问答题Back in 1979, a fat, unhealthy property developer, Mel Zuckerman, and his exercise-fanatic wife, Enid, opened Canyon Ranch, “America’s first total vacation/fitness resort”, on an old dude ranch in Tucson, Arizona. At the time, their outdoorsy, new age-

题目
问答题
Back in 1979, a fat, unhealthy property developer, Mel Zuckerman, and his exercise-fanatic wife, Enid, opened Canyon Ranch, “America’s first total vacation/fitness resort”, on an old dude ranch in Tucson, Arizona. At the time, their outdoorsy, new age-ish venture seemed highly eccentric. Today Canyon Ranch is arguably the premium health-spa brand of choice for the super-rich. It is growing fast and now operates in several places, including the Queen Mary 2. (1)________________.  “There is a new market category called wellness lifestyle, and in a whole range of industries, if you are not addressing that category you are going to find it increasingly hard to stay in business,” enthuses Kevin Kelly, Canyon Ranch’s president. This broad new category, Mr. Kelly goes on, “consolidates a lot of subcategories” including spas, traditional medicine and alternative medicine, behavioural therapy, spirituality, fitness, nutrition and beauty. (2)________________ “You can no longer satisfy the consumer with just fitness, just medical, just spa,” says Mr. Kelly.  Canyon Ranch’s strategy reflects this belief. (3) ________________ . This year in Miami Beach it will open the first of what it expects to be many upmarket housing estates built around a spa, called Canyon Ranch Living. Together with the Cleveland Clinic, one of the world’s leading private providers of traditional medicine, it is launching an “executive health” product which combines diagnosis, treatment and, above all, prevention. It also has plans to produce food and skin-care products, a range of clothes and healthy-living educational materials.  (4)________________. Mr. Case reckons that one of the roots of today’s health-care crisis, especially in America, is that prevention and care are not suitably joined up. A growing number of employers now promote wellness at work, both to cut costs and to reduce stress and health-related absenteeism, says Jon Denoris of Catalyst Health, a gym business in London. He has been helping the British arm of Harley Davidson, a motorbike-maker, to develop a wellness programme for its workers.  The desire to reduce health-care costs is one force behind the rise of the wellness industry; the other is the growing demand from consumers for things that make them feel healthier. Surveys find that three out of four adult Americans now feel that their lives are “out of balance”, says Mr. Kelly. So there is a huge opportunity to offer them products and services that make them feel more “balanced”. This represents a big change in consumer psychology, claims Mr. Kelly, and one that is likely to deepen over time: market research suggests that 35-year-olds have a much stronger desire to lead healthy lifestyles than 65-year-olds.  (5)________________. Another will be to maintain credibility in (and for) an industry that combines serious science with snake oil. One problem—or is it an opportunity? —in selling wellness products to consumers is that some of the things they demand may be faddish or nonsensical. Easy fixes, such as new-age therapies, may appeal to them more than harder but proven ways to improve health.  One of Canyon Ranch’s answers to this problem has been to hire Richard Carmona, who was America’s surgeon-general until last summer. In that role, he moved prevention and wellness nearer to the centre of public-health policy. The last time a surgeon-general ventured into business, it ended disastrously: during the internet bubble, Everett Koop launched DrKoop.com, a medical-information site that went bust shortly after going public and achieving a market capitalisation of over $1 billion. This time around, the wellness boom seems unlikely to suffer such a nasty turn for the worse.  (此文选自The Economist 2007年刊)  [A] It is expanding a brand built on $1,000-a-night retreats for the rich and famous in several different directions.  [B] Mr. Zuckerman, now a trim and sprightly 78-year-old, remains chairman of the firm.  [C] There is growing evidence that focusing holistically on wellness can reduce health-care costs by emphasizing prevention over treatment.  [D] One difficulty for wellness firms will be acquiring the expertise to operate in several different areas of the market.  [E] It is also one of the leading lights in “wellness”, an increasingly mainstream—and profitable—business.  [F] As more customers demand a holistic approach to feeling well, firms that have hitherto specialised in only one or two of those areas are now facing growing market pressure to broaden their business.  [G] And there is much debate about the health benefits of vitamin supplements, organic food and alternative medicines, let alone different forms of spirituality.

