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If you're a book lover, you have a pile ...

    If you're a book lover, you have a pile of books on your bedside, or a bookshelf in your library with a “to read” sign on it. Yet you can't stop yourself from adding to the pile. This can lead to feelings of guilt over your new purchases. But I'm here to tell you to stop worrying.

What you have is an antilibrary, and it's a very good thing. The term comes from writer Umberto Eco. He is the owner of a large personal library. He separates visitors into two groups: those who react with “Wow! What a library you have! How many of these books have you read?” and the others who get the point that a private library is not something to show off but a research tool. Read books are far less valuable than unread ones. Indeed, the more you know, the larger the rows of unread books. Let us call this collection an antilibrary.

If you think you already know everything about a subject, you're cutting yourself off from a stream of information at an artificial point. So a growing library of books you haven't read means you're consistently curious about the unknown. And that attitude is a great foundation for a lifelong love of learning.

So don't feel guilt over your unread books. Those books will be there for you when you do want them, and as you build your library of read and unread books, you can start using it as you would use a bigger library. Certain books may become references more than read-throughs. Or you may find that a book you bought five years ago has special relevance today. Letting the role of books evolve in your life is a healthy sign of curiosity. That's good for you and good tor the world around you.

1.What does the underlined word "antilibrary in Paragraph 2 refer to?

A.Feelings of guilt over new books. B.A pile of books on the bookshelf.

C.The collection of unread books. D.A large personal library.

2.Which of the following will the writer agree with?

A.The unread books you bought years ago are of no use.

B.You don't have to read every book from cover to cover.

C.Read books are of more use than unread books.

D.You shouldn’t purchase new books until the unread ones are covered.

3.What does the writer think of someone having lots of unread books?

A.Approving. B.Doubtful.

C.Critical. D.Indifferent.

 

1.C 2.B 3.A 【解析】 本文是议论文。文章主要讲了不要因为你买了而没读过的书感到内疚,你可能会发现,你五年前买的一本书今天特别有用,收藏更多的未读书籍并不是坏事。 1.词义猜测题。根据第二段中的Read books are far less valuable than unread ones. Indeed, the more you know, the larger the rows of unread books. Let us call this collection an antilibrary.可知,读过的书远不如没读过的书有价值;事实上,你知道的越多,未读的书就越多;让我们称这种收藏为反图书馆。由此推知,antilibrary指的是未读书籍的收藏。故选C。 2.细节理解题。根据第四段中的Certain books may become references more than read-throughs.可知,某些书可能成为参考书而不是通读。由此可知,作者认为不必将每本书从头读到尾。故选B。 3.推理判断题。最后一段中的Letting the role of books evolve in your life is a healthy sign of curiosity. That's good for you and good tor the world around you.可知,让书在你的生活中发挥作用是一种健康的好奇心。这对你和你周围的世界都有好处,由此推知,作者对于收藏未读书籍这一行为持赞成态度。故选A。
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    When Ariyah Georges was born 15 weeks early, she weighed only one pound, 12 ounces. Her mother, Jovan, knew how important breastfeeding was, especially for a premature (早产的) baby like Ariyah, so she began pumping milk to feed her through a tube. But two days later, Jovan felt dizzy and feverish — 104 Fahrenheit degrees, in fact. She had a blood disease and was close to full shock.

She was separated from others for nearly two weeks at the regional Northern Virginia hospital where she'd delivered. During that time, she could still pump breast milk, but Ariyah couldn't consume it because of the risk of infection. Without it, the newborn was particularly easily affected by diseases. There are many cases like this, which creates the need for the milk donation.

Enter donor milk breast milk purchased by hospitals for mothers who aren't able to produce enough milk on their own, due to health complications, stresses, or other factors. The milk comes from milk banks, organizations that collect and screen breast milk from those women willing to donate. Usually processed in intensive-care units, the milk is only available by prescription.

In recent years, both milk banks and the use of donated human milk have risen swiftly in the United States. In 2011, 22 percent of NICUs used donor breast milk; four years later, that number doubled to nearly 40 percent, and went even higher for the most intensive NICUs — as much as 75 percent. There are 23 milk banks in the United States recognized by the Human Milk Banking Association of North America, or HMBANA, double the number that existed five years ago.

