2014年职称英语理工A完形填空6篇10至15

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2014职称英语真题及答案(各类最全)

2014职称英语真题及答案(各类最全)

2014年职称英语考试真题(综合类C级)第一部分:词汇选项(第1~15题,每题1分,共15分)下面共有15个句子,每个句子中均有1个词或短语划有底横线,请从每个句子后面所给的4个选项中选择1个与划线部分意义最相近的词或短语。

1.The AIDS convention will be held in Glasgow.A.partyB.celebrationC.unionD.conference2.He made a number of rude remarks about the food.mentsB.signsC.mannersD.noises3.The new service helped boost pre-tax profits by10%.A.returnB.realizeC.increaseD.doubleck of space forbids further treatment of the topic here.A.receivesB.preventsC.deservesD.accepts5.Take some spare clothes in case you get wet,A.extraB.fineC.winterD.outdoor6.The book raised a storm of controversy.A.damageB.voiceC.argumentD.doubt7.His heart gave a sudden leap when he saw her.A.jumpB.hopeC.silenceD.life8.I'm sure I'll able to amuse myself for a few hours.A.treatB.entertainC.holdD.keep9.Some comments are just inviting trouble.A.keeping out ofB.getting intoC.asking forD.suffering from10.My principal concern is to get the job done fast.A.seriousB.deepC.particularD.main11.Several windows had been smashed.A.cleanedB.brokenC.replacedD.fixed12.His knowledge of French is fair.A.quite goodB.very usefulC.very limitedD.rather special13.They are trying to identify what is wrong with the present system.A.discoverB.proveC.considerD.imagine14.The worst agonies of the war were now beginning.A.partsB.aspectsC.painsD.results15.Afterwards there was just a feeling of letdown.A.excitementB.disappointmentC.angerD.calm第二部分:阅读判断(第16~22题,每题l分,共7分)下面的短文后列出了7个句子,请根据短文的内容对每个句子做出判断:如果该句提供的是正确信息,请选择A;如果该句提供的是错误信息,请选择B;如果该句的信息文中没有提及,请选择C。

2014年职称英语考试理工类A级试题及参考答案

2014年职称英语考试理工类A级试题及参考答案

2014年职称英语考试理工类A级试题及参考答案词汇选项:1. This was disaster on cosmic scale.A. modestB. commercialC. hugeD. national2. New secretaries came and went with monotonous regularity.A. amazingB. depressingC. predictableD. dull3. A person’s wealth is often in inverse proportion to their happiness.A. equalB. certainC. largeD. opposite4. His professional career spanned 16 years.A. startedB. changedC. lastedD. moved5. The symptoms of the disease manifested themselves ten days later.A. easedB. improvedC. relievedD. appeared6. The group does not advocate the use of violence.A. limitB. supportC. regulateD. oppose7. She felt that she had done her good deed for the day.A. actB. homeworkC. justiceD. model8. Some of the larger birds can remain stationary in the air for several minutes.A. motionlessB. silentC. seatedD. true9. There was an inclination to treat geography as a less important subject.A. pointB. resultC. findingD. tendency10. His stomach felt hollow with fear.A. sincereB. respectfulC. emptyD. terrible11. The committee was asked to render a report on the housing situation.A. copyB. publishC. summarizeD. furnish12. That uniform makes the guards look absurd.A. seriousB. beautifulC. impressiveD. ridiculous13. The department deferred the decision for six months.A. put offB. arrived atC. abided byD. protested against14. The original experiment cannot be exactly duplicated .A. inventedB. reproducedC. designedD. reported15. The country was torn apart by strife.A. conflictB. povertyC. warD. economy阅读判断:Experience the World in 3D GameEver wondered how your cat or dog sees the world? Now you can look through their eyes with the first 3D game that recreates the vision of different species based on scientific evidence.The online simulation, created by the French3D design company Dassault Systèmes, with the guidance of veterinary ophthalmologist (眼科专家)Didier Schmidt-Morand, mimics (模仿)the vision of five animals – cats dogs, rats, hawks and bees – as aplayer steers them through Place Vend洀攀in Paris.Due to differences in field of view, colour perception and night vision, for example, sight can be drastically different from species to species. "In terms of performance, eyes are as variable as different models of cars," says Schmidt-Morand.The game was created by using existing virtual models of the square then applying effects based on descriptions of each animal's vision. Dassault's 3D software allows a scene to be modified by adding blur or changing the colours, angle of vision and depth of field.Although it was easy to recreate vision inferior to that of humans – cats and dogs, for example, have trouble distinguishing shades of red –replicating features that we are unable to see was a challenge. Hawks have more detailed vision than ours, whereas dogs are better at seeing movement and have a wider field of view. "We used virtual cameras to precisely simulate larger viewing angles but the result made people nauseous(令人作呕的)," says Schmidt-Morand. "So we tweaked(微调) the model to give a sense of the wider view without sticking to reality."The rat's view also departs from reality: because they are near-sighted, everything more than 15 centimetres away is ablur, so they typically move close to walls to help them navigate. "A ratwould never throw itself into the middle of an open area," says Schmidt-Morand. The simulation for this animal is supplemented with a map inthe top right corner to help determine the rat's position: because of their limited eyesight, most landmarks are obscured.The game is intended as an educational resource and players can discuss their experience with others through community features on the website. If there is interest from schools and zoos, the team hopes to recreate the vision of more animals.16. The game developed by Dassault Systemesis the first 3D game recreating the vision of different species .A. RightB. WrongC. Not mentioned17.Dassault’s3Dsoftware takes different perspectives like color perception and angle of visioninto account .A. RightB. WrongC. Not mentioned18.The animals’ viewsin the software are the same as those in reality .A. RightB. WrongC. Not mentioned19. Dogs have larger viewing angles than humans .A. RightB. WrongC. Not mentioned20.It takes the team the longest time to recreate the rat’s view because they’re near-sighted .A. RightB. WrongC. Not mentioned21.The team is working on recreating thevision of more animals .A. RightB. WrongC. Not mentioned22.Schmidt-Morand’sfavorite animal is cat .A. RightB. WrongC. Not mentioned概括大意与完成句子:Climate Change: The Long Reach1 Earth is warming .Sea levels are rising. There’s more carbon in the air, and Arctic ice is melting faster than at any time in recorded history. Scientist who study the environment to better gauge (评估) Earth’s future climate now argue that these changes may not reverse for a very long time.2 People burn fossil fuels like coal and oil for energy. That burning releases carbon dioxide, a colorless gas. In the air, this gas traps heat at Earth’s surface. And the more carbon dioxide released, the more the planet warms. If current consumption of fossil fuels doesn’t slow, the long-term climate impacts could last thousands of years—and be more severe than scientists had been expecting. Climatologist Richard Zeebe of the University of Hawaii at Manoa offers this conclusion in a new paper.3 Most climate-change studies look at what’s going to happen in the next century or so. During that time, changes in the planet’s environment could nudge (推动) global warming even higher. For example: Snow and ice reflect sunlight back into space. But as these melt, sunlight can now reach—and warm—the exposed ground. This extra heat raises the air temperature even more, causing even more snow to melt. This type of rapid exaggeration of impacts is called a “fast feedbac k”.4 Zeebe says it’s important to look at fast feedbacks. However, he adds, they’re limited. From a climate change perspective, “This century is the mostimportant time for the next few generations, ” he told Science News. “But the world is not ending in 2100 .” For this new study, Zeebe now focuses on “slow feedbacks.” While fast feedback events unfold over decades or centuries, slow feedbacks can take thousands of years. Melting of continental ice sheets and the migration of plant life—as they relocate to more comfortable areas—are two examples of slow feedbacks.5 Zeebe gathered information from previously publishes studies investigating how such processes played out over thousands of years during past dramatic changes in climate. Then he came up with a forecast for the future that accounts for both slow and fast feedback processes. Climate forecasts that use only fast feedbacks predict a 4.5 degree Celsius (8.1 degree Fahrenheit) change by the year 3000. But slow feedbacks added another 1.5℃—for a 6℃ total increase, Zeebe reports. He also found that slow feedback events will cause warming to persist for thousands of years after people run out of fossil fuels to burn.23. Paragraph 2 ___B____24. Paragraph 3 ___C____25. Paragraph 4 ___D____26. Paragraph 5 ___F____ A. Rising of sea levelsB. Impact of burning fossil fuelsC. Fast feedbacksD. Slow feedbacksE. Unpredictability of feedback processesF.A prediction of future climate change27. Arctic ice has never been melting so fast in ___D___.28. Melting of snow and ice enables sunlight to reach ____A____.29. Zeebe came up with his future climate prediction by analyzing ___E___.30.After fossil fuels are used up, global warming will continue for ___B___.A. the exposed groundB. a very long timeC. the extra heatD. recorded historyE. previously published studiesF. rapid exaggeration of impacts阅读理解第一篇:Eye-tracker Lots You Drag and Drop Files with a Glance Bored of using a mouse? Soon you'll be able to change stuff on your computer screen – and then move it directly onto your smart phone or tablet(平板电脑) –with nothing more than a glance.A system called Eye Drop uses a head-mounted eye tracker that simultaneously records your field of view so it knows where you are looking on the screen. Gazing at an object – a photo, say – and then pressing a key, selects that object. It can then be moved from the screen to a tablet or smart phone just by glancing at the second device, as long as the two are connected wirelessly."The beauty of using gaze to support this is that our eyes naturally focus on content that we want to acquire, "says Jayson Turner, who developed the system with colleagues at Lancaster University, UK.Turner believes Eye Drop would be useful to transfer an interactive map or contact information from a public display to your smart phone or for sharing photos.A button needs to be used to select the object you are looking at otherwise you end up with the "Midastouch"(点石成金) effect, whereby everything you look at gets selected by your gaze, says Turner. "Imagine if your mouse clicked on everything it pointed at," he says.Christian Holz, a researcher inhuman-computer interaction at Yahoo Labs in Sunnyvale, California, says the system is a nice take on getting round this fundamental problem of using gaze-tracking to interact. "Eye Drop solves this in a slick (灵巧的)way by combining it with input on the touch devices we carry with us most of the time anyway and using touch input as a clutching mechanism," he says. "This now allows users to seamlessly(无缝地) interact across devices far and close in a very natural manner."While current eye-trackers are rather bulky, mainstream consumer devices are not too far away. Swedish firm Tobii is developing gaze-tracking technology that can be installed in laptops and tablets and is expected to be available to buy next year. And the Google Glass headset is expected to include eye-tracking in the future.Turner says he has also looked at how content can be cut and pasted or drag-and-dropped using a mix of gaze and taps on a touch screen. The system was presented at the Conference on Mobile and Ubiquitous Multimedia in Sweden, last week.31. The eye-tracker technology enables us to______A. change our computer screen.B. focus on anything that interests us.C. get a smart phone connected wirelessly.D. move an object from screen with a glance.32. Why is a button needed?A. To minimize the cost of Eye Drop.B. To choose as many objects as possible.C. To make Eye Drop different from others.D. To select what we want.33. The word “this” in Paragraph 6 refers to_______A. application of gaze-tracking inhuman-computer interaction.B. interaction between human and computer.C. combination of gaze-tracking with input on touch devices.D. generalization of Eye Drop system.34. Which of the following statement is true of eye-trackers for consumer use?A. They are costly.B. They are available.C. They are installed in Google Glass headset.D. They are expected to come out soon.35. What is Turner likely to study next?A. How to drag and drop with gaze and taps.B. How to present the system in public.C. How to get touch screen involved.D. How to cut and paste content from a public display.第二篇:A New Strategy to Overcome Breast CancerPost-menopausal(绝经后)women who walk for an hour a day can cut their chance of breast cancer significantly, a study has suggested. The report , which followed 73,000 women for 17 years, found walking for at least seven hours a week lowered the risk of the disease. The American Cancer Society team said this was the first time reduced risk was specifically linked to walking. UK experts said it was more evidence that lifestyle influenced cancer risk.A recent poll for the charity Ramblers a quarter of adults walk for no more than an hour a week, but being active is known to reduce the risk of a number of cancers. This study, published in Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention, followed 73.615 women out of97,785 aged 50-74 who had been recruited by the AmericanCancer Society between1992 and 1993,so it could monitor the incidence of cancer in the group.They were asked to complete questionnaires on their health and on how much time they were active and participating in activities such as walking, swimming and aerobics(有氧运动)and how much time they spent sitting watching television or reading. They completed the same questionnaires at two-year intervals between 1997 and 2009.Of thewomen,47% said walking was their only recreational activity. Those who walked for at least seven hours per week had a 14% lower risk of breast cancer compared to those who walked three or fewer hours per week.Dr.Alpa Patel, a senior epidemiologist at the American Cancer Society in Atlanta, Georgia, who led the study, said:”Given that more than 60% of women report some daily walking, promoting walking as a healthy leisure-time activity could be an effective strategy for increasing physical activity amongst post-menopausal women. We were pleased to find that without any other recreational activity, just walking one hour a day was associated with a lower risk of breast cancer in these women.””More strenuous(紧张的)and longer activities lowered the risk even more.”Baroness Delyth Morgan, chief executive of Breast Cancer Campaign, said:”This study adds further evidence that our lifestyle choices can play a part in influencing the risk of breast cancer and even small changes incorporate into our normal day-to-day activity can make a difference.”She added:”We know that the best weapon to overcoming breast cancer is the ability to stop it occurring in the first place. The challenge now is how we turn thesefindings into action and identify other sustainable lifestyle changes that will help us prevent breast cancer.”36. All of the following factors relating to cancer risk were mentioned in the passage EXCEPT________A. breathing exerciseB. regular walkingC. recreational activityD. lifestyle choices37. It can be inferred from Dr. Alpa Patel’s study that____.A. women have fewer chances of physical activityB. daily walking could cut the chance of breast cancerC. leisure-time activity is not associated with cancer riskD. walking is not recommended for women with breast cancer38. Dr. Alpa Patel was_____.A. head of the survey studyB. chief editor of Cancer EpidemiologyC. chair of the American Cancer SocietyD. chief executive of Breast Cancer Campaign39. Which of the following statements is true according to the passage?A. Most women take walking as their only recreational activity.B. The study aims to track the health conditions of its subjects.C. Walking was the only recreational acitivity for about half of the women surveyed.D. Irregular walking increased the risk of breast cancer in post-menopausal women40. The word “sustainable” in the last paragraph is closest in meaning toA. continuableB. affordableC. availableD. persistent第三篇The Northern LightsThe sun is stormy and has it own kind of weather. It is so hot and active that even the Sun’s gravity cannot hold its atmosphere in check! Energy flows away from the Sun toward the Earth in a stream of electrified particles that move at speeds around a million miles per hour. These particles are called plasma, and the stream of plasma coming from the Sun is called the solar wind. The more activethe Sun, the stronger the solar wind.The solar wind constantly streams toward the Earth, but don’t worry because a protective magneticfields surrounds our planet. The same magnetic field that makes your compass point north also steers the particles from the Sun to the north and south poles. The charged particles become trapped in magnetic belts around the Earth. When a large blast of solar wind crashes into the Earth’s magnetic field first gets squeezed and then the magnetic field lines break and reconnect.The breaking and reconnecting of the magneticfield lines can cause atomic particles called electrons trapped in the belts to fall into the Earth’s atmosphere at the poles. As theelectrons fall into the Earth, they collide with gas molecules in theatmosphere, creating flashes of light in the sky.Each atmospheric gas glows a different color. Oxygen and nitrogen glows red and green and nitrogen glows violet-purple. As these various colors glow and dance in the night sky, they create the Northern Lights and the Southern Lights.Watching auroras(北极光)is fun and exciting, but normally you can only see them in places far north like Alaska and Canada. The movement of the aurora across the sky is usually slow enough to easily follow with your eyes but they can also pulsate(跳动), flicker(闪烁), or even move like waves. During solar maximum, 5 auroras are seen as far south as Florida, even Mexico! Auroras often seem to be very close to the ground, but the lowest aurora is still about100 kilometers above the ground, a distance much higher than clouds are formedor airplanes can fly. A typical aurora band can be thousands of kilometers long, a few hundred kilometers high, but only a few hundred meters thick.We hope you are able to travel to far-north places like the Arctic Circle and see the Northern Lights at least once during your lifetime. We know you will never forget it!41.The solar wind comes into being as a result ofA. disappearance of the Sun’s gravity.B. unpredictable weather of the Sun.C. fast flow of energy away from the Sun.D. a stream of particles being blown away.42.What happens when solar wind comes to the Earth?A. A protective magnetic field is forms at the same time.B. It is trapped in magnetic belts around the Earth.C. It destroys the protective magnetic field surrounding the Earth.D. It breaks magnetic field lines and does severe damage to the Earth.43.The Northern Lights are created whenA. atomic particles fall to the Earth and collide with atmospheric gases.B. the magnetic field lines fail to reconnect.C. the electrons falling to the Earth shine in different colors.D. oxygen and nitrogen are separated from the atmospheric gases.44.Which of the following statements is true of the Northern Lights?A. Their movement is slow enough to be observed with the eyes.B. People cannot see them unless traveling to Alaska or Canada.C. They are very close to the ground.D. They are very lng and thick.45.What is the auther’s tone toward the Northern Lights?A. indifferent.B. Sarcastic.C. Sharp.D. Appreciative.补全短文:Wrongly Convicted Man and His Accuser Tell Story NEW YORK, NY, January 5, 2010. St. Martin’s Press has announced the release of the paperback edition of Picking Cotton, a remarkable true story of what novelist John Gris ham calls an “account of violence, rage redemption(救赎) and,ultimately forgiveness.”The story began in 1987, in Burlington, North Carolina, with the rape of a young while college student named Jennifer Thompson. During her ordeal, Thompson swore to herself that she would never forget the face of her rapist, a man who climbed through the window of her apartment and assaulted her brutally___46___. When the police asked her if she could identify the assailant (袭击者)from a book of mug shots, she picked one that she was sure was correct, and later she identified the man lineup.Based on her convincing eyewitness testimony, a 22-year-old black man named Ronald Cotton was sentenced to prison for two life terms. Cotton’s lawyer appealed the decision, and by the time of the appeals hearing, evidence had come to light suggesting that the real rapist might have been a man who looked very like Cotton, an imprisoned criminal named Bobby Poole. ___47___Jennifer Thompson looked at both men face to face, and once again said that Ronald Cotton was the one who raped her.Eleven years later, DNA evidence completely exonerated (证明…..清白)Cotton and just as unequivocally (明确地)convicted Poole, who confessed to the crime ___48___”The man I was so sure I had never seen in my life was the man was inches from my throat, who raped me , who hurt me, who took my spirit away, who robbed me of my soul,” she wrote “And the man I had identified so surely on so many occasions was absolutely innocent. ___49___Remarkably both were able to put this tragedy behind them, overcome the racial barrier that divided them, and write a book, which they have subtitled “Our memoir of injustice and redemption.”Nevertheless, Thompson says, she still lives” with constant pain that my profound mistake coast him so dearly ___50___”A.Another trial was heldB.I cannot begin to imagine what would have happened had my mistakenidentification occurred in a capital caseC.Thompson was as shocked and devastatedD.Jennifer Thompson decided to meet Cotton and apologize to him personallyE.During the attack, she made and effort to memorize every detail of his face,looking for scars, tattoos(纹身) or other identifying marking.F.Many criminals are sent to prison on the basis of accurate testimony byeyewitnesses.参考答案:46-50:FDEAC完形填空Musical Training Can Improve Communication Skills American scientists say musical training seems to improve communication skills and Language retardation(延迟).They found that developing musical skill involves the___51___process in the brain as learning how to speak .The scientists believe that could ___52___children with learning disabilities .Nina Krauss is a neurobiologist at Northwestern University in lllinois .She says Musical training___53___putting together different kinds of information, such as hearing music, looking at musical notes, touching an instrument and watching other musicians. The ___54___ is not much different from learning how to speak .Both involve different senses .She further explains musical training and learning to___55___each make us think about what we are doing .She say speech and music___56___ through astructure of the nervous system called he brain stem .The brain stem ___57___ our ability to hear .Until recently, experts have though the brain stem could not be developed or changed. ___58___ Professor Krauss and her team found that musical training can improve a person’s brain stem activity.The study involved individuals with different levels of musical___59___.They were asked to wear an electrical device that measures ___60___ activity. The individuals wore the electrode while they watched a video of someone speaking and a person playing a musical instrument---the cello(大提琴).Professor Krause says cello have sound qualities similar ___61___some of the sounds that are important with speech .The study found that the more years of training people had, the more___62___ they were to the sound and rhythm of the music. Those who were Involved in musical activities were the same people in whom the ___63___ of sensory events was the strongest. It shows the importance of musical training to children with learning ___64___.She says using music to improve listening skills could mean they ___65___ sentences and understand facial expressions better .51. A. unique B. different C. same D. strange52. A. help B. tell C. remind D .entertain53. A. shapes B. involves C .relates D. enhances54. A. form B. step C. point D. process55. A. play B. sing C. speak D. think56. A. pass B. use C. look D. put57. A. develops B. controls C. assesses D. observes58. A. So B. Moreover C. As D. But59. A. instruments B. ability C. types D. contact60. A. physical B. musical C. speech D. brain61. A. as B. of C. to D. at62. A. familiar B. inactive C. critical D. sensitive63. A. reduction B. improvement C. interference D. implication64. A. styles B. disabilities C. interests D. approaches65. A. read B. write C. hear D. change更多职称英语考试免费资料请访问“新东方在线职称英语频道”。