相似考题
更多“问答题Back in 1979, a fat, unhealthy property developer, Mel Zuckerman, and his exercise-fanatic wife, Enid, opened Canyon Ranch, “America’s first total vacation/fitness resort”, on an old dude ranch in Tucson, Arizona. At the time, their outdoorsy, new age-”相关问题
  • 第1题:

    What made the author laugh?

    A. His own behavior

    B. His wife’s suggestion

    C. His changeable feelings.

    D. His wife’s sweet kiss.


    正确答案:A

  • 第2题:

    Passage Four

    Every culture and every country in the world celebrates New Year, but not everyone does it the same way. The countries in North America and Europe welcome New Year on January the first. This practice began with the Romans in the Middle East, New Year is when spring begins. People in China and Vietnam celebrate it on the first day of the Spring Festival, which is the first day of their calendar based on the moon. Rosh Hashana, which is the Jewish (犹太人的) New Year, comes at the end of summer. The Hindus (印度教教徒 ) in India celebrate the first day of each season, so they have four New Years.

    In all these cultures, there is a practice of making noise. People made noise in ancient times to drive away the evil spirits (妖精) from their homes. Today making noise is more of a custom than a religious rim

    In the United States, many people stay up until midnight on New Year's Eve to watch the clock pass from one year to the next. Friends often gather together at a party on New Year's Eve, and when the new year comes, all ring bells, blow' whistles, sing songs, and kiss each other. A favorite Scottish song which everyone sings together is Auld Lang Sync. The words tell of old friends and good times.

    In all cultures, New Year's Day is a time when people think of new beginnings. They want to make the coming year better than the last one. Many people in the United States make New Year resolutions. These are specific promises that they make to improve their behavior, change their habits, and become better people. There are many jokes about how a person keeps his or her New Year resolutions.

    48. In ancient times, the practice of making noise was meant ______.

    A. to keep the evil spirits away

    B. to have fun

    C. to celebrate the coming of the new year

    D. to keep to a custom


    正确答案:A

        48.答案为A  此考题为细节题。根据文章第2段第2People made noise in ancient times to drive away the evil spirits from their homes,就可肯定A正确。

  • 第3题:

    He decided to()more time to accompany his children after the death of his wife.

    A、set aside

    B、set out

    C、set back

    D、set off


    正确答案:A
    解析:A) set aside:留出B) set out:出发C) set back:阻碍D) set off:出发根据句意,应该是“留出更多时间 ”

  • 第4题:

    What made the author laugh?

    A. His own behavior

    B. His wife’s suggestion

    C. His changeable feelings

    D. His wife’s sweet kiss


    正确答案:A

    A

  • 第5题:

    Passage Five

    In America, every student in his or her second year of high school is required to take a class in driver's education.

    The course is divided up into two parts: class time for learning laws and regulations and driving time to practice driving. Each student is required to drive a total of six hours. The students are divided up into groups of four. The students and the instructor go out driving for two hour blocks of time. Thus, each student gets half an hour driving time per outing. Drivers Ed cars are unlike other cars in which they have two sets of brakes, one on the driver's side and one on the other side where the instructor sits. Thus, if the student driver should run into difficulties the instructor can take over.

    After a student has passed the driver's education course and reached the appropriate age to drive (this age differs in every state but in most cases the person must be 16 years old), he must take his driver's test. The person must pass all three tests in order to be given a driver's license. If the person does well in his or her driver's education class, he or she will pass the test with flying colors and get a driver's license.

    51. In America, the driver's course mentioned above______.

    A. is considered as part of the advanced education

    B. is given to anyone wanting to get a driver's license

    C. is carried on after students graduate from high school

    D. is offered to all the students of Grade 2 in high school


    正确答案:D

    51.答案为D  根据第一段every student in his or her second year of high school is required to take a class in driver's education可知高中二年级的学生必须修驾驶课。

  • 第6题:

    Which production opened for the first time in 1947?

