单选题People in the past preferred standing up to lying down when sleeping.
单选题Many factory workers find their jobs {{U}}tiresome{{/U}}.
A. difficult
B. pointless
C. profitable
D. boring
单选题He has trouble understanding that other people judge him by his social skills and
conduct
.
单选题The project for developing local industries was evaluated for its usefulness, feasibility and easiness of execution.A. assessedB. comparedC. measuredD. weighed
单选题
下面的短文后列出了7个句子,请根据短文的内容对每个句子做出判断:如果该句提的是正确信息,请选择A:如果该句提的是错误信息,请选择B:如果该句的信息文中没有提及,请选择C。
The Spanish Flu Epidemic
If you're worried about the possibility of a coming bird flu epidemic, you
can take comfort in the fact that humanity has survived a similar influenza
epidemic in the past. Starting its rounds at the end of World War I, the 1918
flu killed an estimated 50 million people. Popularly known as
the Spanish Flu, this type of influenza was far worse than your common cold.
Normally, influenza only kills those who are more vulnerable to disease, such as
newborns, the old or the sick. However, the Spanish Flu was prone to killing the
young and healthy. Often it would disable its victims in hours; within a day,
they would be dead, typically from extreme cases of pneumonia (肺炎).
The Spanish Flu was quite nasty-fast-spreading and deadly. It managed to
spread across the globe, devastating the world. Then suddenly, after two years
ravaging(蹂躏)the Earth, it disappeared as quickly as it had arisen.
Despite its nickname, the Spanish Flu did not originate in Spain. Its true
origins are unknown. Some believe it started in US forts and then spread to
Europe as America joined the war; others think that it populated the trenches of
the English and the French and eventually broke out in 1918. Regardless of where
it started, eventually a fifth of the world population suffered the disease,
with a global mortality rate(死亡率) estimated at 2.5% of the population.
Modernity was partly to blame for the quick spread of the disease. It
passed throughout the world on trade routes and shipping lines. It hit Northern
America, Europe, Asia, Africa and the South Pacific. The war did not help at
all--the movement of supplies and troops aided the spread of the Spanish Flu, as
well as the trench warfare. Imagine the speed at which a virus can spread in a
crowded ditch. The fast emergence of the virus in the trenches caused some
soldiers to believe that the Spanish Flu was a new form of biological
warfare. Luckily, the Spanish Flu simply vanished by 1920. It is
believed the flu simply ran out of fuel to
spread.
单选题We would much appreciate it if you could do us a favor.A. enjoyB. be surprised byC. be astonished byD. be thankful for
单选题The path was moist with dew.
单选题The wonders which medical workers have already brought about in the diagnosis(诊断) and treatment of disease suggest that a time may come when the physician will be able to analyze most illnesses as soon as they start, and cure them before damage results. How soon this "golden age of healing" arrives will depend greatly on how close is the collaboration between research workers in medicine and those who work in the sciences on which medicine depends. The physician has long relied on the chemist for curative drugs, and on the physicist for diagnostic instruments and healing rays. In the one field new materials and in the other new devices are being produced in increasing numbers, helping to make imminent new miracles of medicine. The X-ray and the microscope have extended the vision of the medical observer until he can see through ten inches of living flesh or into a single tissue cell, yet similar but much more powerful tools still await development. Modern electrical devices enable him to listen to faint murmurings of the life processes, or to measure feeble currents arising from heart and brain and nerve; yet electrical body measurements are but little understood. Now newly discovered atomic rays are being brought to help him destroy malignant invaders of the human system, and there is every reason to believe that even more curative rays await discovery.
单选题They {{U}}strolled{{/U}} around the lake for an hour or so.
A. ran
B. rolled
C. walked
D. raced
单选题Who Wants to Live Forever?
If your doctor could give you a drug that would let you live a healthy life for twice as long, would you take it?
The good news is that we may be drawing near to that date. Scientists have already extended the lives of flies, worms and mice in laboratories. Many now think that using genetic treatments we will soon be able to extend human life to at least 140 years.
This seems a great idea. Think of how much more time we could spend chasing our dreams, spending time with our loved ones, watching our families grow and have families of their own.
