1、75分Directions: Read the following passages carefully. Each passage is followed by some questions or unfinished sentences. For each of them there are four choices marked A, B, C, and D. Choose the best answer to each question.Governments throughout the world act on the assumption that the welfare of
2、their people depends largely on the economic strength and wealth of the community. Under modern conditions, this requires varying measures of centralized control and hence the help of specialized scientists such as economists and operational research experts. Furthermore, it is obvious that the stre
3、ngth of countrys economy is directly bound up with the efficiency of its agriculture and industry, and that this in turn rests upon the efforts of scientists and technologists of all kinds. It also means that governments are increasingly compelled to interfere in these sectors in order to step up pr
4、oduction and ensure that it is utilized (利用) to the best advantage. For example, they may encourage research in various ways, including the setting up of their own research centers; they may alter the structure of education, or interfere in order to reduce the wastage of natural resources or develop
5、 resources hitherto (到目前为止) unexploited; or they may cooperate directly in the growing number of international projects related to scientific and technological manpower of all kinds.Owing to the remarkable development in mass-communications, people everywhere are feeling new wants and are being expo
6、sed to new customs and ideas, while governments are often forced to introduce still further innovations (创新) for the reasons given above. At the same time, the normal rate of social change throughout the world is taking place at a vastly accelerated speed compared with the past. For example, in the
7、early industrialized countries of Europe, the process of industrialization with all the far-reaching changes in social patterns that followed was spread over nearly a century, whereas nowadays a developing nation may undergo the same process in a decade or so. All this has the effect of building up
8、unusual pressures and tensions within the community and consequently presents serious problems for the governments concerned. Additional social stresses may also occur because of the population explosion or problems arising from mass migration movements themselves made relatively easy nowadays by mo
9、dern means of transport. As a result of all these factors, governments are becoming increasingly dependent on biologists and social scientists for planning the appropriate programs and putting them into effect.1)What is believed to directly affect the welfare of people according to the passage?A. Va
10、rying measures of centralized controlB. Economic strength and wealth of the community.C. Economists and operational research experts.D. Help of specialized scientists.2)How can the governments do to promote the production?By interfering in different sectors that can promote science and technology to
11、 ensure smooth operationBy asking the scientists and technologists to improve efficiency.By utilizing natural resources to the best advantage.By changing the structure of education to train more scientists.3)What can be inferred from the development in mass-communications?People are constantly chang
12、ing their customs and ideas.People always want something new and remarkable to feel better.Governments are under greater pressure of bringing about new inventions.Governments are often forced to keep up with new customs and ideas.4)What has posed pressures and problems for the governments concerned
13、according to the passage?Social changes throughout the world are speeding up compared with the past.The rate of social changes in the early industrialized countries is becoming slow now.The far-reaching changes in social patterns can be spread over in a developing country within a decade.The normal
14、rate of social changes is taking place at a steady speed.5)Why are governments becoming increasingly dependent on biologists and social scientists?Because governments need to handle social stresses and problems.Because governments want to learn from early industrialized countries.Because governments
15、 have to make modern means of transport relatively easy.Because governments need them for the industrialization of their own countries.参考答案:1)B 2)A 3)C 4) 5)解析:(无) 收起解析Why do smokers tend to weigh less than nonsmokers and gain weight when they give up the habit?Contrary to “common knowledge”, nonsmo
16、kers do not generally eat more than smokers, nor do they exercise less, studies find. Research performed on smokers at rest indicates that nicotine (尼古丁) itself can increase basal metabolic (新陈代谢的) rates, meaning smokers burn more energy than nonsmokers during periods of inactivity. But surveys sugg
17、est most smokers smoke not while completely at rest, but while performing light activities such as desk work that can increase metabolic rates by two or three times. Unless nicotines metabolic effects increase proportionally with metabolic rates, its influence on weight might be insignificant.Now a
18、study shows that nicotines effects on body-fuel consumption indeed increase proportionally with increases in activity. “These results indicate that the metabolic effect of nicotine may play a greater part in accounting for body-weight differences between smokers and nonsmokers than was previously be
19、lieved,” says Kenneth A. Perkins and his colleagues at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine.The researchers gave a nicotine nose spray to individuals performing light work in this case riding an exercise bicycle modified to allow easy riding while subjects remain seated in a comfortable a
20、rmchair. The activity raised resting metabolic rates two to three times.By analyzing air breathed out, the researchers calculated energy consumption in the armchair bicyclists before and after giving the nose spray and compared the relative changes with subjects in the control group given placebo (试
21、验药物用的)无效对照剂) nose sprays. Relative to their baseline bicycle expenditures, individuals in the nicotine group expended considerably more energy than did those in control group while doing the same amount of work. With nicotine, Perkins says, “Its as if the body is becoming much less efficient in usin
22、g its stored energy.”While the results may seem discouraging to smokers whod like to quit without gaining weight, Perkins notes that walking an extra mile a day should make up for the difference in metabolic efficiency. And he says smokers would have to gain “well more than 50 pounds” to counterbala
23、nce the health risks of continued smoking.6)What might “common knowledge” say about smokers and nonsmokers?Smokers eat more and exercise less than nonsmokers.Smokers eat less and exercise more than nonsmokers.Smokers eat more and exercise more than nonsmokers.Smokers eat less and exercise less than
24、nonsmokers.7)When might nicotine influence smokers weight significantly?While smokers are at rest.While smokers are exercising.When Nicotines metabolic effects and metabolic rates increase at the same rate.When Nicotines metabolic effects increase proportionally with the amount of light activities.8
25、)The word “subjects” in the fourth paragraph means .researchersaddicted smokerspeople under medical treatmentpeople undergoing an experiment9)What have the researchers found out in their study?People in the nicotine group consumed more energy.People in the control group breathed out more air.People
26、without nicotine nose spray are becoming much less efficient in using energy.People in the armchair expended more energy than people doing desk work.10)Why do the study results seem discouraging to some smokers according to the passage?Because they want to keep fit without having to quit smoking.Bec
27、ause they want to quit smoking and still keep fit.Because they want to gain weight to tackle the health risks of continued smoking.Because they want to walking an extra mile a day to lose some weight.6) 7) 8)D 9) 10)According to the new school of scientists, technology is an overlooked force in expa
28、nding the horizons of scientific knowledge. Science moves forward, they say, not so much through the insights of great men of genius as because of more ordinary things like improved techniques and tools. In short, a leader of the new school contends (声称), the scientific revolution, as we call it, wa
29、s largely the improvement and invention and use of a series of instruments that expanded the reach of science in innumerable (无数的) directions.Over the years, tools and technology themselves as a source of fundamental innovation (创新) have largely been ignored by historians and philosophers of science
30、. The modern school that hails technology argues that such masters as Galileo, Newton, Maxwell, Einstein, and inventors such as Edison attached great importance to, and derived great benefit from, craft information and technological devices of different kinds that were usable in scientific experimen
31、ts.The core of the argument of a technology-yes, genius-no advocate was an analysis of Galileos role at the start of the scientific revolution. The wisdom of the day was derived from Ptolemy, an astronomer of the second century, whose elaborate system of the sky put Earth at the center of all heavenly motions. Galileos greatest glory was that in 1609 he was the first person to turn the newly invented telescope on the heavens to prove that the planets revolve around the sun rather th
copyright@ 2008-2022 冰豆网网站版权所有
经营许可证编号:鄂ICP备2022015515号-1