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单选题Latin America, with its many diverse musical cultures, is a case in point.
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单选题{{B}}Passage Three{{/B}} It's navel gazing time again, that stretch of the year when many of us turn our attention inward and think about how we can improve the way we live our lives. But as we embark on this annual ritual of introspection, we would do well to ask ourselves a simple question: Does it really do any good? The poet Theodore Roethke had some insight into the matter: "Self-contemplation is a curse that makes an old confusion worse." As a psychologist, I think Roethke had a point, one that's supported by a growing body of controlled psychological studies. In a study I conducted with Dolores Kraft, a clinical psychologist, and Dana Dunn, a social psychologist, people in one group were asked to list the reasons their relationship with a romantic partner was going the way it was, and then rate how satisfied they were with the relationship. People in another group were asked to rate their satisfaction without any analysis; they just gave their gut reactions. It might seem that the people who thought about the specifics would be best at figuring out how they really felt, and that their satisfaction ratings would thus do the best job of predicting the outcome of their relationships. In fact, we found the reverse. It was the people in the "gut feeling" group whose ratings predicted whether they were still dating their partner several months later. As for the navel gazers, their satisfaction ratings did not predict the outcome of their relationships at all. Rather, too much analysis can confuse people about how they really feel. Self-reflection is especially problematic when we are feeling down. Research by Susan Nolen-Hoeksema, a clinical psychologist at Yale University, shows that when people are depressed, ruminating on their problems makes things worse. For years it was believed that emergency workers like police officers and firefighters should undergo a debriefing process to focus on and relive their experiences; the idea was that this would make them feel better and prevent mental health problems down the road. But did it do any good? In an extensive review of the research, a team led by Richard McNally, a clinical psychologist at Harvard, concluded that debriefing procedures have little benefit and might even hurt by interrupting the normal healing process. People often distract themselves from thinking about painful events right after they occur, and this may be better than mentally reliving the events.
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单选题Ever since Geoffrey sent a sizeable cheque to a well-known charity he's been ______ with requests for money from all sides. A. devastated B. smashed C. bombarded D. cracked
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单选题That a different component part of the vaccine is necessary is principally due to the variable change of ______.
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单选题During our stay m Paris we were splendidly ______ by the Italian Ambassador.
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单选题There are strict laws about exporting______ animals.
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单选题Some linguists believe that the ______ age for children learning a foreign language is 5 to 8. A. optimistic B. optional C. optimal D. oppressed
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单选题Producing elastin through chemical synthesis is a tedious process consuming ______ three months. A. the better half of B. for the better of C. all the better for D. the better part of
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单选题Jack would rather his younger sister ______ in the same hospital as he does.
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单选题Travelling like this is really an adventure. Very often, you're doing something strange where you don't know what's going to ______ around the next bend. A. turn off B. turn on C. turn away D. turn up
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单选题A wise man once said that the only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing. So, as a police officer, I have some urgent things to say to good people. Day after day my men and I struggle to hold back a tidal wave of crime. Something has gone terribly wrong with our once-proud American way of life. It has happened in the area of values. A key ingredient is disappearing, and I think I know what it is: accountability. Accountability isn"t hard to define. It means that every person is responsible for his or her actions and liable for their consequences. Of the many values that hold civilization together-honesty, kindness, and so on—accountability may be the most important of all. Without it, there can be no respect, no trust, no law—and ultimately, no society. My job as a police officer is to impose accountability on people who refuse, or have never learned, to impose it on themselves. But as every policeman knows, external controls on people"s behaviour are far less effective than internal restraints such as guilt, shame and embarrassment. Fortunately there still communities—smaller towns, usually—where schools maintaining discipline and where parents hold up standards that proclaim: "In this family certain things are not tolerated—they simply are not done!" Yet more and more, especially in our larger cities and suburbs, these inner restrains are loosening. Your typical robber has none. He considers your property his property; he takes what he wants, including your life if you enrage him. The main cause of this breakdown is a radical shift in attitudes. Thirty years ago, if a crime was committed, society was considered the victim. Now, in a shocking reversal, it"s the criminal who is considered victimized: by his underprivileged upbringing, by the school that didn"t teach him to read, by the church that failed to reach him with moral guidance, by the parents who didn"t provide a stable home. I don"t believe it. Many others in equally disadvantaged circumstances choose not to engage in criminal activities. If we free the criminal, even partly, from accountability, we become a society of endless excuses, where no one accepts responsibility for anything. We in America desperately need more people who believe that the person who commits a crime is the one responsible for it.
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单选题They have occupied our land, stolen our freedom and violated everything we held ______ .
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单选题The trouble is that various worldly pressures will make you more, not less, inclined to play it ______.
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单选题Despite her nerves, she walked towards her groom with no regrets about choosing such a ______ time to get married.
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单选题Now the ______ port city near the month of the mighty Yangtze River is hoping to leave its record of turmoil behind and renew its status as the epicenter of Chinese modernization.
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单选题(Just as) children the world over (like) Christmas morning, (adults so like) Christmas evening when (peace and calm) return to the household.
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单选题The language barrier made communication difficult, but finally, part of my message ______.
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