单选题Don' t {{U}}fling{{/U}} your clothes on the floor, hang them up.
单选题I am very sorry for ringing you late last night. A. simply B. terribly C. eagerly D. largely
单选题The
caliber
of F. Scott Fitz gerald"s writing was reassessed by literary critics in the 1950"s.
单选题The book raised a storm of Ucontroversy/U.
单选题Walking Barefoot Can Help Prevent Some Injuries
Walking barefoot helps to improve balance, posture and prevent common foot injuries, according to an American researcher. Patrick McKeon, a professor at Ithaca College"s School of Health Sciences in New York, says the more people go barefoot at home, in the office or outside, the healthier their feet will be.
He believes the small, often overlooked muscles in the foot play a vital but underestimated role in movement and stability, similar to the core muscles in the abdomen.
The researcher explained their importance by describing the cycle of feedback between the large "extrinsic" (外在的) muscles in the legs and feet, the smaller "intrinsic" (内部的) muscles in the feet, and the neural connections that send information from them to the brain. When this cycle is broken, it can lead to overuse injuries that most athletes are familiar with.
Shoes can also have a negative effect on this cycle, McKeon explained. "When you put a big sole underneath, you put a big dampening effect (阻尼效应) on that information. There"s a missing link that connects the body with its environment."
Without the information provided by the small muscles in the foot, the larger muscles over-compensate and over-exert beyond the point of their natural ability to maintain and repair themselves. And when these muscles are no longer able to absorb the forces of activity, the forces are transferred to the tendons (肌腱), bones and ligaments (韧带), resulting in an increased risk of injury.
McKeon says the only way of reintroducing this link and reactivating the cycle is to take off our shoes and strengthen the muscles in our feet by walking barefoot.
单选题Her father was a quiet man with
graceful
manners.
单选题Let's arrange the provisional meeting for next Wednesday, even though we may have to change it.A. tentativeB. practicalC. localD. commercial
单选题The word “thrift ”in paragraph 1 could be best replaced by
单选题How can we
reduce
the risk of cancer?
单选题It took us a long time to
mend
the house.
单选题In most places, the edges of the continents slope gradually before making a sharp drop to the ocean floor.A. randomB. suddenC. dangerousD. brief
单选题
Valuing Childhood The
value of childhood is easily blurred (模糊) in today's world. Consider some recent
developments, the child-murders in the Jonesboro, Ark, schoolyard shooting case
were convicted and sentenced. Two boys, 7 and 8, were charged in the murder of
an 11-year-old girl in Chicago. Children who commit horrible
crimes appear to act of their own will. Yet, as legal proceedings in Jonesboro
showed, the one boy who was "to address the court couldn't begin to explain his
acts, though he tried to apologize. There may have been a motive youthful
jealousy and resentment. But a deeper question remains. Why did these boys and
others in similar trouble apparently lack any inner, moral restraint
(束缚)? That question echoes for the accused in Chicago, young as
they are. They wanted the girl's bicycle, a selfish impulse (冲动) common enough
among kids. Redemption (拯救) is a practical necessity. How can
value be restored to young lives distorted (扭曲) by acts of violence? The boys in
Jonesboro and in Chicago will be confined in institutions for a relatively short
time. Despite horror at what was done children are not—cannot be dealt with as
adults, not if a people wants to consider itself civilized. That's why
politicians' cries for adult treatment of youthful criminals ultimately miss the
point. But the moral void (真空) that invites violence has many
sources. Family instability (不稳定) contributes. So does economic stress. That
void, however, can be filled. The work starts with parents, who have to ask
themselves whether they're doing enough to give their children a firm sense of
right and wrong. Are they really monitoring their activities and their
developing processes of thought? Schools, too, have a role in
building character. So do youth organizations. So do law enforcement agencies,
which can do more to inform the young about laws, their meaning. And their
observance(遵守).
单选题The agenda will be choosen through an ongoing process of consultations with officials of governments and international organizations.A. continuingB. easygoingC. outgoingD. stopping
单选题Dating from around A. D. 1000, the largest mound surviving from the Mississippian
culture
was one hundred feet high and had a base of nearly fifteen acres.
单选题Stop {{U}}clambering{{/U}} over my sister's furniture.
