搜档网
当前位置:搜档网 › 职称英语C级补全短文(-)

职称英语C级补全短文(-)

职称英语C级补全短文(-)
职称英语C级补全短文(-)

2016职称英语教材-卫生类C级完形填空及参考译文1

第一篇Better Control of TB Seen If a Faster Cure Is Found

The World Health Organization1 estimates that about one-third of all people are infected with bacteria that cause tuberculosis . Most times, the infection remains inactive. But each year about eight million people develop active cases of TB, usually in their lungs. Two million people die of it. The disease has increased with the spread of AIDS and drug-resistant forms of tuberculosis. Current treatments take at least six months. People have to take a combination of several antibiotic drugs daily. But many people stop as soon as they feel better. Doing that can lead to an infection that resists treatment. Public health experts agree that a faster-acting cure for tuberculosis would be more effective. Now a study estimates just how effective it might be. A professor of international health at Harvard University2 led the study. Joshua Salomon says a shorter treatment program would likely mean not just more patients cured. It would also mean fewer infectious patients who can pass on their infection to others.

The researchers developed a mathematical model to examine the effects of a two-month treatment plan. They tested the model with current TB conditions in Southeast Asia. The scientists found that a two-month treatment could prevent about twenty percent of new cases. And it might prevent about twenty-five percent of TB deaths. The model shows that these reductions would take place between two thousand twelve and two thousand thirty. That is, if a faster cure is developed and in wide use by two thousand twelve.

The World Health Organization reductions the DOTS3 program in nineteen ninety. DOTS is Directly Observed Treatment, Short-course. Health workers watch tuberculosis patients take their daily pills to make sure they continue treatment.

Earlier this year, an international partnership of organizations announced a plan to expand the DOTS program. The ten-year plan also aims to finance research into new TB drugs. The four most common drugs used now are more than forty years old. The Global Alliance for TB Drug Development4 says its long-term goal is a treatment that could work in as few as ten doses.

1.找到速效治疗剂可以更好控制结核病

世界卫生组织估计全球有大约三分之一的人感染了导致结核病的病菌。大多数时候,这种感染是不活跃的。但是每年大约有八百万结核病病例,通常是在肺部。两百万人因此丧命。结核病发病率由于艾滋病的传播和抗药型结核病的出现而增加。目前的治疗至少需要六个月。患病者不得不每日服用多种抗生素药品。许多人在稍感舒适后就停止使用药品,这么做可能导致抗药性感染。公共卫生专家一致认为针对结核病的速效治疗剂将会更加有效果。现在有一项研究评估这种速效治疗剂究竟效力有多大。这项研究由美国哈佛大学国际卫生方面的教授率领。Joshua Salomon说,疗程较短的治疗计划可能不仅仅意味着更多病人被治好,也意味着将感染传给别人的病人会更少。

研究者们设计了一个数学模型来检测两个月治疗计划的效果。他们以东南亚目前的结核病情况来检验这个模型。科学家们发现两个月的治疗可以防止大约20%的新病例,也可能防止大约5%因结核病引起的死亡。这个模型表明,如果速效治疗剂可以在2012年前研发出来并大规模使用的话,减少结核病例在2012年到2030年间就可以实现。

世界卫生组织在1990年制定了DOTS计划,DOTS意指短期直接观察治疗。卫生工作者监督结核病人每天服药,以确信他们继续治疗。今年年初,一个国际组织同盟宣布了一项扩大DOTS的计划。这个十年计划也旨在资助新结核药品的研究。现在四种最常用的药品也有四十多年的历史了。全球结核病药物开发联盟宣称它的长期目标是找到一种治疗方法,可以通过十次剂量就效果。

第二篇:A Biological Clock

Every living thing has what scientists call a biological clock that controls behavior. The biological clock tells____1____when to form flowers and when the flowers should open. It tells_____2___when to leave the protective cocoons and fly away, and it tells animals and human beings when to eat, sleep and wake.

Events outside the plant and animal____3____the actions of some biological clocks. Scientists recently found, for example, that a tiny animal changes the color of its fur____4____the number of hours of daylight. In the short____5____of winter, its fur becomes white. The fur becomes gray brown in color in the longer hours of daylight in summer.

Inner signals control other biological clocks. German scientists found that some kind of internal clock seems to order birds to begin their long migration____6____twice each year. Birds____7____flying become restless when it is time for the trip,_____8___they become calm again when the time of the flight has ended.

Scientists say they are beginning to learn which____9____of the brain contain biological clocks. An American researcher, Martin Moorhead, said a small group of cells near the front of the brain____10____to control the timing of some of our actions. These____11____tell a person when to____12____, when to sleep and when to seek food. Scientists say there probably are other biological clock cells that control other body activities.

Dr. Moorhead is studying____13____our biological clocks affect the way we do our work. For example, most of us have great difficulty if we must often change to different work hours.

____14____can take many days for a human body to accept the major change in work hours. Dr. Moorhead said industrial officials should have a better understanding of biological clocks and how they affect workers. He said____15____understanding could cut sickness and accidents at work and would help increase a factory’s production.

