
According to text 5A7-I, judge the following items.
If a country fulfills the requirements for electricity, it will not be left out of the Fourth Industrial Revolution.
According to text 5A7-I, judge the following items.
If a country fulfills the requirements for electricity, it will not be left out of the Fourth Industrial Revolution.
According to text 5A7-I, judge the following items.
Regular wage-earning workers will soon compete with machines for jobs.
According to text 5A7-I, judge the following items.
Digital instruction will guarantee employability.
According to text 5A7-I, judge the following items.
Smart technologies depend on satellite communication.
Judge the following items, concerning the vocabulary used in text 5A7-I.
The phrase unprecedented suffering conveys the same idea as “untold suffering” (l.6).
Judge the following items, concerning the vocabulary used in text 5A7-I.
The word “undisputed” (l.30) may be replaced by unquestioned, without altering the meaning of the sentence.
Based on text CB1A5AAA, judge the following items.
The author of the text suggests that the old-fashioned way of sending messages on postcards can be as dangerous as sending them through cyber-café computers.
Based on text CB1A5AAA, judge the following items.
The author is critical of people who should be, but are not, thankful for the work intelligence and security agents do.
Based on text CB1A5BBB, judge the following items.
The author defends the idea that the fight against organized and sexual crimes has diverted invaluable but scarce resources from what should be America’s secret services’ main goal: the combat against terrorism.
Based on text CB1A5BBB, judge the following items.
The idea expressed in “Counter-terrorism (…) is pre-emptive” (l.31) can be also found in the following proverb: It is better to prevent than to cure.