单选题A Statistics about major diseases.B Symptoms of influenza infection.C A. major epidemic of influenza.D Different strains of the flu virus.

题目
单选题
A

Statistics about major diseases.

B

Symptoms of influenza infection.

C

A. major epidemic of influenza.

D

Different strains of the flu virus.


相似考题

2.Passage TwoQuestions 26 to 30 are based on the following passage.Scientists have established that influenza viruses taken from man can cause the disease in animals. In addition,man can catch the disease from animals. In fact,a great number of wild birds seem to carry the virus without showing any evidence of illness. Some scientists conclude that a large family of influenza viruses may have evolved in the bird kingdom,a group that has been on the earth 100 million years and is able to carry the virus without contracting the disease. These are even convincing evidence to show that virus strains are transmitted from place to place and from continent to continent by migrating birds.It is known that two influenza viruses can recombine when both are present in an animal at the same time. The result of such recombinations is a great variety of strains constraining different H and N spikes. This raises the possibility that a human influenza virus can recombine with an influenza virus form. a lower animal to produce an entirely new spike.Research is underway to determine if that is the way that major new strains come into being. Another possibility is that two animal influenza strains may recombine in a pig,for example,to produce a new strain which is transmitted to man.According to the passage,scientists have discovered that influenza viruses______.A. cause ill health in wild birdsB. do not always cause symptoms in birdsC. are rarely present in wild birdsD. change when transferred from animals to man

更多“单选题A Statistics about major diseases.B Symptoms of influenza infection.C A. major epidemic of influenza.D Different strains of the flu virus.”相关问题
  • 第1题:

    I’ll begin by talking about our total sales last year, and then I’ll talk about our market share of our product in some major countries.Finally I’ll talk about our main customers and future plans.


    正确答案:我首先谈谈去年的销售总额,然后谈谈我们产品目前在主要几个国家的市场份额,最后谈我们的主要客户及今后的计划。

  • 第2题:

    The author writes the passage to_______

    A. show us the function of major sports

    B. encourage us to go in for green sports

    C. discuss the major influence of popular sports

    D. introduce different types of environment-friendly sports


    正确答案:
    B

  • 第3题:

    Text 1 The influenza season is just getting started in the United States,and it already promises to be more severe than usual.Hospital emergency rooms are filling up with flu sufferers,and pharmacies have reported medicine shortages.Twelve children had died as of last month.To make matters worse,in Australia,which experienced its flu season four to six months ago,the current vaccine appeared to be only about 10 percent effective against tlus year's dominant strain.Yet as bad as this winter's epidemic is,it won't compare with the flu pandemic that is almost certainly on the horizon if we don't dedicate energy and resources to a universal vaccine.The 1918 Spanish flu epidemic killed 50 million t0 100 million around the globe.Given the century of medical progress since then,one might conclude that we are far better prepared today to deal with such a worldwide catastrophe.Unfortunately,the opposite is true.The world has about four times the number of inhabitants it did in 1918,including hundreds of millions of people,poultry and pigs living close together.This provides a potent biologic mixing bowl and natural influenza virus mutation factory.When a pandemic does strike,we'll be in trouble in part because American hospitals and pharruacies keep in stock no more than a few days supply of most lifesaving drugs,almost all of which are made in Asia.Worldwide manufacturing and shipping are highly susceptible to disruption,which could mean shortages in many areas.A 1918-type influenza pandemic could cause ruin on the order of what the Black Death did t0 14th-century Europe,but on a global scale.Our current vaccines are based on 1940s research.Limited global manufacturing capacity combined with the five to six months it takes to make these vaccines mean many people would never even have a chance to be vaccinated.Little is being done to aggressively change this unacceptable situation.We will have worldwide flu pandemics.Only their severity is unknown.The only real solution is a universal vaccine that effectively attacks all influenza A strains,with reliable protection lasting for years,like other modem vaccines.Although the National Institutes of Health has publicly declared developing a vaccine a priority,it has only about$32 million this year specifically for such research.The Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority,the other federal agency responsible for developing and making available new vaccines for emergency response,has in fiscal year 2017 0nly a single project for$43 million supporting game-changing infiuenza vaccines.By contrast,the search for an H.I,V.vaccine-still a scientific long shot-receives Sl billion annually.We estimate that intemational govemments,vaccine manufacturers and the philanthropic community must make a similar commitment to influenza vaccine research if the kind of vaccine we need is to developed in the next 10 years.But there is no apparent effort to make these vaccines a priority in the current administration 22.We can infer from Paragraph 2 that

    A.Spanish flu is one of the most severe epidemics.
    B.we still couldn't effectively cope with epidemics.
    C.medical course has made great progress in the past century.
    D.there is an increasing number of people living with poultry.