    A. Abigail

    B. The New Dream

    C. Born to Shine

    D. Now until Forever

    答案:C
    解析:

  • 第7题:

    共用题干
    The Fat Problem that Men Face

    It is a pleasure to see men of a certain age worrying about their weight.Listening to them is not such a
    pleasure.Because the men are new at the game,they don't hesitate to discuss the fat problem incessantly.
    However women of the same age do not discuss the fat problem,especially not in mixed company.They prefer
    to face the problem with quiet dignity.Discussing the problem might only draw attention to some stray body
    part that mnay be successfully tucked away under an article of clothing.
    The age at which a man begins to explore the fat problem can vary.The actual problem can manifest it-
    self in the early 30's,but broad-range discussion usually starts later. There are early nonverbal symptoms.
    I've watched the rugged journalist who shares my apartment sneak by with a Diet Coke.His shirts are no
    longer neatly tucked in to display a trim waist.Recently he has begun to verbalize his anxiety.He tells me,
    with a sheepish grin,that he is taking his suits to Chinatown to have them"tailored".
    Still older men have lost their dignity and rattle on unabashedly.Often wives and children play important
    roles in their fat-inspection rituals.Take my oldest brother,a former college football player. His daughter says
    that several times a day he will stand at attention and call out,"Fat,medium or thin?"She knows the correct
    answer:medium.Thin would be an obvious stretch,and fat may not get her that new video.According to his
    wife,he stands in front of the mirror in the morning(before the day's meals take their toll),puts his hands
    behind his head and lurches into a side bend,then clutches the roll that has developed and says,"am I
    getting fatter?"His wife is expected to answer,"you look like you may have lost a few pounds".
    And then there are the ex-husbands a pitiful group.They are extremely vocal.When I go to the movies
    with one,he confides that he is suffering from great hunger because he is dieting. He hasn't eaten since the
    pancakes and sausages he wolfed down that morning. He pauses in his monologue while he buys his popcorn.
    After the movie,we sprint to a restaurant,where he again pauses to devour a basket of bread.Before he orders
    his chaste salad and soup,he grows plaintive.Do I think he's fat?

    The ex-husbands are pitiful because they have got no wives to sympathize with their fat problem.
    A:Right
    B:Wrong
    C:Not mentioned

    答案:C
    解析:
    文章第一段说看到某一年龄段的那些男人们为他们的体重而担心是一件有趣的事情, 而听他们谈论这件事就不那么有趣了。因为这些男人们在这个问题上还是新手,他们总是毫 不迟疑地、没完没了地谈论发福的问题。
    第一段第三句话说某一年龄的女人们却不谈论发福的问题,尤其是当有男士在场的时 候。“in mixed company”在这个句子中的意思是“在既有女士也有男士的社交场合。”“in the presence of men”的意思是“在男士面前”。
    第二段第一句话说男人们开始为发福的问题而担心的年龄各不相同,因此该题说男人 们通常在将近四十岁的时候开始为体重的问题而担心是不正确的。
    第二段中提到的那位记者过去并不喝无糖的健怡可乐,而且过去他常把衬衫扎在裤子 中是为了显示自己纤细的腰部,而不是为了保持体型。
    作者在第三段第一句话中说比那位记者还要年长一些的男士们在发胖的问题上已经 丧失了自尊,总是喋喋不休地谈论自己的体重。接着作者以自己的大哥为例说明尽管如此,他 们还是不希望听到自己的妻子和孩子说自己胖。
    第三段中作者大哥的女儿不愿告诉父亲他很胖,原因是她想取悦父亲,以便得到自己 想要的东西,比如一盘新录像带,而不是因为怕父亲伤心。
    文章最后一段提到离了婚的男士们在发福这个问题上最令人同情,但并没有提到是因 为身边没有夫人而同情他们。

  • 第8题:

    共用题干
    The Fat Problem that Men Face

    It is a pleasure to see men of a certain age worrying about their weight.Listening to them is not such a
    pleasure.Because the men are new at the game,they don't hesitate to discuss the fat problem incessantly.
    However women of the same age do not discuss the fat problem,especially not in mixed company.They prefer
    to face the problem with quiet dignity.Discussing the problem might only draw attention to some stray body
    part that mnay be successfully tucked away under an article of clothing.
    The age at which a man begins to explore the fat problem can vary.The actual problem can manifest it-
    self in the early 30's,but broad-range discussion usually starts later. There are early nonverbal symptoms.
    I've watched the rugged journalist who shares my apartment sneak by with a Diet Coke.His shirts are no
    longer neatly tucked in to display a trim waist.Recently he has begun to verbalize his anxiety.He tells me,
    with a sheepish grin,that he is taking his suits to Chinatown to have them"tailored".
    Still older men have lost their dignity and rattle on unabashedly.Often wives and children play important
    roles in their fat-inspection rituals.Take my oldest brother,a former college football player. His daughter says
    that several times a day he will stand at attention and call out,"Fat,medium or thin?"She knows the correct
    answer:medium.Thin would be an obvious stretch,and fat may not get her that new video.According to his
    wife,he stands in front of the mirror in the morning(before the day's meals take their toll),puts his hands
    behind his head and lurches into a side bend,then clutches the roll that has developed and says,"am I
    getting fatter?"His wife is expected to answer,"you look like you may have lost a few pounds".
    And then there are the ex-husbands a pitiful group.They are extremely vocal.When I go to the movies
    with one,he confides that he is suffering from great hunger because he is dieting. He hasn't eaten since the
    pancakes and sausages he wolfed down that morning. He pauses in his monologue while he buys his popcorn.
    After the movie,we sprint to a restaurant,where he again pauses to devour a basket of bread.Before he orders
    his chaste salad and soup,he grows plaintive.Do I think he's fat?

    The journalist used to drink Diet Coke and tuck his shirts in order to keep trim.
    A:Right
    B:Wrong
    C:Not mentioned

    答案:B
    解析:
    文章第一段说看到某一年龄段的那些男人们为他们的体重而担心是一件有趣的事情, 而听他们谈论这件事就不那么有趣了。因为这些男人们在这个问题上还是新手,他们总是毫 不迟疑地、没完没了地谈论发福的问题。
    第一段第三句话说某一年龄的女人们却不谈论发福的问题,尤其是当有男士在场的时 候。“in mixed company”在这个句子中的意思是“在既有女士也有男士的社交场合。”“in the presence of men”的意思是“在男士面前”。
    第二段第一句话说男人们开始为发福的问题而担心的年龄各不相同,因此该题说男人 们通常在将近四十岁的时候开始为体重的问题而担心是不正确的。
    第二段中提到的那位记者过去并不喝无糖的健怡可乐,而且过去他常把衬衫扎在裤子 中是为了显示自己纤细的腰部,而不是为了保持体型。
    作者在第三段第一句话中说比那位记者还要年长一些的男士们在发胖的问题上已经 丧失了自尊,总是喋喋不休地谈论自己的体重。接着作者以自己的大哥为例说明尽管如此,他 们还是不希望听到自己的妻子和孩子说自己胖。
    第三段中作者大哥的女儿不愿告诉父亲他很胖,原因是她想取悦父亲,以便得到自己 想要的东西,比如一盘新录像带,而不是因为怕父亲伤心。
    文章最后一段提到离了婚的男士们在发福这个问题上最令人同情,但并没有提到是因 为身边没有夫人而同情他们。

  • 第9题:

    In()a small group of Puritans sailed from Plymouth in the Mayflower,and found New Plymouth in America,Britain.s first settlement in the New World.

    A1614

    B1615

    C1620

    D1621


    C

  • 第10题:

    问答题
    When David is twice as old as he is now he will be four times as old as his daughter Jane will be in five years time. If in 1990, four years ago, he was four times as old as his daughter, in what year was she born?

    正确答案: In 1983
    解析:
    (由题目可知,四年前为1990年,则今年为1994年。可以设David的女儿今年为X岁,David为Y岁,根据题目条件可以列出一个两元一次方程组:4(X+5)=2Y; 4(X-4)=Y-4。解方程组可得:X=11,Y=32,即Jane今年11岁,又知今年为1994年,则1994-11=1983,即她出生于1983年。)

  • 第11题:

    单选题
    In()a small group of Puritans sailed from Plymouth in the Mayflower,and found New Plymouth in America,Britain.s first settlement in the New World.
    A

    1614

    B

    1615

    C

    1620

    D

    1621


    正确答案: D
    解析: 暂无解析

  • 第12题:

    问答题
    For Einstein to become a modern icon, especially in America, required a total revision of the definition of a hero. Anti-intellectualism has been as integral a part of American culture as the drive for universal education, and the fact that both have existed concurrently may account for the low status of teachers. In America it is not enough to be smart; one must compensate for one's intelligence by also showing the canniness and real-world power of the cowboy and the pioneer. Einstein did this. He was the first modern intellectual superstar, and he won his stardom in the only way that Americans could accept—by dint of intuitive, not scholarly, intelligence and by having his thought applied to practical things, such as rockets and atom bombs.

