自考笔果题库
笔果题库
历年真题
  • 上海市
  • 四川省
  • 广东省
  • 湖南省
  • 湖北省
  • 江苏省
  • 浙江省
  • 安徽省
  • 福建省
  • 江西省
  • 山东省
  • 河南省
  • 甘肃省
  • 澳门特别行政区
  • 青海省
  • 内蒙古自治区
  • 广西壮族自治区
  • 新疆维吾尔自治区
  • 西藏自治区
  • 宁夏回族自治区
  • 中国台湾省
  • 香港特别行政区
  • 北京市
  • 陕西省
  • 云南省
  • 贵州省
  • 海南省
  • 黑龙江省
  • 吉林省
  • 辽宁省
  • 山西省
  • 河北省
  • 重庆市
  • 天津市
押密题库
本科
专科
视频题库
考证通关
笔果题库返回
学位英语
VIP题库
Passage One
Finding fresh drinking water was not a problem in the Roman Empire. The ancient Romans built aqueducts (from the Latin words aqua, meaning "water," and ductus, meaning "channel"). The pipes and channels wound down hills and valleys, transporting freshwater from remote lakes and streams to cities. Engineers designed each aqueduct so that water would drop precisely 24 feet per mile. A steeper slope would bring too much water too quickly. Less of a slope would cause the water to stagnate. Stone bridges with multiple arches were built to support aqueducts where the land dipped too sharply. Many of the bridges can still be found in Europe. At the Roman Empire's peak in the first and second centuries, nearly 200 cities had water supplied by aqueducts.
Rome, the empire's capital, had 11 aqueducts for its estimated 1 million people. When the water reached Rome, it flowed into large containers, or tanks, on high ground. From there, it was distributed through pipes to different areas of the city. Some water was sold to rich citizens for their private use; some went to supply large public baths; the rest went to public fountains, located at crossroads throughout Rome that were never more than 109 yards apart. Experts say that each citizen of Rome could have used an average of 265 gallons of fresh, clean water per day — more than what's available in some cities today.

Which of the following is the best title of the passage?
A  
Rome’s Waterways
B  
The Distribution of Water
C  
Bridges with Arches
D  
Public Fountains in Rome
深圳市笔果教育科技有限公司
粤ICP备17094429号-1
自考笔果题库APP
更优刷题体验,尽在笔果APP!
立即下载