    答案:B
    解析:
    推理判断题。根据题千信息定位到第二段,原文提到,人们可能会得出结论,我们今天为应对这样一场全球性灾难所做的准备要充分得多。不幸的是,事实恰恰相反,故B项为正确答案。【干扰排除】A项和C项原文未提及,属于无中生有;D项“越来越多的人与家禽生活在一起”,是对原文的曲解。故均排除。

  • 第4题:

    共用题干
    Flu Shots Or Not?
    It sounded like a good idea when New York City's mayor,Rudollph Giuliani,advised New Yorkers recently to get a flu shot.After all,20,000 Americans each year die of influenza. And this year in particular,the mayor suggested,getting a flu shot might be an especially good idea, since it could help doctors distinguish between flu and the deadly inhalational(吸入的)form of anthrax(炭疽).How? Both anthrax and flu exhibit strikingly similar symptoms-fever, chills and muscle aches-in the early days of the infection.Physicians would be quick to suspect anthrax in anyone who was vaccinated(接种疫苗)against flu and still developed fever and chills. That would give them a better chance to identify any new victims of terror while their infection was still in its earliest,most treatable stages.
    Or so the mayor's reasoning went. Unfortunately,there are a couple of problems with his log-ic .For one thing,getting vaccinated against influenza doesn't guarantee you won't get sick .Al-though highly effective,the flu vaccine(疫苗)protects against only the dominant types of the dis-ease and even then does not provide 100% protection.It takes a couple of weeks for your body to respond to the vaccine with a sufficient number of antibodies(抗体).Each year thousands of
    Americans who get the vaccine nevertheless still get the flu.
    There are also plenty of reasons you might develop fever,chills and muscle aches that have nothing to do with either anthrax or flu .Indeed,doctors estimate that more than 80%of all flu-like illnesses each winter are caused by other groups of viruses.Getting vaccinated against flu can't protect you against suffering from these other illnesses.
    In the worst case,asking all healthy adults to get vaccinated could actually have the opposite effect to the one intended,leading to even more deaths if it means we run out of shots for those who are most vulnerable to the infection.Already there have been delays in getting this year's shipment of vaccine to clinics and doctor's offices.Those who should be at the front of the line in-clude folks who are 65 or older,nursing-home residents and adults and children with chronic health problems as well as anyone who cares for or lives with such people .Flu shots are also im- portant for men and women whose immune system is weakened by HIV(艾滋病病毒)or other conditions.
    The best reason to get the flu vaccine is that it proteets against most flus-not that you're worried about getting anthrax.While inhalational anthrax has killed only five people so far,many more could be at risk from flu-related complications.There's no need to worsen the tragedy by making this year's influenza epidemic any worse.

    People who care for those most vulnerable to the influenza infection needn't get flu shots.
    A: Right
    B: Wrong
    C: Not mentioned

    答案:B
    解析:
    通篇文章除了开头提到纽约市长最近建议纽约市民前往打流感预防针以外,并没有提到有多少人接受他的意见前往打针,所以Quite a few ( = A considerable number of 相当多的)这个数量就无法证实。


    短文第一段第五句说到炭疽病和流感在感染初期,其表现出来的症状十分相似,所以本题说“在感染初期不易区分”是正确的。tell sb. /sth. from sb. /sth. = distinguish sb./sth .from sb./sth.。


    短文第二段第二句说“打了流感预防针也不能保证你不得病”,本段最后一句还说 “每年有成千上万人打了流感预防针还得流感”,故本题是错的。


    整个第三段都证明本题的论述是正确的,其中说到“发烧、发冷和肌肉疼痛可以与炭疽病和流感没有任何关系(have nothing to do with)",而且“医生佑计,每年冬天, 80%以上的类似流感的疾病是由其他类型病毒所引起的”。


    文章第四段第一句讲到了本题所说的内容,即如果人人都打的话就可能造成疫苗短缺,而需要打预防针的人却无法打。


    短文第四段第三句列举了最需要打流感预防针的人中就包括了“那些护理的人和与他们一起居住的人(as well as anyone who care for or lives with such people)",故本题是错的。


    文章最后一段说到“迄今为止,炭疽病只导致5人死亡”,但并未提到这些人是否打过流感预防针。

  • 第5题:

    共用题干
    Flu Shots Or Not?
    It sounded like a good idea when New York City's mayor,Rudollph Giuliani,advised New Yorkers recently to get a flu shot.After all,20,000 Americans each year die of influenza. And this year in particular,the mayor suggested,getting a flu shot might be an especially good idea, since it could help doctors distinguish between flu and the deadly inhalational(吸入的)form of anthrax(炭疽).How? Both anthrax and flu exhibit strikingly similar symptoms-fever, chills and muscle aches-in the early days of the infection.Physicians would be quick to suspect anthrax in anyone who was vaccinated(接种疫苗)against flu and still developed fever and chills. That would give them a better chance to identify any new victims of terror while their infection was still in its earliest,most treatable stages.
    Or so the mayor's reasoning went. Unfortunately,there are a couple of problems with his log-ic .For one thing,getting vaccinated against influenza doesn't guarantee you won't get sick .Al-though highly effective,the flu vaccine(疫苗)protects against only the dominant types of the dis-ease and even then does not provide 100% protection.It takes a couple of weeks for your body to respond to the vaccine with a sufficient number of antibodies(抗体).Each year thousands of
    Americans who get the vaccine nevertheless still get the flu.
    There are also plenty of reasons you might develop fever,chills and muscle aches that have nothing to do with either anthrax or flu .Indeed,doctors estimate that more than 80%of all flu-like illnesses each winter are caused by other groups of viruses.Getting vaccinated against flu can't protect you against suffering from these other illnesses.
    In the worst case,asking all healthy adults to get vaccinated could actually have the opposite effect to the one intended,leading to even more deaths if it means we run out of shots for those who are most vulnerable to the infection.Already there have been delays in getting this year's shipment of vaccine to clinics and doctor's offices.Those who should be at the front of the line in-clude folks who are 65 or older,nursing-home residents and adults and children with chronic health problems as well as anyone who cares for or lives with such people .Flu shots are also im- portant for men and women whose immune system is weakened by HIV(艾滋病病毒)or other conditions.
    The best reason to get the flu vaccine is that it proteets against most flus-not that you're worried about getting anthrax.While inhalational anthrax has killed only five people so far,many more could be at risk from flu-related complications.There's no need to worsen the tragedy by making this year's influenza epidemic any worse.

