2017年全國職稱英語考試 衛(wèi)生類A級 考前密押試卷【密】

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1、2014年職稱英語衛(wèi)生類A級考前押題(一) 詞匯選項   第1部分:詞匯選項(第1~15題,每題1分,共15分)下面每個句子中均有1個詞或者短語劃有底橫線,請為每處劃線部分確定1個意義最為接近的選項。   1、   The dentist has decided to extract her bad tooth.   A.take out   B.break off   C.push in   D.dig up   2、 The economy continued to exhibit signs of decline in September.   A.play   B

2、.show   C.send   D.tell   3、 This table is strong and durable.   A.long-lasting   B.extensive   C.far-reaching   D.eternal   4、 He endured great pain before he finally expired.   A.fired   B.resigned   C.die   D.retreated   5、 The girl is gazing at herself in the mirror.   A.smiling  

3、 B.laughing   C.shouting   D.staring   6、 The price of vegetables fluctuates according to the weather.   A.jumps   B.rises   C.falls   D.changes   7、 Did you do that to irritate her?   A.tease   B.attract   C.annoy   D.protect   8、 Mary looked pale and weary.   A.ill   B.tired   C.wo

4、rried   D.peaceful   9、 The water in this part of the river has been contaminated by sewage (污水).   A.polluted   B.downgraded   C.mixed   D.blackened   10、 Her treatment of the subject is exhaustive.   A.boring   B.thorough   C.interesting   D.touching   11、 These are their motives for d

5、oing it.   A.reasons   B.excuses   C.answers   D.plans   12、 The river widens considerably as it begins to turn west.   A.twists   B.stretches   C.broadens   D.bends   13、 Henry cannot resist the lure of drugs.   A.abuse   B.flavor   C.temptation   D.consumption   14、 These programs a

6、re of immense value to old people.   A.natural   B.fatal   C.tiny   D.enormous   15、 A great deal has been done to remedy the situation.   A.maintain   B.improve   C.assess   D.protect 第二部分-閱讀判斷   Sleep Problems Plague the Older Set   Older Americans often have difficulty getting a good

7、night’S rest.It's a huge quality—of-life problem,experts say,because contrary to popular belief,seniors require about the same amount of sleep as younger adults.   “Sleep problems and sleep disorders are not an inherent(固有的)pa rt of aging,”said Dr.Harrison G.Bloom,an associate clinical professor of

8、 geriatrics(老年病學(xué))and medicine at the Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York City.“It’S pretty much of a myth that older people need less sleep than younger people.”   Yet.in a study published recently in The American Journal of Medicine,researchers found that more than half of older Americans h

9、ave problems getting the sleep they need.   older people tend to have“sleep fragmentation,”meaning they wake up more often during the night,said study author Dr.Julie Gammck,an assistant professor of medicine in the Division of Geriatric Medicine at St.Louis University.   They also seem to get les

10、s“REM”sleep,the type of sleep during which rapid eye movement occurs,Bloom added.   It’s unclear what role these naturally occurring changes in sleep patterns have on person’s quality of life,Bloom said.“What is important,though,is that older people often have actual sleep disorders and problems wi

11、th sleep,”he said.   And,experts say,there is usually more than one cause.   “Sleep trouble in older adults is typically associated with acute and chronic illnesses,including specific sleep disorders like sleep apnea(呼吸暫停)and restless leg syndrome that appear with greater frequency in older popula

12、tions,”said Michael V.Vitiello , a professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences and associate director of the University of Washington’S Northwest Geriatric Education Center.   Taking multiple medications,as many older people do,can also lead t0 fatigue a“ hypersomnia ,”or being tired all the ti

13、me,Bloom added.   Another big problem,he noted,IS depression and anxiety.“Those are very commonly associated with sleep problems.”   Despite the prevalence(流行)of sleep difficulties in older adults,many patients Aren’t getting the help they need。As a result,problems like insomnia(失眠),restless leg s

14、yndrome and sleep apnea are underdiagnosed and undertreated,Bloom said.   16. Sleep problems can seriously affect one’s quality of life   A Right B Wrong C Not mentioned   17. it is true that older people need less sleep than younger people   A Right B Wrong C Not mentioned   18 Younger people

15、in America seldom complain of sleep disorders.   A Right B Wrong C Not mentioned   19. The number of older Americans with sleep problems is not small.   A Right B Wrong C Not mentioned   20. “SIeep fragmentation” refers to a marked lack of “REM” sleep   A Right B Wrong C Not mentioned   21. Th

