【考研类试卷】考博英语-198及答案解析.doc
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1、考博英语-198 及答案解析(总分:100.00,做题时间:90 分钟)一、Reading Comprehensio(总题数:0,分数:0.00)二、Passage 1(总题数:1,分数:20.00)Cancer has always been with us, but not always in the same way. Its care and management have differed over time, of course, but so, too, have its identity, visibility, and meanings. Pick up the thread
2、 of history at its most distant end and you have cancer the crabso named either because of the ramifying venous processes spreading out from a tumor or because its pain is like the pinch of a crab“s claw. Premodern cancer is a lump, a swelling that sometimes breaks through the skin in ulcerations pr
3、oducing foul-smelling discharges. The ancient Egyptians knew about many tumors that had a bad outcome, and the Greeks made a distinction between benign tumors (oncos) and malignant ones (carcinos). In the second century A.D., Galen reckoned that the cause was systemic, an excess of melancholy or bla
4、ck bile, one of the body“s four “humors,“ brought on by bad diet and environmental circumstances. Ancient medical practitioners sometimes cut tumors out, but the prognosis was known to be grim. Describing tumors of the breast, an Egyptian papyrus from about 1600 B.C. concluded: “There is no treatmen
5、t.“ The experience of cancer has always been terrible, but, until modern times, its mark on the culture has been light. In the past, fear coagulated around other ways of dying: infectious and epidemic diseases (plague, smallpox, cholera, typhus, typhoid fever); “apoplexies“ (what we now call strokes
6、 and heart attacks); and, most notably in the nineteenth century, “consumption“ (tuberculosis). The agonizing manner of cancer death was dreaded, but that fear was not centrally situated in the public mindas it now is. This is one reason that the medical historian Roy Porter wrote that cancer is “th
7、e modern disease par excellence,“ and that Mukherjee calls it “the quintessential product of modernity.“ At one time, it was thought that cancer was a “disease of civilization,“ belonging to much the same causal domain as “neurasthenia“ and diabetes, the former a nervous weakness believed to be brou
8、ght about by the stress of modern life and the latter a condition produced by bad diet and indolence. In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, some physicians attributed cancernotably of the breast and the ovariesto psychological and behavioral causes. William Buchan“s wildly popular eighteenth-c
9、entury text “Domestic Medicine“ judged that cancers might be caused by “excessive fear, grief, religious melancholy.“ In the nineteenth century, reference was repeatedly made to a “cancer personality,“ and, in some versions, specifically to sexual repression. As Susan Sontag observed, cancer was con
10、sidered shameful, not to be mentioned, even obscene. Among the Romantics and the Victorians, suffering and dying from tuberculosis might be considered a badge of refinement; cancer death was nothing of the sort. “It seems unimaginable,“ Sontag wrote, “to aestheticism“ cancer.(分数:20.00)(1).According
11、to the passage, the ancient Egyptians _.(分数:4.00)A.called cancer the crabB.were able to distinguish benign tumors and malignant onesC.found out the cause of cancerD.knew about a lot of malignant tumors(2).Which of the following statements about the cancers of the past is best supported by the passag
12、e?(分数:4.00)A.Ancient people did not live long enough to become prone to cancerB.In the past, people did not fear cancerC.Cancer death might be considered a badge of refinementD.Some physicians believed that one“s own behavioral mode could lead to cancer(3).Which of the following is the reason for ca
13、ncer to be called “the modern disease“?(分数:4.00)A.Modern cancer care is very effectiveB.There is a lot more cancer nowC.People understand cancer in radically new ways nowD.There is a sharp increase in mortality in modern cancer world(4).“Neurasthenia“ and diabetes are mentioned because _.(分数:4.00)A.
14、they are as fatal as cancerB.they were considered to be “disease of civilization“C.people dread them very muchD.they are brought by the high pressure of modern life(5).As suggested by the passage, with which of the following statements would the author most likely agree?(分数:4.00)A.The care and manag
15、ement of cancer have development over timeB.The cultural significance of cancer shifts in different timesC.Cancer“s identity has never changedD.Cancer is the price paid for modern life三、Passage 2(总题数:1,分数:20.00)Visanto Melina, R.D., got the surprise of her career last year, when Seattle-based vegeta
16、rian nutritionist was asked to give a seminar on vegetarianism at a senior citizen center. “I thought there“d be four or five people.“ she says. Instead, the room was packed with seniors who had paid a $5 fee to hear her advice. And their interest in better health wasn“t only keen; it was informed.
17、“They“ve obviously been paying attention to new research,“ she says. If Melina studied demographic trends for a living, she probably wouldn“t have been so surprised. Trend watchers have verified an intriguing new phenomenon. Older people are turning to a vegetarian diet in ever-increasing numbers. N
18、ot surprisingly, demographics are driving the drift. By the year 2005, people born between 1949 and 1963 the Baby Boom Generation, will make up 38 percent of the American population. Furthermore, statistics suggest this educated, health-conscious, rebellious and relatively affluent contingent fits t
19、he traditional vegetarian profile. Add to the fact that older people seek natural, pleasant ways to combat problems associated with agingweight gain, higher cholesterol and blood pressure, increased cancer risk and impaired digestionand you have real motivation to go meatless, says Suzanne Havala, R
20、. D., author of the American Dietetic Association“s position paper on vegetarianism. Quantifying this new trend isn“t easy, but a 1994 study by Health Focus Inc., an independent research organization based in Des Moines, Iowa, found that shoppers over age 50 are cutting down on their consumption of
21、red meat or eliminating it from their diets entirely. More compelling evidence for the senior surge toward vegetarianism comes from vegetarian groups nationwide, which report a swell in the ranks of older vegetarians. For example, one out of five members of the new Syracuse (N.Y.) Area Vegetarian Ed
22、ucation Society is over 50; unusually high for a fledgling organization. And two-thirds of the 850-member Vegetarian Society of Honolulu are also members of the American Association of Retired Persons, society executives say. An informal poll of older people suggests better health is often the main
23、incentive and objective for turning veg. Three years ago Nancy Roberts, a 53-year-old Magazine editor, found herself doing what many people do over the holidays: overindulging in rich treats. However, this time it made her in. “The crash felt like the flu,“ she says. By chance, Roberts was asked to
24、edit some vegetarian recipes during that same period. She made a few at home, and her “flu“ disappeared. More dramatically, Ruth Heidrich believes vegetarianism saved her life. The 61-year-old marathoner and triathlete was diagnosed with breast cancer 14 years ago, at age 47. When an initial biopsy
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- 考研 试卷 英语 198 答案 解析 DOC
