The Healthy Habits Survey (調(diào)查) shows that only about one third of American seniors have correct habits. Here are some findings and expert advice.
1. How many times did you brush your teeth yesterday?
Finding: A full 33% of seniors brush their teeth only once a day.
Step: Remove the 300 types of bacteria in your mouth each morning with a battery-operated toothbrush. Brush gently for 2 minutes, at least twice a day.
2. How many times did you wash your hands or bathe yesterday?
Finding: Seniors, on average, bathe fewer than 3 days a week. And nearly 30%wash their hands only 4 times a day-half of the number doctors recommend.
Step: We touch our faces around 3,000 times a day-often inviting germs (病菌) to enter our mouth, nose, and eyes. Use toilet paper to avoid touching the door handle. And, most important, wash your hands often with hot running water and soap for 20 seconds.
3. How often do you think about fighting germs?
Finding: Seniors are not fighting germs as well as they should.
Step: Be aware of germs. Do you know it is not your toilet but your kitchen sponge (海綿) that can carry more germs than anything else? To kill these germs, keep your sponge in the microwave for 10 seconds.
【小題1】What is found out about American seniors?

A.Most of them have good habits. 
B.Nearly 30%of them bathe three days a week. 
C.All of them are fighting germs better than expected. 
D.About one third of them brush their teeth only once a day 
【小題2】Doctors suggest that people should wash their hands          .
A.twice a day B.three times a day 
C.four times a day D.eight times a day 
【小題3】Which of the following is true according to the text?
A.We should keep from touching our faces. 
B.There are less than 300 types of bacteria in the mouth. 
C.A kitchen sponge can carry more germs than a toilet. 
D.We should wash our hands before touching a door handle. 
【小題4】The text probably comes from             .
A.a(chǎn) guide book B.a(chǎn) popular magazine 
C.a(chǎn) book review D.a(chǎn)n official document 


【小題1】D
【小題2】D
【小題3】C
【小題4】B

解析試題分析:美國(guó)人的健康生活習(xí)慣怎么樣?最近一項(xiàng)調(diào)查顯示,只有1/3的美國(guó)人生活習(xí)慣良好。在刷牙、洗手、滅菌的調(diào)查中,許多人并沒(méi)有養(yǎng)成良好的生活習(xí)慣。
【小題1】細(xì)節(jié)理解題。由“A full 33% of seniors brush their teeth only once a day.”可知有大約1/3的人每天只刷一次牙。許多人的生活習(xí)慣并不算好,A項(xiàng)不對(duì)。老年人每星期洗澡小于3天,B項(xiàng)不對(duì)。人們沒(méi)有像應(yīng)該的那樣抗菌,C項(xiàng)不對(duì)。故選D。
【小題2】細(xì)節(jié)理解題。由“nearly 30%wash their hands only 4 times a day-half of the number doctors recommend.”可知,每天洗4次手只達(dá)到了醫(yī)生要求的一半,即每天應(yīng)洗8次手。故選D。
【小題3】細(xì)節(jié)理解題。由“Do you know it is not your toilet but your kitchen sponge (海綿) that can carry more germs than anything else? ”可知廚房里的海綿可以攜帶比廁所更多的細(xì)菌。故選C。
【小題4】推理判斷題。A項(xiàng)“指南”,B項(xiàng)“受歡迎的雜志”,C項(xiàng)“書(shū)評(píng)”,D項(xiàng)“官方文件”。根據(jù)文章內(nèi)容推斷應(yīng)為雜志,故選B。
考點(diǎn):科普類文章閱讀。

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Below is a discussion on a website.

http://www.TalkingPoints.com/
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【小題1】What does the writer want to tell the readers in the first paragraph?

A.Hospital emergency rooms always treat injured fingers. 
B.A bleeding cut is serious enough to require medical attention 
C.Dr Martin Brown is in charge of Inova Alexandria Hospital. 
D.It is important for us to be able to tell how serious a finger cut is. 
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A.a(chǎn) finger cut without treatment can lead to permanent damage 
B.the length of a cut on a finger is more important than the depth 
C.a(chǎn) long but not very deep cut often doesn’t need professional attention 
D.a(chǎn) short but deep laceration that has been damaged need professional attention. 
【小題3】The underlined word “reattach” in Para.3 is closest in meaning to         .
A.repair B.rebuild C.reconstruct D.reconnect 
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A .How a wound bleeds can show us how serious the wound could be.
B Venous bleeding will often stop when we put pressure on the wound.
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【小題1】The underlined sentence in Paragraph 1 probably means that _____.

A.a(chǎn)nthropologists can study the structure of human stomachs by studying their teeth.
B.a(chǎn)nthropologists can study the diet of early humans by studying their teeth
C.a(chǎn)nthropologists can learn whether humans were healthy by looking at their teeth
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State television's noon newscast showed the tourist city of Hangzhou on the eastern coast, where graceful bridges and waterside pagodas were hidden in a mix of sand and other pollution. In Beijing, residents and tourists with faces covered scurried along sidewalks to minimize exposure to the pollution.
A massive sandstorm hit Beijing in 2006, when winds dumped about 300,000 tons of sand on the capital.
【小題1】We can learn from the text that           .

