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丽丽,银行在学校的东边,如果有同学要去,你带他们去。还有,注意,下午5点银行下班。 根据这段话,可以知道:

A. 丽丽是老师
B. 丽丽表示同意
C. 应该在下午5点之前去银行

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When Louise Brown was born on 25 July 1978, she kicked off an era. The first "test tube baby" is a mother herself now, and she’s been joined by millions of others born with the (47) of in vitro fertilization (体外受精), or IVF. Now specialists wonder whether people who were conceived by IVF are likely to be (48) . "By and large, the kids are just fine. It’s not like the kids having (49) arms or heads," says Carmen Sapienza, a scientist at Temple University. But none is older than their early 30s, and the vast (50) are under the age of 20, so they haven’t had time for long-term health problems to show up. One source of worry is that so many IVF babies have low birth weight. Children-conceived through IVF are more likely to (51) less than 2.5 kilograms than are babies conceived (52) . That could spell trouble ahead, because low-birth-weight babies often have long-term health problems. They’re more likely to be obese, to have diabetes (糖尿病) or other problems. With that in mind, Sapienza and colleagues have looked at genes that are likely to play a role in such health problems. They found that certain DNA-patterns, which affect how genes are (53) , are different between IVF and non-IVF children. There’s no way to tell if that’s because of the (54) used to produce the IVF babies or whether the difference has something to do with the underlying infertility problem the parents had. It’s also (55) whether these gene-expression differences will translate into health differences. But it does suggest that children conceived by IVF are (56) on some level.A) weighB) technologyC) helpD) unsureE) unclearF) naturallyG) expressedH) procedureI) uniqueJ) healthy K) explained L) extra M) majority N) minority O) completely

Why do we laugh For years scientists have asked themselves this question. No other animals laugh and smile--only human beings, so does laughter help us to (36) in any way The answer seems to be that smiling and laughter help us to relax, reducing (37) and preventing illnesses which are caused by stress. Laughter really is the best (38) ! But if you’re unhappy, it can’t do you any good to smile, can it Not true. Apparently the (39) effects of smiling are just the same (40) you feel like smiling or not. Scientists in California asked a group of (41) to act five different feelings: happiness, sadness, (42) , surprise and fear--just using their faces. Changes in their heart rate, blood pressure and temperature were (43) down. Most of the feelings they acted didn’t cause changes, but when they smiled their heart rate and their blood pressure went down. (44) . A sense of humor also helps to keep things in perspective. (45) .So if you find yourself in a stressful situation, try to let yourself [giggle](咯咯地笑). A psychologist writes: " (46) .If you start to laugh, in time you will actually become happier.\

他迷路了。

A. 对
B. 错

We may all like to consider ourselves free spirits. But a study of the traces left by 50,000 cellphone users over three months has conclusively proved that the truth is otherwise. "We are all in one way or another boring," says Alhert-László Barabási at the Center for Complex Network Research at Northeastern University in Boston, who co-wrote the study. "Spontaneous individuals are largely absent from the population." Barabási and colleagues used three months’ worth of data from a cellphone network to track the cellphone towers each person’s phone connected to each hour of the day, revealing their approximate location. They conclude that regardless of whether a person typically remains close to home or roams far and wide, their movements are theoretically predictable as much as 93 per cent of the time. Surprisingly, the cellphone data showed that individuals’movements were more or less as predictable at week ends as on weekdays, suggesting that routine is rooted in human nature rather than being an effect of work patterns. The cellphone records were processed to identify the most visited locations for each user. Then the probability of finding a given user at his or her most visited locations at each hour through the day was calculated. People were to be found in their most visited location for any given hour 70 per cent of the time. Not surprisingly, the figure increased at night, and decreased at lunchtime and in the early evening, when most people were returning home from work. The team analysed the randomness(随意的) of people’s traces to show it was theoretically possible to predict the average person’s whereabouts as much as 93 per cent of the time. "Say your routine movement is from home to the coffee shop to work: if you are at home and then go to the coffee shop it’s easy for me to predict that you are going to work," says co-author Nicholas Blumm. This predictability was not much affected by differences in age, gender, language spoken or whether a person lived in a rural or urban setting. What is the passage mainly about

A. The new application of cellphones.
B. The predictability of one’s routine.
C. The influence of cellphones on one’s routine.
D. The factors that help determine one’s routine.

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