7.Two years ago,the Funk family of suburban Chicago adopted a Chinese baby girl who had been abandoned on a sidewalk near a Yangzhou textile factory.
Last year,halfway across the United States,the Ramirez family of suburban Miami adopted a girl who had been abandoned a week later on the same spot.
Both families named their daughters Mia.It turns out,a first name and Chinese heritage aren't the only things the threeyearolds have in common.The girls'mothers-Holly Funk and Diana Ramirez-met on a website for parents who had gone through international adoptions.After a lot of emails comparing photographs and biographical details,DNA testing proved the families'suspicions:the girls are probably fraternal(亲如手足的) twins.
"I was in shock,"said Ramirez,who lives with her husband Carlos in Pembroke Pines,Florida."Well,now this is for real."
The Internet and Web groups revolving around international orphanages are increasingly being used to link adopted children with biological kin(亲属).The site that the Funks and Ramirezes used has a membership of 137people,with 15sets of twins and 7sets of siblings (兄弟,姐妹) whose relationships have been confirmed.
At a reunion Friday at Chicago's O'Hare International Airport,Mia Diamond Funk and Mia Hanying Ramirez shyly surveyed each other,and then reached for each other's hand.
DNA tests establish an 85percent probability that the girls are at least halfsisters.Scientists do not have a biological parent to test and reach a greater certainty,but given their ages and physical similarities,experts say it is likely they are fraternal twins.
Douglas and Holly Funk hope to bring their Mia to Miami in October.Both sets of parents say they are committed to staying in touch and often let the twins talk to each other on the phone.
12.Both the adopted girls shared a first nameD.
A.because they both came from China
B.because of their physical similarities
C.because their US parents suspected they were twins
D.for no good reason
13.Why did the girls'mothers meet on the Internet?B
A.To compare photographs of the two girls.
B.To find the girls'biological kin.
C.To test their suspicions.
D.To enjoy the joy of adopting children.
14.Experts are still not 100percent sure that the two girls are fraternal twins becauseC.
A.DNA tests are still not accurate enough
B.the two girls were born in two different families
C.the DNA of a biological parent is still missing
D.one girl was born a week later than the other
15.What Ramirez said in Paragraph 4suggests that sheB.
A.didn't believe what had happened
B.was surprised at what had happened
C.didn't want to accept the fact
D.was pleased with what they had done.