But as the demand for donor milk rises, banks must find more charitable donors — a task made more complicated by informal networks of milk sharing that happens online. And many of the most vulnerable infants are still not being reached.

1.Jovan couldn't feed her baby Ariyah on her breast milk because_______.

A.Ariyah was a premature baby B.Jovan couldn't produce enough milk

C.Jovan was separated from others D.Jovan was in poor health.

2.By telling the story of Ariyah and her mother, the writer wants to______.

A.tell us what to do if mothers cannot produce enough milk.

B.remind us of the importance of breastfeeding the newborn.

C.introduce the topic of an increasing need for donated human milk.

D.warn us against the risk of the newborn being affected by diseases.

3.How is the writer's idea mainly developed in Paragraph 4?

A.By following time order. B.By listing statistics.

C.By giving examples. D.By making predictions.

4.What problem are milk banks now faced with?

A.It's difficult to find enough charitable donors.

B.networks of milk looking for donors online are informal.

C.The milk purchased from milk banks cannot reach infants' home.

D.The number of women willing to donate breast milk are decreasing.

 

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    One of the most popular beliefs in parenting is the socalled Mozart effect which says that listening to music by the Austrian composer Wolfgang Mozart can increase a child's intelligence Some pregnant women have even gone so far as to play Mozart recordings on headphones pressed against their bellies And it's not hard to see how Mozart's name became associated with accelerated development He was history's greatest child genius performing astonishing music for kings and queens at an age when many of us were content with tuneless singing "I'm a Little Teapot"

So if you have kids or you're expecting to have them how seriously should you take the Mozart effect Will the child who doesn't listen to Mozart in the cradle (摇篮) be limited to an ordinary life Are you a bad parent if your kids don't know about any works of Mozart

Relax There is no scientific evidence that listening to Mozart improves children's cognitive abilities The whole idea comes from a small study done in 1993 which found that college students who listened to Mozart's Sonata for Two Pianos in D Major K 448showed some improvement in a test of spatial (空间的) skills This finding was later described as something extremely amazing by a musician Don Campbell in a book Campbell's claims about the super powers of Mozart's music were repeated endlessly in the media and fueled a craze for Mozartbased enrichment activities In 1998 for example the governor of Georgia in the USA requested funds to send classicalmusic CDs to all parents of newborns in the state

Since then scientists have examined the claim that Mozart increases intelligence and found no evidence for it The original experiment with college students was reviewed in 1999 and the increase in the students' spatial skills was found to be negligible In 2007 the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research asked a team of experts to examine the scientific literature regarding Mozart and child development and they found no reason to believe that it increased intelligence

1.People relate Mozart to children's intelligence development because he     

A.owned extraordinary music talent.

B.could perform music as a child.

C.offered music to pregnant women.

D.was an royal Austrian composer.

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B.It found no evidence for supporting Mozart effect

C.It helped college students make academic progress

D.It urged Georgia's governor to spread classical music

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A.Sudden

B.Insignificant

C.Average

D.Steady

4.What can be the best title for the text

A.New Findings Mozart Effect to Be Proved.

B.Secrets Uncovered History of Mozart Effect.

C.Does Listening to Mozart Make Kids Smarter

D.How Does Mozart Improve Kids' Intelligence

 

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    Your brain isn't necessarily the same age as the rest of you Now it may be possible to predict how quickly a person's brain will age throughout life based on tests taken when he or she is three years old

A person's biological age may be a better indicator of their health than their real age Brain age can be measured using brain scans and machinelearning to determine if a person's brain looks older or younger than the average healthy brain for people of the same age

To find out if brain age might reveal anything about a person's health in midlife Max Elliott at Duke University in North Carolina and his colleagues assessed the brains of 869 adults in New Zealand who have undergone regular medical and cognitive (认知的) testing since they were 3 years old

When the volunteers all aged between 43 and 46 underwent MRI brain scans the team found that their brain ages ranged from 23 to 71 Those with older brain ages performed worse on tests of cognition memory and IQ The researchers also found that some people have a very advanced brain age but their bodies seem to be ageing slowly and vice versa (反之亦然). However the team found that those who had the highest scores on cognitive tests when they were 3 years old went on to have the youngestlooking brains

