单选题
Western-style conversations often develop quite differently from Japanese-style conversations.
A Western-style conversation between two people is like a
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of tennis. If I introduce a topic, a conversational ball, I expect you do
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it back. If you agree with me, I don"t expect you simply to agree and to say:
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more. I expect you to add something to carry the idea further.
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I don"t expect you always to agree. I am just as
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if you completely disagree with me.
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you agree or disagree, your
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will return the ball to me. And then it is my turn
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I don"t serve a new ball from my
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starting line. I hit your ball back again to you by
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your idea further. And so the ball goes back and forth,
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each of us doing our best to give it a new twist.
A Japanese-style conversation,
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, is not at all like tennis or volleyball. It"s like bowling. You
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for your turn. And you always know your
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in line. It depends on such things as whether you are older or younger, a close friend or a relative stranger
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the previous speaker, in a senior or junior position, and so on. When your turn comes, you
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up to the starting line with your bowling ball, and
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howl it. Everyone else stands back and watches politely, whispering
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. Everyone waits until the ball has reached the end of the alley, and watches to see if it
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down all the pins, or only some of them, or none of them. There is a pause, while everyone registers your
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