词汇:

biological /ba??(?)'l?d??k(?)l/ adj.生物(学)的

insect /'?nsekt/ n.昆虫

cocoon /k?'ku?n/ n.防护卵袋,茧

fur /f??/ n.软毛

migration /ma?'gre??(?)n/ n.迁徙

restless /'res(t)l?s/ adj.焦躁不安的

contain /k?n'te?n/ v.含有

cell /sel/ n.细胞

注释:

1. 本句中谓语动词tells的宾语由两部分组成。第一部分是when to form flowers,是带疑问副词的动词不定式,第二部分是when the flowers should open,是名词从句。从修辞上说,两者有些不平衡。

2. ...the way we do our work 可以理解为the way in which we do our work 或the way that we do our work.实际上,三种说法都成立。如:

He speaks English the way the English people do.

I don’t understan d the way in which he dealt with the matter.

3. take作“花费,花去”解时可用于几种不同的句型:

It will take me five days to complete the work.

The work will take me five days to complete.

To complete this work will take me five days.

练习:

1. A. scientists B. humans C. plants D. animals

2. A. insects B. birds C. fish D. snakes

3. A. effect B. affect C. effected D. affected

4. A. because B. for the reason that C. because of D. since

5. A. months B. days C. minutes D. weeks

6. A. flight B. fly C. movement D. transportation

7. A. prevented from B. ordered by C. helped by D. intruded on

8. A. and B. but C. therefore D. however

9. A. portions B. parts C. sections D. kinds

10. A. try B. tries C. seem D. seems

11. A. things B. parts C. cells D. actions

12. A. awaken B. woke C. awakening D. wake-up

13. A. how B. why C. where D. what

14. A. We B. It C. They D. You

15. A. so B. with C. such D. if

第二篇:A Biological Clock

答案与题解:

1. C 从后半句When to form flowers and when the flowers should open 知道,只有plants 才有花。前面没有定冠词修饰的plants是泛指植物这一大类,与动物类相对应。

2. A 后面出现的when to leave the protective cocoons and fly away 提示我们,唯有选insects 才是正确的,因为只有insects才有protective cocoons,而birds、fish和snakes都没有。

3. B affect作为动词是“影响”的意思,而effect作为动词则是“使发生;使生效”的意思。这里谈论的是动植物生物钟的一般情况,所以使用动词的一般现在时。

4. C这里应使用介词短语,因为其后是名词。because和since都有“因为”的意思,但它们都是连词,用来引导原因状语从句,如:

He will not come because he is ill.

Since he is ill, he will not come.

for the reason that后接句子,所以也不是答案。

5. B 根据下句中的in the longer hours of daylight in summer 和上句中的the number of hours of daylight,以及该段的中心意思,可以判断,应选择B,因为冬天日短夜长,夏天则反之。

6. A本句中有birds, migration这些词,下一句又谈及迁徙飞行前的躁动不安,就知道应该填词义为“飞行”的名词。fly是动词,不能选择;其他两个选项也都不合适。flight是fly的名词形式,所以是合适的选择。

7. A该句句子的主干是:主语birds,谓语become restless。所以,所填的词是过去分词,修饰birds。从上下文表达的意思判断,ordered by (被命令)、helped by (被帮助)和intruded on(被强加)都不匹配,只有prevented from是合适的选择。

8. B很明显,这里需使用连词,连接该句中平行的两个分句。而根据整个句子的句意,上半句和下半句形成反差对比:become restless when the time of the flight has ended,所以应选择but,表示相反的两层意思。

9. B portion是“一定数量;一份”, section是“切下的部分”,kind是“种类”,都不符合上下文意思连贯的要求。唯有B是正确的选项。

10. D不能选择C,因为主语是group,而不是cells,所以要采用动词的第三人称单数形式seems

A和B不符合常识。

11. C These 一词说明,其后的名词是上文已经提到的某些事物,即cells。从下文中可以看出,尽管actions 一词也在上文中出现,但该词不符合句意。选项A和B意思不准确。

12. A该句中的三个宾语都是带疑问副词的动词不定式,所以都要用动词原形。awaken是唯一合适的选择,woke是wake的一般过去形式,awakening是形容词,wake-up是名词。

13. A studying后面是一个从句作它的宾语,而从句起首处应有个连词。把C或D填入空格上下文意思不连贯。根据下文的例子,作者讨论的不是生物钟为什么会影响我们的工作,而是生物钟如何影响我们的工作。所以,how是正确的选择。

14. B从句子结构中不难看出,to accept the major change in work hours是实际上的主语,而此处需要一个形式主语,所以只能选择It。

15. C该句中的understanding既然是上句中提到的better understanding, C便是最佳的选项。其他三个选项均不符合语法。

第三篇One Good Reason to Let Smallpox Live

It’s now a fair bet that we will never see the total extinction of the smallpox virus. The idea was to cap the glorious achievement of 1980, when smallpox was eradicated in the wild, by destroying the killer virus in the last two labs that are supposed to have it—one in the US and one in Russia. If smallpox had truly gone from the planet, what point was there in keeping these reserves?

in reality, of course, it was naive to imagine that everyone would let go of such a potential weapon. Undoubt edly several nations still have a few much vials. And the last “official” stocks of lice virus bred mistrust of the US and Russia, for no obvious gain.

