() is forbidden in public places.
A.To smoke
B.Smoke
C.Smoking
C、Smoking
A.To smoke
B.Smoke
C.Smoking
C、Smoking
The driver was at______loss when word came that he was forbidden to drive for speeding.
A.a;/
B.a;the
C.the;the
D./;/
A.Conception
B.Abortion
C.Delivery
D.Perception
What does the professor imply about the rooms inside the homes of today?
A.They have the same functions as those in ancient homes.
B.They are more often round than box- shaped.
C.They are arranged to progress from public to private.
D.They are forbidden to any person outside the family.
What have been done to control smoking in the world?
A.A majority of countries have passed laws against smoking.
B.Some countries have made laws to restrict cigarette consumption.
C.Some governments in Latin America have cut down on the sales of cigarettes.
D.Many developing countries have forbidden the import of foreign cigarettes.
Many governments, moreover, are reluctant to wage anti-smoking wars because they're addicted to tobacco taxes. Argentina gets 22. 5 percent of all tax revenue from tobacco; Malawi, 16.7 percent.
Into this climate of naivety and neglect, American tobacco companies have unleashed not only the marketing wizardry (魔术) that most of us take for granted, but other tactics they wouldn't dare use here.
Tobacco spokesmen insist that cigarette advertising draws only people who already smoke. But an ad executive, who worked until recently of the Philip Morris account, speaking on condition of anonymity, disagrees. "You don't have to be a brain surgeon to figure out what's going on. Just look at the ads. It's ludicrous (荒唐的) for them to deny that a cartoon character like Joe Camel isn't attractive to kids."
People in developing countries are easily influenced by cigarette advertising because ______.
A.they don't know the relationship between tobacco and disease
B.they have a strong inclination to smoke
C.they have been forbidden to smoke by the governments
D.there were no institutions which persuade them not to smoke