2014年职称英语考试真题及解析(理工类A)

2014年职称英语考试真题及解析(理工类A)

2014年职称英语考试真题及解析(理工类A)insane1.Both of the old man’s daughters were killed, and now he is goingA.sadB.mourningC.crazyD.revenge正确答案:C解析:老人的两个女儿都被杀死了,现在他快要疯了。

A 伤心B哀悼C 疯了D 报仇2.The teacher got annoyedwith him because his was always lateA.enjoyedB.connectedC.satisfiedD.upset正确答案:D解析:他总是迟到,这令他的老师很生气。

A 喜欢B 联系C 满意D 生气consequently3.The supermarket was closed, and they returned home with empty handsA.conciselyB.eloquentlyC.as a resultD.frequently正确答案:C解析:超市关门了,结果他们只能空手而归。

A 简明地 B 雄辩地 C 结果D频繁地foliage4.The park is famous for the autumnA.weatherB.harvestC.festivalsD.leaves正确答案:D解析:那个公园以秋叶闻名。

A 天气,气候B收获C节日D叶子fruitful5.The scientific work in the past ten years turns outA.blindpleteC.productiveD.careful解析:十年来的科学工作结果硕果累累。

A 盲的B 完整的C 有收获的D 仔细的dog than the wolf6.Of all the wild dogs, none is more closely related to the domesticatedA.ordinaryB.tameC.faithfulD.hunting正确答案:B解析:所有的野狗都没有狼与家狗的关系密切。

2014年职称英语理工类A级考试真题(含答案)

2014年职称英语理工类A级考试真题(含答案)

