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长春医学高等专科学校
2011级护理(中外合作办学)专业《阅读》试卷(1-1
 
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II
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得分
I. Vocabulary and Structure  (15分,每题1)
Directions: There are 30 incomplete sentences in this part . For each sentence there are four choices
marked A) B) C ) and  D).Choose the one that best completes the sentence .
1. If you love plants , the chances are you buy them          and then wonder where to put them.
  A. purpose            B. impulse              C. display              D. cue
2. If you have to go through a smoke-filled area , you’d better          with your head low.
  A. crawl            B. retreat                C. proceed              D. drag
3. Mother            my brother to keep his voice down but he ignored her.
  A. remarked          B. motioned            C. shrugged              D. impressed
4. If doing one thing gives you an unpleasant feeling , the normal        would be to stop doing it .
  A. perspective        B. emotion              C. reaction              D. function
5. Among these articles, which do you think are most            to interest our students?
  A. unexpected        B. awkward            C. competent            D. likely
6. Long after even the latest apple tree had finally broken into leaf , the mulberry’s branches remained stubbornly            .
  A. empty          B. bare                C. stale                  D. dumb
7. These schools come under the supervision of locally            committees.
  A. appointed        B. rotated              C. consisted              D. composed
8. We should see ourselves as part of nature rather than in            with it.
  A. argument        B. connection          C. conflict              D. crash
9. These rows of small trees growing close together            living walls for shelter and privacy in the garden.
kidnapping an heiress
  A. obtain          B. breed              C. arrange            D. create
10. Don’t            to let me know if there’s anything I can do for you .
  A. hesitate          B. reject              C. puzzle            D. thrill
11. During the nine months before her baby is born, her face is one          smile.
  A. humble          B. exclusive            C. perpetual            D. modest
12. Traditional Chinese food is far            to McDonald’s KFC or any other fast foods I know.
  A. immune            B. superior              C. essential          D. similar
13. Under this law , consumers have the right to          faulty goods and demand a refund(退款).
  A. resent            B. reject              C. object            D. replace
14. I was shocked by the conditions in the factory , which        definite health and safety hazards .
  A. constituted      B. masked            C. enclosed          D. consolidated
15. His bedroom            a single bed with a small television at its foot.
  A. makes up        B. consists of            C. lays out              D. serves as
得分
II. Reading Comprehension (Skimming and Scanning) (10分,每题1)
Directions: In this part, you will go over the passage quickly and answer the questions. Ch
oose the
best answer from the four choices marked [A], [B], [C]and [D].
The Making of a Surgeon
  A famous surgeon tells about the importance of self-confidence from his own experience.
  How does a doctor recognize the point in time when he is finally a "surgeon"? As my year as chief resident drew to a close I asked myself this question on more than one occasion.
  The answer, I concluded, was self-confidence. When you can say to yourself, "There is no surgical patient I cannot treat competently, treat just as well as or better than any other surgeon" - then, and not until then, you are indeed a surgeon. I was nearing that point.
  Take, for example, the emergency situations that we encountered almost every night. The first few months of the year I had dreaded the ringing of the telephone. I knew it meant another critical decision to be made. Often, after I had told Walt or Larry what to do in a par
ticular situation, I'd have trouble getting back to sleep. I'd review all the facts of the case and, not infrequently, wonder if I hadn't made a poor decision. More than once at two or three in the morning, after lying awake for an hour, I'd get out of bed, dress and drive to the hospital to see the patient myself. It was the only way I could find the peace of mind I needed to relax.
  Now, in the last month of my residency, sleeping was no longer a problem. There were still situations in which I couldn't be certain my decision had been the right one, but I had learned to accept this as a constant problem for a surgeon, one that could never be completely resolved - and I could live with it. So, once I had made a considered decision, I no longer dwelt on it. Reviewing it wasn't going to help and I knew that with my knowledge and experience, any decision I'd made was bound to be a sound one. It was a nice feeling.