正文
职称英语考试2006年全真模拟试题卫生类C级(四)
The health effects of smoking cigars is one of eight sections of the article“Cigars:Health Effects and Trends.”The researchers report that,compared with a cigarette,a large cigar emits up to 90 times as much carcinogenic tobacco.specific nitrosamines.
“This article provides clear and invaluable information about the disturbing increase0 in
cigar use and the significant public health consequences。for the country,”said Dr.Richard
Klausner,director of the National Cancer Institute,in a statement.
“The data are clear—the harmful substances and carcinogens in cigar smoke.1ike
cigarettes,are associated with。the increased risks of several kinds of cancers as well as heart and lung diseases,”he added.“In other words,cigars are not safe alternatives to cigarettes and may be addictive.”
“To those individuals who may be thinking about smoking cigars,our advice is—don’t.To those currently smoking cigars,quitting is the only way to eliminate completely the cancer,heart and lung disease risks,”warned Klausner.
According to a National Cancer Institute press release, there haven’t been any studies on the health effects on nonsmokers at cigar social events.but“…a significant body of evidence clearly demonstrates an increased lung cancer risk from secondhand smoke.’’
词汇:
cigar/n.雪茄烟
double/vt.使加倍,把……增一倍
esophagus/n.食管
larynx/n.喉
esophageal/adj.食管的
emit/vt.发出,射出,散发
carcinogenic/adj.致癌的
nitrosamine/n.亚硝胺
invaluable/adj.非常宝贵的,无价的
carcinogen/n.致癌物
alternative/n.供替代的抉择
addictive/adj.(使人)上瘾的, (使人)入迷的
eliminate/vt.排除,消除,根
除
练习:
1.According co the report.smoking three or four cigars a day
A)increases the risk of oral cancer for non-smokers.
B)greatly increases the risk of oral cancer for smokers.
C)increases the risk of more than one cancer for non-smokers,
D)greatly increases the risk of more than one cancer for smokers.
2.In the passage how many cancers are mentioned in relation to smoking cigars daily?
A)Six.
B)Seven.
C)Eight.
D)Nine.
3.What is the main idea of the article“Cigars:Health Effects and Trends”?
A)When it comes to cancer,cigars are not any safer than cigarettes.
B)Cigars may be addictive while cigarettes are not easily so.
C)Cigars contain less harmful substances than cigarettes.
D)Increase in cigar-smoking does not affect public health much.
4.What is the doctors’advice to those cigar-smokers?
A)To give it up completely.
B)To give up part of it.
C)Not to think about it any more.
D)To cure the diseases first.
5.In the context of this passage,“secondhand smoke”means
A)smoking bad-quality cigars.
B)smoking very cheap cigars.
C)being near cigar smokers when they are not smoking.
D)being near cigar smokers when they are smoking.
第3篇
Some things we know about language
Many things about language are a mystery, and many will always remain SO.But some
things we do know.
First,we know that all human beings have a language of some sort.There is no race of men anywhere on earth so backward that it has no language,no set of speech sounds by which the people communicate with one mother.Furthermore,in historical times,there has never been a race of men without a language.
Second,there is no such thing as a primitive language.There are many people whose
cultures are undeveloped,who are,as we say,uncivilized, but the languages they speak are not primitive.In all known 1anguages we can see complexities that must have been tens of thousands of years in developing.
This has not always been well understood;indeed, the direct contrary has often been stated.Popular ideas of the 1anguage of the American Indians will illustrate.Many people have supposed that the Indians communicated in a very primitive system of noises.study has proved this to be nonsense.There are,or were,hundreds of American Indian languages,and a11 of them turn out to be very complicated and very old. They are certainly different from the languages that most of us are familiar with,but they are no more primitive five than English and Greek.
A third thing we know about language is that all languages are perfectly adequate.That is, each one is a perfect means of expressing the culture of the people who speak the language.
Finally, we know that language changes.It is natural and normal for language to change;
the only languages which do not change are the dead ones.This is easy to understand if we look backward in time.Change goes on in all aspects of language.Grammatical features change as do speech sounds,and changes in vocabulary are sometimes very extensive and may occur very rapidly.Vocabulary is the least stable part of any language.