"Longer life would give us a chance to recover from our mistakes and promote long term thinking, " says Dr Gregory Stock of the University of California School of Public Health. "It would also raise productivity by adding to the year we can work. "
Longer lives don"t just affect the people who live them. They also affect society as a whole. "We have war, poverty, all sorts of issues around, and I don"t think any of them would be at all helped by having people live longer, " says US bioethicist Daniel Callahan. "The question is "What will we get as a society?" I suspect it won"t be a better society. "
It would certainly be a very different society. People are already finding it more difficult to stay married. Divorce rates are rising. What would happen to marriage in a society where people lived for 140 years? And what would happen to family life if nine or 10 generations of the same family were all alive at the same time?
Research into ageing may enable women to remain fertile for longer. And that raises the prospect of having 100-year-oldparents, or brothers and sisters born 50 years apart. We think of an elder sibling as someone who can protect us and offer help and advice. That would be hard to do if that sibling came from a completely different generation.
Working life would also he affected, especially if the retirement age was lifted. More people would stay in work for longer. That would give us the benefits of age - skill, wisdom and good judgment.
On the other hand, more people working for longer would create greater competition for jobs. It would make it more difficult for younger people to find a job. Top posts would be dominated by the same few individuals, making career progress more difficult. And how easily would a 25-year-old employee be able to communicate with a 125-year-old boss?
Young people would be a smaller part of a society in which people lived to 140. It may be that such a society would place less importance on guiding and educating young people, and more on making life comfortable for the old.
And society would feel very different if more of its members were older. There would be more wisdom, but less energy. Young people like to move about. Old people like to sit still. Young people tend to act without thinking. Old people tend to think without acting. Young people are curious and like to experience different things. Old people are less enthusiastic about change. In fact, they are less enthusiastic about everything.
The effect of anti-ageing technology is deeper than we might think. But as the science advances, we need to think about these changes now.
"If this could ever happen, then we"d better ask what kind of society we want to get, " says Daniel Callahan. "We had better not go anywhere near it until we have figure those problems out. "
单选题We have to change the public’s (perception) that money is everything.
单选题{{B}}第二篇{{/B}}
{{B}}Medical Education{{/B}} In 18th-century
colonial America, those who wanted to become physicians either learned as
personal students from established professionals or went abroad to study in the
traditional schools of London, Paris, and Edinburgh. Medicine was first taught
formally by specialists at the University of Pennsylvania, beginning in 1765,
and in 1767 at King's College (now Columbia University), the first institution
in the colonies to give the degree of doctor of medicine. Following the American
Revolution, the Columbia medical faculty (formerly of King's College) was
combined with the College of Physicians and Surgeons, chartered in 1809, which
survives as a division of Columbia University. In 1893, the
Johns Hopkins Medical School required ail applicants to have a college degree
and was the first to afford its students the opportunity to further their
training in an attached teaching hospital. The growth of medical schools
attached with established institutions of learning went together with the
development of proprietary (私营的) schools of medicine run for personal profit,
most of which had low standards and poor facilities. In 1910, Abraham Flexner,
the American education reformer, wrote Medical Education in the United States
and Canada, exposing the poor conditions of most proprietary schools.
Subsequently, the American Medical Association (AMA) and the Association of
American Medical Colleges (AAMC) laid down standards for course content,
qualifications of teachers, laboratory facilities, connection with teaching
hospitals, and licensing of medical practitioners (开业医师) that survive to this
day. By the late 1980s the U.S. and Canada had 1424-year medical
colleges recognized by the Liaison (联络) Committee on Medical Education to offer
the M.D. degree; during the 1987-88 academic year, 47,262 men and 25,686 women
entered these colleges and an estimated 11,752 men and 5,958 women were
graduated. Graduates, after a year of internship (实习期), receive licenses to
practice if they pass an examination given either by a state board or by the
National Board of Medical Examiners.
单选题
Using HIV Virus to Cure
Cancer Scientists are planning to use human
immunodeficiency (免疫缺陷) virus (HIV), one of mankind's most feared viruses, as a
carrier of genes which can fight cancer and a range of diseases that cannot be
cured. The experts say HIV has an almost perfect ability to avoid the body's
immune (免疫的) defenses, making it ideal for carrying replacement genes into
patients' bodies, according to the Observer. A team at
the California-based Salk Institute, one of the world's leading research centers
on biological sciences, has created a special new breed of HIV and has started
negotiations with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to begin clinical
gene therapy (治疗) trials this year. The first trials are expected to involve
patients suffering from cancers that cannot be cured by surgery although project
leader Professor Inder Verma said the HIV technique would have "far wider
applications". The plan remains very likely to cause
controversy since it involves making use of a virus which has caused more than
22 million deaths around the world in the past two decades. Verma said that the
idea of using HIV for a beneficial purpose was "shocking" but the fierce nature
of HIV had disappeared by having all six of the potentially deadly genes
removed. Illnesses such as various cancers are caused when a
gene in a patient's body fails to work properly. In the past two years,
breakthroughs in genetics (遗传学) have led gene therapy scientists to try and
replace the genes that do not function normally. Unfortunately,
the body's immune defenses have been known to attack the modified genes and make
them lose their effects before they can start their task and progress in the
field has been held up by the lack of a suitable carrier. The
HIV virus has the ability to escape from, and then destroy, the immune defense
cells designed to protect our bodies and this makes it attractive to scientists
as a way of secretly conveying replacement genes into patients' bodies.
