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While talking,Englishmen will      a certain distance away.

A.go         B.move      C.take      D.keep

 

D

keep此处意为“保持(距离)”。?

 

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【小题1】We usually have a class meeting on __________ (星期一)afternoon.
【小题2】It’s bad manners to __________ (打断……讲话)others when they are talking. 
【小题3】We know that __________ (克隆)brings us benefits as well as problems.
【小题4】They are interested in talking about what they will do when they __________ (退休).
【小题5】He found the road has blue and white signs with __________ (海鸥) on them to show the way to go.

阅读方式
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传统阅读
优点
信息量大,更新快,廉价
精确,可靠性强
缺点
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更新慢、成本高
你的观点
……
【小题6】So we think that it is __________ (合情合理的)to assume they live in these caves, regardless of the cold.
【小题7】We must give every __________ (文件) a different name while typing on computers.
【小题8】I tried to phone Jackson this morning but I couldn’t get through. Later I found I __________ (拨) the wrong number.
【小题9】__________ (通常;普遍地,一般地)speaking, when British meet, their talk will begin with weather. 
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After getting a good grade on her history essay, Ellen talks to Shirley after class one day.

Ellen: Shirley, can I talk to you for a minute?

Shirley: 1.? I have to rush to my next class.

Ellen: ? 2. It’s about my history essay.

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Whether you’re eating at a fancy restaurant or dining in someone’s home. Proper table manners are likely to help you make a good impression. According to a US expert, Emily Post, “All rules of table manners are made to avoid ugliness.”
While Henry Hitchings of the Los Angeles Times admits that good manners can reduce social conflict, he points out that mostly their purpose is protective - they turn our natural warrior-like selves into more elegant ones.
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In medieval England, a writer named Petrus Alfonsi took the lead to urge people not to speak with their mouths full. And King David I of Scotland also proposed that any of his people who learned to eat more neatly be given a tax deduction (减除).
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Pacing and Pausing

Sara tried to befriend her old friend Steve's new wife, but Betty never seemed to have anything to say. While Sara felt Betty didn't hold up her end of the conversation, Betty complained to Steve that Sara never gave her a chance to talk. The problem had to do with expectations about pacing and pausing.

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It may not be coincidental that Betty, who expected relatively longer pauses between turns, is British, and Sara, who expected relatively shorter pauses, is American. Betty often felt interrupted by Sara. But Betty herself became an interrupter and found herself doing most of the talking when she met a visitor from Finland. And Sara had a hard time cutting in on some speakers from Latin America or Israel.

The general phenomenon, then, is that the small conversation techniques, like pacing and pausing, lead people to draw conclusions not about conversational style but about personality and abilities. These habitual differences are often the basis for dangerous stereotyping (思维定式). And these social phenomena can have very personal consequences. For example, a woman from the southwestern part of the US went to live in an eastern city to take up a job in personnel. When the Personnel Department got together for meetings, she kept searching for the right time to break in --- and never found it. Although back home she was considered outgoing and confident, in Washington she was viewed as shy and retiring. When she was evaluated at the end of the year, she was told to take a training course because of her inability to speak up.

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