It’s 2009. You feel sick, so you go to the doctor. She checks your fever, looks
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It’s 2009. You feel sick, so you go to the doctor. She checks your fever, looks at your throat, and asks what you’ve been thinking about lately. When you leave,she gives you some medicine, but also a list of thinking skills that you are supposed to practice daily. She says that the way you think is causing some of your illness. Doctors and other scientists who study the human mind and try to explain why people behave in the way that do, called psychologists, are starting to believe it. You know that your brain is connected to every part of your body through your nervous system(神经系统). Now scientists have proved that how you think and feel can have an influence on the health of your body. Stress(压力,紧张) is caused whenever there is a problem or a change in your life. Of course, everybody has stress more or less; nobody’s life is perfect. In fact, stress is necessary. Without stress, we would never learn anything or grow or change. We would probably be bored to death. But too much stress can hurt you. It can weaken your body’s protection so that you are more likely to catch diseases. It can even make you more likely to have an accident. When you feel stress, your brain sends a message to your body to produce a chemical called adrenaline(肾上腺素). Adrenaline speeds up your breathing and your heartbeat. Today you have a different kind of stress. Problems like endless homework or troubles with your family are the kind of things you can’t fight or run away from, so you don’t use up all that adrenaline. It just stays bottled up inside you, and that’s what can do something bad to you. What can you do about stress? First, you can try to find ways to change things so you aren’t under so much stress. You can set up a plan to finish homework or go to a doctor or a psychologist to try to work things out with your family or your friends. But sometimes you can’t change a stressful situation. Sometimes you don’t even want to. A big change might be a good change, but it will still be stressful. The link(关联) between your body and brain works in two ways. Your body can help your mind deal with stress. If you are under stress, you need to take especially good care of your body. It’s important to get enough sleep and eat nutritious meals. Some people take a vitamin-mineral pill every day. Another thing that you can do is daily exercise. If you go walking or do aerobic(需氧的) dancing or work out at the gym, you give your body a chance to burn up some of that adrenaline. Of course, a person who isn’t used to much physical activity should start slowly. Anyone with a continuing physical problem should check with a doctor before staring any exercise programs. 1. A psychologist is a person who may help you with your ______. A. illness and abilities B. thoughts and behaviour C. mind and nervous system D. physical activity and daily exercise 2. Which of the following is TRUE according to the passage? A. You shouldn’t go to the gym if you are under stress. B. One can do his homework to burn up adrenaline. C. Diseases and accidents are caused by stress. D. Everyone needs stress to improve himself. 3. From the last sentence of Paragraph 5 we can infer that ________. A. it’s difficult to change a stressful situation B. it’s not stressful when a good change takes place C. a big change will cause another stressful situation D. a stressful situation can’t be changed without any effort 4. What is probably the best title for this passage? A. The body-Brain Link B. The Causes of Stress C. The Advice on Health D. The Nervous System |
答案
小题1:B 小题2:D 小题3:C 小题4:A |
解析
略 |
举一反三
English is the most widely used language in the history of our planet. One in every seven human beings can speak it. More than half of the world’s books and three quarters of international mail are in English. Of all languages, English has the largest vocabulary — perhaps as many as two million words. However, let’s face it: English is a crazy language. There is no egg in an eggplant, neither pine nor apple in a pineapple and no ham in a hamburger. Sweet-meats are candy, while sweetbreads, which aren’t sweet, are meat. We take English for granted. But when we explore its paradoxes (探讨它的矛盾), we find that quicksand can work slowly, boxing rings are square, public bathrooms have no baths in them. And why is it that a writer writes, but fingers don’t fing, grocers don’t groce, and hammers don’t ham? If the plural of tooth is teeth, shouldn’t the plural of booth be beeth? One goose, two geese — so one moose, two meese? How can a slim chance and a fat chance be the same, while a wise man and a wise guy are opposites? How can overlook and oversee be opposites, while quite a lot and quite a few are alike? How can the weather be hot as hell one day and cold as hell the next? English was invented by people, not computers, and it reflects (反映) the creativity of human beings. That’s why, when stars are out, they are visible (能看见的); but when the lights are out, they are invisible. And why, when I wind up my watch, I start it; but when I wind up this essay, I end it. 1. According to the passage ______. A. sweet-meats and sweetbreads are different things B. there should be egg in an eggplant C. pineapples are the apples on the pine tree D. boxing rings should be round 2. Which of the following is the correct plural? A. Beeth. B. Geese. C. Meese. D. Tooth. 3. Which of the following includes two items which have the similar meaning? A. A wise man and a wise guy. B. Overlook and oversee. C. Quite a lot and quite a few. D. Hot as hell and cold as hell. 4. The underlined words “wind up” in the last paragraph probably mean “______”. A. blow B. roll up C. get hurt D. finish 5. Through the many paradoxes in the English language, the writer wants to show that human beings are ______. A. clever B. crazy C. lazy D. dull |
