问题 完形填空

阅读下列短文,根据以下提示:1)汉语提示,2)首字母提示,3)语境提示,在每个空格内填入一个适当的英语单词,并将该词完整地写在右边相对应的横线上。所填单词要求意义准确,拼写正确。

Body language is used by people for sending messages to one another. In many

countries in the world, people k____ each other when they meet.    101.______

In Britain, people usually shake________ when they meet some one 102.______

for the first time. They are not comfortable touching______(陌生人) 103.______

French people kiss each other ______ and goodbye on the        104._______

______(脸颊)more often than the British people. People from     105._______

Arabian countries stand ______ than people from Britain         106._______

when they are talking. They might move very close to you

as you i_______ yourself to them. Body language              107._______

is very_______(广泛的) and not all members of a culture        108._______

b_______the same way. Using body language in a correct way    109._______

will help you to better c_________ with other people.           110._______

答案

101.kiss     102. hands    103. strangers.  104.hello         105. cheek106.closer

107. introduce 108. general  109.1 behave    110. communicate

选择题
阅读理解
阅读理解。
     Read the following text and choose the most suitable heading from A-F for eachparagraph. There
is one extra heading which you do not need.
A. What does the Olympic Motto mean?
B. Research on individual styles improves performance.
C. Research holds the key to success.  
D. Personalized programs will help.
E. New equipment has made a difference.  
F. Is there a limit to record-breaking?

1. ________________________
     A world record is every athlete's dream, but the hard-won records of a few years ago are
mostly just today's qualifying times. Roger Bannister's famous four-minute mile of 1956 has been
beaten by nearly 15 seconds, while almost an hour and twenty minutes has been taken off the
women's marathon since. 1953. 'Faster, higher, stronger', is the Olympic motto, and today's
competitors continue to push back the boundaries of what the body can achieve. But one wonders
if this can continue.
2. ________________________
     The last forty years have seen many important technological advances. For example, since the
introduction of strong flexible, fiberglass poles, over a meter has been added to the pole vault record.
There have also been important developments in the design of the running shoe. And while a shoe
won't actually make someone run faster, modern shoes do mean many more miles of comfortable,
injury-free training.
3. ________________________
     Pushing back the limits now depends more on science, technology and medicine than anything
else. Athletic technique, training programmes and diets are all being studied to find ways of taking
a few more seconds off or adding a few more centimetres to that elusive world record. It seems
that natural ability and hard work are no longer enough.
4. ________________________
     The research to find more efficient ways of moving goes on. Analysis of an athlete's style is
particularly useful for events like jumping and throwing. Studies show that long jumpers need to
concentrate not on the speed of approach, as once thought, but on the angle their bodies make
with the ground as they take off. However, the rules governing each sport limit advances achieved
by new styles. For instance only one-footed takeoffs are allowed in the high jump.
5. ________________________
     In the future, it should be possible to develop a more individual approach to training programmes.
Athletes will keep detailed diaries and collect data to help predict the point when training becomes
overtraining, the cause of many injuries. If athletes feed all their information into a database, it may
then be possible to predict patterns and to advise them individually when they should cut.