A.the sandstorms were purposely made by China.
B.the writer thinks that China government should be responsible for the pollution.
C.the sandstorms badly affected the air in US.
D.China's Central Meteorological Station will be closed.
【小題2】The passage tells us that the sandstorms mainly came from      .
A.XinjiangB.HangzhouC.BeijingD.Inner Mongolia
【小題3】The underlined word, “respiratory” (in Para.4) means         .
A.breathingB.digestingC.hearingD.walking
【小題4】Which of the following statements is NOT true?
A.South Korea seldom issues nationwide dust advisories.
B.Taiwan is 1,600 miles from Beijing.
C.Sandstorms have hit Beijing more than once.
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In November, experts tested a drug on people in the US and France. The drug stops the body releasing chemicals that fix memories in the brain. So far the research has suggested that only the emotional effects of memories may be reduced, not that the memories are wiped out. They are not sure to what degree people’s memories are affected.
The research has caused a great deal of argument. Some think it is a bad idea, while others support it.
Supporters say it could lead to pills that prevent or treat soldiers' troubling memories after war.
They say that there are many people who suffer from terrible memories.
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"All of us can think of bad events in our lives that were terrible at the time but make us who we are. I'm not sure we want to wipe those memories out, "said Rebecca Dresser, a medical ethicist.
【小題1】The passage is mainly about              .

A.a(chǎn) new medical invention
B.a(chǎn) new research on the pill
C.a(chǎn) way of wiping out painful memories
D.a(chǎn)n argument about the research on the pill
【小題2】The drug tested on people can           .
A.cause the brain to fix memories
B.stop people remembering bad experiences
C.prevent body producing certain chemicals
D.wipe out the emotional effects of memories
【小題3】We can infer from the passage that           .
A.people doubt the effects of the pills
B.the pill will certainly stop people's emotional memories
C.taking the pill will do harm to people's physical health
D.the pill has already been produced and used by the public in America
【小題4】Which of the following does Rebecca Dresser agree with in the last paragraph ?
A.some memories can ruin people's lives.
B.people want to get rid of bad memories.
C.experiencing bad events makes us different from others.
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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源: 題型:閱讀理解

With alarming regularity, we read about oil tankers having accidents near land and the terrible consequences of the oil spills (泄露) on people, nature, and the environment.
Millions of dollars have been used in developing special chemicals to help dismiss the spills and to clean up the animals, beaches, and land spoiled by the oil.Unfortunately, when many of these chemicals are used, more damage is caused to the environment, especially to lives in the sea.
Of all of today's environmental disasters, an oil spill may actually be one of the least serious.Although oil is poisonous, it is a natural material.In the end, it breaks down naturally.There are, of course, long-term effects, but it is usually more serious in the short term.
Nature by itself works better than chemical materials, but when there is a spill we demand that governments act immediately with as much hi-tech knowledge as possible.In 1967 the tanker Torrey Canyon sank off the Scilly Isles near the coast of England and spilled 120,000 tones of oil into the ocean.If you go there today, you will find it hard to see any sign that it ever happened.
Governments seem to accept the risk of transporting millions of tons of oil by ship every day so that we can fill up our cars and drive around and cause even more environmental damage.Interestingly, the biggest companies in the world produce cars, and the next biggest supply the gasoline to make them run.
We should be thinking more about reducing our dependency on oil.Governments should be encouraging research into new technologies, such as cars run by solar power (太陽(yáng)能) , electricity, hydrogen, and so on.Much of this research has, in the past, been held back by the oil, gas, and coal.
If the world's millions of cars were 10% more efficient (高效的)—and the industry could easily produce cars at least twice as efficient,we would need many fewer tankers crossing the oceans each year.If this happened, the risks of oil spills would be reduced, and the air we breathe would be cleaner and fresher, too.
【小題1】What is the passage mainly talking about?

A.Oil spills pollution.   B.What oil pollution is
C.Oil tanker accidents.D.How to reduce oil pollution
【小題2】How does the author support the idea that oil spills are not as serious as people believe?
A.By giving a description.B.By making an argument
C.By giving an example.D.By drawing a diagram
【小題3】What does the underlined word "risk" in Paragraph 5 refer to?
A.Transportation depending more on oil
B.Poisonous oil breaking down naturally
C.Millions of tons of oil spilling into the sea
D.More environmental damage being caused
【小題4】Which suggestion, is made for reducing oil tank accidents according to the passage?
A.We should build safer tankers in the near future
B.We should develop new technologies to cut oil use
C.Tankers should not be allowed to sail near the coastlines
D.Countries should build more oil pipelines under the sea

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