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全国职称英语等级考试应试指导-卫生类--强化训练题二

2008-04-09来源:

1、If you want to telephone him, you will have to____the number.

   A.look at

   B.look through

   C.look to

   D.look up

2、After the campaign a special medal was____to all combatants.

   A.gained

   B.awarded

   C.deserved

   D.donated

3、He spoke so quickly that I didn’t____what he said.

   A.catch

   B.receive

   C.listen

   D.accept

4、This young tree could not have been damaged by accident; I believe it was done____.

   A.in fact

   B.on purpose

   C.by plan

   D.by appointment

5、He is not so well off, for he lives from hand to____.

   A.nose

   B.mouth

   C.face

   D.head

6、Being extremely____to the cold, I do not like skiing.

   A.insensitive

   B.sensible

   C.senseless

   D.sensitive

7、It’s much more_____to buy a season ticket if you travel every day.

   A.cheap

   B.***nomical

   C.***nomic

   D.saving

8、He looked for a table to sit down at, but they were all____.

   A.Used up

   B.Engaged

   C.Filled in

   D.Occupied

9、Your library card____next month, you’ll have to get a new one if you want to borrow more books.

   A.discloses

   B.closes

   C.expires

   D.surpasses

10、You won’t find a greater variety of flowers anywhere else on____.

   A.soil

   B.ground

   C.earth

   D.world

11、She was an (unlikely) candidate for the position.

   A.improbable

   B.unpopular

   C.unqualified

   D.dishonest

12、I suppose he will give it to you (eventually).

   A.in a way

   B.in due course

   C.in the end

   D.in any case

13、I like George; he is so (down-to-earth).

   A.practical

   B.friendly

   C.amusing

   D.honest

14、Peter is (experiencing) a difficult period in his life.

   A.going into

   B.going out of

   C.going over

   D.going through

15、John was (reluctant) to come.

   A.glad to come

   B.unable to come

   C.hesitant about coming

   D.planning to come

16、Don’t get upset about (trivial) matters.

   A.unexpected

   B.unusual

   C.unimportant

   D.uncertain

17、She (longed) to be envied and sought after.

   A.hoped

   B.wished

   C.was eager

   D.wanted

18、The teachers want to (do away with) cheating in their school.

   A.put an end to

   B.retain

   C.do credit to

   D.substitute for

19、The mail was (delayed) for two days because of the snow-storm.

   A.held in

   B.held up

   C.held down

   D.held off

20、He is always (under the weather).

   A.travelling

   B.sick

   C.away

   D.unconscious

21、第一篇 Types of Blood You have been badly injured in a car accident. It is necessary to give you a blood transfusion because you lost a great deal of blood in the accident. Howev er, special care must be taken in selecting new blood for you. If the blood is t oo different from your own, the transfusion could kill you. There are four basic types of blood: A, B, AB, and O. A simple test can ind icate a person’s blood type. Everybody is born with one of these four types of b lood. Blood type, like hair color and height, is inherited from parents. Because of substances contained in each type, the four groups must be transf used carefully. Basically, A and B cannot be mixed. A and B cannot receive AB, b ut AB may receive A or B. O can give to any other group; hence, it is often call ed the universal donor. For the opposite reason, AB is sometimes called the univ ersal recipient. However, because so many reactions can occur in transfusions, p atients usually receive only salt or plasma ( liquid ) until their blood can be matched as exactly as possible in the blood bank of a hospital. In this way , it is possible to avoid any bad reactions to the transfusion. There is a relationship between your blood type and your nationality. Among Europeans and people of European ancestry, about 42 percent have type A while 45 percent have type O. The rarest is type AB. Other races have different percenta ges. For example, some American Indian groups have nearly 100 percent type O. If a patient can receive type A blood,____

   A.he must have type A blood.

   B.he can also receive type AB blood.

   C.he can’t have type B blood.

   D.he can’t have type AB blood.

22、(同21题)The word Transfusion" is closest in meaning to____

   A.transfer.

   B.check.

   C.treatment.

   D.mixture.

23、(同21题)If you need a transfusion, the best and safest blood for you is____

   A.type AB.

   B.type O .

   C.exactly the same type as yours.

   D.a mixture of salt and plasma.

24、(同21题)According to the passage, the third most common blood type for Europeans is____

   A.A..

   B.B.

   C.AB.

