更多"The native Canadians lived in _____"的相关试题:
[单项选择]The native Canadians lived in () with nature, for they respected nature as a provider of life.
A. coordination
B. acquaintance
C. contact
D. harmony
[单项选择]According to the news item, many Canadians gathered in Montreal( ).
A. to give support to Quebec’s independence effort.
B. to drive the French-speaking people away.
C. to uphold the country’s unity.
D. to provoke greater surge of campaigning in Quebec.
[填空题]The old-age paternalism of southern Canadians over Eskimos
has died more slowly in the rural villages where Eskimos have
been more reluctant to voice their opinions aggressively. This has
been a frustration in government officials trying to develop local (53)______
leadership among the Eskimos, however a blessing to other de- (54)______
partments whose plans have been received without local obstruc- (55)______
tion. In rural areas the obligations of kinship often ran counter (56)______
the best interests of the village and potential leaders were re-
strained from making positive contributions to the village coun-
cil. More recently, therefore, the educated Eskimos have been (57)______
voicing over the interests of those in the rural areas. They are (58)______
trying out to persuade the government to recognise the rights of (59)______
full-time hunters, by protecting their territo
[填空题]
Canadians like to think that although they are the junior partner in their trade relations with the United States, the 174 billion barrels of proven reserves in the oil sands of Alberta provide a powerful ace up their sleeve in any dealings with their energy-hungry neighbor. That belief has now been shaken by an American law that appears to prohibit American government agencies from buying crude produced in the oil sands of the western province.
41. ______. But that is the effect of banning federal agencies from buying alternative or synthetic fuel, including that from non-conventional sources, if their production and use result in more greenhouse gases than conventional oil. Transforming Alberta’s tarry muck into a barrel of oil is an energy-intensive process that produces about three times the emissions of a barrel of conventional light sweet crude.
Having woken belatedly to the danger, the Canadian government is now scrambling to secure an exception. Mi