题目列表(包括答案和解析)
2. The students went out of the classroom____.
A. one after one B. one after another C. one by other D. one another
1.---Good luck____your trip!
---Thanks a lot.
A. to B. of C. with D. in
(B)
An experimental treatment that causes AIDS patients to develop a dangerously high fever has shown promise as a way of prolonging and improving the patients’ life.
Called the Biologic-HT System, the new treatment lets doctors extract the blood of a patient and heat it before circulating it back into the body. The heated blood causes the patient’s body temperature to rise above 42 degrees Celsius. In people with AIDS, that increase in temperature kills some heat-sensitive HIV, the virus, most doctors say, causes AIDS.
Heating the blood of AIDS patients has been tried before, say doctors. But during previous attempts, the treatment induced deadly chemical changes in the blood. The Biologic-HT System prevents those changes from happening, allowing the heat to kill viruses with few ill side effects.
The new heat treatment cannot be considered a cure for Aids, says president of the company that makes the system. He says the treatment doesn’t kill all traces of the virus. However, it kills enough virus particles to give a patient’s immune system a reprieve in its deadly duel with HIV.
Tests of the Biologic-HT treatment began on 36 patients earlier this year. The treatment takes about four hours, and the patient normally feels well enough to leave the hospital or clinic the following morning.
So far, the patients who have had the treatment say they feel better and have developed no new opportunistic infections-disease that strike people with damaged immune systems. The patients also have experienced about a 50 percent increase in the number of T cells in their bodies. T cells are key disease-fighting cells of the immune system and the main target of HIV.
66. This passage is mainly concerned with ____________.
A. a way for treating AIDS
B. a heat-sensitive virus
C. the immune system of the human body
D. the function of high temperature
67. The blood of the patient___________.
A. is heated with a single injection
B. is heated by being circulated at a higher rate
C. is taken out from the body and then circulated through a heating system.
D. Is taken out from the body, heated outside and then put back into the body.
68. The previous attempts to use high temperature for treating AIDS failed because they_________.
A. caused chemical changes
B. could not kill HIV effectively
C. resulted in deaths
D. killed both HIV and healthy cells
69. According to the passage, the new treatment___________.
A. can kill all the HIV viruses
B. cannot eliminate the viruses completely
C. can double the number of disease-fighting cells
D. can reconstruct the patient’s immune system.
70. The result of the experiment seems to be ___________.
A. disappointing B. incomplete C. successful D. surprising
Translation(20%)
Directions: translate the following sentences into English , using the words given in the brackets.
71.他总是乐于帮助别人。他的同学推选他为班长。(make)
72.由于他读音不准,他把两个意义不同的词混淆了。(mix up; different in meaning)
73.每次我向他要钱, 他都假装他身边没钱。( every time, pretend)
74.见到老师问好是有礼貌的行为。(good manners)
75.那个病人,在证实已痊愈之前,要隔离起来。( be isolated)
(A)
It is easy to find your way about in New York. It is laid out so regularly. Instead of streets winding and twisting (迂回) as they do in London, they are all regular and well planned. The streets running north and south are called “avenues” and are numbered, e.g. 1st Avenue, 2nd Avenue, etc. The streets going east and west are called “streets” and are also numbered, e.g. 51st Street, 63rd Street. It is all much more logical (合理的) than London’s street names. But I couldn’t help thinking how much more interesting than these dull cold numbers are London’s illogical but colorful names of streets, e.g. “Bishopgate” (which is not a gate and hasn’t a Bishop in it); “Haymarket” or “Cornmarket” (where you won’t see any hey or corn) or “Poultry” (without a living chicken anywhere in sight) or “Threadneedle Street” (where you won’t find little girls learning to sew).
61. In the second sentence of the passage, “laid out” means ______.
A. built B. be put C. designed D. cut down
62. The streets running from north to south are called _______.
A. avenues in London B. streets in America
C. avenues in New York D. streets in London
63. According to the writer’s opinion, ______.
A. avenues and streets are the same
B. streets in America are better than avenues in England
C. streets in New York are better than those in London
D. the writer didn’t agree with the London streets planners
64. The names of streets both in London and New York ______.
A. are quite good B. are interesting
C. are not practical D. differ greatly in form
65. The writer tells his readers that he prefers (更喜欢) _____.
A. London streets B. New York streets
C. both D. neither
(B)
Most animals can swim right _51___ the first time they go into the water. Dogs and horses do not __52___ to swim, but men can not swim _53___ they learn now.
Learning to swim took time __54____ this is rewarded in many__55___ when one can swim. The _56____ is it that is a very good form of exercise that doctors are strongly _57____ because in swimming all the muscles of the body are _58_____.
__59___ swimming gives great pleasure, how nice it is, on a hot summer afternoon, to get the cool water and to swim till one is tired. Sometimes swimming may even _60____ all the difference between life and death.
51. A. for B. at C. in D. away
52. A. teach B. need to teach C. have to teach D. have to be taught
53. A. when B. because C. until D. though
54. A. for B. but C. or D. as
55. A. times B. things C. places D. ways
56. A. thing B. fact C. matter D. problem
57. A. for B. after C. against D. in
58. A. tired B. touched C. used D. fixed
59. A. On the contrary B. At least C. Besides D. Fixed 60. A. mean B. tell C. find D. reach
Reading Comprehension(20%)
Directions: Read the following passages. Each passage is followed by several questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices marked A, B, C and D. Choose the one that fits best according to the information given in the passage you have just read.
Directions: Read the passages and choose the best answer from A, B, C and D.
(A)
English people are generally reserved. A __41___ person is one who doesn’t talk very much to strangers, and doesn’t show much of his feelings and __42____ gets excited. It is difficult _43____ to know a reserved person. He never tells you anything about himself. And you may work with him __44___ ever knowing where he lives, how much he earns, how many children he had and what his interests are. English people tend to be like that. If they are making a journey __45___ train, they will do their best to find an _46____ compartment. If they have to share the compartment with a stranger, they may travel many miles without _47___ a conversation. If they do talk, personal question like: “How old are you?” or “What is your name?” are not to be asked. Questions like: “How much did you pay _48___ your watch?” “What is your salary?” are almost forbidden. They talk __49____. Loud speeches are regarded __50___ bad manners.
41. A. talkative B. reserve C. reserved D. reserving
42. A. often B. always C. seldom D. usually
43. A. get B. to get C. learn D. to learn
44. A. without B. with C. by D. through
45. A. in B. on C. at D. by
46. A. full B. empty C. crowded D. filled
47. A. start B. begin C. ending D. starting
48. A. for B. by C. on D. buy
49. A. quite B. quiet C. quietly D. silent
50. A. for B. on C. as D. like
40. A lot of students in our school are interested in English. They want to ___ it.
A. major with B. major in C. major on D. measure
39. Their carelessness ___ them the success.
A. paid B. cost C. made D. spent
38. In the temple the farmer knelt down and ___ rain.
A. asked for B. beg for C. prayed for D. prayed in
37. He drove away ___ the direction of London.
A. in B. at C. to D. for
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