单选题{{B}}Passage Two{{/B}}
Do you find getting up in the morning
so difficult that it's painful? This might be called laziness, but Dr. Kleitman
has a new explanation. He has proved that everyone has a daily energy
cycle. During the hours when you labor through your work may say
that you're "hot". That's true. The time of day when you feel most energetic is
when your cycle of body temperature is at its peak. For some people the peak
comes during the forenoon. For others it comes in the afternoon or evening. No
one has discovered why this is so, but it leads to such familiar monologues (独白)
as: "Get up, John! You'll be late for work again!" The possible explanation to
the trouble is that John is at his temperature-and-energy peak in the evening.
Much family quarreling ends when husbands and wives realize what these energy
cycles mean, and which cycle each member of the family has. You
can't change your energy cycle, but you can learn to make your life fit it
better. Habit can help, Dr. Kleitman believes. Maybe you're sleepy in the
evening but feel you must stay up late anyway. Counteract (阻碍) your cycle to
some extent by habitually staying up later than you want to. If your energy is
low in the morning but you have an important job to do early in the day, rise
before your usual hour. This won't change your cycle, but you'll get up steam
and work better at your low point. Get off to a slow start which
saves your energy. Get up with a leisurely yawn (哈欠) and stretch. Sit on the
edge of the bed a minute before putting your feet on the floor. Avoid the
troublesome search for clean clothes by laying them out the night before.
Whenever possible, do routine work in the afternoon and save tasks requiring
more energy or concentration for your sharper
hours.
单选题______ we need more practice is quite clear.
A. When
B. What
C. That
D. /
单选题 The Supreme Court's decisions on physician-assisted
suicide carry important implications for how medicine seeks to relieve dying
patients of pain and suffering. Although it ruled that there is
no constitutional right to physician-assisted suicide, the Court in effect
supported the medical principle of "double effect," a centuries-old moral
principle holding that an action having two effects--a good one that is intended
and a harmful one that is foreseen--is permissible if the actor intends only the
good effect. Doctors have used that principle in recent years
to justify using high doses of morphine to control terminally ill patients'
pain, even though increasing dosages will eventually kill the patient.
Nancy Dubler, director of Montefiore Medical Center, contends that the
principle will shield doctors who "until now have very, very strongly insisted
that they could not give patients sufficient medication to control their pain if
that might hasten death." George Annas, chair of the health law
department at Boston University, maintains that, as long as a doctor prescribes
a drug for a legitimate medical purpose, the doctor has done nothing illegal
even if the patient uses the drug to hasten death. "It's like surgery," he says.
"We don't call those deaths homicides because the doctors didn't intend to kill
their patients, although they risked their death. If you're a physician, you can
risk your patient's suicide as long as you don't intend their
suicide." On another level, many in the medical community
acknowledge that the assisted-suicide debate has been fueled in part by the
despair of patients for whom modern medicine has prolonged the physical agony of
dying. Just three weeks before the Court's ruling on
physician-assisted suicide, the National Academy of Science (NAS) released a
two-volume report, {{I}}Approaching Death: Improving Care at the End of Life.{{/I}}
It identifies the undertreatment of pain and the aggressive use of "ineffectual
and forced medical procedures that may prolong and even dishonor the period of
dying" as the twin problems of end-of-life care. The profession
is taking steps to require young doctors to train in hospices, to test knowledge
of aggressive pain management therapies, to develop a Medicare billing code for
hospital-based care, and to develop new standards for assessing and treating
pain at the end of life. Annas says lawyers can play a key role
in insisting that these well-meaning medical initiatives translate into better
care. "Large numbers of physicians seem unconcerned with the pain their patients
are needlessly and predictably suffering," to the extent that it constitutes
"systematic patient abuse." He says medical licensing boards "must make it
clear...that painful deaths are presumptively ones that are incompetently
managed and should result in license suspension."
单选题 Directions: For each blank
in the following passage, choose the best answer ,from the choices given below.
Mark your answer on the ANSWER SHEET by drawing with a pencil a
short bar across the corresponding letter in the brackets.
Most children with healthy appetites
are ready to eat almost anything that is offered them and a child rarely
dislikes food {{U}}(31) {{/U}} it is badly cooked. The way a meal is
cooked and served is most important and an attractively served meal will often
improve a child's appetite. Never ask a child {{U}}(32) {{/U}} he likes
or dislikes a food and never discuss likes and dislikes in front of him or allow
{{U}}(33) {{/U}} else to do so. If the father says he hates fat meat or
the mother refuses vegetables, in the child's hearing he is {{U}}(34)
{{/U}} to copy this procedure. Take it {{U}}(35) {{/U}} granted that
he likes everything and he probably will. Nothing healthful should be omitted
from the meal because of a supposed dislike. At meal times it is a good
{{U}}(36) {{/U}} to give a child a small portion and let him come back
for a second helping rather than give him as {{U}}(37) {{/U}} as he is
likely to eat all at once. Do not talk too much to the child {{U}}(38)
{{/U}} meal times, but let him get on with his food; and do not
{{U}}(39) {{/U}} him to leave the table immediately after a meal or he
will soon learn to swallow his food so he can hurry back to his toys. Under
{{U}}(40) {{/U}} circumstances must a child be coaxed (哄骗) or forced to
eat.
单选题Mother: Danny! Don't make any sound when you have your soup.Danny: Yes, Mum.Father: ______. He's only a child.
单选题Trouble was expected at the football match, so the police had to be
there ______.
A. in plenty
B. in full
C. in number
D. in force
单选题The chief reason for the population growth isn't so much a rise in birth rates ______ a fall in death rates as a result of improvements in medical care. A. and B. as C. but D. or
单选题An effective way to prevent the burnout of young athletes is______.
