Yu Bingbing is a 28­year­old market research manager. When she is ____ her way to work each morning, she cannot help feeling ____ about whether she has locked the door of her apartment and ____ off the gas.
¡°I'm usually ____ with these feelings for the entire day£¬¡± Yu said. Working at an international pharmaceutical(ÖÆÒ©µÄ) firm, Yu looks older than she is and her heavily made­up face always has a(n) ____ look. ¡°Since I have been ____ to a managerial position, I lose my temper with my parents and husband more frequently just because of some ____ things£¬¡± she said, adding that ____ wrinkles and acne(·Û´Ì) on her face have irritated her even more, and even luxury cosmetics cannot ____ her.
¡°I have to work six days a week and don't even have extra off­time when I'm sick£¬¡± she said. ¡°I have to ____ myself to become a workaholic since the competition in my company is really ____ and I also have to pay a 5,000 yuan monthly mortgage, besides saving a certain amount of money for my ____ baby.¡±
Life is like riding on a ____ for Yu and many other members of China's post­80s generation, the first generation ____ after the ____ of the family­planning policy and the group to benefit ____ from the country's opening up policy and its booming economy.
Being the only child in their family, and without much to trouble them during their youth, most of them were taken good care of or even ____ by their parents and grandparents.
Having such a ____ carefree youth¡ªwhen this generation reached ____ and had to ____ with soaring(ÃÍÔöµÄ) prices, the high cost of raising children and intense competition in the workplace¡ªthey suffered a rude awakening.
According to statistics, the population of China's post­80s generation is over 200 million. The media usually refers to them as ¡°slaves¡± to property, credit cards, children and marriage.

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When our restaurant business failed£¬we headed north in a camping truck to Texas£¬hoping to have a ¡°fresh start¡±.
At the     of Palo Duro Canyon (Ï¿¹È£©State Park£¬I     a job advertisement hiring park hosts. The position offered a     £¬permanent campsite in the park, and     , the hosts served as a link between the park¡¯s guests and the rangers (»¤ÁÖÈË). It was the perfect solution: a rent-free place to reorganize our lives. We entered the park and I made an     for the following day.
The park was     , so it took us some time to find an available site. That evening, as we finished our dinner, my wife saw two large skunks (³ôÊóÓÉ£©walking toward our table. We     climbed onto the table and, for the next four hours, waited for them to     our camp.
Having survived that night, we were     that everything else would be all right. The next day we met with the people who ran the park. They explained our     and gave us a beautiful campsite.
That evening,     , we learned about the canyon    . They were strong and cold, rocking our little camping truck violently£¬and we lay     in the dark until the winds died away.
   the weeks that followed, we learned to survive in our truck and     the little money my wife     by substitute teaching. Building a successful business and then losing it had left very little time for building a successful     For a time after our business    I thought I might lose my family as well.
Living in the tiny     with no television, we sat close together reading and talking. One evening, standing under a jeweled sky£¬I found myself     for all the hardships. We had walked the trails and climbed the canyon walls. We had become a family!

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The purpose of a letter of application is to help you to ¡°sell¡± yourself. It should state   __ __ the job you want, and should tell what your abilities are and what you have      . It should be simple, human, personal and brief without      out any necessary facts.
In writing a letter of application, keep in        that things a possible employer is most       to want to know about are your qualification, your achievements and your aims. The opening paragraph is perhaps the most important part.       the first few sentences fail to       the readers¡¯ attention, the rest of the letter may not be        at all. Try to key your opening remarks to the needs or interests of the employer, not       your own needs or desires. For example, instead of beginning with ¡°I saw your     in today¡¯s newspaper¡±. You might say , ¡°I have made a careful       of your advertising during the past six months¡± or ¡° I have made a survey in my neighborhood to find out how many housewives       your product and why they like it¡±.
Try to       generalities (Áýͳ) . Be clear about the kind of job for which you are now   ___    . College graduates looking for their first positions often ask ¡°What can I      ?¡± in a letter. Employers want experience---which, naturally, no      has. The answer is that everything you have ever done is      .
It is important to write a good strong closing remark for your letter.       a specific request for an interview or give the possible employer something definite to do or expect. An excellent    _ is to enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope with your letter. That makes it       for a possible employer to get in touch with you.

