题干

下列各句中加点的词语能用括号内的词语来替代的一项是( )

A:随着社会不断进步,生活水平也日益提高,我们不用过箪食瓢饮的日子了,但那种一掷千金的“豪爽”也是我们应该唾弃的。(箪食壶浆)

B:早就听说他要认真学习,可几年过去了,也不见他真刻苦起来,还是老样子,雷声大,雨点小。(小题大做)

C:他的作品很一般,怕被人看不起,动不动就搬出某某名作家吓唬人,四处乱吹,无非想拉大旗作虎皮抬高自己罢了,并不能说明他的作品好。(狐假虎威)

D:岁月悠悠,不觉二十多年倏得就过去,日本的经济泡沫也破了,往日的风光不再,当然烂船也有三斤铁,日本仍然是不容忽视的,日本人的奋斗精神和创意能望其项背者几何!(点金成铁)

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答案(点此获取答案解析)

C

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    Joseph Francis Charles Rock (1884–1962) was an Austrian-American explorer, botanist, and anthropologist(人类学家). For more than 25 years, he travelled extensively through Tibet and Yunnan, Gansu, and Sichuan provinces in China before finally leaving in 1949.

    In 1924, Harvard sent Joseph Francis Rock on a treasure hunt through China's southwestern provinces—the Wild West of their day. But gold and silver weren't his task: Rock, a distinguished botanist, sought only to fill his bags with all the seeds, saplings, and shrubs he could find. During his three-year expedition, he collected 20,000 specimens for the Arnold Arboretum(阿诺德植物园).

    Botany, though, was just one of Rock's strengths. As an ethnologist(民族学者), he took hundreds of photographs of the Naxi, a tribe in Yunnan province, recording their now-lost way of life for both Harvard and National Geographic, and took notes for an eventual 500-page dictionary of their language. His hand-drawn map of his travels through China's “Cho-Ni” territory, in the Harvard Map Collection, includes more than a thousand rivers, towns, and mountains indicated in both English and Chinese, and was so well made that the U.S. government used it to plan aerial missions in World War II.

    Scientist, linguist, cartographer, photographer, writer—Rock was not a wallflower in any sense. Arrogant and self-possessed, he would walk into a village or warlord's place “as if he owned the place,” said Lisa Pearson, the Arboretum's head librarian.

    In declaring his successful return under the headline “Seeking Strange Flowers, in the Far Reaches of the World,” the Boston Evening Transcript ran a large photo of the daring explorer wearing in a woolly coat and fox-skin hat. “In discussing his heroism including hair-raising escapes from death either from mountain slides, snow slides and robber armies, he waves the idea away as if it is of no importance.”

    The Arboretum and Rock parted ways after 1927, mainly because his trip cost Harvard a fortune—about $900,000 in today's dollars. Fortunately, many of his specimens, many of his amazing photos, and his great stories remain.