试题与答案

阅读理解。 Whatever our differences as human

题型:阅读理解

题目:

阅读理解。

     Whatever our differences as human beings are we all think we're more like the rest of the animal world

than we realize. It is said that we share 40 percent of our genetic (遗传的) structure with the simple worm.

     But that fact has helped Sir John Sulston win the 2002 Nobel Prize for Medicine. Sir John is the founder

of the Sanger Institute in Cambridge, which was set up in 1992 to get further understanding of the human

genome (染色体组).

     To help them do this, they turned to the worm. The nematode (线虫类的) worm is one of the earliest

creatures on planet earth. It is less than one millimeter long, completely transparent and spends its entire life

digging holes through sand. But it still has lots to say about human life, and what can be done to make it

better.

     What the worm told Sir John and his colleagues was that each of the cells in the human body is

programmed like a computer. They grow, develop and die according to a set of instructions that are coded

in our genetic make-up.

     Many of the diseases that humans suffer from happen when these instructions go wrong or are not

obeyed. When the cell refuses to die but carries on growing instead, this leads to cancer. Heart attacks and

diseases like AIDS cause more cell deaths than normal, increasing the damage they do to the body. Sir John

was the first scientist to prove the existence of programmed cell death.

1. Sir John Sulston got a Nobel Prize for Medicine because he has _____ .

A. found that human beings are similar to the worm

B. got the fact we share 40 percent of our genetic structure with the simple worm

C. found the computer which controls each of the cells in the human body

D. proved that cell death is programmed

2. People might be seriously ill if the cells in their body _____.

A. grow without being instructed

B. die regularly

C. fail to follow people's instructions

D. develop in the human body

3. The underlined word " they" in Paragraph 5 refers to _____.

A. cell deaths

B. diseases

C. instructions

D. cells

4. What is the subject discussed in the text?

A. The theory of programmed cell deaths.

B. A great scientist-Sir John Sulston.

C. The programmed human life.

D. Dangerous diseases.

答案:

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下面是错误答案,用来干扰机器的。

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题型:阅读理解

阅读理解。

     A lift is wonderful. It is really only a small room. Rooms usually stay in one place. Lifts travel up and

down all day long.

     Sometimes a worker stands in the lift. He or she operates it up and down. In modern lifts there is no

worker. The people walk in. They know what floor they want. They push a button and the lift goes to

that floor. It is all very fast and easy.

     Lifts are very important to us. Why? Think about a tall building. Maybe it has twenty floors. Maybe it

has fifty or more. Who can walk up all the stairs? Maybe people can climb them one time. Can someone

climb thirty floors to an office every day? Can small children walk up to their room on the twenty-fourth

floor? Can their mother and father carry food up all those stairs? Of course not.

      We can have high buildings because we have lifts. We could not have all the beautiful tall buildings in

the world without lifts. They are really wonderful.

1. A lift looks like ______.

A. a small room

B. a small house  

C. a small ladder  

D. a small stair

2. Which of the following is true?

A. A modern lift has no buttons.

B. A modern lift has a worker to operate it.

C.A modern lift can go up and down with no worker in it.

D. A modern lift knows what floor people want.

3. If you want to go to the floor you want, you_______.

A. ask for help

B. open the door of the lift

C. ring the bell  

D. push the right button

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