单选题{{B}}第二篇{{/B}}
{{B}}
Some Things We Know
About Language{{/B}} Many things about language are a mystery, and
many will always remain so. But some things we do know. First,
we know that all human beings have a language of some sort. There is no race of
men anywhere on earth so backward that it has no language, no set of speech
sounds by which the people communicate with one another. Furthermore, in
historical times, there has never been a race of men without a
language. Second, there is no such thing as a primitive
language. There are many people whose cultures are undeveloped, who are, as we
say, uncivilized, but file languages they speak are not primitive. In all known
languages we can see complexities that must have been tens of thousands of years
in developing. This has not always been well understood; indeed,
the direct contrary has often been stated. Popular ideas of the language of the
American Indians will illustrate. Many people have supposed that the Indians
communicated in a very primitive system of noises. Study has proved this to be
nonsense. There are, or were, hundreds of American Indian languages, and all of
them turn out to be very complicated and very old. They are certainly different
from the languages that most of us are familiar with, but they are no more
primitive than English and Greek. A third thing we know about
language is that all languages are perfectly adequate. That is, each one is a
perfect means of expressing the culture of the people who speak the
language. Finally, we know that language changes. It is natural
and normal for language to change; the only languages which do not change are
the dead ones. This is easy to understand if we look backward in time. Change
goes on in all aspects of language. Grammatical features change as do speech
sounds, and changes in vocabulary are sometimes very extensive and may occur
very rapidly. Vocabulary is the least stable part of any
language.
单选题Food and Cancer
Medical experts have suspected for many years that there is a strong link between what a person eats and cancer. They say a new study provides the first evidence that vitamins could reduce a person"s chance of developing cancer. A team of Chinese and American scientists did the study. They are from American National Cancer Institute and the Cancer Institute of the Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences in Beijing. The
Journal of the National Cancer Institute
published the results of the study. About thirty thousand people between the ages of 40 to 69 took part in the study. They were from the northern central Chinese area of Linxian. Most of them took vitamins and minerals every day for five years.
Linxian was chosen because the people there have an extremely high rate of cancer of stomach and esophagus. Researchers believe that fungus and molds in local foods may be partly responsible for the high cancer rate. Researchers divided those into eight groups. Seven of the groups received different mixtures of vitamins and minerals daily.
The amounts of the vitamins and minerals were 1 to 2 times greater than what American health officials say is needed. The eighth group received sugar pills that had no effect. Those who seemed to gain the most received a mixture of a form of vitamin A called β-carotene, vitamin E and the mineral selenium. The vitamin and mineral are believed to prevent damage to cells caused by cancer-causing substances. Researchers reported a 13 percent drop in cancer rates in those who took β-carotene, vitamin E and selenium. They also found a 10 percent drop in the number of deaths caused by strokes from bursting blood vessels.
Scientists warn that it is too soon to know if the efffect would be the same among people in other countries. They note that the people in Linxian eat foods that lack necessary vitamins and minerals. Chinese officials will continue to record the health records of the people in Linxian for many years. For now officials reportedly are considering using the results of the study. They want to find a way to improve the health of people in Linxian and other small towns in China.
单选题The White House, situated in Washington D.C., is well-known as the official home of the president of the US.A. locatedB. placedC. builtD. stablished
单选题In order to improve our standard of living,we have to {{U}}accelerate{{/U}} production:
单选题The company
endured
heavy financial losses.
单选题The staff of the company are always courteous and helpful. A. efficient B. respectable C. well-informed D. respectful
单选题The exhausted mother smiled at the wail of her newborn baby.A. sadB. gloomyC. tiredD. happy