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Coin confusion
Rachel looked through troubled eyes at her sister and said, "I wouldn't have thought Eric would be a thief." Her sister Sarah replied, "Whoa, that's a      accusation to make against your best friend!"
Rachel remembered two days ago when she had brought out her coin collection for Eric to     . At the end of that day, Rachel's mother asked her to do her a favor, so she asked her friend," Is it okay if I leave you for a few minutes?" Eric said, "Go ahead. I¡¯ll clean up here,"      at the piles of coins on the floor.
When Rachel returned, it never occurred to her to     her coins until two days later that she realized some quarters were      .
Sarah said, "Why don't you just ask him?"
"Ask him what? Hey, best friend, did you       my coin collection?" Rachel thought for a moment,        if that would be a good idea. The theft of her collection left her with a feeling of        "How could I have misjudged my friend's       ?"
The next day Rachel went to Eric's house. Eric was acting funny sort of nervous, like he couldn't be       . In fact, Rachel thought Eric acted like someone with a secret. Anger blossomed as Rachel watched Eric pretend to be kind,      Eric had obviously stolen from her. Rachel finally could not stand it anymore and stood up. Suddenly, Eric     ,"I can't stand it anymore!" Rachel was astonished at hearing her own      burst forth from her friend! Instead of sounding     , Eric sounded excited. He pulled something from underneath the chair.
"Go to open it! I was going to wait until your birthday, but I can't wait." Slowly, Rachel lifted the top of the     . Laid out in front of her were all of the quarters from her coin collection. Each quarter was in its own      in a new collection case. Each quarter shone like it was new.
Rachel felt      rush over her neck and ears. She said     , "Thank you! This means... a great deal to me." She was grateful that Eric had cut her      before she said something she would     . Eric was exactly the type of person she wanted as a friend!

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"Efficiency is the by-product of comfort," says Dr. Erwin Tichauer of New York University. To prove this____, Dr. Tichauer uses his capability to find_____ways to do things. _____, he felt that the traditional kind of pliers(ǯ×Ó£©______a better design. The usual____limited hand movement and used unnecessary force because it bent the_____. So he designed a pair of pliers to allow the wrist to remain in a comfortable position.
To improve the design of______and then make work easier, Dr. Tichauer____the old tools. He asks such questions as: why ____a stepladder have four legs____three are more stable? Why dose a screwdriver (ÂÝË¿µ¶) have to be made with straight handles? After testing his____, he has invented a new tool that causes less muscle injury and is more efficient. 
Tichauer is not interested in getting ____ from his inventions. In fact, he says, "We _____ people to steal from us. At New York University, we do not patent(×¢²áרÀû£©knowledge or invention."__ __companies have adopted some of his inventions.
As a biochemist, as well as inventor, Dr Techauer____the effect of stress on areas of the body. Even easy______work may put heavy stress on small areas of body and____causes a serious disease. Thus his studies of workers in factories who use the____tool all day long are extremely____in learning about the damage on human body? Dr. Techauer knows that he can not redesign the ____ so he redesigns the tool!

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In a spelling contest (¾ºÈü), an 11-year-old girl was asked to spell a certain word. But with her     voice the judges were not sure if she spelled the word with the letter A or E. They talked it over and finally decided to     ask her what she had said. By then, the girl knew she had     the word, but instead of lying, she told the truth that she had said the     letter¡ªso she lost the contest.
As the girl walked off the   , the entire audience stood to their feet, clapping to praise her    . Later, dozens of newspaper reporters wrote about this girl¡¯s honesty.     she lost the contest, she     the biggest contest that day: the contest of her     .
Probably the biggest test of our character is what we should do if we knew we would never get   . This young girl could easily have    and nobody would have known it   herself. However, that¡¯s just it: she would know she did wrong. It¡¯s been said, ¡°If you cheat, you make yourself   .¡± This young girl was strong and smart enough to value her own character more than the    from a spelling contest. Her    for herself was more important than any respect others might give her for winning a contest. She knew she would have to    with herself and the    she made at that moment would have a long-lasting influence.
It¡¯s so true that the choices you make today make     you are tomorrow. Our children will follow our behavior. So if we want them to     to be honest, we must be honest ourselves. Remember, our kids are     what we do even when we don¡¯t know.

