Mark the option that correctly completes the numbered blanks (31–40) in Text I.
4781
Q705919
Mark the option that correctly completes the numbered blanks (31–40) in Text I.
4782
Q705918
Mark the option that correctly completes the numbered blanks (31–40) in Text I.
4783
Q705917
Mark the option that correctly completes the numbered blanks (31–40) in Text I.
4784
Q705916

Based on the text, judge the following items.
“most of them” (lines 2 and 3) and the majority of them are synonymous expressions.
4785
Q705915

Based on the text, judge the following items.
“bad” in “reception was sometimes bad” (line 9) is not the contrary of better.
4786
Q705914

Based on the text, judge the following items.
“everybody” in “everybody could record” (line 13) and somebody are synonyms.
4787
Q705908

Decide whether the following statements are right (C) or wrong (E) according to text I.
In the first paragraph, the words “ongoing” (l.2) and “advocates” (l.5) can be correctly and respectively replaced by far-reaching and lawyers without this changing the meaning of the passage.
4788
Q705907

Decide whether the following statements are right (C) or wrong (E) according to text I.
The passage “what has always happened to it:” (l.7) can be correctly replaced by what has always happened to it, which means that or by what has always happened to it, which is to say.
4789
Q705906

Decide whether the following statements are right (C) or wrong (E) according to text I.
In the end of the second paragraph, the authors express the opinion that the so-called ‘new statecraft’(l.22), also known as “digital diplomacy” (l.23), is “too simplistic” (l.24).
4790
Q705905

Decide whether the following statements are right (C) or wrong (E) according to text I.
The passage “the lure of quick fixes addressing multifaceted processes of change” (Rl. 29 and 30) could be replaced by the temptation of finding easy solutions for manifold processes of change and this would still keep the paragraph coherent.