Since we are social beings, the quality of our lives depends in large measure on

Since we are social beings, the quality of our lives depends in large measure on

题型:不详难度:来源:
Since we are social beings, the quality of our lives depends in large measure on our interpersonal relationships.One strength of the human condition is our tendency to give and receive support from one another under stressful circumstances.Social support consists of the exchange of resources among people based on their interpersonal ties.Those of us with strong support systems appear better able to deal with major life changes and daily difficulties.People with strong social ties live longer and have better health than those without such ties.Studies over a range of illnesses, from depression to heart disease, show that the presence of social support helps people protect themselves from illness, and the absence of such support makes poor health more likely.
Social support cushions stress in a number of ways.First, friends, relatives and coworkers may let us know that they value us.Our self respect is strengthened when we feel accepted by others despite our faults and difficulties.Second, other people often provide us with informational support.They help us to explain and understand our problems and find solutions to them.Third, we typically find social companionship supportive.Engaging in leisure time activities with others helps us to meet our social needs while at the same time distract(转移…注意力)us from our worries and troubles.Finally, other people may give us important support—financial aid, material resources, and needed services—that reduces stress by helping us solve and deal with our problems.
小题1:Research shows that people’s physical and mental health has much to do with      .
A.the social medical system
B.the amount of support they get from others
C.their strength for dealing with interpersonal ties
D.their ability to deal with daily worries and troubles
小题2:The underlined word “cushions” probably means “    
A.adds up to B.decreases the effect of
C.gets rid of D.lays the foundation for
小题3:Social companionship is beneficial in that it
A.helps strengthen our ties with relatives
B.enables us to get rid of our faults and mistakes
C.makes our leisure time activities more enjoyable
D.draws our attention away from our worries and troubles

答案

小题1:B
小题2:B
小题3:D
解析

试题分析:本文叙述了人们是需要有社会关系网,有社会关系的人他们身体和精神方面很容易保持健康,有利于防止疾病的发生,因为有了社会关系可以通过亲戚朋友之间的帮助来排除自己的烦恼和忧愁。
小题1:细节理解题。根据Studies over a range of illnesses, from depression to heart disease, show that the presence of social support helps people protect themselves from illness, and the absence of such support makes poor health more likely.研究表明人们对于人们的身体与精神健康与人的社会交往有很大关系,故选B。
小题2:词义猜测题。根据First, friends, relatives and coworkers may let us know that they value us.Our self respect is strengthened when we feel accepted by others despite our faults and difficulties.可以推知人们有社会关系可以减少压力,故选B。
小题3:细节理解题。根据Those of us with strong support systems appear better able to deal with major life changes and daily difficulties.有社会关系有助于人们处理生活变化和日常困难,故选D。
点评:做词义猜题须联系主旨、整合上下文信息是解答这类题的关键。近几年阅读理解的生词率略有上升,加大了猜测力度。命题者着重考查考生利用同义或反义关系、构词法、语法和语篇文脉等理解生词的能力。
举一反三
It was the summer of my freshman year of college. Instead of heading home for a nice long   1 , my friends and I had decided to   2  and take some extra courses. We had   3  the top floor of an old house to live in. My bed was   4   into a stuffy (愁闷的)former laundry room and each night was a new   5  in humidity. Still, it felt   6  to be in my own place for the first time. After the first few weeks,   7  , the thrill faded and   8  set in. I found myself sitting alone each night   9  my home and my parents.
My summer holidays had always been a   10  time. I spent hours playing basketball and swimming. I talked to my Mom while she tended her flowers. I   11  helping my Dad drag firewood for the winter. And every night I sat at a dinner table full of delicious food   12  with love while my family filled the room with the sound of sweet   13 . Now I found myself missing them   14  than ever.
Finally when my   15  were at their lowest, I heard a   16  at the door. I opened it and was   17  to see my parents standing there with big smiles to fill my   18  heart and a box full of food to feed my hungry friends. We spent the afternoon eating   19  , and just being together. It felt so good, and I felt so loved.
Victor Hugo wrote that, “The supreme happiness of life is the   20  that one is loved; loved for oneself, or better yet, loved despite oneself.” It was that gift of happiness that my parents gave me that afternoon and every day of my life.
小题1:
A.journeyB.termC.breakD.way
小题2:
A.leaveB.stayC.relaxD.travel
小题3:
A.rentedB.boughtC.paintedD.repaired
小题4:
A.madeB.changedC.jammedD.hidden
小题5:
A.wishB.pleasureC.experimentD.adventure
小题6:
A.excitingB.boringC.astonishingD.moving
小题7:
A.anywayB.thoughC.thereforeD.instead
小题8:
A.headacheB.lonelinessC.satisfactionD.homesickness
小题9:
A.forgetting aboutB.relying onC.thinking ofD.referring to
小题10:
A.specialB.terribleC.specificD.difficult
小题11:
A.gave upB.had trouble in C.put offD.took pride in
小题12:
A.frozenB.preparedC.tastedD.kept
小题13:
A.laughterB.screamC.whistleD.sigh
小题14:
A.lessB.moreC.worseD.better
小题15:
A.mindsB.dreamsC.spiritsD.thoughts
小题16:
A.kickB.hitC.crashD.knock
小题17:
A.disappointedB.surprisedC.puzzledD.encouraged
小题18:
A.hungryB.openC.sickD.gentle
小题19:
A.making upB.getting upC.catching upD.taking up
小题20:
A.signB.chanceC.secretD.belief