    正确答案:
    爱因斯坦成为现代社会的偶像,尤其是成为美国社会的偶像,使我们对英雄要重新定义。美国文化从来都反对智力至上,美国教育也不以学业高下为唯一评判标准,两者的共存使教师的地位低下。在美国,聪明不是一切,还得有美国牛仔和开拓者的机智和实践能力。但爱因斯坦颠覆了这一切。他是第一个现代社会科学上的超级明星。他的理论由直觉产生,而不是源自研究推理,他的理论运用到了实践中,使火箭和原子弹得以制成,他以这种美国人唯一可以接受的方式一举成名。
    解析: 暂无解析

  • 第13题:

    Instead of calling _________ his uncle, he called _________ my new house with his wife that day.

    A. by; for

    B. on; at

    C. for; on

    D. at; by


    正确答案:B
    call on sb.拜访某人;call at someplace访问某地。

  • 第14题:

    He()whenthe door opened and his wife came in.

    A.was smiling

    B.smiled

    C.is smiling

    D.has smiled


    正确答案:A

  • 第15题:

    I suppose by the time I come back in ten years? time all these old house have been put down.()


    正确答案:错

  • 第16题:

    Michael’s new house is like a huge palace, ______with his old one.

    A. comparing B. compares

    C. to compare D. compared


    正确答案:D

  • 第17题:

    The old man asked Lucy to move to another chair _______ he wanted to sit next to his wife.

    A.although

    B.unless

    C.because

    D.if


    正确答案:C

  • 第18题:

    Josh graduated with his master’s degree in space studies and planetary sciences,but after years of working odd jobs and barely______,he decided to go back to get his teaching license。

    A.putting on the back burner
    B.breaking new ground
    C.making ends meet
    D.proving his mettle

    答案:C
    解析:
    本题考查动词词义辨析。题目意为“乔希毕业于空间研究和行星科学硕士学位,但经过多年来打零工勉强维持生计后,他决定回去考取教学执照。”A选项“搁置,延后”,B选项“开辟新天地”,C选项“收支平衡”, D选项“证明他的勇气”。根据题干,barely making ends meet意为“勉强维持生计”,和空格前面打零工内容契合,故C选项符合题意。
      

  • 第19题:

    共用题干
    The Fat Problem That Men Face
    It is a pleasure to see men of a certain age worrying about their weight.Listening to them is not such a pleasure.Because the men are new at the game,they don't hesitate to discuss the fat problem incessantly. However,women of the same age do not discuss the fat problem,especially not in mixed company.They prefer to face the problem with quiet dignity.Discussing the problem might only draw attention to some stray body part that may be successfully tucked away under an article of clothing.
    The age at which a man begins to explore the fat problem can vary.The actual problem can manifest itself in the early 30's,but broad-range discussion usually starts later.There are early nonverbal symptoms. I've watched the rugged journalist who shares my apartment sneak by with a Diet Coke.His shirts are no longer neatly tucked in to display a trim waist.Recently he has begun to verbalize his anxiety.He tells me, with a sheepish grin,that he is taking his suits to Chinatown to have them"tailored".
    Still older men have lost their dignity and rattle on unabashedly.Often wives and children play important roles in their fat-inspection rituals.Take my oldest brother,a former college football player,as an example.His daughter says that several times a day he will stand at attention and call out,"Fat,medium or thin?" She knows the correct answer:medium.Thin would be an obvious stretch,and fat may not get her that new video.According to his wife,he stands in front of the mirror in the morning(before the day's meals take their toll),puts his hands be- hind his head and lurches into a side bend,then clutches the roll that has developed and says,"Am I getting fat- ter?"His wife is expected to answer,"You look like you may have lost a few pounds."
    And then there are the ex-husbands a pitiful group.They are extremely vocal.When I go to the movies with one,he confides that he is suffering from great hunger because he is dieting.He hasn't eaten since the pancakes and sausages he wolfed down that morning.He pauses in his monologue while he buys his popcorn. After the movie,we sprint to a restaurant,where he again pauses to devour a basket of bread.Before he orders his chaste salad and soup,he grows plaintive.Do I think he's fat?

