单选题Football supporters declare their loyalty through ______
单选题{{B}}Passage Five{{/B}}
Some 23 million additional U.S. residents are
expected to become more regular users of the U.S. health care system in the next
several years, thanks to the passage of health care reform.Digitizing medical
data has been promoted as one way to help the already burdened system manage the
surge in patients. But putting people's health information in databases and
online is going to do more than simply reduce redundancies. It is already
shifting the very way we seek and receive health care. "The
social dynamics of care are changing," says John Gomez, vice president of
Eclipsys, a medical information technology company. Most patients might not yet
be willing to share their latest CT scan images over Facebook, he notes, but
many parents post their babies' ultrasound images, and countless patients
nowadays use social networking sites to share information about conditions,
treatments and doctors. With greater access to individualized
health information-whether that is through a formal electronic medical record,
a self-created personal health record or a quick instant-messaging session
with a physician—the traditional roles of doctors and patients are undergoing a
rapid transition. "For as long as we've known, health care has
been I go to the physician, and they tell me what to do, and I do it,'" says
Nitu Kashyap, a physician and research fellow at the Yale Center for Medical
Informatics. Soon more patients will be arriving at a hospital or doctor's
office,having reviewed their own record, latest test results and recommended
articles about their health concerns. And even more individuals will be able to
skip that visit altogether, instead sending a text message or e-mail to their
care provider or consulting a personal health record or smart phone application
to answer their questions. These changes will be strengthened by
the nationwide shift to electronic medical records,which has already began.
Although the majority of U.S. hospitals and doctors' offices are still
struggling to start the changeover, many patients already have electronic
medical records, and some even have partial access to them. The My Chart
program, in use at Cleveland Clinic, the University of Texas Southwestern
Medical Center at Dallas and other facilities, is a Web portal (门户)through which
patients can see basic medical information as well as some test results.
Medical data is getting a new digital life, and it is
jump-starting a "fundamental change in how care is provided," Gomez says.
单选题One witness ______that he'd seen the suspect run out of the bank after it had been robbed.
单选题{{B}}Passage Two{{/B}}
The bat is a marvel of evolutionary
adaptation. Most of them roost during the day, and are active at night or
twilight for they can avoid objects in the dark. I have seen this phenomenon at
work. In my youth I used to explore old mining shafts in the Randsburg district.
Sometimes my intrusion disturbed clans of bats that were hanging upside down in
the dark caves. They would fly about to evident panic, but the
panic was mine, not theirs. Some flew crazily out into the daylight but some
merely returned to their perches. None ever touched me, much to my
relief. They may exist but I have never seen a stuffed nylon
bat. To children, bats may not be as lovable as koala bears. Perhaps
manufacturers do not regard them as marketable. It is not so much their hideous
faces and winged bodies that have caused us to get rid of bats, but rather the
ancient myths in which dead humans, such as Count Dracula, leave their graves at
night in the form of bats to suck blood from human victims, especially fragile
young woman. As we know from some movies these vampires must return to their
graves before daylight. Endangered young women can frustrate vampire by sleeping
with a string of garlic around their necks. There are actually
three species of bloodsucking bats. They are called vampire bats after the
ancient legends, and their tactics are indeed frightful. Like Count Dracula,
they feed at night. They make a small cut in their sleeping victim with sharp
incisor teeth, usually not even awakening their prey. Then they suck the blood
that sustains them. Should that discourage children from wanting
them as pets? As Mitchell notes from the New Yorker ad, bats are
clean and intelligent. Most of them are insect-eaters, and they serve nature by
destroying crop-damaging insects. They also pollinate (传授花粉) flowers and
spreading seed. Bat Conservation International claims that
without bats a host of insects/pests would multiply unchecked and many of our
planet's most valuable plants would go unpollinated. It is clear
that the bat is our friend, and that, despite its appearance, it is here to
serve humanity. I'd be the first to buy a stuffed nylon bat.
Children's hearts are big, and bats need love,
too.
单选题Man: I've just found a great location to open a new shop. Woman: But you haven't researched the market. Don't you think this is putting the cart before the horse?Question: What does the woman mean?
单选题She always handles the problems ______ her own experience and principles.
单选题The attitude of the writer toward that billionaires don't pass their wealth to their children is ______.
单选题I was (so interested in) the video that I (watched) it (for) two hours before I (realized) it.A. so interested inB. watchedC. forD. realized
单选题Mr Tunick filed suit against the New York police department after city officials ______ his request.
单选题Man: I am worried about those classes I missed when I was sick.
Woman: I will try to bring you up today on what we’ve done.
Question: What does the woman mean?
单选题Dating from around A. D. 1000,the largest mound surviving from the Mississippian {{U}}culture{{/U}}was one hundred feet high and had a base of nearly fifteen acres.
单选题
单选题Man: Would you like to go to the movies with Anne and me on Friday?Woman: I wish I could, but I am having dinner at my brother's.Question: What will the woman do on Friday?
单选题Different ______ of linguistics have led to the popularity of different teaching methods.
单选题{{B}}Passage Three{{/B}}
Our culture has caused most Americans
to assume not only that our language is universal but that the gestures we use
are understood by everyone. We do not realize that waving good-bye is the way to
summon a person from the Philippines to one's side, or that in Italy and some
Latin-American countries, curling the finger to oneself is a sign of
farewell. Those private citizens who sent packages to our troops
occupying Germany after World War II and marked the items GIFT to escape duty
payments did not bother to find out that "gift" means poison in German.
Moreover, we like to think of ourselves as friendly, yet we prefer to be at
least 3 feet or an arm's length away from others. Latins and Middle Easterners
like to come closer and touch, which makes Americans uncomfortable.
