October 15th is Global Handwashing Day. Activities are planned in more than twenty countries to get millions of people in the developing world to wash their hands with soap.
Experts say people around the world wash their hands but very few use soap at so-called extremely moments. These include after using the toilet,after cleaning a baby and before touching food.
Global Handwashing Day is the idea of the Public Private Partnership for handwashing with soap. The goal,they say,is to create a culture of handwashing with soap. The organizers say all soaps are equally effective at removing disease-causing germs (细菌).They say the correct way to wash is to wet your hands with a small amount of water and cover them with soap. Rub it into all areas,including under the fingernails. Then,wash well under running water. Finally,dry your hands with a clean cloth.
The Partnership says soap is important because it increases the time that people spend washing. Soap also helps to break up the dirt that holds most of the germs. And it usually leaves a pleasant smell,which increases the chances that people will wash again.
It also says that washing hands with soap before eating and after using the toilet could save more lives than any medicine. It could help reduce cases of diarrhea (痢疾),which is the second leading cause of child deaths,killing more than one and a half million children a year,by almost half.Which of the following is the right way to wash hands?
a. Washing hands well under running water.
b. Covering hands with soap.
c. Drying hands.
d. Rubbing hands with soap.
e. Wetting hands.
A.a-c-b-e-d | B.e-d-a-b-c |
C.a-c-b-d-e | D.e-b-d-a-c |
Which fact can’t explain why soap is important?
A.It gives people a longer handwashing time. |
B.It helps to remove a lot of germs from hands. |
C.It attracts people to do more handwashing. |
D.It gets all people into the habit of washing hands. |
According to the last paragraph,diarrhea is a disease that______.
A.kills half of the kids in the developing countries a year |
B.causes the greatest number of child deaths |
C.can be prevented to some degree by washing hands with soap |
D.can’t be cured without washing hands |
There are robots all around us. Some do very complicated jobs like flying airplanes and driving subway trains. and some do one simple job. When an automatic washing machine is switched on, water pours in. The machine waits until the water is warm enough for washing clothes. It does this by “feedback”(反馈). Information about what is happening is feedback into the robot to tell what to do next. Our eyes, ears and other senses are our feedback. They tell us what is going on around us. So robots are like human beings in two ways. They work and they have feedback.
In some ways robots are better than human beings. They work quickly and do not make mistakes. They do not get bored doing the same job over and over again. And they never get tired. So robots are very useful in factories. They can be taught to do many different jobs. First their electronic brain must be shown how the job is done. A person moves the robot’s “arms” and “hands” through each part of the job.
The most intelligent robots can move and see. Their eyes are cameras. Their fingers can feel shapes and sizes of the objects. These robots have computer brains linked to their eyes and fingers, which control their actions. The expensive robots are used in scientific research. They do such job as handling radioactive materials.In this passage the author tells us that ________.
A.robots are very popular |
B.there are various kinds of robots |
C.we see robots only at certain times |
D.robots can be easily controlled |
What does the author seem to inform you about robots?
A.They should be greatly improved. |
B.They will probably take over in the future. |
C.They are very helpful and useful to humans. |
D.They are machines that break down a lot. |
The author says that in industry ________.
A.robots break down a lot |
B.robots can do many jobs |
C.robots only get in the way |
D.robots sometimes cause troubles |
The fact that a robot never gets bored doing the same job means that _______.
A.it is very much like human beings |
B.it can do boring jobs for people |
C.it will never bore people |
D.it will work much better than human beings |
The robots used for scientific research _______.
A.are not very clever | B.are very cheap |
C.are very big | D.are very costly |
As a boy, Sanders was much influenced(影响) by books about the sea, but by the age of fifteen he had decided to become a doctor rather than a sailor. His father was a doctor. So he was often with the doctors and got along very well with them. When he was fourteen, he was already hanging around the hospital where he was supposed to be helping to clean the medicine bottles, but was actually trying to listen to the doctors’ conversations with patients in the next room.
During the war Sanders served in the army as a surgeon(外科医生). “That was the happiest time of my life. I was dealing with real sufferers and on the whole making a success of my job.” In Rhodes he taught the country people simple facts about medicine. He saw himself as a life-saver. He had proved his skill to himself and had a firm belief that he could serve those who lived simply, and were dependent upon him. Thus, while in a position to tell them what to do he could feel he was serving them.
After the war, he married and set up a practice deep in the English countryside, working under an old doctor who hated the sight of blood. This gave the younger man plenty of opportunity(机会) to go on working as a life-saver. When he was a small boy, books about the sea had made Sanders want to be ___.
A.a surgeon | B.an army man | C.a sailor | D.a life-saver |
At the age of 14, Sanders ___.
A.worked as a doctor by cleaning the medicine bottles |
B.met some doctors who were very friendly to him |
C.was interested in talking with patients |
D.remained together with the doctors |
His experience in the Army proved that ___.
A.he was good at medical operations on the wounded |
B.he succeeded in teaching people how to save their lives themselves |
C.a doctor was the happiest man |
D.his wish of being a life-saver could hardly come true |
Having proved his skill to himself, Sanders ___.
