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[主观题]

The doctors don’t ________ that he will live much longer.A) articulate B) anticipa

The doctors don’t ________ that he will live much longer.

A) articulate

B) anticipate

C) manifest

D) monitor

答案
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更多“The doctors don’t ________ that he will live much longer.A) articulate B) anticipa”相关的问题

第1题

Hospital doctors don' t go out very often as their work ______ all their time.A.takes away

Hospital doctors don' t go out very often as their work ______ all their time.

A.takes away

B.takes in

C.takes over

D.takes up

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第2题

Hospital doctors don’t go out very often as their work__________ aU their time.A.takes aw

Hospital doctors don’t go out very often as their work__________ aU their time.

A.takes away

B.takes in

C.takes over

D.takes up

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第3题

In that country, hospital doctors don't go sightseeing very often because their work _____
_ almost all their time.

A.takes down

B.takes up

C.takes apart

D.takes over

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第4题

After reading the story what can we infer about the hospital?A.h is a children’s hospital

After reading the story what can we infer about the hospital?

A.h is a children’s hospital.

B.It has strict rules about visiting hour.

C.The conditions there aren’t very good.

D.The nurses and doctors there don’t work hard.

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第5题

In Britain people usually have a doctor near their home or in their town. This is the
local doctor. You have to register with a doctor before you can make an appointment. You usually have to fill in a form. and the doctor examines you. Families often all register with the same doctor. Doctors often work together in groups, and the name of the place where they work is a Doctor's Surgery. The government pays for this system, and it is free to go to see your doctor. If the doctor decides that you need treatment he can prescribe medicine. For example he can prescribe antibiotics for an infection. Medicine can be tablets to take with water or liquid to drink. The doctor writes the prescription. You take the prescription to the chemist's, and the chemist will make up the medicine for you. You usually have to pay some money for the medicine --- but you don't have to pay the full price.

(1). British people usually go a long way to see a doctor.

A、 Right.

B、Wrong.

C、Doesn't say.

(2). Some rich British families don't register with the same doctor.

A、 Right.

B、Wrong.

C、Doesn't way.

(3). British people don't have to pay when they see their doctor.

A、 Right.

B、Wrong.

C、Doesn't say.

(4). Doctors always work alone in their own Doctor's Surgery.

A、 Right.

B、Wrong.

C、Doesn't say.

(5). British people usually have to pay for their prescription at the chemist's.

A、 Right.

B、Wrong.

C、Doesn't say.

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第6题

Most Americans don't like to get advice from members of their family. When they need advic
e, they don't usually 【61】 people they know. 【62】 , many Americans write letters to newspapers and magazines which give advice 【63】 many different subjects, including family problems, sex, the use 【64】 the language, health, cooking, childcare, clothes, and how to buy a house or a car.

【65】 newspapers regularly print letters 【66】 readers with problems. Along 【67】 the letters there are answers written 【68】 people who are supposed to know how to 【69】 such problems. Some of these writers are doctors; 【70】 are lawyers or educators. But two of the most famous writers of advice 【71】women without special training 【72】 this kind of work. One of them answers letters 【73】 to " Dear Abby". The other is addressed 【74】 " Dear Ann Landers". Experience is their preparation for 【75】 advice.

There is one writer who has not lived long 【76】 to have much experience. She is a girl named Angel Cavaliere, who started writing 【77】 for newspaper readers 【78】 the age of ten. Her advice to young readers now 【79】 regularly in the Philadelphia Bulletin in a column 【80】 DEAR ANGEL.

(61)

A.talk

B.ask

C.tell

D.speak

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第7题

根据以下资料,回答下列各题: Years ago,Charlie,a highly respected orthopedist and a mento
r of mine,found a lump in his stomach.He had a surgeon explore the area,and the diagnosis was pancreatic cancer. He went home the next day,closed his practice,and never set foot in a hospital again.He focused on spending time with family and feeling as good as possible.Several months later,he died at home.He got no chemotherapy,radiation,or surgical treatment.Medicare didn’tspend much on him. It’s not a frequent topic of discussion,but doctors die,t00.And they don’t die like the rest of us.What’s unusual about them is not how much treatment they get compared to most Americans,but how little.Of course,doctors don’t want to die;they want to live.But they know enough about modern medicine to know its limits.Almost all medical professionals have seen what we call“futile care”being performed on people.That’s when doctors bring the cutting edge of technology to bear on a grievously ill person near the end of life.The patient will get cut open,perforated with tubes,hooked up to machines,and assaulted with drugs.I cannot count the number of times fellow physicians have told me,in words that vary only slightly.“Promise me if you find me like this that you’ll kill me.” How has it come to this—that doctors administer so much care that they wouldn’t want for themselves?The simple,or not—s0—simple,answer is this:patients,doctors,and the system. To see how patients play a role,imagine a scenario in which someone has lost consciousness and been admitted to an emergency room,and shocked and scared family members find themselves caught up in a maze of choices.When doctors ask if they want“everything”done.they answer yes.Then the nightmare begins.Feeding into the problemare unrealistic expectations of what doctors can accomplish.For example,many people think of CPR as a reliable lifesaver when,in fact,the results are usually poor. But of course it’s not just patients making these things happen.Doctors play an enabling role,too.The trouble is that even doctors who hate to administer futile care must find a way to address the wishes of patients and families.Imagine,once again,the emergency room with those grieving family members.They do not know the doctor.Establishing trust and confidence under such circumstances is a very delicate thing.People are prepared to think the doctor is acting out of base motives,trying to save time,or money,or effort,especially if the doctor is advising against further treatment. It's easy to find fault with both doctors and patients in such stories,but in many ways all the parties are simply victims of a larger system that encourages excessive treatment.In some unfortunate cases,doctors use the fee.for-service model to do everything they can,no matter how pointless.to make money.More commonly,though,doctors are fearful of litigation and do whatever they’re asked to avoid geeing in trouble. The real problem the author is concerned about in this article is________.

