3. The doctors tried to save the__________ boy.A. dieB. dyingC. deadD. death

题目

3. The doctors tried to save the__________ boy.

A. die

B. dying

C. dead

D. death


相似考题
参考答案和解析
正确答案:B
3.B【解析】dying是die的现在分词形式,也可作形容词,表“垂死的”,“要死的”,常作定语。
更多“3. The doctors tried to save the__________ boy.A. dieB. dyingC. deadD. death”相关问题
  • 第1题:

    The present campaigns that doctors have begun are______.

    A. to save or rescue more than two million people

    B. to reveal the fight between doctors and mosquitoes

    C. to support the WHO's effects in destroying mosquitoes

    D. to kill all malaria-bearing mosquitoes before their resistance becomes too great


    正确答案:D
     [解析] 见最后一段第一句话。

  • 第2题:

    I learned to ______a bicycle as a small boy.

    A. drive

    B. run

    C. operate

    D. ride


    正确答案:D

        15.答案为D  to ride a bicycle“骑自行车”。

  • 第3题:

    He tried to ____the country ____ economic ruin.

    A. save..from

    B. save up

    C. save for

    D. save..on


    正确答案:A

  • 第4题:

    The word “euthanasia” in the second paragraph most probably means ________.

    [A] doctors’ sympathy to dying patients

    [B] doctors’ aggressive medical measures to dying patients

    [C] doctors’ mercy killing to reduce sufferings of dying patients

    [D] doctors’ well-meaning treatment to save dying patients


    正确答案:C
    58. [C]意为:医师为帮助生命垂危病人摆脱痛苦而采取的致死措施。 本题是一道词义题,但是解题更多的需要涉及到文章中心词,本文第一段从澳大利亚通过的一个关于安乐死法案的新闻入手,下文全部在讨论各界对该法案的反应,同时在文章最后作者以实例表明了自己对安乐死的观点,由此我们可以确定文章的中心是关于安乐死的。而考研文章的任何一道阅读题目的命制都是和文章中心紧密相连的。据此我们可以推断出答案为C。
    A意为:医师对垂危病人的同情。
    B 医师对垂死病人采取的过激医疗手段。
    D 医师为挽救垂危病人的生命而采取的善意的治疗。 另外“euthanasia” 所在句和下面的 In the US and Canada, where the right to die movement is gathering strength, observers are waiting for the dominoes to start falling.处于平衡位置,由此我们可以判断“euthanasia”和下句的 the right to die 大意相同,答案可
    以锁定 C,四个选项中只有该选项与死亡相关。

  • 第5题:

    It has been documented that during World War Ⅱ, America's armed forces once tried formation flight to save fuel.


    正确答案:

  • 第6题:

    请阅读Passage 1,完成题:
    Modern scientists divide the process of dying into two stages--clinical or temporary death and biological death. Clinical death occurs when the vital organs, such as the heart or lungs, have ceased to function, but have not suffered permanent damage. The organism can still be revived.
    Biological death occurs when changes in the organism lead to the disintegration of vital cells and tissues. Death is then irreversible and final.
    Scientists have been seeking a way to prolong the period of clinical death so that the organism can be revived before biological death occurs. The best method developed so far involves cooling of the organism, combined with narcotic sleep. By slowing down the body's metabolism, cooling delays the processes leading to biological death.
    To illustrate how this works, scientists performed an experiment on a six-year-old female monkey called Keta. The scientists put Keta to sleep with a narcotic. Then they surrounded her body with ice-bags and began checking her body temperature. When it had dropped to 28 degrees the scientists began draining blood from its body. The monkey's blood pressure decreased and an hour later both the heart and breathing stopped; clinical death set in. For twenty minutes Keta remained in this state. Her temperature dropped to 22 degrees. At this point the scientists pumped blood into its body in the direction of the heart and started artificial breathing. After two minutes the monkey's heart became active once more. After fifteen minutes, spontaneous breathing began,and after four hours Keta opened her eyes and lifted her head. After six hours, when the scientists tried to give her a penicillin injection, Keta seized the syringe and ran with it around the room. Her behavior differed little from that of a healthy animal.

