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IV. Reading Comprehension
Questions 41-50: Choose the BEST answer to each question below according to what is stated and implied in the following passages.
       There is a quality of cohesiveness about the Roman world that applied neither to Greece nor perhaps to any other civilization, ancient or modern. Like the stones of a Roman wall, which were held together both by the regularity of the design and by that peculiarly powerful Roman cement, so the various parts of the Roman realm were bonded into a massive, monolithic entity by physical, organizational, and psychological controls. The physical bonds included the network of military garrisons, which were stationed in every province, and the network of stone-built roads that linked the provinces with Rome. The organizational bonds were based on the common principles of law and administration and on the universal army of officials who enforced common standards of conduct. The psychological controls were built on fear and punishment—on the absolute certainty that anyone or anything that threatened the authority of Rome would be utterly destroyed.
       The source of Roman obsession with unity and cohesion may well have been the pattern of Rome’s early development. Whereas Greece had grown from scores of scattered cities, Rome grew from one single organism. While the Greek world had expanded along the Mediterranean sea lanes, the Roman world was assembled by territorial conquest. Of course, the contrast is not quite so stark: in Alexander the Great, the Greeks had found the greatest territorial conqueror of all time, and the Romans, once they moved outside Italy, did not fail to learn the lessons of sea power. Yet the essential difference is undeniable. The key to the Greek world lay in its high-powered ships; the key to Roman power lay in its marching legions. The Greeks were wedded to the sea; the Romans, to the land. The Greek was a sailor at heart; the Roman, a landsman.
       Certainly, in trying to explain the Roman phenomenon, one would have to place great emphasis on this almost animal instinct for the territorial imperative. Roman priorities lay in the organization, exploitation, and defense of their territory. In all probability, it was the fertile plain of Latium, where the Latins who founded Rome originated, that created the habits and skills of landed settlement, landed property, landed economy, landed administration, and a land-based society. From this arose the Roman genius for military organization and orderly government. In turn, a deep attachment to the land and to the stability of rural life fostered the Roman virtues: gravitas, a sense of responsibility; pietas, a sense of devotion to family and country; and justitia, a sense of the natural order.
       Modern attitudes to Roman civilization range from the infinitely impressed to the thoroughly disgusted. As always, there are the power worshippers, especially among historians, who are predisposed to admire whatever is strong and who feel more attracted to the might of Rome than to the subtlety of Greece. At the same time, there is a solid body of opinion that dislikes Rome. For many, Rome is, at best, the imitator and the continuator of Greece on a larger scale. Greek civilization had quality; Rome, mere quantity. Greece was original; Rome, derivative. Greece had style; Rome had money. Greece was the inventor; Rome, the research and development division. Such indeed was the opinion of some of the more intellectual Romans. “Had the Greeks held novelty in such disdain as we,” asked Horace in his Epistles, “what work of ancient date would now exist?” 
       Rome’s debt to Greece was enormous. The Romans adopted Greek religion and moral philosophy. In literature, Greek writers were consciously used as models by their Latin successors. It was absolutely accepted that an educated Roman should be fluent in Greek. In speculative philosophy and the sciences, the Romans made virtually no advance on early achievements. 
       Yet it would be wrong to suggest that Rome was somehow a junior partner in Greco-Roman civilization. The Roman genius was projected into new spheres—especially into those of law, military organization, administration, and engineering. Moreover, the tensions that arose within the Roman state produced literary and artistic sensibilities of the highest order. It was no accident that many leading Roman soldiers and statesmen were writers of high caliber.

【題組】44. Which of the following statements is NOT true according to the passage?
(A) The Romans made significant advancements in military organization.
(B) The Romans completely rejected Greek culture and ideas.
(C) Greek writers were used as models by Latin authors.
(D) Roman soldiers and statesmen were often skilled writers.


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 【站僕】摩檸Morning:有沒有達人來解釋一下?
倒數 1天 ,已有 1 則答案
Celeste 小五下 (2024/08/18):

(A) The Romans made significant advancements in military organization.
羅馬人在軍事組織方面取得了重大進展。對,最後一段文章說"The Roman genius was projected into new spheres -especially into those of law, military organization, administration, and engineering."
這裡有說到羅馬在軍事組織方面是天才

(B) The Romans completely rejected Greek culture and ideas.
中文翻譯:羅馬人完全拒絕了希臘文化和思想。倒數第二段The Romans adopted Greek religion and moral philosophy
所以(B)錯,羅馬繼承希臘文化,和希臘文化息息相關

(C) Greek writers were used as models by Latin authors.拉丁作家以希臘作家為榜樣
對,文章倒數第二段"In literature, Greek writers were consciously used as models by their Latin successors. It was absolutely accepted that an educated Roman should be fluent in Greek"
中文翻譯:在文學方面,希臘作家被拉丁繼承者有意識地用作榜樣。一個受過教育的羅馬人應該精通希臘語是完全被接受的。


(D) Roman soldiers and statesmen were often skilled writers.
羅馬士兵和政治家通常是技藝精湛的作家。
對,最後一段說到
Moreover, the tensions that arose within the Roman state produced literary and artistic sensibilities of the highest order. It was no accident that many leading Roman soldiers and statesmen were writers of high caliber.
中文翻譯:當時羅馬國內的緊張局勢催生了最高水準的文學和藝術感知。許多傑出的羅馬士兵和政治家同時也是高水準的作家,這絕非偶然。



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IV. Reading ComprehensionQuestions 41-50..-阿摩線上測驗