2014年职称英语考试试题理工类c级真题及答案(word版)第1部分词汇选项1.Take some spare clothes in case you get wet.A fineB winterC outdoorD extra2.Afterwards there was just a feeling of let-down.A excitementB angerC calmD disappointment3.The AIDS convention will be held in Glasgow.A conferenceB partyC celebrationD union4.The new service helped boost pre-tax profits by 10%.A returnB realizeC increaseD double5.Some comments are just inviting trouble.A asking forB keeping out ofC getting intoD suffering from6.His knowledge of French is fair.A very usefulB very limitedC quite goodD rather special7.The book raised a storm of controversy.A damageB voiceC doubtD argument8.My principal concern is to get the job done fast.A seriousB mainC deepD particularck of space forbids further treatment of the topic here.A receivesB deservesC acceptsD prevents10.He made a number of rude remarks about the food.A commentsB signsC mannersD noises11.They are trying to identify what is wrong with the present systm.A proveB discoverC considerD imagine12.His heart gave a sudden leap when he saw her.A hopeB jumpC silenceD life13.The worst agonies of the war were now beginning.A partsB aspectsC painsD results14.I'm sure I'll be able to amuse myself for a few hours.A entertainB treatC holdD keep15.Several windows had been smashed.A cleanedB brokenC replacedD fixed答案:DDACA CDBDA BBCAB第二部分阅读判断So Many "Earths"The Milky Way(银河) contains billions of Earth-sized planets that could support life.That's the finding of new study.It draws on data that came from NASA's top planet-hunting telescope.A mechanical failure recently put that Kepter space telescope out of service.Kepler had played a big role in creating a census of planets orbiting some 170,000 stars. Its date have been helping astronomers predict how common planets are in our galaxy.The telescope focused on hunting planets that might have conditions similar to those on Earth.The authors of a study published in The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences conclude that between 14 and 30 out of every 100 stars with a mass and temperature similar to the Sun may host a planet that could support life as we know it.Such a planet would have a diameter at least as large as Earth's but no more than twice that big.The planet also would have to orbit in a stor's habitable zone. That's where the surface temperature would allow any water to exist as liquid.The new estimate of how many plantes might fit these conditions comes from studying more that 42,000 stars and identifying suitable worlds orbiting them.The scientists used those numbers to extrapolate(推算) to the rest of the stars that the telescope could not see.The estimate is rough,the authors admit. If applied to the solar system,it would define as habitable a zone starting as close ot the Sun as Venus and running to as far away as Mars. Neither planet is Earthlike(although either might have been in the distant pase). Using tighter limits the researchers estimate the between 4 and 8 out of every 100 sunlike stars could host an Earth-sized world.These are ones that would take 200 to 400 days to complete a yearly orbit.Four out of every 100 sunlike stars doesn't sound like a big number. It would mean however that the Milky Way could host more than a billion Earth-sized planets with a chance for life.16. The Kepler space telescpe has been in service for 15 yearsA RightB WrongC Not mentioned17.The main task of the Kepler space telescope is to find out planets with similar conditions to Earth's.A RightB WrongC Not mentioned18.The planet that could support life might be a little bit smaller than Earth.A RightB WrongC Not mentioned19.The Earth is a planet orbiting in the Sun's habitable zone.A RightB WrongC Not mentioned20.The new finding is based on a thorough study of 170,000 stars on the Milky Way.A RightB WrongC Not mentioned21.The estimate of the number of planets that could support life is not very accurate.A RightB WrongC Not mentioned22.This is the first research finding about the planets with a chance for life.A RightB WrongC Not mentioned答案:CABABAC第3部分概括大意与完成句子Pathways to Research:Problem-solving1 Pittsburgh's many hills aren't kind to bikers. Anyone hoping to pedal to work there has to contend with steep streets like Canton Avenue,which famouslyclimabs at a nearly 40-degree angle.As a result,some residents avoid biking altogether.2 But University of Pittsburgh graduate Micah Toll,23,and a few friends recently launched an invention that they hope will increase the city's pedal power. An electric bike called to Pulse PEVO. A super-strong battery powers the bicycle. Able to hit nearly 20 miles per hours without pedaling,it zips battery powers the bicycle. Able to hit nearly 20 miles per hour without pedating ,it zips up the city's most daunting(令人却步的)hills.Toll hopes it will persuade people in Pittsburgh and elsewhere to get out of their cars and onto bikes.3 If it sounds like Toll has a knack(窍门) for fixing problems,that's because he does. In high school,he designed a new type of construction beam. It weights no more than a feather pillow but can be used to build sturdy(坚固的)homes for refugees fleeing war or natural disaster.For his work,Toll was invited to attend the Inter International Science and Engineering Fair(Isef)—twice,in 2006 and 2007. The annual competition for young researchers is program of Society for Science&the Public(that's the parent organization of Science News for Kids).Toll says that when it comes to science,he keeps it simple:“You see a problem and say,“How couldI solve that?”4 He's not the only to take that approach. Many young researchers get their start by trying to solve a problem or fulfill a need in their own communities.When students dedicate themselves to finding a solution that many benefit theircommunity,“a passion is ignited(点燃),”says Wendy Hawkins,executive director of the Inter Foundation,which sponsors Intel ISEF."Finding that passion and fostering it can be the key to many students future success."she says.23. Paragraph 124. Paragraph 225. Paragraph 326. Paragraph 4A Intel International Science and Engineering FairB The enthusiasm for solving problemsC The young researchers' passionD An invention increasing pedal powerE Why people avoid biking in PittsburghF The cause of national disaster27 A Pulse PEVO is powered with28 Toll hopes his Pulse PEVO will encourage people to29 A new construction beam invented by Toll weighs like30 Many young researchers are finding solutions to problems that mayA a nearly 40-degreeangleB get on bikesC a feather pillowD fix more problemsE a super-strong batteryF benefit their community答案:EDBC EBCF第4部分,阅读理解Approaches to Understanding IntelligencesIt bays to be smart, but we are not all smart in the same way .You may be a talented musician, but you might not be a good reader. Each of us is different.Psychologists disagree about what is intelligence and what are talents or personal abilities .Psychologists have two different views on intelligence .Some believe there is one general intelligence .Others believe there are many different intelligences .Some psychologists say there is one type of intelligence that can be measured with IQ tests .These psychologists support their view with research that concludes that people who do well on one kind of test for mental ability do well on other tests .They do well on tests using words, numbers or pictures. They do well on individual or group tests, and written or oral tests .Those who do poorly on one test, do the same on all tests.Studies of the brain show that there is a biological basis for general intelligence .The brain of intelligence people use less energy during problem solving .The brain waves of people with higher intelligence show a quicker reaction .Some researchers conclude that differences in intelligence result from differences in the speed and effectiveness of information processing by the brain .Howard Gardner, a psychologist at the Harvard School of Education, has four children .He believes that all children are different and shouldn’t be tested by one intelligence test .Although Gardner believes general intelligence exists, he doesn’t think it tells much about the talents of a person outside of formal schooling .He think that the human mind has different intelligences .These intelligences allow us to solve the kinds of problems we are presented with in life .Each of us has different abilities within these intelligences .Gardner believes that the purpose of school should be to encourage development of all of our intelligences .Gardner says that his theory is based on biology .For example ,when one part of the Brain is injured ,other parts of the brain still work .People who cannot talkbecause of Brain damage can still sing .So ,there is not just one intelligence to lose .Gardner has Identified 8 different kinds of intelligence; linguistic, mathematical, spatial, musical, Interpersonal, intrapersonal, body-kinesthetic(身体动觉的),and naturalistic .31. What is the main idea of this passage?A. How to understand intelligence.B. The importance of intelligence.C. The development of intelligence tests.D. How to become intelligent.32. Which of the following statements is true concerning general intelligence?A. Most intelligent people do well on some intelligence tests.B. People doing well on one type of intelligence test do well on other tests.C. Intelligent people do not do well on group tests.D. Intelligent people do better on written tests than on oral tests.33. Gardner believes that ________.A. children have different intelligences.B. all children are alike.C. children should take one intelligence test.D. there is no general intelligence.34. According to Gardner, schools should ________.A. test students’IQs.B. train students who do poorly on tests.C. focus on finding the most intelligent students.D. promote development of all intelligences.35. Gardner thinks that his theory has a ________ .A. musical foundation.B. biological foundation.C. intrapersonal foundation.D. linguistic foundation.答案:ABADBMusic is one of the most beautiful forms of artistic expression是ever invented. In movies and plays,music has an added function:it not only moves people but also can shock people.Our eardrums can withstand sound within 20 to 80 decibels(分贝).Once sound exceeds this limit,even beautiful music will become ear-splitting noise and harm health.A strong blast(响声) of high sound can twist and break a solid iron sheet.High sound of 150 decibels can kill a healthy rat.In movies,sometimes the hero can produce a sound that ordinary people can't hear and only those who have the same ability can feel.In nature,there is actually sound that is beyond our hearing. In physics,the sound that exceeds 20000Hz is called ultrasonic(超音波的).Dolphins,whales and bats can make suchhigh-frequency sound.It does no harm to health.Sound less than 20Hz is called infrasonic(次声)waves. When we move,the air will vibrate. The vibration of air can produce infrasonic wave.As the frequency of infrasonic waves is close to that of people's internal organs,infrasonic wave may cause resonance(共振) in human bodies. As a result,people's vision may weaken and internal organs may rupture(断裂). However,whether an infrasonic wave can be used as a weapon depends on its intensity. If its intensity is very low,it won't damage internal organs or a person's health. If the intensity of inf让sonic wave exceeds 160 decibels,it is extremely harmful. When wind blows at a force of 3 or 4 over the sea,it will produce infrasonic waves of several decibels. Only typhoons canproduce infrasonic waves of over 100 decibels. At present,scientists can only produce infrasonic weapons in the lab with the help of advanced scientific tools and powerful electric power.36 What could be the best title of the passage?A The power of musicB The harms of noisesC The magic of soundD The discovery of infrasonic waves37 What does the author say about music?A It may be harmful to people's halthB It always cheers people upC It is very often difficult to understandD It sounds better when it is lound enough38 It is true that the soundA of nature is the most beautifulB over 80 decibels is harmful to peopleC of high intensity benefits animalsD in movies is pleasing to the ear39 An ultrasonic soundA is very loudB does harm to people's healthC cannot be heard by peopleD is produced by the hero in movies40 It can be found from the last paragraph that infrasonic wavesA are harmless to people's healthB exist in people's internal organsC can be used as deadly weaponsD can improve eyesight答案:CABCCCompact DisksIf someone says to you your music CDs don't really hold any music on them, and they only have numbers recorded on them, you may not believe it. In fact, he isright in that sound is actually recorded onto the CDs as special numbers —a digital code.1 The code is pressed onto the CD as bumps on a long spiral track almost five kilometers long. These bumps are an average of 0.5 microns wide.A small laser beam shines onto the bumps as the CD turns. The light is reflected back to a receiver that records how the laser light bounces back. This lets the CD player2 turn the reflected light back into the original code. This means you can hear the original code as music.Digital codes are used with many technologies. E-mail needs these kinds of code numbers. Space probes communicate with their ground station on earth using digital codes. Bar codes are read as digital codes in computer systems. Digital communications with cell phones need digital codes. Weather radios also tune into specific signals using these codes.There are many types of compact disks. One format is called CD-RWs. They can be recorded on and re-recorded on(rewritten on)as you would do with a floppy disk3. Another format is the CD-ROM. The technology for recording on these disks is different from other CDs. These CDs have a dye layer that the CD writer can darken or leave clear. The clear and dark spots are the digital code. CD-ROM stands for Compact Disc —Read Only Memory4. This disk is like a "super" floppy disk that can hold lots of information. One CD-ROM can hold the same amount of data as 500 floppy disks. Information is permanently recorded onto it. Computer games and other programs are considered to be CD-ROMs.CDs were first sold to the public in 1982 These CDs still play well and sound fine. Current CDs are expected to last between 70 to 200 years. Of course, you can make sure your CDs last a long time by taking care of them.Science keeps on developing. It may not be many more years before a completely new technology is invented5 and introduced to the public for music recording. In the meantime, there is no doubt you will continue to enjoy listening to your favorite music on CDs6 and playing your favorite computer games onCD-ROMs.41 Music is recorded onto CDs asA laser beamsB digital codesC musical notesD special sounds42 E-mail is mentioned in the third paragraph to showA the variety of digital communicationsB the development of new technologiesC the usefulness of digital codesD the relationship between communication and technology43 One of the differences between CD-RWs and CD-ROMs isA CD-ROMs can be used for longer timeB CD-ROMs cannot be rewritten onC CD-RWs hold more informationD CD-RWs are merely used for music recording44 CDs can last a long time ifA they are seldom usedB they play well and sound fineC their users take good care of themD they are developed with new technology45 It can be inferred from the passage thatA CD-ROMs are more expensive than other CDsB new technology for music recording is being developedC the author likes listening to musicD flppy disks are no longer in use答案:BCBCC第5部分,补全短文Do You Have a Sense of Humor?Humor and laughter are good for us. There is increasing evidence that they can heal us physically,mentally,emotionally,and spiritually. In fact,every system of the body responds to laughter in some positive,healing way. So how can we get more laughter into our lives?(46)Psychologist and author,Steve Wlison,has some answers.Many peoplebelieve that we are born with a sense of humor.They think,“either you've got it,or you don't”Dr.Wilson points out that this false.(47) The parts of brain and central nervous system that control laughing and smiling are mature at birth(48)(After all ,when a baby laughs,we don't rush over and say,“That kid has a great sense of humor!”)A sense of humor is something that you can develop over a lifetime.Sometimes people think that they don't have a good sense of humor because they are not good joke tellers.Dr.Wilson reminds us that telling jokes is only one of many ways to express humor.(49)Then we will make others laugh,too.A person who has a true sense of humor is willing and able to see the funny side of everyday life.One of the best definition of a sense of humor is“the ability to see the nonserious element in a situation.”Consider this sign from a sore window.“Any faulty merchandise will be cheerfully replanced with merchandise of equal quality.”The store manager probably placed the sign in the window to impress customers with the store's excellent service.(50)As Dr.Wilson says,“a good sense of humor means that you don't have to be funny;you just have to see what's funny.”A He advises us to lose our inhibitions(抑制)and try to laugh at ourselves.B Is it possible to develop a sense of humor?C However,that does not mean that infants have a sense of humor.D What is true,however,it that we are born with the capacity to laugh and smileE Everyone experiences this emotionF He had a serious purpose,but if you have a sense of humor,you will probably find the sign funny!答案:BDCAF第6部分:完形填空(第51~65题,每题1分,共15分)Citizen ScientistsUnderstanding how nature responds to climate change will require monitoring key life cycle1 events —flowering, the appearance of leaves, the first frog calls of the spring —all around the world. But ecologists can't be everywhere so they're turning to non-scientists, sometimes called citizen scientists, for help.Climate scientists are not present everywhere. Because there are so many places in the world and not enough scientists to observe all of them, they're asking for your help in observing signs of climate change across the world. The citizen scientist movement encourages ordinary people to observe a very specific research interest —birds, trees, flowers budding, etc. —and send their observations to a giant database to be observed by professional scientists. This helps a small number of scientists track a large amount of data that they would never be able to gather on their own. Much like citizen journalists helping large publications cover a hyper-local beat2, citizen scientists are ready for the conditions where they live. All that's needed to become one is a few minutes each day or each week to gather data and send it in.A group of scientists and educators launched an organization last year called the National Phenology4Network. “Phenology”is what scientists call the study of the timing of events in nature.One of the group's first efforts relies on scientists and non-scientists alike to collect data about plant flowering and leafing every year. The program, called Project Bud Burst, collects life cycle data on a variety of common plants from acrossthe United States. People participating in the project —which is open to everyone —record their observations on the Project Bud Burst website.“People don't have to be plant experts —they just have to look around and see what's in their neighborhood,”says Jennifer Schwartz, an education consultant with the project. “As we collect this data, we'll be able to make an estimate of how plants and communities of plants and animals will respond as the climate changes.”51 A everywhere B anywhere C somewhere D nowher52 A If B Although C When D Because53 A giving B showing C developing D observing54 A special B professional C skillful D ordinary55 A on B at C to D with56 A small B limited C smple D large57 A Very B Much C AsD Many58 A All B Any C Some D Most59 A send B print C answer D keep60 A known B featured C belonged D called61 A alike B like C unlike D likely62 A points B wonders C data D interests63 A common B suitable C open D strange64 A want B forget C mind D have65 A who B how C before D since ADDDC BDAAD ACCDB。

2014年职称英语(综合类)A级真题试卷(题后含答案及解析)

2014年职称英语(综合类)A级真题试卷(题后含答案及解析)

2014年职称英语(综合类)A级真题试卷(题后含答案及解析)题型有:1. 词汇选项 2. 阅读判断 3. 概括大意与完成句子 4. 阅读理解 5. 补全短文6. 完形填空词汇选项(第1-15题,每题1分,共15分)下面每个句子中均有1个词或短语在括号中,请为每处括号部分的词汇或短语确定1个意义最为接近选项。

1.There was an inclination to treat geography as a less important subject.A.pointB.tendencyC.resultD.finding正确答案:B解析:本句意思:曾经有一种倾向认为地理是一门次要的学科。

inclination 意思为“倾向,趋势”,与tendency(趋势,倾向)意思相近。

point论点,观点,要点;resulf后果,结果;finding调查发现,调查结果。

2.New secretaries came and went with monotonous regularity.A.amazingB.depressingC.predictableD.dull正确答案:D解析:本句意思:秘书不停地更换,令人厌烦。

monotonous意思为“单调乏味的”,与dull(枯燥无味的,令人生厌的)意思相近。

amazing令人惊奇的;depressing令人沮丧的;predictable可预见的。

3.The committee was asked to render a report on the housing situation.A.furnishB.copyC.publishD.summarize正确答案:A解析:本句意思:委员会要提交一份有关住房情况的报告。

render意思为“递交,提交”,与furnish(提供)意思相近。

copy复制,复印;publish出版,发行;summarize总结,概括。

4.The group does not advocate the use of violence.B.regulateC.opposeD.support正确答案:D解析:本句意思:该团体不支持使用暴力。