单选题A. Do you mind my taking this seat? B: ______
A. Yes, sit down please.
B. No, of course not.
C. Yes, take it please.
D. No, you can't take it.
单选题If you want to have a walk every morning in Lincoln Park, which hotel should be the best choice?
单选题
Change, or the ability to {{U}}(31)
{{/U}} oneself to a changing environment is essential {{U}}(32)
{{/U}} evolution. The farmer whose land is required for housing or industry
must adapt himself: he can transfer to another place and master the problems
{{U}}(33) {{/U}} to it; he can change his occupation, perhaps
{{U}}(34) {{/U}} a period of training; or he can starve to death. A
nation which can't adapt its trade or defense requirements to {{U}}(35)
{{/U}} world conditions faces an economic and military disaster. Nothing is
fixed and permanently stable. {{U}}(36) {{/U}} must be movement
forward, which is progress of a sort, and movement backward, which is
decay and deterioration. In a changing world, traction can be a
force for good or for evil. {{U}}(37) {{/U}} long as it offers a guide,
it helps the ignorant and the uninformed to take a step {{U}}(38) {{/U}}
and, thereby adapt themselves to {{U}}(39) {{/U}} circumstances. But if
we make an idol of tradition, it ceases to be a guide. It becomes an obstacle
{{U}}(40) {{/U}} on the path of course. Man is to accept the help which
tradition can give but to be well aware of its limitations in a changing
world.
单选题The government is trying to ______ public confidence in its management of the economy.
单选题Mr. Wells, together with all the members of his family, ______ for Europe this afternoon. A. is leaving B. leave C. are to leave D. are leaving
单选题The vocabulary and grammatical differences between British and American English are so trivial and few as hardly ______. A. noticed B. being noticed C. to notice D. to be noticed
单选题An important factor of leadership is attraction. This does not mean attractiveness in the ordinary sense, for that is a born quality (21) our control. The leader has, nevertheless, to be a magnet; a central figure towards whom people are (22) Magnetism in that sense depends, first of all, (23) being seen. There is a type of authority which can be (24) from behind closed doors, but that is not leadership. (25) there is movement and action, the true leader is in the forefront and may seem, indeed, to be everywhere at once. He has to become a legend; the (26) for anecdotes, whether true or (27) , character. One of the simplest devices is to be absent (28) the occasion when the leader might be (29) to be there, enough in itself to start a rumor about the vital business (30) has detained him. To (31) up for this, he can appeal when least expected, giving rise to another story about the interest he can display (32) things which other folks might (33) as trivial. With this gift for (34) curiosity the leader always combines a reluctance to talk about himself. His interest is (35) in other people; he questions them and encourages them to talk and then remembers all (36) is relevant. He never leaves a party (37) he has mentally formed a minimum dossier (档案) on (38) present, ensuring that he knows (39) to say when he meets them again. He is not artificially extrovert but he would usually rather listen (40) talk. Others realize gradually that his importance needs no proof.
单选题Speaker A: We"ve made an appointment with the students, We"ll meet at 7 in the morning. Can you come on time?
Speaker B: I"m afraid, ______. It"s too early.
单选题 According to the dictionary definition of "create",
ordinary people are creative every day. To create means "to bring into being, to
cause to exist" --something each of us does daily. We are
creative whenever we look at or think about something in a new way. First this
involves an awareness of our surroundings. It means using all of our sense to
become aware of our world. This may be as simple as being aware of color and
texture, as well as taste, when we plan a meal. Above all, it is the ability to
notice things that others might miss. A second part of
creativity is an ability to see relationships among things. If we believe the
expression, "There is nothing new under the sun," the creativity is remaking or
recombining the old in new ways. For example, we might do this by finding a more
effective way to study or a better way to arrange our furniture, or we might
make a new combination of camera lenses and filters to create an unusual
photograph. A third part of creativity is the courage and drive
to make use of our new ideas, to apply them to achieve some new results. To
think up a new concept is one thing; to put the idea to work is
another. These three parts of creativity are involved in all
the great works of genius, but they are also involved in many of our day to day
activities.
单选题 In the 1960s, medical researchers Thomas Holmes and Richard
Rahe developed a checklist of stressful events. They appreciated the tricky
point that any major change can be stressful. Negative events like "serious
illness of a family member" were high on: the list, but so were some positive
life-changing events, like marriage. When you take the Holmes-Rahe test you must
remember that the score does not reflect how you deal with stress—it only shows
how much you have to deal with. And we now know that the way you handle these
events dramatically affects your chances of staying healthy. By
the early 1970s, hundreds of similar studies had followed Holmes and Rahe. And
millions of Americans who work and live under stress worried over the reports.
Somehow, the research got boiled down to a memorable message. Women's magazines
ran headlines like "Stress causes illness. " If you want to stay physically and
mentally healthy, the articles said, avoid stressful events.
But such simplistic advice is impossible to follow. Even if stressful events are
dangerous, many—like the death of a loved one—are impossible to avoid. Moreover,
any warning to avoid all stressful events is a prescription (处方) for staying
away from opportunities as well as trouble. Since any change can be stressful; a
person who wanted to be completely free of stress would never marry, have a
child, take a new job or move. The notion that all stress makes
you sick also ignores a lot of what we know about people. It assumes we're all
vulnerable (脆弱的) and passive in the face of adversity (逆境). But what about human
initiative and creativity? Many come through periods of stress with more
physical and mental vigor than they had before. We also know that a long time
without change or challenge can lead to boredom, and physical and mental
strain.
单选题I don't think you'll change his mind; once he's decided on something he tends to ______ it.
单选题I wish I ______ longer this morning, but I had to get up and pick him up. A. could have slept B. might have slept C. slept D. have slept
