上海市2021-2022学年高三英语二模语法填空汇编(含答案)

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上海市2021-2022学年高三英语二模语法填空汇编(含答案)

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上海市2021-2022学年高三英语二模语法填空汇编(16区全)
2021-2022学年金山区二模
Pop-up Shops Are Gaining Popularity
The retail business may be suffering in Hong Kong, but pop-up shops have become popular with the brands looking to reconnect with the local consumers.
Although the pop-up is not a new concept, the market is welcoming it with open arms. It (21) ________ (regard) as a testing ground for promoting new products, while offering shoppers a more personalized brand interaction. It is believed that the pop-up effect primarily benefits small retailers and young designers, both of (22) ________ expect to connect with their customers for lack of a physical store. On the other hand, they try to avoid long-term contract.
“As we are a young brand, it’s difficult for customers to find us. We’re (23) ________ (likely) to have a permanent store since the barriers to entry are so high,” says the founder of fashion label PT’A. “With the pop-up, we sell in person and have that one-to-one contact with our customers. We see our sales soar dramatically (24) ________ we do pop-ups.”
It is not just small retailers and young designers that are benefiting. With the market (25) ________ (shift) from physical retail to e-commerce, online-only brands such as Grana have used pop-up shops as a way to complement their brand. Customers are able to try out the products firsthand, and then shop online at their convenience. Additionally, established brands are also using pop-ups to excite shoppers. Shiseido, for example, once did a pop-up (26) ________ (promote) one of their specific line of lipsticks. It is otherwise difficult to do in their current retail spaces (27) ________ they have to accommodate their entire product line.
While some industry insiders insist that it is a short-term trend (28) ________ (drive) by a bad economy, others see benefits in the long run. Landlords are also changing their minds. In essence, pop-up shops are mutually beneficial to both the landlord and the retailer.
“Personally, I don’t think pop-ups are a passing trend. From what we (29) ________ (learn) from our customers so far, they are always looking for unique products and experiences, exactly (30) ________ that pop-up shops can offer. I believe they will remain an enduring experiential marketing platform,” says the manager of a small retailer.
2021-2022学年浦东新区二模
Blue Monday
Ask most people which day of the week they fear the most and the answer is likely to be Monday. The first day of the week can make us joyless and depressed, which is (21)_______ the feeling is described as the Monday blues. But what is it exactly (22)_______ makes us feel down and does it affect everyone
Apparently, (23)_______ (depressing) day of the year is the third Monday in January, when it’s cold and dark outside. This day (24) _______ (nickname) ‘Blue Monday’ by psychologist Cliff Arnall in 2004. He came up with it after a holiday company asked him for a ‘scientific formula’ for the January blues.
(25)_______ _______ there was little science behind the formula, it’s probably true that the sound of our alarm clock on any Monday morning signals the dawning of a new week and possibly the end of our weekend of fun. Research shows our Monday mood can be based on a direct comparison (26)_______ the day before. It’s what psychologists call an emotional shift, and no (27)_______ part of the week has a transition like it.
Monday means the end of weekend lie-ins – it is back to the routine and the realization that there are five days ahead of the nine-to-five, and according to the BBC Bitesize website “If you can’t stand your job then the Monday blues can be very real.” And your miserable Monday is followed by trying Tuesday – the most popular day for job applications (28)_______ (send) out.
But is Monday as bad as we think (29)_______ (feel) a bit low shouldn’t be confused with more serious depression, caused by other factors. Writing for the BBC, author and presenter Claudia Hammond, argues that this low feeling (30)_______ be a myth. She later found the day that scored the lowest was in fact Wednesdays. So, when Monday comes, maybe we should give it a second chance!
2021-2022学年青浦区二模
Scientists say cure for baldness could be close
Help may soon be at hand for those who are losing or have lost their hair. A team of Japanese scientists has discovered stem cells 21____________ are vital in the hair regeneration process. This is promising news for the millions of people worldwide who suffer from baldness. A cure has escaped 22____________ (understand) by scientists for decades, 23____________ extensive research and significant investment in research. The scientists are now setting out on clinical research and laboratory trials. They hope to adapt the stem cells to finally create a therapy for hair loss. Baldness principally affects men. By the age of 35, around two-thirds of men will experience some degree of hair loss and by the age of 50, up to 85 per cent will experience significantly thinning hair.