2014全国职称英语考试理工A阅读理解、完型填空、教材新增文章复习资料

2014全国职称英语考试理工A阅读理解、完型填空、教材新增文章复习资料

2014理工A阅读理解、完型填空、新增文章复习资料目录阅读理解+第三十四篇Batteries Built by Viruses+第三十五篇Putting Plants to Work (2013理工B真题)+第三十六篇Listening Device Provides Landslide Early Warning+第三十七篇"Don't Drink Alone" Gets New Meaning+第三十八篇"Life Form Found" on Saturn's Titan(2012真题)+第三十九篇Clone Farm+第四十篇Teaching Math, Teaching Anxiety(2012新增文章)+ 第四十一篇Too Little for Global Warming+ 第四十二篇Renewable Energy Sources+ 第四十三篇Forecasting Methods(2013理工A真题)+ 第四十四篇Defending the Theory of Evolution Still Seems Needed+ 第四十五篇Small But Wise (2012年真题)+ 第四十六篇Ants have Big Impact on Environment as "Ecosystem Engineers"(2012新增文章)+ 第四十七篇Listening to Birdsong+ 第四十八篇Researchers Discover Why Humans Began Walking Upright (2013教材新增)+ 第四十九篇U. S. Scientists Confirm Water on Mars+ 第五十篇Cell Phones Increase Traffic, Pedestrian Fatalities完型填空:+第十五篇(2012新增)"Liquefaction" Key to Much of Japanese Earthquake Damage+第十二篇(2012新增)Free Statins With Fast Food Could Neutralize Heart Risk*第十篇(2012新增)Chicken Soup for the Soul: Comfort Food Fights Loneliness+第十四篇Sharks Perform a Service for Earth's Waters2014年教材新增文章第二部分阅读判断*第八篇What Is a Dream?*第十篇The Biology of Music+第十一篇Bill Gates: Unleashing Your Creativity+第十四篇Stage Fright第四部分阅读理解*第二十九篇I’ll Be Bach第五部分补全短文第四篇The Bilingual Brain*第十篇How Deafness Makes It Easier to Hear+第十五篇 A Memory Drug?理工A复习说明:2014 阅读理解带加号,重点要求17篇,第34-50篇,较2013年增加了7篇文章(这7篇原来是2013理工B的文章)这里注意下,第35篇Putting Plants to Work(非2013新增文章)是2013年理工B的真题,2014年应该不会考到。

2014年职称英语《理工A》真题与答案

2014年职称英语《理工A》真题与答案

2014年职称英语《理工A》真题第1部分词汇选项下面每个句子中均有1个词或短语划有底横线,请为每处划线部分确定一个意义最为接近的选项。

1. This was disaster on cosmic scale.A. modestB. commercialC. hugeD. national2. New secretaries came and went with monotonous regularity.A. amazingB. depressingC. predictableD. dull3.A person’s wealth is often in inverse proportion to their happiness.A. equalB. certainC. largeD. opposite4. His professional career spanned 16 years.A. startedB. changedC. lastedD. moved5. The symptoms of the disease manifested themselves ten days later.A. easedB. improvedC. relievedD. appeared6. The group does not advocate the use of violence.A. limitB. supportC. regulateD. oppose7. She felt that she had done her good deed for the day.A. actB. homeworkC. justiceD. model8. Some of the larger birds can remain stationary in the air for several minutes.A. motionlessB. silentC. seatedD. true9. There was an inclination to treat geography as a less important subject.A. pointB. resultC. findingD. tendency10. His stomach felt hollow with fear.A. sincereB. respectfulC. emptyD. terrible11. The committee was asked to render a report on the housing situation.A. copyB. publishC. summarizeD. furnish12. That uniform makes the guards look absurd.A. seriousB. beautifulC. impressiveD. ridiculous13. The department deferred the decision for six months.A. put offB. arrived atC. abided byD. protested against14. The original experiment cannot be exactly duplicated .A. inventedB. reproducedC. designedD. reported15. The country was torn apart by strife.A. conflictB. povertyC. warD. economy第2部分阅读判断下面的短文列出了7个句子请根据短文的内容对每个句子做出判断:如果该句提到的是正确信息,请选择A;如果该句提供的信息是错误的,请选择B;如果该句的信息文中没有提及,请选择C。

2014职称英语_理工类A级阅读理解及完型填空

2014职称英语_理工类A级阅读理解及完型填空

Free Statins With Fast Food Could Neutralize Heart RiskFast food outlets could provide statin drugs free of 1charge so that customers can reduce the heart disease dangers of fatty food, researchers at Imperial College London 2suggest in a new study.Statins reduce the 3amount ofunhealthy ”LDL” cholesterol in the blood. A wealth of trial data has proven them to be highly effective at lowering a person’s heart attack4risk .In a paper published in the American Journal of Cardiology,Dr Darrel Francis and colleagues calculate that the reduction in heart attack risk offered by a statin is 5enough to offset the increase in heart attack risk from 6eating a cheeseburger and drinking a milkshake.Dr Francis,from the National Heart and Lung Institute at Imperial College London,who is the senior author of the study, said:”Statins don’t cut out a11 of the 7unhealthy effects of cheeseburgers and French fries.It’s better to avoid fatty food altogether.But we’ve worked out that in terms of your 8possobility of having a heart attack. Taking a statin can reduce your risk to more or lessthesame 9degree as a fast food meal increases it.”“It’s ironic that people are free to take as many unhealthv condiments in fast food outletsas they 10like , but statins, which are beneficial to heart health, have to be prescribed. It makes sense to make risk-reducing statins available just as easily as the unhealthy condiments that are 11provided free of charge.It would cost less than 5 penceper 12customer ---not much different to a sachet of sugar.” Dr Francis said.When people engage in risky behaviours like driving or smoking, they’re encouraged to take 13measures that lower their risk, 1ike 14wearing a seatbelt or choosing cigarettes with filters. Taking a statin is a rational way of 15lowering some of the risks of eating a fatty meal.Sharks Perform a Service for Earth’s WatersIt is hard to get people to think of sharks as anything but a deadly enemy1. They are thought to 1 attack people frequently. But these fish2 perform a 2 valuable service for earth's waters and for human beings. Yet business and sport fishing3 are threatening their 3 existence Some sharks are at risk of disappearing from 4 EarthWarm weather may influence both fish and shark activity. Many fish swim near coastal areas 5 because of their warm waters. Experts say sharks may follow the fish into the same areas, 6 where people also swim. In fact, most sharks do not purposely charge at or bite humans. They are thought to mistake a person 7 for a sea animal, such as a seal or sea lion. That is why people should not swim in the ocean when the sun goes down or comes up. Those are the 8 times when sharks are looking for food. Experts also say that bright colors and shiny jewelry may cause sharks to attack. A shark has an extremely good sense of smell4. It can find small amounts of substances in water, such as blood, body liquids and 9 chemicals produced by animals. These powerful 10 senses help sharks find their food. Sharks eat fish, any 11 other sharks, and plants that live in the ocean.Medical researchers want to learn more about the shark’s body defense, and immune 12 systems against disease. Researchers know that sharks 13 recover quickly from injuries. They study the shark in hopes of finding a way to fight human disease.Sharks are important for the world’s 14 oceans . They eat injured and diseased fish. Their hunting activities mean that the numbers of other fish in ocean waters do not become too 15 great . This protects the plants and other forms of life that exist in the oceans.Liquefaction” Key to Much of Japanese Earthquake DamageThe massive subduction zone1 earthquake in Japan caused a significant level of soil "liquefaction"2 that has surprised researchers with its 1 widespread severity, a new analysis shows."We've seen localized3 examples of soil liquefaction as extreme as this before, but the distance and 2 extent of damage in Japan were unusually severe," said Scott Ashford, a professor of geotechnical engineering4 at Oregon State University5. "Entire structures were tilted and sinking into the sediments," Ashford said. "The shifts in soil destroyed water, drain and gas pipelines6, crippling the utilities and infrastructure these communities need to 3 function . We saw some places that sank as much as four feet."Some degree of soil liquefaction7 is common in almost any major earthquake. It's a phenomenon in which soils soaked with water, particularly recent sediments or sand, can lose much of their 4 strength and flow during an earthquake. This can allow structures to shift or sink or 5 collapse.But most earthquakes are much 6 shorter than the recent event in Japan, Ashford said. The length of the Japanese earthquake, as much as five minutes, may force researchers to reconsider the extent of liquefaction damage possibly occurring in situations such as this8."With such a long-lasting earthquake, we saw 7 how structures that might have been okay after 30 seconds just continued to sink and tilt as the shaking continued for several more minutes," he said. "And it was clear that younger sediments, and especially areas built on 8 recently filled ground, are much more vulnerable."The data provided by analyzing the Japanese earthquake, researchers said, should make it possible to improve the understanding of this soil 9 phenomenon and better prepare for it in the future. Ashford said it was critical for the team to collect the information quickly, 10before damage was removed in the recovery efforts9."There's no doubt that we'll learn things from what happened in Japan10 that11 will help us to reduce risks in other similar 11events," Ashford said. "Future construction in some places may make more use of techniques known to reduce liquefaction, such as better compaction to make soils dense, or use of reinforcing stone columns."Ashford pointed out that northern California have younger soils vulnerable to liquefaction ---on the coast, near river deposits or in areas with filled ground. The "young" sediments, in geologic terms, may be those 12 deposited within the past 10,000 years or more. In Oregon, for instance, that describes much of downtown Portland, the Portland International Airport and other cities.Anything 13 near a river and old flood plains is a suspect12, and the Oregon Department of Transportation has already concluded that 1,100 bridges in the state are at risk from an earthquake. Fewer than 15 percent of them have been reinforced to 14 prevent collapse. Japan has suffered tremendous losses in the March 11 earthquake, but Japanese construction 15 standards helped prevent many buildings from collapse ---even as they tilted and sank into the ground.==Batteries Built by VirusesWhat do chicken pox,the common cold, the flu,and AIDS have in common?1.According to the first paragraph,people try to C. stay away from viruses because they are causes of various diseases.2.What is Belcher's team doing at present?C. It is making batteries with viruses.3.What expression below is opposite in meaning to the word "shrink" appearing in paragraph 5?D. Expand:4.Which of the following is true of Belcher's battery mentioned in paragraph 6?D It is a metallic disk with viruses inside it.5.How tiny is one battery part?A.Its width is one tenth of a hair..Listening Device Provides Landslide Early WarningA device that provides early warning of a landslide by monitoring vibrations in soil is being tested by UK researchers.1.What does “Such natural disasters” in the first paragraph refer to? D Landslides.2.Which of the following statements is true of landslides? D All of the above.3.Why do researchers develop a new device to monitor signs of landsides?C Because the common methods can cause false alarms.4.Which of the following statements is NOT true of the device,according 1o Paragraph4?A It is filled in with gravel.5.According to the context,what does the word “positives” in the fifth paragraph mean?B Evidences."Don't Drink Alone" Gets New MeaningIn what may be bad news for bars and pubs,a European research group has found that peopleA who drink alcohol outside of mealsur2. Which of the following is NOT the conclusion m ade by the researchers about “drinking with meals”?C It increases by 20 percent the possibility of cancer in all sites.3. Approximately how many drinks do the lowest-intake group average per day? A 3 drinks.4Which cancer risk is the lowest among all the four kinds of cancer mentioned in thepassage?B Oral cancer.5According to the last paragraph, tissue‟s lower exposure to alcohol D reduces therisk of laryngeal cancer.Teaching Math, Teaching Anxiety In a new study about the way kids learn math in elementary school,:1.What is the result of the research at the University of Chicago,according to the first paragraph?D Female teachers' confidence in their math skills is related to girl's math skills.2.What is implied in the third paragraph?B A difficult subject like math may affect teachers' confidence in teaching the subject.3.According to the experiment,those teachers were probably anxious about math when they feltC uneasy reading the numbers of a sales receipt.4.The sixth paragraph tells us that the research findingsA prove a strong link between female teachers' math anxiety and their female students' math achievements.5.David Geary thinks thatB the research results need to be retested based on a larger sample.Renewable Energy SourcesToday petroleum provides around 40% of the world’s energy needs, mostly fuelling automobiles1. Coal is still used, mostly in power stations, to cover one-quarter of our energy needs, but it is the least1.What are the energy resources that are notrenewable according to the article? D A and B.2.China’s Three Gorges DamB is of the same size of the US’s Hoover Dam.3.Which is the country with the first commercialpower station that makes use of ocean currentsproduced by tides? B Norway.4.Which of the following statements is true ofwind power? D All of the above.5.According to the article, resources such as windB are renewable so sustainable.Ants have Big Impact on Environment as "Ecosystem Engineers"Research by the University of Exeter1 has revealed that ants have a big impact on their local1 .Why are ants compared to ecosystem engineers?C Because their activity affects the environment.2. As predators, ants A prey on small as well as large animals.3. Dir Sanders' study centered on how antsD produce such a big impact on the environment.4. What does paragraph 6 tell us?B Ants bring about a positive influence to an area when their population is small.5. What still remains unclear about ants, according to the last paragraph?C How do human activities affect ants' influenceon a given ecosystem?Researchers Discover Why Humans BeganWalking UprightMost of us walk and carry items in our hands every day. These are seemingly simple activities that the majority of us don’t question. But an international team of researchers, including Dr. Richmond from GW's Columbian College of Arts and Sciences,have discovered1.Which of the following statements is NOT true according to the first two paragraphs?A Many people question the simple human activities of walking and carrying items.2.Dr. Richmond conducted the experiment with the purpose of findingB what made our ancestors walk upright.3.Kyoto, University's study discovered that chimpanzees.C liked coula nuts better than oil palm nuts.4.Why did the chimpanzees walk on two limbs during Kyoto University's experiment?D Because they wanted to carry more nuts with two free limbs.5.What can we infer from the reading passage?D Human walking on two legs developed as a means of survival.Chicken Soup for the Soul: Comfort Food Fights LonelinessMashed potatoes, macaroni and cheese, may be bad for your arteries.1 But according to a study in Psychological Science, they’re good for your heart and 2 emotions.The study focuses on “comfort food” and how it makes people feel."For me 3 personally, food has always played a big role in my family,” says Jordan Troisi, a graduate student at the University of Buffalo, and lead author on the study.The study came out of the research program of his co—author Shira Gabriel.It has 4 looked at non-human things that may affect human emotions.Some people reduce loneliness by bonding with their 5 favorite TV show, building virtual relationships with a pop song singer or looking at pictures of loved ones.Troisi and Gabriel wondered if comfort food could have the same effect 6 by making peoplethink of their nearest and dearest. In one experiment, in order to make 7 participants feel lonely, the researchers had them write for six minutes about a fight with someone close to them.Others were given an emotionally neutral writing assignment. Then, some people in each 8 group wrote about the experience of eating a comfort food and others wrote about eating a new food.9 Finally,the researchers had participants 10 complete questions about their levels of loneliness.Writing about a fight with a close person made people feel lonely.But people who were generally 11 secure in their relationships would feel less lonely by writing about a comfort food."We have found that comfort foods are consistently associated with those close to us."says Troisi."Thinking about or consuming these foods later then serves as a reminder of those close others."In 12 their essays on comfort food, many people wrote about the 13 experience of eating food with family and friends. In another experiment, 14 eating chicken soup in the lab made people think more about relationships, but only if they considered chicken soup to be a comfort food.This was a question they had been asked long before the experiment, along with many other questions, so they wouldn’t remember it. Throughout everyone’s daily lives they experience s tress, often associated with our 15 connections with others," Troisi says."Comfort food Can be an easy remedy for loneliness.Cell Phones Increase Traffic, Pedestrian Fatalities Cell phones are a danger on the road in more ways than one.1 The two new studies, lead-authored by Professor Peter D. Loeb D both A and C.2 According to the second paragraph, when did cell phones actually help to reduce pedestrian and traffic fatalities? B Before the number of cell phone users reached a critical mass3 What is said about cell phone use in paragraph 4?D The use of cell phones has a life-saving effect for pedestrians and drivers.4 What is said about cell phone use in themid-1980s in paragraph 5?A It had a life-taking effect because there weren't enough cell phones in use then.5 Which of the following statements DOES NOT answer the question(What caused the “life-saving effect”to occur in the early 1990s?)?B The number of cell phone users reached about 100 million.U.S. Scientists Confirm Water on MarsNASA1scientists said that Mars was covered once by vast lakes, flowing rivers and a variety of other wet environments that had the potential to support life. 1. What was discovered by NASA's Phoenix Mars Lander on Mars?C)Water in a soil sample.2. Why did the first two attempts to deliver samples fail?C)The samples got stuck inside the scoop.3. Which one of the following statements is NOT meant by the writer?A)Scientists have been trying to break the ice-rich layers of soil on Mars.4. Where are the scientists involved in the research from?C)They are from both America and Canada.5. Which of the following do you think is the best description of Phoenix’s Surface Stereo Imager Camera, according to your understanding of the passage?A)It imitates human vision and is able to capture three-dimensional images.。

