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英美概况题库美国部分精编版

英美概况题库美国部分

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MQS system office room 【MQS16H-TTMS2A-MQSS8Q8-MQSH16898】

The United States

I. Choose the correct answer.

1. In area, the United States is the c largest country in the world.

a. 2nd

b. 3rd

c. 4th

d. 5th

2. The Midwest in the US refers to the region d .

a. west of the Mississippi Valley

b. west of the Appalachian Mountains

c. east of the Rocky Mountains

d. around the Great Lakes and the upper Mississippi Valley.

3. The Backbone of North America refers to the b .

a. Appalachian Mountains

b. Rocky Mountains

c. the Rocky Mountains

d. Sierra Nevada Mountains

4. Death Valley is on the western edge of a .

a. the Great Basin

b. California

c. the Rocky Mountains

d. the Sierra Nevada Mountains

5. Which region might have a dust storm in summer? c

a. The Deep South.

b. The Middle West.

c. The Great Plains

d. The Central Valley of California.

6. Which area has the highest rainfall in the US? b

a. The region around the Great Lakes.

b. The western part of Washington State.

c. The Middle Atlantic states.

d. The Central Valley of California.

7. The US primary suppliers of foreign oil are the following countries except b .

a. Canada

b. Japan

c. Venezuela

d. Saudi Arabia

8. The US largest open-pit copper-mining center is in b .

a. California

b. Utah

c. Montana

d. South Dakota

9. The over 3 million of early Americans in 1790 were mostly of ancestry. c

a. Spanish

b. French

c. British

d. Dutch

10. How many immigrants were legally received by the US each year during

the 1980s? b

a. About 270,000.

b. About 700,000.

c. About 675,000.

d. About 800,000

11. The official racial segregation continued to be the law of the US

until d .

a. 1860

b. 1863

c. 1918

d. 1954

12. American Indians now mainly live in the a .

a. South

b. West

c. Midwest

d. Northeast

13. The majority of American Hispanics are from the following countries

except c .

a. Mexico

b. Cuba

c. Spain

d. Puerto Rico

14. According to the text, which region now leads in percentage increase

in population? c

a. The Northeast.

b. The Great Plains.

c. The South.

d. The West.

15. According to the 1994 US census, the second most populous state in

the US is c .

a. California

b. New York

c. Texas

d. Washington

16. The trend in migration from cities to suburbs now prevailed in all

region b .

a. the Northeast

b. the South

c. the Midwest

d. the West

17. According to the text, the ancestors of the present American Indians came from c .

a. Europe

b. Africa

c. Asia

d. Mongolia

18. Which is not correct to explain the reasons for the sudden daring exploration of the unknown in the mid-15th century? a

a. The ambition for the cast lands.

b. The strong desire for Eastern goods.

c. The improvements in navigation and naval architecture.

d. The great spirit of adventure started by the Renaissanc

e.

19. On his voyage of 1492, Columbus expected to reach c .

a. the New world

b. the West Indies

c. India

d. America

20 Among the following navigators who discovered the route to India?

b

a. Christopher Columbus.

b. Vasco da Gama.

c. Bartholoneu Diaz.

d. Ferdinand Magellan.

21. Who was sent by the English King to explore the new way to the East? b

a. Jacques Cartier.

b. John Cabot.

c. Bartholeneu Diaz.

d. Ferdinand Magellan.

22. Which colony in the following was not founded first by the English? c

a. Virginia.

b. Massachusetts.

c. New York

d. Georgia.