    Asking all healthy adults to get a flu shot may result in a shortage of the flu shots for those who are most vulnerable to the infection.
    A: Right
    B: Wrong
    C: Not mentioned

    答案:A
    解析:
    通篇文章除了开头提到纽约市长最近建议纽约市民前往打流感预防针以外,并没有提到有多少人接受他的意见前往打针,所以Quite a few ( = A considerable number of 相当多的)这个数量就无法证实。


    短文第一段第五句说到炭疽病和流感在感染初期,其表现出来的症状十分相似,所以本题说“在感染初期不易区分”是正确的。tell sb. /sth. from sb. /sth. = distinguish sb./sth .from sb./sth.。


    短文第二段第二句说“打了流感预防针也不能保证你不得病”,本段最后一句还说 “每年有成千上万人打了流感预防针还得流感”,故本题是错的。


    整个第三段都证明本题的论述是正确的,其中说到“发烧、发冷和肌肉疼痛可以与炭疽病和流感没有任何关系(have nothing to do with)",而且“医生佑计,每年冬天, 80%以上的类似流感的疾病是由其他类型病毒所引起的”。


    文章第四段第一句讲到了本题所说的内容,即如果人人都打的话就可能造成疫苗短缺,而需要打预防针的人却无法打。


    短文第四段第三句列举了最需要打流感预防针的人中就包括了“那些护理的人和与他们一起居住的人(as well as anyone who care for or lives with such people)",故本题是错的。


    文章最后一段说到“迄今为止,炭疽病只导致5人死亡”,但并未提到这些人是否打过流感预防针。

  • 第6题:

    共用题干
    Flu Shots Or Not?
    It sounded like a good idea when New York City's mayor,Rudollph Giuliani,advised New Yorkers recently to get a flu shot.After all,20,000 Americans each year die of influenza. And this year in particular,the mayor suggested,getting a flu shot might be an especially good idea, since it could help doctors distinguish between flu and the deadly inhalational(吸入的)form of anthrax(炭疽).How? Both anthrax and flu exhibit strikingly similar symptoms-fever, chills and muscle aches-in the early days of the infection.Physicians would be quick to suspect anthrax in anyone who was vaccinated(接种疫苗)against flu and still developed fever and chills. That would give them a better chance to identify any new victims of terror while their infection was still in its earliest,most treatable stages.
    Or so the mayor's reasoning went. Unfortunately,there are a couple of problems with his log-ic .For one thing,getting vaccinated against influenza doesn't guarantee you won't get sick .Al-though highly effective,the flu vaccine(疫苗)protects against only the dominant types of the dis-ease and even then does not provide 100% protection.It takes a couple of weeks for your body to respond to the vaccine with a sufficient number of antibodies(抗体).Each year thousands of
    Americans who get the vaccine nevertheless still get the flu.
    There are also plenty of reasons you might develop fever,chills and muscle aches that have nothing to do with either anthrax or flu .Indeed,doctors estimate that more than 80%of all flu-like illnesses each winter are caused by other groups of viruses.Getting vaccinated against flu can't protect you against suffering from these other illnesses.
    In the worst case,asking all healthy adults to get vaccinated could actually have the opposite effect to the one intended,leading to even more deaths if it means we run out of shots for those who are most vulnerable to the infection.Already there have been delays in getting this year's shipment of vaccine to clinics and doctor's offices.Those who should be at the front of the line in-clude folks who are 65 or older,nursing-home residents and adults and children with chronic health problems as well as anyone who cares for or lives with such people .Flu shots are also im- portant for men and women whose immune system is weakened by HIV(艾滋病病毒)or other conditions.
    The best reason to get the flu vaccine is that it proteets against most flus-not that you're worried about getting anthrax.While inhalational anthrax has killed only five people so far,many more could be at risk from flu-related complications.There's no need to worsen the tragedy by making this year's influenza epidemic any worse.