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I would like to suggest that for sixty to ninety minutes each evening all television broadcasting in the United States be forbidden by law. Let us take a      , reasonable look at what the results might be if such a£¨an£©     were accepted.
Families might use the time for a real family hour. Without the distraction£¨·ÖÉ¢×¢ÒâÁ¦£© of TV, they might    together after dinner and actually talk to one another. It is well known that many of our   ----everything in fact, from the generation gap to the high divorce rate to some forms of    illness ----are caused at least in part by    to communicate. By using the quiet family hour to     our problems, we might get to know each other better, and to like each other better. On evenings when such talk is     , families could discover more active pastimes(ÓéÀÖ). Freed from TV and forced to find their own activities, they might take a     together to watch the sunset    they might take a walk together.
     free time and no TV, children and adults might discover reading. There is more entertainment in       than in a TV program.       report that the generation growing up with television can hardly write an English sentence,       at the college level.    is often learned from reading. A more literate new generation could be a product of the quiet hour. A different form of reading might also be done     it was in the past: reading aloud. The quiet hour could become the story hour. When the    ends, the TV networks might be forced to    with better shows in order to get us back from our newly- discovered activities.
At first glance, this idea seems radical(¼¤½øµÄ).    will we spend the time then? The fact is: it has been only twenty-five years since television came to control American free time. Those of us thirty-five and older can    childhoods without television. It wasn't that difficult.

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As a teenager, I felt I was always letting people down. I was rebellious(ÅÑÄæ)on the outside,      on the inside I wanted people to     .
Once I left home to hitchhike(´î±ã³µ)to California with my friend Penelope. The trip wasn¡¯t     , and there were many times I didn¡¯t feel safe. One situation in particular       me grateful to still be alive. When I returned home, I was different¡ªnot so outwardly sure of myself.
I was happy to be home. But then I noticed that Penelope, who was       with us, was wearing my clothes. And my       seemed to like her better than me. I wondered if I would be       if I weren¡¯t there. I told my mom, and she explained that       Penelope was a lovely girl, no one could       me. I pointed out, ¡°She is more patient and is neater than I have ever been.¡± My mom said these were wonderful      , but I was the only person who could fill my      . She made me realize that even with my      , ¡ªand they were many¡ªI was a loved member of the family who couldn¡¯t be replaced.
I became a searcher,       who I was and what made me unique. My       of myself was changing. I wanted a solid base to start from. I started to resist pressure to       in ways that I didn¡¯t like any more, and I       who I really was. I came to feel much more       that no one can ever take my place.
Each of us       a unique place in the world. You are special, no matter what others say or what you may think. So       about being replaced. You       be.

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The summer before I went off to college, Mom stood me in her usual spot behind the ironing board (ÌÌÒ°å)and said, ¡°Pay attention: I¡¯m going to teach you to iron.¡±
Mom clearly explained her      for this lesson. I was going to be     and needed to learn this vital skill. Also, I would be meeting new people, and properly ironed clothes would help me make a good    .
¡°Learn to iron a shirt,¡± Mom said, ¡°and you can iron anything.¡±
But ironing shirts was not      work. It didn¡¯t make use of long muscles we used to throw a baseball£¬and it wasn¡¯t a     operation like ice-skating. Ironing was like driving a car on a street that has a stop sign every 10 feet, Moreover, an iron produced steam and it carried an element of     .If you touched the wrong part of it, you¡¯d get burnt. If you forgot to turn it off when you      ,you might bum down the house.
As for technique, Mom     me to begin with the flat spaces outward, always pushing the iron forward into wrinkled (ÓÐñÞÖåµÄ£©parts. Collars had to be done right. Mom said they were close to your face, where everyone would     them.
Over the years, I¡¯ve learned to iron shirts skillfully, which gives me a sense of     Whatever failures I suffer in my life, an ironed shirt tells me I am good at something.       ,through ironing I¡¯ve learned the method for solving even the most troublesome problems. ¡°     wrinkles one at a time,¡± as Mom might have said, ¡°and before long everything will get ironed out.¡±

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