    One characteristic of clinical death is__________.
    查看材料

    A.lasting damage to the lungs
    B.destruction of the tissues
    C.temporary non-functioning of the heart
    D.that the organism cannot be revived

    答案:C
    解析:
    根据第一段“Clinical death occurs when the vital organs,such as the heart Of lungs,have ceased to function.but have not suffered permanent damage.The organism can still be revived.”可知.临床死亡是指机体的重要器官比如心、肺等停止运转,但是还没有遭到永久的损害,机体还可以复活。因此答案为C。

  • 第7题:

    Modern scientists divide the process of dying into two stages--clinical or temporary death and biological death. Clinical death occurs when the vital organs, such as the heart or lungs, have ceased to function, but have not suffered permanent damage. The organism can still be revived. Biological death occurs when changes in the organism lead to the disintegration of vital cells and tissues. Death is then irreversible and final.
    Scientists have been seeking a way to prolong the period of clinical death so that the organism can be revived before biological death occurs. The best method developed so far involves cooling of the organism, combined with narcotic sleep. By slowing down the body's metabolism, cooling delays the processes leading to biological death.
    To illustrate how this works, scientists performed an experiment on a six-year-old female monkey called Keta. The scientists put Keta to sleep with a narcotic. Then they surrounded her body with ice-bags and began checking her body temperature. When it had dropped to 28 degrees the scientists began draining blood from its body. The monkey's blood pressure decreased and an hour later both the heart and breathing stopped; clinical death set in. For twenty minutes Keta remained in this state. Her temperature dropped to 22 degrees. At this point the scientists pumped blood into its body in the direction of the heart and started artificial breathing. After two minutes the monkey's heart became active once more. After fifteen minutes, spontaneous breathing began, and after four hours Keta opened her eyes and lifted her head. After six hours, when the scientists tried to give her a penicillin injection, Keta seized the syringe and ran with it around the room. Her behavior differed little from that of a healthy animal.
    The best statement of the main idea of this passage is that _____

    A.scientists have found a way to prolong the period of clinical death
    B.biological death occurs when vital organs have suffered perumnent damage
    C.modern scientists divide the process of dying into clinical and biological death
    D.cooling delays the processes leading to biological death

    答案:A
    解析:
    A项“科学家已找到延长临床死亡的办法”最能够体现全文主旨。

  • 第8题:

    The doctors tried their best to save the patient's life,__failed.

    A.or
    B.so
    C.but
    D.because

    答案:C
    解析:
    此题考查连词的使用。根据句意,上下文是转折关系,所以选C。医生们尽力挽救,但还是失败了。

  • 第9题:

    Text l How,when and where death happens has changed over the past century.As late as 1990 half of deaths worldwide were caused by chronic diseases;in 2015 the share was two-thirds.Most deaths in rich countries follow years of uneven deterioration.Roughly two-thirds happen in a hospital or nursing home.They often come after a ctimax of desperate treatment.Such passionate intervention can be agonising for all concerned.These medicalised deaths do not seem to be what people want.Polls find that most people in good health hope that,when the time comes,they will die at home.They want to die free from pain,at peace,and surrounded by loved ones for whom they are not a burden.But some deaths are unavoidably miserable.Not everyone will be in a condition to toast death's imminence with champagne,as Anton Chekhov did.What people say they will want while they are well may change as the end nears.Dying at home is less appealing if all the medical kit is at the hospital.A treatment that is unbearable in the imagination can seem like the lesser of two evils when the alternative is death.Some patients will want to fight until all hope is lost.But too often patients receive drastic treatment in spite of their dying wishes~by default,when doctors do"everything possible",as they have been trained to,without talking through people's preferences or ensuring that the prediction is clearly understood.The legalisation of doctor-assisted dying has been called for,so that mentally fit,terminally ill patients can be helped to end their lives if that is their wish.But the right to die is just one part of better care at the end of life.The evidence suggests that most people want this option,but that few would,in the end,choose to exercise it.To give people the death they say they want,medicine should take some simple steps.More palliative care is needed.Providing it earlier in the course of advanced cancer alongside the usual treatments turns out not only to reduce suffering,but to prolong life,too.Most doctors enter medicine to help people delay death,not to talk about its inevitability.But talk they must.Medicare,America's public health scheme for the over-65s,has recently started paying doctors for in-depth conversations with terminally ill patients;other national health-care systems,and insurers,should follow.Cost is not an obstacle,since informed,engaged patients will be less likely to want pointless procedures.Fewer doctors may be sued,as poor communication is a common theme in malpractice claims.
    Concerning dying patients,doctors are accustomed to_____

    A.giving them the death they want
    B.helping them delay death
    C.talking about the inevitability of death
    D.providing them with palliative care