23. The breadbasket colonies include the following ones except

d .

a. New York

b. Pennsylvania

c. Maryland

d. Virginia

24. The last one fo the 13 colonies was c , which was established in 1733.

a. North Carolina

b. South Carolina

c. Georgia

d. Maryland

25. There was a great change in British policy towards the 13 colonies

after .

a. 1760

b. 1763

c. 1764

d. 1767

26. Which Act first set a large scale of opposition in the colonies?

b

a. The Sugar Act of 1764.

b. The Stamp Act of 1765.

c. The Quartering Act of 1765.

d. The Tea Act

27. The Tea Act of 1773 was passed by the British Parliament in order to

c .

a. get more money from the colonies

b. provide cheap tea for the American consumers

c. help the British East India Company

d. monopolize the American tea business

28. The First Continental Congress was attended by the representatives

from all the colonies except d .

a. Delaware

b. Pennsylvania

c. Massachusetts

d, Georgia

29. The first shot of the American War of Independence was fired in

b .

a. Concord

b. Lexington

c. Philadelphia

d. Boston

30. Thomas Paine’s Common Sense urged the American colonists to

d .

a. abolish slavery in the colonies

b. continue a shipping trade with England

c. win independence through peaceful means

d. declare their independence

31. The principal author of the Declaration of Independence was

b .

a. Benjamin Franklin

b. Thomas Jefferson

c. George Washington

d. John Adams

32. Which victory was considered as the turning point of the War of

Independence? c

a. The victory at Trenton.

b. The victory at Boston.

c. The victory at Saratoga.

d. The victory at Yorktown.

33. The Confederation created in 1781 was a a .

a. very loose union of states

b. very powerful central government

c. very firm league of states

d. weak government without the legislative power

34. Who was called the Father of the US Constitution? d

a. George Washington.

b. Benjamin Franklin.

c. Alexander Hamilton.

d. James Madison.

35. According to the text, the Constitution was framed on the following ideas except that d .

a. there should be three branches of government: one to make laws,

another to execute them, and a third to settle questions of law

b. the three branches should be able to check and balance the other

c. the national government is a government of the people, and not of

states alone

d. the new government should impose its authority on the people through states

36. Those who supported the Constitution and preferred a strong national government were called c .

a. Democrats

b. Republicans

c. Federalists

d. Antifederalists

37. How many states were needed to ratify the Constitution? b

a. Eight

b. Nine

c. Eleven

d. Thirteen

38. Which is incorrect to comment on the Federalist Papers? d

a. They support the ratification of the Constitution

b. The defend the principles of the Constitution

c. They help dispel the fears of a national authority

d. They spell out the people’s right

39. The amendment of the Constitution requires the approval of at least

c of the states.

a. one-third

b. two-thirds

c. three-fourths

d. three-fifths

40. When the Second War of Independence broke out in 1812, the US

president was b .

a. Thomas Jefferson

b. James Madison

c. John Adams

d. James Monroe

41. The Monroe Doctrine had the following features or ideas except

d .

a. non-colonization

b. America for Americans

c. non-intervention

d. Latin America for Europeans

42. The US continental expansion was almost complete by d .

a. 1840

b. 1845

c. 1846

d. 1848

43. Cotton became the most profitable crop in the South mainly because

of the b .

a. use of irrigation on plantation

b. Whitney’s cotton gin

c. slave labour

d. improved agricultural techniques

44. in 1854, the Republican Party was founded by some b .

a. slaveholders

b. abolitionists

c. democrats

d. proslavery persons

45. In his inaugural address in 1861, Lincoln showed clearly that he

b .

a. would abolish slavery in the South

b. would not abolish slavery immediately but to preserve the Union

c. would wage a war against slavery

d. had no idea to abolish slavery in the South

46. Which of the following statements about the Emancipation Proclamation is not accurate? a

a. It immediately freed all slaves living in the United States.

b. It freed slaves only in the Confederacy.

c. It brought many blacks to serve in the Union Army.

d. It gave the North a high moral reason for continuing the war.

