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1. Skill to ask questions   1) be aware of the human nature:readiness to answer others’’ questions regardless of (1)________   2) start a conversation with some personal but unharmful questions e.g. questions about one’’s (2)________ job questions about one’’s activities in the (3)________   3) be able to spot signals for further talk 2. Skill to (4)________ for answers   1) don’’t shift from subject to subject ―sticking to the same subject: signs of (5)________ in conversation   2) listen to (6)________of voice ―If people sound unenthusiastic, then change subject.   3) use eyes and ears ―steady your gaze while listening 3. Skill to laugh   Effects of laughter:   ease people’’s (7)________   ―help start (8)________ 4. Skill to part   1) importance: open up possibilities for future friendship or contact   2) ways:   ―men: a smile, a (9)________   ―women: same as (10)________ now   ―how to express pleasure in meeting someone

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问答题I agree to some extent with my imaginary English reader. American literary historians are perhaps prone to view their own national scene too narrowly, mistaking prominence for uniqueness. They do over-phrase their own literature, or certainly its minor figures. And Americans do swing from aggressive over-phrase of their literature to an equally unfortunate, imitative deference. But then, the English themselves are somewhat insular in their literary appraisals. Moreover, in fields where they are not preeminent―e. g. in painting and music― they too alternate between boasting of native products and copying those of the Continent. How many English paintings try to look as though they were done in Paris; how many times have we read in articles that they really represent an English tradition after all.To speak of American literature, then, is not to assert that it is completely unlike that of Europe. Broadly speaking, America and Europe have kept step. At any given moment the traveler could find examples in both of the same architecture, the same style in dress, the same books on the shelves. Ideas have crossed the Atlantic as freely as men and merchandise, though sometimes more slowly. When I refer to American habit, thoughts, etc. , I intend some sort of qualification to precede the word, for frequently the difference between America and Europe (especially England) will be one of degree, sometimes only of a small degree. The amount of divergence is a subtle affair, liable to perplex the Englishman when he looks at America. He is looking at a country which in important senses grew out of his own, which in several ways still resembles his own ― and which is yet a foreign country. There are odd overlappings and abrupt unfamiliarities; kinship yields to a sudden alienation, as when we hail a person across the street, only to discover from his blank response that we have mistaken a stranger for a friend.

问答题investing——invested