单选题IQ-gene In the angry debate over how much of IQ comes from the genes that children inherit from parents and how much comes from experiences, one little fact gets overlooked: no one has identified any genes (other than those that cause retardation) that affect intelligence. So researchers led by Robert Plomin of London's Institute of Psychiatry decided to look for some. They figured that if you want to find a "smart gene," you should look in smart kids. They therefore examined the DNA of students like those who are so bright that they take college entrance exams four years early — and still score at Princeton-caliber levels. The scientists found what they sought. "We have, " says Plomin, "the first specific gene ever associated with general intelligence. " Plomin's colleagues drew blood from two groups of 51 children each. all 6 to 15 years old and living in six counties around Cleveland. In one group, the average IQ is 103. All the children are white. Isolating the blood cells, the researchers then examined each child's chromosome 6. Of the 37 landmarks on chromosome 6 that the researchers looked for, one jumped out: a form of gene called IGF2R occurred in twice as many children in the high-IQ group as in the average group — 32 percent versus 16 percent. The study, in the May issue of the journal Psychological Science, concludes that it is this form of the IGF2R gene that contributes to intelligence. Some geneticists see major problems with the IQ-gene study. One is the possibility that Plomin's group fell for "chopsticks fallacy". Geneticists might think they've found a gene for chopsticks flexibility, but all they've really found is a gene more common in Asians than, say, Africans. Similarly, Plomin's IQ gene might simply be one that is more common in groups that emphasize academic achievement. "What is the gene that they've found reflects ethnicity?" asks geneticist Andrew Feinberg of Johns Hopkins University. "That alone might explain the link to intelligence, since IQ tests are known for being culturally sensitive and affected by a child's environment. " And Neil Risch of Standford University points out that if you look for 37 genes on a chromosome, as the researchers did, and find that one is more common in smarter kids, that might reflect pure chance rather than a causal link between the gene and intelligence. Warns Feinberg: "I would take these findings with a whole box of salt. /
单选题Once Daily Pill Could Simplify HIV Treatment
Bristol-Myers Squibb and Gilead Sciences have combined many HIV drugs into a single pill. Sometimes the best medicine is more than one kind of medicine. Malaria, tuberculosis and HIV/AIDS,
1
, are all treated with combinations of drugs. But that can mean a lot of pill to take. It would be
2
drug companies combined all the medicines into a single pill, taken just once a day.
Now, two companies say they have done that for people just
3
treatment for HIV, the virus that causes AIDS. The companies are Bristol-Myers Squibb and Gilead Science. They have
4
a single pill that combines three drugs currently on the market. Bristol-Myers Squibb sells one of them
5
the name of Sustiva. Gilead combined the
6
, Emtriva and Viread, into a single pill in two thousand four.
Combining drugs involves more than
7
issues. It also involves issues of competition
8
the drugs are made by different companies. The new once-daily pill is the result of
9
is described as the first joint venture agreement of its kind in the treatment of HIV. In January the New England Journal of Medicine published a study of the new pill. Researcher compared its
10
to that of the widely used combination of Sustiva and Combivir. Combivir
11
two drugs, AZT and 3TC. The researchers say that after one year of treatment, the new pill sup- pressed HIV levels in more patients and with fewer
12
effects. Gilead paid for the study. Professor Joel Gallant at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine in Baltimore, Maryland, led the research. He is a paid adviser to Gilead and Bristol-Meyers Squibb as well as the maker of Combivir, Glaxo Smith Kline.
Glaxo Smith Kline reacted
13
the findings by saying that a single study is of limited value. It says the effectiveness of Combivir has been shown in each of more than fifty studies. The price of the new once-daily pill has not been announced. But Gilead and Bristol-Myers Squibb say they will provide it at reduced cost to developing countries. They plan in the next few months to ask the United States Food and Drug Administration to approve the new pill.
There are limits to who could take it
14
the different drugs it contains. For example,
15
women are told not to take Sustiva because of the risk of birth disorders. Experts say more than forty million people around the world are living with HIV.
单选题The teacher posted the schedule of classes. A. timetable B. plan C. list D. index
单选题He was rather
vague
about the reasons why he never finished school.
单选题Can we
resume
the meeting?