填空题Directions: In the following article, some sentences have been removed. For Questions 41-45, choose the most suitable one from the list A-G to fit into each of the numbered blank. There are two extra choices, which do not fit in any of the gaps. Mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET 1. What killed the dinosaurs? Until recently, no one really knew the answer to that question. That was until a huge crater was discovered under the sea off Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula. Studies revealed that the hole had been made by an asteroid which struck the earth 65 million years ago, and caused the extinction of the dinosaurs as well as two-thirds of all species. 41. ______ For the first time, humans were able to witness exactly what happens when a celestial body collides with a planet. As the comet punched holes bigger than the earth into Jupiter's atmosphere, and threw up clouds of debris thousands of miles high, it quickly became clear that survival was no longer entirely a question of being the "fittest". 42. ______ But, to most people, the risk remains academic. With all the dangers humans face—sickness, accidents, etc.—it is understandable that people don't take seriously the risk posed by something :hat hasn't happened for 65 million years and may not happen for another 65 million years. 43. ______ Even the worst tornadoes, floods and earthquakes affect only a very small percentage of the earth's surface and population. But the effects of an impact caused by a celestial body of just 10 kilometers in diameter would make humans extinct, along with most of the world's other animals and plants. The danger comes from asteroids and comets which cross the earth's orbit. Asteroids pose a greater danger because they are more numerous. Most originate in the Asteroid Belt—a vast group of asteroids which orbit the sun between Mars and Jupiter. These asteroids are normally in stable orbits but collisions between them, and the gravitational effects of Jupiter, can change their orbits, either sending them out of the solar system or towards tile sun. 44. ______ They can still do some damage, however, particularly if they are composed of iron. About 50,000 years ago, a metallic asteroid with a diameter of about 30 meters smashed into what is now the American state of Arizona. It left a crater 1.2 kilometers wide. More recently, in 1908, a rocky asteroid about 60 meters in diameter exploded as it entered the earth's atmosphere above the Tunguska Valley in Siberia. 45. ______ But, it is those asteroids with diameters of one kilometre or more which pose the greatest threat. It is estimated that between 1,000 and 2,000 of these come closer to the earth than Mars, our nearest planetary neighbor. If a one-kilometer asteroid were to hit the earth, the consequences would be devastating. These bodies typically travel at speeds of about 20 kilometers per second. At that speed, one hitting the earth would release energies millions of times greater than those released by the atomic bomb at Hiroshima in 1945. Such an impact would not be enough to make humans extinct, but it would change forever life as we know it. An object of this size is estimated to collide with the earth every 300,000 years.[A] Once the rain of debris subsided, the sky would turn black. Vast clouds of dust and soot would block out sunlight, stopping photosynthesis and causing acid rain. Then the earth would begin to cool, and a mini ice age would follow. The age of mammals would be over.[B] Fragments crashed to the ground and although they did not leave a crater, they destroyed an area of forest 50 kilometers across. If this happened above a city, buildings and people would be completely destroyed.[C] If one were to hit earth now, it would release energies of about 100 million megatons—five billion times greater than the Hiroshima bomb.[D] A new factor had been introduced into evolution: the ability to survive a collision between the earth and an asteroid or comet.[E] But, many scientists believe that collisions between the earth and celestial bodies cannot be regarded as "just another risk". The main reason for this is that no other catastrophe—except perhaps a nuclear war—has the potential to destroy human civilization completely.[F] But just how one impact managed to cause such destruction was not widely understood until July 1994, when the comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 smashed into the planet Jupiter.[G] Those less than 100 meters in diameter are not usually regarded as a threat because most are destroyed by heat as they enter the earth's atmosphere and so never reach the ground.