题型:不详难度:| 查看答案
Fourteen – year – old Richie Hawley had spent five years studying violin at the Community School of Performing Arts in Los Angeles when he took part in a violin contest. Ninety two young people were invited to the contest and Hawley came out first.
The contest could have been the perfect setup for fear, worrying about mistakes, and trying to impress the judges.But Hawley says he did pretty well in staying calm. “I couldn’t be thinking about how many mistakes I’d make—it would distract me from playing,” he says.“I didn’t even remember trying to impress people while I played. It’s almost as if they weren’t there. I just wanted to make music.”
Hawley is a winner. But he didn’t become a winner by concentrating on winning. He did it by concentrating on playing well.
“The important thing in the Olympic Games is not to win but to take part,” said the founder of the modern Olympics, Pierre de Coubertin.“The important thing in life is not the triumph but the struggle.The essential thing is not to have conquered but to have fought well.”
A characteristic of high performers is their intense, pleasurable concentration on work, rather than on their competitors or future glory or money, says Dr.Charles Garfield, who has studied 1,500 achievers in business, science, sports, the arts, and professions.“They are interested in winning, but they’re most interested in self-development, testing their limits.”
One of the most surprising things about top performers is how many losses they’ve had and how much they’ve learned from each. “Not one of the 1,500 I studied defined losing as failing,” Garfield says.“They kept calling their losses ‘setbacks’.”
A healthy attitude toward setbacks is essential to winning, experts agree.
“The worst thing you can do if you’ve had a setback is to let yourself get stuck in a prolonged depression. You should analyze carefully what went wrong, identify specific things you did right and give yourself credit for them.” Garfield believes that most people don’t give themselves enough praise. He even suggests keeping a diary of all the positive things you’ve done on the way to a goal.
小题1:Hawley won the contest because _______.
A.he put all his mind to his performance
B.he cared much about the judges’ feelings
C.he tried his best to avoid making mistakes
D.he paid close attention to the people around
小题2:High performers is that they tend to give priority to _______.
A.gloryB.wealthC.pleasureD.work
小题3:According to the passage, successful people concentrate on _______.
A.challenging their own limitsB.learning from others
C.defeating their opponentsD.avoiding setbacks
小题4: It can be learned from the passage that top performers are not _______.
A.interested in winningB.free of losses
C.accustomed to failuresD.concerned about setbacks
小题5:The passage tells us that “praise” in times of trouble _______.
A.helps people deal with their disappointment
B.makes people forget their setbacks
C.makes people regret about their past
D.helps people realize their goals

题型:不详难度:| 查看答案
Statuses are wonderful human inventions that enable us to get along with one another and to determine where we "fit" in society. In our everyday lives whenever we meet people, we always try to judge them in terms of their statuses. For example, we must judge whether the person in the library is a reader or a librarian, whether the telephone caller is a friend or a salesman and so on.
Our statuses often vary with the people we meet, and change through life. Most of us can, at very high speed, assume(表现出) the different statuses that various situations require. Much of social communication consists of recognizing and selecting among proper statuses and allowing other people to assume their statuses in relation to us. This means that we fit our actions to those of other people, based on a constant mental process of assessment and understanding. Although some of us find the task more difficult than others, most of us perform it rather easily.
A status has been compared to ready-made clothes. Within certain limits the buyer can choose style and material. But an American is not free to choose the clothes of a Chinese peasant or that of a Hindu prince. We must choose from among the clothing presented by our society.
Furthermore, our choice is limited to a size that will fit, as well as by our wallet. Having made a choice within these limits, we can have certain changes made. But apart from small adjustments, we tend to be limited to what the stores have on their shelves. Statuses too come ready-made, and the range of choice among them is limited.
小题1:According to the writer, people often assume different statuses______.
A.in order to distinguish themselves from others
B.in order to better recognize other people
C.as their mental processes change
D.as the situation changes
小题2:In the last sentence of the second paragraph, “it” refers to “___
A.constant mental process
B.selecting one’s own statuses
C.recognition of other people’s statuses
D.fitting our actions to those of other properly
小题3:What can be the best title for this text?
A.Proper Relations.
B.Limited Choices.
C.Judgment of Statuses.
D.Comparison of Clothes.

