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OFFICIAL33 Look at the four squares[■] to insert the sentence in the passage

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The First Civilizations
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Evidence suggests that an important stimulus behind the rise of early civilizations was the development of settled agriculture, which unleashed a series of changes in the organization of human communities that culminated in the rise of large ancient empires.

The exact time and place that crops were first cultivated successfully is uncertain. Many prehistorians believe that farming may have emerged in dependently in several different areas of the world when small communities, driven by increasing population and a decline in available food resources, began to plant seeds in the ground in an effort to guarantee their survival. The first farmers, who may have lived as long as 10,000 years ago, undoubtedly used simple techniques and still relied primarily on other forms of food production, such as hunting, foraging, or pastoralism. The real breakthrough took place when farmers began to cultivate crops along the floodplains of river systems. The advantage was that crops grown in such areas were not as dependent on rainfall and therefore produced a more reliable harvest. An additional benefit was that the sediment carried by the river waters deposited nutrients in the soil, thus enabling the farmer to cultivate a single plot of ground for many years without moving to a new location. Thus, the first truly sedentary (that is, nonmigratory) societies were born. As time went on, such communities gradually learned how to direct the flow of water to enhance the productive capacity of the land, while the introduction of the iron plow eventually led to the cultivation of heavy soils not previously susceptible to agriculture.

The spread of this river valley agriculture in various parts of Asia and Africa was the decisive factor in the rise of the first civilizations. The increase in food production in these regions led to a significant growth in population, while efforts to control the flow of water to maximize the irrigation of cultivated areas and to protect the local inhabitants from hostile forces outside the community provoked the first steps toward cooperative activities on a large scale. The need to oversee the entire process brought about the emergence of an elite that was eventually transformed into a government.

The first clear steps in the rise of the first civilizations took place in the fourth and third millennia B.C. in Mesopotamia, northern Africa, India, and China. How the first governments took shape in these areas is not certain, but anthropologists studying the evolution of human communities in various parts of the world have discovered that one common stage in the process is the emergence of what are called “big men” within a single village or a collection of villages. By means of their military prowess, dominant personalities, or political talents, these people gradually emerge as the leaders of that community. In time, the “big men” become formal symbols of authority and pass on that authority to others within their own family. As the communities continue to grow in size and material wealth, the “big men” assume hereditary status, and their allies and family members are transformed into a hereditary monarchy.

The appearance of these sedentary societies had a major impact on the social organizations, religious beliefs, and way of life of the peoples living within their boundaries. [■]With the increase in population and the development of centralized authority came the emergence of the cities. [■]While some of these urban centers were identified with a particular economic function, such as proximity to gold or iron deposits or a strategic location on a major trade route, others served primarily as administrative centers or the site of temples for the official cult or other ritual observances. [■]Within these cities, new forms of livelihood appeared to satisfy the growing need for social services and consumer goods. [■]Some people became artisans or merchants, while others became warriors, scholars, or priests. In some cases, the physical division within the first cities reflected the strict hierarchical character of the society as a whole, with a royal palace surrounded by an imposing wall and separate from the remainder of the urban population. In other instances, such as the Indus River Valley, the cities lacked a royal precinct and the ostentatious palaces that marked their contemporaries elsewhere.

13.Look at the four squares[■] to insert the sentence in the passage

This was accompanied by increased professional specialization..

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【题目翻译】看这四个方块,把句子插入到段落中。 A:这伴随着专业化的提高。 【判定题型】:根据题目问法,题目要求将句子插入到文中最恰当的空格处,故判断本题为句子插入题。 【待插入句分析】插入句中的This很明显是指代关系,再其前文必定提及this所指代的对象。除了这个指代关系之外,还需要关注句尾的关键词professional specialization。句尾出现的关键内容极易在其下文中再次提及讨论。 【原文分析】段落说明了:定居社会对社会组织、宗教信仰和住在界定范围内的人们的生活方式造成了何种巨大的影响。 【选项分析】 A选项前后两句话关系紧密,排除。 B选项后面那句话中的these urban centers体现出其和前一句话的紧密指代关系,排除; C选项的these cities体现出其和前一句话的紧密指代关系。 D选项之后的内容提到了大量的职业类型,这个和professional specialization非常吻合,试着将句子插入,通读D选项前后两句话,this放在这个位置是指代前一句话描述的内容:新的生活方式满足了人们对于服务和物质的需求。语义连贯,上下文也对应

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