更多"After the war, a new school buildin"的相关试题:
[单项选择]After the war, a new school building was put up ______ there had once been a theatre.
A. that
B. where
C. which D.when
[简答题]A (A)container weighs (B) more after air is put in (C), it (D) proves that air has weight.
[单项选择]A bottle weighs more after air is put in. ______ proves that air has weight.
A. We
B. Which
C. It
D. What
[填空题]After World War II most Australians were cautious about prospects for the future.
[填空题]After the new technique was introduced, the factory ______ (1998年生产的电视机是前一年的两倍多).
[单项选择]The American baby boom after the war made unconvincing U.S. advice to poor countries that they restrain their births. However, there has hardly been a year since 1957 in which birth rates have not fallen in the United States and other rich countries, and in 1976 the fall was especially sharp. Both former East Germany and former West Germany have fewer births than they have deaths, and the United States is only temporarily able to avoid this condition because the children of the baby boom are now an exceptionally large group of married couples.
It is true that Americans do not typically plan their births to set an example for developing nations. We are more affected by women’s liberation: once women see interesting and well-paid jobs and careers available, they are less willing to provide free labor for child raising. From costing nothing, children suddenly come to seem impossibly expensive. And to the high cost of children are added the uncertainties introduced by divorce, coupl
A. increased
B. experienced both falls and rises
C. was reduced
D. remained stable
[填空题]After the war, returned male workers were responsible for the total loss of women’s jobs.
[简答题]After World War 11 the glorification of an ever larger GNP formed the basis of a new materialism, which became a sacred obligation for all Japanese governments, businesses, and trade unions. Anyone who mentioned the undesirable by-products of rapid economic growth was treated as a heretic. Consequently everything possible was done to make conditions easy for the manufacturers. (1) Few dared question the wisdom of discharging untreated waste into the nearest water body or untreated smoke into the atmosphere. This silence was maintained by union leaders as well as most of the country’s radicals; except for a few isolated voices, no one protested. (2)An insistence on treatment of the various effluents would have necessitated expenditures on treatment equipment that in turn would have given rise to higher operating costs. Obviously this would have meant higher prices for Japanese goods, and ultimately fewer sales and lower industrial growth and GNP.
(3) The pursuit o