题型:不详难度:| 查看答案
Taste is such a subjective matter that we don’t usually conduct preference tests for food. The most you can say about anyone’s preference is that it’s one person’s opinion. But because the two big cola companies—Coca-Cola and Pepsi Cola are marketed so aggressively, we’ve wondered how big a role taste preference actually plays in brand loyalty. We set up a taste test that challenged people who identified themselves as either Coca-Cola or Pepsi fans: Find your brand in a blind tasting.
We invited staff volunteers who had a strong liking for either Coca-Cola Classic (传统型) or Pepsi, Diet (低糖的) Coke, or Diet Pepsi. These were people who thought they’d have no trouble telling their brand from the other brand.
We eventually located 19 regular cola drinkers and 27 diet cola drinkers. Then we fed them four unidentified samples of cola one at a time, regular colas for the one group, diet versions for the other. We asked them to tell us whether each sample was Coke or Pepsi; then we analyzed the records statistically to compare the participants’ choices with what mere guess-work could have accomplished.
Getting all four samples right was a tough test, but not too tough, we thought, for people who believed they could recognize their brand. In the end, only 7 out of 19 regular cola drinkers correctly identified their brand of choice in all four trials. The diet-cola drinkers did a little worse----only 7 of 27 identified all four samples correctly.
While both groups did better than chance would predict, nearly half the participants in each group made the wrong choice two or more times. Two people got all four samples wrong. Overall, half the participants did about as well on the last round of tasting as on the first, so tiredness, or taste burnout, was not a factor. Our preference test results suggest that only a few Pepsi participants and Coke fans may really be able to tell their favorite brand by taste and price.
小题1:According to the passage the preference test was conducted in order to ________.
A.show that a person’s opinion about taste is mere guess-work
B.compare the ability of the participants in choosing their drinks
C.find out the role taste preference plays in a person’s drinking
D.reveal which cola is more to the liking of the drinkers
小题2: It is implied but not stated in the first paragraph that ________.
A.the competition between the two colas is very strong
B.blind tasting is necessary for identifying fans
C.the purpose of taste tests is to promote the sale of colas
D.the improvement of quality is the chief concern of the two cola companies
小题3:The word “burnout” (Line3, Para. 5) refers to the state of _________.
A.being seriously burnt in the skin
B.being badly damaged by fire
C.being unable to function because of excessive use
D.being unable to burn for lack of fuel
小题4:The author’s purpose in writing this passage is to ________.
A.emphasize that taste and price are closely related to each other
B.recommend that blind tasting be introduced in the quality control of colas
C.show that taste preference is highly subjective
D.argue that taste testing is an important marketing strategy

题型:不详难度:| 查看答案
Strange Baby-Naming Laws
Germany Parents are banned by law from using last names and the names of objects and products as first names. A child’s first name must clearly indicate his or her sex, and all names must be approved by the office of vital statistics in the area in which the child was born.
Iceland The country’s naming committee consults the National Register of Persons to determine if a name is acceptable. If parents want to go off-list, they must apply for approval and pay a fee, and the name must contain only letters in the Icelandic alphabet.
New Zealand The country’s Births, Deaths, and Marriages Registration Act of 1995 prohibits parents from choosing a name that “ might cause offense to a reasonable person; is unreasonably long; or is, includes, or resembles an official title or rank,” including, apparently, Adolf Hitler and Yeah Detroit—both names recently rejected.
Denmark If Danish parents prefer a moniker not on the list of 7,000 preapproved baby names, they must get permission from local church and government officials. Fifteen to 20 percent of the 1,100 reviewed names—including creative spellings of common names, last names as first names, and unusual names—are rejected each year.
小题1:You can tell whether a baby is a girl or a boy according to the first name in _____.
A.Denmark B.New ZealandC.IcelandD.Germany
小题2:In Iceland, the names should _____.
A.be approved by the office of vital statistics.
B.be accepted by the National Register of Persons.
C.contain only letters in the Roman alphabet.
D.be paid for some money.
小题3:Which name is accepted in New Zealand?
A.Bin LadenB.Talula Does The Hula
C.Keenan Got LuckyD.John Smith
小题4:According to the passage, which of the following is true?
A.Danish babies’ names should be on the list if parents can’t get the permission.
B.Each year about 150-200 reviewed names are rejected in Denmark.
C.Adolf Hitler is banned in Iceland.
D.Parents should pay a fee for babies’ names if the names are rejected.

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