题目内容
The public commonly associates steroid use with big-time athletics. But the drugs may be even more of a menace to teenagers. The synthetic hormones can stunt a young person’s growth by prematurely closing the ends of the long bones in the skeleton. That means a 1.7 metre, 15-year-old high school student who uses steroids “might get bigger but won’t get any taller”, according to a US doctor.
Nearly seven percent of boys in the US try steroids before the end of high school, according to a 1988 study by professors Charles Yesalis and William Buckley, of Penn State University. The estimate comes from a poll of 3,400 seniors in 46 public and private schools across the US.
“Abusers of Steroids did it to improve their appearance and to excel at sports,” Professor Yesalis said. “Parents, teachers and coaches make boys believe that to be an ideal male you need to have these. Then they say: ‘you can’t play games to have fun; you play games to win.’”
“Such attitudes put many high school athletes at high risk of becoming abusers of steroids,” said Mike Gimbel, director of Baltimore County Office of substance Abuse. “For these athletes, the pressure to perform is incredible,” he said. “It was inevitable that it would seep down to high school level.”
The word “big-time” in Paragraph 1 most nearly means “________”.
A. long time B. good time C. top rank D. modern
Why are steroids even more of a threat to teenagers?
A. Because they make teenagers grow too tall.
B. Because they make teenagers get too big.
C. Because they prevent teenagers from getting taller and taller.
D. Because they give teenagers too much pressure.
Which of the following statements is implied but not mentioned?
A. School athletes have too much pressure.
B. Steroids can help people have lots of muscles.
C. The pressure chiefly comes from parents, teachers and coaches.
D. Girls are not interested in steroids.
Which of the following is a good title for this passage?
A. Drugs and Sports
B. The Pressure to School Boys are Too Much
C. School Boys are Interested in Drugs
D. School Athletes Risk Damage from Drugs
【小题1】C
【小题2】C
【小题3】D
【小题4】D
解析:
【小题1】C 词义猜测题。文章第 1 句话“人们通常把类固醇与高难度运动项目联系起来”便是答案。
【小题2】C 事实细节题。文章第 1 段最后两句较为详细地说明原由。
【小题3】D 推理判断题。文章第 2、4 段只谈到男生服用类固醇而没有提到女生。
【小题4】D 主旨大意题。文章最后一节点出主题。
People with disabilities make up a large part of the population. It is estimated(估计) that over 35 million Americans have physical, mental, or other disabilities. About half of these disabilities are “developmental", i.e., they occur before the individual's twenty-second birthday, often from genetic conditions, and are severe enough to affect three or more areas of development, such as mobility, communication, employment, etc. Most other disabilities are considered “adventitious", i.e., accidental or caused by outside forces.
Prior to the 20th century, only a small percentage of people with disabilities survived for long. Medical treatment for these disabilities was unavailable. Advancements in medicine and social services have created a climate in which people with disabilities can expect to have such basic needs as food, shelter, and medical treatment. Unfortunately, these basics are often not available. Civil liberties such as the right to vote, marry, get an education, and gain employment have historically been denied on the basis of disability.
In recent decades, the disability rights movement has been organized to fight against these infringements(违反;侵犯)of civil rights. Congress responded by passing major legislation recognizing people with disabilities as a protected class under civil rights statutes.
Still today, people with disabilities must fight to live their lives independently. It is estimated that more than half of qualified Americans with disabilities are unemployed, and a majority of those who do work are underemployed. About two-thirds live at or below the official poverty level.
Significant barriers, especially in transportation and public awareness, prevent disabled people from taking part in society. For example, while no longer prohibited by law from marrying, a person with no access to transportation is effectively excluded from community and social activities which might lead to the development of long-term relationships.
Only when public attitudes advance as far as laws have will disabled people be fully able to take their rightful place in society.
【小题1】A “developmental" disability ______.
A.develops very slowly over time |
B.is caused by forces |
C.occurs in youth and affects development |
D.is getting more and more severe |
A.disabilities destroyed major bodily functions |
B.they were not very well looked after |
C.medical techniques were not available |
D.they were too poor to get proper treatment |
A.more laws should be passed |
B.public attitudes should be changed |
C.government should provide more aids |
D.more public facilities should be set up |
A.Many disabled people may remain single for their whole life. |
B.The public tends to look down upon the disabled people. |
C.The disabled people feel inferior to those surrounding them. |
D.Discriminatory laws prevent the disabled from mixing with others. |
A.Handicaps(障碍)of People with Disabilities |
B.The physical difficulties of the Disabled |
C.The Causes for Disabilities |
D.Medical Treatments for Disabilities |
London, Reuters---What could annoy teenagers enough to make them stop hanging out with friends and go home?