2014年职称英语_综合类_完形填空讲义

2014年职称英语_综合类_完形填空讲义

2014年职称英语_国家指定教材_完形填空_所有文章中英文对照版 (3)完形填空文章_综合类_C级 (3)第一篇 A Life with Birds【有鸟陪伴的生活】 (3)第二篇 A Lucky Break【幸福的骨折】 (5)第三篇Global Warming 【全球变暖】 (6)第四篇 A Success Story【一个成功的故事】 (8)第五篇Traffic in Our Cities 【城市的交通】 (10)完形填空文章_综合类_B级 (12)第六篇Teaching and Learning【教与学】 (12)第七篇The Difference between Man and Computer 【人与电脑的区别】 (14)第八篇Look on The Bright Side 【看光明的一面】 (16)第九篇The First Bicycle【第一辆自行车】 (18)第十篇Working Mothers 【职业母亲】 (19)完形填空文章_综合类_A级 (21)第十一篇School Lunch【学校午餐】 (21)第十二篇 A Powerful Influence【强大的影响】 (23)第十三篇The Old Gate【古老之门】 (25)第十四篇Family History【家族史】 (27)第十五篇Helen and Martin【海伦和马丁】 (29)完形填空文章课后练习参考答案__综合类 (32)2014年职称英语_国家指定教材_完形填空_所有文章中英文对照版阅读下面的短文。

短文中有十五个空白,在文章的后面,每一个空白都列了四个备选答案。

请根据文章的内容选择合适的词或短语填在空白处。

完形填空文章_综合类_C级第一篇 A Life with Birds【有鸟陪伴的生活】For nearly 17 years David Cope has worked as one of the Tower of London's Yeoman Warders, ____1____ known to tourists as Beefeaters. David, 64, lives in a three-bedroomed flat right at the ___2_____ of the Byward Tower, one of the gatehouses. “____3____ our bedroom we have a marvellous view of Tower Bridge and the Thames. ”says David.The Tower of London is famous ___4____its ravens, the large black birds which have lived there for over three centuries. David was immediately fascinated by the birds and when he was ____5___ the post of Raven Master eight years ago he had no ____6____ i n accepting it. “The birds have now become my life and I'm always ____7___ of the fact that I am ___8____ a tradition. The legend says that if the ravens leave the Tower, England will fall to enemies, and it's my job to ____9____ sure this doesn't happen!”David ____10____about four hours a day to the care of the ravens. He has grown to love them and the ____11____ that he lives right next to them is ideal. “I can ____12____ a close eye on them all the time, and not just when I'm working.” ____13____, David's wife Mo was not ____14____ on the idea of life in the Tower, but she too will be sad to leave when he retires next year. “When we look out of our windows we see history ___15_____ around us, and we are taking it in and storing it up for our future memor ies. ”文章翻译:有鸟陪伴的生活作为伦敦塔的守卫者之一David Cope在那里工作了近17年,被游客们称为Beefeaters。

2014年职称英语综合类A级考试试题答案及解析(二)

2014年职称英语综合类A级考试试题答案及解析(二)

职称英语综合类A级考试试题答案及解析(二)一、词汇选择(本大题15小题.每题1.0分,共15.0分。

下面共有15个句子,每个句子中均有1个词或短语画有底横线,请从每个句子后面所给的4个选项中选择1个与画线部分意义最相近的词或短语。

请将答案涂在答题卡相应的位置上。

)第1题Their research merely duplicates work already done elsewhere.A borrowedB purchasedC copiedD rewritten【正确答案】:C【本题分数】:1.0分【答案解析】[解析] 本句意思:他们的研究工作只是重复别人做过的事情。

duplicate:复制。

copy和它是近义词。

如:The secretary was asked to copy the contract.秘书被要求复印合同书。

purchase和buy意思相同,表示购买,只是它比buy用法要正式。

rewritten是rewrite的过去分词,表示改写,如:He was asked to rewrite the article.他被要求重写这篇文章。

第2题After supper we usually take a stroll around the park for about an hour.A walkB restC bathD breath【正确答案】:A【本题分数】:1.0分【答案解析】[解析] 本句意思:我们饭后经常在公园散步大约一个小时。

句子意思应该是很悠闲地散步,所以A与其意思较接近。

walk:走路,行走。

bath:洗澡,用法为“to take a bath”。

breath:呼吸,如:I was out of breath/short of breath after running for the bus.我因为追赶公共汽车,弄得上气不接下气。

第3题The film originated from a short story.A resultedB heardC derivedD made【正确答案】:C【本题分数】:1.0分【答案解析】[解析] 本句意思:这部电影取材于一篇短篇小说。

2014年职称英语考试 理工类 完形填空 15篇全 字典版 重点预测标注版 正反打印

2014年职称英语考试 理工类 完形填空 15篇全 字典版  重点预测标注版  正反打印

(理工类)14年完形填空第一篇Captain Cook Arrow Legend库克船长箭传说It was a great legend while it lasted,but DNA testing has(1)finally ended a two-century-old story of the Hawaiian arrow carved from the bone of British explorer Captain James Cook(2)who died in the Sandwich Islands’in1779.“There is(3)no Cook in the Australian Museum,’’museum collection manager Jude Philip said not long ago in announcing the DNA evidence that the arrow was not made of Cook’S bone.But that will not stop the museum from continuing to display the arrow in its(4) exhibition,“Uncovered:Treasures of the Australian Museum,”which(5)does include a feather cape presented to Cook by Hawaiian King Kalani’opu’u in1778.Cook was one of Britain’s great explorers and is credited with(6)discovering the“Great South Land,"(7)now Australia,in1770.He was clubbed to death in the Sandwich Islands,now Hawaii。

2014年职称英语真题解析_理工A

2014年职称英语真题解析_理工A

2014年职称英语试题(理工A)主讲人:王霞词汇选项1. This was disaster on cosmic scale.A. modestB. commercialC. hugeD. nationalcosmic:极其广阔的2. New secretaries came and went with monotonous regularity.A. amazingB. depressingC. predictableD. dullmonotonous:单调的,枯燥乏味的词汇选项3. A person’s wealth is often in inverse proportion to their happiness.A. equalB. certainC. largeD. oppositeinverse:相反的4. His professional career spanned 16 years.A. startedB. changedC. lastedD. movedspanned:跨越[时间]词汇选项5. The symptoms of the disease manifested themselves ten days later.A. easedB. improvedC. relievedD. appeared提示:该题出现出题错误原题:The symptoms of the disease manifested themselves ten years later.A. eased (减轻,缓解)B. improved(提高改进)B. relieved(减轻,缓解) D. appeared(出现)解析:答案选项D是不及物动词,后面不能带宾语。

