填空题 "The more gadgets there are, the (31) things seem to get. " said Honore Ervin, co-author of The Etiquette Girls: Things You Need to Be Told. "Just because it's there (32) your disposal, doesn't mean you have to use it 24/7. "
A recent (33) by market research company Synovate showed that 70 percent of 1,000 respondents (34) the poorest etiquette in cell phone users over other devices. The worst habit? Loud phone conversations in public places, or "cell yell, " (35) to 72 percent of the Americans polled.
"People use (36) anywhere and everywhere, " Ervin said. "At the movies—turn (37) your cell phone. I don't want to pay $10 to be sitting next to some guy chitchatting to his girlfriend (38) his cell phone. " This rudeness has deteriorated public spaces, according to Lew Friedland, a communication professor (39) the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He (40) the lack of manners a kind of unconscious rudeness, (41) many people are not (42) of what they're doing or the others around them.
"I think it's really noticeable in any plane, train or bus (43) you're subjected against your will (44) someone else's conversation, " he said. "You can listen to intimate details of their uncle's illness, problems with their lovers and (45) they're having for sinner. " "It (46) what was a public common space and starts to (47) it up into small private space. "
A short time ago, if cell phone users (48) politely asked to talk quietly, they would (49) with chagrin, he said. "Now more and more people are essentially treating you like you don't understand that loud cell phone use is (50) in public. /