Directions:
Try to guess the meaning of the highlighted words based on your knowledge of
English. In each set of words, underline the two words that have similar meanings
to the words in bold letters on the left. Use your dictionaries if necessary.
The first one has been done for you.
1.
furor |
a. uproar |
b. anger |
c. turmoil |
2.
challenge |
a. confront |
b. face |
c. argue |
3.
match |
a. fire |
b. equal |
c. counterpart |
4.
conceive |
a. create |
b. form |
c. imagine |
5.
relative |
a. next of kin |
b. family member |
c. daughter |
6.
infusion |
a. blend |
b. stirring |
c. mixture |
7.
harbinger |
a. omen |
b. demise |
c. indication |
8.
furious |
a. firey |
b. irate |
c. enraged |
9.
trait |
a. feature |
b. characteristic |
c. face |
10.
plight |
a. procedure |
b. dilemma |
c. predicament |
Directions:
The exercise below has 25 problems that will help you read faster. You will
have only 30 seconds to finish. You will probably not finish all 25 problems,
but you are to work as quickly as you can. Be careful not to make any error, so
read rapidly but carefully. In this exercise, there are six words: one word to
the left of the line and five to the right. Read the word on the left and then
find it among the five words to the right. Once you have found it, circle it.
Example
raft |
rift |
rate |
raft |
rote |
reef |
1.
case |
care |
came |
cage |
case |
cave |
2.
check |
cheek |
chalk |
check |
chain |
chair |
3.
worrying |
worming |
worrying |
wearing |
working |
warming |
4.
failing |
filling |
flailing |
fooling |
feeling |
failing |
5.
affect |
affect |
effect |
defect |
effort |
effective |
6.
nervous |
nerves |
never |
neither |
nervous |
nerve |
7.
percent |
person |
perceive |
percent |
parson |
percents |
8.
due |
die |
doe |
dues |
duty |
due |
9.
have |
heave |
haven |
hear |
hove |
have |
10.
both |
bath |
booth |
both |
bout |
bother |
11.
praise |
prize |
prayers |
pried |
praise |
praises |
12.
charge |
change |
cheer |
charge |
charges |
chain |
13.
raise |
raisin |
rise |
rose |
rains |
raise |
14.
choose |
choose |
chose |
chooses |
chosen |
chairs |
15.
where |
when |
wharf |
wheeze |
where |
here |
16.
policy |
police |
polemic |
policy |
pools |
poles |
17.
agreed |
agree |
greed |
agree |
agrees |
greedy |
18.
little |
liter |
litter |
ladle |
listen |
little |
19.
plight |
plait |
flight |
light |
plight |
plate |
20.
sought |
ought |
south |
sooth |
sought |
sight |
21.
easy |
essay |
ease |
easy |
easier |
eases |
22.
specialist |
specialize |
special |
spleen |
specialist |
specialists |
23.
noted |
nose |
noted |
knotted |
notes |
nosed |
24.
sick |
sack |
sic |
sock |
stick |
sick |
25. save |
slave |
shave |
safety |
saves |
save |
Directions: Starting with the first sentence of the passage,
read as quickly as you can for three and a half minutes. Circle the last word
you read when the time is up.
Directions: Starting with the first sentence of the
passage, read as quickly as you can for three and a half minutes. Circle the
last word you read when the time is up.
Directions: Starting with the first sentence of the passage, read as quickly as you can for three and a half minutes. Circle the last word you read when the time is up.
Directions: Starting with the first sentence of the
passage, read as quickly as you can for three and a half minutes. Circle the
last word you read when the time is up.
Line No |
Word Count |
||
5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60 65 70 |
Adam Nash is the first known case of a test-tube baby
born to be a transplant donor thanks to a genetic test originally invented to
check whether embryos carry an inherited disease. The American baby was born
in Denver on August 26, 2000, to save his ailing six-year-old sister, Molly,
who is suffering from an inherited, fatal blood disease, Fanconi anemia. The
case has caused a furor in the medical profession, challenging medical ethics
and sparking a debate as to whether the operation was acceptable, worrying
yet inevitable, or a chilling step towards the “designer” infant. The boy, who was born specifically so that his stem
cells could replace the failing bone marrow of his sister, was selected among
a batch of embryos, conceived in vitro, by his parents in the hope of
finding a tissue match for their daughter. His parents said that, in any
case, they wanted a second healthy child. They were previously reluctant
to conceive, fearing that the same blood disease would affect any new baby.
The selection, which took place at Chicago’s Reproductive Genetics Institute,
used pre-implantation genetics diagnosis (PGD) in choosing an embryo free of
the gene for Fanconi anemia. This technique is normally used to see if a
fetus is carrying a serious genetic disorder such as cystic fibrosis,
muscular dystrophy, hemophilia, or Huntington’s disease, a crippling disorder
of the nervous system. When Adam Nash’s tissue was found to be 100 percent compatible with that of his sister, he became the perfect donor. Molly’s
doctors say she now has a 90 percent chance of survival due to a transplant
of stem cells from Adam’s umbilical cord instead of the 30 percent she would
have had with a transplant from a non-relative. The girl, who received the
transplant in a Minneapolis hospital, is now recuperating from a painless
procedure which involved the collection of cells from her brother’s umbilical
cord and their infusion into her circulatory
system. Her doctors are very optimistic that within a week they will be able
to report a successful outcome. The procedure has been both a promising and worrisome
harbinger of where scientific advances are taking human reproduction in the
near future. In some medical circles, it has won praise. However, in some
others, it has unleashed furious accusations that Man is trying to play God –
a charge that has colored so many past rows about reproduction, from
contraception and abortion to in vitro fertilization itself. The case, therefore, has raised questions about
parents’ ability to choose the traits of their children for whatever
practical or capricious reason they may have. Paul Vey, a consultant in
stem-cell transplants at London’s Great Ormond Street Hospital, said that the
issue raised questions about where the cut-off line should be in genetic
screening. He also pointed out the fact that it was a start towards being
able to choose the right color of eyes and the right intelligence of one’s
children. Vivienne Nathanson, head of Ethics and Policy at the
British Medical Association, said regulations in Britain’s governing genetic
screening were tighter than in the United States. She
stated there was little doubt that British authorities would have agreed to
the use of the technique to determine which embryos carried disease gene and
would have avoided implanting those. She maintained that she was much less
certain that they would have sanctioned the selection of the one healthy embryo that would have been the
best tissue match. Nicole Alby, a leading French child psychologist,
argued that many would sympathize with the plight of the Nash family as they
saw their daughter’s health decline and desperately sought a solution. She
added that, in tragic cases of transplant or death, there was no easy
solution. “It’s a very complicated problem in which no one has the right to
make value judgments, a horrible situation for a family,” she contended. Thierry Leblanc, a specialist in childhood blood
disorders at Paris’ Saint Louis Hospital, said that the use of PGD to
identify the donor had “reached the ethical limits.” However, he noted that
there had been many cases in the past which were never reported by the media.