词汇选项6. The group does not advocate the use of violence.A. limitB. supportC. regulateD. opposeadvocate:提倡,拥护7. She felt that she had done her good deed for the day.A. actB. homeworkC. justiceD. model词汇选项8. Some of the larger birds can remain stationary in the air for several minutes.A. motionlessB. silentC. seatedD. truestationary:静止的,固定的9. There was an inclination to treat geography as a less important subject.A. pointB. resultC. findingD. tendencyinclination:倾向词汇选项10. His stomach felt hollow with fear.A. sincereB. respectfulC. emptyD. terriblehollow:空的11. The committee was asked to render a report on the housing situation.A. copyB. publishC. summarizeD. furnishrender:提供词汇选项12. That uniform makes the guards look absurd.A. seriousB. beautifulC. impressiveD. ridiculousabsurd:荒谬的,荒唐的13. The department deferred the decision for six months.A. put offB. arrived atC. abided byD. protested againstdeferred:推迟词汇选项14. The original experiment cannot be exactly duplicated .A. inventedB. reproducedC. designedD. reportedduplicated:复制15. The country was torn apart by strife.A. conflictB. povertyC. warD. economystrife:冲突阅读判断——Experience the world in 3D game16. The game developed by Dassault Systemes is the first 3D gamerecreating(再现) the vision(视觉) of different species.答案为:A文章中相关句:Now you can look through their eyes with the first3D game that recreates the vision of different species …. Theonline simulation, created by the French 3D design companyDaasault, with the guidance of …. mimics (模仿) the vision offive animals --- cats,…阅读判断——Experience the world in 3D game 17. Dassult’s 3D software takes different perspective like colorperception and angle of vision into account.答案为:A文章中的相关句:due to differences in field of view, color perception and night vision, for example, … be drasticallydifferent from species to species….. Dassault’s 3 D allows …be modified by adding blur(模糊区域) or changing the colors,angle of vision and depth of…阅读判断——Experience the world in 3D game18. The animals’ views in the software are the same as those in reality.答案为:B文章中的相关句:“We used virtual cameras to preciselysimulate larger viewing angles but the result made peoplenauseous(令人作呕的),” says Schmidt-Morand. “So wetweaked(微调) the model to give a sense of the wider viewwithout sticking to(忠于) reality.”阅读判断——Experience the world in 3D game19. Dogs have larger viewing angles than humans.答案为A文章中的相关句:Haws have more detailed vision than ours, whereas dogs are better at seeing movement and have a wider field of view.阅读判断——Experience the world in 3D game20. It takes the team the longest time to recreate the rat’s view becausethey’re near sighted.答案为C阅读判断——Experience the world in 3D game21. The team is working on recreating the vision of more animals. 答案为B.答案相关句:If there is interest from schools and zoos, theteam hopes to recreate the vision of more animals.阅读判断——Experience the world in 3D game22. Schmidt-Morand’s favorite animal is cat.答案为C概括大意与完成句子(暂缺)阅读理解——A new strategy to overcome breast cancer 31. All of the following factors relating to cancer risk were mentioned inthe passage EXCEPT ______.答案为AB. regular walkingC. recreational activityD.lifestyle choices阅读理解——A new strategy to overcome breast cancer32. It can be inferred from Dr. Alpa Patel’s study that ___.B. daily walk could cut the chance of breast cancer.文章中的相关句:We were pleased to find that without anyother recreational activity, just walking one hour a day wasassociated with a lower risk of breast cancer in these women.阅读理解——A new strategy to overcome breast cancer33. Dr. Alpa Patel was ___.A. head of the survey study文章中的相关句:Dr. Alpa Patel, a senior epidemiologist(流行病学家) at the American Cancer Society is Atlanta, Georgia, wholed the study,….阅读理解——A new strategy to overcome breast cancer34.Which of the following statements is true according to the passage? 答案为C:Walking was the only recreational activity for about half of the women文章中的相关句 Of the women, 47% said walking was their onlyrecreational activity.A. Most women take walking as their only recreational activity.B. the study aims to track the health conditions of its subjects., … so it ( the study) could monitor the incidence of cancer inthe group.D. irregular walking increased the risk of breast cancer in post-menopausal(绝经后的) women阅读理解——A new strategy to overcome breast cancer 35. The word “sustainable” in the last paragraph is closest in meaning to___.答案为A:continuable(可持续的)D: persistent:[尤指不好或不受欢迎的状态或情况]持续存在的,继续发生的;执著的;不屈不挠的文章中的相关句:The challenge now is how we turn thesefindings into action and identify other sustainable lifestylechanges that will help us…阅读理解——The Northern Lights36. The solar wind comes into being as a result of ___. 答案为C:fast flow of energy away from the sun干扰项:a stream of particles being blown away文章中的相关句:Energy flows away from the Sun toward the Earth in a stream of electrified particles that move at speeds around a million miles per hour. These particles are called plasma, and the stream of plasma coming from the Sun is called the solar wind.阅读理解——The Northern Lights37. What happens when solar wind comes to the Earth? 答案为B:It is trapped in magnetic belts around the Earth.文章中的相关句:The solar wind constantly streams toward the Earth, but don’t worry because a protective magnetic field surrounds our planet. The same magnetic field that makes your compass point north also steers the particles from the Sun to the north and south poles. The charged particles become trapped in magnetic belts around the Earth.阅读理解——The Northern Lights38. The Northern Lights are created when______答案为A:atomic particles fall to the Earth and collide with atmospheric gases.文章中的相关句: The breaking and reconnecting of themagnetic field lines can cause atomic (原子的)particlescalled electrons trapped in the belts to fall into the Earth’satmosphere at the poles. As the electrons fall into the Earth,they collide with gas molecules(分子) in the atmosphere,creating flashes of light in the sky.阅读理解——The Northern Lights39.Which of the following statements is true of the Northern Lights?答案为A:Their movement is slow enough to be observed with the eyes. 文章中的相关句:Watching auroras(北极光) is fun and exciting,but normally you can only see them in places far north likeAlaska and Canada. The movement of the aurora across thesky is usually slow enough to easily follow with your eyes butthey can also pulsate(跳动), flicker(闪烁), or even move likewaves.阅读理解——The Northern Lights40. What is the author’s tone toward the Northern Lights?D. Appreciative (欣赏的)文章中的相关句:(文章最后一句)We hope you are able to travel to far-north places like the Arctic Circle and see the Northern Lights at least once during your lifetime. We know you will never forget it!with a Glance41. The eye-tracker technology enables us to______答案为D. move an object from screen with a glance.文章中的相关句:(第二段) A system called EyeDrop uses a head-mounted eye tracker that simultaneously records your field of view so it knows where you are looking on the screen. Gazing at an object – a photo, say – and then pressing a key, selects that object. It can then be moved from the screen to a tablet or smartphone just by glancing at the second device, as long as the two are connected wirelessly.with a Glance42. Why is a button needed?D. To select what we want.文章中的相关句:(第四段)A button needs to be used to select the object you are looking at otherwise you end up with the "Midas touch"(点石成金) effect, whereby everything you look at gets selected by your gaze, says Turner. "with a Glance43. The word “this” in Paragraph 6 refers to_______C. combination of gaze-tracking with input on touch devices. 答案相关句:(第六段)Christian Holz, a researcher in human-computer interaction at Yahoo Labs in Sunnyvale, California, saysthe system is a nice take on getting round this fundamentalproblem of using gaze-tracking to interact. "EyeDrop solves this ina slick (灵巧的)way by combining it with input on the touch deviceswe carry with us most of the time anyway and using touch input asa clutching(抓取) mechanism," he says. "This now allows usersto seamlessly(无缝地) interact across devices far and close in avery natural manner."with a Glance44. Which of the following statement is true of eye-trackers for consumerdevices.D. They are expected to come out soon.答案相关句:(第7段)While current eye-trackers are ratherbulky(笨重的), mainstream consumer devices are not too faraway.with a Glance45. What is Turner likely to study next?答案为:C. How to get touch screen involved.超强干扰项:A. How to drag and drop with gaze and taps.答案相关句:(最后一段)Turner says he has also looked at how content can be cut and pasted or drag-and-dropped using a mix of gaze and taps on a touchscreen. The system was presented at the Conference on Mobile and Ubiquitous Multimedia in Sweden, last week.补全短文——Wrongly Convicted(宣判有罪) Man and His Accuser (原告) Tell Their StoryNEW YORK,NY, January 5,2010. St.Martin’s Press has announced the release of the paperback edition of Picking Cotton, a remarkable true story of what novelist John Grisham calls an “account of violence, rage, redemption(救赎),and, ultimately forgiveness.”补全短文——Wrongly Convicted(宣判有罪) Man and His Accuser (原告) Tell Their StoryThe story began in 1987, in Burlington, North Carolina, with the rape of a young while college student named Jennifer Thompson. During her ordeal(折磨), Thompson swore(发誓) to herself that she would never forget the face of her rapist(强奸犯), a man who climbed through the window of her apartment and assaulted(攻击) her brutally. ___F____(46) When the police asked her if she could identify the assailant (袭击者) from a book of mug shots(嫌疑犯照片), she picked one that she was sure was correct, and later she identified the same man in a lineup(行列).F. During the attack, she made an effort to memorize everydetail of his face, looking for scars, tattoos(纹身),orother identifying marks.补全短文——Wrongly Convicted(宣判有罪) Man and His Accuser (原告) Tell Their StoryBased on her convincing eye witness testimony, a 22-year-old black man named Ronald Cotton was sentenced to prison for two life terms. Cotton’s lawyer appealed the decision(提出上诉), and by the time of the appeals hearing(上诉听证会), evidence had come to light suggesting that the real rapist might have been a man who looked very like Cotton, an imprisoned criminal named Bobby Poole. _____ D____(47) Jennifer Thompson looked at both men face to face, and once again said that Ronald Cotton was the one who raped her.D. Another trial was held.补全短文——Wrongly Convicted(宣判有罪) Man and His Accuser (原告) Tell Their StoryEleven years later, DNA evidence completely exonerated(证明……清白)Cotton and just as unequivocally(明确地) convicted Poole, who confessed to the crime. _____E___ (48) “The man I was so sure I had never seen in my life was the man who was inches from my throat, who raped me, who hurt me, who took my spirit away, who robbed me of my soul,” she wrote. “And the man I had identified so surely on so many occasions was absolutely innocent.”E. Thompson was shocked and devastated(使震惊)补全短文——Wrongly Convicted(宣判有罪) Man and His Accuser (原告) Tell Their Story____C___(49) Remarkably both were able to put this tragedy behind them, overcome the racial barrier that divided them, and write a book, which they have subtitled “Our memoir(回忆录) of injustice and redemption(拯救).”C. I cannot begin to imagine what would have happenedhad my mistaken identification occurred in a capital(可判死刑的)case补全短文——Wrongly Convicted(宣判有罪) Man and His Accuser (原告) Tell Their StoryNevertheless, Thompson says, she still lives “with constant pain that my profound mistake cost him so dearly ____A____(50)”A. Jennifer Thompson decided to meet Cotton andapologize to him personally.补全短文——Wrongly Convicted(宣判有罪) Man and His Accuser (原告) Tell Their StoryA. Jennifer Thompson decided to meet Cotton and apologize tohim personally.B. Many criminals are sent to prison on the basis of accuratetestimony by eye witnesses.C. I cannot begin to imagine what would have happened hadmy mistaken identification occurred in a capital caseD. Another trial was held.E. Thompson was shocked and devastated.F. During the attack, she made an effort to memorize everydetail of his face, looking for scars, tattoos(纹身),or otheridentifying marks.完形填空——Musical Training Can Improve Communication Skills American scientists say musical training seems to improve communication skills and Language retardation(延迟).They found that developing musical skill involves the (51) same process in the brain as learning how to speak .The scientists believe that could (52) help children with learning disabilities .Nina Krauss is a neurobiologist at Northwestern University in Illinois. She says Musical training (53) involves putting togetherdifferent kinds of information, such as hearing music, looking atmusical notes, touching an instrument and watching othermusicians .The (54) process is not much different fromlearning how to speak .Both involve different senses .完形填空——Musical Training Can Improve Communication Skills She further explains musical training and learning to (55) speak each make us think about what we are doing .She says speech and music (56) pass through a structure of the nervous system called the brain stem .The brain stem (57) controls our ability to hear .Until recently, experts have though the brain stem could not be developed or changed. (58) But Professor Krauss and her team found that musical training can improve a person’s brain stem activity.完形填空——Musical Training Can Improve Communication Skills The study involved involved individuals with different levels of musical (59) ability. They were asked to wear an electrical device that measures (60) brain activity. The individuals wore the electrode while they watched a video of someone speaking and a person playing a musical instrument---the cello(大提琴).Professor Krause says cello have sound qualities similar (61) to some of the sounds that are important with speech .The study found that the more years of training people had, the more (62) sensitive they were to the sound and rhythm of the music. Those who were Involved in musical activities were the same people in whom the (63)improvement of sensory events was the strongest. It shows theimportance of musical training to children with learning (64)disabilities. She says using music to improve listening skills couldmean they (65) hear sentences and understand facialexpressions better .完形填空——Musical Training Can Improve Communication Skills51. A. unique B. different C. same D. strange52. A. help B. tell C. remind D .entertain53. A. shapes B. involves C .relates D. enhances54. A. form B. step C. point D. process55. A. play B. sing C. speak D. think56. A. pass B. use C. look D. put57. A. develops B. controls C. assesses D. observes完形填空——Musical Training Can Improve Communication Skills58. A. So B. Moreover C. As D. But59. A. instruments B. ability C. types D. contact60. A. physical B. musical C. speech D. brain61. A. as B. of C. to D. at62. A. familiar B. inactive C. critical D. sensitive63. A. reduction B. improvement C. interference D. implication64. A. styles B. disabilities C. interests D. approaches65. A. read B. write C. hear D. change。

2014年职称英语理工类A级考试试题及答案解析(一)

2014年职称英语理工类A级考试试题及答案解析(一)

职称英语理工类A级考试试题及答案解析(一)一、词汇选择(本大题15小题.每题1.0分,共15.0分。

下面共有15个句子,每个句子中均有1个词或短语画有底横线,请从每个句子后面所给的4个选项中选择1个与画线部分意义最相近的词或短语。

请将答案涂在答题卡相应的位置上。

)第1题The staff of the company are always courteous and helpful.A efficientB respectableC well-informedD respectful【正确答案】:D【本题分数】:1.0分【答案解析】[解析] 本题考查的是对形容词的认知。

这句话的意思是:这家公司的员工有礼貌且热心。

courteous:有礼貌的,谦恭的,在四个选项中只有respectful和它意义相近。

respect.able和respectful的区别是前者是“可尊敬的”,后者是“恭敬的,有礼貌的”,如:a respectable gentleman一位值得尊敬的先生,a respectful bow充满敬意的鞠躬。

A.efficient:有效率的;B.respectable:值得尊敬地;C.well-informed:有学问的。

第2题The curious look from the strangers around her made her feel uneasy.A difficultB worriedC anxiousD unhappy【正确答案】:C【本题分数】:1.0分【答案解析】[解析] 本题考查的是对形容词的认知。

这句话的意思是:从陌生人那里投来的好奇的目光让她感觉局促不安。

uneasy和easy不是反义词。

uneasy是“局促不安的,忧虑的,担心的”的意思,如:I felt uneasy about asking her for such a big favor.求她帮我这么个大忙,我感到有点不安。

2014职称英语理工A完形填空(整理版)

2014职称英语理工A完形填空(整理版)