47. the most important advantage the North had over the South in the

Civil War was its d .

a. manpower

b. superior military leadership

c. European allies

d. industrial superiority

48. An advantage the South had over the North was its d .

a. great mineral resources

b. great number of railroads

c. manpower

d. superior military leadership

49. The first US president who faced impeachment proceedings was

b .

a. James Buchanan

b. Andrew Johnson

c. Ulysses S. Grant

d. Rutherford B. Hays

50. The radical Reconstruction was ended under President d .

a. Abraham Lincoln

b. Andrew Johnson

c. Ulysses S. Grant

d. Rutherford B. Hays

51. Gold was discovered in California in c .

a. 1828

b. 1838

c. 1848

d. 1858

52. The first transcontinental railroad in the US was completed in

c .

a. 1850

b. 1859

c. 1869

d. 1890

53. Telephone was invented in 1876 by b .

a. Thomas B. Edison

b. Alexander D. Bell

c. Guglielmo Marconi

d. George Westinghouse

54. According to the text the value of manufactured goods in the US was

worth twice as that of her agricultural products by d .

a. 1860

b. 1890

c. 1894

d. 1900

55. The first imperialist, the US-Spanish War, broke out in c .

a. 1886

b. 1890

c. 1898

d. 1900

56. After US-Spanish War, the US acquired all the following areas except

d .

a. Puerto Rico

b. Guam

c. the Philippines

d. Cuba

57. By the beginning of the 20th century the country that took the first

place in economy in Europe was a .

a. Germany

b. France

c. Britain

d. Russia

58. When the First World War began, President Wilson immediately called upon the American people to b .

a. be ready for the war

b. observe strict neutrality

c. give financial help to the Allies

d. end the trade relations with Germany

59. The US joined the First World War in d .

a. 1914

b. 1915

c. 1916

d. 1917

60. Wilson’s Fourteen Points did not include the point of d .

a. disarmament

b. creation of an international organization of nations

c. freedom of the seas, in peace and war

d. creation of an international peacekeeping force

61. Which statement about the US in 1920s is not true? b

a. The gross national product rose.

b. Only the rich could afford new consumer goods.

c. The youth suspected the values of the older generation.

d. There was a fast urbanization in the whole country.

62. In responding to the Depression, President Hoover thought that the basic role of the Government was to b .

a. provide government aid for the poor

b. create conditions favorable to the development of private enterprises

c. intervene in the affairs of economy

d. take the responsibility for the welfare of the people

63. The agricultural Adjustment Act was an attempt to deal with the farmers’ problem of d .

a. soil erosion

b. declining labor supply

c. inflation

d. overproduction

64. Which one is not right to comment on the New Deal? d

a. It relieved unemployment through a vast scheme of public works.

b. It offered relief to farmers through providing money at low rates of interest.

c. It brought in old age and unemployment insurance through providing a system of pension.

d. It reduced the commodity prices by limiting production and devaluing the dollar.

65. Between 1935 and 1939, American foreign policy included all of the following except d .

a. the prohibition of the sale of arms or equipment to nations at war

b. the prohibition of loans to belligerent nations

c. cash-and-carry policy

d. active intervention to prevent aggression

66. The US formerly entered the Second World War in d .

a. 1937

b. 1939

c. 1940

d. 1941

67. Normandy Landing took place on a .

a. June 6, 1944

b. July 6, 1944

c. April 30, 1945

d. April 12, 1945

68. At which conference did Roosevelt, Churchill and Stalin agree to

call a conference of all the United Nations in San Francisco in April 1945? d

a. The Conference in Teheran, on Nov. 28, 1943.

b. The Conference in Cairo, on Nov. 23, 1943.

c. The Conference at Dumbarton Oaks, in the fall of 1944.

d. Yalta Conference, in Feb. 1945.

