大学英语试题5(17页).doc
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1、-第 1 页-姓名:_班级:_学号:_日期:_unit 5 vocabulary&reading试卷编号:试卷编号:unit5readingquiz考试时间:考试时间:120 分钟分钟满分:满分:100 分分Part 1 Reading Comprehension(Banked Cloze)(Each item:1)Directions:Fill in the blanks in the following passage(s)by selecting suitablewords/expressions from the Word Bank.You may not use any of the
2、 words/expressionsmore than once.Questions 1 to 10 are based on the following passage.New medicines have helped many live with AIDS,but they have also had some negativeeffects on the fight against the disease.In recent years people who have been 1.confusedcombatingacquaintingestimateddiagnosedpromot
3、epressureassumeaccessaccountsolutionobviousplagueavailableviruswith AIDS have been livinglonger,healthier lives.This is because those that have been infected with the disease have 2.confusedcombatingacquaintingestimateddiagnosedpromotepressureassumeaccessaccountsolutionobviousplagueavailablevirusto
4、new medicines.These medicines should not however,be 3.-第 2 页-confusedcombatingacquaintingestimateddiagnosedpromotepressureassumeaccessaccountsolutionobviousplagueavailableviruswith a complete cure for AIDS.AIDS continues to 4.confusedcombatingacquaintingestimateddiagnosedpromotepressureassumeaccessa
5、ccountsolutionobviousplagueavailablevirusfor huge losses in life.This includes people who use the new medicines.The only sure way to protect yourself from AIDS is to avoid risks connected with the 5.confusedcombatingacquaintingestimateddiagnosedpromotepressureassumeaccessaccountsolutionobviousplague
6、availablevirusthat causes the illness.One of the biggest concerns in recent years has been the publics attitude toward thedisease.Having new medicines has lead many to 6.confusedcombatingacquaintingestimateddiagnosedpromotepressureassumeaccessaccountsolutionobviousplagueavailablevirusthat AIDS nolon
7、ger threatens a persons life.This has lead to careless behavior in places where these-第 3 页-medicines are 7.confusedcombatingacquaintingestimateddiagnosedpromotepressureassumeaccessaccountsolutionobviousplagueavailablevirus.It is 8.confusedcombatingacquaintingestimateddiagnosedpromotepressureassumea
8、ccessaccountsolutionobviousplagueavailablevirusthat the number ofpeople who got AIDS in developed countries in 2004 was up 10 percent from 2003.Those in rich countries should remember 9.confusedcombatingacquaintingestimateddiagnosedpromotepressureassumeaccessaccountsolutionobviousplagueavailableviru
9、sthe AIDS epidemic issomething the people on this earth must do together.We must act with care and show theworld that educated communities can fight this 10.confusedcombatingacquaintingestimateddiagnosedpromotepressureassumeaccessaccountsolutionobviousplagueavailablevirus.If richer nationscannot sto
10、p the spread of AIDS,there will be no hope for the poorer nations.Questions 11 to 20 are based on the following passage.We need to protect the ones we love from AIDS.This means avoiding behavior 11.rateslackstatusconnectedparticipateillustratedliteracyemergedliteratureimplementedcrisisdiagnosesignco
11、nstitutefocuswith the virus that causes the disease.The greatest health risk facing-第 4 页-young people today is their 12.rateslackstatusconnectedparticipateillustratedliteracyemergedliteratureimplementedcrisisdiagnosesignconstitutefocusof information about how people getAIDS.Many organizations have
12、13.rateslackstatusconnectedparticipateillustratedliteracyemergedliteratureimplementedcrisisdiagnosesignconstitutefocusover the past twenty-five years tofight this illness.Their goal is to combat the spread of AIDS by getting the information to thepublic.Teenagers have shown higher 14.rateslackstatus
13、connectedparticipateillustratedliteracyemergedliteratureimplementedcrisisdiagnosesignconstitutefocusof becoming infected than other agegroups.Many campaigns that have been 15.rateslackstatusconnectedparticipateillustratedliteracyemergedliteratureimplementedcrisisdiagnosesignconstitutefocusto protect
14、 young peoplehave failed.Organizations have needed to find new ways to educate this age group about thedisease.We cant assume that what works for adults will also work for teenagers,said onehealth worker.Her organization is trying to get information to young people by having them-第 5 页-16.rateslacks
15、tatusconnectedparticipateillustratedliteracyemergedliteratureimplementedcrisisdiagnosesignconstitutefocusin discussions with peers.There is also a strong 17.rateslackstatusconnectedparticipateillustratedliteracyemergedliteratureimplementedcrisisdiagnosesignconstitutefocuson informing women with AIDS
16、 who want tohave a baby.There has been a lot of 18.rateslackstatusconnectedparticipateillustratedliteracyemergedliteratureimplementedcrisisdiagnosesignconstitutefocusput out to reach this group.There is a real 19.rateslackstatusconnectedparticipateillustratedliteracyemergedliteratureimplementedcrisi
17、sdiagnosesignconstitutefocusgoing on in our country,said one nurse.Women in-第 6 页-poorer areas 20.rateslackstatusconnectedparticipateillustratedliteracyemergedliteratureimplementedcrisisdiagnosesignconstitutefocusa far greater number of those being diagnosed withAIDS than women in better neighborhoo
18、ds.She hopes a publication that she is puttingtogether will help with this.Part 2 Cloze(with Options)(Each item:1)Directions:Read the following passage carefully and choose the best answer from thechoices.Questions 21 to 40 are based on the following passage.Polio(小儿麻痹症)was one of the most feared di
19、seases of the first half of the 20th century.Itappeared 21.by chanceby turnsby mistake,mostly in children,causing parents to worry during theepidemics of the 1940s and 1950s.President Franklin Delano Roosevelt caught the diseasein 1921.He was 22.remainedleftgotwithout the use of his legs.Different t
20、o what is commonly believed,polio did not typically 23.result inemerge inhappen inseriousdamage to ones legs.24.Rather thanIn place ofRather,the majority of individuals who caught it only25.implementedexperiencedexperimentedsmall problems,such as fever and headache.These difficultiesonly 26.wentpass
21、edlasteda few days,and many had such small cases 27.thatwhichsotheydid not even realize they were ill.28.ThereforeHoweverIn such,they often continued 29.duringwhilewiththeir daily lives,attending school or work,unknowingly giving many others thevirus.This explains 30.whenwhyhowmany people who had se
22、rious cases of polio believedthat they were the only one in their family,neighborhood,or community to have 31.-第 7 页-haddonesufferedthe disease.In truth,there could have been many individuals 32.fortowithwhom they came into contact that had the illness,33.sincesobutdid notshow symptoms.In 1948,Jonas
23、 Salk 34.madestartedworkedresearch on a vaccine for the disease.35.After allThanThenin 1955,the Salk vaccine was shown to be 36.operativeefficiencyeffectiveinpreventing the disease after trials 37.involvingaffectingprotectingnearly two million children.Anationwide program to vaccinate(接种疫苗)was quick
24、ly started and 38.sinceafterbeforeseveral years and improvements on the vaccine by Albert Sabin,the UnitedStates was almost entirely 39.rid ofdone awayput an end tothe disease.Today,polio is all butforgotten,as it has pletelyrelativelyinevitablydisappeared from developed countries.Questions 41 to 55
25、 are based on the following passage.I remember the day I was told I had polio very well.That morning,I was in physical 41.educationprogramtrainclass at school,and we were out playing football.I noticed 42.duringwhensinceI was running,my leg was weak and 43.shouldnthadntwouldntwork right.I didntreall
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