This suggests we might be able to tell who is at risk of accelerated brain ageing early in life Researchers hope that predicting brain ageing earlier in life could allow treatments for conditions like dementia (痴呆) to be started sooner This means treatments might have a better chance of working

We don't yet have a way to treat brain ageing but given the known benefits to the brain of healthy eating and exercise these aren't a bad place to start

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A.One's health condition

B.A test result at the age of 3

C.The actual age of one's brain

D.A machine for medical check

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C.To discover whether brain age can be measured by machines

D.To explore the relationship between brain age and future health

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A.The influence of cognitive tests

B.The procedure of Elliott's study

C.The information about volunteers

D.The findings of the brain research

4.What do the findings of the research imply

A.We should test our brain age earliest possible

B.People suffering dementia can go on working

C.Brain ageing could be predicted at an early age

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    Howard Weistling wanted to be a comic strip (连环漫画) artist But when the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor he joined the Army

After flight engineer training Howard was shipped off to Europe On his maiden flight his plane was shot down over Austria The entire crew of eight men landed safely But a farmer found Howard hiding in his barn and turned him over to a prison of war camp in Barth Germany It was freezing and the men almost starved to death eating the guards' garbage

Hungry and homesick Howard coped the only way he knew how He drew a comic strip The book made of cigarette wrappers bound together with  scrap  metal  was  sent  around  the  camp Every couple of days he would add a new panel One panel at a time would be passed around the whole camp And they'd have something to look forward to

After an entire year of this they woke one morning to find their guards gone They fled and Howard finally got to go home Just lucky to get out alive he left the book behind

Back home in California Howard soon had a wife and kids to feed so he had to set aside his dream of becoming an artist He took a job as a gardener instead

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"I get an email from a gentleman and he says ‘I think I may have some drawings your father did when he was a POW prisoner of war in World War II'" Morgan recalls "‘Would you like them' And I just stared at that email and started crying"

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D.It raised prisoners' confidence in freedom

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    The Worlds' Best Bookshops

There's nothing like being surrounded by books wherever you are Here are the finest oases of literature that travellers can bring you

Daikanyama Tsite | Tokyo

It is well worth visiting even if just to admire the building's beautiful crisscrossed architecture Once you've had your fill of roaming three floors' worth of bookshelves there's the bar the coffee shop or even the video rental space to give you more reason to stay just that little bit longer Grab a book order a beer and dive into its pages I could have stayed hours here

City Lights | San Francisco

The threestorey establishment publishes and sells titles in poetry fiction translation politics history and the arts It hosts events and readings and runs a nonprofit of the same name that aims to promote diversity of voices and ideas in literature It's opposite Vesuvio a bar frequented by Kerouac and other Beatgeneration writers and artists

Shakespeare and Company | Paris

I made a special trip to the Left Bank for this one when I was in Paris It has two floors packed with Englishlanguage texts and I was particularly struck by any spare wall space devoted to notes from visitors heartfelt messages to a loved one dedications to the shop itself or a quote from a favourite author or philosopher

Hutatma Chowk | Mumbai

A few years ago I visited India investigating Rudyard Kipling's connections with the country I spotted a cheap copy of The Jungle Book on one of the tarpcovered book stalls at Hutatma Chowk Martyrs' Square). The booksellers here are like amateur librarians able to lay their hands on almost any title you ask for To me those wellthumbed (翻旧了的) books spoke volumes about the changes of Mumbai's readers in the 150 years since the city gave us Kipling

1.In which bookshop can you buy a drink while visiting

A.Daikanyama Tsite.

B.City Lights.

C.Shakespeare and Company.

D.Hutatma Chowk.

2.What can be learned about the book stalls at Hutatma Chowk

A.People can meet Rudyard Kipling there

B.They sell the cheapest books in the world

C.The book owners are amateur librarians

D.The sellers are familiar with the books

3.What do the four bookstores have in common

A.They are beautifully designed

B.They are threestorey buildings

C.They offer book lovers good experience

D.They are frequently visited by great writers

 

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