Wouldn't it be ________ wonderful world if all nations live in________ peace with one another?
A.a; / B. the; / C. a; the D.the; the
Most mornings, the line begins to form at dawn: scores of silent women with babies on their backs, buckets balanced on their heads, and in each hand a brightblue plastic jug. On good days, they will wait less than an hour before a water tanker goes across the dirt path that serves as a road in Kesum Purbahari, a slum on the southern edge of New Delhi. On bad days, when there is no electricity for the pumps, the tankers don't come at all. “That water kills people,” a young mother named Shoba said one recent Saturday morning, pointing to a row of pails filled with thick, caramel (焦糖)colored liquid. “Whoever drinks it will die.” The water was from a pipe shared by thousands of people in the poor neibourhood. Women often use it to wash clothes and bathe their children, but nobody is desperate enough to drink it.
There is no standard for how much water a person needs each day, but experts usually put the minimum at fifty litres. The government of India promises (but rarely provides) forty. Most people drink two or three litres—less than it takes to wash a toilet. The rest is typically used for cooking and bathing. Americans consume between four hundred and six hundred litres of water each day, more than any other people on earth. Most Europeans use less than half that. The women of Kesum Purbahari each hoped to drag away a hundred litres that day—two or three buckets' worth. Shoba has a husband and five children, and that much water doesn't go far in a family of seven, particularly when the temperature reaches a hundred and ten degrees before noon. She often makes up the difference with bottled water, which costs more than water delivered any other way. Sometimes she just buys milk; it's cheaper. Like the poorest people everywhere, the people of New Delhi's slums spend a far greater percentage of their incomes on water than anyone lucky enough to live in a house connected to a system of pipes.
1.The underlined word “slum” most likely means________.
A.a village
B.a small town
C.an area of a town with badlybuilt, overcrowded buildings
D. the part of a town that lacks water badly
2.Sometimes the water tanker doesn't come because________.
A.the weather is bad
B. there is no electricity
C.there is no water
D.people don't want the dirty water
3.A person needs at least________litres of water a day.
A.a hundred B.four hundred
C.forty D.fifty
4.Which of the following statements is WRONG?
A.A hundred litres of water a day is enough for Shoba's family.
B.Americans uses the largest amount of water each day.
C.In Kesum Purbahari milk is cheaper than bottled water.
D.Shoba has a family of seven people.
—How was your recent trip to Sichuan?
—I've never had ________ one before.
A.a pleasant B.a more pleasant
C.a most pleasant D.the most pleasant
Isn't ________ rude ________ him to talk to his mother like that?
A.that; for B.that; of C.it; for D.it; of
________of the people on the Net ________China's economy is among the strongest in the world.
A.Four fifth; believes B.Four fifth; believe
C.Four fifths; believe D.Four fifths; believes
How much________she looked without her glasses!
A.well B.good C.best D.better