The scientists took fur cells from mice and cultured them in the lab. They shared an observation 24____________ hair growth was a cyclical process within the follicle (毛囊). They analysed the stem cells and used 220 combinations of chemicals 25____________ (make) the hair regrow naturally. Lead scientist Takashi Tsuji said, “Our culture system establishes a method for cyclical regeneration of hair follicles from hair follicle stem cells and will help make hair follicle regeneration therapy a reality in the near future.” He added, “Losing hair is not life-threatening, 26____________ it negatively affects the quality of life.” Sam Baker, a 52-year-old bank worker, hopes the therapy 27____________ work. He said, “Having a full head of hair again will make me look ten years 28____________ (young)”.
It has to pass clinical trials 29____________ this baldness cure becomes commercially available. So far, the researchers 30____________ (demonstrate) stem cell therapy in preclinical lab tests. Tsuji said they were looking for outside collaborators to help develop clinical applications for the new hair growth technology.
2021-2022学年宝山区二模
Who is responsible for childhood obesity(肥胖)
It's lunchtime and sixth-grader Oscar Villanova visits the vending(售卖) machine. He pays for an orange juice and some cheese sticks, (21)________ he really wanted soda and chips. His school, Mildred Avenue, only sells school lunch and healthy snacks.
Seventh-grader Leticia Brown (22)________ (tell) by her doctor that she needs to lose weight. Her doctor says exercise will help her control her weight but at school she only gets physical education once a week.
Many children suffer from health conditions (23)________ are caused or made worse by their lifestyles. Childhood obesity has more than doubled in children and four times in adolescents in the past 30 years. Moreover, rates of childhood diabetes(糖尿病) (24)________ (rise). These conditions can put children (25)________ risk for heart disease and other major killers later in life.
These health issues are complex problems with many different causes. Eating meals out, watching lots of TV, and not being active after school can cause too much weight gain. But there are many things children can do (26)________ (improve) their health. Doctors say the primary focus for children (27)________ be eating healthy food and getting exercise every day.
Schools are getting (28)________ (involve) in solving the problem. Some, like Mildred Avenue, restrict the snacks students can buy (29)________ are offering more gym classes to emphasize the importance of exercise. Some schools even send home health notices warning parents that their child may be overweight. These schools believe parents should be acting more responsibly by restricting children's diets. Many parents get angry, (30)________ (argue) that schools should limit their focus to teaching. They believe that they have primary responsibility for their children's health.
2021-2022学年崇明区二模
Photographers Turn Their Cameras on Pets
In 2019 photographers Kendrick Brinson and David Walter Banks visited 14 countries on assignment. When the couple described the adventures 21____________ they had experienced when photographing, people invariably asked, “But who takes care of your four cats and dogs ” They joked that the pet sitter (临时看护宠物的人) made a lot of money.
But 2020 couldn’t have been 22____________ (different). Due to COVID-19, Brinson and Banks never left the United States. Often, they didn’t even leave their Los Angeles neighborhood. 23______ ______ spending long hours in airport security lines and waiting for the perfect lighting, the pair stayed along with dogs Tux and Tia and cats Rex and Kudzu. “Our pets became emotional therapy animals, and our only friends we could safely hug in a world 24____________ (strike) by a deadly pandemic (大流行病),” Banks said.
As COVID-19 lockdowns swept across the world in March of 2020, the change made an especially great impact on photographers, who are accustomed to 25____________ (spend) long periods abroad. And so many cameras 26____________ (turn) on a domestic subject: the pet.
Research suggests that pets have offered emotional support during the pandemic, helping 27____________ (make) the long days of isolation more bearable, says Emily McCobb, a clinical associate professor at Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine at Tufts University. In fact, the pandemic has sped up a trend, according to McCobb’s and other scientists’ observation, 28____________ the pet is becoming a member of the family. “In the past 20 to 30 years, the role of the pet in the family 29____________ (take) on a whole new role,” says McCobb. “It really hasn’t been that long 30____________ these furry child substitutes gained this kind of importance in American society.”
