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| 发布时间:2006-7-30 15:04:30 | 信息来源:本站原创 | 浏览: | |
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More than half of a person’s body is composed of muscle fibers, most of which are involuntary—in other words, work without conscious direction. The voluntary muscles, those that we move consciously to perform particular actions, number more than five hundred. Women have only 60 to 70 percent as much muscle as men for their body mass. That is why an average woman can’t lift as much, throw as far, or hit as hard as an average man. 66. According to the selection, the muscular sense is responsible for ______. A. the efficiency of our muscles B. the normal breathing function C. directing our muscles intelligently D. the work of only our involuntary muscles 67. Intelligent use of the muscles means that ________. A. one always knows what his muscles are doing B. one performs simple actions whithout working C. one’s muscles are used only to the extent necessary for each action they perform D. one improves muscular action consciously 68. Muscles are unique fibers because, they can ________. A. contract B. stretch C. retract D. do all of the above 69. Under a microscope, muscle cells appear to be _______. A. textured like wood B. colored like wood C. smooth and red D. short and thick 70. According to the selection more than half of a person’s body is composed of ______. A. voluntary muscles B. involuntary muscles C. muscle fibers D. sensory nerves
Passage Three The large part which war played in English affairs in the Middle-Ages, the fact that the control of the army and navy was in the hands of those that spoke French, and the circumstances that much of English fighting was done in France all resulted in the introduction into English of a number of French military terms. The art of war has undergone such changes since the battles of Hastings, Lewes, and Agincourt that many words once common are now only in historical use. Their places have been taken by later borrowings, often like wise from French, many of them being words acquired by the French in the course of their wars in Italy during the sixteenth century. Yet we still use French words of the Middle Ages when we speak of the army and the navy, of peace, enemy, battle, soldier, guard and spy, and we have kept the names of officers such as captain and sergeant. Some of the French terms were introduced into English because they were needed to express a new object or a new idea. In other cases a French and a native English word for the same thing existed side by side. Sometimes one or the other has since been lost from the language; but sometimes both the borrowed and the native word have been still in common use. 71. The main idea of this passage is that ______. A. most of today’s common English military terms dated from the sixteenth century or later B. a study of the English vocabulary shows the important part which war has played in the history of England C. many French words borrowed into English during the Middle Ages have since disappeared from the language D. many military terms used in English were originally borrowed from French, some as early as the Middle Ages本新闻共 6页,当前在第 4页 1 2 3 4 5 6 |
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