第一节完形填空 Japanese high school students do not drive cars. Many either walk or ride bicycles if distance is not too great. In other cases, a lot of students must 1 public buses and trains, often changing lines several times in order to reach their 2 . it is common for students to 3 two or more hours each day on public transportation. After junior high school, students attend schools based on standardized high school entrance examination scores. As a result some students travel a great distance to 4 the school. The school day begins at 8:30, so students may leave home as early as 6:30. While some students sleep or study during their long travel, public transportation also 5 a chance for socializing with peers. Students 6 to school is regulated by school policies. There policies may prohibit 7 activities in public-chewing gum, consuming snacks, 8 books while walking-anything that might reflect 9 on the reputation of the school. Each school has a unique uniform that makes its students easily identifiable to the public. School policies often require students to 10 on buses and trains, leaving seats open for other passengers in order to show his thoughtfulness(关怀;体贴) towards others. ( ) 1. A. go B .have C. take D. get ( ) 2. A. homes B. destinations C. schools D. classrooms ( ) 3. A. take B. cost C. spend D .have ( ) 4. A. go B. leave C. attend D .pass ( ) 5. A. gives B. offers C. sends D .takes ( ) 6. A. on the way B. in the way C .by the way D. at the way ( ) 7. A. sure B. certain C. special D. probable ( ) 8. A. carrying B. taking C. holding D .reading ( ) 9. A. worse B. well C. badly D. truly ( ) 10. A. silence B. sit C. seat D. stand |
第一节 完形填空 People joke that no one in Los Angeles reads; everyone watches TV, rents DVDs, or goes to the movies. The most popular reading material is comic books, movie magazines, and TV guides. City 21 has only 10 percent of the traffic that car washes have. But how do you explain the following? An annual book festival in west Los Angeles is “22 ”,year after year. People wait half an hour for a parking space to become 23 . This outdoor festival, 24 by a newspaper, occurs every April for one weekend. This year’s attendance was about 145,000. There were about 90 talks given by authors, with an 25 question period following each talk. Book lovers were also able to collect some of the signatures of their favourite authors. A food store sold all kinds of popular foods. 26 a$7 parking fee, the festival was free. Even so, some people 27 the food store prices by 28 taking in their own sandwiches and drinks. The idea for the festival occurred years ago, but nobody knew if it would succeed. 29 book festivals were already popular in other US cities, would Los Angeles people welcome one?“Los Angeles people are very 30 ,”said one of the festival founders. 1. A. cinemas B. libraries C. supermarkets D. parkings 2. A. broken out B. carried out C. sold out D. run out 3. A. possible B. available C. acceptable D. useful 4. A. bought B. discovered C. taken D. sponsored 5. A. expert B. accurate C. audience D. optimistic 6. A. Except for B. Consisting of C. Rather than D. Along with 7. A. avoided B. increased C. asked D. bargained 8. A. openly B. secretly C. slowly D. naturally 9. A. As if B. When C. Even that D. Although 10. A. confident B. unexpected C. friendly D. unpredictable |
第一节:完形填空 It’s not just an American phenomenon: 1 the globe, single-parent homes are on the 2 . Numbers for one-parent families increased from England to Australia during the 1990s, mirroring demographic (人口统计学的) changes reflected in the US census. Just as in America, those changes 3 new questions about how 4 government should be in helping single-parent families, which often are less well-off 5 than those led by a married mom and dad. Should single parents be afforded tax breaks to help pay for child 6 ? Should employers be monitored to make 7 flexible work hours are offered? Annie Oliver, a 32-year-old single mother from Bristol, England, thinks so. “You wouldn’t believe 8 becoming a single parent suddenly made me a second-class 9 ,” said Oliver, who struggles to 10 a full-time job and give the extra care her disabled son needs. ( ) 1. A. onB. in C. across D. through ( ) 2. A. rise B. way C. fall D. decrease ( ) 3. A. asked B. answered C. avoided D. raised ( ) 4.A. included B. concludedC. involved D. intended ( ) 5. A. physically B. financially C. mentally D. spiritually ( ) 6. A. care B. growth C. happiness D. concern ( ) 7. A. clear B. known C. out D. sure ( ) 8. A. when B. whatC. how D. why ( ) 9. A. employee B. citizen C. partner D. mother ( ) 10. A. keep B. look for C. find D. own |
第一节:完形填空 San Francisco is a big city which lies in the west of the United States very near the Pacific, where two earth"s plates often meet and jump. So earthquake is a 1 word to hear there. It is recorded that at least 2 big earthquakes have happened in San Francisco since the beginning of the _3 century. One happened in 1906, the other in 1989. The second worst earthquake _4 San Francisco on the evening of October 17, 1989, when people were traveling to their 5 . A wide and busy overhead road fell onto the one 6 _. Many people were killed in their cars. A few 7 ones were not hurt, but many thousands became 8 . A large number of weak buildings didn"t _9 in the quake and the 10 electricity was cut off for several days, too. ( ) 1. A. terrible B. sad C. usualD. funny ( ) 2. A. two B. three C. four D. five ( ) 3. A. 17th B.18th C. 19th D 20th ( ) 4. A. shook B. felt C. discovered D. moved ( ) 5. A. offices B. homes C. factories D. schools ( ) 6. A. above B. nearby C. below D. round ( ) 7. A. young B. tall C. strong D. lucky ( ) 8. A. homeless B. jobless C. friendless D. childless ( ) 9. A. put up B. go up C. stay up D. turn up ( ) 10. A. company"s B. school"s C. country"s D. city"s |
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