Now American researchers have found an animal model of the human disease, opening the way for tests on n ew treatments and vaccines. So one again there’s a good reason to keep the virus—just in case t he disease puts in a reappearance.

How do we_deal with the mistrust of the US and Russia? Simple Keep the virus under international auspices in a well-guarded U N laboratory that’s open to all countries. The US will object, of course, just as it rejects a multilateral approach to just about everything. But it doesn’t mean the idea is wrong. If the virus is useful, then let’s make it the servant of all humanity—not just a part of it.

一个让天花存在的好理由

目前很可能我们永远都不会看到天花的彻底绝迹。这个观念掩盖了1980年光辉成就,那时消灭了最后两个拥有这种致命病毒的实验室的病毒后,四处蔓延的天花已经被根除了。那两个实验室,一个在美国,一个在俄国。如果天花真的在这个星球上消失了,那么保留这些储备的意义何在?

当然,事实上想像每个人都会放弃这样一种有效的潜在的武器是幼稚的。无疑,几个国家仍旧有几瓶。美俄最后的“官方”的活病毒储备引起大家对这两个国家的不信任,因为并没有获得明显的收获。

现在美国研究者们发现了人类疾病的动物版,为试验新的治疗方法和新的疫苗开辟了道路。因此,再次存在着一个保存病毒的理由——万一这种病卷土重来。

我们怎样应付对美国和俄国的不信任呢?很简单。把病毒放在国际赞助的、被严密监视和向所有国家开放的联合国实验室中。针对的对象当然是美国,因为它反对任何事务的多边化。但是这并不意味着这个想法是错的。如果病毒是有用的,那么让我们把它变成全人类的奴仆——而不是一部分人的。

第四篇Diet, Alcohol Linked to Nearly One Third of Cancers

Diet is second only to tobacco as a leading cause of cancer and, along with alcohol, is responsible

for nearly one third of cases of the disease in d eveloped countries, a leading researcher said on Tuesday.

Dr. Tim Key, of the University of Oxford, told a cancer conference that scientists are still discovering how certain foods contribute to cancer,but they know that diet, alcohol and obesity . play a major role.

“Five percent of cancers could be avoided if nobody was obese,” he said.

While tobacco is blinked to about 30 percent of cancer cases, diet is involved in an estimated 25 percent and alcohol in about six percent.

Obesity raises the risk of breast, womb, bowel and kidney cancer, while alcohol is known to cause cancers of the mouth, throat and liver, Its dangerous impact is increased when combined with smoking.

Key told the meeting of the charity Cancer Research UK that other elements of diet linked to cancer are still unknown but scientists are hoping that the EPIC study, which is comparing the diets of 500,000 people in 10 countries and their risk of cancer, will provide some answers . Early results of the study have revealed that Norway, Sweden and Denmark have the lowest consumption of fruit and vegetables among European countries while Italy and Spain have the highest. Eating at least five portions of fruit and vegetables a day is recommended to reduce the risk of cancer.

Key, principal scientist on the EPIC study, said it is looking at dietary links to some of the most common cancers including colorectal, breast and prostate.

大约三分之一的癌症与饮食和酒精有关

一位重要的研究者在星期二说,饮食是仅次于吸烟的导致癌症的原因,在发达国家饮食和酒精导致了大约三分之一癌症。

牛津大学的提姆?凯博士在癌症会议上说,科学家们正在研究特定的食物是怎样导致癌症的,但是他们知道,饮食、酒精和肥胖起了很大作用。

他说:“如果没有肥胖的人,癌症能够减少5%。”

然而吸烟和大约30%的癌症有关,饮食和大约25%的癌症有关,酒精和大约6%的癌症有关。肥胖增加了乳腺、子宫、肠和肾脏得癌症的危险,而人们知道酒精会导致嘴、喉咙和肝脏的癌症。以上因素如果和抽烟共同发生,危险性就更大的。

凯在英国慈善癌症研究会议上说,人们还不知道与癌症相关的饮食中的其他因素,但是科学家们希望EPIC 研究能够给出答案。EPIC研究正在比较十个国家50万人的饮食和患癌症的比例。

这个研究的早期结果揭示挪威、瑞典和丹麦消费水果和蔬菜的量在欧洲国家中是最低的,而意大利和西班牙的水果和蔬菜消费量是最大的。专家推荐每天至少食用五份水果和蔬菜来减少得癌症、乳腺癌和前列腺癌。

EPIC 研究的带头科学家——凯说他们现在正在关注饮食一些非常普遍的癌症之间的联系,包括直肠癌、乳腺癌和前列腺癌。

第五篇Men Too May Suffer from Domestic Violence

Nearly three in 10 men have experienced violence at the hands of1 an intimate partner during their lifetimes. according to one of the few studies to look ___l____ domestic violence and health among men.