Our linguistic (语言上的) and cultural blindness and the casualness with which
we take notice of the developed tastes, gestures, customs and languages of other
countries, are losing us friends, business and respect in the world.
Even here in the United States, we make few concessions to the needs of
foreign visitors. There are no information signs in four languages on our public
buildings or monuments; we do not have multilingual (多语的) guided tours. Very few
restaurant menus have translations, and multilingual waiters, bank clerks and
policemen are rare. Our transportation systems have maps in English only and
often we ourselves have difficulty understanding them. When we
go abroad, we tend to cluster in hotels and restaurants where English is spoken.
The attitudes and information we pick up are conditioned by those
natives--usually the richer --who speak English. Our business deals, as well as
the nation's diplomacy, are conducted through interpreters. For
many years, America and Americans could get by with cultural blindness and
linguistic ignorance. After all, America was the most powerful country of the
free world, the distributor of needed funds and goods. But all
that is past. American dollars no longer buy all good things, and we are slowly
beginning to realize that our proper role in the world is changing. A 1979
Harris poll reported that 55 percent of Americans want this country to play a
more significant role in world affairs, we want to have a hand in the important
decisions of the next century, even though it may not always be the upper
hand.
单选题To Usuppress/U this uprising completely seemed to be too difficult a mission to these officials.
单选题
单选题People in Europe are shivering, while people in North Asia and parts of Australia are feeling uncomfortably hot. Scientists say these weather extremes are to be expected and neither
21
can be used as a case for or against global warming.
Secretary-General of the World Meteorological Organization, Michel Jarraud, says people should not confuse
22
weather variability with climate change. Just because people in Geneva and elsewhere in Europe are
23
does not mean global warming has stopped. He says the
24
toward global warming is still there. "I think we have to be careful not to interpret any single event
25
a proof of either warming or the fact that warming has stopped. When scientists look at the global warming, they take into
26
much old possible available evidence.
27
, we cannot explain any single phenomenon by one single cause."
He says average global surface temperatures have climbed
28
since 1850, when historical weather statistics were first recorded. "Global warming will mean that heat waves like the one we got in Western Europe in 2003 will become more
29
. But, it does not mean that the 2003 heat wave was produced by global warming..." he says.
Scientists say human activity
30
to climate change, but they do not agree on the pace at which climate change may be unfolding.
单选题A scorching sun, an endless sea of sand and a waterless, forbiddingly lonely land—that is the image most people have of deserts. But how true is this picture? Deserts are dry lands where rainfall is low. This is not to say rain never falls in deserts: it may fall once or twice a year in a fierce torrent that fades almost as soon as it has begun, or which evaporates in the hot air long before it has got anywhere near the earth. It may fall in a sudden sweeping flood that carries everything in its path. Rains may only come once in five or six years or not fall for a decade or more. The Mojave desert in the United States remained dry for twenty-five years. Without water no living thing can survive, and one feature of the true desert land-scape is the absence of vegetation. With little rain and hardly any vegetation the land suffers under the sun. There are virtually no clouds or trees to protect the earth's surface and it can be burning hot. Under the sun, soils break up and crack. Wind and torrential rain sweep away and erode the surface further. Eight million square kilometers of the world's land surface is desert. Throughout history deserts have been expanding and retreating again. Cave paintings show that parts of the Sahara Desert were green and fertile about 10,000 years ago, and even animals like elephants and giraffes roamed the land. Fossil and dunes found in fertile and damp parts of the world show that these areas were once deserts. But now the creation of new desert areas is happening on a colossal scale. Twenty million square kilometers, an area twice the size of Canada, is at a high to very high risk of becoming desert. With a further 1.25 million square kilometers under moderate risk, an area covering 30% of the earth's land surface is desert, becoming desert, or in danger of becoming desert. The rate of growth of deserts is alarming. The world's dry lands which are under threat include some of the most important stock-rearing and wheat-growing areas and are the homes of 600~700 million people. These regions are becoming deserts at the rate of more than 58,000 square kilometers a year or 44 hectares a minute. In North Africa at least 100,000 hectares of cropland are lost each year. At this rate there is a high risk that we will be confined to living on only 50% of this planet's land surface within one more century unless we are able to do something about it.
单选题{{B}}Passage Four{{/B}}
Most people would agree that, although
our age exceeds all previous ages in knowledge, there has been no corresponding
increase in wisdom. But agreement ceases as soon as we attempt to define
"wisdom" and consider means of promoting it. There are several factors that
contribute to wisdom. Of these I should put first a sense of proportion: the
capacity to take account of all the important factors in a problem and to attach
to each its due weight. This has become more difficult than it
used to be owing to the extent and complexity of the special knowledge required
of various kinds of technicians. Suppose, for example, that you are engaged in
research in scientific medicine. The work is difficult and is likely to absorb
the whole of your mind. You have no time to consider the effect which your
discoveries or inventions may have outside the field of medicine. You succeed
(let us say) asmodern medicine has succeeded, in enormously lowering the
infant death-rate, not only in Europe and America, but also in Asia and Africa.
This has the entirely unintended result of making the food supply inadequate and
lowing the standard of life in the parts of the world that have the greatest
populations. To take an even more dramatic example, which is in everybody's mind
at the present time, you study the makeup of the atom from a disinterested
(无利害关系的) desire for knowledge, and by chance place in the hands of a powerful
mad man the means of destroying the human race. Therefore, with
every increase of knowledge and skill, wisdom becomes more necessary, for every
such increase augments (增强) our capacity for realizing our purposes, and
therefore augments our capacity for evil, if our purposes are
unwise.