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31.He ___ the check and deposited it in hisaccount. 2_Jb9:/X
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32.She claimed that she was deniedadmission to the school ___ her race eb7UoZw
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33.The present is ill.so the secretary willbe ___ for him as chairman at the meeting. W#C
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34The witness was.___ by the judge forfailing to answer the question SJF 2k[da
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35.Publicly,they are trying to ___ thislatest failure,but in private they are very worried. y(ldO;.
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36.It is sheer ___ to be home again and beable to relax. b`?M9f5
A.prestigen B.paradise C.pride D.privacy
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38.Someone who is in ___ confinement iskept alone in a room in prison. ~JT lPU'
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39.She is very ___ , and will be able to perpformall require tasks well. aeQ{_SK
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40.Various books and papers are ___ uptogethir on her desk. ],!pp3U
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48. I am just fed up with his excuse fornot getting his work done fed up with xU:
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49. Let’s get out the dictionary and settlethis dispute once and for all. X/K| WOO6
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Culture shock might be called an occupational disease of people who havebeen suddenly transplanted abroad.Like most ailments,it has its own symptomsand cure. W"#j7p`d
Culture shock is precipitated by the 51 that result from losing all our familiarsigns and symbols of social intercourse.Those signs or cues include the thousandsand one ways in thich we 52 ourselves to the situation of daily life; when toshake hands and what to say,when we meet people, when and how to give tips,howto make purchases,when to accept and when to 53 invitations,when to takestatements seriously and 54 .These cues,which may be words,gestures,facialexpressions,customs,or norms,are acquired by all of us in the course of growingup and are 55 apart of our cultrue as the language we speak or the beliefs we accept.All of usdepend 56 our peace of mind and our efficiency on hundreds of these cues,mostof which we do not carry,57 conscious awareness. k)o7COx
Nowwhen individual enters a strange culture,all or most of these familiar cues are58 .He or she is like a fish out water.No matter how broad-minded or full of goodwill you maybe, a series of props have been knocked 59 you,followed by feeling offrustrations and anxiety.People react to the frustration in much the sameway.First they reject the environment which causes the discomfort.“The ways ofthe host country are bad because they make us feel bad.”When foreigners in astrange hand get together to grouse about the 60country and itspeople.You can be sure they are suffering from culture shock. Wll
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High-speed Living has become a fact of life andthe frantic pace is taking its toll,according to science writer James Gleick.It’s as if the old“type A”behavior of a few has expanded into the “hurrysickness ”of the many. {&Gk.ODI7
“We dofeel that we’re more time-driven and time-obsessed and generally rushed thanever before”write Gleick in Faster:The Acceleration of Just About Everything,a surveyof fast -moving culture and its consfequences.We may also be acting morehastily,losing control, and thinking superficially because we lie faster. cfQh
Technologyhas conditioned us to expect instant results.Internet purchases arrive bynext-day delivery and the microvave delivers a hot meal inminutes.Faxes,e-mails,and cell phones make it plssible—and increasinglyobligatory—for people to work faster.Gleick cites numerous examples oflast-forward changes in our lives:Stock trading and news cycles are shorter;sound bites of presidential candidates on network newscasts dropped from 40secinds in 1868 to 10 seconds in 1998 ; and some fast-food restaurants haveadded express lanes J,&