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提问人:网友曾深鑫 发布时间:2022-01-07
[单选题]

Because Edgar was convinced of the accuracy of this fact ,he()his opinion.

A.struck to

B.strove for

C.stuck of

D.stood for

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  • · 有7位网友选择 A,占比70%
  • · 有2位网友选择 D,占比20%
  • · 有1位网友选择 B,占比10%
匿名网友[24.***.***.226]选择了 A
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匿名网友[23.***.***.207]选择了 D
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匿名网友[36.***.***.110]选择了 A
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匿名网友[30.***.***.209]选择了 A
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匿名网友[152.***.***.15]选择了 A
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匿名网友[220.***.***.38]选择了 A
1天前
匿名网友[112.***.***.3]选择了 D
1天前
匿名网友[203.***.***.2]选择了 A
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匿名网友[226.***.***.158]选择了 A
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匿名网友[253.***.***.76]选择了 B
1天前
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更多“Because Edgar was convinced of the accuracy of this fact ,he()his opinion.”相关的问题
第1题
Because Edgar was convinced of the accuracy of this fact, he ___________ (坚持自己的观点).

Because Edgar was convinced of the accuracy of this fact, he ___________ (坚持自己的观点).

点击查看答案
第2题
Because Edgar was convinced of the accuracy of this fact, he ______his opinion.A.struck at

Because Edgar was convinced of the accuracy of this fact, he ______his opinion.

A.struck at

B.strove for

C.stuck to

D.stood for

点击查看答案
第3题
Because Edgar was convinced of the accuracy of this fact, he ________ his opinion.A

Because Edgar was convinced of the accuracy of this fact, he ________ his opinion.

A) struck at

B) stove for

C) stuck to

D) stood for

点击查看答案
第4题
Edgar Snow was a reporter and a journalist. He was a doer, a seeker of facts. His mature y
ears were spent in communicating to people -- he was an opener of minds, a bright pair of eyes on what went on about him. Fortunately, he went to many places, knew many people, saw many things; thus he communicated from depth and involvement. Suspicious of dogma, he stated in his autobiography: "What interested me was chiefly people, all kinds, of people, and what they thought and said and how they lived -- rather than officials, and what they said in their interviews and handouts about what 'the people' thought and said." In writing about people and the event which shaped or misshaped their lives, his point of view was essentially honest and searching-- founded on his own inquiry and resting on a body of truth perceived with vision and with compassion. His valued friend and editor, Mary Heathcote, stated to Edgar Snow, "True professionalism meant telling the truth as one saw it, with as many of the reasons for its existence as one could find out and as much empathy as possible for the people experiencing it..."

That he is remembered mostly through Red Star Over China is understandable. The accounts in that book were of international importance and the experience for the author in getting those accounts was perhaps the most significant one in his life. Though it is typical of him, after the acclaim the book received, he commented, "I simply wrote down what I was told by the extraordinary young men and women with whom it was my privilege to live at age thirty, and from whom I learned a great deal." That "great deal" spread from the pages of Red Star to alter the thinking of countless people -- including many citizens of China who were led by it to action that drastically affected their own lives and the course of their country's future. An awesome realization of personal responsibility also came about at this point for the young journalist, one he was cognizant of the rest of his life -- the discovery, as he heard of friends and students killed in a war they had been moved to join largely because of his reports, that his writing had taken on the nature of political action and that he, as a writer, had to be personally answerable for all he wrote.

There were other texts which broke through ignorance and prejudice in similar ways: Far Eastern Front, Living China, Battle for Asia, People on Our Side, Journey To the Beginning, to name some of the eleven books he produced, as well as many pages of engaged reporting -- of floods and famines, of wars declared and undeclared, of human dilemmas and indignities, of unsung heroes and unheralded sacrifices -- a life's study of the impact of people and events from many lands known at first hand.

