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(London)­If it really is what's on the i...

(London)­If it really is what's on the inside that counts, then a lot of thin people might be in trouble.

Some doctors now think that the internal fat surrounding important organs like the heart or liver could be as dangerous as the external fat which can be noticed more easily.

Being thin doesn't surely mean you are not fat,” said Dr Jimmy Bell at Imperial College. Since 1994, Bell and his team have scanned nearly 800 people with MRI machines to create “fat maps” showing where people store fat.

According to the result, people who keep their weight through diet rather than exercise are likely to have major deposits of internal fat, even if they are slim.

Even people with normal Body Mass Index scores can have surprising levels of fat deposits inside. Of the women, as many as 45 percent of those with normal BMI scores (20 to 25) actually had too high levels of internal fat. Among men, the percentage was nearly 60 percent.

According to Bell, people who are fat on the inside are actually on the edge of being fat. They eat too many fatty and sugary foods, but they are not eating enough to be fat. Scientists believe we naturally store fat around the belly first, but at some point, the body may start storing it elsewhere.

Doctors are unsure about the exact dangers of internal fat, but some think it has something to do with heart disease and diabetes. They want to prove that internal fat damages the body's communication systems.

The good news is that internal fat can be easily burned off through exercise or even by improving your diet. If you want to be healthy, there is no short cut. Exercise has to be an important part of your lifestyle,” Bell said.

1.What is this piece of news mainly about?

AThin people also have troubles.

BInternal fat is of no importance.

CInternal fat leads to many diseases.

DThin people may be fat inside.

2.Doctors have found ________.

Abeing slim doesn't mean you are not fat inside

Binternal fat is the cause of heart disease and diabetes

Cbeing slim is not dangerous at all

Dthe exact dangers of internal fat

3.According to the passage, which of the following is WRONG?

APeople with heart disease all have internal fat.

BPeople can get rid of internal fat by improving diet.

CMen are more likely to have too much internal fat.

DExercise can help to reduce the internal fat.

 

1.A 2.D 3.A 【解析】 文章大意:本文讲述了很多表面很瘦的人实际上内部器官里的脂肪不一定就少,号召人们要通过锻炼来减肥,而不是仅仅是节食。 1.A 细节理解题。根据文章第3段“Being thin doesn't surely mean you are not fat,”以及第4段According to the result, people who keep their weight through diet rather than exercise are likely to have major deposits of internal fat, even if they are slim.可知瘦并不意味着你就不胖,很多节食但是不锻炼的人实际上在内部也有很多的脂肪。故A正确。 2.2】D 主旨大意题。根据文章1,2段If it really is what's on the inside that counts, then a lot of thin people might be in trouble.和Some doctors now think that the internal fat surrounding important organs like the heart or liver could be as dangerous as the external fat which can be noticed more easily可知在人体内部堆积的脂肪对人的健康也有很大的威胁。瘦的人的体内也可能有很多脂肪。故D正确。 3.3】A 推理判断题。本文只是讲述很多表面不胖的人,实际上也可能在内部器官里堆积了很多的脂肪。并不是说患心脏病的人体内都含有很多的脂肪。故A说法是错误的。
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Sweetest Day in America is always the third Saturday in October. This holiday is much more important in some regions than in others (Detroit, Cleveland and Buffalo being the biggest Sweetest Day cities). It is a holiday that is gaining in popularity every year throughout the country.

Sweetest Day is celebrated on the third Saturday in October as a day to make someone happy. It is an occasion which offers all of us an opportunity to remember not only the sick, aged, and orphaned, but also friends, relatives and associates whose helpfulness and kindness we have enjoyed.

Over 60 years ago, a man in Cleveland, believing that the city's orphans and shut­ins (卧病在床的人) too often felt forgotten and neglected, thought of the idea of showing them that they were remembered. He did this through the distribution of small gifts. With the help of his friends and neighbors, he distributed these small remembrances on a Saturday in October. During the years that followed, other Clevelanders began to participate in the celebration ceremony, which came to be called “Sweetest Day”. In time, the Sweetest Day idea of spreading cheer to the underprivileged was broadened to include everyone, and became an occasion for remembering others with a kind act or a small remembrance. And soon the idea spread to other cities all over the country.

Sweetest Day is not based on any single group's religious affection or on a family relationship. It is a reminder that a thoughtful word or deed enriches life and gives it meaning.

Because for many people remembering takes the form of gift­giving, Sweetest Day offers us the opportunity to show others that we care, in a practical way.

1.We can learn from the first paragraph that Sweetest Day is ________.

Asometimes the third Saturday in October

Bhardly celebrated in Detroit

Cof equal importance in every part of the USA

Dgetting increasingly popular in the USA

2.Sweetest Day was intended to remember ________.