填空题[A]"Customersdon'tbuyproducts,"Marysays."Theybuyresults."Maryexplainsthatitisherjobtohelpcustomersgetresults.Resultsarewhattheproductsdoforthecustomers.Customersbuyproductsforwhattheproductsdo.[B]Maryenjoysherjob.Herjobiscustomerservice.Shehelpscustomersusehercompany'sproducts.Whenpeopleaskherwhatshedoes,Marysays."Salespeoplesellourproducts.Myjobistomakesuretheystaysold."[C]Shefindssomeonewhoisdoingexactlywhatthecustomerwhocalledisinterestedinseeing.Marycallscustomerswhoarealreadyusingtheproduct.Sheasksifthecustomerwhowantstoseehowtheproductsareusedcanvisitthesecompanies.Mostcustomerscooperate.Theyletothercustomersvisittoseehowproductsareused.Theyhelpothersbecausetheyknowtheymayneedhelpthemselvessomeday.Theyknowtheywillbeabletoaskforhelplateriftheygivehelptoothersnow.[D]MarygetscopiesofsalesordersfromSteve,John,Helen,andothersalespeople.Whenshegetstheorders,Marytalkstothesalespeopleaboutthecustomers.ItispartofMary'sjobtofindouthowcustomersareusinghercompany'sproducts.Marytellscustomers,"I'mintheinformationbusiness.Myjobistogiveyouanyinformationyouneedaboutourproductsandhowthey'reused."[E]Marymakesappointmentsforhercompany'scustomerstovisiteachother.Mary'scompanyisveryhappytohavecust6merscomparehowtheyuseitsproducts.Thecompanyfeelsthatthisishowcustomershelpsellitsproductstoothercustomers.[F]SometimesMaryhelpscustomerstohelpeachother.Customerscalltoaskaboutusinghercompany'sproducts.Marygivesthemproductliterature.Shealsogivestheminformationfromherfilesonhowproductscanbeused.Sometimescustomerswanttoseeproductsbeingused.Thesecustomersareinterestedinseeingexactlywhatisdonewiththeproducts.Whenthishappens,Marylooksinherfiles.'Shelookstoseewhichcustomersareusingtheproducts.Thenshelookstoseehowtheproductsareused.[G]Marykeepsfilesofinformationaboutproductsandcustomers.Filesaregroupsofdocumentssetuptomakeiteasytofindanydocumentorrecordwhichisneeded.Inherfiles,Maryhasprintedsheetsabouthercompany'sproducts.Theseprintedsheetsaboutthethingsthecompanymakesarecalledproductliterature.Productliteraturetellsaboutthethingsthecompanymakes.Theliteraturealsotellswhattheproductsdo.Theideaistoshowhowproductshelpcustomerswhousethem.[H]Maryhasalistofallthecompany'scustomers.Whenshereceivescopiesoforders,Marychecksthemtoseeifthereareanynewcustomers.Maryalsocheckstoseeifanyoldcustomersarebuyingproductthathasnotbeenmadebefore.Marychecksorderstoseewhichcustomersbuyit.Anytimecustomersbuyproductstheyhavenotusedbefore,Marycallstoseeifshecanhelp.Maryasksifthecustomerneedsinformation.Shealsoaskshowthecustomerisusingtheproduct.Maryputsinformationinherfilesonhowcustomersusehercompany'sproducts.{{B}}Order:{{/B}}
填空题Vitamins are organic compounds necessary
填空题[A]Butscientistsarestillworkingtoimproveonthat,andamongthemissocialpsychologistAldertVrijoftheUniversityofPortsmouthinEngland.Vrijhasbeenusingakeyinsightfromhisfieldtoimproveinterrogationmethods.Inshort,thetruthisautomaticandeffortless,andlyingistheoppositeofthat.Itisintentional,deliberateandexhausting.Thehumanmind,despiteitsimpressiveabilities,haslimitedcapacityforhowmuchthinkingitcanhandleatanyonetime.Sopilingondemandsforadditional,simultaneousthought—orcognitive"load"—compromisesnormalinformationprocessing.[B]WhenVrijandhiscolleaguesaskedvolunteerswhattheirofficeslookedlike,afterinstructinghalftotellthetruthabouttheiroccupationsandhalftolie,bothtruthtellersandliarsgavethesameamountofdetailintheirverbalresponses.ButwhenVrijaskedthemtodrawtheiroffices,theliars'drawingsweremuchlessdetailedthanthoseofthetruthtellers.[C]Allthesetricksmayseemlikeoverkillwhenwethinkaboutthefictionaldetectivesweknow,includingHolmesSherlock,whoseemabletoferretouteveryfalsehoodtheyhearwithoutusinganystrategiesotherthantheirintuition.Butinreallife,suchpeopleareexceedinglyrare;andresearchershavebeentrying—withoutalotofsuccess—tounravelthesegenius'strategies.Untiltheydo,lesssophisticatedliecatchersmaybeabletoexploitthemind'scognitivedeficits,usingtrickssuchasVrij's,tocatchthebadguysintheirdeceptions.[D]Andinfact,thatisjustwhathappensinthelab:Vrijrananexperimentinwhichhalftheliarsandtruthtellerswereinstructedtorecalltheirstoriesinreverseorder.Whenobserverslaterlookedatvideotapesofthecompleteinterviews,theycorrectlyspottedonly42percentoftheliespeopletoldwhenrecountingtheirstorieswithoutfabrication—belowaverage,whichmeanstheywerehardtospot—butaremarkable60percentwhentheliarswerecompromisedbythereversestorytelling.[E]Psychologicalscientistsarefascinatedbykeenliespotter.Detectingliesandliarsisessentialtoeffectivepolicingandprosecutionofcriminals,butitismaddeninglydifficult.Mostofuscancorrectlyspotbarelymorethanhalfofallliesandtruthsthroughlisteningandobservation—meaningwearewrongalmostasoftenasweareright.Andhalfacenturyofresearchhasdonelittletopolishthisunimpressivetrackrecord.[F]Anotherstrategythatcouldbesurprisinglyeffectiveistoasksuspectstodrawapicture.Puttingpenciltopaperforcespeopletogivespatialinformation—somethingthatmostliarshavenotpreparedforaspartofplanningtheirliesandthat,therefore,overtaxestheirmentalresources.[G]HereareafewstrategiesthatVrijandhiscolleagueshavebeentestinginthelaboratory.Oneintriguingstrategyistodemandthatsuspectstelltheirstoriesinreverse.Narratingbackwardincreasescognitiveloadbecauseitrunscountertothenaturalforwardsequencingofevents.Becauseliarsalreadyhavedepletedcognitiveresources,theyshouldfindthisunfamiliarmentalexercisemoretaxingthantruthtellersdo—whichshouldincreasethelikelihoodthattheywillsomehowbetraythemselves.
