22.We could not have succeeded your help. A.but for B.without C.if it had not been for D.all the above 查看更多

 

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We could not have succeeded ______ your help.
  A.but for B.without C.if it had not been for D.all the above

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    You hear this,“No wonder you are fat.All you ever d0 is eat.”You feel sad.“I skip my breakfast and supper.I run every morning and evening.What else can I do?”

    Basically you can do nothing.Your genes,not your life habits,determine your weight and your body constantly tries to maintain it.

    Albert Stunkard of the University of Pennsylvania found from experiments that“80 percent of the children of two fat parents become fat,as compared with no more than 14.percent of the children of two parents of normal weight.”   

    How can obese people become thinner through dieting? Well,dieting can be effective.but the health costs are great.

    Jules Hirsch,a research physician at Rockefeller University,did a study of eight fat people.They were.given a liquid formula(配方)providing 600 calories a day.After more than 10 weeks,the subjects lost on average 45 kg.But after leaving the hospital,they all regained the weight.

    The results were surprising:by metabolic(新陈代谢的)measurement,fat people who lost large amounts of weight seemed like they were starving.They had psychiatric problems.They dreamed of food or of breaking their diet They were anxious and depressed.Some wanted to kill themselves.They hid food in their rooms.

    Researchers warn that it is possible that weight reduction doesn’t result in normal weight,but in an abnormal state lust like that of starved non.obese people.   

    Thin people, however,suffer from the opposite.They have to make a great effort to gain weight  Ethan Sims of the University of Vermont got prisoners to volunteer to gain weight.In four to six months—they ate as much as they could.They succeeded in increasing their weight by 20 to 25 percent. But months after the study ended,they were back to normal weight and stayed there.

    This did not mean that people are completely without hope in controlling their weight.It means that those who tend to be fat will have to constantly battle their genetic inheritance(遗传)if they want to significantly 1ower their weight.

    The findings also provide evidence for something scientists thought was true—each person has a comfortable weight range.The range might be as much as 9kg.Someone might weigh 60--69kg without too much effort.But,going above or below the natural weight range is difficult.The body resists by feeling hungry or full and changing.the metabolism to push the weight back to the range it seeks.

The story is mainly written to       。

    A.point out the relations between our body and mind

    B.warn us it’s extremely harmful to reduce or gain our weight

    C.tell us that it’s difficult to make a significant change in our weight

D.stress that dieting 1s a recommended way to help you reach your desired weight   

Jules Hirsch’s study’found that         .

     A.big weight loss could lead to mental problems

     B.a person’s weight can be decided by their parents’ weight

     C.only dieting cannot produce a desired result in weight reduction

     D.big efforts to lose weight may result in a weight much heavier than one’s normal weight

From the text,we know that the body can still feel comfortable

     A.when the weight goes up or down by 6 kg

     B.when the weight goes up or down by l0 kg

     C.when the weight is increased by 20 to 25 percent

     D.when the weight is decreased by 20 to 25 percent

What can be inferred from the passage?

     A.When it comes to weight,naturalness is the healthiest

     B.Weight reduction could be both risky and painful.

     C.Seek professional advice when reducing your weight.

     D.There’s no hope and no point in controlling your weight.

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You hear this,“No wonder you are fat.All you ever d0 is eat.”You feel sad.“I skip my breakfast and supper.I run every morning and evening.What else can I do?”

    Basically you can do nothing.Your genes,not your life habits,determine your weight and your body constantly tries to maintain it.

    Albert Stunkard of the University of Pennsylvania found from experiments that“80 percent of the children of two fat parents become fat,as compared with no more than 14.percent of the children of two parents of normal weight.”   

    How can obese people become thinner through dieting? Well,dieting can be effective.but the health costs are great.

    Jules Hirsch,a research physician at Rockefeller University,did a study of eight fat people.They were.given a liquid formula(配方)providing 600 calories a day.After more than 10 weeks,the subjects lost on average 45 kg.But after leaving the hospital,they all regained the weight.

    The results were surprising:by metabolic(新陈代谢的)measurement,fat people who lost large amounts of weight seemed like they were starving.They had psychiatric problems.They dreamed of food or of breaking their diet They were anxious and depressed.Some wanted to kill themselves.They hid food in their rooms.

    Researchers warn that it is possible that weight reduction doesn’t result in normal weight,but in an abnormal state lust like that of starved non.obese people.   

    Thin people, however,suffer from the opposite.They have to make a great effort to gain weight  Ethan Sims of the University of Vermont got prisoners to volunteer to gain weight.In four to six months—they ate as much as they could.They succeeded in increasing their weight by 20 to 25 percent. But months after the study ended,they were back to normal weight and stayed there.

    This did not mean that people are completely without hope in controlling their weight.It means that those who tend to be fat will have to constantly battle their genetic inheritance(遗传)if they want to significantly 1ower their weight.

    The findings also provide evidence for something scientists thought was true—each person has a comfortable weight range.The range might be as much as 9kg.Someone might weigh 60--69kg without too much effort.But,going above or below the natural weight range is difficult.The body resists by feeling hungry or full and changing.the metabolism to push the weight back to the range it seeks.

56.The story is mainly written to      

    A.point out the relations between our body and mind

    B.warn us it’s extremely harmful to reduce or gain our weight

    C.tell us that it’s difficult to make a significant change in our weight

D.stress that dieting 1s a recommended way to help you reach your desired weight   

57.Jules Hirsch’s study’found that         .