He claimed that many desperate couples had attempted to have another child in
the hope of providing a tissue match to save their children. Having no
recourse to PGD, they used amniocentesis after 14 to 16 weeks’ pregnancy to
see if the match was right. If it were wrong, the fetus was
often aborted. Doctors, he asserted, did not advise any of these actions as a
rule but could not prevent them altogether, thus, insinuating that desperate
couples would take desperate measures in order to save their children. In conclusion, some say that the Nash case marks a step
towards the nightmare of “designer” babies selected for looks or smartness.
Others defend it, saying a child’s life may be saved. Still, many others
throw up their hands and say the issue is worrying yet insoluble. Adapted from The
Arab Times, October 4 and 9, 2000 |
50 96 151 195 255 306 352 401 454 500 556 598 655 707 747 802 826 |
|
Directions: Circle
the letter next to the statement that best answers the following questions.
1.
An
appropriate title for the article would be _____.
a.
Choosing
the Traits of Your Child
b.
Scientific
Possibilities of “Designer” Babies
c.
Debate
over Gene Screening
d.
Choosing
Healthy Embryos
2.
The
thesis statement of the article begins in _____.
a.
line
3
b.
line
5
c.
line
1
d.
line
9
3.
The
issue discussed in the article is _____.
a.
whether
PGD should be used to find perfect donors
b.
whether
Fanconi anemia patients should be given transplants
c.
whether
“designer” babies should be chosen for their intelligence
d.
whether
test-tube babies should be allowed to exist
4.
PGD
is used _____.
a.
to
determine if embryos carry the genes of certain diseases
b.
for
implanting a fetus in the mother’s womb
c.
exclusively
in choosing an embryo free of the gene for hemophilia
d.
none
of the above
5.
A
description of how Molly’s transplant was carried out is found in paragraph
_____.
a.
1
b.
2
c.
3
d.
4
6.
Faconi
anemia is a disease affecting the _____.
a.
nervous
system
b.
muscles
c.
bone
marrow
d.
genes
7.
According
to Nathanson, British authorities _____.
a.
do
not permit the use of PGD
b.
permit
the use of PGD only for disease screening
c.
permit
the use of PGD only if couples wish it
d.
do
not permit the use of PGD unless the embryos are healthy
8.
“Designer”
infant means _____.
a.
A
baby whose embryo was chosen for being a non-relative
b.
a
baby whose embryo was chosen for its specific traits
c.
a
baby who is intelligent
d.
a
baby who is beautiful
9.
Nicole
Alby said that _____.
a.
she
could not understand the plight of the Nash family
b.
she
was looking for a solution to the problem
c.
people
do not have the right to condemn the decision of the family
d.
people
do have the right to choose certain traits for their baby
10.
The
difference between PGD and amniocentesis is _____.
a.
PGD
is used in the USA while amniocentesis is used in France
b.
PGD
is only used after four months of pregnancy
c.
after
PGD, the fetus is aborted if the match is wrong while, with amniocentesis, the
fetus is kept alive
d.
PGD
is a pre-implantation screening while amniocentesis is a post-implantation
screening
11.
The
author of the article _____.
a.
is
for the use of PGD
b.
is
against the use of PGD
c.
does
not express other people’s opinions
d.
does
not express his/her personal opinion
12.
Based
on information in the article, it logically can be inferred that _____.
a.
there
should be a law against PGD and amniocentesis
b.
laws
in the U.K. are the strictest in the world
c.
desperate
parents will do desperate things to save their children
d.
most
parents want to design their future children
13.
In
line 4, “ailing” means _____.
a.
sick
b.
young
c.
pretty
d.
unhappy
14.
In
line 13, “reluctant” means _____.
a.
able
b.
ready
c.
hesitant
d.
willing
15.
In
line 20, “compatible” means _____.
a.
matching
b.
unsuitable
c.
compact
d.
incorrect
16.
In
line 26, “their” means _____.
a.
umbilical
cords
b.
collections
c.
doctors
d.
cells
17.
In
line 44, “tighter” means _____.
a.
thinner
b.
more
expensive
c.
stricter
d.
looser
18.
In
line 47, “they” refers to _____.
a.
U.S.
authorities
b.
British
authorities
c.
genes
d.
embryos
19.
In
line 48, “sanctioned” means _____.
a.
banned
b.
allowed
c.
avoided
d.
determined
20.
In
line 63, “it” refers to _____.
a.
the
future
b.
the
praise
c.
the
procedure
d.
human
reproduction