Athe young and disabled

Bfriends and relatives

Corphans and shut­ins

Dthe sick and aged

3.We can infer from the passage that the birthplace of Sweetest Day is ________.

ADetroit        BCleveland

CBuffalo  DWashington

4.Now on Sweetest Day gifts are given to those ________.

Awe care  Bwe admire

Cin need of help  Din trouble

 

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Music to My Ears

Robby was 10 for his first piano lesson in my class. Much as he tried, he ____ even the basic rhythm. However, he dutifully reviewed the pieces that I required.

Over the months he tried and tried while I ____ and encouraged him. At the end of each lesson he'd always say, “My mom's going to hear me play some day.” ____ it seemed hopeless.

I only knew his mother from a ____ as she waited in her aged car to pick him up. Then one day Robby stopped coming. I was secretly ____ that he stopped because of his lack of ability.

Weeks later I informed the students, including Robby, of the coming recital(独奏). To my ____ Robby asked me if he could be included. I told him he really did not qualify because he had ____ out. He said his mom had been sick and unable to take him to lessons but he was still ____ .

I've just got to play!” he ____. Something inside me let me allow him to.

Then came the recital night. The gym was ____ with parents. I put Robby up ____ thinking that I could save his poor performance through my curtain closer(谢幕).”

The recital went off smoothly. Then Robby came up on stage. His clothes were wrinkled and his hair was ____. Why didn't his mother at least make him comb his hair for this special night?” I thought.

Robby pulled out the piano bench and began. I was not ____ for what I heard next. His fingers were ____ on the keys. Never had I heard Mozart played so well by people of his age. After he ended, everyone was ____ their feet in wild applause.

In ____ I ran up on stage and put my arms around Robby. I've never heard you play like that, Robby! How did you ____ it?”

Robby explained, Well, Miss Hondorfremember I told you my mom was sick? ____ she had cancer and passed away yesterday. She was born deaf, so tonight she could hear me play in heaven. I wanted to make it special.

There wasn't a ____ eye in the house. That night I felt he was the teacher and I was the pupil, for it was he who taught me the meaning of perseverance and ____.

1.A.lacked  Bhad

Cshowed  Dgot

2.A.listened  Blearned

Cchecked  Dplayed

3.A.And  BBut

CSo  DOr

4.A.conversation  Bperformance

Cdistance  Dpicture

5.A.guilty  Bsad

Canxious  Dglad

6.A.relief  Bsurprise

Cpleasure  Dsatisfaction

7.A.stepped  Bworn

Crun  Ddropped

8.A.acting  Bperforming

Cpracticing  Drecording

9.A.insisted  Bsuggested

Ccomplained  Dthreatened

10.A.lined  Bpacked

Cpiled  Dcovered

11.A.least  Bmost

Cfirst  Dlast

12.A.messy  Bcool

Cneat  Ddull

13.A.eager  Bconcerned

Cprepared  Dgrateful

14.A.hesitating  Bdancing

Ctouching  Dcrawling

15.A.over  Bunder

Cin  Don

16.A.chaos  Btears

Csilence  Dreturn

17.A.find  Bfeel

Cmake  Dlike

18.A.Gradually  BSuddenly

CFrequently  DActually

19.A.dry  Bcurious

Cbright  Dwet

20.A.regret  Btalent

Clove  Dcourage

 

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To Friend or Not to Friend

We all love our parents and turn to them when we're in need, but would you like them to hear the conversations you have with your friends on the school playground or lunch queue? Social networking sites have become extensions of the school hallways, so would you add your parents as “friends” and allow them to view your online activities and conversations with friends?

In the past the generation gap included a technology gap, where children were up to date with latest technology and parents were left behind, content to continue their day to day lives as they always had because they had no need to know more about technology. However, more and more parents are beginning to realize just how important social networks are in their lives. This realization has given many parents the motivation to educate themselves about social networking sites.

These days many people are attracted to social networking sites because they can choose who they have around them; there's also a certain amount of control over privacy that we don't get in real life. Sometimes we feel that privacy is violated when we must accept a “friend” request from a parent or family member.

It's a difficult choice whether or not to allow a parent to become a part of our online lives. On the one hand we don't want to “reject” their request because that might hurt their feelings or make them feel you have something to hide. On the other hand if you do accept, then you could have a sense of being watched and no longer feel free to comment or communicate the way you did before.

A recent survey suggested that parents shouldn't take it personally if their child ignores their request: “When a teen ignores a parent's friend request, it doesn't necessarily mean that they are hiding something, but it could mean that this is one part of their life where they want to be independent.”

Perhaps talking with parents and giving explanations would help soften the blow if you do choose not to add them to your friends list.