    答案:B
    解析:
    [信息锁定]根据第四段④句“大多数医生从医,为的是帮助病人延缓死亡”及第三段①句“医生接受的职业训练使得他们习惯于对病人施展一切可能性救治手段”可推知“医生习惯于对临终病人施展一切可延缓死亡的救治经验”.B.正确。[解题技巧]A.利用第四段①句“给他们想要的死亡”干扰,而由句首To可知,这实际是“期冀”而非“事实”,也即,医生们目前尚不能做到给病人想要的死亡,他们通常是过度治疗病人、令其在痛苦中离去;C.源自第四段④句,却明显与句意“医生常帮病人延缓死亡,而不跟病人讨论死亡的不可避免”相悖;D.源自第四段②③句”提供更多姑息治疗”,但它实为针对①句“希冀”而提出的“建议”并非”事实”,并非医生们的习惯性做法。

  • 第10题:

    单选题
    ______explain it to him, he still didn't understand.
    A

    Hard as I tried to

    B

    As I tried hard to

    C

    Hard I tried to

    D

    Tried as I hard to


    正确答案: A
    解析:

  • 第11题:

    填空题
    自从父亲去世以来,我一直害怕孤独,总是想办法让母亲更多地关注我。I have been afraid of ____ alone, and tried to make my mother pay ____ attention to me since my father’s death.

    正确答案: being,more
    解析:
    be alone独自,孤单的。介词of后接动名词形式。pay more attention to更加注意。

  • 第12题:

    单选题
    He wept as he recalled how he had to leave his parents _____, When I tried to return to save my parents, I was driven back by the thick smoke and the heat.
    A

    about

    B

    alone

    C

    behind

    D

    off


    正确答案: A
    解析:
    leave behind忘记带走,把……丢在后面,遗留。leave about乱放,乱丢。leave alone不理会,不惹。leave off停止,戒除,不再使用。

  • 第13题:

    The victims of eating disorders, more often than not, will _____.

    [A] starve themselves to death

    [B] suffer greatly from the complications

    [C] puzzle doctors in the years to come

    [D] recover completely with no aftereffects


    正确答案:B

    本题考查事实细节。第二段主要论述了饮食性疾患的危害及治疗情况。由第三句可知,饮食性疾患的幸存者,患各种其他疾病的危险更大。[B]项正确,排除[D]项。由第二句中in the most extreme cases排除[A]项;由末句可知,医生已经掌握了大量关于饮食性疾患的信息,排除[C]项。

  • 第14题:

    Mathematician have _____ computers to copy the way the brain works.

    A. tried using

    B. tried to use

    C. tried use

    D. tried to using


    参考答案: B

  • 第15题:

    Which of the following statements is true according to the text?

    A Doctors will be held guilty if they risk their patients'death.

    B Modern medicine has assisted terminally ill patients in painless recovery.

    C The Court ruled that high-dosage pain-relieving medication can be prescribed.

    D A doctor's medication is no longer justified by his intentions.


    正确答案:C

  • 第16题:

    Which of the following is TRUE according to the passage?

    A. This influenza can cause death if not treated immediately.

    B. The number of the influenza virus can grow very rapidly.

    C. The people who got the disease recovered soon.

    D. The London doctors did not take the virus seriously at first.


    正确答案:B
    答案为B。根据第三段和第四段,They found that by reproducing itself at very high speed,the virus had multiplied more than a million times within two days.There experiments revealed that the new virus spread easily, but that it was not a killer 作出该项选择。其他选项与这两句矛盾。

  • 第17题:

    38.The doctor _________ a __________ boy yesterday.

    A. had saved ;dying

    B. saved ;dead

    C. has saved : dead

    D. saved :dying


    正确答案:D
    38.D【解析】句意t昨天,那个医生救了一个奄奄一息的男孩。从时间状语yesterday判断为过去时,排除答案 A、c;现在分词dying表示奄奄一息的,尚未死去,而过去分词dead表示已经死了的,明显不符题意。故选D。

  • 第18题:

    Text4 Death comes to all,but some are more sure of its timing,and can make plans.Kate Granger,a 32-year-old doctor suffering from an incurable form of sarcoma,has"very strong ambitions"for her last hours.She plans to avoid hospital emergency departments and die at her parents'house-music playing,candles glowing,family by her side.Surveys show that over two-thirds of Britons would like to die at home.Like Dr.Granger,they want to be with family and free ofpain.Yet hospital remains the most common place ofdeath.For some this is unavoidable-not every disease has as clear a tuming point as cancer-but for others a lack of planning is to blame.The govemment,motivated by both compassion and thrift,wants to help.To steer patients away from hospitals,general practitioners have been encouraged to find their l%-those patients likely to die in the next year-and start talking about end-of-life care.This can be difficult for doctors."As a profession we view death as failure,"says Dr.Granger.Yet when there is no cure to be had,planning for death can be therapeutic for patients.Those who do plan ahead are much more likely to have their wishes met.A growing number of patients have electronic"palliative-care co-ordination systems",which allow doctors to register personal preferences so that other care providers can follow them.A paramedic called to a patient's home would know of a do-not-resuscitate order,for example.One study showed that such systems increase the number of people dying in their homes.But savings for the government may mean costs for charities and ordinary folk.At the end of life it is not always clear who should pay for what.Although Britons can get ordinary health care without paying out of pocket,social care is means-tested.People must often shell out for carers or care homes-or look after the terminally ill themselves.Disputes crop up over trivial things,like responsibility for the cost ofa patient's bath.A bill now would cap the cost of an individual's social care by Parliament.Still,some want it to be free for those on end-of-life registries.That would cut into the govemment's savings-but allow more people to die as they want.37.Which of the following would Dr.Granger most probably agree on?

    A.A planned death is equal to suicide.
    B.Death is a failure for doctors.
    C.Planning for death is beneficial for patients.
    D.End-of-Iife care is a fundamental rask for doctors.

    答案:B
    解析:
    推理判断题。第三段第二句给出信息说“格兰杰说:‘作为医生,我们将死亡看作失败”’。故选B项。【干扰排除】A项,第三段最后一句说到,“即使没有什么治疗方法,为死亡做好充分的计划对患者来说也是有益的”,故排除A项。C项,第三段最后一句有提到相关内容,但它不是格兰杰直接提出的观点,故排除;D项,第三段第一句说到“为引导病人出院,普通医生被劝服找到那些1%的可能会在下一年离世的病人,并且开始与他们谈论临终护理”,并不是说临终关怀就是他们的基本任务,故排除D项。

  • 第19题:

    共用题干
    The Death

    Modern scientists divide the process of dying into two stages一(46)________.Clinical death occurs when the vital organs,such as the heart or lungs,have ceased to function,but have not suffered permanent damage. The organism can still be revived(复活).Biological death occurs when changes in the organism lead to the disintegration(解体)of vital cells and tissues. Death is then irreversible and final.
    Scientists have been seeking a way to prolong the period of clinical death so that(47) ________.The best method developed so far involves cooling of the organism,combined with narcotic(麻醉的)sleep. By slowing down the body's metabolism(新陈代谢),cooling delays the processes leading to biological death.
    To illustrate how this works,scientists performed an experiment on a six-year-old female monkey called Keta.(48)_________.Then they surrounded her body with ice-bags and began checking her body temperature.When it had dropped to 28 degrees the scientists began draining blood from its body.The monkey's blood pressure decreased and an hour later both the heart and breathing stopped,clinical death set in.For twenty minutes Keta remained in this state.Her temperature dropped to 22 degrees.At this point the scientists pumped blood into its body in the direction of the heart and started artificial breathing.(49)_______.After fifteen minutes,spontaneous breathing began,and after four hours Keta opened her eyes and lifted her head.After six hours,when the scientists tried to give her a penicillin injection,Keta seized the syringe and ran with it around the room.(50)__________.

    ________(50)
    A:the organism can be revived before biological death occurs
    B:clinical or temporary death and biological death
    C:After two minutes the monkey's heart became active once more
    D:Her behavior differed little from that of a healthy animal
    E:The scientists put Keta to sleep with a narcotic
    F:Clinical death process should be prolonged

    答案:D
    解析:
    空白前面告诉我们死亡分为两个阶段,并且还有破折号,表示后面是对前面的解释,只有选项B具体解释了其中一个是临床死亡,一个是生物死亡。
    文章在第一段告诉我们临床死亡只是暂时的,生物死亡是永久的。因此我们推断科学家延长临床死亡的时间为的是争取时间拯救患者,不让他生物死亡。因此只有 A项在这里最合适。
    文章前一句讲的是科学家们要用猴子做实验,空白的后面讲的是实验的第二步,因此空白处应该是实验的第一步。由此我们推断实验的第一步是麻醉猴子,因此只有选项E最合适。
    该空白处应当讲的是猴子苏醒的过程,跟此相关的仅有选项C,因此是心跳先恢复,自主呼吸才慢慢恢复。
    文章最后一句应当是总结全文或者是描述猴子恢复神志以后的状态,选项中只有D项的陈述总结了猴子的情况,即它的行为同一只正常的动物相比没什么分别。