No, it’s not a visit from their mothers, and not a threat to take away their cellphones or pocket money.
It’s high-frequency noise. The UK police recently agreed to use a device (装置) called the Sonic Teenager Deterrent. It sends out a sound that makes teenagers become so impatient and angry that they have to cover their ears tightly and walk away.
The sound is at extreme high-pitch that can be heard by those under 20. The body’s natural ability to detect some wave bands (波段) decreases almost entirely after 20, so few adults can hear the sounds. The black-box device, nicknamed the Mosquito because of its sound, can be fixed to the outside walls of shops, offices and homes. It sounds to youngsters like a crazy insect or a badly played violin. But it causes no physical damage.
A number of police forces and councils have given permission to use the system and want to install it at trouble spots.
Staffordshire Police Inspector Amanda Davies, who has given the device to shopkeepers in the Moorlands area, said," It is controlled by the shopkeepers--if they can see through their window that there is a problem, they turn the device on for a while until the group has run away."
【小题1】The device can be used to ____________.
A.threaten teenagers in public |
B.drive away trouble-makers under 20 |
C.help mothers control their teenage children |
D.help the police control shopkeepers |
A.young people often suffer from pains in ears |
B.shopkeepers are troubled by noisy insects |
C.high-frequency noise is beyond the listening ability of people over 20 |
D.the police invented a new device to deal with teenagers |
A.to advertise a new hi-tech device |
B.to tell the reader a piece of news |
C.to sell the device to shopkeepers |
D.to inform the public as the spokesman of the police |
A.Shopkeepers. | B.The police. | C.Young people. | D.The producer. |
Chinese media and Internet users on Monday condemned lack of morals in society after a toddler was struck twice –by two different vans-and left bleeding on the road as more than a dozen bystanders did nothing to help the seriously injured girl.
The incident, captured by a surveillance camera and broadcast by Southern Television Guangdong (TVS),showed the two-year-old girl was knocked down and run over by a white van on a narrow market street on the afternoon of Oct.13,in Foshan City of Guangdong Province.
The driver fled the scene of the accident,leaving the girl to bleed on the sidewalk.Over the next six minutes,more than a dozen people walked by the girl,yet not one individual did anything to help her.The girl was then hit a second time by another van before an elderly trash collector came to her aid and brought the attention of the girl’s mother,according to the video and eyewitnesses.
Doctors said that the girl,who was put on life support after being hospitalized,remains in a deep coma.The girl’s parents,who are migrants living in the city,are now with her.
Police said the drivers of both vehicles have been arrested.However,the apathy of the bystanders shown in the video has shocked the public,as Internet forums have seethed with anger, and people are questioning the morality of society.
High moral standards were once triumphed as national pride in China where individuals known for selflessly helping others were adored by the public.
But in recent years,the perception(观念)of a decline of morals has become a hot topic as profit and materialism are perceived to be affecting society’s values.
On Sept.2 an 88-year-old man in central China collapsed,his face striking the pavement.Yet,no one came to his aid,and he ended up choking to death on the blood from his nose.
Some have linked the absence of good Samaritans (模范人物)to a previous case in which a man trying to help an elderly woman who fell was accused of harming her.
A strong chorus of opinion on the Internet says laws should exempt(免除)Samaritans from liability(责任),yet laws themselves cannot solve society’s morality dilemma.
Cao Lin,a China Youth Daily commentator,said in a signed article published on Monday that the worry of liability should not be an excuse for not helping,and this case exposes the decline of humanity in Chinese society.
【小题1】According to the passage,what would happen if someone helped others selflessly in the past?
A.He/ she would be condemned by the public. |
B.He/ she would be awarded by the government. |
C.He/ she would have to worry about liability. |
D.The public would feel proud of him/ her and thus showed love and respect for him/ her |
A.Nobody helped the girl who was struck twice by two different vans. |
B.The toddler died immediately after she was hit a second time. |
C.High moral standards were once regarded as national pride in China. |
D.Journalists from TVS captured the incident by using a camera. |
A.profit and materialism | B.people’s perceptions |
C.the apathy of bystanders | D.the morals of society |
A.The worry of liability. |
B.Lack of laws that exempt Samaritans from liability. |
C.The decline of humanity in society. |
D.The fear of being accused of harming her. |
A.A fashion magazine. | B.A news report. |
C.A science fiction. | D.An education column. |