"Many men actually do experience domestic violence, although we don't hear about it____2_____," Dr. Robert J. Reid of the University of Washington in Seattle, one of the study's authors, told Reuters Health. "They often don’t tell____3_____we don't ask. We warn to get the

message out2 to men who ____4_____ experience domestic violence that they are not alone and there are resources available to ____5_____. "

The researchers asked study participants about physical abuse and non-physical___6____,such as threats that made them____7___ for3 their safety, controlling behavior ( for example,being told who they could associate with and where they could go) , and constant name-calling.

Among men 18 to 54 years old,14.2 percent said they had experienced intimate partner _____8____ in the past five years. while 6.1 percent reported domestic violence in the previous year.

Rates were lower for men 55 and ___9___. with 5.3 percent reporting violence in the past five years and 24 percent having experienced it in the past 12 months.

Overall,30.5 percent of men younger than 55 and 26.5 percent of older men said they had been victims of ____10____violence at some point in their lives. About half of the violence the men ____11____ was physical

However, the physical violence men reported wasn't as harsh as ___12____suffered by women m a previous study; 20 percent t040 percent of the men rated it as severe, compared to 61 percent of___13_______.

Men who reported experiencing domestic violence had more emotional and mental health problems____14_____. those who had not. especially older men. the ___15____ found

词汇:

intimate [??nt?m?t] adj.亲密的name-calling [ne?m- ?k?:l??] n辱骂

abuse [??bju:s] n伤害

注释:

l at the hands of :出自某人之手,从某人那里

2 get the message out:传达这样个信息

3 fear for:为……担忧

练习:

1 A by B at C on D for

2. A never B often C ever D now

3. A and B but C yet D unless

4. A to B no C do D go

5. A us B him C you D them

6. A Strength B labor C abuse D exercise

7. A hope B fear C wait D look

8 A violence B attitude C friendship D stress

9. A younger B junior C senior D older

10 A normal B necessary C domestic D foreign

11. A enjoyed B experienced C performed D committed

12. A this B those C that D one

13. A women B people C adults D children

14. A from B than C except D despite

15. A victims B victims C researchers D partners

答案与题解:

1 B look at表示“观察、研究”。

2 B根据上下文可必推断,此处应选表示“经常”意思的often 一词。

3 A这句话的意思是:“他们经常不说而我们也不问”。所以应用and一词连接两个并列成分。

4 C本段中的第一句已经出现过do experience的用法,表示“的确经历过”。

5 D前面出现的是men 一词,与其对应的应是them。

6 C前面出现了physical abuse,与其并列自然应是non-physical abuse。

7 B既然是威胁,肯定会令他们为自身安全担忧,而fear for their safety正表示这样的意思。

8 A从第一句中的violence at the hands of an intimate parmer就可以推断,此处应选violence 一词。

9 D因为前面提到了18~ 54岁的男人,因此此处应是55岁及5S岁以上的男人。

10 C前面已经多次出现过domestic violence的搭配。

11. B前面已经多次出现过experience violence这一搭配,而上下文也表明此处表示的意思是男人“遭受的”家庭暴力。

12 C用that指代妇女遭受的physical violence。

13 A因为是在与男人做比较,所以应选women。

14. B本句中前面出现了表示比较的more -词,此处自然应选than -词。

15. C结果只能是“研究者”发现的。

职称英语C级补全短文(-)