填空题
填空题
A. Human behavior B. Culture
attributes C. Physiology of Homo sapiens D.
Classification of Homo sapiens E. Human society
F. Structure of Homo sapiensHuman, common name given to any
individual of the species Homo sapiens and, by extension, to the entire species.
The term is also applied to certain species that were the evolutionary
forerunners of Homo sapiens. Scientists consider all living people members of a
single species.41.__________ Homo sapiens is identified, for
purposes of classification, as an animal with a backbone and segmented spinal
cord that suckles its young; that gestates its young with the aid of a placenta;
that is equipped with five-digited extremities, a collarbone, and a single pair
of mammary glands on the chest; and that has eyes at the front of the head,
stereoscopic vision, and a proportionately large brain. The species belongs to
the family Hominidae, the general characteristics of which are discussed
below. 42.__________ The details of skeletal
structure distinguishing Homo sapiens from the nearest primate relatives-the
gorilla, chimpanzee, and orangutan-stem largely from a very early adaptation to
a completely erect posture and a two-footed striding walk. The uniquely S-shaped
spinal column places the center of gravity of the human body directly over the
area of support provided by the feet, thus giving stability and balance in the
uptight position. Complete bipedalism in the human freed the
hand to become a supremely sensitive instrument for precise manipulation and
grasping. The most important structural detail in this refinement is the
elongated human thumb, which can rotate freely and is fully opposable to the
other fingers. The physiological requirements for speech were secondarily
established by erect posture, which positions the vocal cords for controlled
breathing, and by the skilled use of the hands. The latter development occurs in
association with the enlargement and specialization of a brain area that is a
prerequisite for refined control of the lips and tongue.
43.__________ The large brain of Homo sapiens is approximately
double that of early human toolmakers. This great increase in size in only 2
million years was achieved by a process called neoteny, which is the
prolongation of retention of immature characteristics. The juvenile stage of
brain and skull development is prolonged so that they grow for a longer period
of time in relation to the time required to reach sexual maturity. Unlike the
early human adult skull, with its sloping forehead and prominent jaw, the modem
human skull-with biologically insignificant variations-retains into maturity a
proportionately large size, in relation to the rest of the body, a high-rounded
dome, straight-planed face, and reduced jaw size, all closely resembling the
characteristics of the skull in the juvenile chimpanzee. Its enlarged dimensions
required adaptations for passage through the birth canal; consequently, the
human female pelvis widens at maturity, and the human infant is born
prematurely. 44.__________ The physiological
adaptations that made humans more flexible than other primates allowed for the
development of a wide range of abilities and an unparalleled versatility in
behavior. The brain's great size, complexity, and slow maturation, with neural
connections being added though at least the first 12 years of life, meant that
learned behavior could largely modify stereotyped, instinctive responses. New
environmental demands could be met by rapid adjustments rather than by slow
genetic selection; thus, survival in a wide range of habitats and under extreme
conditions eventually became possible without further species differentiation.
Each new infant, however, with relatively few innate traits yet with a vast
number of potential behaviors, must be taught to achieve its biological
potential as a human. 45.__________ The human
species has a unique capability for culture in the sense of conscious thinking
and planning, transmission of skills and systems of social relationships, and
creative modification of the environment. The integrated patterns of behavior
required for planning and fashioning tools were accomplished at least 2.5
million years ago, and some form of advanced code for vocal communication may
also have existed at this time. By 350, 000 years ago planned hunting, fire
making, and the wearing of clothing were well established, as was possibly
ritualized disposal of the dead. Evidence of religion, recorded events, and art
date from 30, 000 to 40, 000 years ago and imply advanced language and ethics
for the complex ordering of social groups required for such activities. From
about that time the genus Homo began to stabilize into the one generalized
species of Homo sapiens.
填空题
填空题{{B}}Directions: {{/B}}You are going to read a text about basic element in
both speaking and writing, followed by a list of examples and explanations.
Choose the best example or explanation from the list A-F for each numbered
subheading (41-45). There is one extra example which you do not need to use.
Mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET 1.