   D.O.

25、(同21题)The passage is most probably written for____

   A.the general reader.

   B.the medical student.

   C.the blood expert.

   D.people badly injured in a car accident.

26、第二篇 Public Health in Rome and Arab The Romans built great /!aqueducts" to carry fresh water from the mountains to the cities. Many of these aqueducts are still standing today. The Romans also built great pipes under the ground to carry away the sewage. In Romes these sewa ge pipes (sewers) are still used today; it is 2,000 years old. The Roman Emperor s even set up a government Wealth service. They built the first great public hos pitals in Europe, and they paid doctors to look after poor people. Then the Roman Empire fell to pieces, these civilised methods of treatment d isappeared from most of Europe, for more than a thousand years. People went back to the old ways. They lived in dirty conditions which helped to cause diseases; and they asked God to cure the diseases. They shut up mentally sick people in p risons. Or they burnt them alive because they were supposed to have magic power. But the work of the Greek and Roman doctors was lost. Over a thousand years ago, the Arabs moved into many of the Mediterranean countries. They took big par ts of the old Roman lands. They translated the Greek and Roman medical books int o Arabic. Arab doctors themselves made many new discoveries. When civilization at last came back to Europe, men once again translated the Greek and Roman works on medicine into Latin. Slowly very sloppily European doc tors discovered again the things that the Greeks and Romans had known so long ag o. Slowly, they began to make new discoveries. They found out more about the way the body works the way our blood goes round our bodies, the way our nerves send messages from our brains to our muscles, the way these muscles move our bodies.The word /!aqueduct" probably means____

   A.something which was built long ago.

   B.something invented by a Roman Emperor.

   C.a big pipe under the ground.

   D.something built to supply clean water for the citizens.

27、(同26题)Which of the following is true? _____

   A.The sewage pipes built by the Romans are no longer in use now.

   B.Sewage pipes in Arabia were built by the Roman.

   C.A sewage pipe still being used today in Rome was built 2,000 year ago.

   D.The ancient Romans got their drinking water from underground pipes.

28、(同26题)Which of the following is Not true? ____

   A.A government health service was set up in ancient Rome.

   B.The first public hospital in Europe was built in Rome.

   C.In ancient Rome doctors were paid by the government.

   D.Those who were mentally sick were all burnt alive in the Roman Empire.

29、(同26题)From this article we’ ve learned that the Arabs ____

   A.made more discoveries than the Romans.

   B.helped to preserve the Roman medical works.

   C.discovered more about the way the human body works.

   D.Occupied big parts of the old Roman lands 2,000 years ago.

30、(同26题)This article is mainly about____

   A.the contributions made by the Romans and Arabs to the promotion of public health.

   B.how the Arabs invaded the Roman Empire.

   C.The rise and fall of the Roman Empire.

   D.How Arabian doctors helped to translate the medical books.

31、第三篇 Population Densities The average population density of the world is 47 persons per square mile. Continental densities range from no permanent inhabitants in Antarctica to 211 per square mile in Europe. In the western hemisphere, population densities range from about 4 per square mile in Canada to 675 per square mile in Puerto Rico. I n Europe the range is from 4 per square mile in Iceland to 831 per square mile I n the Netherlands. Within countries there are wide variations of population dens ities. For example, in Egypt, the average is 55 persons per square mile, but 1,3 00 person inhabit each square mile in settled portions where the land is arable. High population densities generally occur in regions of developed industri alization, such as the Netherlands, Belgium, and Great Britain, or where lands a re intensively used for agriculture, as in Puerto Rico and Java. Low average population densities are characteristic of most underdeveloped countries. Low density of population is generally associated with a relatively low percentage of cultivated land. This generally results from poor quality land s. It may also be due to natural obstacles to cultivation, such as deserts, moun tains, or malaria (疟疾)-infested jungles; to land uses othe r than cultivation, as pasture and forested sand; to primitive methods that limit cultivation; to so cial obstacles; and to land ownership systems which keep land out of production. More ***nomically advanced countries of low population density have, as a rule, large proportions of their populations living in urban areas. Their rural population densities are usually very low. Poorly developed countries of corresp ondingly low generally population density, on the other hand, often have a conce ntration of rural population living on arable land, which is as great as the rur al concentration found in the most densely populated industrial countries.Along the banks of the Nile, we may expect to find____