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高中英语

So what is a hot guy? Who do you _________to be a hot guy? It might be a celebrity(名人). It might be somebody you are ________with like your friend or your family member.
What __________do they possess to make them a hot guy? Remember it's not always about__________. Some people find unconventionally handsome men________. It may be a personality trait(品质). It might be the way they _________, or just a certain sense of confidence. What is within your circle of control? Could you ________up to go to an expensive salon to find a haircut that matches your_________? Could you simply pluck in between your eyebrows to make sure your face is more defined(轮廓分明的)? Maybe you need to start going to the gym or giving up drinking alcohol or eating___________.
What could you do today that will bring you towards what you believe is a hot guy? Now start to _________like that hot guy. Imagine that you're him. If you can imagine yourself as a hot guy you're that bit _________to being there. If nothing else, the confidence that will bring will make you__________. There may be somebody that you work with, maybe somebody in your family, maybe a friend who you think is very cool. If that's the_______, really watch what they do. Watch how they live their lives and you can start to________ that. Keep the motto "I'm cool and calm" in your head and if you keep ________that, that's exactly what you'll become. That is how to be a hot guy.

A.remember B.consider C.remind D.inform

A.angry B.satisfied C.familiar D.patient

A.experiences B.feelings C.skills D.features

A.looks B.characters C.wealth D.status

A.rich B.strong C.friendly D.popular

A.behave B.demand C.treat D.dress

A.live B.save C.stay D.stand

A.figure B.weight C.height D.face

A.fast B.little C.healthily D.slowly

A.act B.walk C.talk D.smile

A.farther B.closer C.earlier D.harder

A.funny B.respectable C.successful D.attractive

A.case B.belief C.way D.matter

A.accept B.copy C.receive D.understand

A.explaining B.improving C.repeating D.writing

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It’s no secret that many children would be healthier and happier with adoptive parents than with the parents that nature dealt them. That’s especially____of children who remain in homes where they’re badly treated____the law blindly favors biological parents. It’s also true of children who____for years in foster (寄养) homes because of parents who can’t or won’t care for them but____to give up custody (监护) rights.
Fourteenyearold Kimberly Mays doesn’t fit ____ of the descriptions, but her recent court victory could____help children who do. Kimberly has been the____of an angry custody battle between the man who raised her and her biological parents, with whom she has never lived. A Florida judge____that the teenager can remain with the only father she's ever known and that her biological parents have “no legal____”on her.
Shortly after____in December 1978, Kimberly Mays and another baby were mistakenly switched and sent home with the____parents. Kimberly’s biological parents, Ernest and Regina Twigg, received a child who died of a heart disease in 1988. Medical tests____that the child wasn’t the Twiggs’ own daughter, but Kimberly was, thus leading to a custody____with Robert Mays. In 1989, the two families____that Mr. Mays would maintain custody with the Twiggs getting____rights. Those rights were ended when Mr. Mays decided that Kimberly was being____.
The decision to____Kimberly with Mr. Mays caused heated discussion. But the judge made it clear that Kimberly did have the right to sue (起诉)__ __her own behalf. Thus he made it clear that she was____just a personal possession of her parents. Biological parentage does not mean an absolute ownership that cancels(取消) all the____of children.