  • 第20题:

    Text l How,when and where death happens has changed over the past century.As late as 1990 half of deaths worldwide were caused by chronic diseases;in 2015 the share was two-thirds.Most deaths in rich countries follow years of uneven deterioration.Roughly two-thirds happen in a hospital or nursing home.They often come after a ctimax of desperate treatment.Such passionate intervention can be agonising for all concerned.These medicalised deaths do not seem to be what people want.Polls find that most people in good health hope that,when the time comes,they will die at home.They want to die free from pain,at peace,and surrounded by loved ones for whom they are not a burden.But some deaths are unavoidably miserable.Not everyone will be in a condition to toast death's imminence with champagne,as Anton Chekhov did.What people say they will want while they are well may change as the end nears.Dying at home is less appealing if all the medical kit is at the hospital.A treatment that is unbearable in the imagination can seem like the lesser of two evils when the alternative is death.Some patients will want to fight until all hope is lost.But too often patients receive drastic treatment in spite of their dying wishes~by default,when doctors do"everything possible",as they have been trained to,without talking through people's preferences or ensuring that the prediction is clearly understood.The legalisation of doctor-assisted dying has been called for,so that mentally fit,terminally ill patients can be helped to end their lives if that is their wish.But the right to die is just one part of better care at the end of life.The evidence suggests that most people want this option,but that few would,in the end,choose to exercise it.To give people the death they say they want,medicine should take some simple steps.More palliative care is needed.Providing it earlier in the course of advanced cancer alongside the usual treatments turns out not only to reduce suffering,but to prolong life,too.Most doctors enter medicine to help people delay death,not to talk about its inevitability.But talk they must.Medicare,America's public health scheme for the over-65s,has recently started paying doctors for in-depth conversations with terminally ill patients;other national health-care systems,and insurers,should follow.Cost is not an obstacle,since informed,engaged patients will be less likely to want pointless procedures.Fewer doctors may be sued,as poor communication is a common theme in malpractice claims.
    A ceniury ago,death was characterized as being_____

    A.quick
    B.slow
    C.medicalised
    D.peaceful

    答案:A
    解析:
    [信息锁定]第一段首句总括:一个世纪以来,死亡的方式、时间及地点都发生了变化。随后各句具体解释变化的具体内容:全球一半、甚至三分之二的死者都因慢性病致死,富裕国家的死者多半历经多年不规则的衰竭过程,三分之二的死者在医院或疗养院离世前都接受过一次强过一次的绝望治疗。由此可见,一个世纪以来的死亡更为“长期而缓慢”、“死干医院或疗养院”,借此可反推过去一个世纪里,死亡应该具有“短暂、突然、死于家中”的特征,故A.正确。[解题技巧]B.为一个世纪以来死亡特征;C.源自第二段②句lhese medicalised deaths,借其回指功能可知它实指一个世纪以来的死亡特征.D.源自第二段④句at peace,而该句实质以当前人们愿望“愿安详离去”反衬医疗化死亡的”痛苦”,但并不能由此推知一个世纪以前的死亡就是“安详的”,因为其后⑤句明显指出了“有些死亡是不可避免地要遭受痛苦”。

  • 第21题:

    You are the top of the hierarchy in configuration mode. How would you save your configuration to a file on the router?()

    • A、save configuration <filename>
    • B、save config <filename>
    • C、save <filename>
    • D、save run <filename>

    正确答案:C

  • 第22题:

    单选题
    Doctors give less importance to the communication between patients and doctors mainly because ______.
    A

    modem medical instruments are used

    B

    they can cure more diseases and save more lives

    C

    they have much more medical experience than before

    D

    they are too busy to have time to talk with patients


    正确答案: A
    解析:
    推理判断题。由the communication between patients and doctors定位到文章第二段分别介绍了这种医疗仪器的正面和负面影响,题干部分属于负面影响。

  • 第23题:

    单选题
    Scientists and doctors believed that “Lorenzo’s Oil” _____.
    A

    was really effective

    B

    was a success story

    C

    only worked in theory

    D

    would save the boy’s life


    正确答案: A
    解析:
    细节题。由关键词“Lorenzo Oil”定位到第三段倒数第三句,“尽管结果很好,但是科学家和医生们并不信服。他们认为这缺少证据,只是在理论上可行”。就是说这种药只是一个理论,C项属于直接引用,为正确选项。A项偷换概念。“确实有效”虽然是一种事实,但并不是科学家的观点。B项虽是事实,但却不是科学家和医生的观点。D项在文中没有提到。