第六篇Car Thieves Could Be Stopped RemotelySpeeding off1 in a stolen car, the thief thinks he has got a great catch2. But he is in a nasty surprise3. The car is fitted with a remote immobilizer, and a radio signal from a control center miles away will ensure that once the thief switches the engine of , he will not be able to start it again.For now, such devices are only available for fleets of trucks4 and specialist vehicles used on construction sites. But remote immobilization technology could soon start to trickle down to ordinary cars5, and should be available to ordinary cars in the UK in two months.The idea goes like this. A control box fitted to the car incorporates6 a miniature cellphone, a microprocessor and memory, and a GPS7 satellite positioning receiver. If the car is stolen, a coded cellphone signal will tell the unit to block the vehicle’s engine management system and prevent the engine being restarted.There are even plans for immobilizers that shut down vehicles on the moves8, though there are fears over the safety implications of such a system.In the UK, an array of9 technical fixes10 is already making life harder for car thieves. “The pattern of vehicles crime has changed.” says Martyn Randall of Thatcham, a security research organization based in Berkshire11 that is funded in part by the motor insurance industry.He says it would only take him a few minutes to teach a novice how to steal a car, using a bare minimum of tools12. But only if the car is more than 10 years old.Modern cars are a far tougher proposition13, as their engine management computer will not allow them to start unless they receive a unique ID code beamed out14 by the ignition key. In the UK, technologies like this have helped achieve a 31 per cent drop in vehicle-related crime15 since 1997.But determined criminals are still managing to find other ways to steal cars. Often by getting hold of the owner’s keys in a burglary. In 2000, 12 per cent of vehicles stolen in the UK were taken by using the owner’s keys, which doubles the previous year’s figure. Remote-controlled immobilization system would put a major new obstacle in the criminal’s way by making such thefts pointless. A group that includes Thatcham, the police, insurance companies and security technology firms have developed standards for a system that could go on the market sooner than the customer expects.第九篇Wonder WebsSpider webs are more than homes, and they are ingenious traps. And the world’s best web spinner may be the Golden Orb Weaver spider. The female Orb Weaver spins a web of fibers thin enough to be invisible to insect prey, yet tough enough to snare a flying bird without breaking.The secret of the web’s strength? A type of super-resilient silk called dragline. When the female spid er is ready to weave the web’s spokes and frame, she uses her legs to draw the airy thread out through a hollow nozzle in her belly. Dragline is not sticky, so the spider can race back and forth along it to spin the web’s trademark spiral.Unlike some spiders that weave a new web every day, a Golden Orb Weaver reuses her handiwork until it falls apart, sometimes not for two years1. The silky thread is five times stronger than steel by weight and absorbs the force of an impact three times better than Kevlar, a high-strength human-made material used in bullet-proof vests. And thanks to its high tensile strength, or the ability to resist breaking under the pulling force called tension, a single strand can stretch up to 40 percent longer than its original length and snap back as well as new. No human-made fiber even comes close.It is no wonder manufacturers are clamoring for spider silk. In the consumer pipeline: high-performance fabrics for athletes and stockings that never run2. Think parachute cords and suspension bridge cables. A steady supply of spider silk would be worth billions of dollars — but how to produce it?Harvesting silk on spider farms does not work because the territorial arthropods have a tendency to devour their neighhors. Now, scientists at the biotechnology company Nexia are spinning artificial silk modeled after Golden Orb dragline.The first step: extract silk-making genes from the spiders. Next, implant the genes into goat egg cells. The nanny goats that grow from the eggs secrete dragline silk proteins in their milk.“The young goats pass on the silk-making gene without any help from us,” says Nexia president Jeffry Turner. Nexia is still perfecting the spinning process, but they hope artificial spider silk will soon be snagging customers as fast as the real thing snags bugs.第十一篇 Climate Change Poses Major Risks for Unprepared CitiesA new examination of urban policies has been carried out recently by Patricia Romero Lankao.She is a sociologist specializing in climate changeand urban development.She warns that many of the world’s fast-growing urban areas,especially in developing countries.will likely suffer from the impacts of changing climate.Her work also concludes that most cities are failing to reduce emissions of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases.These gases are known to affect the atmosphere.”Climate change is a deeply local issue and poses profound threats to the growing cities of the world,” says Romero Lankao. ”But too few cities are developing effective strategies to protect their residents."Cities are major sources of greenhouse gases.And urban populations are likely to be among those most severely affected by future climate change. Lankao’sfindings highlight ways in which city-residents are particularly vulnerable, and suggest policy interventions that could offer immediate and longer-term benefits .The locations and dense construction patterns of cities often place their populations at greater risk for natural disasters. Potential threats associated with climate include storm surges and prolonged hot weather. Storm surges can flood coastal areas and prolonged hot weather can heat heavily paved cities more than surrounding areas.The impacts of such natural events can be more serious in an urban environment.For example,a prolonged heat wave can increase existing levels of air pollution,causing widespread health problems.Poorer neighborhoods that may lack basic facilities such as drinking water or a dependable network of roads,are especially vulnerable to natural disasters.Many residents in poorer countries live in substandard housing without access to reliable drinking water,roads and basic services.Local governments, therefore should take measures to protect theirresidents.”Unfortunately,they tend to move towards rhetoric rather than meaningful responses, Romero Lankao writes, ” They don’t impose construction standards that could reduce heating and air conditioning needs. They don't emphasize mass transit and reduce automobile use. In fact, many local governments are taking a handsoff approach.” Thus, she urges them to change their idle policies and to take strong steps to prevent the harmful effects of climate change on cities.*第十二篇 Free Statins With Fast Food Could Neutralize Heart RiskFast food outlets could provide statin drugs free of charge so that customers can reduce the heart disease dangers of fatty food, researchers at Imperial CollegeLondon suggest in a newstudy.Statins reduce the amount of unhealthy ”LDL” cholesterol in the blood. A wealth of trial data has proven them to be highly effective at lowering a person’s heart attack risk. In a paper published in the American Journal of Cardiology,Dr Darrel Francis and colleagues calculate that the reduction in heart attack risk offered by a statinis enough to offset the increase in heart attack risk from eating a cheeseburger and drinking a milkshake.Dr Francis,from the National Heart and Lung Institute at Imperial College London,who is the senior author of the study, said:”Statins don’t cut out a11 ofthe unhealthy effects of cheeseburgers and French fries.It’s better to avoid fatty food altogether.But we’ve worked out that in terms of your possibility of having a heart attack. Taking a statin can reduce your risk to more or less the same degree as a fast food meal increases it.”“It’s ironic that people are free to take as many unhealthv condiments in fast food outlets as they like , but statins, which are beneficial to heart health, have to be prescribed. It makes sense to make risk-reducing statins available just as easily as the unhealthy condiments that are provided free of charge.It would cost less than 5 pence per customer一not much different to a sachet of sugar.” Dr Francis said.When people engage in risky behaviours like driving or smoking, they’re encouraged to take measures that lower their risk, 1ike wearing a seatbelt or choosing cigarettes with filters. Taking a statin is a rational way of lowering some of the risks of eating a fatty meal.第十四篇Sharks Perform a Service for Earth’s WatersIt is hard to get people to think of sharks as anything but a deadly enemy. They are thought to attack people frequently. But these fish perform a valuable service for earth's waters and for human beings. Yet business and sport fishing3 are threatening their existence Some sharks are at risk of disappearing from EarthWarm weather may influence both fish and shark activity. Many fish swim near coastal areas since their warm waters. Experts say sharks may follow the fish into the same areas, where people also swim. In fact, most sharks do not purposely charge at or bite humans. They are thought to mistake a person for a sea animal, such as a seal or sea lion. That is why people should not swim in the ocean when the sun goes down or comes up. Those are the times when sharks are looking for food. Experts also say that bright colors and shiny jewelry may cause sharks to attack.A shark has an extremely good sense of smell4. It can find small amounts of substancesin water, such as blood, body liquids and chemicals produced by animals. These powerful senses help sharks find their food. Sharks eat fish, any other sharks, and plants that live in the ocean.Medical researchers want to learn more about the shark’s body defense, and immune systems against disease. Researchers know that sharks recover quickly from injuries. They study the shark in hopes of finding a way to fight human disease.Sharks are important for the world’s oceans. They eat injured and diseased fish. Their hunting activities mean that the numbers of other fish in ocean waters do not become too great. This protects the plants and other forms of life that exist in the oceans.第十五篇“Liquefaction” Key to Much of Japanese Earthquake DamageThe massive subduction zone1 earthquake in Japan caused a significant level of soil "liquefaction"2 that has surprised researchers with its widespread severity, a new analysis shows."We've seen localized3 examples of soil liquefaction as extreme as this before, but the distance and extent of damage in Japan were unusually severe," said Scott Ashford, a professor of geotechnical engineering4 at Oregon State University5. "Entire structures were tilted and sinking into the sediments," Ashford said. "The shifts in soil destroyed water, drain and gas pipelines6, crippling the utilities and infrastructure these communities need to function . We saw some places that sank as much as four feet." Some degree of soil liquefaction7 is common in almost any major earthquake. It's a phenomenon in which soils soaked with water, particularly recent sediments or sand, can lose much of their strength and flow during an earthquake. This can allow structures to shift or sink or collapse.But most earthquakes are much shorter than the recent event in Japan, Ashford said. The length of the Japanese earthquake, as much as five minutes, may force researchers to reconsider the extent of liquefaction damage possibly occurring in situations such asthis8."With such a long-lasting earthquake, we saw how structures that might have been okay after 30 seconds just continued to sink and tilt as the shaking continued for several more minutes," he said. "And it was clear that younger sediments, and especially areas built on recently filled ground, are much more vulnerable."The data provided by analyzing the Japanese earthquake, researchers said, should make it possible to improve the understanding of this soil phenomenon and better prepare for it in the future. Ashford said it was critical for the team to collect the information quickly, before damage was removed in the recovery efforts9."There's no doubt that we'll learn things from what happened in Japan10 that11 will help us to reduce risks in other similar events," Ashford said. "Future construction in some places may make more use of techniques known to reduce liquefaction, such as better compaction to make soils dense, or use of reinforcing stone columns."Ashford pointed out that northern California have younger soils vulnerable to liquefaction ---on the coast, near river deposits or in areas with filled ground. The "young" sediments, in geologic terms, may be those deposited within the past 10,000 years or more. In Oregon, for instance, that describes much of downtown Portland, the Portland International Airport and other cities.Anything near a river and old flood plains is a suspect12, and the Oregon Department of Transportation has already concluded that 1,100 bridges in the state are at risk from an earthquake. Fewer than 15 percent of them have been reinforced to prevent collapse. Japan has suffered tremendous losses in the March 11 earthquake, but Japanese construction standards helped prevent many buildings from collapse ---even as they tilted and sank into the ground.。

2014年职称英语综合A真题答案2014年职称英语综合A真题答案

2014年职称英语综合A真题答案2014年职称英语综合A真题答案

2014年职称英语综合A真题答案(代码13)第1部分:词汇选项(第1~15题,每题1分,共15分)下面每个句子中均有1个词或者短语划有底横线,请为每处划线部分确定1个意义最为接近的选项。

1. There was an inclination to treat geography as a less important subject.A. pointB. tendencyC. result d. finding2. New secretaries came and went with monotonous regularity.a. amazingb. depressingc. predictabled. dull3. The committee was asked to render a report on the housing situation.a. furnishb. copyc. publishd. summarize4. The group does not advocate the use of violence.a. limitb. regulatec. opposed. support5. The original experiment cannot be exactly duplicate.a. reproducedb. inventedc. designedd. reported6. The department deferred the decision for six months.a. put offb. arrived atc. abided byd. protested against7. The symptoms of the disease manifested themselves ten days later.a. easedb. appearedc. improvedd. relieved8. The uniform makes the guards look absurd.a. seriousb. ridiculousc. beautifuld. impressive9. Some of the larger birds can remain stationary in the air for several minutes.a. silentb. motionlessc. seatedd. true10. The country was torn apart by strife.a. povertyb. warc. conflictd. economy11. She felt that she had done her good deed for the day.a. actb. homeworkc. justiced. model12. A person’s wealth is often in inverse proportion to their happiness.a. equalb. certainc. larged. opposite13. His professional career spanned 16 days.a. startedb. changedc. movedd. lasted14. His stomach felt hollow with fear.a. sincereb. respectfulc. terribled. empty15. This was disaster on a cosmic scale.a. modestb. hugec. commerciald. national第2部分:阅读判断(第16~22题,每题1分,共7分)下面的短文后列出了7个句子,请根据短文的内容对每个句子做出判断;如果该句提供的是正确信息,请选择A;如果该句提供的是错误信息,请选择B;如果该句的信息文中没有提及,请选择C。

2014年全国职称英语等级考试理工类A真题

2014年全国职称英语等级考试理工类A真题

2014年全国职称英语等级考试理工类A真题第1部分词汇选项下面每个句子中均有1个词或短语划有底横线,请为每处划线部分确定一个意义最为接近的选项。

1. This was disaster on cosmic scale.A. modest B. commercial C. huge D. national2. New secretaries came and went with monotonous regularity.A. amazing B. depressing C. predictable D. dull3.A person’s wealthis often in inverse proportion to their happiness.A. equal B. certain C.large D. opposite4. His professional career spanned 16 years.A. started B. changed C. lasted D. moved5. The symptoms of the disease manifested themselves ten days later.A. eased B. improved C.relieved D. appeared6. The group does not advocate the use of violence.A. limit B. support C.regulate D. oppose7. She felt that she had done her good deedfor the day.A. actB. homework C. justice D. model8. Some of the larger birds can remain stationary in the air for several minutes.A. motionless B. silent C. seated D. true9. There was an inclination to treat geography as a less importantsubject.A. point B. result C.finding D. tendency10. His stomach felt hollow with fear.A. sincere B. respectful C. empty D. terrible11. The committee was asked to render a report on the housing situation.A. copy B. publish C.summarize D. furnish12. That uniform makes the guards look absurd.A. serious B. beautiful C. impressive D. ridiculous13. The department deferred the decision for six months.A. put off B. arrived at C. abided by D. protested against14. The original experiment cannot be exactly duplicated .A. invented B. reproduced C. designed D. reported15. The country was torn apart by strife.A. conflict B. poverty C. war D. economy第2部分阅读判断下面的短文列出了7个句子请根据短文的内容对每个句子做出判断:如果该句提到的是正确信息,请选择A;如果该句提供的信息是错误的,请选择B;如果该句的信息文中没有提及,请选择C。

2014职称英语理工A级真题及答案

2014职称英语理工A级真题及答案

第1部分词汇选项下面每个句子中均有1个词或短语划有底横线,请为每处划线部分确定一个意义最为接近的选项。

1. This was disaster on cosmic scale.A. modestmercialC.hugeD.national2. New secretaries came and went with monotonous regularity.A.amazingB.depressingC.predictableD.dull3. A person’s wealth is often in i nverse proportion to their happiness.A.equalB.certainrgeD.oppoite4. His professional career spanned 16 years.A.startedB.changedstedD.moved5. The symptoms of the disease manifested themselves ten days later.A.easedB.improvedC.relievedD.appeared6. The group does not advocate the use of violence.A.limitB.supportC.regulateD.oppose7. She felt that she had done her good deed for the day.A.actB.homeworkC.justiceD.model8. Some of the larger birds can remain stationary in the air for several minutes.A.motionlessB.silentC.seatedD.true9. There was an inclination to treat geography as a less important subject.A.pointB.resultC.findingD.tendency10. His stomach felt hollow with fear.A.sincereB.respectfulC.emptyD.terrible11. The committee was asked to render a report on the housing situation.A.copyB.publishC.summarizeD.furnish12. That uniform makes the guards look absurd.A.seriousB.beautifulC.impressiveD.ridiculous13. The department deferred the decision for six months.A.put offB.arrived atC.abided byD.protested against14. The original experiment cannot be exactly duplicated.A.inventedB.reproducedC.designedD.reported15. The country was torn apart by strife.A.conflictB.povertyC.warD.economy第2部分阅读判断下面的短文列出了7个句子请根据短文的内容对每个句子做出判断:如果该句提到的是正确信息,请选择A;如果该句提供的信息是错误的,请选择B;如果该句的信息文中没有提及,请选择C。

2014年职称英语理工类A级考试试题及答案解析(二)

2014年职称英语理工类A级考试试题及答案解析(二)

职称英语理工类A级考试试题及答案解析(二)一、词汇选择(本大题15小题.每题1.0分,共15.0分。

下面共有15个句子,每个句子中均有1个词或短语画有底横线,请从每个句子后面所给的4个选项中选择1个与画线部分意义最相近的词或短语。

请将答案涂在答题卡相应的位置上。

)第1题In order to improve our standard of living, we have to accelerate production.A involveB decreaseC speed upD give up【正确答案】:C【本题分数】:1.0分【答案解析】[解析] 本题考查的是对动词的认知能力。

