-
Vessels wishing to communicate with the Port Health Officer should do()on VHF Channel 14.
A . so
B . that
C . this
D . same
-
The novel The Joy Luck Club focuses on Chinese American immigrant families in San Francisco who start a club known as The Joy Luck Club, playing the Chinese game of while feasting on a variety of foods.
-
—Are these your sheep ?—No. Mine _____ on grass at the foot of the hill.
-
Seeing the big crowd coming towards him, he started to run down the hill, but ______ and went down on his hands and knees in the melting snow.
-
Which equipment cannot be found at the health club:
-
There is a fully ________ health center on the ground floor of the main office building.
-
Every year on the last weekend in August, around 1.5 million people go to west London to take part in and join one of the ______ () street parties in Europe, Notting Hill Carnival.
-
" ()people have already joined our health club, and we haven’t started advertising yet."
A. lot
B.Few
C. Too few
D. A few
-
听力原文:M: The Students' English Club is having a party on Saturday night. Would you like to come?
W: I would like to, but I have to work at a restaurant on the weekend.
Why does the woman refuse to go the party?
A.Because she has got an appointment.
B.Because she doesn't want to.
C.Because she has to work.
D.Because she wants to eat in a new restaurant.
-
Have you ever read Randolph&39;s work? It is ex______ concerned with the effects of pollution on health.
-
She reached the top the hill and stopped______on a big rock by the side of the path.
A.to have rested
B.resting
C.to rest
D.rest
-
What can people save on the membership fee when joining the Club?
A.By buying a lot of stamps.
B.By doing some voluntary work for the Club.
C.By joining as a group.
D.By becoming a member for more than two years.
-
听力原文:W: What's the reason for the warning on every pack of cigarettes? I mean the note that says smoking is dangerous to health. Why does the manufacturer say so?
M: It's the law here. They have to print it.
Q: What are they talking about?
(14)
A.People must give up cigarettes.
B.A health warning on cigarette packs.
C.The law doesn't allow people to smoke.
D.Smoking can cause lung cancer.
-
The lady sitting on Mr. Brown's left finally succeeded in joining the club in the spring of this year when______
A.her husband died
B.the ladies in the club began to like her
C.she got married
D.she pretended to be merry
-
The author makes clear both the effects of iron deficiency on people’s health and the
是
否
-
There is an interesting old()on top of the hill.
A.ruin
B.ruins
C.damage
D.destroy
-
The more a country spends on health care, the better care its people enjoy.
A.Right
B.Wrong
C.Not mentioned
-
Throughout the course of treatment, attention _____on the general physical health.
A.A.focused
B.B.was focused
C.C.attracted
D.D.was attracted
-
The house was situated on a hill over the village.
A.above the village
B.beyond the village
C.under the village
D.within the village
-
Mind and body are two parts of a complex organism controlled by the nervous system, which acts on information received from the senses. The way a person perceives and reacts depends on his mood, his state of health, his diet, his body temperature and his level of consciousness.
2. There is considerable evidence that every thought or emotion has some related physical effect, and that every change within the nervous system should have some psychological effect. Although the precise nature of these correlations is not always known, the view that body and mind are constantly interacting in some way is now accepted by most psychologists.
3. The relationship between mind and body is particularly apparent in emotional states, especially those of fear and anger. When a person is in the grip of a powerful emotion his body undergoes changes, just as it does when he is asleep, ill or under the influence of drugs or alcohol. Most people are familiar with such sensations as a dry mouth when they are nervous, or a racing heart when they are afraid or excited. Such physical changes can be measured, for instance, by recording pulse rate and breathing, or by measuring the dilation of the pupils of the eyes.
4. a particularly sensitive measure of bodily change during periods of emotion is the galvanic skin response(GSR). This is used in the instrument known as the lie detector. The GSR depends on the fact that some mental activity produces bodily changes, such as sweating, which affect the skin's resistance to electricity. To measure GSR, electrodes are placed on the palm and on the back of the hand, and a weak current is passed between the electrodes. Changes in the current are recorded in an amplified form, often by means of an automatically controlled pen on moving paper. Other recordings, for instance of pulse, blood pressure and breathing, can be made simultaneously, by an instrument called a polygraph.
5. The galvanic skin response method has proved a very efficient indicator of general psychological arousal. Even slight embarrassment will cause a defection of the recording pen.
A. Every thought or emotion has some related physical effect.
B. GSR is a measure of bodily change during periods of emotion.
C. GSR is very efficient in indicating people's emotion.
D. GSR is very expensive.
E. GSR is used to judging prisoners.
F. Mind and body has an apparent relationship.
Para 2 ______.
-
For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write a composition on the topic Wealth and Health. You should write at least 150 words and you should base your composition on the outline (given in Chinese) below:
1.有人认为财富比健康重要;
2. 也有人认为健康比财富重要;
3. 我的观点是:
-
Directions: For this part, you are to write a composition of no less than 100 words on “、Health and Sports”. Please write it on the ANSWER SHEET. The following are the key words for reference: Health, important, healthy, enjoy, sports, exercise, increase, appetite, mind, sound, relaxed, and indulge.
-
If national health insurance would not cure the problems of the American healthcare system, what, then, is responsible for them? Suspicion falls heavily on hospitals, which make up the largest component of the system. In 1988 hospitals accounted for 39% of all health expenditures-more than doctor, nursing homes, drugs, and home health care combined.
Although U.S. hospitals provide outstanding research and frequently excellent care, they also exhibit the classic attributes of insufficient organizations: increasing costs and decreasing use. The average cost of a hospital stay in 1987—$3,850—was more than double the 1980 cost. A careful government analysis published in 1987 revealed the inflation of hospital costs, over and above general price inflation, as a major factor in their growth, even after allowances were made for increases in the population and in intensity of care. While the rate of increase for hospital costs was 2796 greater than that for all medical care and 163% greater than that for all other goods and services, demand for hospital services fell by 34%. But hospitals seemed oblivious of the decline: during this period the number of hospital beds shrank only by about 396, and the number of full-time employees grew by more than 240,000.
After yet another unexpectedly high hospital-cost increase last year, one puzzled government analyst asked: "Where's the money going?" Much of the increase in hospital costs—amounting to $180 billion from 1965 to 1987—went to duplicating medical technology available in nearby hospitals and maintaining excess beds. Modern Healthcare, a leading journal in the field, recently noted that "anecdotes of hospitals' unnecessary spending on technology abound". Medical technology is very expensive. An operating room outfitted to perform. open-heart surgery costs hundreds of thousands of dollars. From 1982 to 1989 the number of hospitals with open-heart-surgery facilities grew by 33%, and the most rapid growth occurred among smaller and moderate-sized hospitals. This growth was worrisome for reasons of both costs and quality. Underused technology almost inevitably decreases quality of care. In medicine, as in everything else, practice makes perfect. For example, most of the hospitals with the lowest mortality rates for coronary-bypass surgery perform. at least fifty to a hundred such procedures annually, and in some cases many more; the majority of those with the highest mortality rates perform. fewer than fifty a year.
According to the passage, the American health-care system______.
A.is working smoothly
B.is the best system in the world
C.is not working efficiently
D.in on the point of collapses
-
3、计算机对语言进行处理,首先要解决的是语言的歧义性问题,给出句子“I saw the man on the hill with the telescope”,不可能解释为 ()
A.I with the telescope
B.the man with the telescope
C.the hill with the telescope
D.I on the hill