2016职称英语教材-卫生类C级完形填空及参考译文1 第一篇Better Control of TB Seen If a Faster Cure Is Found The World Health Organization1 estimates that about one-third of all people are infected with bacteria that cause tuberculosis . Most times, the infection remains inactive. But each year about eight million people develop active cases of TB, usually in their lungs. Two million people die of it. The disease has increased with the spread of AIDS and drug-resistant forms of tuberculosis. Current treatments take at least six months. People have to take a combination of several antibiotic drugs daily. But many people stop as soon as they feel better. Doing that can lead to an infection that resists treatment. Public health experts agree that a faster-acting cure for tuberculosis would be more effective. Now a study estimates just how effective it might be. A professor of international health at Harvard University2 led the study. Joshua Salomon says a shorter treatment program would likely mean not just more patients cured. It would also mean fewer infectious patients who can pass on their infection to others. The researchers developed a mathematical model to examine the effects of a two-month treatment plan. They tested the model with current TB conditions in Southeast Asia. The scientists found that a two-month treatment could prevent about twenty percent of new cases. And it might prevent about twenty-five percent of TB deaths. The model shows that these reductions would take place between two thousand twelve and two thousand thirty. That is, if a faster cure is developed and in wide use by two thousand twelve. The World Health Organization reductions the DOTS3 program in nineteen ninety. DOTS is Directly Observed Treatment, Short-course. Health workers watch tuberculosis patients take their daily pills to make sure they continue treatment. Earlier this year, an international partnership of organizations announced a plan to expand the DOTS program. The ten-year plan also aims to finance research into new TB drugs. The four most common drugs used now are more than forty years old. The Global Alliance for TB Drug Development4 says its long-term goal is a treatment that could work in as few as ten doses. 1.找到速效治疗剂可以更好控制结核病 世界卫生组织估计全球有大约三分之一的人感染了导致结核病的病菌。大多数时候,这种感染是不活跃的。但是每年大约有八百万结核病病例,通常是在肺部。两百万人因此丧命。结核病发病率由于艾滋病的传播和抗药型结核病的出现而增加。目前的治疗至少需要六个月。患病者不得不每日服用多种抗生素药品。许多人在稍感舒适后就停止使用药品,这么做可能导致抗药性感染。公共卫生专家一致认为针对结核病的速效治疗剂将会更加有效果。现在有一项研究评估这种速效治疗剂究竟效力有多大。这项研究由美国哈佛大学国际卫生方面的教授率领。Joshua Salomon说,疗程较短的治疗计划可能不仅仅意味着更多病人被治好,也意味着将感染传给别人的病人会更少。 研究者们设计了一个数学模型来检测两个月治疗计划的效果。他们以东南亚目前的结核病情况来检验这个模型。科学家们发现两个月的治疗可以防止大约20%的新病例,也可能防止大约5%因结核病引起的死亡。这个模型表明,如果速效治疗剂可以在2012年前研发出来并大规模使用的话,减少结核病例在2012年到2030年间就可以实现。 世界卫生组织在1990年制定了DOTS计划,DOTS意指短期直接观察治疗。卫生工作者监督结核病人每天服药,以确信他们继续治疗。今年年初,一个国际组织同盟宣布了一项扩大DOTS的计划。这个十年计划也旨在资助新结核药品的研究。现在四种最常用的药品也有四十多年的历史了。全球结核病药物开发联盟宣称它的长期目标是找到一种治疗方法,可以通过十次剂量就效果。

2019年中石油职称英语新版选读文章系列(26)

2019年中石油职称英语新版选读文章系列(26) The Moon-Riddle from the Past月球-来自远古之谜 1. Spacecraft from the United States and from Russia have been to the moon,and men have walked upon its surface. Rock and soil samples and information of many other kinds have become available in recent years. Yet with all we know about the moon,there is even more that we don't know. 1、美国和俄国的宇宙飞船都已经到达过月球,而且人类也在它的表面上行走过。月球上的岩石和土壤的样本,以及很多其它类型的信息,近些年来已经为人们所知所用了。不过除了我们所知道的关于月球的那些外,还有更多是我们不知道的。 2. Following the end of the Apollo space program,the National Geographic Society published an excellent set of articles about the moon. Here,in shorter form,are some questions and answers from one of these articles. For the full story,see the September,1973,issue of National Geographic. 2、在阿波罗太空计划结束后,国家地理协会出版了一组相关月球的极好文章。这里,以简短的形式截取了其中一篇文章重的部分问答。完整的内容,请见1973年九月发行的《国家地理》。 Were scientists right about what the moon would be like? 科学家关于“月球外貌”的描述是准确的吗? 3. Many were,of course,but many were mistaken. One said there was no lava on the moon. Another said that the moon material would explode as soon as an astronaut's boot touched it. One said there would certainly be water on the moon. Many

2015年全国职称英语考试 理工类新增文章汇总 考试重点内容 word版 全网独一份

2015年全国职称英语考试理工类新增文章汇总 word版全网独一份 注:押题皇后王霞老师授意,新增文章仍然是考试热门文章,务必掌 握。 2015年职称英语教材理工类的变动比较小,一共只有5篇新增文章。2015年职称英语教材理工类新增的5篇文章,分布在阅读理解和补全短文:阅读理解理工C和理工B各新增一篇文章;补全短文理工A、B和C各新增一篇文章。完形填空理工类整体都没有新增文章。

理工C阅读理解新增文章 第九篇An Essential Scientific Process All life on the earth depends upon green plants. Using sunlight, the plants produce their own food. Then animals feed upon the plants. They take in the nutrients the plants have made and stored. But that’s not all. Sunlight also helps a plant produce oxygen. Some of the oxygen is used by the plant, but a plant usually produces more oxygen than it uses. The excess oxygen is necessary for animals and other organisms to live. The process of changing light into food and oxygen is called photosynthesis. Besides light energy from the sun, plants also use water and carbon dioxide. The water gets to the plant through its roots. The carbon dioxide enters the leaves through tiny openings called stomata. The carbon dioxide travels to chloroplasts, special cells in the bodies of green plants. This is where photosynthesis takes place. Chloroplasts contain the chlorophylls that give plants their green color. The chlorophylls are the molecules that trap light energy. The trapped light energy changes water and carbon dioxide to produce oxygen and a simple sugar called glucose. Carbon dioxide and oxygen move into and out of the stomata. Water vapor also moves out of the stomata. More than 90 percent of water a plant takes in through its roots escapes through the stomata. During the daytime, the stomata of most plants are open. This allows carbon dioxide to enter the leaves for photosynthesis. As night falls, carbon dioxide is not needed. The stomata of most plants close. Water loss stops. If photosynthesis ceased, there would be little food or other organic matter on the earth. Most organisms would disappear. The earth’s atmosphere would no longer contain oxygen. Photosynthesis is essential for life on our planet. 词汇: nutrient n.营养物 organism n.生物体,有机体 carbon dioxide n.二氧化碳 chloroplast n.叶绿体 molecule n.分子 vapor n.水蒸气 oxygen n.氧气 photosynthesis n.光合作用 chlorophyll n.叶绿素 glucose n.葡萄糖 cease v.停止 注释: 1.Then animals feed upon the plants.动物以植物为食。 练习: 1.In the first paragraph,the word “excess” means Aheavy. Bextra. Cgreen. Dliquid.