Edgar represents what is best in American journalism -- as did his compatriots Agnes Smedley and Jack Belden. They dedicated to action, to communication that would help lessen the need, help correct the injustices. A main objective of theirs, because they were there and they saw, because they were internationalists with concern for human welfare, values and dignity, was to contribute to an understanding of China and the crippling burdens she bore -- in a world dominated by arrogance, greed, and ignorance.

According to the article, the writings of Edgar Snow were based on ______.

A.facts of life

B.his own peep-hole view

C.the officials' taste

D.his prejudiced imagination

点击查看答案
第5题
Edgar Snow was a reporter and a joumalist. He was a doer, a seeker of facts. His mature ye
ars were spent in communicating to people-he was an opener of minds, a bright pair of eyes on what went on about him. Fortunately, he went to many places, knew many people, saw many things; thus he communicated from depth and involvement. Suspicious of dogma, he stated in his autobiography. "What interested me was chiefly people, all kinds of people, and what they thought and said and how they lived-rather than officials, and what they said in their interviews and handouts about whatthey people' thought and saiD." In writing about people and the event which shaped or misshaped their lives, his point of view was essentially honest and searching- founded on his own inquiry and resting on a body of truth perceived with vision and with compassion. His valued friend and editor, Mary Heathcote, stated that to Edgar Snow, "true professionalism meant telling the truth as one saw it, with as many of the reasons for its existence as one could find out and as much empathy as possible for the people experiencing it..."

That he is remembered mostly through Red Star Over China is understandable. The accounts in that book were of international importance and the experience for the author in getting those accounts was perhaps the most significant one in his life. Though it is typical of him what, after the acclaim the book received, he commented, "I simply wrote down that I was told by the extraordinary young men and women with whom it was my privilege to live at age thirty, and from whom I learned a great deal. " That "great deal" spread from the pages of Red Star to alter the thinking of countless people—including many citizens of China who were led by it to action that drastically affected their own lives and the course of their country's future. An awesome realization of personal responsibility also came about at this point for the young journalist, one he was cognizant of the rest of his life—the discovery, as he heard of friends and students killed in a war they had been moved to join largely because of his reports, that his writing had taken on the nature of political action and that he, as a writer, had to be personally answerable for all he wrote.

There were other texts which broke through ignorance and prejudice in similar ways: Far Eastern Front, Living China, Battle for Asia, People on Our Side, Journey To the Beginning, to name some of the eleven books he produced, as well as many pages of engaged reporting—of floods and famines, of wars declared and undeclared, of human dilemmas and indignities, of unsung heroes and unheralded sacrifices-a life's study of the impact of people and events from many lands known at first hanD.

Ed represents what is best in American joumalism—as did his compatriot Agnes Smedley and Jack Belden. They dedicated to action, to communication that would help lessen the need, help correct the injustices. A main objective of theirs, because they were there and they saw, because they were internationalists with concern for human welfare, values and dignity, was to contribute to an understanding of China and the crippling burdens she bore—in a world dominated by arrogance, greed, and ignorance.

According to the article, the writings of Edgar Snow were based on______.

A.facts of life

B.his own peep-hole view

C.the officials'taste

D.his prejudiced imagination

点击查看答案
第6题
I loved the cabin in the village because it ’s full of() charm.A、urbanB、cityC、rusticD、co

A.urban

B.city

C.rustic

D.common

点击查看答案
第7题
He was held in the police station because he ___________ to an offence.A was relatedB co

He was held in the police station because he ___________ to an offence.

A was related

B connected

C linked

点击查看答案
第8题
Concrete is used in extensive projects because of ______.A.the increase in trafficB.the co

Concrete is used in extensive projects because of ______.

A.the increase in traffic

B.the cost of other materials

C.the change of the climate

D.the construction of the roads

点击查看答案
第9题
Economics can help one make better decisions because he learns______.A.how to weigh the co

Economics can help one make better decisions because he learns______.

A.how to weigh the cost and the benefit

B.all the practical economic theories

C.something useful about business

D.logical way of thinking

点击查看答案
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