填空题

Why, you may wonder, should spiders be our friends
Because they protect so many insects,and insects include [1] ______
some of the greatest enemies of the human race. Insects
would make impossible for us to live in the world; they [2] ______
would ruin all our crops and kill our flocks and herds,
as it were not for the protection we get from insect [3] ______
- eating animals. We owe a lot for the birds and beasts [4] ______
who eat insects but all of them put together kill only
a fraction of the amount destroyed by spiders. Moreover, [5] ______
unlike some of the insect - eaters, spiders never make [6] ______
the least harm to us or our belongings.
Spiders are not insects, as many people think, and [7] ______
nor even nearly related to them. One can tell the difference
almost at a glance, for a spider always has eight
legs but an insect never more than six.
How many spiders are joined in this work on our [8] ______
behalf One authority on spiders made a census
of the spiders in a grass field in the south of
England, and he estimated that there were more
than 2,250,000 in one acre; that is anything [9] ______
like 6,000,000 spiders of different kinds on
a football pitch. Spiders are busy least
half the year in killing insects. It has been
estimated that the weight of all the insects
destroyed by spiders in Britain in one year would
be greater than those of all the human beings [10] ______
in the country.

【参考答案】

makeΛimpossible: it
热门 试题

问答题
Before Keynes, economists were gloomy naysayers. Nothing can be done , Don’t interfere, It will never work, they intoned with Eeyore —— like pessimism. But Keynes was an unswerving optimist. Of course we can lick unemployment! There is no reason to put up with recessions and depressions! The economic problem is not —— if we look into the future —— the permanent problem of the human race, he wrote. Keynes was born in Cambridge, England, in 1883. His father John Neville Keynes was a noted Cambridge economist. His mother Florence Ada Keynes became mayor of Cambridge. Young John was a brilliant student but didn’t immediately aspire to either academia or public life. He wanted to run a railroad. It is so easy... and fascinating to master the principles of these things, he told a friend, with his usual modesty. But no railroad came along, and Keynes ended up taking the civil service exam. His lowest mark was in economics. I evidently knew more about Economics than my examiners. he later explained. Keynes was posted to the India Office, but the Civil Service proved deadly dull, and he soon left. He lectured at Cambridge, edited an influential journal and socialized with his Bloomsbury friends, surrounded himself with artists and writers and led an altogether dilettantish life until Archduke Francis Ferdinand of Austria was assassinated in Saraievo, and Europe was plunged into World War I. Keynes was called to Britain’s Treasury to work on overseas finances, where he quickly shone. Even his artistic tastes came in handy. He figured a way to balance the French accounts by having Britain’s National Gallery buy paintings by Manet, Corot and Delacroix at bargain prices.