单选题 Every newborn baby is dealt a hand of cards which helps to determine how long he or she will be allowed to play the game of life. Good cards will help those who have them to have a long and healthy existence, while bad cards will bring to those who have them terrible diseases like high blood pressure and heart disease. Occasionally, cards are dealt out that doom their holders to an early death. In the past, people never knew exactly which cards they had been dealt. They could guess at the future only by looking at the kind of health problems experienced by their parents or grandparents. Genetic testing, which makes it possible to find dangerous genes, has changed all this. But, until recently, if you were tested positive for a bad gene you were not obliged to reveal this to anyone else except in a few extreme circumstances. This month, however, Britain became the first country in the world to allow life insurers to ask for test results. So far, approval has been given only for a test for a fatal brain disorder known as Huntington''s disease. But ten other tests (for seven diseases) are already in use and are awaiting similar approval. The independent body that gives approval, the Department of Health''s genetics and insurance committee, does not have to decide whether the use of genetic information in insurance is ethical. It must judge only whether the tests are reliable to insurers. In the case of Huntington''s disease the answer is clear-cut. People unlucky enough to have this gene will die early, and cost life insurers dearly. This is only the start. Clear-cut genetic answers, where a gene is simply and directly related to a person''s risk of death, are uncommon. More usually, a group of genes is associated with the risk of developing a common disease, dependent on the presence of other genetic or environmental factors. But, as tests improve, it will become possible to predict whether or not a particular individual is at risk. In the next few years researchers will discover more and more about the functions of individual genes and what health risks — or benefits — are associated with them.
单选题 The word "cards" in Line 1 refers to______.
【正确答案】 B
【答案解析】释义题。文章第一段将基因比喻成命运的纸牌,因为基因从一定意义上决定了我们的健康状况。故选B。
单选题 The function of genetic testing is to______.
【正确答案】 C
【答案解析】主旨题。全文所说的是通过基因检查预测会得什么疾病。故选C。
单选题 Health authorities allow insurers to use genetic information for the purpose of______.
【正确答案】 D
【答案解析】推理题。由倒数第二段最后一句话可知如果投保人得了与基因有关的疾病,保险公司要支付大笔赔偿金,保险公司如果知道检测结果,可以提高此类基因病患者的保费,或不接受此类人投保,所以最终目的在于减少保险公司的损失。故选D。
单选题 Which of the following statements is true according to the passage?
【正确答案】 A
【答案解析】是非题。文章最后一段第三句话说常见的疾病可能是由一组基因引起的,A选项意思与此一致。故选A。
单选题 The author''s purpose in writing the passage is to______.
【正确答案】 C
【答案解析】主旨题。文章第一段提出了基因对人们健康的决定作用和之前它的未可知性。然后引出了基因测试这一对策,并介绍了它的用途、当前状况和发展前景。从而可总结得出作者的目的在于介绍基因测试及其作用。故选C。