    None of the five people killed by inhalational anthrax had been vaccinated against influenza.
    A: Right
    B: Wrong
    C: Not mentioned

    答案:C
    解析:
    通篇文章除了开头提到纽约市长最近建议纽约市民前往打流感预防针以外,并没有提到有多少人接受他的意见前往打针,所以Quite a few ( = A considerable number of 相当多的)这个数量就无法证实。


    短文第一段第五句说到炭疽病和流感在感染初期,其表现出来的症状十分相似,所以本题说“在感染初期不易区分”是正确的。tell sb. /sth. from sb. /sth. = distinguish sb./sth .from sb./sth.。


    短文第二段第二句说“打了流感预防针也不能保证你不得病”,本段最后一句还说 “每年有成千上万人打了流感预防针还得流感”,故本题是错的。


    整个第三段都证明本题的论述是正确的,其中说到“发烧、发冷和肌肉疼痛可以与炭疽病和流感没有任何关系(have nothing to do with)",而且“医生佑计,每年冬天, 80%以上的类似流感的疾病是由其他类型病毒所引起的”。


    文章第四段第一句讲到了本题所说的内容,即如果人人都打的话就可能造成疫苗短缺,而需要打预防针的人却无法打。


    短文第四段第三句列举了最需要打流感预防针的人中就包括了“那些护理的人和与他们一起居住的人(as well as anyone who care for or lives with such people)",故本题是错的。


    文章最后一段说到“迄今为止,炭疽病只导致5人死亡”,但并未提到这些人是否打过流感预防针。

  • 第7题:

    共用题干
    The Spanish Flu Epidemic
    If you're worried about the possibility of a coming bird flu epidemic,you can take
    comfort in the fact that humanity has survived a similar influenza epidemic in the past.
    Starting its rounds at the end of World War!,the 1918 flu killed an estimated 50 million
    people.
    Popularly known as the Spanish Flu,this type of influenza was far worse than your
    common cold.Normally,influenza only kills those who are more vulnerable to disease,
    such as newborns,the old or the sick.However,the Spanish Flu was prone to kill the
    young and healthy.Often it would disable its victims in hours;within a day,they would be
    dead,typically from extreme cases of pneumonia(肺炎).
    The Spanish Flu was quite nasty-fast-spreading and deadly. It managed to spread
    across the globe,devastating the world.Then suddenly,after two years ravaging(蹂躏)
    the Earth,it disappeared as quickly as it had arisen.
    Despite its nickname,the Spanish Flu did not originate in Spain.Its true origins are
    unknown.Some believe it started in US forts and then spread to Europe as America joined
    the war;others think that it populated the trenches of the English and the French and
    eventually broke out in 1918.Regardless of where it started,eventually a fifth of the world
    population suffered the disease,with a global mortality rate(死亡率)estimated at 2. 5% of
    the population.
    Modernity was partly to blame for the quick spread of the disease.It passed throughout
    the world on trade routes and shipping lines.It hit Northern America,Europe,Asia,Africa
    and the South Pacific.The war did not help at all一the movement of supplies and troops
    aided the spread of the Spanish Flu,as well as the trench warfare:!magine the speed at
    which a virus can spread in a crowded ditch.The fast emergence of the virus in the
    trenches caused some soldiers to believe that the Spanish Flu was a new form of biological
    warfare.
    Luckily,the Spanish Flu simply vanished by 1920.It is believed the flu simply ran out
    of fuel to spread.

    About half of the people in the world suffered from the Spanish Flu.
    A:Right
    B:Wrong
    C:Not mentioned

    答案:B
    解析:

  • 第8题:

    单选题
    From the passage we see that the major function of advertising is to ______
    A

    use different media vehicles to popularize products.

    B

    help marketing realize its objectives.

    C

    arouse consumer’s interest in products.

    D

    reach different customers.


    正确答案: A
    解析:
    文章第一段第一句指出“The primary function of advertising is to communicate marketing objectives to selected target audiences.”,其中primary function与major function表达意思相同。可知广告的主要任务是帮助市场营销实现其目标,故选B。

  • 第9题:

    单选题
    It is these poisonous products _______ can cause the symptoms of the flu, such as headache and aching muscles.
    A

    who

    B

    that

    C

    how

    D

    what


    正确答案: B
    解析:

  • 第10题:

    单选题
    Which of the following statements is NOT true about the postal service?
    A

    American abortionists were not happy about it.

    B

    The stamp was invented in Britain.

    C

    It helped the independence of America.

    D

    In the 1840s it was the major means of national communications in Britain.


    正确答案: B
    解析:
    第五段指出“19世纪,邮政服务奠定了国内和国际交流的基石。邮票的出现、较低的价位和由发信人付费都对邮政服务的发展至关重要。在1840年英国使这些想法都成为了现实”,由此可知选项B(邮票是在英国发明的)和选项D(1840年邮政服务是英国国内交流的主要方式)都符合原文。从文章第六段提到的美国商人可通过邮政服务收集信息,邮政促进废奴思想的传播等可以看出postal service在美国获得独立方面起到了促进作用,因此选项C也正确。文章中并未提到“美国有权流产主义者”对其态度。

  • 第11题:

    问答题
    Directions:In this section, there is one passage followed by 5 questions. Read the passage carefully, then answer the questions in as few words as possible (not more than 10 words). Remember to write the answers on the Answer Sheet.  Questions 1-5 are based on the following passage.  Many people today are worried about bird flu. They are afraid that it will pass from birds to humans and that thousands of people will die in a pandemic. In 1918 a flu virus killed about 50 million people around the world. The virus was called Spanish influenza (or Spanish flu, for short) because Spanish newspapers first described the disease. Now, after nine years of work, scientists in an American laboratory in Atlanta, Georgia, have produced a copy of the Spanish flu virus. They are also going to publish the genetic sequence of the virus on the Internet and some experts are afraid that other laboratories could copy the virus.  Scientists have copied the virus because they want to understand why the 1918 Spanish flu pandemic killed so many people. In a report in the journal Science, Dr. Jeffery Taubenberger and a team of scientists in the USA show that the copied virus is extremely powerful. The scientists injected the virus into mice and the mice began to lose weight very quickly. They lost 13% of their weight in two days and all of the mice died within six days.  “I didn’t expect it to be as lethal as it was,”Dr. Terrence Tumpey, one of the scientists in the team, told the journal Nature. In another experiment, they injected more mice with a normal type of flu. The mice lost weight at first but then they got better and did not die. The experiments showed that the mice with the Spanish flu virus had 39,000 times more flu virus in their bodies than the second group of mice.  The scientists who copied the virus say their work has already provided important information about the virus and helps to explain why it is so lethal. But other experts are worried that the virus could escape from the laboratory. “Some people will think that they have really created a biological weapon,” said Professor Ronald Atlas of the University of Louisville in Kentucky. “I am even more worried now than I was before about the possibility of a flu pandemic. The 1918 flu pandemic started with bird flu and that might happen again today with Asian bird flu.”  Some scientists are worried about the publication of the genetic sequence on the Internet. They are afraid that biologists could copy the virus using the information on the Internet. This could be very dangerous.  It took a long time to copy the virus. Scientists used material taken from the lungs of people who died from the flu virus in 1918. In a second report in Nature, Taubenberger and his colleagues analyzed the genetic make-up of the virus. They were surprised to find that it was completely different from all the normal human flu viruses. This probably means that Spanish flu jumped from birds to humans and did not mix with a human virus first. This is very worrying for scientists because in the past everyone believed that a pandemic was only possible if a bird flu virus mixed with a human flu virus.  Taubenberger says it is very important to know what changes in the virus caused the 1918 Spanish flu virus. This will help scientists to work out which viruses might cause a pandemic. The H5N1 bird flu in Asia is already changing and it could infect humans, he said.  Viruses have escaped from high-security labs before. The SARS virus escaped at least twice, once in Taiwan and once in Singapore. But some scientists believe a pandemic will not happen even if the virus escapes, because most people are naturally immune and there are now a lot of drugs which protect people from flu.  Questions:  1.When was the Spanish flu pandemic?  2.How many people died in the Spanish flu pandemic?  3.Where did the scientists produce a copy of the Spanish flu virus?  4.How quickly did the laboratory mice die?  5.What is H5N1?

    正确答案:
    1.1918年 文章第一段提到In 1918 a flu virus killed about 50 million people around the world. The virus was called Spanish influenza.
    2.About 50 million. 文章第一段提到flu virus killed about 50 million people.
    3.Atlanta, Georgia, USA (in a laboratory). 文章第一段提到scientists in an American laboratory in Atlanta, Georgia, have produced a copy of the Spanish flu virus.
    4.Within 6 days. 文章第二段最后一句提到mice died within six days .
    5.A bird flu virus. 文章倒数第二段最后一句提到The H5N1 bird flu in Asia.
    解析: 暂无解析

  • 第12题:

    单选题
    The nation’s fledgling economy struggled because the investment from other countries into its major industries was lacking from most of them.
    A

    because the investment from other countries into its major industries was lacking from most of them

    B

    because few other countries were willing to invest in its major industries

    C

    due to the fact that few other countries would have invested in its major industries

    D

    because of the lack of investment from few other countries in its major industries

    E

    for the lack of investment in its major industries from other countries


    正确答案: C
    解析:
    B选项最符合逻辑,最简洁,表意最完整。

  • 第13题:

    Tell me, Meng.What’s your major? ( )

    A、My major problem is lack of confidence.

    B、Mr.Wang is the major.

    C、I’m majoring in English.

    D、I am not a major.


    参考答案:C

  • 第14题:

    Text 1 The influenza season is just getting started in the United States,and it already promises to be more severe than usual.Hospital emergency rooms are filling up with flu sufferers,and pharmacies have reported medicine shortages.Twelve children had died as of last month.To make matters worse,in Australia,which experienced its flu season four to six months ago,the current vaccine appeared to be only about 10 percent effective against tlus year's dominant strain.Yet as bad as this winter's epidemic is,it won't compare with the flu pandemic that is almost certainly on the horizon if we don't dedicate energy and resources to a universal vaccine.The 1918 Spanish flu epidemic killed 50 million t0 100 million around the globe.Given the century of medical progress since then,one might conclude that we are far better prepared today to deal with such a worldwide catastrophe.Unfortunately,the opposite is true.The world has about four times the number of inhabitants it did in 1918,including hundreds of millions of people,poultry and pigs living close together.This provides a potent biologic mixing bowl and natural influenza virus mutation factory.When a pandemic does strike,we'll be in trouble in part because American hospitals and pharruacies keep in stock no more than a few days supply of most lifesaving drugs,almost all of which are made in Asia.Worldwide manufacturing and shipping are highly susceptible to disruption,which could mean shortages in many areas.A 1918-type influenza pandemic could cause ruin on the order of what the Black Death did t0 14th-century Europe,but on a global scale.Our current vaccines are based on 1940s research.Limited global manufacturing capacity combined with the five to six months it takes to make these vaccines mean many people would never even have a chance to be vaccinated.Little is being done to aggressively change this unacceptable situation.We will have worldwide flu pandemics.Only their severity is unknown.The only real solution is a universal vaccine that effectively attacks all influenza A strains,with reliable protection lasting for years,like other modem vaccines.Although the National Institutes of Health has publicly declared developing a vaccine a priority,it has only about$32 million this year specifically for such research.The Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority,the other federal agency responsible for developing and making available new vaccines for emergency response,has in fiscal year 2017 0nly a single project for$43 million supporting game-changing infiuenza vaccines.By contrast,the search for an H.I,V.vaccine-still a scientific long shot-receives Sl billion annually.We estimate that intemational govemments,vaccine manufacturers and the philanthropic community must make a similar commitment to influenza vaccine research if the kind of vaccine we need is to developed in the next 10 years.But there is no apparent effort to make these vaccines a priority in the current administration 25.Which ofthe following would be the best title for the text?