2015职称英语考试真题及答案(理工类B级)

2015年职称英语理工类B级考试真题 第一部分:词汇选项 1.The organization was bold enough to face the press. A.pleased B.powerful C.brave D.sensible 参考答案:C 2.I will not tolerate that sort of behavior in my class. A.accept B.control C.observe D.regulate 参考答案:A 3.I realized to my horror that I had forgotten the present. A.limit B.fear C.power D.fool 参考答案:B 4.Most people find rejection hard to accept. A.excuse B.client C.destiny D.refusal 参考答案:D 5.She's extremely competent and industrious. A.hardworking B.honest C.objective D.independent 参考答案:A 6.The doctors did not reveal the truth to him. A.hide B.handle C.disclose D.establish 参考答案:C 7.He tried to assemble his thoughts. A.clear B.share C.gather D.spare 参考答案:C

8.The law carries a penalty of up to three years in prison. A.message B.punishment C.guilt D.obligation 参考答案:B 9.Prisoners were kept in the most appalling conditions. A.flexible B.terrible C.reasonable D.serious 参考答案:B 10.These products are inferior to those we brought last year. A.poorer than B.narrower than https://www.sodocs.net/doc/0e3050370.html,rger than D.richer than 参考答案:A 11.The political situation in the region has deteriorated rapidly. A.improved B.changed C.worsened D.developed 参考答案:C 12.There was a simultaneous trial taking place in the next building. A.coexisting B.fair C.full D.pubic 参考答案:A 13.They're petitioning for better facilities for the disabled on public transport. A.requesting B.planning C.preparing D.looking 参考答案:A 14.He said some harsh words about his brother. A.unkind B.proper C.normal D.unclear 参考答案:A 15.We were attracted by the lure of quick money. A.amount

职称英语综合类补全短文第四篇The First Four Minute逐句翻译

The First Four Minutes最初四分钟 When do people decide whether or not they want to become friends?人们什么时候决定他们是否愿意成为朋友?During their first four minutes together, according to a book by Dr. Leonard Zunin. In his book, “Contact:The first four minutes" he offers this advice to anyone interested in starting new friendships:“Every time you meet someone in a social situation, give him your undivided attention for four minutes. (1) A lot of people's whole lives would change if they did just that. ”按列奥纳多?祖尼博士的书中所说是在他们相处的最初四分钟。在他的书《接触:最初四分钟》里,他向所有对开始新的友谊感兴趣的人们提出了这样的建议:“每次你在社交场合遇到什么人时,全神贯注地注意他四分钟。如果这样做了的话,他们的生活就会完全不同。”; You may have noticed that the average person does not give his undivided attention to someone he has just met. 你可能已经注意到了,一般人都不会全神贯注地注意一个他刚认识的人。(2) He keeps looking over the other person's shoulder, as if hoping to find someone more.他不停地往其他人身后看,好像要在屋里其他地方找到更趣的人似的。If anyone has ever done this to you, you probably did not like him very much.如果有人对你这样,你大概不会很喜欢他。

职称英语 短文翻译参考译文

第三部分短文翻译参考译文 、级翻译 :科研方法不过是人类思维活动必要方式的表达,只是对一切现象进行推理并给予精确严谨解释的方式。你们都多次听说过,科学家在工作中使用的是归纳法和演绎法。在某种意义上说,他们借助于这些方法设法从自然界中找出某些大协作规律,并根据这些规律建立起自己的理论。 :创造性的思想不仅能产生出适合时代和环境要求而自身生存的因素,而且在环境改变的压力下,可以由新的形式取代旧的形式。例如,民主作为一种思想起源于古希腊,并从那里传播至西欧和美洲。但民主并没有保留古希腊的形式,而是经历了数次改革过程。实质上民主是动态发展的,且根据不同地区需求而改变。因此,民主政府在形式上各不相同。 :在雇员经常变换工作的新时代,劳务市场上的新成员可望每十年变换一个职业,变换工作的频率甚至更高。这种遍及西方商界的劳动力的模式和流动形式,是一个新的发展趋势。其部分原因在于中间管理层逐步取消,致使越来越多的式人自己负责个人的发展。让工人承担自我发展的责任也许颇具戏剧性,但如今已成了准则。 :由于工业发展水平和获取食物及原料能力的不同,各国政府对于人口增长的态度也不相同。在发展中国家,人口急剧膨胀对有限的食物、