There are many differences .between communicating in written
and spoken words—one to one or one to many. Because speaking is face to face and
personal, it is much more direct than writing.. Hand and body gestures, facial
expressions, and vocal variety help greatly to support face-to-face
communication. It is also reinforced by instant feedback from listeners in the
form of smiles, frowns, applause, catcalls, clenched fists, and so on. An alert
speaker who is sensitive to feedback can "shift gears" and adapt to changing
circumstances.41. The differences between talking and
writing Writing, however, depends solely on words and
punctuation to deliver the message. There are no gestures and no voice, and if
there is any feedback, it takes time to reach the writer.42. Why long
sentences can be used in writing? Effective talking is aimed at
people's minds and hearts through their ears, and ears prefer short, direct,
conversational sentences. There are three standards that apply
equally to talking and writing—clarity, accuracy, and appropriateness.43.
Clarity. If the audience doesn't understand the message
instantly, then the speaker has, to some extent, failed. Thus, every possible
measure must be taken to ensure that all your words and thoughts are perfectly
clear to the audience.44. Accuracy. As a conscientious
speaker, you must see to it that your information is as current and as accurate
as research can make it.45. Appropriateness. In addition to
being precise, your language should also be suitable to the subject, audience,
and occasion. [A] For instance, a speaker can vary
his/her pitch or tone to change the meaning expressed. A writer, on the other
hand, has to rely solely on the words and context or even explanations in braces
to achieve that. [B] Good talking is wordy, repetitive,
and far less structured than efficient writing. A good speech, reproduced word
for word on paper, usually does not read well because it rambles and repeats
words and thoughts. It is not nearly as disciplined and organized as good
writing. [C] Throughout your talk, words are your prime
means for helping your audience understand your message. And to harness the
profound power of words, you should develop a lifelong habit of using a
dictionary and a thesaurus. If you do not exploit these resources, you will fail
to achieve your full potential as a speaker and conversationalist. Another
device that will help you achieve clarity in your talk is a summary. If your
talk consists of three willresearched major points, lit those points in your
introduction so your audience will know at once what ground you will cover.
Discuss them in depth, summarize them at the end of your talk, and emphasize any
conclusions hat they lead to. [D] For example, a speaker
who's addressing a Parent-Teacher Association should avoid the statistical and
psychological jargon of advanced educational researchers. By the same token, she
should not indulge in teenage slang. Any speaker worth her salt will analyze her
audience first and adapt her language accordingly. [E]
The surest way for you to damage your credibility is to spew forth
misinformation or outdated information. How many times have you seen a story, a
name, an important fact, or a charge against someone retracted in newspapers?
Unfortunately, the damage was done when the misinformation first appeared in
print. Such unwarranted embarrassment and mental anguish could have been avoided
ff someone had taken the time to recheck the information. If your talk is
on a current or crucial topic, do your homework and arm yourself with quotations
and sources to fortify your facts. [F] Long, involved sentences
are acceptable in writing for two reasons: (1) The eye can absorb many more
words in an instant than the ear can hear. (2) If a reader stumbles on a
marathon sentence, she can read it again. Not so with spoken words— once uttered
they're gone, especially in speech. If a listener misses a sentence, both she
and the speaker have lost part of the message; there is no going back, except
perhaps during the question-and-answer period. In a conversation, of course, the
listener can ask the speaker to repeat.
填空题
填空题
填空题
填空题{{B}}Directions:{{/B}}In the following article, some sentences have been
removed. For Questions 41~45, choose the most suitable one from the list A~G to
fit into each of the numbered blanks. There are two extra choices which do not
fit in any of the gaps. Mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET 1.
US President Bush has been having a difficult summer. Recent
polls show a considerable decline in public approval of his conduct of the
nation's business, yet in just few weeks voters will decide whether he or
Democrat John Kerry is to be the next president. If things are going so badly
for Bush, then Kerry must be doing well, right? 41)__________.
His public appearances kindle little enthusiasm. His TV ads sway few viewers. As
a result, Kerry supporters tend to be more anti-Bush than they are genuinely
pro-Kerry. Democratic strategists point out that Kerry has a
pattern of coming from behind to win political races. And even though Kerry
stirs little excitement, many Americans are quite eager to learn whom he will
choose as his running mate. A popular vice presidential candidate could energize
his campaign, especially since there is little chance that President. Bush will
dump the much-loathed Richard Cheney from the Republican ticket.
Most observers agree that Kerry is not a particularly strong candidate for
the US presidency. He tends to be respected, but he arouses little
enthusiasm.42)__________But then, two weeks ago, the Republicans counterattacked
vigorously, end the race is once again wide open. The public's
generally positive impression of Senator's Kerry's character is based in large
part on his record during the war in Vietnam, when he performed heroically as
the commander of a "swift boat", a light military craft used by the US Navy to
thread the rivers and canals of southern Vietnam. The crew of his old boat are
united in their praise of him. 43)__________.Two weeks ago they
began appearing in stingingly negative TV ads aired in crucial states where
currently undecided voters will probably determine the outcome of the election.
