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问答题试管婴儿
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问答题美国《幸福》杂志曾在征答栏中刊登过这么一个题目:假如让你重新选择,你做什么?一位军界要人的回答是去乡间开一个杂货铺:一位女部长的答案是到哥斯达黎加的海滨经营一个小旅馆;—位市长的愿望是改行当摄影记者;一位劳动部长是想做一家饮料公司的经理。几位商人的回答最是离奇。一位想变成女人;一位想成为一条狗。更有甚者,想退出人的世界,化为植物。其间也有一般百姓的回答。想做总统的,想做外交官的,想做面包师的,应有尽有。但是,很少有人想做现在的自己。
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问答题民为邦本
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问答题Pyramid selling
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问答题经济特区
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问答题People in China generally agree that it is important to celebrate the country s rich history, but its culture police think there is too much of the wrong kind of celebrating going on. Two agencies, the Ministry of Culture and the State Administration of Cultural Heritage, have banned the promotion of negative historical figures or literary works for tourism purposes, theoretically ending a longstanding practice by Chinese cities of playing up their ties to racy cultural icons like the lustful Ximen Qing through festivals, theme parks and merchandise.(1)A few lucky destinations in China, like Mao s hometown of Shaoshan in Hunan province, are blessed with the notoriety of a state-approved celebrity, allowing them to rake in tourism dollars. But for most Chinese towns, bringing in tourists is hard work, which is made easier if they can stake a claim to someone famous, whether real mythical or literary. Disputes can flare up among towns claiming to be the original homes of the same popular character. Just before the Ministry of Culture announced the new rules,Loufan county in Shanxi declared itself hometown of the Monkey King, challenging the same claim made first by Lianyugang City in Jiangsu, according to a recent article on Xinhua s English-language website.(2)Critics say that this kind of cultural infighting' is embarrassing to China, especially when attracting foreign dollars is the motive. It is better if these cities manage and protect their own cultural heritage and intangible cultural resources, rather than compete with each other and humiliate themselves.(3)In the past, tourist stunts by Chinese towns have been heavily frowned upon by the public. A sex theme park in southwestern China was demolished before it even opened, after inciting widespread condemnation. Earlier this year, public outcry forced government officials in Zhangjiajie to back away from plans to rename a local mountain Avatar Hallelujah Mountain1 after the popular Hollywood movie. The latest crackdown, however, goes further than any one campaign and promises to lay out strict guidelines for what is appropriate cultural celebration in the coming weeks.
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问答题《京华烟云》
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问答题tiger mom
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问答题speed bump
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问答题vacillation
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问答题实事求是
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问答题PPT
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问答题More than a century ago, Russian novelist Leo Tolstoy wrote, “Happy families are all alike; every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way.”【】The words have become immortalized, and the unhappy story of “Anna Karenina” is considered one of the greatest novels ever written. Recently, however, psychologists and sociologists are starting to question the observation.【】“I think Tolstoy was totally wrong,” said John Gottman, a professor of psychology at the University of Washington in Seattle. “Unhappy families are really similar to one another—there’s much more variability among happy families.”【】As couples clink wine glasses over candlelit Valentine’s Day dinners this week and exchange vows of undying love, Gottman and others are trying to understand why as many as one in two marriages end in divorce, and why so many couples seem to fall out of love and break apart.【】Some of the most revealing answers, it turns out, come from the couples who stay together. While conventional wisdom holds that conflicts in a relationship slowly erode the bonds that hold partners together, couples who are happy in the long term turn out to have plenty of conflicts, too. Fights and disagreements are apparently intrinsic to all relationships—couples who stay together over the long haul are those who don’t let the fighting contaminate the other parts of the relationship, experts say.【】“Why do people get married in the first place?” asked Thomas Bradbury, a professor of psychology at the University of California at Los Angeles. “To have someone to listen to—to have a friend, to share life’s ups and downs. We want to try to draw attention to what's valuable in their relationship.”【】Researchers are finding that it is those other parts of relationships—the positive factors—that are potent predictors of whether couples feel committed to relationships, and whether they weather storms and stick together. As long as those factors are intact, conflicts don’t drive people apart.【】“What we’ve discovered is surprising and contrary to what most people think,” said Gottman, the author of “The Mathematics of Marriage.” “Most books say it’s important for couples to fight fair — but 69 percent of all marital conflicts never get resolved because they are about personality differences between couples. What's critical is not whether they resolve conflicts but whether they can cope with them.” 
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问答题moon away
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问答题Behavioral Economics
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问答题telecom
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问答题armed to the teeth
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问答题United Nations peace-keeping force
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问答题MT
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问答题贫困指数
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