空间和自然资源带来极大压力,因此,政府首先关注的是人口控制。在高度工业化的国家里,由于人口减少会导致市场萎缩和失业,政府很可能更愿看到人口缓慢增长。 :谈判包括说服和妥协,但是为了参与其中任何一项活动,谈判者必须懂得如何在谈判的文化背景下说服对方和达成妥协,。导致跨文化误解的两个突出特点是美国谈判者的直截了当和缺乏耐心。他们经常打坚持实现短期目标。外国的谈判者可能会珍视与对手建立的联系,愿意投入时间,获取长期利益。 :曾几何时,有人对计算机、未来和“无纸化办公”做过大胆的预测。然而,实际情况明显反映出计算机不仅没有减少纸张数量,相反却使之增加。目前由于高速打印机和复印机的出现,制作高质量纸张文档已变得极为容易。尽管诸如电子邮件那样的不以纸张形式出现的文档数量还在迅猛增长,但人们对纸张的需求却并没有因此减少,因此,人们认为至少在不久的将来,在即将到来的几十年中,纸将继续在办公室中扮演重要角色。 :工作本身是复杂、有趣并具有挑战性的,但它并不局限于一个或几个生产线、市场、买方类型、市场管理技能或职能的专业化。你必须获取多方面的商业活动的知识,理解国内外政府的法律、政策和规章,敏锐地洞穴国际贸易行为,至少要深刻理解商法的几个组成部分。 :如果生活中有一个导致成功的因素的话,那就是从挫折中吸取教训的能力。据我所知,一切成功的取得,都是因为当事人能够分析挫折,并在下一次的事业中实际地得益于上次的挫折。如果把挫折与失败混同

职称英语新增文章一

职称英语新增文章一 职称英语文章一 1. On the night of August 17, 1959, at about 20 minutes before midnight, the ground in the vicinity of Yellowstone National Park began shaking violently. At the time there was a rumbling sound, something like a huge truck would make. Both the heaving of the ground and the noise were very frightening but lasted not quite 45 seconds. 1、1959年8月17日的晚上,大约午夜前20分钟,黄石国家公园附近大地开始猛烈 摇动。同时,大地发出如同重型卡车发出的轰响。大地的升降和啸叫都令人非常害怕,但 是一切不超过45秒。 2. What was even more frightening was the sound of huge boulders which began rolling down the steep mountain. In one part of the upper reaches of the Madison River, a whole mountain began shifting, then came crashing down to fill the deep valley and dam the great river with millions of tons rock and trees. 2、更令人害怕的是巨石开始从陡峭的山上滚下来的声音。在麦迪生河上游的一条支 流处,一整座山开始移动,之后,它崩塌下来填满深深的山谷,上百万吨岩石和大树如坝 般阻挡住大河。 3. A dozen or more campers along the river were buried deep beneath the great landslide. Others were able to climb to safety, some of them badly hurt, but were trapped by the slide. Finally these people were saved, many of them by helicopter. 3、十几个,或许更多沿河的露营者被深埋在大滑坡下。幸存的野营者开始爬向较安 全的地方,其中一些人伤得很重,仍然不时陷入滑坡。最后这些人都获救了,其中多人得 救于直升飞机。 4. This earthquake near Yellowstone Park was just one of nearly a million that happen every year all over the world. And as bad as this quake was, many have been worse. Earthquake experts say that the Yellowstone quake of 1959 was about as bad as the one which hit San Francisco in 1906.But the San Francisco quake caused more damage because it struck in a place where there were so many people living. In San Francisco 700 person lost their lives. An earthquake in Japan in 1923 took 160,000 lives. In china in 1920 an earthquake took 200,000 lives. It is easy to understand why earthquake are so feared.

职称英语理工类B级阅读理解真题及答案(第三篇)

职称英语理工类B级阅读理解真题及答案(第三篇) 第4部分:阅读理解(第31——45题,每题3分,共45分) 下面有3篇短文,每篇短文后有5道题。请根据短文内容,为每题确定1个选项。 第三篇 Can You Hear This? When something creates a sound wave in a room or anauditorium, listeners hear the sound wave directly from the source. They alsohear the reflections as the sound bounces off thewalls. floor, and ceiling. These are called the reflected wave or reverberant(反射)sound, which can be heard evenafter the sound is no longer coming from the source. The reverberation time of an auditorium isdetermined by the volume or interior size of the auditorium. It is alsodetermined by how well or how poorly the walls, ceiling, floor, and contents ofthe room (including the people) absorb sound. There is no ideal reverberation time,because each use of an auditorium calls for different reverberation. Speechneeds to be understood clearly; therefore rooms used for talking must have ashort reverberation time. The full-sound performance of music such ad Wagneroperas or Mahler symphonies should have a long reverberation time. The light,rapid musical passages of Bach or Mozart need a reverberation time somewherebetween. Acoustic problems often are caused by poorauditorium design. Smooth, curved reflecting surfaces create large reflections.Parallel (平行的)wallsreflect sound back and forth, creating a rapid, repetitive pulsing https://www.sodocs.net/doc/0e3050370.html,rge pillars (柱)and comerscan cause acoustic shadows as the sound waves try to pass around the object.Some of these