And the ads were effective, drawing independent voters away from Kerry. In
the meantime, Kerry's own crewmen have strongly rejected the new version of
events. 44)__________Journalists quickly turned up links between
the navy veterans and Texas fat cats who had long supplied the Bush family with
funds for political campaigns. These rich folks were in turn linked to Karl
Rove, Bush' s masterful political strategist--his very own Zhuge
Liang. 45)__________. Cartoonist David Horsey, like many other
observers, thinks Karl Rove is up to his old tricks; a similar effort--in
this case, untraceable slanderous rumors during a key primary
race--undermined popular Republican Senator John McCaine's campaign for
the GOP nomination in 2000. In today's cartoon Rove is portrayed as the
puppeteer controlling Bush' s wealthy supporters in Texas (notice the
Texas-style cowboy hat). The hand puppet in turn seems to be manipulating
another, smaller puppet that represents the angry swift boat veterans.
A. Nonetheless, thanks to the slow economic recovery, the difficult
situation in Iraq and changing perceptions of President Bush's competence, he
seemed to be on the road to a very narrow victory in November.
B. But leadership, you know, isn't about taking the easy route; it is
about making the tough, sometimes unpopular decisions. President Bush has
demonstrated that he can make tough decisions, and I personally like the fact
that his faith end his values are the foundation of his decisions.
C. Not exactly. Americans outside Massachusetts, which Kerry represents in
the Senate, seem to find it hard to relate to the Democratic
candidate. D. While Bush would dearly love to undermine Kerry's
image, he cannot afford to be seen doing so. (His own military record, after
all; makes a sorry contrast with Kerry's.) E. Are the ads the
Bush campaign in action or just the vengeful protest of naval officers whose
leadership was questioned in a recent biography of Kerry? It costs hundreds of
thousands of dollars to make such an ad and buy air time; so many people
immediately suspected that wealthy Republicans were behind the effort.
F. However, a group of navy veterans (all present in the same area of
Vietnam as Kerry and during the same period, some as senior officers, others as
crewmen not on Kerry's boat but on other, similar craft) have denounced Kerry in
a book that came out last month. They allege that he did not deserve the medals
for valiant leadership he won in the war. G. Kerry remains an
unknown quantity to most Americans, but better known Democrats are much in the
news. Examine the publicity posters in the cartoon. In both upper comers are ads
for ex-President Clinton's lengthy autobiography, My Life.
填空题 The economic transformation of India is one of the
great business stories of our tinge. Indian companies like Infosys and Wipro are
powerful global players, while Western firms like G.E. and I.B.M. now have major
research facilities in India employing thousands. India's seemingly endless flow
of young, motivated engineers, scientists, and managers offering developed-world
skills at developing-world wages is held to be putting American jobs at risk,
and the country is frequently heralded as "the next economic
superpower." But India has nm into a surprising hitch on its
way to superpower status: its inexhaustible supply of workers is becoming
exhausted. {{U}} {{U}} 11 {{/U}} {{/U}} How is
this possible in a country that every year produces two and a half million
college graduates and four hundred thousand engineers? Start with the fact that
just ten per cent of Indians get any kind of post-secondary education, compared
with some fifty per cent who do in the U.S. {{U}} {{U}} 12
{{/U}} {{/U}} India does have more than three hundred
universities, but a recent survey by the London Times Higher Education
Supplement put only two of them among the top hundred in the world. A current
study led by Vivek Wadhwa, of Duke University, has found that if you
define "engineer" by U.S. standards, India produces just a hundred and
seventy thousand engineers a year, not four hundred thousand. The irony of the
current situation is that India was once considered to be overeducated.
{{U}} {{U}} 13 {{/U}} {{/U}} However, once the
Indian business climate loosened up, though, that meant companies could tap a
backlog of hundreds of thousands of eager, skilled workers at their disposal.
Unfortunately, the educational system did not adjust to the new realities.
{{U}} {{U}} 14 {{/U}} {{/U}}Even as the need for skilled workers
was increasing, India was devoting relatively fewer resources to producing
them. India has taken tentative steps to remedy its skills
famine-the current government has made noises about doubling spending on
education, and a host of new colleges and universities have sprung up since the
mid-nineties. {{U}} {{U}} 15 {{/U}} {{/U}}. In
a country where more than three hundred million people live on a dollar a day,
producing college graduates can seem like a low priority. Ultimately, the Indian
government has to pull off a very tough trick, malting serious changes at a time
when things seem to be going very well. It needs, in other words, a clear sense
of everything that can still go wrong. The paradox of the Indian economy today
is that the more certain its glowing future seems to be, the less likely that
future becomes. A. But India's impressive economic performance
has made the problem seem less urgent than it actually is, and allowed the
government to defer difficult choices. B. Moreover, of that ten
per cent, the vast majority go to one of India's seventeen thousand colleges,
many of which are closer to community colleges than to four-year
institutions. C. Infosys says that, of 1.3 million applicants
for jobs last year, it found only two per cent acceptable. D.