本句意思:为了提高我们的生活水平,我们得加快生产。

A.involve:包含、涉及;B.decrease:减少、降低,例如:There has been a steady decrease in population in this city.这个城市的人口在持续下降。

C.speed up:加速,与accelerate的意思相同,例如:Let's speed up.我们赶快些吧。

D.give up:放弃,例如:They gave up without a fight.他们不战而降。

第2题A lot of people could fall ill after drinking contaminated water.A boiledB pollutedC mixedD sweetened【正确答案】:B【本题分数】:1.0分【答案解析】[解析] 本题考查的是对形容词的认知能力。

本句意思:许多人喝脏水后都会生病。

A.boiled:煮沸的,例如:The milk had boiled over.牛奶已沸腾得溢出来。

B.polluted:被污染的.与contaminated:被污染的、弄脏的意思相近;C.mixed:混合的,弄糊涂的,例如:He had some mixed pickles and rice for supper.他晚饭吃了一些什锦泡菜和米饭。

2014年理工类职称英语A级考试全真模拟题一(6)

2014年理工类职称英语A级考试全真模拟题一(6)

2014年理工类职称英语A级考试全真模拟题一(6)2014年职称英语考试时间为2014年3月29日,考生们在备考的过程中切记要结合模拟题来练习,使自己的复习更加有效。

第6部分:完形填空阅读下面的短文,文中有l5处空白,每处空白给出了4个选项,请根据短文的内容从4个选项中选择l个最佳答案,涂在答题卡相应的位置上。

根据材料,回答问题。

The Greatest Mystery Of WhalesThe whale is a warm-blooded, air-breathing animal, giving birth to its young alive,sucking them -- and, like all mammals, originated on land. There are many front flippers(鳍状肢), used for steering and stability, are traces of feet,(51)__________of this. Its Immensestrength is (52)__________ into the great body of the big whales, and in fact most of a whale'sbody is one gigantic muscle. The blue whale's pulling strength has been estimated (53)__________400 horsepower. One specimen was reported to have towed (拖) a whaling vessel for sevenhours at the (54) __________ of eight knot (节).An angry whale will (55) __________ A famous example of this was the fate of Whaler Essex,(56)__________ was sunk off the coast of South America early in the last century. More recently,steel ships have (57)__________their plates buckled (使弯曲) in the same way. Sperm whales (抹香鲸) were known to seize the old-time whaleboats in their jaws and crush them.The greatest (58)__________ of whales is their diving ability. The sperm whale dives to theBottom for his (59)__________ food, the octopus (章鱼). In that search he is known to go as farDown as 3,200 feet, where the. (60)__________ is 1,400 pounds, to a square inch. Doing so hewill (61)__________ underwater long as one hour. Two special skills are involved in this storing upenough (62) __________ (all whales are air-breathed) and tolerating the great change in pressure.Just how he does it scientists have not (63) __________. It is believed that some of the oxygen isstored in a special (64) of blood vessels, rather than just held in the lungs. And it isbelieved that a special kind of oil in his head is some sort of compensating mechanism that _(65)__________adjusts the internal pressure of his body. But since you can't bring alive whale intothe laboratory for study, no one knows just how these things work.51、请在第__(51)__处填上正确答案。

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10. Chicken Soup for the Soul: Comfort Food Fights LonelinessMashed potatoes, macaroni and cheese, may be bad for your arteries,but according to a study in Psychological Science, they’re good for your heart and emotions.The study focuses on “comfort food” and how it makes people feel."For me personally, food has always played a big role in my family,” says Jordan Troisi, a graduate student at the University of Buffalo, and lead author on the study.The study came out of the research program of his co—author Shira Gabriel.It has looked at non-human things that may affect human emotions.Some people reduce loneliness by bonding with their favorite TV show, building virtual relationships with a pop song singer or looking at pictures of loved ones.Troisi and Gabriel wondered if comfort food could have the same effect by making people think of their nearest and dearest.In one experiment, in order to make participants feel lonely, the researchers had them write for six minutes about a fight with someone close to them.Others were given an emotionally neutral writing assignment. Then, some people in each group wrote about the experience of eating a comfort food and others wrote about eating a new food.Finally, the researchers had participants complete questions about their levels of loneliness.Writing about a fight with a close person made people feel lonely.But people who were generally secure in their relationships would feel less lonely by writing about a comfort food."We have found that comfort foods are consistently associated with those close to us."says Troisi."Thinking about or consuming these foods later then serves as a reminder of those close others."In their essays on comfort food, many people wrote about the experience of eating food with family and friends.In another experiment, eating chicken soup in the lab made people think more about relationships, but only if they considered chicken soup to be a comfort food.This was a question they had been asked long before the experiment, along with many other ques tions, so they wouldn’t remember it.“Throughout everyone’s daily lives they experience stress, often associated with our connections with others," Troisi says."Comfort food can be an easy remedy for loneliness.”11. Climate Change Poses Major Risks for Unprepared CitiesA new examination of urban policies has been carried out recently by Patricia Romero Lankao.She is a sociologist specializing in climate change and urban development.She warns that many of the world’s fast-growing urban areas,especially in developing countries, will likely suffer from the impacts of changing climate.Her work also concludes that most cities are failing to reduce emissions of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases.These gases are known to affect the atmosphere.”Climate change is a deeply local issue and poses profound threats tothe growing cities of the world,” says Romero Lankao. ”But too few cities are developing effective strategies to protect their residents."Cities are major sources of greenhouse gases.And urban populations are likely to be among those most severely affected by future climate change. Lankao’s findings highlight ways in which city-residents are particularly vulnerable, and suggest policy interventions that could offer immediate and longer-term benefits.The locations and dense construction patterns of cities often place their populations at greater risk for natural disasters. Potential threats associated with climate include storm surges and prolonged hot weather. Storm surges can flood coastal areas and prolonged hot weather can heat heavily paved cities more than surrounding areas.The impacts of such natural events can be more serious in an urban environment.For example,a prolonged heat wave can increase existing levels of air pollution,causing widespread health problems.Poorer neighborhoods that may lack basic facilities such as drinking water or a dependable network of roads,are especially vulnerable to natural disasters.Many residents in poorer countries live in substandard housing without access to reliable drinking water,roads and basic services.Local governments, therefore, should take measures to protect their residents. ”Unfortunately,they tend to move towards rhetoric rather than meaningful responses,”Romero Lankao writes. ”They don’t impose construction standards that could reduce heating and air conditioning needs. They don't emphasize mass transit and reduce automobile use. In fact, many local governments are taking a hands—off approach.” Thus, she urges them to change their idle policies and to take strong steps to prevent the harmful effects of climate change on cities.12. Free Statins With Fast Food Could Neutralize Heart RiskFast food outlets could provide statin drugs free of charge so that customers can reduce the heart disease dangers of fatty food, researchers at Imperial CollegeLondon suggest in a new study.Statins reduce the amount of unhealthy ”LDL” cholesterol in the blood. A wealth of trial data has proven them to be highly effective at lowering a person’s heart attack risk.In a paper published in the American Journal of Cardiology,Dr Darrel Francis and colleagues calculate that the reduction in heart attack risk offered by a statin is enough to offset the increase in heart attack risk from eating a cheeseburger and drinking a milkshake.Dr Francis,from the National Heart and Lung Institute at Imperial College London,who is the senior author of the study, said:”Statins don’t cut out a11 of the unhealthy effects of cheeseburgers and French fries.It’s better to avoid fatty food altogether.But we’ve worked out that in terms of your possibility of having a heart attack, taking a statin can reduce your risk to more or less the same degree as a fast food meal increases it.”“It’s ironic that people are free to take as many unhealthy condiments in fast food outlets as they like , but statins, which are beneficial to heart health, have to be prescribed. It makes sense to make risk-reducing statins available just as easily as the unhealthy condiments that are provided free of charge.It would cost less than 5 pence per customer—not much different to a sachet of sugar,” Dr Francis said.When people engage in risky behaviours like driving or smoking, they’re encouraged to take measures that lower their risk, 1ike wearing a seatbelt or choosing cigarettes with filters. Taking a statin is a rational way of lowering some of the risks of eating a fatty meal.13. Better Solar Energy Systems: More Heat, More LightSolar photovoltaic thermal energy systems, or PVTs, generate both heat and electricity, but until now they haven’t been very good at the heat-generating part compared to a stand-alone solar thermal collector. That’s because they operate at low temperatures to cool crystalline silicon solar cells, which lets the silicon generate more electricity but isn’t a very efficient way to gather heat.That’s a problem of economics. Good solar hot-water systems can harvest much more energy than a solar-electric system at a substantially lower cost. And it’s also a space problem: photovoltaic cells can take up all the space on the roof, leaving little room for thermal applications.In a pair of studies, Joshua Pearce, an associate professor of materials science and engineering, has devised a solution in the form of a better PVT made with a different kind of silicon. His research collaborators are Kunal Girotra from Thin Silicon in California and Michael Pathak and Stephen Harrison from Queen’s University, Canada.Most solar panels are made with crystalline silicon, but you can also make solar cells out of amorphous silicon, commonly known as thin-film silicon. They don’t create as much electricity, but they are lighter, flexible, and cheaper. And, because they require much less silicon, they have a greener footprint. Unfortunately, thin-film silicon solar cells are vulnerable to some bad-news physics in the form of the Staebler-Wronski effect.“That means that their efficiency drops when you expose them to light—pretty much the worst possible effect for a solar cell,” Pearce explains, wh ich is one of the reasons thin-film solar panels make up only a small fraction of the market.However, Pearce and his team found a way to engineer around the Staebler-Wronski effect by incorporating thin-film silicon in a new type of PVT. You don’t have t o cool down thin-film silicon to make it work. In fact, Pearce’s group discovered that by heating it to solar-thermal operating temperatures, near the boiling point of water, they could make thicker cells that largely overcame the Staebler-Wronski effect. When they applied the thin-film silicon directly to a solar thermal energy collector, they also found that by baking the cell once a day, they boosted the solar cell’s electrical efficiency by over 10 percent.14. Sharks Perform a Service for Earth's WatersIt is hard to get people to think of sharks as anything but a deadly enemy. They are thought to attack people frequently. But these fish perform a valuable servicefor earth's waters and for human beings. Yet business and sport fishing are threatening their existence. Some sharks are at risk of disappearing from earth.Warm weather may influence both fish and shark activity. Many fish swim near coastal areas because of their warm waters. Experts say sharks may follow the fish into the same areas, where people also swim. In fact, most sharks do not purposely charge at or bite humans. They are thought to mistake a person for a sea animal, such as a seal or sea lion. That is why people should not swim in the ocean when the sun goes down or comes up. Those are the times when sharks are looking for food. Experts also say that bright colors and shiny jewelry may cause sharks to attack.A shark has an extremely good sense of smell. It can find small amounts of substances in water, such as blood, body liquids and chemicals produced by animals. These powerful senses help sharks find their food. Sharks eat fish, any other sharks, and plants that live in the ocean.Medical researchers want to learn more about the shark's body defense, and immune systems against disease. Researchers know that sharks recover quickly from injuries. They study the shark in hopes of finding a way to fight human disease.Sharks are important for the world's oceans. They eat injured and diseased fish. Their hunting activities mean that the numbers of other fish in ocean waters do not become too great. This protects the plants and other forms of life that exist in the oceans.15. “Liquefaction” Key to Muc h of Japanese Earthquake DamageThe massive subduction zone earthquake in Japan caused a significant level of soil "liquefaction" that has surprised researchers with its widespread severity, a new analysis shows."We've seen localized examples of soil liquefaction as extreme as this before, but the distance and extent of damage in Japan were unusually severe," said Scott Ashford, a professor of geotechnical engineering at Oregon State University. "Entire structures were tilted and sinking into the sediments," Ashford said. "The shifts in soil destroyed water, drain and gas pipelines, crippling the utilities and infrastructurethese communities need to function. We saw some places that sank as much as four feet."Some degree of soil liquefaction is common in almost any major earthquake. It's a phenomenon in which soils soaked with water, particularly recent sediments or sand, can lose much of their strength and flow during an earthquake. This can allow structures to shift or sink or collapse.But most earthquakes are much shorter than the recent event in Japan, Ashford said. The length of the Japanese earthquake, as much as five minutes, may force researchers to reconsider the extent of liquefaction damage possibly occurring in situations such as this."With such a long-lasting earthquake, we saw how structures that might have been okay after 30 seconds just continued to sink and tilt as the shaking continued for several more minutes," he said. "And it was clear that younger sediments, and especially areas built on recently filled ground, are much more vulnerable."The data provided b y analyzing the Japanese earthquake, researchers said, should make it possible to improve the understanding of this soil phenomenon and better prepare for it in the future. Ashford said it was critical for the team to collect the information quickly, before damage was removed in the recovery efforts."There's no doubt that we'll learn things from what happened in Japan that will help us to reduce risks in other similar events ," Ashford said. "Future construction in some places may make more use of techniques known to reduce liquefaction, such as better compaction to make soils dense, or use of reinforcing stone columns."Ashford pointed out that northern California have younger soils vulnerable to liquefaction ---on the coast, near river deposits or in areas with filled ground. The "young" sediments, in geologic terms, may be those deposited within the past 10,000 years or more. In Oregon, for instance, that describes much of downtown Portland, the Portland International Airport and other cities.Anything near a river and old flood plains is a suspect, and the Oregon Department of Transportation has already concluded that 1,100 bridges in the state are at risk from an earthquake. Fewer than 15 percent of them have been reinforcedto prevent collapse. Japan has suffered tremendous losses in the March 11 earthquake, but Japanese construction standards helped prevent many buildings from collapse ---even as they tilted and sank into the ground.。

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