您的位置:成都教育网首页 > 外语 > 英语 > 2008年职称英语阅读理解习题(14)

2008年职称英语阅读理解习题(14)

2008-04-20 00:42:09 作者:成都教育网 来源: 互联网

Ulcers

Even though ulcers a ear to run in families, lifestyle plays more of role than genetic factors in causing the illne , according to a report in the April 13th Journal of Internal Medicine. In particular, smoking and stre  in men and the regular use of pain releasing medicines in women were linked with an increased risk of developing an ulcer.

Overall, 61% of ulcer risk a ears to be due to environmental factors, such as smoking, and the remaining 39% is due to genes according to Dr. Ismo Raiha of the University of Turky and colleagues at the University of Helsinki, Finland. Some researchers had suggested that families may  read Helicobacteria pylori, the bacteria that can cause ulcers. However, the new study suggests this is unlikely, according to the report.

Raiha and colleagues studied data from more than 13,000 pairs of twi  “to examine the roles of genetic and environmental factors in the origin of peptic ulcer disease,” they explain. Both twi  were more likely to develop an ulcer if the pair were genetically the same as compared with a pair of fraternal twi , suggesting that there must be some genetic susceptibility to ulcer development.

However, the risk was no greater in twi  living together compared with twi  living apart, suggesting that shared exposure to H. pylori was not to blame. “Environmental effects were not due to factors shared by family members, and they were related to smoking and stre  in men and the use of analgesics in women,” the authors wrote. “The minor effects of shared environment to disease liability do not su ort the concept that the grouping of risk factors, such as H. pylori infection, would explain the genetic factor of peptic ulcer disease,” they concluded.

1. According to the pa age, which of the following is a very likely cause of ulcer in men?
A. Smoking and stre .
B. Drinking and smoking.
C. Genes and children.
D. Use of a certain medicine.

2. What factors contribute to over half the ulcers?
A. Hereditary factors.
B. Economic factors.
C. Environmental factors.
D. Genetic factors.

3. In relation to ulcers, experts study twi  in order to examine
A. the roles of genetic factors.
B. the roles of environmental factors.
C. the roles of both genetic and environmental factors.
D. the roles of brotherhood.

4. What does “environmental effects” in the fourth paragraph refer to?
A. A clean environment with no smoke and dust surrounding the living area.
B. Smoking and stre  in men and use of pain-killing medicine in Women.
C. Factors shared by family members such as genes and the food they eat.
D. Shared exposure to H. pylori infection in the unclean environment.

5. The pa age argues that
A. ulcers are related to genes.
B. ulcers are related to lifestyle.
C. ulcers a ear in men and women.
D. ulcers are caused by pylori infection.

How Animals Keep Warm

Man has invented ways to keep warm, but how do animals defend themselves? They ca ot reason in the se e that man can, but nature has taken care of the animal kingdom by providing animals with  ecial i tincts. One of these i tincts is known as hibernation.

“Sleeping like a dormouse” is not only a common saying but is a reality. When winter comes, the dormouse and other hibernating animals have reached a well-nourished state. They eat very well in warmer days laying down fat in the ti ues of their bodies and during hibernation this kee  them alive. Safe in their nests, or burrows, they sleep soundly until the warmth of  ring arrives.

Bats, tortoises,  akes, frogs, even i ects like butterflies, hibernate more or le  completely. Some, like the squirrels, sleep during coldest weather but are roused by a warm  ell. During hibernation, the temperature of an animal's body dro  drastically. Breathing and heart-beats almost cease.

Another i tinctive method of avoiding inte e cold is to escape by mea  of migration. Wild swa , seagulls, swallows and cuckoos are a few of the very many kinds of birds which fly thousands of miles, twice a year, to avoid cold. Many animals, e ecially those of the Arctic regio , have summer and winter quarters. The Arctic deer of North America, as well as the reindeer of Europe, move southward towards the forests when winter a roaches. They return to the northern area when the warmth of  ring begi  to be se ed.

There are animals which do not attempt to leave at the first sign of winter cold. Their i tinctive mea  of defence is to dig out a deep burrow, made soft and warm by padding out with straw, leaves, mo  and fur. In it they have a “secret place” containing food which they hope will last the winter through! Animals which fall into this cla  include the Arctic fox, the ra it and the ermine, and the little field-mice.

1. How does the dormouse defend itself agai t cold in winter?
A. It moves about to keep warm.
B. It grows thicker fur.
C. It slee  continuously.
D. It goes to warmer areas.

2. What kee  animals alive during hibernation?
A. The fat stored in their bodies.
B. Their thick fur.
C. Their warm burrows.
D. Their deep sleep.

3. During hibernation, animals breathe
A. normally.
B. at a slower rate.
C. at a faster rate.
D. irregularly

4. According to the pa age, what is “migration” ?
A. Moving from one place to another with the season.
B. Living in burrows in winter.
C. Travelling in the winter months.
D. Leaving one's own country for another.

