问答题

Everyone would have heard the famous phrase 'Anger is one short of danger'. It is an age-old adage,but it is【C1】______and still holds true. Things said or done during anger have created 【C2】______with a lot of people and things. The 【C3】______ packed bag of mental frustration 【C4】______into a volcano of anger. But basically lets try to analyze【C5】______ one gets angry? When one is not satisfied with the way things have 【C6】______,when someone has been taken for a ride,when one【C7】______life for treating him badly,and many such【C8】______things are the various reasons. All the frustrations get collected on one part of our mind and when we can【C9】______ it no longer, our feelings are【C10】______in the form. of a volcano of emotional tantrums. Anger is one of the major hindrances in self-development, because it【C11】______ our outlook. The mind looses its【C12】______of logic and fairness, when it is accelerated by the arrogant mood of anger. Getting angry can get your things done 【C13】______, but not everywhere. This is because【C14】______you grow,you yourself are responsible to clean your recycle bin of emotions and frustrations. No one has the foresight or 【C15】______ to judge what has brought you 【C16】______that violent mood or what hardships you have faced. Angry people hardly go places. The 【C17】______one comes to this piece of reality, the better he will get. The best way to counterattack anger is to absorb patience in ourselves. A person with infinite patience has matured mentally, and is the bravest war-horse over the【C18】______ of anger. He controlled himself every time and got【C19】______ from trying circumstances using the best lifeline available. Such people are always in【C20】______ with themselves and are always enjoying life.
【C1】

A.tested
B.testified
C.examined
D.confirmed
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问答题

Linguistic researchers have gradually come to understand how and why so many teenagers sound like Dizzee Rascal, a rapper from Bow in east London. They call this【C1】______. changing argot(俚语)Multicultural London English(MLE). When MLE first【C2】______, linguists believed it was a ham version of the way West Indians speak English. In the early 1980s ' West Indians who had spoken Cockney suddenly started to speak 【C3】______,' explains Paul Kerswill of York University. Young Afro-Caribbean men【C4】______ have adopted a new style. of speech as they sought to forge a(n)【C5】______in an often hostile society. Others were thought to have【C6】______ them. But【C7】______being cod-Jamaican, MLE is now thought to be a hybrid(混合的)【C8】______ that emerged from the mixing of West Indians, South Asians and speakers of Cockney and Estuary English. Researchers have found that MLE【C9】______ from place to place. Variants have emerged in 【C10】______cities with many immigrants, such as Birmingham and Manchester. Children tend to 【C11】______MLE at secondary school. It is more common—and more strongly accented—among boys【C12】______among girls. The grammar that tends to【C13】______ MLE is increasingly uniform. for example the use of ' we wasnt'【C14】______place of 'we werent'. Linguists are most excited by【C15】______ MLE is doing to the rhythm of speech. English is usually spoken with a stress-timed rhythm, in which syllables are stressed at regular【C16】______. Speakers of MLE speak with a syllable-timed rhythm, in which all syllables are【C17】______ roughly the same time and stress, as in French or Japanese. Syllable-timed speech is a【C18】______ of languages that have come Into contact 【C19】______other languages. Versions of it may have【C20】______in multicultural places such as Hackney for centuries, thinks Mr. Kerswill.
【C1】

A.spreading
B.expanding
C.extending
D.stretching
问答题

The list of candidates for greatest men of the 20th century is as short as it is extraordinary. Franklin Roosevelt is the obvious American 【C1】______. He guided the United States safely through the centurys gravest damages, the Great 【C2】______and World War II. His long lasting New Deal imprint still【C3】______America today. Let us not forget giants of science like Albert Einstein or Thomas Edison. But the list would not be complete【C4】______ the name of Nelson Mandela, the【C5】______South African President who died on Thursday at 95. Its hard to name anyone, anywhere, in any time whose life is quite a【C6】______for his. Mandela led his people to freedom, ending the apartheid(种族隔离)rule of South Africas 【C7】______white-minority regime. But neither of those men,【C8】______ the others mentioned here, was put to such an extraordinary personal test. All you need to know to grasp the【C9】______ of Mandela is this: He spent 27 years in prison. He was given no hope and allowed little【C10】______ with the outside world. Yet instead of yielding to his plight—or【C11】______his cause by speaking a few words that【C12】______ him free—he persisted, fighting against all odds and emerging 【C13】______, a leader of such stature that his 【C14】______could not stand against him. And then, at his moment of【C15】______, with the presidency of South Africa in his hands, he 【C16】______not revenge for all that had been done to him【C17】______ racial peace for his people, black and white, which—incredibly—he achieved. Such is the power of historys few【C18】______ great leaders and the examples they set. If Mandela could suffer【C19】______he did without seeking revenge, then how could others do any less? And how could the nations fearful and suspicious white minority【C20】______the olive branch?
【C1】

A.applicant
B.candidate
C.participant
D.competitor
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