A.They face them.B.They are interested in them.C.They accept and enjoy them.D.They ign
A.They face them.
B.They are interested in them.
C.They accept and enjoy them.
D.They ignore them.
A.They face them.
B.They are interested in them.
C.They accept and enjoy them.
D.They ignore them.
A.They are willing to donate their faces.
B.They are concerned about moral problems.
C.They would accept the idea of face transplant.
D.They have no clue what face transplant means.
How do many presidents feel in the face of the current situation?
A.They feel quite nostalgic.
B.They feel frightened.
C.They are full of revenge.
D.They are much disturbed.
A.They will face extinction without artificial reproduction.
B.They will have to migrate to find new homes.
C.They will be able m survive in the preserves.
D.They will gradually die out.
A.They reduce a person's appetite.
B.They make a person less persistent in face of trouble.
C.They make a person's nervous system weak.
D.They make a person more vulnerable to disease.
A.They write their biographies for us to read.
B.They make themselves to be heroes.
C.They persuade us to face the impossible things.
D.They show us their experiences to overcome the difficulties.
How did parents feel in the face of the experts' studies?
A.They didn't know who to believe.
B.They felt very much relieved.
C.They weren't convinced of the results.
D.They were frightened by the evidence.
How did parents feel in the face of the experts' studies?
A.They didn't know who to believe.
B.They felt very much relieved.
C.They weren't convinced of the results.
D.They were frightened by the evidence.
A.They will gradually die out.
B.They will be able to survive in the preserves.
C.They will have to migrate to find new homes.
D.They will face extinction without artificial reproduction.
A.they don't like to keep their eyes on the face of the speaker
B.they need not communicate through eye contact
C.they don't think it polite to have eye contact
D.they didn't have much opportunity to communicate through eye contact in babyhood
听力原文: Many people suffer from some form. of extreme anxiety. Some experience occasional attacks of panic for no apparent reason. Others go around in a state of continual uneasiness. The usual way of controlling anxiety is with drugs, which cure none of the conditions described but do help patients man age their anxiety. Patients who take these drugs say that they are able to work, to sleep, and to go to places they had feared to visit. But the effects of the drugs on the human body, especially on the nervous system, have been unknown.
We have started a series of studies to identify the effects of the drugs on the brain and have gained some insight into the costs and benefits of the anti anxiety drugs. They are valuable because they can reduce the effects of anticipated failure, frustration, and disappointment. But their value demands a price. Two effects of the drugs are obviously harmful. They reduce a person's ability to react to changes in the environment; and more important, they keep a person from developing persistence in the face of unexpected troubles. Since it is fairly sure that people will meet problems they had not expected, this effect may make the price of anti-anxiety drugs too high.
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A.They help to cure anxiety.
B.They help patients to gain insight into the cause of anxiety.
C.They help to control anxiety.
D.They help patients to work efficiently.