A、An alloy of copper and silver. B、Pure silver or pure gold. C、An alloy of copper and fin. D、An alloy of gold and silver. B事实细节题

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问题  
A silver dollar is not worth a dollar--nor is any other silver coin really worth its face value. Silver coins are made of an alloy--a mixture of 10 per cent copper and 90 per cent silver---which lasts much longer in circulation than pure silver would. A silver dollar contains 90 cents worth of silver and a dime has 9 cents worth. It takes only a pennyworth of silver to make a nickel.
    This was not the case in 1792, when the United States began minting coins of pure gold and silver. Citizens were welcome to stop in anytime with gold or silver in any form--cups, vases, or even gold fillings from their teeth--and have it melted down for spending money.
    Today the mints in Philadelphia and Denver earn a yearly profit of about $40 million. Most of this comes from using alloys rather than pure silver in the production of the $2.5 billion worth of coins circulating in the United States. The Philadelphia plant also manufactures coins for foreign countries. In a recent year almost 130 million coins were made for the use of foreign governments.

选项 A、An alloy of copper and silver.
B、Pure silver or pure gold.
C、An alloy of copper and fin.
D、An alloy of gold and silver.

答案B

解析 事实细节题 初期的美国硬币是由纯银或者纯金铸造成的。
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