69. The post-World War II program of economic assistance to Western

Europe was known as c .

a. containment policy

b. Truman Plan

c. Marshall Plan

d. Communist prevention

70. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., advocated the philosophy of b .

a. economic equality

b. nonviolence

c. military protest

d. black power

71. Thousands of American soldiers were sent to Vietnam under President

c .

a. Dwight D. Eisenhower

b. John F. Kennedy

c. Lyndon B. Johnson

d. Richard M. Nixon

72. The formal diplomatic relation at the ambassadorial rank between

China and the US was established under President b .

a. Nixon

b. Carter

c. Reagan

d. Bush

73. The power of the state in the US is actually from d .

a. the central government

b. the state constitution

c. the US Constitution

d. both b and c

74. The supreme law of the United States includes d .

a. the US Constitution

b. treaties under the authority of the United States

c. laws to ensure the constitutional power being practiced

d. all the above three

75. The terms of the senator and representative are d and years respectively.

a. two…four

b. two…three

c. two…six

d. six…two

76. Which Amendment provided for the direct election of senators? b

a. The 16th Amendment (1913)

b. The 17th Amendment (1913)

c. The 18th Amendment (1919)

d. The 19th Amendment (1920)

77. Certain presidential appointments must be approved by a majority vote in d .

a. Congress

b. the House

c. the Supreme Court

d. the Senate

78. All revenue or tax bills must be originated in b .

a. the Cabinet

b. the House

c. the Senate

d. the Executive Office

79. Who is second in line in presidential succession? a

a. The Speaker of the House.

b. The Vice President.

c. The president pro tempore.

d. The leader of the majority party in the Senat

e.

80. In the House, the power to decide when the full House will hear the bill is vested in a .

a. the Rules Committee

b. the standing committee

c. Subcommittee

d. the select committee

81. Which one in the following limits the President to two successive terms only? c

a. The 20th Amendment (1933)

b. The 21st Amendment (1933)

c. The 22nd Amendment (1951)

d. The 23rd Amendment (1961)

82. The American President has all the following powers except c .

a. deploying armed forces

b. making treaties

c. declaring war on another country

d. granting pardons

83. The president’s major appointments should be approved by c .

a. Congress

b. the House

c. the Senate

d. the Supreme Court

84. Which is not correct to explain the executive agreement? c

a. An agreement between the president and another country.

b. It has the force of a treaty.

c. It requires the approval of Congress.

d. It does not require the Senate’s advice and consent.

85. the President’s veto can be overridden by two-thirds votes in

c .

a. the House

b. the Senate

c. both houses

d. the Supreme Court

86. The federal courts that regularly employ grand and petit juries are

c .

a. the Supreme Court

b. the courts of appeal

c, the district courts

d. specialized courts

87. The highest authority of the Supreme Court is d .

a. to review decisions of the courts of appeal

b. to review decisions of the federal district courts

c. to try the impeachment case

d. to interpret the US Constitution

88. The cases involving copyright, trademark, counterfeiting, and bank robbery are usually first tried in c .

a. the courts of appeal

b. the appellate court

c. the federal district courts

d. the state supreme court

89. The emblem of the Democratic Party is b .

a. elephant

b. donkey

c. bear

d. bull

90. The first Democratic President was c .

a. George Washington

b. Abraham Lincoln

c. Thomas Jefferson

d. Andrew Jackson

91. The first Republican President was b .

a. George Washington

b. Abraham Lincoln

c. Thomas Jefferson

d. Andrew Jackson

92. The only Democratic President who served two separate terms between the end of Civil War and 1912 was a .

a. Grover Cleveland

b. William McKinley

c. Theodore Roosevelt

d. Woodrow Wilson

93. The presidential candidate of the major party is nominated b .

a. at the state convention

b. at the national convention

c. by the leaders from state party organizations

d. by the party’s national committee

94. In the presidential election year the American voters vote on the

a .

a. Tuesday after the first Monday

b. first Tuesday

c. Tuesday after the second Monday

d. Monday after the first Tuesday

95. The number of the presidential electors in each state is equal to

the number of c .

a. its senators

b. its representatives

c. its senators and Representatives

d. its counties

96. The American President is actually elected by c .

a. the House

b. the Senate

c. presidential electors

d. American citizens

97. Who is chiefly responsible for education in the US?

a. The federal government.

b. The state government.

c. the county government.

d. The local government.

