Which is the most important risk factor?A.poor dietB.diabetesC.high blood cholesterolD.bee
Which is the most important risk factor?
A.poor diet
B.diabetes
C.high blood cholesterol
D.beer drinking
Which is the most important risk factor?
A.poor diet
B.diabetes
C.high blood cholesterol
D.beer drinking
第1题
Im told that during an international game of chess (国际象棋), many beautiful moves couldbe made on a chessboard. In a decisive36in which he was evenly matched with a Russianmaster ____ 37____, Marshall found his queen under serious attack. There were several ways of ____ 38____,and since the queen is the most____39____piece, spectators (观众) thought Marshall would naturallymove his queen to ____ 40____ Deep in thought, Marshall used all his time to consider the ____ 41____. He picked up his queen,paused, and placed it down on the most ____ 42 ____ square of all-a square from which the queen couldbe____43____by any one of three enemy pieces. Marshall had sacrificed (牺牲) his queen-an unthinkable move. Everyone else was ____ 44____ Then the Russian, and the____45____, realized that Marshall had actually made a____46____move.It was clear that no matter how the____47____was taken, the Russian. would soon be in a____48____posi-tion. Seeing this, the Russian admitted his defeat. When spectators recovered from the____49____of Marshalls daring, they showered the chessboardwith money. Marshall had achieved____50____in a very unusual and daring fashion-he had____51____bysacrificing the queen. To me, its not____52____that he won. What counts is that Marshall had broken with standard____ 53____to make such a move. He had looked____54____the usual patterns of play and had been willingto consider an imaginative risk on the basis of his judgment and his judgment alone. No matter howthe game ____ 55 ____ , Marshall was the winner. 根据材料请回答下列各 A.experience B.battle C.game D.chance
第2题
The reviewer suggests that one advantage of the book is that .
A.it is better value than other management books
B.it does not need to be read right through
C.it is about well-known people
第3题
A.The Book Critics Circle Award.
B.The Nobel Prize for literature.
C.The Pulitzer Prize for fiction.
D.The National Book Award.
第4题
What is the lecture mainly about?
A.Global warming.
B.Shoreline retreat.
C.Rise in sea-level.
D.Water intrusion.
第5题
where Im most (11) ............to see colleagues.
A.possible
B.able
C.likely
第6题
第7题
Critics of AI would probably agree with the statement that______.
A.logic plays the most important part in human reasoning
B.fast computation shows the ability of understanding
C.the new silicon chip is working in the way that human brain works
D.reasoning is something too complicated to be duplicated by the computer
第8题
第三节 短文理解2
阅读下列短文,从[A]、[B]、[C]三个选项中选择一个正确答案。
Computers are very important to modem (现代的) life. Many people think that in the future computers will be used in lots of everyday life. It is thought that we won't have to go shopping because we will be able to get most things which are sold in the shops on the Interact. There will be no more books because we will be able to get all texts from computers. The Internet will be used to play games, see films and buy food. Most telephone calls will be made by computers.
Some people are glad about these new ways of shopping and communication (交流). Others do not think that computers will replace (取代) our old ways.
Let's look at books, for example. Some people think that one day we will not read books made of paper. In- stead, we will buy and read books using computers. We will read texts on small pocket computers. The computers will keep many different books in them at the same time. We won't need to turn lots of pages and paper will be saved. Computerized (计算机化的) books will be used more and more.
Is Internet shopping such a pleasure as going to the shop? Many people say it is not. It is a pleasure to go into shops and look at things you want to buy. Also probably people won't like to read large texts on our computers, because paper books seem to be more friendly. Maybe computers won't change these two habits (习惯).
In the first paragraph it is thought people will use computers to ______.
A.play games, see films and have meals
B.play games, go shopping and make telephone calls
C.see films, buy food and see the doctor
第9题
Retirement Brings Most a Big Health Boost
The self-reported health of the newly retired improves so much that most feel eight years younger, a new European study suggests.
This happy news was true of almost everyone except a small minority -- only 2 percent -- who had experienced "ideal" conditions in their working life, anyway.
"The results really say three things: that work puts an extra burden on the health of older workers, that the effects of this extra burden are largely relieved by retirement and, finally, that both the extra burden and the relief are larger when working conditions are poor," said Hugo Westerlund, lead author of a study published online Nov. 9 in The Lancet (柳叶刀). "This indicates that there is a need to provide opportunities for older workers to decrease the demands in their work out of concern for their health and well-being. "
But of course, added Westerlund, who is head of epidemiology at the Stress Research Institute at Stockholm University in Sweden, "not all older workers suffer from poor perceived health. Many are indeed remarkably healthy and fit for work. But sooner or later, everyone has to slow down because of old age catching up. "
Last week, the same group of researchers reported that workers slept better after retirement than before. "Sleep improves at retirement, which suggests that sleeping could be a mediator between work and perception of poor health," Westerlund said.
This study looked at what the same 15,000 French workers, most of them men, had to say about their own health up to seven years pre-retirement and up to seven years post-retirement.
As participants got closer to retirement age, their perception of their own health declined, but went up again during the first year of retirement.
Those who reported being in poorer health declined from 19.2 percent in the year prior to retirement to 14.3 percent by the end of the first year after retiring. According to the researchers, that means postretirement levels of poor health fell to levels last seen eight years previously.
The changes were seen in both men and women, across different occupations, and lasted through the first seven years of not punching the clock.
Workers who felt worse before retirement and had lower working conditions reported greater improvements as soon as they retired, the team found.
Most of the newly retired feel younger and healthier than before.
A.Right
B.Wrong
C.Not mentioned
第10题
第11题
A.The Chairman of the Board.
B.The Managing Director.
C.The General Manager.
D.The Executive Director.