16、e causes of sleep problems in older people remain unidentified.   A Right B Wrong C Not mentioned   22. Actions will soon be taken in America to better help people with sleep problems   A Right B Wrong C Not mentioned  第三部分-概括大意   Parkinson’s Disease   1 Parkinson’s disease affects the way you

17、 move. It happens when there is a problem with certain nerve cells in the brain. Normally, these nerve cells make an important chemical called dopamine. Dopamine sends signals to the part of your brain that controls movement. It lets your muscles move smoothly and do what you want them to do. When y

18、ou have Parkinson’s, these nerve cells break down. Then you no longer have enough dopamine, and you have trouble moving the way you want to.   2 No one knows for sure what makes these nerve cells break down. But scientists are doing a lot of research to look for the answer. They are studying many p

19、ossible causes, including agin g and poisons in the environment. Abnormal genes seem to lead to Parkinson’s disease in some people. But so far, there is not enough proof to show that it is always inherited.   3 ’rremor may be the first symptom you notice. It is one of the most common signs of the d

20、isease, although not everyone has it. More importantly, not everyone with a tremor has Parkinson’s disease. Tremor often starts in just one arm or leg or only on one side of the body. It may be worse when you are awake but not moving the affected arm or leg. It may get better when you move the limb

21、or you are asleep. In time, Parkinson’s affects muscles all through your body, so it can lead to problems like trouble swallowing or constipation. In the later stages of the disease, a person with Parkinson’s may have a fixed or blank expression, trouble speaking, and other problems. Some people als

22、o have a decrease in mental skills ( dementia).   4 At this time, there is no cure for Parkinson’s disease. But there are several types of medicines that can control the symptoms and make the disease easier to live with. You may not even need treatment if your symptoms are mild. Your doctor may wai

23、t to prescribe medicines unntil your symptoms start to get in the way of your daily life. Your doctor will adjust your medicines as your symptoms get worse. You may need to take several medicines to get the best results.   23. Paragraph I_____________ .   24. Paragraph 2 _____________.   25. Para

24、graph 3_____________ .   26. Paragraph 4 _____________.   A. Tips for Patients with the Disease   B. Common Treatment for the Disease   C. Means of Diagnosis of the Disease   D. Typical Symptoms of the Disease   E. Possible Causes of the Disease   F. Definition of Parkinson’s Disease   27. Y

25、ou’II find it hard to move the way you want to_____________ .   28. A lot of research is being done to find out_____________.   29. One of the most common signs of Parkinson’s is tremor_____________.   30. A person with Parkinson’s has to learn to live with the disease,_____________.   A. if the

26、re isn’t enough dopamine m your body   B. what affects muscles all through your body   C. which cannot be cured yet   D. if you have a fixed or blank expression   E. which may be the first symptom you notice   F. what causes Parkinson’s disease   第四部分-閱讀理解   Martin Luther King Jr.   By the t

27、ime the Montgomery Improvement Association chose the 26-year-old Martin Luther King Jr. as its leader, the hours-old bus boycott by the black citizens of Montgomery, Alabama, was already an overwhelming success. King would later write that his unanticipated call to leadership "happened so quickly th

28、at I did not have time to think in through." "It is probable that if I had, I would have declined the nomination."   Although press reports at the time focused on his inspiring oratory, King was actually a reluctant leader of a movement initiated by others.(The boycott began on Dec. 5 1955.) His su

29、bsequent writings and private correspondence reveal man whose inner doubts sharply contrast with his public persona. In the early days of his involvement, King was troubled by telephone threats, discord within the black community and Montgomery's "get tough" policy, to which king attributed his jail

30、ing on a minor traffic violation. One night, as he considered ways to "move out of the picture without appearing a coward," he began to pray aloud and, at that moment, "experienced the presence of the God as I had never experienced Him before."   He would later admit that when the boycott began, he

31、 was not yet firmly committed to Gandhian principles. Although he had been exposed to those teachings in college, he had remained skeptical. "I thought the only way we could solve our problem of segregation was an armed revolt," he recalled. "I felt that the Christian ethic of love was confined to i

32、ndividual relationships."   Only after his home was bombed in late January did king reconsider his views on violence. (At the time, he was seeking a gun permit and was protected by armed bodyguards.) Competing with each other to influence King were two ardent pacifists: Bayard Rustin, a black activ

33、ist with the War Resisters League, and the Rev. Glenn E. Smiley, a white staff member of the Fellowship of Reconciliation. Rustin was shocked to discover a gun in King's house, while Smiley informed fellow pacifists that King's home was "an arsenal."   31. What did King think of his nomination as l

34、eader of the Montgomery Boycott?   A) He hadn't expected it.   B) He had to think about it carefully.   C) He would refuse to accept it.   D) He was prepared to accept it.   32. Why was King unwilling to lead the movement at first?   A) Because he doubted if the boycott would be successful.  