1.From Paragraph 2, we learn that ________.

Aparents feel secure about their privacy online

Bsocial networks successfully fill the generation gap

Cparents have realized the importance of social networks

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2.Teenagers may refuse a parent's friend request because ________.

Athey hide something from their parents

Bthey are unwilling to be watched by parents

Ctheir parents tend to fall behind in technology

Dtheir parents make negative comments on them

3.The passage is mainly about ________.

Aprivacy online

Bsocial networks

Cthe generation gap

Dparents' friend requests

4.The passage is written mainly for ________.

Aparents  Bteenagers  

Cteachers  Dresearchers

 

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Steve knew he'd been adopted as a baby, and when he turned 18, in 2003, he decided he'd try to track down his birth mother. The agency from which he'd been adopted gave him his mother's name: Tallady. But online searches didn't turn up any results about it, and Steve had to let it go.

In 2007, though, he searched for the name again online. This time, the search results included a home address near the Lowe's store where Steve, then 22, worked as a deliveryman. When he mentioned the coincidence to his boss, his boss said, You mean Tallady, who works here?”

Steve and Tallady, a cashier, had said hello to each other a few times at the store, but they'd never really talked. He hadn't even known her name. Steve thought there was no possible way she was his mother though they shared the same name. For a few months, Steve avoided Tallady. I wasn't sure how to approach her,” he told a local reporter. Finally, the agency volunteered to arrange their reunion.

When Tallady realized that the nice guy she'd been waving at was his son, she sobbed. She'd always hoped to meet her birth son one day. Later that day, mother and son talked for almost three hours at a nearby bar. She'd given him up for adoption in 1985, when she was 23. I wasn't ready to be a mother,” she told him. Married with two other children, Tallady says, “I have a complete family now.”

1.Steve gave up the on­line search for his birth mother in 2003 because ________.

Athe agency didn't give him any help        

Bthere was no information about his mother

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Dhe missed the information about his mother

2.What did Steve find about his mother online in 2007?

AHer home address.  BHer full name.

CHer boss's name.  DHer new job.

3.Why Steve avoided Tallady for months?

ABecause she didn't want to talk to him.

BBecause he wasn't fully prepared for the reunion.

CBecause she was very difficult to approach.

DBecause he didn't think she was his birth mother.

4.The best title for the text is ________.

AThe Love of Mother

BAn Unexpected Meeting

CThe Power of the Internet

DAn Unusual Reunion

 

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On May 23rd the United States Department of Agriculture will meet to discuss the pressing topic of wild pigs. These beasts, which number 6 million or so, are an increasing bother. At their worst, they can damage crops, spread diseases, attack humans and kill farm animals. And things are getting worse: a study show that they are likely to double in number over the next 3 years. Why is it so hard to control wild pigs?

Introduced to America in the 16th century, and related to the wild pigs found in Europe, wild pigs can be found in 75% of all states. No single law exists to control them and regulations differ between states: while in Missouri they can only be shot if met by chance, in Texas hunting is actively encouraged. A “pork chopper” law allows Texan hunters to shoot wild pigs from helicopters, and some people in Louisiana have even built their own pig­hunting drone(无人机). As well as being popular with hunters, wild pigs are cheaper for game raisers to breed(饲养)than deer. In Michigan and Pennsylvania suggested bans on the private breeding of pigs for hunting have caused quarrels between game raisers and wildlife officials. 

Wild pigs' double nature——considered pests by farmers, but valued by hunters——makes it hard to pass laws  to control them. Two other factors also contribute. Nearly 70% of land in America is privately owned. And it is difficult for lawmakers to impose(强加)breeding and hunting laws on private landowners. Secondly, it is hard to define a wild pig.

In some states, laws are being introduced to redefine the term “wild animal” to keep out wild pigs. This is good news for those raising pigs for hunting, but less are to those who consider them pests whose number should be limited. Meanwhile, discussions continue over how to deal with this problem.

1.People are not permitted to hunt wild pigs freely in ________.

ATexas  BMichigan

CMissouri  DLouisiana

2.Why do the game raisers prefer raising wild pigs to deer?

AIt's difficult to raise deer.

BWild pigs are in large numbers.

CDeer are not popular with hunters.

DThey can benefit more from wild pigs.

3.Which is NOT the reason for the difficulty in controlling wild pigs?

AThe difficulty of passing effective laws.

BThe high percentage of land owned privately.

CThe farmers' unwillingness to shoot wild pigs.

DThe popularity of raising wild pigs in many states.

4.What is the best title of the text?

AWhy are wild pigs so hard to control?

BAre wild pigs pests or wild animals?

CWild pigs——an increasing danger in the US.

DHow to deal with the problem of wild pigs?

 

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