职称英语补全短文 第3课时1

职称英语补全短文第3课时1 PASSAGE 8 Einstein Named "Person of Century" Albert Einstein,whose theories on space time and matter helped unravel the secrets of the atom and of the universe,was chosen as "Person of the Century" by Time magazine on Sunday. A man whose very name is synonymous with scientific genius,Einstein has come to represent_(1)_the flowering of 20th century scientific thought that set the stage for the age of technology. "The world has changed far more in the past 100 years than in any other century in history. The reason is not political or economic,but technological-technologies_(2)_," wrote theoretical physicist Stephen Hawking in a Time essay explaining Einstein's significance. "Clearly,no scientist better represents those advances than Albert Einstein." Time chose as runner-up President Franklin Roosevelt to represent the triumph of freedom and democracy over fascism,and Mahatma Gandhi as an icon for a century when

2020年职称英语新增文章:教材理工类第六篇

2020年职称英语新增文章:教材理工类第六篇 第六篇 The Apgar Test The baby was bom at 3:36 p. m. At 3:37,she scored 4 out of 10 on her first test. At 3:41,she scored 8 out of 10. The doctor was glad. Another baby, bom at 8:24 p. m.,scored 3 out of 10 on his first test He scored 4 out of 10 on his second test. He took another test at 8:34 and scored 5. 1 He called for help1. These newborn babies took a test called the Apgar test. This test helps doctors diagnose problems. 2 Most babies take two tests. The first is at 1 minute after birth, and the second is at 5 minutes after birth. If a baby’s score at 5 minutes is less than 6,the baby takes another test at 10 minutes after birth. The Apgar t est is not an intelligence test. It’s a test that shows a baby’s health right after it is bom. The Apgar test measures things such as a baby’s color, heart rate, and breathing. The test has five parts, and the score for each part can be 0,1,or 2. 3

2012年职称英语理工类阅读理解新增文章(含练习解析及译文)

2012年职称英语理工类 新增文章 阅读理解(6篇) 第六篇Making Light of1 Sleep 第十九篇Graphene's Superstrength1 *第三+八篇"Life Form Found" on Saturn's Titan *第四十篇Teaching Math, Teaching Anxiety +第四+五篇Teaching Math, Teaching Anxiety +第四十六篇Ants Have Big Impact on Environment as "Ecosystem Engineers" 注: 1、+表示A级文章;*表示B即文章;其他为C级文章 2、阅读理解 3、2012年词汇部分与2011年教材相比未作任何变化 阅读理解 第六篇Making Light of1 Sleep All we have a clock located inside our brains. Similar to your bedside alarm clock,your internal clock2 runs on a 24-hour cycle. This cycle,called a circadian rhythm,helps control when you wake,when you eat and when you sleep. Somewhere around puberty,something happens in the timing of the biological clock. The clock pushes forward,so adolescents and teenagers are unable to fall asleep as early as they used to. When your mother tells you it's time for bed,your body may be pushing you to stay up3 for several hours more. And the light coming from your computer screen or TV could be pushing you to stay up even later. This shift4 is natural for teenagers. But staying up very late and sleeping late can get your body's clock out of sync with the cycle of light and dark5. It can also make it hard to get out of bed in the morning and may bring other problems,too. Teenagers are put in a kind of a gray cloud6when they don't get enough sleep,says Mary Carskadon,a sleep researcher at Brown University in Providence,RI7 .It affects their mood and their ability to think and learn. But just like your alarm clock,your internal clock can be reset. In fact,it automatically resets itself every day. How? By using the light it gets through your eyes. Scientists have known for a long time that the light of day and the dark of night play important roles in setting our internal clocks. For years,researchers thought that the signals that synchronize the body's clock8were handled through the same pathways that we use to see. But recent discoveries show that the human eye has two separate light-sensing

2020职称英语补全短文练习题(1)

2020职称英语补全短文练习题(1) The Invader of AIDS The invader is small, even in the microscopic world of bacteria and viruses. It is alive only in the strictest sense of the world. It had no intelligence, no means of mobility, no methods of defense in the outside world. It is fragile, easily killed by common household bleach(漂白剂)and even short periods outside the body. 1 . It is the AIDS virus, and it is a killer. AIDS is a disease, caused by a virus that breaks down part of the body’s immune system, leaving a person defenseless against a variety of unusual life-threatening illnesses.2 . The body’s immune system normally provides us the weapons we need to win constant battles with invading viruses, bacteria and other invading organisms. His defense system is powerful but not perfect. 3 . We do not even know that anything is happening. But the AIDS virus acts differently from other invaders. It attacks the very cells that normally protect us. 4 . It turns our own white blood cells into mini-factories or making more viruses. Each time a cell is taken over, it fills up with thousands of new viruses, dies and releases those viruses, with attack more white blood cells. After enough attacks, our defense system is weakened and certain infections and conditions that we normally fight off with no problem take advantage of his weakness.

相关主题