98. In the US school system, there are twelve levels called c .

a. classes

b. divisions

c. grades

d. degrees

99. The elementary and secondary education in the US lasts c .

a. 8 years

b. 10 years

c. 12 years

d. 14 years

100. The average teacher salary in private secondary schools is b

that in public schools.

a. higher than

b. lower than

c. almost same as

d. half of

101. A great majority of doctor-level universities in the US are

c .

a. private

b. supported by religious groups

c. public

d. supported by private funds

102. After completing four-year study in a college, the student usually

can earn c .

a. a university degree

b. graduate degree

c. a bachelor’s degree

d. a master’s degree

103. In order to remain in college the student must maintain at least a average. b

a. B

b. C

c. D

d. F

104. The first daily newspaper in America was published in c .

a. 1690

b. 1775

c. 1783

d. 1800

105. Which newspaper first uncovered the Watergate scandal in 1972? b

a. New York Times.

b. Washington Post.

c. New York Daily News.

d. Los Angeles Times.

106. The world most-read magazine is c .

a. TV Guide

b. Time

c. Reader’s Digest

d. People Weekly

107. The TV networks in the US are owned b .

a. by the federal government

b. by private companies

c. by state government

d. by local governments

108. Democratic and Republican National Conventions were televised for

the first time in c .

a. 1945

b. 1950

c. 1952

d. 1960

109. Which one in the following is not proper to describe the American

family values? d

a. Individual freedom.

b. Belief in equality.

c. Personal independence.

d. Formal and strict relations between parents and children.

110. If a junior staff member challenges and argues points with an older executive, the junior is considered being d .

a. impolite

b. rude

c. immoral

d. harmless

111. To make distinctions between persons, the Americans may use

b .

a. the family title

b. the occupational title

c. Mr. or Ms.

d. Sir or Ma’am

112. To Americans, if weaknesses were pointed out by others, it would be c .

a. disgraceful

b. all right

c. resentful

d. indifferent

113. By American standards, which one in the following is not a taboo?

d

a. Financial affairs.

b. Person’s age.

c. Religion.

d. Person’s work.

114. According to the text, which word in the following is not proper to describe an American? c

a. Optimistic.

b. Acquisitive.

c. Formal.

d. Frank.

II. Fill in the blanks:

1.“The backbone of the continent” refers to .

(the Rocky Mountains)

2.During Ratification, those who supported the Constitution and

preferred a strong national government were called , their

opponents were called . (Federalists, Antifederalists)

3.The war of 1812 was also known as for America got

economically independent after it. (Second War of Independence)

4.Washington D. C. is situated on River which is the

traditional dividing line between the South and the North. (the

Potomac)

5.The United States is the most populous country. (third)

6.In his Abraham Lincoln expressed his ideas of a

democratic government “of the people, by the people and for the

people.”(Gettysburg Address)

7.In the year , President Nixon visited China, and later during

‘s presidency, formal diplomatic relations between China and the

United States were established. (1972, Jimmy Carter)

8.The division of powers by a constitution between the central

government and state government is called .

(Federalism)

9.By law any American citizen of and over years of

age and of being a resident within the United States for

years can run for the President. The duly elected and duly qualified

president-elect takes office on the of January following

his election. (natural-born, 35, 14, 20th)

10.When a Bill is vetoed by the President, it can still become a law if

the Congress . the veto by a vote of both houses.

