Passage One Questions 26 to 28 are based on the passage you have just heard.
A. To get information.
B. To know the related areas.
C. To know the latest news.
D. To make friends.
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We should do all we can to protect wetlands to ensure that their functions and values will be preserved for______.
Too much love that parents give their children may make them______.
A. harmed
B. damaged
C. destroyed
D. spoiled
Generations of Americans have been brought 【26】 to believe that a good breakfast is important for health. Eating breakfast at the 【27】 of the day, we have ail been 【28】 ,is as necessary as putting gasoline in the family car 【29】 starting a trip. But for many people the thought of food first in the morning is by 【30】 pleasure. So 【31】 ail the efforts, they still take no 【32】 . Between 1978 and 1983, the latest year for which figures are 【33】 ,the number of people who didn’’t have breakfast increased 【34】 33 percent ― from 8.8 million to 11.7 million 【35】 the Chinese ― based Market Research Corporation of America. For those who feel pain of 【36】 about not having breakfast, 【37】 there is some good news. Several studies in the last few years 【38】 that, for adults especially, there may be nothing 【39】 with omitting breakfast. "Going 【40】 breakfast does not affect 【41】 "Said Arnold E. Bendoer, former professor of nutrition at Queen Elizabeth College in London, 【42】 does giving people breakfast improve performance. 【43】 evidence relating breakfast to better health or 【44】 performance is surprisingly inadequate, and most of the recent work involves children, not 【45】 "The literature," says one researcher, Dr. Emesto Pollitt at the University of Texas, "is poor."
I am not convinced that this argument is particularly good news for elders who may be 【1】 to enjoy the time of their lives. What maybe good news is perhaps best forgotten by those who are 【2】 on from day to day, and getting by as best they 【3】 . Causation is itself an 【4】 matter for the unscientific mind. Which would you rather feel: that your cancer has been genetically 【5】 , induced by stress or caused by viruses Brought about by your own folly in smoking cigarettes, as Kirkwood himself appears to take 【6】 granted—brought about casually and spontaneously through the operation of chance If it is put before them in this way, most people would rather not think about the matter at all. Kirkwood takes a different view, maintaining that the more we know about the 【7】 process, the more we can " 【8】 a greater degree of personal control". Common sense certainly tells us oldies to take it easy, to cut 【9】 a bit on food and alcohol and strenuous exercise, but we know this from the feel of our 【10】 rather than from what we read about the progress of science.
A. to
B. for
C. up
D. in