A.wanted to live a simple life like a countryman |
B.came to realize that he was really working for his countrymen |
C.taught himself life-saving |
D.was highly respected by the old doctor |
When the war was over, he ___.
A.learned from an old doctor because he was popular |
B.started to hate the sight of blood while working |
C.served the countrymen under an old doctor who needed someone to help him |
D.had few chances to be a “life-saver” because he was younger |
A young man went to a town and worked there. He did not have a wife and a servant did the work in his house.
The young man liked laughing a lot. He nailed the servant’s shoes to the floor on Monday, and then laughed, because he put his feet in them and fell down.
The servant was not angry, but smiled. Then the young man put brushes in his bed on Tuesday. The servant got into bed and hit the brushes with his feet. He was afraid. The young man laughed loudly again. Again the servant was not angry, but smiled.
Then on Wednesday the young man said to his servant, “You’re a nice, kind man. I am not going to be unkind to you again.”
The servant smiled and said, “And I’m not going to put any more mud from the street in your coffee.” The young man went to a town ___.
A.to study | B.to work | C.to see his relative | D.to spend his holiday |
He played a joke on the servant because ___.
A.he hated him |
B.he was not satisfied with the food the servant prepared for him |
C.he wanted to get pleasure |
D.he liked to show off himself |
When the young man played a joke on him, the servant was not angry but smiled because ___.
A.he liked the young man’ s action |
B.making the young man laugh is his job |
C.he was afraid to be fired |
D.he thought he shouldn’t be angry with a child |
What did the servant do in return to the young man?
A.He stole something from the house. |
B.He gave a smile to the young man. |
C.He had a fight with him. |
D.He put mud into the young man’s coffee. |
Why did the young man stop playing jokes on the servant?
A.Because the servant showed kind and nice behaviour to him |
B.Because the servant told him the truth |
C.Because he wanted to be a good man |
D.Because his father told him to do so |
Dorothea Dix left home at an early age — of her own free will — to live with her grandmother.
At fourteen, Dorothea was teaching school at Worcester, Massachusetts. A short time after she had begun teaching, she set up a school for young girls in her grandparents’ home, which she conducted until she was thirty-three.
She was forced to give up teaching at her grand-parents’ home, however, when she became ill, a few years of inactivity followed.
In 1841 Dorothea began to teach again, accepting a Sunday school class in the East Cambridge, Massachusetts prison. Here she first came upon insane people (精神病人) locked up together with prisoners.
In those days insane people were treated even worse than prisoners. There were only a few madhouses in the entire country. Therefore prisons, poor houses, and houses of correction were used to keep the insane.
Dorothea Dix made a careful investigation(调查) of the inhuman treatment of the insane. It was considered unusual for a woman to devote herself to such work at that time. But this did not stop Dorothea Dix from providing proper medical care for the insane.
Gradually, because of her investigations, conditions were improved. More than thirty mental institutions were founded or rebuilt in the United States because of her hard work. Dorothea also spread her investigations to England and to other parts of Europe.
During the Civil War, Dorothea served as superintendent(负责人) of women hospital nurses in the Union army. When the war was over, she returned to her work of improving conditions for insane people. What kind of school was Dorothea’s school at Worcester, Massachusetts?
How did Dorothea Dix first realize the mistreatment of insane people?
Why was Dorothea Dix’s work with the insane interrupted(中断)?
How are the events of Dorothea Dix’s life presented in the passage?
What does this article mainly tell us about?
A large number of women in Western European countries wish that they were born men. The number is said as high as 60% in West Germany.
“Women often wish that they had the same chance as men have, and believe it is still men’s world,” said Dr James Holden, one of the scientists who did the study.
Anne Harper has a very good job for an international oil company. She also believes in “Women’ s Liberation(解放)”.
“I don’t wish that I were a man,” she says, “and I don’t think many women do. But I do wish that people would stop looking down upon us women. At work, for example, we often do the work that men do but get paid less. There are still a lot of jobs that are usually the best ones and open only to men. If you’re a man, you have a much better chance of leading an exciting life. How many women pilots are there ... or engineers or scientists?”What can we learn from the first paragraph?
A.60% Western European women wish that they were born men. |
B.Most women in Western European countries wish that their babies were all boys. |
C.60% women in West Germany wish that they were born men. |
D.60% Western European women who wish that they were born men are from West Germany. |
“It is still men’s world.” means “______.”
A.There’re more men than women in the world |
B.There’re more men scientists or engineers than women scientists or engineers in the world |
C.Women cannot live without men |
D.Women have not been given the same chance as men |
Anne Harper considers that women should ______.
A.be really liberated |
B.live a better life than men |
C.be well paid |
D.get better jobs than men |
Anne Harper doesn’t wish that she were a man because she ______.
A.has got a very good job |
B.believes in “Women’s Liberation” |
C.does the work that a man can’t do |
D.isn’t looked down upon by anyone |
Which of the following is NOT true according to the passage?
A.Usually the best jobs are not open to women. |
B.Women are less paid than men for the same job. |
C.There’re more men pilots, engineers and scientists than women ones. |
D.Women are looked down upon because they’re the second-class citizens. |