35、 B) Because he was troubled with a traffic accident at that time.   C) Because he thought he was too young to be a leader.   D) Because he himself didn't start the boycott.   33. Which of the following is Not mentioned as something that happened at the beginning of the black people's movement?  

36、 A) King was put into prison.   B) Black people disagreed with each other.   C) King's armed revolt proposal was turned down.   D) Black people found it hard to accept the policy pursued in Montgomery.   34. Which of the following was the immediate cause that made King change his view on violenc

37、e?   A) The education he received in college.   B) The attack of his home.   C) The influence of two active non-violence advocates.   D) The verdict of the Supreme Court.   35. In Paragraph 4, the last sentence "King's home was 'an arsenal'" means   A) King's home was a place where people got

38、together.   A Phone That Knows You're Busy   It's a modem problem: you're too busy to be disturbed by incessant (連續(xù)不斷的) phone calls so you turn your cell phone off.But if you don't remember to turn it back on when you're less busy. You could miss some important calls if only the phone knew when it

39、 was wise to interrupt you, you wouldn't have to turn it off at all. Instead, it could let calls through when you are not too busy.   A bunch of behavior sensors (傳感器) and a clever piece of software could do just that, by analyzing your behavior to determine if it's a good time to interrupt you. If

40、 built into a phone, the system may decide you're too busy and ask the caller to leave a message or ring back later.   James Fogarty and Scott Hudson at Camegie Mellon University in Pennsylvania based their system oil tiny microphones, cameras and touch sensors that reveal body language and activit

41、y. First they had to study different behaviors to find out which ones strongly predict whether your mind is interrupted.   The potential "busyness" signals they focused on included whether the office doors were left open or closed, the time of day, if other people were with the person in question,

42、how close they were to each other, and whether or not the computer was in use.   The sensors monitored these and many other factors while four subjects were at work. At random intervals, the subjects rated how interruptible they were on a scale ranging from "highly interruptible" to "highly not-int

43、erruptible". Their ratings were then correlated with the various behaviors . "It is a shotgun (隨意的) approach: we used all the indicators we could think of and then let statistics find out which were important, " says Hudson.   The model showed that using the keyboard, and talking on a landline or t

44、o someone else in the office correlated most strongly with how interruptible the   subjects judged themselves to be. Interestingly, the computer was actually better than people at predicting when someone was too busy to be interrupted.The computer got it right 82 per cent of the time, humans 77 per

45、cent. Fogarty speculates that this might be because people doing the interrupting are inevitably biased towards delivering their message, whereas computers don't care.   The first application for Hudson and Fogarty's system is likely to be in an instant messaging system, followed by office phones a

46、nd cellphones. "There is no technological roadblock (障礙) to it being deployed in a couple of years, " says Hudson.   A big problem facing people today is that________.   A.they must tolerate phone disturbances or miss important calls.   B.they must turn off their phones to keep their homes quiet.

47、   C.they have to switch from a desktop phone to a cell phone.   D.they are too busy to make phone calls.   37、 The behavior sensor and software system built in a phone________.   A.could help store messages   B.could send messages instantly   C.could tell when it is wise to interrupt you   D

48、.could identify important phone calls   38、 Scientists at Carnegie Menon University tried to find out________.   A.why office doors were often left open   B.when it was a good time to turn off the computer   C.what questions office workers were bothered with   D.which behaviors could tell wheth

49、er a person was busy   39、 During the experiment, the subjects were asked________.   A.to control the sensors and the camera   B.to rate the degrees to which they could be interrupted   C.to compare their behaviors with others'   D.to analyze all the indicators of interruption   40、 The comput

50、er performed better than people in the study because________.   A.the computer worked harder   B.the computer was not busy   C.people tended to be biased   D.people were not good at statistics   41、   根據(jù)下列材料,回答41-55題   Effects of Environmental Pollution   If pollution continues to increase a

