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C£®the melted ice made him visible D£®he was just on a mountain pass

37£®What can be inferred from paragraph 2? A£®The iceman was killed while working£®

B£®The iceman could have died from the wound in the head£® C£®The iceman lived a poor life£®

D£®The iceman was struck dead from behind£®

38£®All the following are assumptions once made about iceman EXCEPT_____________£®

A£®he was a soldier in World War I B£®he came from Italy

C£®he was a Swiss woman's long-lost father D£®He was born about a thousand years ago

39£®The scientists made the deduction that the iceman_________£® A£®was hit in the shoulder by an arrowhead B£®was probably in some kind of a battle C£®had got a wound on the back of his head D£®has a tiny hole in his skin causing his death£®

40£®The word\£® A£®robbers B£®soldiers C hunters

D£®shooters µÚÈýƪ

Scientists Make Sweet Discovering

Good news for chocoholics£ºthe treat preferred by millions all over the world is good for you£¬ according to American researchers at the University of

California£®Chocolate contains substancescalled flavonoids that can help maintain a healthy heart and good circulation£®The researchers havediscovered that cocoa acts like aspirin and that eating a bar of chocolate has also been shown to release endorphins in the body£ºthese chemicals help to reduce pain and stress and make you feel happy.

The Olmec Indians of Mexico and Central America were the first to grow cocoa beans£¬in about1500 BC£¬and the Mayas were drinking unsweetened coca hundreds of years before it became fashionable in Europe£®

In 1544£¬a delegation of Mayan nobles visited Philip of Spain and gave him jars of cocoa as a gift£®Cocoa soon became fashionable in Spain and Portugal£®The Spanish were the first to add sugarto their cocoa drink£®

By the middle of the century£¬solid chocolate was becoming familiar£®In 1765£¬James Baker and John Hanan opened the first chocolate mill in the United States£¬introducing chocolate to the average citizen£®In 1896£¬in Switzerland£¬Daniel Peter had the idea of adding milk in the chocolate-making process and produced the first milk chocolate£®

Since then£¬chocolate has grown enormously in popularity£®One of the biggest chocolate-eatingnations is Britain where the average man£¬women£¬and child eats nine kilos of chocolate a year£®Infact£¬chocolate is the number one comfort food and there are more chocoholics in Britain than any where else in the world£®Researchers warn that although chocolate is good for you£¬it should be eatenin small quantities and with no added milk£®

41£®Why is chocolate good for heaa and circulation? A£®It reduces pain and stress£®

B£®It containS substances called flavonoids£® C£®It releases endorphins in human body£®

D£®It acts like aspirin to protect heart£®

42£®When cocoa was first introduced to Europe_________£¬it soon became fashionable£®

A£®as a drink B£®as a gift C£®as food D£®as a medicine

43£®What does James Bakers and John Hanan do about chocolate? A£®They produce the first mild chocolate£® B£®They introduce chocolate to Europe£® C£®They add sugar to make chocolate bars£® D.They make chocolate accessible to average man£®

44£®Which is the following statement is not true according to the passage? A£®Chocolate contains substances that make people feel happy£® B£®Chocolate is good for health if it is eaten with added milk£® C£®Eating chocolate occasionally contributes to a healthy diet£® D£®Chocolate is loved by millions of people worldwide£® 45£®What iS the author's tone about eating chocolates? A£®ambiguous B£®negative C£®positive D£®humorous

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I Just Know How You Feel

Do you feel sad?Happy?Frustrated?Insouciant?Exonerated?Infuriated?Do you think that the way you display these emotions is unique?Well£¬think again£®Even the expression of the most personal feelings CaB be divided into groups£¬classified£¬and perhaps£¬taught£®This week sees the publication of Mind Reading£¬an interactive DVD-rom displaying every possible human emotion£®It demonstrates 412 distinct ways in which we feel£ºthe first visual dictionary of the human heart£®

The attempt to classify the human heart began with Darwin£®His The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals£¬published in 1872£¬divided the emotions into six types-anger£¬fear£¬sadness£¬ disgust£¬surprise and enjoyment£®________(46)£®

Every other feeling£¬of which there may be thousands£¬was thought to derive from this six-strong group£®More complex expressions of emotion were likely to be learned and therefore more specific to each culture£®An incredulous or indignant Pacific islander might not be able to show an Essex girl exactly how she felt£®

But now it is believed that£¬whereas gestures do not cross cultural boundaries well£¬many more facial expressions than Darwin's half-dozen are shared

worldwide£®___________(47)£®The Mind Reading is a systematic record of each of these expressions being acted out£®

The project was conceived by Professor Simon Baron-Cohen of the autism research centre in Cambridge as an aid for people with autism£¬who have difficulty both reading and expressing emotion£®But it quickly became apparent that it had broader uses£®Novelists£¬actors and portrait painters all need to draw upon a wide range of emotional expression£¬and teachers could use it for classes in personal and social development£®

Baron-Cohen's team first had to decide what counted as an

emotion£®________(48)£®Using thisdefinition£¬1£¬512 emotion terms were identified and put to a panel who had to decide if each repre£® sented a separate emotion£¬or if they were synonyms£®That list was whittled down to 412£¬arranged in24 groups£®from\£®

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C£®the melted ice made him visible D£®he was just on a mountain pass 37£®What can be inferred from paragraph 2? A£®The iceman was killed while working£® B£®The iceman could have died from the wound in the head£® C£®The iceman lived a poor life£® D£®The iceman was struck dead from behind£® 38£®All the following are assumptions once made about iceman EXCEPT_

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