2021-2022学年奉贤区二模
Landslide Injures at least 10 in Norwegian Town of Ask
A landslide (山体滑坡) has smashed into a residential area near the Norwegian capital at midnight on Dec. 30, injuring at least 10 people, leaving 21 unaccounted for and 21____________ (destroy) several homes, authorities said. About 700 people have been brought to safety for fear of further landslides.
The landslide cut across a road, leaving a deep gap that cars 22____________ not pass. Video footage showed dramatic scenes including one house falling into the gap. Photographs showed at least eight destroyed homes.
Rescue workers continued to search the area for children and adults 23____________ (believe) to have been caught in mud and debris (废墟), police said. “We’re still looking for survivors,” police spokesman Roger Pettersen told a news conference.
Pettersen said there were no reports of missing people, but officials could not rule out the possibility 24____________ there might be survivors in collapsed buildings. He said 21 people registered as living in the area are unaccounted for.
One of the injured was seriously hurt, while nine had 25____________ (light) injuries. Weather at the time was reported to be challenging, with snowstorm sweeping the village of Ask, 26____________ about 5,000 people inhabited.
Norway’s King Harald said the landslide had made a deep impression on him. “My thoughts are with all those who are affected, injured or have lost their homes and those who now live in fear and uncertainty of 27______ ______ damage the disaster has caused,” he said in a statement released by the royal palace.
The area in which Ask 28____________ (locate) is known to have a lot of quick clay, which can change from solid to liquid form. Previous landslides have been reported in the region.
Helicopters continued to circle over the area as night fell, 29____________ (lower) rescuers towards the debris of collapsed houses.
“There could be people trapped ... but at the same time we can’t be sure 30____________ it is the new year’s holiday, which means people could be elsewhere,” Erna Solberg, the Norwegian Prime Minister, told reporters after visiting the site.
2021-2022学年虹口区二模
The Year in a Word or Two
Can anybody describe a year with only one word
Each December, the Oxford English Dictionary (OED) nominates (提名)a word to describe the very year (21) ______ has just passed.
2020 was a very unusual year that was really worthy (22) ______ (describe) with two words. Two of the obvious words the OED suggested were “pandemic (疫情)” and “lockdown,” due to most of human activities across the globe (23) ______ (bring) to a stop by the life-threatening disease. Businesses have been closed and people have had to stay in their homes for weeks or even months on end.
(24) ______ I would like to nominate “cooperation” and “hope” as my words of the year because it is supposed to be described in a more positive and (25) ______ (helpless) way, because there was a great deal of cooperation between countries and international health organizations. China took a leading role in this effort by sending masks and protective clothing to Canada, the United States and Europe, (26) ______ ______ ______ to countries in the Middle East and Africa. Without this cooperation, the pandemic, bad (27) ______ it has been, could have been much worse.
And that brings me to my second word: hope. We are beginning to see the light at the end of the tunnel, and, with a little “hope,” we will get to see the world begin to return to normal.
For young people, it was the first time that they (28) ______ (experience) something big, a worry that they shared with their families, friends and neighbors, and a suffering (29) ______ (endure) at this moment and to be endured next few weeks. And they also learned that “hope” — the belief that (30) ______ you will see tomorrow will be better than today — is at the heart of every human being.
With “cooperation” and “hope,” 2021 should make for a wonderful year.
2021-2022学年黄浦区二模
Ocean exploration changed human history
One of humanity’s greatest achievements has been mastering routes across the world’s munities separated by thousands of miles (21)______(bring) into contact and religious ideas have spread across the waters, while artistic creativity has been motivated by the experience of seeing the products of different civilizations. Customs have been decisively altered by the movement of ships across the oceans. No one drank tea in medieval Europe, but (22)______ contact had been made with the tea-drinking Chinese, tea became popular with millions of people from Sweden to the United States.
