According to the last paragragh, consumers who believe that organic foods axe better than conventionally grown foods are often thrifty
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第1题
According to the last paragragh, consumers who believe that organic foods axe better than conventionally grown foods are often ().
A.careless
B.mistaken
C.thrifty
D.skeptical
第2题
According to the last paragragh, consumers who believe that organic foods axe better than conventionally grown foods are often skeptical.()
第3题
According to the last paragragh, consumers who believe that organic foods axe better than conventionally grown foods are often ().
第4题
According to the last paragragh, consumers who believe that organic foods axe better than conventionally grown foods are often careless.()
第5题
According to the last paragragh, consumers who believe that organic foods axe better than conventionally grown foods are often mistaken.()
第8题
Informed conversations about self-driving cars no longer are about feasibility. New key talking points are “When?” and “Which automakers first?” and “Who will be responsible when an accident happens?” Nissan has said it will sell a driverless car by 2020. IHS forecast several models available by 2025. Both of these are guesses—but they indicate how fast the technology is progressing. What seemed unimaginable a decade ago becomes more practical, comprehensible, and real by the day. Google's (GOOG) self-driving Toyota Prius (TM) has logged hundreds of thousands of miles without incident on California roads. Most automakers are testing self-driving cars on tracks and —lately, as I experienced earlier this week in Las Vegas — in traffic. The Audi A7 equipped with “traffic jam assist” was programmed to drive itself slowly in heavy traffic at no more than 40 miles per hour. (Dr. Bjorn Giesler, head of Audi's project team, was behind the wheel.) The car was loaded with cameras, sensors, and a special device that monitors a driver's eyes to ensure he or she doesn't fall asleep at the wheel. In that event, the car will safely slow down, stop, and call for help. Think of a driverless car as a robot. For Audi and other automakers, a key question is how much of the driving should be done by the robot, how much by the driver. The driver decides. Executives at Audi and other automakers say the driver, in any case, must remain engaged and attentive, ready to take over in the event of the unexpected: a car travelling the wrong way or out of control, for example. Audi executives won't use the word “driverless;” instead they speak about “piloted” driving. Other auto executives talk about “autonomous” or “assisted” driving. Only Google is adamant that it wants a driverless car, one that can help the elderly and the blind, as well as anyone who would rather be reading a book.
(1)When it comes to self-driving car, which of the following is NOT the frequent topic?
A. When it is put into use.
B. Which automakers will first produce self-driving car.
C. Whether it is feasible.
D. Who will be responsible when an accident happens.
(2)Which of the following is NOT TRUE according to the passage?
A. IHS claimed that there would be several models in 2025.
B. Google's (GOOG) self-driving Toyota Prius (TM) has been tested.
C. Audi A7 can monitor a driver's eyes to ensure he or she doesn't fall asleep at the wheel.
D. Self-driving car has been in use.
(3)As for driverless car, decide(s) how much of the driving should be done by the car.
A. drivers
B. automakers
C. executives
D. nobody
(4)According to the passage, drivers must even in driverless driving.
A. sleep
B. be attentive
C. take photos
D. do reading
(5)According to Audi executives, which word is NOT proper for self-driving?
A. driverless
B. piloted
C. assisted
D. autonomous