A.the overtreatment for dying patients

B.the different attitude of doctor and patients toward death

C.the disproportionately high medicare expenditure in America

D.the unequal and non.transparent doctor—patient relationship

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第8题

The sense of sound is one of our most important means of knowing what is going on around u
s. Sound has a waste product, too, in the form. of noise. Noise has been called unwanted sound. Noise is growing and it may get much worse before it gets any better.

Scientists, for several years, have been studying how noise affects people and animals. They are surprised by what they have learned. Peace and quiet are becoming harder to find. Noise pollution is a threat that should be looked at carefully.

There is a saying that it is so noisy that you can't hear yourself think. Doctors who study noise believe that we must sometimes hear ourselves think. If we don't, we may have headaches, other aches and pains, or even worse mental problems.

Noise adds more tension to a society that already faces enough stress.

But noise is not a new problem. In ancient Rome, people complained so much about noise that the government stopped chariots(战车) from moving through the streets at night!

Ways of making less noise are now being tested. There are even laws controlling noise. We cannot return to the "good old days" of peace and quiet. But we can reduce noise—if we shout loudly enough about it.

Why are scientists surprised by the findings in their noise study?

A.Because the world is becoming increasingly noisy.

B.Because they have learned that noise is also is also a kind of pollution.

C.Because noise is an unwanted waste for human beings.

D.Because people knew little about noise before.

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第9题

Why shouldn't doctors in public hospitals ask for the extra money from the sick? ______.A.

Why shouldn't doctors in public hospitals ask for the extra money from the sick? ______.

A.Because the so-called extra money is a tip to nurses

B.Because the so-called extra money is ill-gotten money

C.Because doctors are honest

D.Because doctors have additional money is ill-gotten money

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第10题

The inner voice of people who appear unconscious can now be heard. For the first time, res
earchers have struck up a conversation with a man diagnosed as being in a vegetative (植物的) state. All they had to do was monitor how his brain responded to specific questions.

"They can now have some involvement in their destiny," says Adrian Owen of the University of Cambridge, who led the team doing the work.

In an earlier experiment, Owen's team asked a woman previously diagnosed as being in a vegetative state to picture herself carrying out one of two different activities. The resulting brain activity suggested she understood the commands and was therefore conscious.

Now Owen's team has taken the idea a step further. A man also diagnosed with VS was able to answer yes and no to specific questions by imagining himself engaging in the same activities.

The results suggest that it is possible to give a degree of choice to some people who have no other way of communicating with the outside world. "We are not just showing they are conscious, we are giving them a voice and a way to communicate," says neurologist (神经病学家) Steven Laureys of the University of Liege in Belgium, Owen's partner.

Doctors traditionally base these diagnoses on how someone behaves: for example, whether they can glance in different directions in response to questions. The new results show that you don't need behavioural indications to identify awareness and even a degree of cognitive proficiency. All you need to do is tap into brain activity directly.

The work "changes everything", says Nicholas Schiff, a neurologist at Weill Cornell Medical College in New York, who is carrying out similar work on patients with consciousness disorders. "Knowing that someone could persist in a state like this and not show evidence of the fact that they can answer yes/no questions should he extremely disturbing to our practice."

One of the most difficult questions you might want to ask someone is whether they want to carry on living. But as Owen and Laureys point out, the scientific, legal and ethical challenges for doctors asking such questions are formidable.

"They" in the second paragraph can be replaced by "______".

A.patients in a VS

B.researchers

C.monitoring machines

D.specific questions

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第11题

If you want stay young, sit down and have a good think. This is the research finding of a
team of Japanese doctors, who say that most our brains are not getting enough exercises—and as a result, we are ageing unnecessarily soon.

Professor Taiju Matsuzawa wanted to find out why otherwise healthy farmers in northern Japan appeared to be losing their ability to think and reason at a relatively early age, and how the process of ageing could be slowed down.

With a team a colleague (同事) at Tokyo National University, he set about measuring brain volumes of a thousand people of different ages and varying occupations.

" Computer technology enabled the researchers to obtain precise (精确的) measurements of the volume of the front and side sections of the brain, which relate to intellect (智能) and emotion, and determine the human character. " The rear section of the brain, which controls functions like eating and breathing, does not contract with age, and one can continue living without intellectual or emotional facilities.

Contraction of front and side parts—as cells die off—was observed in some subjects in their thirties, but it was still not evident in some sixty- and seventy-year-olds.

Matsuzawa concluded from his tests that there is a simple remedy to the contraction normally associated with age—using the head.

The findings show in general terms that contraction of the brain begins sooner in people in the country than in the towns. Those least at risk, says Matsuzawa, are lawyers, followed by university professors and doctors. White collar workers doing routine work in government offices are, however, as likely to have shrinking brains as the farm workers, bus drivers and shop assistants.

Matsuzawa's findings show that thinking can prevent the brain from shrinking. Blood must circulate properly in the head to supply the fresh oxygen the brain cells need. "The best way to maintain good blood circulation is through using the brain, " he says, "Think hard and engage in conversation. Don't rely on pocket calculators.

The team of doctors wanted to find out______.

A.how to make people live longer

B.the size of certain people's brains

C.which people are most intelligent

D.why certain people age sooner than others

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