光是这一点就不太可能让其他27个成员国满意,但梅暗示,她愿意更进一步,“兑现我们在成员国任期内做出的承诺”。此外,梅提议与欧盟建立安全伙伴关系,强调英国作为一个国防大国的重要性,并提供新的法律保障,以保障英国退出欧盟之后欧盟公民在英国的权利。总的来说,梅试图强调英国与欧洲大陆各国在达成协议和避免贸易中断方面的共同利益,并在比此前的干预措施更积极、敌意更少的对话中体现出来。欧盟谈判代表拒绝谈论英国脱欧后的关系,除非他们认为双方在重要问题上取得了“足够的进展”:英国脱欧后欧盟公民在英国的地位、爱尔兰和北爱尔兰(英国的一部分)之间的边界,以及英国对欧盟的财政承诺。目前还没有迹象表明其他27个国家准备给英国制定一份协议,官员们已经在多个场合警告英国,不会对其喜欢的欧盟成员国采取“摘樱桃策略”(是一种只看到有利于结论的证据,忽略了不利证据的做法,或者说“选择性失明”,就像摘樱桃时只采摘成熟的、质量好的樱桃一样)。

  • 第21题:

    Which of the following is not true of the European Union?()

    AThe United States is also a member of the EU.

    BThe members of the EU cooperate in many areas,including politics and economics.

    CThe EU is a major economic unit.

    DThe combined value of the union.s imports and exports is greater than that of any single country in the world.


    A

  • 第22题:

    Beads, stones, seashells, paper, precious metals such as gold and silver, base metals such as iron have all been used as money. Today, money is printed on paper. A lot of countries use their own currency, with n ames such as dollar, pound, franc, ruble, yuan and so on. Since 2002, 18 of the EU members have replaced their national currencies by Euro notes and coins. If you want to pay for something in another currency, you have to change your money into the other money. If you want to travel outside your native country, you need to change your own country's money for the money of the country you are visiting. Most large banks sell foreign currencies. You can exchange money at a bank or at an office of a tourist agency Wherever you go, exchanging money puts you in touch with international finance, which is concerned with exchange rates between different currencies. Deciding the rate for the international exchange of money is one of the most complex aspects of international banking. Currency means money in the form of paper.


    正确答案:正确

  • 第23题:

    单选题
    For years an acrimonious debate over how to protect heroin users impeded efforts in the U.S. to control the spread of AIDS.
    A

    convoluted    

    B

    belied  

    C

    stoked  

    D

    encumbered


    正确答案: C
    解析: 句意:几年来对如何保护海洛因吸食者的激烈辩论阻碍了美国为控制艾滋病传播而付出的努力。impede阻止。encumber阻碍。convolute旋绕。belie掩饰,伪装。stoke添燃料。