正当防卫超过必要限度造成不应有的危害的,就当负刑事责任;但是应当酌情从轻或者减轻处罚。 ( )
A. 对
B. 错
Task 2 Conversation: This task is the same as Task 1. The 5 questions or unfinished statements are numbered 41 through 45.Human language is a living thing. Each language has its own biological system, which makes it different from all other languages. This system must constantly adjust to a new environment and new situations to survive and flourish (兴盛). When we think of human language this way, it is an easy step to see the words of a language as being like the ceils of a living organism (机物)-they are constantly forming and dying and splitting into parts as time changes and the language adapts. There are several specific processes by which new words are formed. Some words come into the language which sound like what they refer to. Words like buzz (嗡嗡) and ding-dong are good examples of this process. Still another way in which new words are formed is to use the name of a person or a place closely associated with that word’s meaning. The words sandwich and hamburger are examples of this word-formation process. The Earl ( 伯爵 ) of Sandwich was so fond of gambling at cards that he hated to be interrupted by the necessity of eating. He thus invented a new way of eating while he continued his game at the gambling table. This quick and convenient dish is what we now call a sandwich-a piece of meat between two slices of bread. The hamburger became the best-known sandwich in the world after it was invented by a citizen of Hamburg in Germany. As long as a language is alive, its cells will continue to change, forming new words and getting rid of the ones that no longer have any use. The word sandwich came from ______.
A. card games
B. a person’s name
C. a piece of meat
D. a place in England
In 1971 there were about 3,700 million people in the world. If the population were (21) evenly over the earth’ s surface there would be about 50 people to the square mile; but there are vast areas of desert and mountain and tropical forest (22) are uninhabited, (23) at the other (24) , in the great cities millions may live within a few square miles. (25) of the world’ s population is concentrated on only a small (26) of the earth’ s land surface, in the rich valleys and (27) plains, because people up to the present time have (28) to congregate in place where the climate and soil make it easy to grow food and obtain shelter. A (29) world population and the discoveries of science (30) this pattern of distribution in the future. As men slowly learn to master diseases, control floods, prevent famines, and stop wars, fewer people die every year; and in (31) the population of the world is steadily (32) . When numbers (33) , the extra mouths must be fed. New lands must be brought (34) cultivation, or land already (35) , made to yield larger crops. In some areas the accessible land is largely so intensively cultivated (36) it will be difficult to make it (37) more food. in some areas the population is so dense that the land is divided into. units (38) tiny to allow for much improvement in farming methods. (39) a large part of this farming population drawn (40) into industrial occupations, the land might be farmed much more productively by modern methods.
A. hand
B. place
C. extent
D. extreme
In 1971 there were about 3,700 million people in the world. If the population were (21) evenly over the earth’ s surface there would be about 50 people to the square mile; but there are vast areas of desert and mountain and tropical forest (22) are uninhabited, (23) at the other (24) , in the great cities millions may live within a few square miles. (25) of the world’ s population is concentrated on only a small (26) of the earth’ s land surface, in the rich valleys and (27) plains, because people up to the present time have (28) to congregate in place where the climate and soil make it easy to grow food and obtain shelter. A (29) world population and the discoveries of science (30) this pattern of distribution in the future. As men slowly learn to master diseases, control floods, prevent famines, and stop wars, fewer people die every year; and in (31) the population of the world is steadily (32) . When numbers (33) , the extra mouths must be fed. New lands must be brought (34) cultivation, or land already (35) , made to yield larger crops. In some areas the accessible land is largely so intensively cultivated (36) it will be difficult to make it (37) more food. in some areas the population is so dense that the land is divided into. units (38) tiny to allow for much improvement in farming methods. (39) a large part of this farming population drawn (40) into industrial occupations, the land might be farmed much more productively by modern methods.
A. Many
B. Little
C. Much
D. Few