Although India has one of the youngest workforces on the planet, the head of
Infosys said recently that there was an "acute shortage of skilled
manpower," and a study by Hewitt Associates projects that this year salaries for
skilled workers will rise fourteen and a half per cent, a sure sign that demand
for skilled labor is outstripping. E. In the seventies, as its
economy languished, it seemed to be a country with too many engineers and Ph.D.s
working as clerks in government offices. F. Many Indian
graduates therefore enter the workforce with a low level of skills.
G. Between 1985 and 1997, the number of teachers in India actually fell,
while the percentage of students enrolled in high school or college rose more
slowly than it did in the rest of the world.
填空题Directions:You are going to read a list of subheadings
and a text about what experts advise to do to keep a new year's resolution.
Choose the most suitable subheading from the list A-G for each numbered
paragraph. The first paragraph of the text is not numbered. There are two extra
subheadings which you do not need to use. Mark your answers on the ANSWER SHEET.
A. Don't Try to Scare Yourself
Straight B. Get Better Friends C. Quit
Completely D. Focus on Your Achievements E.
Don't Kid Yourself F. Learn from Others G. Try
Being Mindful The Marist poll found that while 65% of people
who made a resolution in the New Year kept their promise for at least part of
the year, 35% never even made it out of the gate. Indeed, when you wake up on
the first day of a new year-or decade-resolutions to "cut back" and "moderate"
seem both an excellent idea and an impossibly hazy dream. But consider this: if
hard-core addicts can break bad habits, there's still hope for you. There's a
lot you can learn from people who have successfully moderated their habits to
help keep you off the resolution merry-go-round. 41.
______ "The most important thing is to be honest with
yourself," says Howard Josepher, a former heroin addict and president of
Exponents Inc.. "You need to know the difference between enjoying yourself and
self-medicating. It's not that self-medicating is necessarily bad-but you should
give yourself parameters. If you are adhering to them, O.K. If not, you need to
check yourself." Successful moderators decide in advance how much is "too
much"-and stick to their limit, no matter what. Have a cookie a day, if that's
what you've deemed acceptable. But if you "cheat" by having "just one more,"
know that you are only cheating yourself and aggravating the problem, experts
say. The point is to learn how to hold yourself accountable.
42. ______ "Theoretically, there are very good reasons to take
a break from a behavior, totally," says Reid Hester, director of research at
Behavior Therapy Associates, explaining that an initial period of complete
abstinence can make it easier for people to moderate behavior, by eliminating
the habitual, automatic aspect of the unwanted activity. Take a cue from the
self-help group Moderation Management (MIV), which advises problem drinkers to
abstain completely for a month before attempting moderate drinking. The best way
to stay on course is frequent self-monitoring; use as many behavior-modification
tools, support groups and programs as you can. 43.
______ "Between stimulus and response, there's a space, and in
that space is our power to choose our response, and in our response lies our
growth and freedom," says Alan Marlatt, director of the Addictive Behaviors
Research Center at the University of Washington, quoting author and Holocaust
survivor Victor Frankl. Marlatt says, "Mindfulness gets you into that space."
Being mindful may involve traditional meditation, in which you sit quietly and
observe your thoughts and breathing without judgment. But here, it is also used
to focus awareness on thoughts and feelings that lead to unwanted behavior.
Simply recognizing the triggers to relapse can help you choose not to give into
them. 44. ______ Research shows that in the
long term, the pleasure of victory is a better incentive than the pain of
defeat. "Punishment is a poor motivator," says Hester. "It sets people up for
failure. If all you do is punish yourself for failure, you won't stay motivated
to change for very long." Instead, reward yourself for sticking to your limits
and focus on the benefits of changing. 45. ______
Consciously and unconsciously, people tend to imitate those around them.
That's why the latest research shows that things like happiness, quitting
smoking and obesity can spread like a contagion through social networks. So,
surround yourself with friends who can also be role models. "Make sure that
people you hang out with are people who look and act the way you would like to.
Social imitation is the easiest form not only of flattery but of
self-improvement," says Stanton Peele, author of Seven Tools to Beat
Addiction.