5. How do ermines survive in winter?
A. They leave their cosy burrows and migrate to warmer lands.
B. They sleep soundly i ide their burrows in winter.
C. They dig out burrows and store them with enough food.
D. They stay in their burrows and live on the food stored there.

Shrinking Water Su ly Poses Threat to Peace

“Water, which is e ential for life, costs nothing. On the other hand, diamonds, which are e ential for nothing, cost a lot.” Unfortunately, the world has changed co iderably since an 18th century economist made this remark.

What was true over 200 years ago is certainly no longer true now. In a number of countries people pay as much for water in their homes as they do for electricity.

Like health, we ignore water when we have it-unle  there are floods, of course. Once there is a threat to our water su ly, however, water can quickly become the only thing that matters. We know only too well that, without water, there can be no life.

The situation is now becoming so bad that environmentalists feel it many be nece ary to shock the world into saving water in a similar way to the shock caused by the oil crises in the 1970's.

At that time, the oil crisis became such a serious threat to the lives of everyone in the developed countries that it made people co cious of the importance of saving oil and provided powerful encouragement for governments to look for other forms of energy.

The result undoubtedly was of major benefit to energy co ervation.

There is now no longer an unlimited su ly of fresh water. About 97 per cent of the planet's water is seawater. Another 2 percent is locked in iceca  and glaciers. There are also reserves of fresh water under the earth's surface but these are too deep for us to use economically.

Unfortunately, competition is growing fiercely for what little water is available. It may be a matter of time before that competition becomes a conflict.

To make matters worse, the world's population is increasing so rapidly that it is expected to grow to about 8 billion in 30 years-an increase of 60 per cent.

Moreover, in many developed countries throughout the world, flush lavatories and washing machines mean the average person now uses 300 litres of water a day compared with 50 at the begi ing of the century.

At the other extreme, according to the World Health Organization, one quarter of the world's present population still lacks safe drinking water and proper sanitation. Most live in the southern hemi here, where su lies of fresh water are put in jeopardy through dirty industrial practices, poor irrigation and erosion.

The social stability of the world is no longer threatened by global wars, the Cold War, . . . However, the su ly of water could soon become the chief threat to such stability. There is already evidence of this ha ening, e ecially in Africa.

Recently the Egyptian Government threatened to destroy and dams built on the Nile if they co idered the dams would  affect their su ly of fresh water.

What is required immediately is an awarene  of the true value of water and the formation of se ible water co ervation strategies.

It is also of vital importance to have a co e us on how best to use shared water resources for the benefit of all the countries in the world as well as an examination of the best methods for the distribution of the world's water.

1. According to the pa age, which of the following statements is true?
A. People now pay as much for water as they did 200 years ago.
B. People now pay as little for water as they did 200 years ago.
C. Water now costs as much as it used to.
D. Water now has become more expe ive than it was.

2. Which of the following is NOT the author's purpose of mentioning the oil crises in the 1970's?
A. To prove that water is as expe ive as oil.
B. To warn the world of a po ible water su ly crisis.
C. To call people's attention to the importance of energy co ervation.
D. To shock the people of the world into saving water.

3. Which of the following is NOT mentioned in the pa age as a factor that is making the water situation in the world more and more severe?
A. The increase of population.
B. The use of washing machines.
C. The use of flush lavatories.
D. The popularity of swimming pools.

4. Which of the following is cited by the author as the place where the su ly of water is most likely to threaten social stability?
A. Africa.
B. The southern hemi here.
C. Egypt.
D. All the developed countries.

5. To solve the water su ly problem the world today faces, the author suggests at the end of the article doing all the following except
A. calling people's attention to the true value of water.
B. blowing up dams that affect the su ly of fresh water.
C. adopting sound water co ervation policies.
D. finding the best way to distribute the world's water.

218/>

点击查看更多关于 the of 的主题

2008年职称英语阅读理解习题(14)

在百度搜索:2008年职称英语阅读理解习题(14)

关于“农村中小学远程教育”的资讯

    原文:2008年职称英语阅读理解习题(14)

    关于“2008年职称英语阅读理解习题(14)”成都教育网免责声明:

    本网站所载之全部信息(包括但不限于:新闻、公告、评论、预测、图表、论文等),仅供网友 参考
    1、 凡本网注明 “来源:XXX(非成都教育网)” 的作品,均转载自其它媒体,转载目的在于传递更 多信息,并不代表本网赞同其观点和对其真实性负责。
    2、 如因作品内容、版权和其它问题需要同本网联系的,请在30日内进行。





    ·









    收藏本文设为主页会员中心
    设为主页 | 收藏本文 | 复制地址 | 保存本文 | 打印本页 | 关闭窗口