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  You probably know the story of the great irony of the Titanic. The ship hailed as “unsinkable” sank after it struck an iceberg on its very first trip across the Atlantic Ocean. In hindsight, it seems almost silly that anyone would assume that a ship weighing more than 50,000 tons (when fully laden) was unsinkable. And indeed, many myth busters have claimed that few people were actually calling the ship “unsinkable” before it sank.
  While it is hard to say whether people thought the ship was absolutely unsinkable under any circumstances, it is clear that people believed that the passenger liner’s safety design (by Thomas Andrews) was state-of-the-art, and some did describe it as “unsinkable” before it ever set sail. Reportedly, that claim was enough to keep many passengers calm even as the ship was in fact sinking. A vice president of the company in charge of the voyage told the U.S. Congress that he initially did not believe reports that the ship was sinking because he thought it to be unsinkable.
  The idea that the ship was unsinkable was advanced by newspaper and magazine articles as well as by advertisement materials from the shipping company. The widely circulated articles detailed the design of the liner and its technologically advanced safety features. Chief among those features were 16 compartments within the hull whose doors could be shut by the flick of a switch. It was believed that the ability to quickly close off the compartments if any of them were breached could keep the ship afloat even if it suffered damage.
  Though it’s an exaggeration to claim that nobody thought the ship unsinkable, it may be true that, before the Titanic sank, people were not particularly interested in whether the ship was unsinkable. The Titanic’s selling point was really its grandeur and luxury, not its safety. Most of the articles and advertisements for the Titanic focused on its size and accommodations, not on the details of its design, and the affluent passengers who boarded the ship chose it for its prestige and comfort. It was only after the ship’s demise that the “unsinkable” moniker really took off, presumably for dramatic effect. So even though the ship was in fact touted as “unsinkable” before it sank, it was the irony of its tragic sinking that actually brought that claim to the fore.

【題組】48 According to the passage, what might make some people believe in the ship’s unsinkability?
(A) Its safety design was the newest and most advanced at its time.
(B) There were reports about how the ship had endured many adverse situations.
(C) The ship designer and the company were making such a claim.
(D) Its sheer size and beauty easily gave people such an impression.


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難度: 困難
1F
加賴叫過去 高三下 (2020/11/15)

第三段:

(A)The ☆☆☆☆ ☆☆☆☆ ☆☆☆ ...



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2F
艾琳娜,我回來了 研一上 (2021/11/12)

48 根據文章,是什麼讓一些人相信這艘船不會沉沒

(A) 其安全設計是當時最新、最先進的。

(B) 有關於這艘船如何忍受許多不利情況的報導。

(C) 船舶設計者和公司提出了這樣的要求。

(D) 它的龐大和美麗很容易給人這樣的印象。

3F
大四上 (2022/12/04)

state-of-the-art 最先進的


While it is hard to say whether people thought the ship was absolutely unsinkable under any circumstances, it is clear that people believed that the passenger liner’s safety design (by Thomas Andrews) was state-of-the-art, and some did describe it as “unsinkable” before it ever set sail. 


雖然很難說人們是否認為這艘船在任何情況下都絕對不會沉沒,但很明顯,人們相信客輪的安全設計(由 Thomas Andrews 設計)是最先進的,有些人確實將其描述為在它啟航之前“永不沉沒”。

請依下文回答第 46 題至第 50 題  You probably know t..-阿摩線上測驗