填空题Cardiologists have pioneered the world's first non-surgical bypass operation to turn a vein into an artery using a new technique to divert blood flow in a man with severe heart disease. 41. ______________________ Although major heart surgery is becoming commonplace, with more than 28,000 bypass operations in the UK annually, it is traumatic for patients and involves a long recovery period. The new technique was carried out by an international team of doctors who performed the non-invasive surgery on a 53-year-old German patient. 42. ______________________ According to a special report in Circulation: Journal of the American Heart Association, cardiologists developed a special catheter (导管)which was inserted into one of :his leg arteries, threaded up through the aorta (主动脉) to the top of the diseased artery, which was the only part still open and receiving blood. 43. ______________________ A thin, flexible wire was threaded through the needle and the needle and catheter were with- drawn, leaving the wire behind and a small angioplasty(血管成形术) balloon, which was used to widen the channel. Finally, the vein was blocked off just above the new channel allowing blood from the artery to be re-routed down the vein. 44. ______________________ Dr. Stephen Oesterle, who led the team, said: "This milestone marks the first coronary artery bypass performed with a catheter. The technology offers a realistic hope for truly minimally invasive bypass procedures in the future." Dr. Oasterle is director of cardiology at Massachusetts General Hospital and associate professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School in Boston. Melanie Haddon, cardiac nurse at the British Heart Foundation, said it was likely to be many years before the procedure was routinely used in hospitals. "Non-invasive surgery, such as this new method, could help minimize the risks, bringing great benefits to the patient." A clot-busting drug combined with 10-minute spurts of exercise has been found to grow new blood vessels in children with heart disease. 45. ______________________ X-rays showed that over a five month period a network of tiny new blood vessels formed in two of the patients. In all seven individuals, the treatment was associated with improved blood flow to the heart muscle in the areas around the blockage.[A] In every case, the therapy increased the size of the blocked artery allowing more blood to pass through.[B] The diabetic patient, who has not been named, had suffered severe chest pains because one of his coronary arteries was severely blocked and depriving his heart muscle of oxygen, but he was considered by doctors to be unsuitable for traditional bypass surgery.[C] Then, guided by ultra-sound a physician pushed a needle from inside the catheter through the artery wall and into the adjacent vein.[D] The keyhole procedure, which avoids the extensive invasive surgery of a conventional bypass, will offer hope to tens of thousands of people at risk from heart attacks. Coronary heart disease, where the arteries are progressively silted up with fatty deposits, is responsible in a major industrial country like Britain for more than 160,000 deaths each year.[E] After the procedure, the vein effectively became an artery, carrying blood in the reverse direction from the previous way, and feeding the starved heart tissue with oxygen.[F] Researchers in Japan studied seven children and teenagers, aged 6 to 19, who had a totally blocked artery and could not be helped by surgery. They were asked to exercise on a bicycle ma- chine twice a day for 10 days and given the anti-clotting drug before each session.[G] It is very premature to suggest that this technique will significantly reduce the need for coronary bypass surgery in the near future. It won't be a solution for everyone. The reality is that veins are not always located that close to an artery, so it wouldn't work under certain circumstances.
填空题In brand-new offices with a still-empty game room and enough space to triple their staff of nearly 30, a trio of entrepreneurs is leading an Internet start-up with an improbable mission: to out-Google Google. The three started Powerset, a company whose aim is to deliver better answers than any other search engine—including Google—by letting users type questions in plain English. And they have made believers of Silicon Valley investors whose fortunes turn on identifying the next big thing. Powerset is hardly alone. (41) . And Wikia Inc, a company started by a founder of Wikipedia, plans to develop a search engine that. like the popular Web-based encyclopedia, would be built by a community of programmers and users. (42) . It also shows how much the new Internet economy resembles a planetary system where everything and everyone orbits around search in general, and around Google in particular. Silicon Valley is filled with start-ups whose main business proposition is to be bought by Google, or for that matter by Yahoo or Microsoft. Countless other start-ups rely on Google as their primary driver of traffic or on Google's powerful advertising system as their primary source of income. Virtually all new companies compote with Google for scarce engineering talent. (43) "There is way too much obsession with search, as if it were the end of the world." said Esther Dyson, a well-known technology investor and forecaster. "Google equals money equals search equals search advertising; it all gets combined as if this is the last great business model." It may not be the last great business model, but Google has proved that search linked to ,advertising is a very large and lucrative business, and everyone—including Ms. Dyson, who invested a small sum in Powerset—seems to want a piece of it. Since the beginning of 2004, venture capitalists have put nearly $350 million into no fewer than 79 start-ups that had something to do with Internet search, according to the National Venture Capital Association, an industry group. (44) Since Google's stated mission is to organize all of the world's information, they may still find themselves in the search giant's cross hairs. That is not necessarily bad, as being acquired by Google could be a financial bonanza for some of these entrepreneurs and investors. (45) . Powerset recently received $12.5 million in financing. Hakia, which like Powerset is trying to create a "natural language" search engine, got $16 million. Another $16 million went to Snap, which has focused on presenting search results in a more compelling way and is experimenting with a new advertising model. And ChaCha. which uses paid researchers that act as virtual reference librarians to provide answers to users' queries. got $6.1 million. Still, recent history suggests that gaining traction is going to be difficult. Of dozens of search start-ups that were introduced in recent years, none had more than a 1 percent share of the United States search market in November. according to Nielsen NetRatings, a research firm that measures Internet traffic.[A] Powerset could possibly steal a lead if it improves search results by a significant measure with natural language and simultaneously incorporates a near-equivalent to Google's existing capabilities.[B] Even as Google continues to outmaneuver its main search rivals, Yahoo and Microsoft, plenty of newcomers—with names like hakia, ChaCha and Snap--are trying to beat the company at its own game.[C] These ambitious quests reflect the renewed optimism sweeping technology centers like Silicon Valley and fueling a nascent Internet boom.[D] But in the current boom, there is money even for those with the audacious goal of becoming a better GooSe.[E] And divining Google's next move has become a fixation for scores of technology blogs and a favorite parlor game among technology investors.[F] An overwhelming majority are not trying to take Google head on, but rather are focusing on specialized slices of the search world, like searching for videos, blog postings or medical information.[G] The venture capitalists made the investment based on an assumption that Powerset would complete the licensing deal,
填空题
填空题Comparisons were drawn between the development television in the 20th century and the diffusion printing in the 15th and 16th centuries. Yet much had happened ---|||________|||---As was discussed before, it was not ---|||________|||--- the 19th century that the newspaper became the dominant pre- electronic ---|||________|||--- , following in the wake the pamphlet and the book and in the ---|||________|||--- the periodical. It was during the same time that the communications revolution ---|||________|||--- up, beginning with transport, the railway, and leading ---|||________|||--- through the telegraph, the telephone, radio, and motion pictures ---|||________|||--- the 20th-century world the motor car and the airplane. Not everyone sees that in ---|||________|||--- It is important to do so.