We tend to hold the view (23)______ the opening of the oceans was the work of the great explorers, especially the 15th century pioneers who edged their way through uncharted waters to southern Africa, the Indian Ocean and the lands of the Indies. These were sailors (24)______ ______ Christopher Columbus, who chanced upon unsuspected lands that blocked the expected sea route from Europe to China and Japan. But while these men (25)______ give the Age of Discovery its name, they didn’t start the exploration of the world’s oceans — and there were also scores of merchants who followed in (26)______ route, taking full advantage of new knowledge about the open ocean to develop trade links across the world, (27)______ laid the foundation for modern globalization. These were the people who really mastered the oceans and brought the continents into contact.
Since then, the oceans have only continued (28)______(tie) the world together — most dramatically when new routes were literally carved out, with the building of the Sues Canal in the 19th century and the opening of the Panama Canal in 1914. The first goods to pass through the Panama Canal consisted of a cargo of (29)______(tin) pineapples from Hawaii. The Pacific and the Atlantic were (30)______(closely) tied together than ever before.
2021-2022学年嘉定区二模
Why Acting Is So Much More Than It Appears to Be
For many people, acting appears to be people talking while getting emotional, which is why so many people think they can do it. No one imagines 21____________ waking up one day and being a professional singer or pianist. But for actors, they say, “Acting is hard only 22____________ one has to memorize lines. If I could remember, I could be an actor, too.”
But acting isn’t just about memorizing lines and talking in conversational reality. As Meisner said, “Acting is doing things truthfully under imaginary circumstances.” If 23____________ (understand) correctly, this definition is an ambitious and remarkable thing to strive for.
To do things truthfully, actors must acquire many challenging skills. 24____________ these skills, the script will remain flat on the page, despite being recited out loud. To make a script come to life in a believable way, the actor 25____________ make active choices.
Imagine for a moment how many different ways there are 26____________ (deliver) one single line. Even something as simple as “close the door” can mean so many different things and 27____________ (express) in so many different ways. The words are the writer’s, but the behavior 28____________ brings them to vivid life That is the actor.
The goal of great actors That’s to act naturally. Good quality acting must always come down to a kind of naturalness that makes those acting skills 29____________ (visible) to the audience. In other words, a good actor must not appear to be acting at all.
So do not be fooled into thinking that 30____________ can read and speak can be an actor. The naturalness displayed by great actors is exactly what makes you think that way, but it took them years of training to get to this point. It is so much more than you know.
2021-2022学年静安区二模
Scientists confirmed Monday that a skeleton (骷髅) found under a carpark in the English city of Leicester was that of King Richard III, in a weird end to a 500-year-old mystery.
DNA from the bones 21____________ (match) that of existing generation of the king's sister and the skeleton had the battle injuries consistent 22____________ contemporary accounts.
The remains of the king, viewed as one of English history’s worst guys, will be reburied later in the local church.
The discovery has caused huge excitement among historians, as it provides firm evidence about a ruler whose life 23____________ (shadow), in spite of official records, by rumours (谣言) concerning his cold blood since his death at the Battle of Bosworth in 1485.
According to historical accounts, Richard's body was transported naked and bloody on the back of a pack horse to Leicester before being buried in an unmarked grave at Greyfriars, a Franciscan temple in the central English city.
Then the crown passed to the Tudor rulers who painted Richard as an ugly bad guy who stopped at 24____________ in his pursuit of power, even murdering his two young nephews, the so-called Princes in the Tower, 25____________ (secure) the power.
The hunt for his body began years ago when archaeologists (考古学家) started to dig beneath the municipal carpark 26____________ the king was supposedly buried. They finally found the skeleton.
On Monday archaeologists said the skeleton confirmed that the king had severe injury in the backbone. It may have been painful and caused his right shoulder to appear higher than his left, but there was no evidence of the deformed arm 27____________ (mention) in Shakespeare's "Richard III".
Historians now hope to clear some of the myths about Richard, 28____________ (publicize) evidence to argue against the claim that he killed the two young princes. They intend to focus on 29____________ Richard achieved in his brief two-year ruling, including the establishment of a system of legal aid.
According to Philippa Langley, a member of the Richard III Society, 30____________ cruel Richard III appeared to be in the past, a new image will emerge of the king. "We have searched for Richard and we have found him. Now it's time to honour him," she said.
