Owing to the lack of agreement on this last subject a decision on promotion methods would ()the next meeting.

be put forward

Text 2
Owing to the insufficient gas supply in the United States, the gas price has dramatically risen. The new gas price reality and the policy decisions it may trigger will undoubtedly lead to critical financial implications for some individuals or companies, but the situation can hardly be termed a "national crisis" or even a "shortage". What is true is that buyers--particularly those in the chemical industry and in independent power generation -will not be able to acquire the quantity of gas they wish at the prices they wish to pay, or even at prices that will allow them to remain competitive in their markets, particularly during peak demand seasons.
Over the next year or two, the result will be higher, and more volatile prices, to be sure, but there are market-driven adjustment mechanisms even in the short term, e.g., more electric power from coal and oil, reduced production of domestic chemicals, and a commensurate substitution of imports. Consumers and companies will feel the economic pinch of higher prices; particularly, if we experience an exceptionally hot summer and a winter, when average temperatures were 20% colder than the year before in the Northeast. Still, the United States faces neither the specter of economic recession--at least not solely due to gas prices--nor of freezing families unable to ’obtain gas to heat their homes.
Given this new price plateau, demand adjustments will also take place and vary across regions of the United States and across industries, with power generation and chemicals perhaps the most affected. Some in those industries may find that their facilities are no longer financially viable at the new price plateau, and there will likely be another round of industrial restructuring not unlike others that have resulted from international differences in resource and labor costs--lest we forget, natural gas is still abundant and very low cost in other countries such as Trinidad, Qatar, and Iran, just as labor is abundant and low cost in China, Indonesia, and parts of Latin America.
From a policy perspective, the United States needs to carefully evaluate a series of trade-offs between environmental concerns and economic growth. The gas price experiences of the last two years are the first real tastes of the economic costs of a gas-based environmental strategy. Evaluating these trade-offs needs to be done with a level head and a clear understanding of those trade-offs.

Which of the following is NOT true according to the article()

A:The financial situation is rather critical owing to the high gas prices. B:The economic situation is not bad enough to trigger a recession. C:Demand adjustments are the same in all the states of America. D:The U. S. need to reconsider its policy concerning environment and economic growth.

Text 2 Owing to the insufficient gas supply in the United States, the gas price has dramatically risen. The new gas price reality and the policy decisions it may trigger will undoubtedly lead to critical financial implications for some individuals or companies, but the situation can hardly be termed a "national crisis" or even a "shortage". What is true is that buyers--particularly those in the chemical industry and in independent power generation -will not be able to acquire the quantity of gas they wish at the prices they wish to pay, or even at prices that will allow them to remain competitive in their markets, particularly during peak demand seasons. Over the next year or two, the result will be higher, and more volatile prices, to be sure, but there are market-driven adjustment mechanisms even in the short term, e.g., more electric power from coal and oil, reduced production of domestic chemicals, and a commensurate substitution of imports. Consumers and companies will feel the economic pinch of higher prices; particularly, if we experience an exceptionally hot summer and a winter, when average temperatures were 20% colder than the year before in the Northeast. Still, the United States faces neither the specter of economic recession--at least not solely due to gas prices--nor of freezing families unable to ’obtain gas to heat their homes. Given this new price plateau, demand adjustments will also take place and vary across regions of the United States and across industries, with power generation and chemicals perhaps the most affected. Some in those industries may find that their facilities are no longer financially viable at the new price plateau, and there will likely be another round of industrial restructuring not unlike others that have resulted from international differences in resource and labor costs--lest we forget, natural gas is still abundant and very low cost in other countries such as Trinidad, Qatar, and Iran, just as labor is abundant and low cost in China, Indonesia, and parts of Latin America. From a policy perspective, the United States needs to carefully evaluate a series of trade-offs between environmental concerns and economic growth. The gas price experiences of the last two years are the first real tastes of the economic costs of a gas-based environmental strategy. Evaluating these trade-offs needs to be done with a level head and a clear understanding of those trade-offs.

Which of the following is NOT true according to the article()

A:The financial situation is rather critical owing to the high gas prices. B:The economic situation is not bad enough to trigger a recession. C:Demand adjustments are the same in all the states of America. D:The U. S. need to reconsider its policy concerning environment and economic growth.

Owing to the efforts of the originators of the Welfare State______

A:the living standard had been greatly improved B:the cost of living has been improved C:people can live a longer life D:Both A and C

He finally succeeded in carrying out his plan owing to his hard-working.

A:due to B:adapting to C:considering D:suiting

The sports meet was postponed owing to the heavy rain.

A:put up B:put away C:put off D:put on

He finally succeeded in carrying out his plan owing to his hard -working( ).

A:due to B:adapting to C:considering D:suiting


阅读下面的短文,文中有15处空白,每处空白给出4个选项,请根据短文的内容从4个选项中选择1个最佳答案。

? ?People thinking about the origin of language for the first time usually arrive at the conclusion that it developed gradually as a system of grunts, hisses and cries and {{U}}?(51) ?{{/U}} a very simple affair in the beginning. {{U}}?(52) ?{{/U}}, when we observe the language behaviour of {{U}}?(53) ?{{/U}} we regard as primitive cultures, we find it {{U}}?(54) ?{{/U}} complicated. It was believed that an Eskimo must have the tip of his tongue a vocabulary of more than 10,000 words {{U}}?(55) ?{{/U}} to get along reasonably well, much larger than the active vocabulary of an average businessman who speaks English. {{U}}?(56) ?{{/U}}, these Eskimo words are far more highly infleeted (词尾变化) than {{U}}?(57) ?{{/U}} of any of the well-known European languages ,for a {{U}}?(58) ?{{/U}} noun can be spoken or written in {{U}}?(59) ?{{/U}} hundred different forms, each {{U}}?(60) ?{{/U}} a precise meaning different from that of any other.
? ?The forms of the verbs are even more {{U}}?(61) ?{{/U}} . The Eskimo language is, therefore, one of the most difficult in the world to learn, {{U}}?(62) ?{{/U}} the result that almost no traders or explorers have {{U}}?(63) ?{{/U}} tried to learn it. Consequently , there has grown up, in communication between Eskimos and whites, a jargon {{U}}?(64) ?{{/U}} to the pidgin English used in Old China, with a vocabulary of from 300 to 600 uninflected words. Most of them are derived from Eskimo but some are derived from English, Danish, Spanish, Hawaiian and other languages. It is this jargon that is usually {{U}}?(65) ?{{/U}} by travellers as "the Eskimo language".

A:with B:for C:owing to D:as

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