     A.big weight loss could lead to mental problems

     B.a person’s weight can be decided by their parents’ weight

     C.only dieting cannot produce a desired result in weight reduction

     D.big efforts to lose weight may result in a weight much heavier than one’s normal weight

58.From the text,we know that the body can still feel comfortable

     A.when the weight goes up or down by 6 kg

     B.when the weight goes up or down by l0 kg

     C.when the weight is increased by 20 to 25 percent

     D.when the weight is decreased by 20 to 25 percent

59.What can be inferred from the passage?

     A.When it comes to weight,naturalness is the healthiest

     B.Weight reduction could be both risky and painful.

     C.Seek professional advice when reducing your weight.

     D.There’s no hope and no point in controlling your weight.

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阅读理解,阅读下列短文,从每题所给的四个选项(A、B、C、D)中,选出最佳选项。

  Gadgets(小装置)can be wildly expensive and quickly out-of-date, but Steven Poole is still the first to buy them.Technological innovations(创新)are often quite stupid.The idea that you might want to walk down the street holding a mobile phone in front of your face, just to experience the wonders of video calling, is clearly ridiculous.Luckily for the tech companies, however, there are some people who jump at the chance to buy into new gadgets before they are fully ready and cheap enough for the mass-market.They are called early adopters, and their fate is a terrible one.I should know, since I am one myself.

  Early adopters have a Mecca: it's Tokyo's Akihabara district, also known as “Electric City”.There, in 1999, I bought a digital camera, a gizmo that few people in Britain had heard of.Over the next few years I watched in great sadness as digital cameras became more popular, cheaper and more powerful, until better models could be had for a quarter of the price I had paid.Did I feel stupid? What I actually did was this: I splashed out more money last year for a new one, one that let me feel pleasantly ahead of the curve once again.But I know that cannot last, and I'll probably have to buy another in a few years.

  Thus early adopters are betting on other people eventually feeling the same desires.And it's worse if that future never arrives.Early adopters of the Betamax home-video format in the 1970s could only look on in sadness when their investment was  ified(使无效)by the success of VHS.All sorts of apparently splendid inventions, such as videogame consoles like the Atari Jaguar have been abandoned to the dustbin of history right after a few early adopters bought in.Those who invested thousands in a Segway motorized scooter on the wave of ridiculous advertising campaigns that accompanied its launch a couple of years ago can join the club.

  You might think we should just stop being so silly, save our money, and wait to see what really catches on.But the logic of the industry is such that, if everyone did that, no innovation would become popular.Imagine the third person to buy an ordinary telephone soon after Alexander Graham Bell had invented it.Who was he going to call? Maybe he simply bought two phones, one for a special friend.But still, the usefulness and eventual popularity of the device wasn't clear at the time.Nobody dreamed of the possibility of being able to speak to any one of millions of people.And yet if he, and the hundreds and thousands of early adopters after him, had not bought into the idea, the vast communication networks that we all take for granted today would never have been built.

  The same goes, indeed, for all new technologies.Those guys holding bricks to their ears that we laughed at in the 1980s made the current mobile phone possible.People who bought DVD players when they still cost a fortune, instead of today's cheap one at the local supermarket, made sure that the new format succeeded.Early adopters’ desire for desires supported the future financially.And what did they get for their pains? They got a hole in their bank accounts and inferior, unperfected technology.But still, they got it first.And today they are still at work, buying overpriced digital radios, DVD recorders and LCD televisions, and even 3G phones, so that you will be eventually be able to buy better and less expensive ones.

  So next time you see a gadget-festooned geek(满身新潮玩意的土包子)and feel tempted to sneer(讥笑), think for a minute.Without early adopters, there would be no cheap mobile phones or DVD players; there would be no telephone or television either.We are the tragic, unsung foot soldiers of the technology revolution.We're the desire-addicted pioneers, pure in heart, dreaming of a better future.We make expensive mistakes so you don't have to.Really, we are heroes.

(1)

Steven Poole is mentioned in the first paragraph to ________.

[  ]

A.

introduce the topic of the passage

B.

present the main idea of the passage

C.

prove the content of the passage is true

D.

explain why modern technology is stupid

(2)

It can be inferred from the passage that ________.

[  ]

A.

the Segway motorized scooter(para.3)was once quite popular

B.

early adopters are probably welcomed by the tech companies

C.

Mecca(para.2)is a place where new digital cameras are designed

D.

all the early adopters are very rich and enjoying buying anything new

(3)

According to the passage, what's probably the worst result for an early adopter?

[  ]

A.

He is laughed at by his family and friends.

B.

What he buys proves useless and expensive.

C.

He finds himself no longer the most fashionable.

D.

What he buys doesn't eventually become popular.

(4)

Why did the writer buy a new digital camera last year?

[  ]

A.

Because he didn't want to miss the cheap but better cameras.

B.

Because he had to buy another new camera in several years anyway.

C.

Because the old camera made him feel upset and out of fashion.

D.

Because early digital cameras were of poor quality and couldn't last long.

(5)

Which of the following best describe the writer's attitude towards the early adopters?

[  ]

A.

Approving.

B.

Doubtful.

C.

Critical.

D.

Ashamed.

(6)

By saying the last sentence “Really, we are heroes.” the writer wants to express that ________.

[  ]

A.

early adopters are likely to get addicted to modern technology

B.

early adopters bravely spend much money buying new technology

C.

early adopters are as a matter of fact clever investors of technology

D.

early adopters help promote the development of technology

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