2021-2022学年闵行区二模
Everywhere I look outside my home I see people busy on their high-tech devices, while driving, walking, shopping, even sitting in toilets. (21) ______ connected electronically, they are away from physical reality.
People (22) ______ (influence) to become technology addicted. One survey reported that “addicted” was the word most commonly used by people (23) ______ (describe) their relationship to iPad and similar devices. One study found that people had a harder time
(24) ______ (resist) the temptation of social media than they did for sleep, cigarettes and alcohol.
The main goal of technology companies is to get people to spend more money and time on their products, not to actually improve our quality of life. They have successfully created a cultural disease. I see people (25) ______ (trap) in a pathological (病态的) relationship with time-consuming technology, (26) ______ they serve technology more than technology serves them. I call this technology servitude (奴役). I am referring to a loss of personal freedom and independence (27) ______ ______ uncontrolled consumption of many kinds of devices that eat up time and money.
What is a healthy use of technology devices That is the vital question. Who is really in charge of my life That is what we need to ask (28) ______ if we are to have any chance of breaking up false beliefs about the use of technology. When we can live happily without using so much technology for a day or a week, then we can regain control and personal freedom, become the master of technology and discover what there is to enjoy in life free of technology. Mae West is famous for the wisdom that “too much of a good thing is wonderful.” (29) ______ it’s time to discover that it does not work for technology.
Richard Fernandez, an executive coach at Google acknowledged that “we can be swept away by our technologies.” To break the grand digital connection, people must consider (30) ______ life long ago could be fantastic without today’s overused technology.
2021-2022学年普陀区二模
Buy a Cup of Coffee for a Stranger
Coffee has developed rapidly and soon become an essential friend and companion for many people.
(21) you first meet her, you'll drink it for a while, feeling refreshed. Slowly, the deeper you go, the more you'll become addicted to it, attracted by her unique smell. You can't help but (22) (follow) her, and you always think coffee has a story.
Coffee can be traced back to about the 10th century AD. It was (23) the 16th century that coffee was introduced to Europe. The way that coffee is grown and made has been refined by the Arabs, and modem coffee is all beverages (饮料).
How about buying a cup of coffee for someone you'll never meet It may sound like the latest trend in the coffee culture, but a suspended coffee is (24) (heartwarming) than a popular latte. The tradition born in a cafe in the southern Italian city of Naples is to buy a cup or two of coffee in advance for (25) who need it later in the day. A customer-in-need can then later ask if there is a suspended coffee available and have a hot drink
(26) having to pay for it.
It may be hard to imagine that this idea has become an internet fashion, with countless coffee shops in Europe and North America (27) (participate) in the movement. The Facebook page alone has more than 28, 000 “likes". The tradition of suspended coffee is a long-standing one in Italy (28) increased in popularity after the Second World War. Agence France-Presse reported last week the practice was starting to be popular in other European countries (29) (hit) hard economically. More than 150 cafes in Bulgaria were taking part. At the very cafes customers can ask. whether there are any suspended coffees available, and if so, they (30) (supply) with a beverage, thanks to the kindness of a stranger.
2021-2022学年松江区二模
How to Become a Morning Person
You have grand ambitions: to start a business, to write a book. But chances are you work long hours, or household responsibilities consume your days. By the time you finish all you have to do, you will have had no energy 21____________ anything you want to do beyond turning on the TV.
Yet some busy people do make time for their priorities. The secret is giving the most attention to 22____________ at the very beginning of a day. They get up earlier than they have to. Morning by morning, they make progress on something 23____________ matters.
It’s not fun to force yourself out of bed, but these early hours are often the best time to do things for yourself. With a little schedule reorganization, 24____________ (become) a morning person is more doable than you think.
I first learned that mornings 25____________ be transformational years ago, when I was studying a busy lawyer’s schedule. She wanted to spend more time with her son, but she had little control over when she left work. This state of affairs kept her sad 26____________ she realized she and her son were both early risers and the morning time could be made full use of. After thinking it through, the lawyer decided to get up even earlier. Then, when the boy stepped into the dining room, she 27____________ (finish) preparing a rich breakfast so they two could enjoy the meal to the fullest together.
