更多"What is true about a human being in"的相关试题:
[单项选择]What is true about a human being in the future
[单项选择]In what sense is the average human being unable to "think"
[单项选择]Every human being, no matter what he is doing, ______ body heat.
A. keeps up
B. puts off
C. takes in
D. gives off
[单项选择]What may be human being's best choice about its future, according to the passage
[单项选择]What may be the reason for human being's leaving the stage
A. D.The command of DN
[单项选择]What is TRUE of human sleep
A. Most people need less sleep when grown older.
B. Most people need seven and a half hours of sleep every night.
C. On average, people in the US today sleep less per night than they used to.
D. Most people need more sleep when they are under pressure.
[单项选择]The longest time a human being can survive without sleep is probably ______.
A. five days
B. seven days
C. ten days
D. twelve days
[单项选择]Every human being who has ever lived had two parents. Therefore, more people were alive three thousand years ago than are alive now.
The reasoning in the argument is flawed because it
A. overlooks the number of people in each generation during the last three thousand years who left no descendants.
B. disregards possible effects of disasters such as famines and plagues on human history.
C. overestimates the mathematical effect of repeated doublings on population size.
D. fails to take into account that people now alive have overlapping sets of ancestors.
E. (E) fails to consider that accurate estimation of the number of people alive three thousand years ago might be impossible.
[单项选择]The writer thinks human being's leaving the stage can be any of the following but __________.
[单项选择]
Placing a human being behind the wheel of an automobile often has the same curios effect as cutting certain fibres in the brain.
The result in either case is more primitive behaviour. Hostile feelings are apt to be ex pressed in an aggressive way.
The same man who will step aside for a stranger at a doorway will, when behind the wheel, risk an accident trying to beat another motorist through an intersection. The importance of emotional factors in automobile accidents is gaining recognition. Doctors and other scientists have concluded that the highway death toll resembles a disease epidemic and should be investigated as such.
Dr Ross A. McFarland, associate professor of industrial Hygiene at the Harvard University School of Public Health, aid that accidents "now constitute a greater threat to the safety of large segments of the population than diseases do."
Accidents are the leading cause of death between the ages of 1 and 35. About one th
A. can be detected in advance
B. are in trouble with collection agencies
C. cannot be discovered on the basis of generally hostile attitudes
D. drive entirely differently from the way they usually live