题目列表(包括答案和解析)
1. By saying “doing well by doing good” in Paragraph 1, the author wants to_____.
A.encourage us just to do it, and it will be better
B.encourage us to try as hard as possible
C.tell us not to give up
D.tell us that people who have volunteered their way into
8.What can we infer from the passage?
A.People should know clearly the exact Chinese translation of English abbreviations.
B.More and more Chinese people will use English abbreviations in the future.
C.Most parents like to give their child English names now.
D.Language scholars hate to use English abbreviations.
第23天 A
Now let’s talk about doing well by doing good-many people who have ever been volunteers for the community find their place in relative jobs or even make their way to be corporate(团体的)leaders.
Consider the case of Kimberly Mulcahy. Throughout her career, Mulcahy has actively volunteered in her community, profession and industry. Though she put in long hours as Vice President at a Fortune 500 company, she also found time to professional and community organizations.
Then last year, the unexpected thing happened. The company where she’d worked for more than 20 years was bought out and she was laid off.
On hearing the news, those who she served were quick not only to offer her support-but actual jobs! In the end, Mulcahy was hired by a PR agency-she used to work as a director of her industry association. And she brought with her several accounts based on relationships she had formed through volunteering.
Volunteering was a godsend(天赐之物)to Todd, who has been a mid-level manager at the same company for many years. After he was out of work, he felt old and disappointed. But Todd knew he needed a change. Todd became involved in community service. He joined his town’s volunteer fire department and was soon appointed to the finance committee.
Sometimes volunteering helps you bring passion to your work, other times it can turn your life’s passion into your work. Cape Cod Baseball League President Judy Scarafile is a registered pharmacist(药剂师)whose love of the game led her to volunteered as league publicist(宣传员), secretary and deputy commissioner woman to hold the top post.
Whether you are to enter the workforce, build your resume, or follow your passion, volunteering is good for the soul and the career.
7.Why are the English abbreviations becoming more and more popular according to the passage?
A.Because English is the most common language in the world.
B.Because using English abbreviations is a fashion.
C.Because English abbreviations are easy and simple to use.
D.Because English abbreviations are easy to pronounce.
6. Why does the author use the example of a couple who tried to name their baby “@”?
A.To show Chinese is badly polluted by English.
B.To express the couple’s love for the child.
C.To indicate “@”is a very common sign among the e-mail users.
D.To show some people are very enthusiastic over English letters.
5. Which of the following is TRUE about the report on the 2006 Language Situation in China?
A.The report is compiled by the Ministry of Education alone.
B.The report is compiled every year.
C.The report is compiled every two years.
D.The report is based on over 1 billion language samples from websites.
4. According to the passage, humans walk upright in order to____.
A.conserve energy B.differ from other animals
C.free their brains D.strengthen their legs
B
Does technology pose a threat to the purity of Chinese language?
Many Chinese use instant messenger tools such as MSN or QQ, listen to music on MP3 players and log on the Internet using ADSL-most without knowing the literal Chinese translation of the abbreviations(缩略词). But they don’t have to, as many English letters have become part of the local vocabulary.
A dozen abbreviations including GDP, NBA, IT, MP3, QQ, DVD and CEO are among the 5,000 most-frequently used words in the Chinese media last year, according to a report on the 2006 Language Situation in China.
The report said some parents are so keen on English letters that a couple tried to name their baby “@”, claiming the character used in email addresses reflects their love for the child. While the “@”is obviously familiar to Chinese e-mail users, they often use the English word “at” to pronounce it “ai ta”,or “love him”.
The study collected more than 1 billion language samples from newspapers, magazines, TV, radio and websites. The annual report is jointly compiled by the Ministry of Education and the State Language Commission.
“Nowadays, more and more English abbreviations are being used in Chinese, making them an important part of modern language,” said Hou Min, a professor at Communication University of China.
“The abbreviations have gained popularity because of the ease of usage,” Hou said. For example, DNA is much simpler to use than its Chinese version. “As more Chinese people learn foreign languages, especially English, in recent years, using abbreviations has become a trend among educated people,” she added.
Some language scholars fear such usage will contaminate(污染)the purity of Chinese and cause confusion in communication.
3. What is Paragraph 4 mainly about?
A.How chimps saved energy.
B.Why chimps didn't walk on two legs.
C.David Raichlen studied chimps.
D.Different chimps consumed different energy.
2. We can infer from the passage that____.
A.scientists have no idea on how humans’ walking on two legs came about
B.scientists have had different views on why chimps walk on four legs
C.scientists have had different views on how humans’ walking on two legs vame about
D.scientists have had similar views on how humans’ walking on two legs came about
1. The underlined word “Bipedalism” in Paragraph 2 probably means____.
A.moving sideways B.walking upright
C.walking on four legs D.running fast
8. The underlined word “they” in Nathan’s words refers to____.
A.the employees B.governments
C.all the restaurants D.fast-food restaurants
第22天 A
Why did humans evolve to walk upright? Perhaps because it’s just plain easier. Make that “energetically less costly”, scientifically speaking.
Bipedalism-walking on two feet, is one of the defining characteristics of being humans, and scientists have debated for years how it came about. In the latest attempt to find an explanation, researchers trained five chimps(黑猩猩)to walk on a treadmill(跑步机)while wearing masks that allowed measurement of their oxygen consumption. The chimps were measured both while walking upright and while moving on their legs and knuckles(膝关节).That measurement of the energy needed to move around was compared with similar tests on humans and the results are published in this week’s online edition of “Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences”.
It turns out that humans walking on two legs use only one-quarter of the energy that chimps use while knucklewalking on four limbs(肢).And the chimps, on average, use as much energy using two legs as they did when they used all four limbs.
However, there were differences among chimps in how much energy they used, and this difference corresponded to their different manner of walking and anatomy(解剖构造).One of the chimps used less energy on two legs, one used about the same and the others used more, said David Raichlen, assistant professor of anthropology at the University of Arizona.
“What we were surprised at was the variation(变异) ”, he said in a telephone interview. Interview. “That was pretty exciting, because when you talk about how evolution works, variation is the bottom line, without variation there is no evolution.”
Walking on two legs freed our arms, opening the door to drive the world, said Raichlen. “We think about the evolution of bipedalism as one of first events that led hominids(原始人)down the path to being humans.”
The research was supported by the National Science Foundation and the L.S.B.Leakey Foundation.
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