Mornings are also great for focused thinking. Get up an hour earlier, and you can knock out your most important task of the day. Or you can spare some time for those creative desires 28____________ (bury) deep in your heart and hard to nurture.
But many will argue: I’m not a morning person! The fact is that there are not so many true night owls. When most people take an honest look at 29____________ they’re spending the hours before bed, they’ll find they have wasted much time on the TV programs they don’t mean 30____________ (watch). Also, they often browse through photos on social media of people they didn’t like in high school anyway.
A better approach is to sleep earlier, rise earlier and turn unproductive evening hours into productive morning hours.
2021-2022学年徐汇区二模
Cosmic rays are mysterious, high-charged atomic particles traveling through space at the speed of light, (21) _______ have puzzled scientists for years. But for Yang Jia, a member of the National Committee of Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC), China’s top political advisory body, the ability to see and study them (22) _______ help generate interest in science and space among schoolchildren.
Cosmic rays, first (23) _______ (discover) in 1912, have been an enigma for years, but their detectability means they can be studied by middle and high school students with a basic knowledge of physics.
Yang, also a professor and a member of the Jiusan Society, a democratic political party, proposed further (24) _______ (promote) the study of cosmic rays on school campuses at this year’s Two Sessions.
"It’s a wonderful idea. I heard a presentation from a scientist Zhang Chuang, and I was quite excited. I think it is a wonderful way (25) _______ (share) their knowledge with young people. At that time, I heard in Los Angeles, there were already 80 high schools having such extra curriculums, and in Italy, there were 50. But in China, there were just a few," said Yang.
An organization called Campus Cosmic Ray Observation Collaboration (26) _______ (establish) in September 2020 to promote the idea. Zhang, head of the organization, said they plan to build more stations on school campuses across China.
"We’ve been working on building more observation stations on campuses. At the moment, we have three in Dongzhimen, and we plan to set up more. Now we are working with three schools to build such stations. We also try to put our existing data on the website so that students can carry out related studies with open access," said Zhang.
(27) _______ cosmic ray observation belongs to the field of frontier physics, experts say introducing it to the campus helps popularize science among students.
Chinese scientist Shen Changquan, 79, (28) _______ (guide) Dongzhimen High School workshop for seven years since his retirement. He said such activities can help increase young students’ interest in science.
"By exposing students to cutting-edge science, students can stand on the shoulders of giants and touch a wider world. It’s not about (29) _______ being scientists. It’s just that a lot of advanced equipment today requires physics knowledge, and improving the physics level of all people is very important," said Shen.
Talking about the future of the proposal, Yang said she is looking forward to seeing more dialogue between top scientists and students in China. She said they are optimistic, and (30) _______ the difficulties ahead, the drive for humans to fully understand the unknown can never be stopped.
2021-2022学年长宁区二模
It was a very dark street. I was on my way home 21 a friend’s party and decided to take a short cut. I just turned the corner from the main street and started walking towards the light at the end of the short street. Suddenly, almost by magic, I thought, there was someone standing at the far end, under the lamplight. Most people 22 have been frightened, perhaps terrified, but I wasn’t at all frightened. Perhaps I should have been. There was someone there. I felt somehow that the person—and I couldn’t see 23 it was a man or a woman—did not mean to harm me. 24 I wasn’t frightened, I still wasn’t sure what to do. Should I walk on towards the end of the street and towards the light and towards the person Or should I go back the way I had come I decided to walk on towards the light.
The “guide”, as I called the person later, stood and waited 25 I was halfway down the street, and then started walking ahead of me. Even now I couldn’t describe him or her: he or she seemed 26 (dress) in a long gown, but there was a dim light all around him or her. Certainly I felt safe and followed the person down several streets that I did not know. It was a part of town, I realized, that I 27 (warn) about, but nothing happened to me, and as soon as we were near the bright lights of the main road, my “guide” just 28 (disappear).
The following day I heard that a young person had been killed 29 (walk) home alone not very far from 30 I was that night. I don’t care what other people think. I am sure that the “guide” was my guardian angel and that he or she looked after me.