    A.We Desperately Need a Universal Vaccine
    B.Shortages ofVaccines Need Solving
    C.To Fully Prepared for a Worldwide Catastrophe
    D.Measures We Should Take to Deal With Influenza

    答案:A
    解析:
    主旨大意题。文章首段及末段都指出研制通用疫苗的迫切性,故A项为正确选项。【干扰排除】B、C项只是文章细节,但并非主旨,故均排除;D项太过宽泛,文中具体讲述了应对流感的其中一种措施——研制通用疫苗,故排除D项。

  • 第15题:

    Text 1 The influenza season is just getting started in the United States,and it already promises to be more severe than usual.Hospital emergency rooms are filling up with flu sufferers,and pharmacies have reported medicine shortages.Twelve children had died as of last month.To make matters worse,in Australia,which experienced its flu season four to six months ago,the current vaccine appeared to be only about 10 percent effective against tlus year's dominant strain.Yet as bad as this winter's epidemic is,it won't compare with the flu pandemic that is almost certainly on the horizon if we don't dedicate energy and resources to a universal vaccine.The 1918 Spanish flu epidemic killed 50 million t0 100 million around the globe.Given the century of medical progress since then,one might conclude that we are far better prepared today to deal with such a worldwide catastrophe.Unfortunately,the opposite is true.The world has about four times the number of inhabitants it did in 1918,including hundreds of millions of people,poultry and pigs living close together.This provides a potent biologic mixing bowl and natural influenza virus mutation factory.When a pandemic does strike,we'll be in trouble in part because American hospitals and pharruacies keep in stock no more than a few days supply of most lifesaving drugs,almost all of which are made in Asia.Worldwide manufacturing and shipping are highly susceptible to disruption,which could mean shortages in many areas.A 1918-type influenza pandemic could cause ruin on the order of what the Black Death did t0 14th-century Europe,but on a global scale.Our current vaccines are based on 1940s research.Limited global manufacturing capacity combined with the five to six months it takes to make these vaccines mean many people would never even have a chance to be vaccinated.Little is being done to aggressively change this unacceptable situation.We will have worldwide flu pandemics.Only their severity is unknown.The only real solution is a universal vaccine that effectively attacks all influenza A strains,with reliable protection lasting for years,like other modem vaccines.Although the National Institutes of Health has publicly declared developing a vaccine a priority,it has only about$32 million this year specifically for such research.The Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority,the other federal agency responsible for developing and making available new vaccines for emergency response,has in fiscal year 2017 0nly a single project for$43 million supporting game-changing infiuenza vaccines.By contrast,the search for an H.I,V.vaccine-still a scientific long shot-receives Sl billion annually.We estimate that intemational govemments,vaccine manufacturers and the philanthropic community must make a similar commitment to influenza vaccine research if the kind of vaccine we need is to developed in the next 10 years.But there is no apparent effort to make these vaccines a priority in the current administration 23.Which ofthe following is not mentioned as factors delaying treatment?

    A.Storage.
    B.Efficacy.
    C.Transportation.
    D.Manufacture

    答案:B
    解析:
    事实细节题。根据定位词定位到第三段,文章第三段提到了库存、运输和生产给治疗带来的影响,但未提及疫苗的功效或效力,故B项为正确选项。【干扰排除】由以上分析可知,A项、C项和D项文中均有提及,故排除。

  • 第16题:

    共用题干
    The Spanish Flu Epidemic
    If you're worried about the possibility of a coming bird flu epidemic,you can take
    comfort in the fact that humanity has survived a similar influenza epidemic in the past.
    Starting its rounds at the end of World War!,the 1918 flu killed an estimated 50 million
    people.
    Popularly known as the Spanish Flu,this type of influenza was far worse than your
    common cold.Normally,influenza only kills those who are more vulnerable to disease,
    such as newborns,the old or the sick.However,the Spanish Flu was prone to kill the
    young and healthy.Often it would disable its victims in hours;within a day,they would be
    dead,typically from extreme cases of pneumonia(肺炎).
    The Spanish Flu was quite nasty-fast-spreading and deadly. It managed to spread
    across the globe,devastating the world.Then suddenly,after two years ravaging(蹂躏)
    the Earth,it disappeared as quickly as it had arisen.
    Despite its nickname,the Spanish Flu did not originate in Spain.Its true origins are
    unknown.Some believe it started in US forts and then spread to Europe as America joined
    the war;others think that it populated the trenches of the English and the French and
    eventually broke out in 1918.Regardless of where it started,eventually a fifth of the world
    population suffered the disease,with a global mortality rate(死亡率)estimated at 2. 5% of
    the population.
    Modernity was partly to blame for the quick spread of the disease.It passed throughout
    the world on trade routes and shipping lines.It hit Northern America,Europe,Asia,Africa
    and the South Pacific.The war did not help at all一the movement of supplies and troops
    aided the spread of the Spanish Flu,as well as the trench warfare:!magine the speed at
    which a virus can spread in a crowded ditch.The fast emergence of the virus in the
    trenches caused some soldiers to believe that the Spanish Flu was a new form of biological
    warfare.
    Luckily,the Spanish Flu simply vanished by 1920.It is believed the flu simply ran out
    of fuel to spread.