词汇:
race/n.种族
primitive/adj.原始的
uncivilized/adj.不开化的,落后的
complexity/n.复杂性,复杂现象
nonsense/n.胡说,没有根据的话
extensive/adj.广泛的
vocabulary/n.词汇
练习:
1. In the second paragraph the author thinks that
A)some backward race doesn’t have a language of its own.
B)some race in history didn’t possess a language of its own.
C)any human race,whether backward or not,has a language.
D)some races on earth call communicate without language.
2. According to the author, people of undeveloped cultures can have___ languages.
A)complicated
B)uncivilized
C)primitive
D)well—known
3.The author has used American Indian languages as an example to show that they are
A)just as old as some well-known languages.
B)just as sophisticated as some well-known languages.
C)more developed than some well-known languages.
D)more complex than some well-known languages.
4. Which of the following statements is INCORRECT?
A)A language is a means of expressing a particular culture.
B)All languages can well express their respective cultures.
C)American Indian languages are as sophisticated as English.
D)Some languages are better than other languages.
5. According to the author, language changes are most likely to occur in
A)grammar.
B)pronunciation.
C)vocabulary.
D)intonation.
第五部分:补全短文(每题2分,共10分)
阅读下面的短文,文章中有5处空白,文章后有6组文字,请根据文章的内容选择5组文字,将其分别放会文章原有位置,以恢复文章原貌。请将答案涂在答题卡相应的位置。
The first four minutes
When do people decide whether or not they want to become friends? During their first four minutes together, according to a book by Dr. Leonard Zunin. In his book, "Contact: The first four minutes," he offers this advice to anyone interested in starting new friendships: __1__. A lot of people's whole lives would change if they did just that.
You may have noticed that average person does not give his undivided attention to someone he as just met.__2__. If anyone has ever done this to you, you probably did not like him very much.
When we are introduced to new people, the author suggests, we should try to appear friendly and self-confident. In general, he says, "People like people who like themselves."
On the other hand, we should not make the other person think we are too sure of ourselves. It is important to appear interested and sympathetic, realizing that the other person has his won needs, fears, and hopes.
Hearing such advice, one might say, "But I'm not a friendly, self-confident person. That's not my nature. It would be dishonest for me to at that way."
__3__. We can become accustomed to any changes we choose to make in our personality. "It is like getting used to a new car. It may be unfamiliar at first, but it goes much better than the old one."
But isn't it dishonest to give the appearance of friendly self-confidence when we don't actually feel that way? Perhaps, but according to Dr. Zunin, "total honest" is not always good for social relationships, especially during the first few minutes of contact. There is a time for everything, and a certain amount of play-acting may be best for the first few minutes of contact with a stranger. That is not the time to complain about one's health or to mention faults one finds in other people. It is not the time to tell the whole truth about one's opinions and impressions.
__4__. For a husband and wife or a parent and child, problems often arise during their first four minutes together after they have been apart. Dr. Zunin suggests that these first few minutes together be treated with care. If there are unpleasant matters to be discussed, they should be dealt with later.
The author says that interpersonal relations should be taught as a required course in every school, along with reading, writing, and mathematics. __5__ that is at least as important as how much we know.
A. In reply, Dr. Zunin would claim that a little practice can help us feel comfortable about changing our social habits.
B. Much of what has been said about strangers also applies to relationships with family members and friends.
C. In his opinion, success in life depends mainly on how we get along with other people.
D. Every time you meet someone in a social situation, give him your undivided attention for four minutes.
E. He keeps looking over the other person's shoulder, as if hoping to find someone more interesting in another part of the room.
F. He is eager to make friends with everyone.
The first four minutes
第六部分:完型填空 (每题1分,共15分)
阅读下面的短文,文中有15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1个最佳答案,并涂在答题卡相应的位置上。
Passive smoking is workplace killer
Pressure mounted on Britain on Monday to take action on __1__ smoking with new
research showing second.hand smoke__2__ about one worker each week in the hospitality
industry.
Professor Konrad Jamrozik,of Imperial College in London,told a conference on
environmental tobacco that second-hand__3__kills 49 employees in pubs,bars,restaurants
and hotels each year and contributes to 700 deaths from lung cancer,heart__4__ and stroke
across the total national work force.
“Exposure in the hospitality__5__at work outweighs the consequences of exposure of
living__6__ a smoker for those staff,” Jamrozik said in an interview.