2021-2022学年杨浦区二模
Understanding the Closeness-Communication Bias(偏见)
Most of us assume that we communicate better with our friends and loved ones than we do with strangers. However, it is often the case that the closer we are to (21) _________, the less likely we are to listen carefully to them. This phenomenon is called closeness-communication bias, and it has been known to affect personal relationships.
The reason (22) _________ many people unconsciously “tune out” their family members or close friends is that they think they already know what the other person (23) ________ (say). It’s similar to the way in which you might not notice signs, landmarks, or scenery on a path you have travelled down numerous times.
Researchers have repeatedly demonstrated closeness-communication bias in experiments. In one such study, subjects were paired up in a room with friends or spouses, (24) _________ (follow) by being paired up with complete strangers. Researchers then asked the subjects to interpret (25) ________ their friends and spouses were saying to them. In the majority of cases, (26) _________ most subjects assumed they would better understand those they were close to, they actually understood them no better than strangers. In some cases, they understood their close friends and spouses even less.
Another study showed that people are more likely to share their most worrisome troubles with people they were (27) ________ (close) to rather than with their spouses or close friends. By sharing secrets with strangers, people are able to avoid (28) ________ (judge) and prevent creating unnecessary conflict within their close relationships.
Unfortunately, the closeness-communication bias is a reality that most people live (29) ________ whether they know it or not. Not only (30) _________ this prevent people from listening to those they love, but it also means their loved ones aren't listening to them, either.
金山区
is regarded 22. whom 23. less likely 24. when/ after 25. shifting
to promote 27. as 28. driven 29. have learned 30. something
浦东新区
21.why 22. that 23. the most depressing 24. was nicknamed 25. Even though/if
26. with/to 27. other 28. to be sent 29. Feeling 30. might/may
青浦区
21. that/which 22. being understood 23. despite 24. that
25. to make 26. but 27. can 28. younger
29. before 30. have demonstrated
宝山区
21. but/ though/ although 22. has been / is told 23. that/ which
24. have risen/been /are rising 25. at 26. to improve 27. should
28. involved 29. Others 30. arguing
崇明区
21. that/which 22. more different 23. Instead of / Rather than 24. struck / stricken
25. spending 26. were turned 27. (to) make 28. that
29. has taken 30. since
奉贤区
21. destroying 22. could 23. believed 24. that
25. lighter 26. where/which 27. how much 28. is located
29. to lower/lowering 30. because
虹口区
21. that 22. to be described 23. having been brought / being brought 24. But
25. less helpless 26. as well as 27. as / though 28. had experienced 29. being endured 30. what
黄浦区
21. have been brought 22. once/when 23. that 24. such as 25. did
26. their/the 27. which 28. to tie/tying 29. tinned 30.more closely
嘉定区
21. oneself/himself/themselves 22. because/if/when 23. understood
24. without 25. must/should 26. to deliver 27. be expressed
28. that/which 29. less visible 3 30. whoever
静安区
21. matched 22. with 23. has been shadowed 24. nothing
25. to secure 26. where 27. mentioned 28. publicizing
29. what 30. however
闵行区
21. when 22. have been influenced 23. to describe 24.resisting 25. trapped
26. Where 27. because of / thanks to / owing to 28. ourselves 29. But 30. how
普陀区
21. When/If 22. follow 23. not until 24, more heartwarming
25. those 26. without 27. participating 28. that/which 29. hit
30. are supplied/will be supplied
松江区
21. for 22. them 23. that 24. becoming / to become. 25. could / might 26. until / till
27. had finished 28. buried 29. how 30. to watch
徐汇区
21. which 22. could/can 23. discovered 24. promoting 25. to share 26. was established
27. Although/While/Though 28. has guided 29. them/their 30. despite/whatever
长宁区
21. from 22. would/might 23. whether 24. Although/Though/While
25. until 26. to be dressed 27. had been warned 28. disappeared
29. walking 30. where
黄浦区
21. somebody 22. why 23. is going to/will say 24. followed 25. what 26.while 27. less close 28. being judged 29. with 30. does

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