    Women of a certain age do not discuss the fat problem,especially in the presence of men.
    A:Right
    B:Wrong
    C:Not mentioned

    答案:A
    解析:
    文章第一段说看到某一年龄段的男士们为他们的体重而担心是一件有趣的事情,而听他们谈论这件事就不那么有趣了。因为这些男士们在这个问题上还是新手,他们会毫不迟疑地、没完没了地谈论发胖的问题。故选A。
    文章第一段第三句话说某一年龄段的女士们不谈论发胖的问题,尤其是在既有女士也有男士的社交场合。因此,在男士面前,女士们也不会谈论此问题。故选A。
    文章第二段第一句话说男士们开始为发胖的问题而担心的年龄各不相同,因此该题说男士们通常在将近四十岁的时候开始为体重的问题而担心是不正确的。故选B。
    由文章第二段第四句和第五句话可推测出,过去那位记者身材纤细,因此他过去并不喝无糖的健怡可乐。而且过去他常把衬衫扎在裤子中是为了显示自己纤细的腰部,而不是为了保持纤细的体型。故选B。
    文章第三段第一句话说比那位记者还要年长一些的男士们在发胖的问题上已经丧失了自尊,总是喋喋不休地谈论自己的体重。接着作者以自己的大哥为例说明尽管如此,他们还是不希望听到自己的妻子和孩子说自己胖。故选A。
    文章第三段说作者大哥的女儿不愿告诉父亲他很胖,原因是她想取悦父亲,以便得到自己想要的东西,比如一盘新录像带,而不是因为怕她父亲伤心。故选B。
    文章最后一段提到离了婚的男士们在发胖这个问题上最令人同情,但并没有提到是因为身边没有妻子同情他们。故选C。

  • 第20题:

    共用题干
    The First Four Minutes

    When do people decide whether or not they want to become friends?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:"________(46)A lot of people's whole
    lives would change if they did just that."
    You may have noticed that the average person does not give his undivided attention to someone he has
    just met._________(47)If anyone has ever done this to you,you probably did not like him very much.
    When we are introduced to new people,the author suggests,we should try to appear friendly and
    self-confident. In general,he says,"People like people who like themselves".
    On the other hand,we should not make the other person think we are too sure of ourselves.It is
    important to appear interested and sympathetic,realizing that the other person has his own needs,fears,and
    hopes.
    Hearing such advice,one might say,"But I'm not a friendly,self-confident person.That's not my
    nature.It would be dishonest for me to act that way."
    __________(48)We can become accustomed to any changes we choose to make in our personality."It is
    like getting used to a new car. It may be unfamiliar at first,but it goes much better than the old one."
    But isn't it dishonest to give the appearance of friendly self-confidence when we don't actually feel that
    way?Perhaps,but according to Dr. Zunin,"total honesty"is not always good for social relationships,
    especially during the first few minutes of contact. There is a time for everything,and a certain amount of
    play-acting may be best for the first few minutes of contact with a stranger. That is not the time to complain
    about one's health or to mention faults one finds in other people.It is not the time to tell the whole truth
    about one's opinions and impressions.
    ________(49)For a husband and wife or a parent and child,problems often arise during their first
    four minutes together after they have been apart. Dr. Zunin suggests that these first few minutes together be
    treated with care.If there are unpleasant matters to be discussed,they should be dealt with later.
    The author says that interpersonal relations should be taught as a required course in every school,along
    with reading,writing,and mathematics.__________(50)That is at least as important as how much we know.

    _________(49)
    A:In reply,Dr. Zunin would claim that a little practice can help us feel comfortable about changing our social habits.
    B:Much of what has been said about strangers also applies to relationships with family members and friends.
    C:In his opinion,success in life depends mainly on how we get along with other people.
    D:Every time you meet someone in a social situation,give him your undivided attention for four minutes.
    E:He keeps looking over the other person'S shoulder,as if hoping to find someone more interesting in another part of the room.
    F:He is eager to make friends with everyone.