51、t the present rate, formation of aerosols (浮質(zhì)) in the atmosphere will cause the onset (開始) of an ice age in about fifty years' time. This conclusion, reached by Dr. S.I. Rasool and Dr. S.H. Schneider of the United States Goddard Space Flight Centre, answers the apparently conflicting questions of wh

52、ether an increase in the carbon dioxide (二氧化碳) content of the atmosphere will cause the Earth to warm up or increasing the aerosol content will cause it to cool down. The Americans have shown conclusively that the aerosol question is dominant.   Two specters haunting conservationists have been the

53、prospect that environmental pollution might lead to the planet's becoming unbearably hot or cold.One of these ghosts has now been laid.Because it seems that even an increase in the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere to eight times its present value will produce an increase in temperature of

54、only 2 ℃, which would take place over several thousand years. But the other problem now looms larger than ever.   Aerosols are collections of small liquid or solid particles dispersed in air or some other medium. The particles are all so tiny that each is composed of only a few hundred atoms. Becau

55、se of this they can float in the air for a very long time. Perhaps the most commonly experienced aerosol is industrial smog (煙霧) of the kind that plagued London in the 1950s and is an even greater problem in Los Angeles today. These collections of aerosols reflect the Sun's heat and thereby cause th

56、e Earth to cool.   Dr. Rasool and Dr. Schneider have calculated the exact effect of a dust aerosol layer just above the Earth's surface in the temperature of the planet. As the layer builds up, the present delicate balance between the amount of heat absorbed from the Sun and the amount radiated fro

57、m the Earth is disturbed.The aerosol layer not only reflects much of the Sun's light but also transmits the infrared (紅外線的 ) radiation from below. So, while the heat input to the surface drops, the loss of heat remains high until the planet cools to a new balanced state.   Within fifty years, if no

58、 steps are taken to stop the spread of aerosols in the atmosphere, a cooling of the Earth by as much as 3.5~C seems inevitable.If that lasts for only a few years it would start another ice age, and because the growing ice caps at each pole would themselves reflect much of the Sun's radiation it woul

59、d probably continue to develop even if the aerosol layer were destroyed.   The only bright spot in this gloomy forecast lies in the hope expressed by Dr. Rasool and Dr. Schneider that nuclear power may replace fossil fuels in time to prevent the aerosol content of the atmosphere from becoming criti

60、cal.   The author's main purpose in writing the article is to warn of________.   A.warm weather   B.hot weather   C.a new ice age   D.a new iceberg   42、 The word "specters" in the second paragraph is closest in meaning to________.   A.pollution.   B.carbon dioxide   C.aerosols   D.ghosts

61、   43、 We learn from the third paragraph that________.   A.London was plagued with rats in the 1950s   B.London is covered with smog today   C.London was polluted by smog in the 1950s   D.Los Angeles is as heavily polluted today as London was in the 1950s   44、 What will happen if the dust aero

62、sol layer develops?   A.The Earth will get extremely hot.   B.The balance between the amount of heat absorbed from the Sun and the amount lost could hardly be maintained.   C.The light of the Sun could no longer reach the surface of the Earth.   D.Infrared radiation could no longer be transmitte

63、d from the Earth to outer space.   45、 The only way to stop the spread of aerosols in the atmosphere, according to   Dr. Rasool and Dr. Schneider, is to use________.   A.fossil fuels   B.electric power   C.nuclear energy   D.coal power   B) King's home was a place where people tested bombs.

64、  C) King's home was a place where weapons were stored.   D) King's home was a place where bombs exploded.  第五部分-補全短文   The Dollar in World Markets   According to a leading German banker, the U.S. dollar is "the most frequently discussed economic phenomenon of our times." He adds, "…the dollars

65、exchange rate is at present the most important price in the world economy…". Because the dollar acts as a world currency, ___(1)___. The central banks of many countries hold huge reserves of dollars, and over half of all world trade is priced in terms of dollars. Any shift in the dollars exchange ra

66、te will benefit some and hurt others. Some people suggest, therefore, ____(2)___.   The dollars exchange rate has been too volatile and unpredictable. Several years age the dollar was rapidly declining in value. This made it ___(3)___. The rise in the price of foreign goods made it possible for U.S. businesses to raise the price of competing foods produced here, thus worsening inflation. Foreigners who dealt in dollars or who held dollars as reserves were hurt. People in the United States who h

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