It is generally recognized, ---|||________|||--- , that the introduction the computer in the early 20th century, ---|||________|||---by the invention the integrated circuit during the 1960s, radically changed the , ---|||________|||---its impact the media was not immediately ---|||________|||---As time went by, computers became smaller and more powerful, and they became "personal" too, as well as ---|||________|||---, with display becoming sharper and storage ---|||________|||---increasing. They were thought , like people, ---|||________|||---generations, with the distance between generations much ---|||________|||---.
It was within the computer age that the term "information society" began to be widely used to describe the ---|||________|||---within which we now live. The communications revolution has ---|||________|||---both work and leisure and how we think and feel both about place and time, but there have been ---|||________|||---views about its economic, political, social and cultural implications. "Benefits" have been weighed ---|||________|||---"harmful" outcomes. And generalizations have proved difficult.
填空题[A] Running after Them Doesn"t Help Anybody
[B] Remember Newton"s Third Law
[C] Show Some Respect for the Things They Care About
[D] 18 Years Old:The Beginning of Adulthood
[E] Know Strength and Weakness of Your Child
[F] Don"t Look Under the Mattress
[G] Be Consistent
When your child becomes a teenager, you"re well over halfway through the job of raising them, and you have only a few years left to instill all those values and principles you want them to go into adult life with. And suddenly, they look as if they"re throwing away all the work you"ve put in up to now. But actually, if you just keep your head, and follow these essential teenage Rules, you"ll find you come out the other end with a terrific adult you can really be proud of.
41.______
Unless your child is putting themselves in serious danger, you really do have to put up with it. The more you try to tell them, the more you push them in the opposite direction. They"re looking for something to kick at, to rebel against, because they"re programmed to. The more force you use, the more they"ll use. Remember Newton"s third law of motion? For every action there is an equal and opposite reaction. So what can you do when you see them going wrong? You can tell them what you think, but don"t tell them what to do.
42.______
Teenagers are up to things you don"t want to know about. For example, your daughter has gone further than you"d like with her boyfriend. And they"ve almost certainly been offered drugs, but they won"t have any evidence of it hanging around in their room, so there"s no point looking under the mattress or reading their secret diary.
And what are you going to do about it — confront them? I think not. You"ll severely damage your relationship, and they"ll just keep them under the floorboards instead.
Maybe you should think back to the things you did as a teenager that you didn"t want your parents to know about. See? Your kids are just being perfectly normal teenagers.
43. ______
It"s one of the many paradoxes of teenagers. On the one hand, they want to rebel, to shock you, to do things that get to you, and on the other hand, they want your approval and your goodwill. So when you criticize your teenager"s choices, you criticize them. It"s an age of fragile egos and easily knocked self-esteem, and it"s easy to make your teenager feel that you disapprove, or even that you don"t like them. Whether it"s their music or their politics or the way they dress or their decision to become vegetarian, they need to know that it"s okay with you.
44.______
You started off with 18 years and counting. How many have you got left? Because when you get to zero, they"ll be on their own. I know parents who are still looking after their kids when they"re 18. And the kids, not being crazy, let them do it. It takes two to play that game. You know your child"s strengths and weaknesses as well as anyone. So think through what they still need to learn, and make sure they do. If they"re hopeless with money, teach them to budget. Get them to do the family shopping for a week on your usual budget, or get firm about not paying to fill up their car beyond the agreed amount.
45. ______
Your kids need to know what is and isn"t acceptable. And they judge that by what was and wasn"t okay yesterday and the day before. If they"re not getting a consistent message, they"re clueless as to how they have to behave, and those all important boundaries aren"t being properly maintained. That means the kids feel confused, insecure, and perhaps even unloved.
If you"ve decided that you don"t allow the kids to stay late outside, you have to stick to it. Just because your little one was a bit sad about something today, and you"re feeling a bit down yourself anyway... no, no, no ! Stop right there ! Let them come back at once and it will be ten times harder to say no to them next time, and they won"t understand why. Say no now and you"re only being cruel to be kind.
填空题