题干

“十月怀胎,一朝分娩”.母亲在怀孕期间,身体负担明显加重.在从受精卵到胎儿呱呱坠地前的整个过程中,其生长发育所需各种营养物质获取于:(    )
①卵黄 ②胎盘 ③脐带 ④母体

A:①③

B:②④

C:①④

D:②③

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答案(点此获取答案解析)

C

同类题1

阅读下面名著选段,完成下列小题。

       祥子的手哆嗦得更厉害了,揣起保单,拉起车,几乎要哭出来。拉到个僻静地方,细细端详自己的车,在漆板上试着照照自己的脸!越看越可爱,就是那不尽合自己的理想的地方也都可以原谅了,因为已经是自己的车了。把车看得似乎暂时可以休息会儿了,他坐在了水簸箕的脚垫儿上,看着车把上的发亮的黄铜喇叭。他忽然想起来,今年是二十二岁。因为父母死得早,他忘了生日是在哪一天。自从到城里来,他没过一次生日。好吧,今天买上了新车,就算是生日吧,人的也是车的,好记,而且车既是自己的心血,简直没什么不可以把人与车算在一块的地方。

      怎样过这个“双寿”呢?祥子有主意:头一个买卖必须拉个穿得体面的人,绝对不能是个女的。最好是拉到前门,其次是东安市场。拉到了,他应当在最好的饭摊上吃顿饭,如热烧饼夹爆羊肉之类的东西。吃完,有好买卖呢就再拉一两个;没有呢,就收车;这是生日!

      自从有了这辆车,他的生活过得越来越起劲了。拉包月也好,拉散座也好,他天天用不着为“车份儿”着急,拉多少钱全是自己的。心里舒服,对人就更和气,买卖也就更顺心。拉了半年,他的希望更大了:照这样下去,干上二年,至多二年,他就又可以买辆车,一辆,两辆……他也可以开车厂子了!

       可是,希望多半落空,祥子的也非例外。

同类题3

阅读下面材料, 从每题所给的A, B, C, D四个选项中选出最佳选项。

C

    Life is full of surprises and you never know how things will turn out. Sir John Gurdon. Is a good example of this. As a boy, he was told he was hopeless at science and finished bottom of his class. Now, aged 79, the very same Gurdon shared the 2012 Nobel Prize in Medicine with Japanese stem cell (干细胞) researcher Shinya Yamanaka.

    Like so many scientists, Gurdon shows us where the power of curiosity and perseverance (坚持) can lead.

    At the age of 15 in 1948, Gurdon ranked last out of the 250 boys at his high school in biology and every other science subject. Gurdon's high school science teacher even said that his dream of becoming a scientist was quite "ridiculous".

    In spite of his teacher's criticisms, Gurdon followed his curiosity and kept working hard. He went to the laboratory earlier and left later than anyone else. He experienced thousands of failures.

    "I believe that we will, in the end, understand everything about how cells actually work." Gurdon said.

    In 1962, Gurdon took a sell from an adult frog and moved its genetic (基因的) information i nto an egg cell. The egg cell then grown into a clone of the adult frog. This technique later helped to create Dolly the sheep in 1996, the first cloned mammal in the world.

    In 2006, Gurdon's work was developed by Yamanaka to show that a sample (样本) of a person's skin can be used to create stem cells. Using the technique, doctors can repair a patient's heart after a heart attack.

    "Luck prefers the prepared mind." Gurdon told the Nobel Prize organization. "Ninety percent of the time things don't work, but when they do, you have to catch the chance."