    The Spanish Flu posed a greater threat to the old and the sick.
    A:Right
    B:Wrong
    C:Not mentioned

    答案:B
    解析:

  • 第17题:

    共用题干
    Flu Shots Or Not?
    It sounded like a good idea when New York City's mayor,Rudollph Giuliani,advised New Yorkers recently to get a flu shot.After all,20,000 Americans each year die of influenza. And this year in particular,the mayor suggested,getting a flu shot might be an especially good idea, since it could help doctors distinguish between flu and the deadly inhalational(吸入的)form of anthrax(炭疽).How? Both anthrax and flu exhibit strikingly similar symptoms-fever, chills and muscle aches-in the early days of the infection.Physicians would be quick to suspect anthrax in anyone who was vaccinated(接种疫苗)against flu and still developed fever and chills. That would give them a better chance to identify any new victims of terror while their infection was still in its earliest,most treatable stages.
    Or so the mayor's reasoning went. Unfortunately,there are a couple of problems with his log-ic .For one thing,getting vaccinated against influenza doesn't guarantee you won't get sick .Al-though highly effective,the flu vaccine(疫苗)protects against only the dominant types of the dis-ease and even then does not provide 100% protection.It takes a couple of weeks for your body to respond to the vaccine with a sufficient number of antibodies(抗体).Each year thousands of
    Americans who get the vaccine nevertheless still get the flu.
    There are also plenty of reasons you might develop fever,chills and muscle aches that have nothing to do with either anthrax or flu .Indeed,doctors estimate that more than 80%of all flu-like illnesses each winter are caused by other groups of viruses.Getting vaccinated against flu can't protect you against suffering from these other illnesses.
    In the worst case,asking all healthy adults to get vaccinated could actually have the opposite effect to the one intended,leading to even more deaths if it means we run out of shots for those who are most vulnerable to the infection.Already there have been delays in getting this year's shipment of vaccine to clinics and doctor's offices.Those who should be at the front of the line in-clude folks who are 65 or older,nursing-home residents and adults and children with chronic health problems as well as anyone who cares for or lives with such people .Flu shots are also im- portant for men and women whose immune system is weakened by HIV(艾滋病病毒)or other conditions.
    The best reason to get the flu vaccine is that it proteets against most flus-not that you're worried about getting anthrax.While inhalational anthrax has killed only five people so far,many more could be at risk from flu-related complications.There's no need to worsen the tragedy by making this year's influenza epidemic any worse.

    Some other illnesses may exhibit symptoms similar to those of flu and anthrax.
    A: Right
    B: Wrong
    C: Not mentioned

    答案:A
    解析:
    通篇文章除了开头提到纽约市长最近建议纽约市民前往打流感预防针以外,并没有提到有多少人接受他的意见前往打针,所以Quite a few ( = A considerable number of 相当多的)这个数量就无法证实。


    短文第一段第五句说到炭疽病和流感在感染初期,其表现出来的症状十分相似,所以本题说“在感染初期不易区分”是正确的。tell sb. /sth. from sb. /sth. = distinguish sb./sth .from sb./sth.。


    短文第二段第二句说“打了流感预防针也不能保证你不得病”,本段最后一句还说 “每年有成千上万人打了流感预防针还得流感”,故本题是错的。


    整个第三段都证明本题的论述是正确的,其中说到“发烧、发冷和肌肉疼痛可以与炭疽病和流感没有任何关系(have nothing to do with)",而且“医生佑计,每年冬天, 80%以上的类似流感的疾病是由其他类型病毒所引起的”。


    文章第四段第一句讲到了本题所说的内容,即如果人人都打的话就可能造成疫苗短缺,而需要打预防针的人却无法打。


    短文第四段第三句列举了最需要打流感预防针的人中就包括了“那些护理的人和与他们一起居住的人(as well as anyone who care for or lives with such people)",故本题是错的。


    文章最后一段说到“迄今为止,炭疽病只导致5人死亡”,但并未提到这些人是否打过流感预防针。

  • 第18题:

    共用题干
    The Spanish Flu Epidemic
    If you're worried about the possibility of a coming bird flu epidemic,you can take
    comfort in the fact that humanity has survived a similar influenza epidemic in the past.
    Starting its rounds at the end of World War!,the 1918 flu killed an estimated 50 million
    people.
    Popularly known as the Spanish Flu,this type of influenza was far worse than your
    common cold.Normally,influenza only kills those who are more vulnerable to disease,
    such as newborns,the old or the sick.However,the Spanish Flu was prone to kill the
    young and healthy.Often it would disable its victims in hours;within a day,they would be
    dead,typically from extreme cases of pneumonia(肺炎).
    The Spanish Flu was quite nasty-fast-spreading and deadly. It managed to spread
    across the globe,devastating the world.Then suddenly,after two years ravaging(蹂躏)
    the Earth,it disappeared as quickly as it had arisen.
    Despite its nickname,the Spanish Flu did not originate in Spain.Its true origins are
    unknown.Some believe it started in US forts and then spread to Europe as America joined
    the war;others think that it populated the trenches of the English and the French and
    eventually broke out in 1918.Regardless of where it started,eventually a fifth of the world
    population suffered the disease,with a global mortality rate(死亡率)estimated at 2. 5% of
    the population.
    Modernity was partly to blame for the quick spread of the disease.It passed throughout
    the world on trade routes and shipping lines.It hit Northern America,Europe,Asia,Africa
    and the South Pacific.The war did not help at all一the movement of supplies and troops
    aided the spread of the Spanish Flu,as well as the trench warfare:!magine the speed at
    which a virus can spread in a crowded ditch.The fast emergence of the virus in the
    trenches caused some soldiers to believe that the Spanish Flu was a new form of biological
    warfare.
    Luckily,the Spanish Flu simply vanished by 1920.It is believed the flu simply ran out
    of fuel to spread.

    Biological warfare originated in the 20th century.
    A:Right
    B:Wrong
    C:Not mentioned

    答案:C
    解析:

  • 第19题:

    Land is a major social and political issue, very explosive and very much inclined to ______ a lot of conflict in different parts of the country.

    A.provoke
    B.irritate
    C.inspire
    D.hoist

    答案:A
    解析:
    题目意为“土地是一个主要的社会和政治问题,非常具有爆炸性,而且很容易在全国各地引发许多冲突。”选项A意为“引发”,选项B意为“刺激,使兴奋”,选项C意为“激励”,选项D意为“升起,提起”。
      

  • 第20题:

    单选题
    In 1964 ______ of Henry Osaka Tanner’s paintings was shown at the Smithsonian Institution.
    A

    was a major collection

    B

    that a major collection

    C

    a collection was major

    D

    a major collection


    正确答案: B
    解析:
    in 1964为时间状语,后面出现动词was,提示前半句为主语从句,只有选项D正确。

  • 第21题:

    单选题
    A

    Her great-grandfather died during a major epidemic.

    B

    Her great-grandfather worked in the field of public health.

    C

    Her great-grandfather was affected by the 1918 epidemic.

    D

    Her great-grandfather was a soldier in World War l.


    正确答案: B
    解析:
    女士提到了自己的曾祖父,她的曾祖父生于1918年,在流感爆发的时候他8岁,他经历过1918年的流感,这场流行病对他产生了很深的影响(His baby sister and his best friend died of the flu),所以本题应该选C。

  • 第22题:

    单选题
    Questions 11 to 15 are based on the following passage. Scratchy throats, stuffy noses and body aches all spell misery, but being able to tell if the cause is a cold or flu (流感) may make a difference in how long the misery lasts. The American Lung Association (ALA) has issued new guidelines on combating colds and the flu, and one of the keys is being able to quickly tell the two apart. That’s because the prescription drugs available for the flu need to be taken soon after the illness sets in. As for colds, the sooner a person starts taking over-the-counter remedy, the sooner relief will come. The common cold and the flu are both caused by viruses. More than 200 viruses can cause cold symptoms, while the flu is caused by three viruses—flu A, B and C. There is no cure for either illness, but the flu can be prevented by the flu vaccine (疫苗), which is, for most people, the best way to fight the flu, according to the ALA. But if the flu does strike, quick action can help. Although the flu and common cold have many similarities, there are some obvious signs to look for. Cold symptoms such as stuffy nose, runny nose and scratchy throat typically develop gradually, and adults and teens often do not get a fever. On the other hand, fever is one of the characteristic features of the flu for all ages. And in general, flu symptoms including fever and chills, sore throat and body aches come on suddenly and are more severe than cold symptoms. The ALA notes that it may be particularly difficult to tell when infants and preschool age children have the flu. It advises parents to call the doctor if their small children have flu-like symptoms. Both cold and flu symptoms can be eased with over-the-counter medications as well. However, children and teens with a cold or flu should not take aspirin for pain relief because of the risk of Reye syndrome (综合症),a rare but serious condition of the liver and central nervous system. There is, of course, no vaccine for the common cold. But frequent hand washing and avoiding close contact with people who have colds can reduce the likelihood of catching one. If children have flu-like symptoms, their parents ()
    A

    are advised not to give them aspirin

    B

    should watch out for signs of Reye syndrome

    C

    are encouraged to take them to hospital for vaccination

    D

    should prevent them from mixing with people running a fever


    正确答案: D
    解析: 暂无解析

  • 第23题:

    单选题
    A

    Statistics on other major disease epidemics.

    B

    Effects of war on the general population.

    C

    Arguments for developing a better public health system.

    D

    The connection between World War II and influenza.


    正确答案: B
    解析:
    男士提到“I wonder how the flu statistics compare with the statistics for other major epidemics, you know, like AIDS and tuberculosis or other flu epidemics”,女士回答说自 己也不知道,但是她会查清楚,可知他们会将其他的大型传染病的统计数据放到自己的报告中,所以本题应该选A项。