    答案:B
    解析:
    本文主要讲与人初次见面最初四分钟对于人际交往的重要性。文章开头以自问自答 的形式提出主题,然后说Leonard Zunin博士在书中向任何想交新朋友的人提出一条建议。这 条建议肯定与初次见面的最初四分钟有关,比较一下只有D与之相关。而且人们常用祈使句 向别人提建议,D是一个祈使句,它的意思是:“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。”和上下文意思连贯。故选D。
    承接上一段,本段第一句话告诉我们有人并不按Leonard Zunin博士建议的那样做。显 然此处选E项最合适,因为它陈述的是一个具体行为,且与Leonard Zunin博士的观点相悖。
    文章第三、四段建议当被引见给陌生人时,态度应当友好而自信,还应掌握好分寸。对 此,有人会说友好和自信非其本性,如果硬要装出如此态度就是不诚实。这是一种反驳意见, A项可以作为回答,"Zunin博士说只要我们稍加练习就可以改变社交习惯。”下文是对此的进 一步解释。
    此前作者主要谈与陌生人相处要注意最初四分钟。从其他句子来看,本段谈的是家庭 成员之间在交往中也应注意在一起的最初四分钟,故B最合适。
    本段强调人际关系的重要性,C项意为“他认为人一生中的成功主要依赖于如何与他人 相处。”其意思符合本段主题,后一句的主语that指的就是与人友好相处这件事。第6部分:完形填空

  • 第21题:

    填空题
    He had no time or energy to play with his children or talk with his wife, but he ____ bring home a regular salary.

    正确答案: did
    解析:
    句意:他没有时间和精力陪孩子玩耍,陪妻子聊天,但是他确实给家庭带来了稳定的收入。本题考查时态和强调句型。通过分析句子结构和空格后的谓语动词原形bring可知,空格处应填情态动词或表示强调或倒装的助动词(do,does,did等),根据had判断,时态为一般过去时。故划线处填did。

  • 第22题:

    单选题
    —What do you think of his new design?—It’s of even ______practical value than the old one. He’s just a bookworm!
    A

    greater

    B

    great

    C

    less

    D

    little


    正确答案: A
    解析:
    句意:——你觉得他的新设计怎么样?——这个甚至比原来的那个更缺乏实际价值。他只是个书呆子罢了! 本题考查形容词。根据题干中than可知应用比较级,故排除B和D项。又根据He’s just a bookworm可知,他的新设计不如原来的好,所以答案为C项。

  • 第23题:

    单选题
    On his back the man carried a heavy()of old clothes.
    A

    bulk

    B

    bundle

    C

    stock

    D

    mass


    正确答案: C
    解析: 暂无解析

  • 第24题:

    问答题
    Back in 1979, a fat, unhealthy property developer, Mel Zuckerman, and his exercise-fanatic wife, Enid, opened Canyon Ranch, “America’s first total vacation/fitness resort”, on an old dude ranch in Tucson, Arizona. At the time, their outdoorsy, new age-ish venture seemed highly eccentric. Today Canyon Ranch is arguably the premium health-spa brand of choice for the super-rich. It is growing fast and now operates in several places, including the Queen Mary 2. (1)________________.  “There is a new market category called wellness lifestyle, and in a whole range of industries, if you are not addressing that category you are going to find it increasingly hard to stay in business,” enthuses Kevin Kelly, Canyon Ranch’s president. This broad new category, Mr. Kelly goes on, “consolidates a lot of subcategories” including spas, traditional medicine and alternative medicine, behavioural therapy, spirituality, fitness, nutrition and beauty. (2)________________ “You can no longer satisfy the consumer with just fitness, just medical, just spa,” says Mr. Kelly.  Canyon Ranch’s strategy reflects this belief. (3) ________________ . This year in Miami Beach it will open the first of what it expects to be many upmarket housing estates built around a spa, called Canyon Ranch Living. Together with the Cleveland Clinic, one of the world’s leading private providers of traditional medicine, it is launching an “executive health” product which combines diagnosis, treatment and, above all, prevention. It also has plans to produce food and skin-care products, a range of clothes and healthy-living educational materials.  (4)________________. Mr. Case reckons that one of the roots of today’s health-care crisis, especially in America, is that prevention and care are not suitably joined up. A growing number of employers now promote wellness at work, both to cut costs and to reduce stress and health-related absenteeism, says Jon Denoris of Catalyst Health, a gym business in London. He has been helping the British arm of Harley Davidson, a motorbike-maker, to develop a wellness programme for its workers.  The desire to reduce health-care costs is one force behind the rise of the wellness industry; the other is the growing demand from consumers for things that make them feel healthier. Surveys find that three out of four adult Americans now feel that their lives are “out of balance”, says Mr. Kelly. So there is a huge opportunity to offer them products and services that make them feel more “balanced”. This represents a big change in consumer psychology, claims Mr. Kelly, and one that is likely to deepen over time: market research suggests that 35-year-olds have a much stronger desire to lead healthy lifestyles than 65-year-olds.  (5)________________. Another will be to maintain credibility in (and for) an industry that combines serious science with snake oil. One problem—or is it an opportunity? —in selling wellness products to consumers is that some of the things they demand may be faddish or nonsensical. Easy fixes, such as new-age therapies, may appeal to them more than harder but proven ways to improve health.  One of Canyon Ranch’s answers to this problem has been to hire Richard Carmona, who was America’s surgeon-general until last summer. In that role, he moved prevention and wellness nearer to the centre of public-health policy. The last time a surgeon-general ventured into business, it ended disastrously: during the internet bubble, Everett Koop launched DrKoop.com, a medical-information site that went bust shortly after going public and achieving a market capitalisation of over $1 billion. This time around, the wellness boom seems unlikely to suffer such a nasty turn for the worse.  (此文选自The Economist 2007年刊)  [A] It is expanding a brand built on $1,000-a-night retreats for the rich and famous in several different directions.  [B] Mr. Zuckerman, now a trim and sprightly 78-year-old, remains chairman of the firm.  [C] There is growing evidence that focusing holistically on wellness can reduce health-care costs by emphasizing prevention over treatment.  [D] One difficulty for wellness firms will be acquiring the expertise to operate in several different areas of the market.  [E] It is also one of the leading lights in “wellness”, an increasingly mainstream—and profitable—business.  [F] As more customers demand a holistic approach to feeling well, firms that have hitherto specialised in only one or two of those areas are now facing growing market pressure to broaden their business.  [G] And there is much debate about the health benefits of vitamin supplements, organic food and alternative medicines, let alone different forms of spirituality.

    正确答案:
    1. E 本文以一对美国夫妇开办的度假/健身庄园引领了美国健康休闲生活的新潮流开头,在第二段首句讲到一种新型的wellness lifestyle,可见空缺处内容该引出文章话题。因此,作为文章开头段落,应该出现与下文主题词相关的内容,承上启下。其中[D]、E均可作为备选,E中的It和第一段末句中的It都是指代度假村,且also与前文一起表示并列关系,所以选E。此处可能会误选B,前文虽提到Zuckeman与妻子创建的新型公司,但是第二段主要讲健康产业的扩展问题,与Zuckeman 无关,所以排除。
    2. F 第二段主要通过引用Kevin Kelly的言论,讲诉他正致力于扩展休闲活动的范围和形式(broad new category, sub-categories)。在选项F中firms that … broaden their business. 正是在论述如何扩展市场,以及扩展更多的休闲形式的压力,这能够和上文很好的衔接,所以F正确。
    3. A 此空位于首句之后,首句意为“凯利的这一观念在其战略中得到了验证”。空后具体讲他将怎样实施其战略来开拓市场。由文章逻辑结构可知,空缺处也该是对首句中心句的阐述。A谈到该公司正在采取措施,朝数个不同方向拓展自己的品牌,实施其设想战略,连接上文,所以A正确。
    4. C 段首空缺,前文是具体描述其战略措施,由下文分析the roots of today’s health-care crisis是因为prevention and care没有恰当地结合可知,此空缺处应为一个过渡句,即下文将要分析这种现象流行的原因。C项中讲到通过强调预防重于治疗,关注身心整体健康的做法能够降低医疗成本,其中“prevention and treatment”与下句中prevention相呼应,并与下句意思形成对比,解释了这种度假村能够流行的社会原因,所以C正确。
    5. D 有本段空格后Another will be…可知答案和后文构成并列关系,D中的0ne difficulty for wellness firms与后句中的another 形成one…another…并列结构。所以选D。
    解析: 暂无解析