题目内容
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解析:
(1) |
根据第二段举的例子:such as when a woman at a party tells another woman that she likes her dress when she really think it looks terrible.可知是“善意的谎言”。 |
(2) |
根据第二段However, this is only one side of the story.Other researchers say that men are more likely to tell serious lies可以反过来理解妇女的谎言的内容。 |
(3) |
根据第四段They simply tend to occur more frequently in this situation可以得出结论。 |
(4) |
根据最后一段的结尾可以得出结论。 |
Every pet owner loves his pet. There is no argument here.
But when we asked our readers whether they would clone (克隆, 复制)their beloved animals, the responses(反应) were split almost down the middle. Of the 228 readers who answered it, 108 would clone, 111 would not and nine weighed each side without offering an opinion.
Clearly, from readers’ response, this is an issue that reaches deeply into both the joy and final sadness of owning a pet. It speaks, as well, to people’s widely differing expectations over the developing scientific procedure.
Most of the respondents who favored the idea strongly believed it would produce at least a close copy of the original; many felt the process would actually return an exact copy. Those on the other side, however, held little hope a clone could never truly recreate a pet, many simply didn’t wish to go against the natural law of life and death.
Both sides expressed equal love for their animals. More than a few respondents owned “the best dog/cat in the world”. They thought of their pets as their “best friend”, “a member of the family,”“the light of my life.” They told moving stories of pets’ heroism, intelligence and selfless devotion.
Then the loss is so disturbing---and the cloning so attractive. “People become very close to their animals, and the loss can be just as hard to bear as when a friend or family member dies,” says Gary Kowalski, author of Goodbye, Friend: Healing Wisdom for Anyone Who Has Ever Lost a Pet. “For me, cloning feels like an attempt to turn death away…It’s understandable. Death is always painful. It’s difficult to deal with. It’s hard to accept.”
But would cloning reduce the blow? This question seemed to be at the heart of this problem.
【小题1】So far as the cloning of pets is concerned, a recent survey shows that, of all pet owners, ____.
| A.a lot more of them are for it |
| B.a lot more of them are against it |
| C.very few of them are willing to tell their opinions |
| D.about half of them are for it and the other half against it |
| A.the death of one’s pet |
| B.the high cost of owning a pet |
| C.the troubles one has to deal with in keeping a pet |
| D.the dangers about the cloning of a pet |
| A.has never thought about the problem of cloning |
| B.is going to write another book on pets |
| C.is in favor of the idea of cloning pets |
| D.is all against the cloning of pets |
| A.Can cloning make the pain one suffers less when a pet dies? |
| B.Can pet owners afford the cost of cloning? |
| C.Does cloning go against the law of nature? |
| D.How reliably does cloning produce an exact copy of one’s pet? |
Scientists who try to predict earthquakes have gotten some new helpers recently—animals.
That’s right, animals. Scientists have begun to understand what farmers have known for thousands of years. Animals often seem to know in advance that an earthquake is coming, and they show their fear by acting in strange ways. Before a Chinese quake in 1975, snakes awoke from their winter sleep early only to freeze to death in the cold air. Cows broke their halters (缰绳) and tried to escape. Chickens refused to enter their cage. All of this unusual behavior, as well as physical changes in the earth, warned Chinese scientists of the coming quake. They moved people away from the danger zone and saved thousands of lives.
One task for scientists today is to learn exactly which types of animal behavior predict quakes. It’s not an easy job. First of all not every animal reacts to the danger of an earthquake. Just before a California quake in 1977, for example, an Arabian horse became very nervous and tried to break out of his enclosure. The Australian horse next to him, however, remained perfectly calm. It’s also difficult at times to tell the difference between normal animal restlessness and “earthquake nerves”. A zoo keeper once called earthquake researchers to say that his cougar had been acting strangely. It turned out that the cat had an upset stomach.
A second task for scientists is to find out exactly what kind of warnings the animals receive. They know that animals sense far more of the world than humans do. Many animals can see, hear, and smell things that people do not even notice. Some can sense tiny changes in air pressure, gravity, or the magnetism of Earth. This extra sense probably helps animals predict quakes.
A good example of this occurred with a group of dogs. They were shut in an area that was being shaken by a series of tiny earthquakes. (Several small quakes often come before or after a large one.) Before each quake a low booming sound was heard. Each boom caused the dogs to bark wildly. Then the dogs began to bark during a silent period. A scientist who was recording quakes looked at his machine. It was acting as though there were a loud noise too. The scientist realized that the dogs had reacted to a booming noise. They also sensed the tiny quake that followed it. The machine recorded both, though humans felt and heard nothing.
In this case there was a machine to monitor what the dogs were sensing. Many times, however, our machines record nothing extraordinary, even though animals know a quake is coming. The animals might be sensing something we measure but do not recognize as a warning. Discovering what animals sense, and learning how they know it is a danger signal, is a job for future scientists.
【小题1】Through the passage the writer hopes to explore __________.
| A.why animals send a danger signal before an earthquake |
| B.how animals know when an earthquake is coming |
| C.why animals not men have good sense of danger |
| D.how much animals know about an earthquake |
| A.chickens refused to go out of their cage |
| B.snakes were frozen to death in their caves |
| C.snakes awoke from their winter sleep earlier |
| D.cows broke their halters and escaped from their sheds |
| A.An Arabian horse tried to escape from his enclosure. |
| B.A cougar had an upset stomach unexpectedly. |
| C.An Australian horse was perfectly calm. |
| D.A cat acted very strangely in a zoo. |
| A.find out that the machine could record unusual happenings |
| B.compare the reactions of animals and those of humans |
| C.prove that animals could sense more than humans |
| D.find out what exact warnings animals sent |