THE PARAGRAPH FOLLOWING THE PASSAGE MOST PROBABLY DISCUSSES________...

8. The paragraph following the passage most probably discusses________. A. the fourth era of nutrition history B. problems associated with under nutritionC. how drug companies became successfulD. why nutrition education lost its appealPart 2. Read the passage and fill in each numbered gap with ONE suitable word.Fog is a cloud in (1) ________ with or just above the surface of land or sea. It can be a majorenvironmental hazard. Fog on highways can cause chain-reaction accidents involving dozens ofcars. Delays and shutdowns at airports can (2) ________ economic losses to airlines andinconveniences to thousands of travelers carrying vast quantities of oil, increases the possibility ofcatastrophic oil spills.The (3) ________ common type of fog, radiation fog, forms at night, when moist air near theground loses warmth through radiation on a clear night. This type of fog often occurs in valleys, (4)________ as California's San Joaquin Valley. (5) ________ common type, advection fog, results from themovement of warm, wet air over cold ground. The air loses temperature to the ground andcondensation sets in. This type of fog often occurs along the California coast and the shores of theGreat Lake. Advection fog also forms when air (6) ________ with a warm ocean current blows acrossthe surface of a cold current. The thick fogs of the Grand Banks of Newfoundland, Canada, arelargely of this origin, (7) ________ here the Labrador Current comes in contact with the warm GulfStream.Two other types of fog are somewhat (8) ________ unusual. Frontal fog occurs when twofronts of different temperatures meet, and rain from the warm front falls (9) ________ the colder one,saturating the air. Steam fog appears when cold air picks (10) ________ moisture by moving otherwarmer water.Part 3. Choose the correct answer to complete the following passage by writing the correspondingletter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet.Of the myriad of Japanese ceremonies introduced to the West, the Japanese tea ceremonywould have to be the least accessible. (1) __________ many other aspects of Japanese culture, thepractice of drinking tea was (2) __________ from China well over a thousand years ago. In Japan, greentea developed its own character, and the Japanese tea ceremony has evolved (3) __________ apeculiarly Japanese phenomenon. The modern tea ceremony can be (4) __________back to the 17th century when it developedalongside another singular Japanese adaption of Chinese culture: the philosophy of Zen. The teaceremony eventually became established as a recognized form of high art, where it was practiced in(5) __________ locations, from a Zen temple to an ordinary home. Even today, the simplest and mostsecular tea ceremony still embraces the Zen aesthetics of (6) __________, austerity and devotion.During the ceremony strictly prescribed words of invitation and gratitude are murmured quietly;tea maker and guests (7) __________ their roles with humility and respect. A brief moment of (8)__________ tranquility has been communally created and shared. It is simultaneously an aesthetic,social and spiritual moment. Significantly it is a Japanese moment, fleeting and poignant with itsown peacefulness (9) __________ the noise and confusion of the everyday world is temporarilysuspended as a vague, indefinable (10) __________ of the eternal pervades.