(override, two-thirds)

11.The United States is bordered on the north by , on the south by

and , on the east by , and on the west

by . (Canada, Mexico, The Gulf of Mexico, The Atlantic,

the Pacific)

12.Because the New England colonies were difficult of farming, they

became a center for . and . The middle colonies were

known as the , which produced wheat and potatoes as the

major staple. The southern colonies developed a . system. The

main crop in the South was , much later, . (fishing,

shipbuilding, breadbasket, plantation, tobacco, cotton)

13.The First World War was waged between tow groups of imperialist

powers: . and . ( the Allies/the Entente, the Central

European Powers)

14.The major triumph for Wilson at the Paris Peace Conference was the

formation of the . (League of Nations)

15.The Nineteenth Amendment to the US Constitution was adopted

in , which granted women the right to . (1920, vote)

16.The Great Depression started with the sudden collapse of the

in New York in October, . This economic distress extended to Europe, Asia, Australia and South America. (stock market, 1929)

17.The candidate with the most voters in a state wins all of that

state’s votes. This is known as the “”

principle. The candidates who wins the of the 538 Electoral

College votes will be US President in the next four years. (electoral, winner-take-all, 270)

18.American universities offer three main categories of graduate degrees:

1) , 2) , 3) . (bachelor’s, master’s, Ph. D)

19.Each of the fifty states in the US provides a free schooling of

years to its residents. (12)

20.Among the five Great Lakes, only Lake belongs entirely to

the US. (Michigan)

21.The emblem of the Democratic Party is , and that of the

Republican Party is . is considered the first

Democratic President, and first Republican President is .

(donkey, elephant, Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln)

III. True or False Statements:

1.People usually regard Christopher Columbus as the discoverer of the

New World, though before him, Norsemen from Scandinavia had already

found this continent.

2.During the Ratification of the Constitution, Thomas Jefferson and

other federalists worked hard to support a strong central government.

3.The Missouri Compromise brought a solution to the immediate problem

of the extension of slavery.

4.Germany’s unrestricted submarine campaign against merchant ships was

one of the reasons that pushed America into World War I.

5.Standing committees are permanent ones to determine whether proposed

legislation should be presented to the entire House or Senate for

consideration.

6.Louisiana Purchase was the largest real estate deal in US history,

which got for America the present Louisiana State.

7.Franklin Roosevelt was one of the greatest American Presidents whose

New Deal effectively put an end to the Great Depression.

8.The Vice President is officially the presiding officer of the House

of Representatives, and in his absence, the president pro tempore

takes his place to deal with day-to-day business.

9.Immediately after Abraham Lincoln took office, the southern states

began to secede from the Federal Union and organized the Confederate States of America.

10.The people of the US are predominantly white, among whom the most

powerful and influential group is the White Anglo-Saxon Protestants

who are the descendents of the early English settlers.

11.Voting requirements are different in one state from another, and

voting qualifications are not determined by federal government.

12.When the state governments act out the powers given to it in the

constitution, the Federal Government has no right to interfere.

13.In the , every state constitution divided political power among three

elements.

14.The power of the state in the US is actually from the state

constitution and the US Constitution.

15.The supreme law of the United States includes the US Constitution,

treaties under the authority of the United States and laws to ensure the constitutional power being practiced.

16.It was the New York Times that first uncovered the Watergate scandal

in 1972.

17.Generally speaking, older people with more education and high income

tend to vote while the youth, especially aged 18 to 21, has the

lowest voting percentage in the United States.

18.As the opposite of Federalists, the Anti-Federalists insisted on the

expansion of slavery in the country.

IV. Explain the following terms:

Federalism

Melting pot

Mosaic

Separation of powers

Judicial review

Winner-take-all

Filibuster

Pocket veto

Cold war

New Deal

Missouri Compromise

V. Questions for discussion

1.How many states are there in the United States? And which two states

are geographically separated from the others?

2.What are the general characters of the Rocky Mountains and the

Appalachian Mountains?

3.Do you think that geography has played an important role in the

economic development of the United States? Explain.

4.Why is the United States known as a “melting pot”?

5.What factors cause the Americans to move frequently within the United

States?

6.Why do many Americans now migrate from cities to suburbs?

7.Discuss the pre-Columbian cultures in the Americas.

8.Why did the discoveries of the New World before Columbus not exert

great influence in the world at that time?

9.Why did so many English people move to the New World in the 17th

century?

10.What was the social structure of the 13 colonies?

11.Why did not the American Indians become slaves during the colonial

days?

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