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高普考/三四等/高員級◆英文題庫下載題庫

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     Wikipedia has become the world’s largest reference work. It is setting a blistering pace with more than 1000 new English-language articles being added each day. Its success has attracted harsh criticism from predictable quarters. In an article published recently on Tech Central Station  website, Robert McHenry, former editor-in-chief of Encyclopaedia Britannica, disdainfully said that using Wikipedia was like visiting a public restroom. McHenry’s vain attempt to turn up the heat is ironic because it is the  old-fangled encyclopedia publishers who are on the hot seat. Wikipedia will put many of them in deep trouble within the next few years. 
    Internet users have been voting with their clicks. Traffic to Wikipedia’s 72 servers on any given day exceeds 80 million hits. Wikipedia articles are cited increasingly by mainstream newspapers and magazines. Encyclopedia publishers lambaste Wikipedia’s reliability, but their outrage has blinded them to a sea change in their core market. The way people research and learn in the Internet age is vastly different than it was only a decade ago, and if they fail to adapt, they will suffer. 
    How did Wikipedia get started? Jimmy Wales, Wikipedia’s co-founder and leader, began with a simple yet 
counterintuitive idea: create an open encyclopedia that anyone can contribute to. (The name Wikipedia comes from the “wiki” sort of collaborative software that powers the website.) The project adopted a few canny rules of order: whenever someone edits an article, a new version of the  article is created and saved. This is important because Wikipedia is an open-content project. Such projects are fuelled by the prestige and social standing derived by the contributors from the work that they do. Your contribution to an article, no matter how small, is kept for posterity and clearly identified as such. 
    The continual creation of new versions also discourages antisocial behavior—vandalized articles can be easily reverted. Each article has a separate page where authors can discuss their changes and air their differences. To reduce bias, Wikipedia’s policy is to present a neutral point of view that fairly represents all sides. 

【題組】15 Which of the following statements about Wikipedia is NOT true?
(A) Wikipedia is becoming more and more popular.
(B) Researching and learning via Wikipedia is a new way of life.
(C) Wikipedia can best be described as an “open encyclopedia.”
(D) Most encyclopedia publishers think Wikipedia a reliable way to find correct information.


答案:登入後觀看
難度: 簡單
1F
Mamiifun 高三下 (2016/07/21)
(A)Wikipedia has become the world’s largest reference work. It is setting a blistering pace with more than 1000 new English-language articles being added each day.
(B)
The way people research and learn in the Internet age is vastly different than it was only a decade ago, and if they fail to adapt
(C)
began with a simple yet 
counterintuitive idea: create an open encyclopedia


2F
糖衣 高二下 (2019/07/24)

以下關於維基百科的哪些陳述不正確?

(A)維基百科正變得越來越流行。

(B)通過維基百科進行研究和學習是一種新的生活方式。

(C)維基百科最好被描述為“開放的百科全書”。

(D)大多數百科全書出版商都認為維基百科是找到正確信息的可靠方法。

3F
骨頭(一般警特行政上榜) 大四下 (2019/12/01)
Wikipedia has become the world’s largest reference work工具書. It is setting a blistering極快的 pace速度, (移動的)步調 with more than 1000 new English-language articles being added each day. Its success has attracted harsh令人不快的;嚴酷 criticism批評 from predictable可預言的;可預計 quarters. In an article published recently on Tech Central Station website, Robert McHenry, former editor-in-chief首要、負責人 of Encyclopaedia Britannica大英百科全書, disdainfully輕視 said that using Wikipedia was like visiting a public restroom. McHenry’s vain不成功的, 徒勞 attempt to turn u...
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