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【简答题】

Section A
Translate the underlined sentences in the following passage into Chinese. Remember to write the answers on the Answer Sheet.
Is the glass half-full or half-empty Depends whether you’re an optimist or a pessimist.
But those two words are more than casual labels: research has established that (91) optimists have a consistent and upbeat way of dealing with adversity and that they are more successful in work, health and life in general than pessimists.
Optimists bounce back from trying times, generally with good grace, and see failure as a stepping-stone to success. Any problem tends to be minimised and dealt with later while the rest of life goes on as usual.
(92) Their upbeat approach, resilience and perseverance makes them ideal for jobs in high- pressure areas where setbacks are part of the territory: sales, brokering, public relations, presenting, creative jobs and high burn-out posts. They are often a company’s visionaries.
Pessimists, however, risk unravelling and sinking into depression when one thread of their life breaks. They are less likely to cope well with setbacks; they give up early or seek excuses.
Both types can be identified through optimism profiling, based on the pioneering work of American psychologist Martin Seligman, of the University of Pennsylvania.
Various studies, quoted in Seligman’s book, Learned Optimism, found that pessimists have twice as many infectious diseases as optimists.
(93) In hundreds of studies, people with high optimism scores out-performed and out-produced those with low scores, equating in sales terms to 20 to 40 percent greater productivity.
More recent research shows optimistic and resilient people’s belief that they have control over seemingly uncontrollable s enables specific molecules to be released by the brain that increase stress resilience, reduce anxiety and make for a less vivid emotional memory of stressful s. (94) What you think and how you explain good and bad s to yourself is the key to resilience.
Heavy pessimism can be moderated. Among the techniques is "thought-stopping", a way of blocking unhelpful rumination--you make an appointment with yourself to worry about it, and the unconscious mind feels relieved of it. And in practice, people generally never get around to the appointment--the need to worry has gone. Another major technique is learning how to dispute one’s own critical internal explanations.
However, mild pessimism does have its place. (95) According to Seligman, the mildly downbeat do well in low-pressure settings on jobs requiring a keen sense of realism: design and safety engineering, contract negotiation, law, statistics, technical writing, quality control, industrial relations management, and technical and cost estimating.
Says Seligman: "The company also needs its pessimists; they must make sure grim reality intrudes upon the optimists. The treasurers, the business administrators, the safety engineers--all these need an accurate sense of how much the company can afford, and of er. "

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【单选题】What kind of transportation does the author seem to favour() A.Electric cars. B.Bicycles. C.Gas cars. D.Buses and trains.

A.
Text 3 The way people in the US travel to and from work has changed a lot in the last fifty years. Before the Second World War, most people lived in the town or the city where they worked. Almost everyone either walked to work or used a good inexpensive transportation system. Many of these systems were electrified and ran on tracks, so they used very little energy. After 1945, the United States government built many new roads and highways. People moved farther and farther from the cities where they worked because they could drive their cars on these new roads from their suburban (郊区的) homes to work in the city. Some of the big car makers also bought the electrified transportation systems so they could destroy them. As people stopped using public transportation, cities spent less money to fix old buses and trains or to buy new ones. Public transportation got worse and worse. In the late 1960s, people found out that the increase in the use of cars led to many problems. There were always too many cars for the highway system, and terrible traffic problems developed. People were spending hours in traffic jams getting to and from work every day. In addition, the air in many cities became dirty because of pollution from millions of cars, and many people died in traffic accidents. As people began to get worried about how the use of cars was hurting the environment, cities began to spend more money on public transportation again so fewer people would have to drive cars. When gas became very expensive in the mid-1970s, the number of people taking public transportation began to increase. Because it is terribly expensive to build new public transportation systems, it is very difficult to make big changes in the way people travel, but an increase in the use of public transportation has begun.

【单选题】53() A.sitting B.waiting C.racing D.turning

A.
Pilot Cabuk was at the control seat calling out his climb checklist after taking off. Keeping him company in the copilot’s seat was the plane’s owner, Doug White. Cabuk began a __36__ call to air traffic controllers in Miami, but __37__ his voice lowered and his head fell to his chest. White __38__ him on the shoulder and tried __39__ him awake, but he was still. The plane was a mile above the earth, climbing up at a speed of 2, 000 feet per minute. And no one on board knew __40__ to get it safely to the __41__. White got on the radio. “Miami,” he said in a trembling (颤抖的) voice, “I’ve got to __42__ —an emergency (紧急状态). My pilot fell ill and is in a terrible state. I need __43__ up here.” Nate Henkels took the __44__ at the Miami center. He was __45__; few aircraft had been as large as this one. Henkels instructed White to __46__ at the height of 12, 000 feet. But the plane kept __47__. “Don’t worry. Pull back gently.” Henkels said, fighting his own __48__. The “gently” part proved __49__. White turned left and moved around, which __50__ him on the proper course. “You’re doing well,” said Henkels. His __51__ voice had become White’s lifeline. Gradually White __52__ the plane and then dropped the landing gear (起落架). Fifteen minutes later, the plane was __53__ on the runway, shining under the Florida sun after a perfect __54__. Inside the Miami control center, __55__ broke out.

【单选题】在化生的基础上发生的癌是()。

A.
肺鳞状细胞癌 
B.
肺小细胞癌 
C.
肺腺癌 
D.
肺巨细胞癌 
E.
肺肉瘤样癌