A.terrible B.sad C.true D.natural

A.but B.if C.when D.because

A.settle B.live C.suffer D.gather

A.have B.refuse C.stick D.fail

A.neither B.both C.either D.all

A.merely B.eventually C.successfully D.suddenly

A.victim B.object C.sacrifice D.teenager

A.ruled B.believed C.ordered D.indicated

A.expectation B.action C.effect D.claim

A.birth B.judgment C.operation D.school

A.biological B.own C.kind D.wrong

A.examined B.explained C.decided D.showed

A.battle B.right C.agreement D.decision

A.thought B.quarreled C.agreed D.prepared

A.equal B.same C.visiting D.speaking

A.harmed B.forbidden C.wounded D.hidden

A.make B.leave C.give D.keep

A.by B.through C.on D.in

A.more than B.no more than C.not more than D.less than

A.freedom B.happiness C.rights D.ideas

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Recently, an almost literal case of lifeboat ethics(伦理) occurred. On Aug. 4, Graham and Sheryl Anley, while boating off the coast of South Africa, hit a rock. As the boat threatened to sink the husband got off, but his wife was trapped in the boat. Instead of freeing his wife and getting her to shore, Graham grabbed Rosie, their pet dog. With Rosie safe and sound, Graham returned for Sheryl. All are doing fine.
It's a great story, but it doesn't strike me as especially newsworthy. News is supposed to be about something fairly unique, and recent research suggests that, in the right circumstances, lots of people also would have grabbed their Rosie first.
We have strange relationships with our pets. We lavish our pets with adoration and better health care than billions of people receive. We speak to pets with the same high-pitched voices that we use for babies. As an extreme example of our feelings about pets, the Nazis had strict laws that guaranteed the humane treatment of the pets of Jews being shipped to death camps.
A recent paper by George Regents University demonstrates this human involvement with pets to an astonishing extent. Participants in the study were told a situation in which a bus is out of control, bearing down on a dog and a human. Which do you save? With responses from more than 500 people, the answer was that it depended: What kind of human and what kind of dog?
Everyone would save a brother, grandparent or close friend rather than a strange dog. But when people considered their own dog versus people less connected with them—a distant cousin or a hometown stranger—votes in favor of saving the dog came rolling in. And an astonishing 40% of respondents, including 46% of women, voted to save their dog over a foreign tourist.
What does a finding like this mean? First, that your odds aren't so good if you find yourself in another country with a bus bearing down on you and a cute dog. But it also points to something deeper: our unprecedented(史无前例的) attitude toward animals, which got its start with the birth of humane societies in the 19th century.
We prison people who abuse animals, put ourselves in harm's way in boats between whales and whalers and show sympathy to Bambi and his mother. We can extend empathy to an animal and feel its pain like no other species. But let's not be too proud of ourselves. As this study and too much of our history show, we're pretty selective about how we extend our humaneness to other human beings.
What is the function of the first paragraph?

A.To create a relaxing mood for readers.
B.To present the theme of this essay straightly.
C.To lead in the main topic of this essay.
D.To raise problems that will be solved later.

The author mentions Nazi laws in the third paragraph _______________.

A.to show how cruel the Nazis were to the Jews
B.as an example to persuade people not to love pets
C.to illustrate the strange relationship between human and pets
D.as an example to display the humaneness of the Nazis

Which of the following is true according to the article?

A.The story of the Anleys and their dog was too unique to be newsworthy.
B.Most people surveyed choose to save their own dog rather than a human.
C.It was in the 19th century that human beings started to love their pets.
D.Human beings are more and more concerned with animals nowadays.

What does the author mainly argue for?

A.Pets are of great significance to us human beings.
B.We should rethink about our attitude towards animals and mankind.
C.It is kind of human beings to extend humaneness to animals.
D.We should be selective when showing attitude toward other human beings.
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Recently, a couple in New Zealand were forbidden from naming their baby son 4Real. Even   36   New Zealand has quite free rules about   37   children, names beginning with a   38  are not allowed. They decided to call him Superman   39  .
In many countries around the world,   40   names for children are becoming more popular. In Britain, you can call a child almost   41   you like. The only restrictions(限制) on parents   42   to offensive(冒犯的) words such as swear words.
  43  parents choose names which come from  44  culture. For example, there have been six boys named Gandalf  45  the character in the Lord of the Rings(指环王) novels and films.   46  , names related to sport are fairly common –   47 1984, 36 children have been called Arsenal(阿森纳) after the football team. Other parents like to 48 names, or combine names to make their own  49 names, a method demonstrated (证实的) by Jordan, the British model,  50   recently invented the name Tiaamii for her daughter by 51 names Thea and Amy (the two grandmothers).
Some names which were previously   52   as old-fashioned have   53   popular again, but the most popular names are not the strange   54  . The top names are fairly   55  , for example, Jack, Charlie and Thomas for boys and Grace, Ruby and Jessica for girls.

A.when B.in C.though D.for

A.calling B.naming C.raising D.educating

A.letter B.mark C.number D.sign

A.however B.too C.thus D.instead

A.outstanding B.unusual C.common D.famous

A.everything B.something C.anything D.nothing

A.to relate B.relate C.relating D.related

A.Many of B.Much C.A great many of D.Some

A.popular B.mysterious C.current D.present

A.for B.by C.after D.like

A.However B.Whereas C.Indeed D.Equally

A.in B.after C.since D.till

A.make out B.make for C.make use of D.make up

A.well-known B.double C.unique D.fantastic

A.which B.who C.that D.who that

A.changing B.combining C.separating D.dividing

A.thought B.thought about C.thought of D.thought over

A.become B.sounded C.formed D.developed

A.personalities B.ones C.characters D.varieties

A.traditional B.convenient C.classic D.contemporary

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Body language is the quiet, secret and most powerful language of all! It speaks 36  than words. According to specialists, our bodies send out more   37   than we realize. In fact, non-verbal communication(非言语交际) takes up about 50% of what we really   38  , And body language is particularly  39   when we attempt to communicate across cultures(文化). Indeed, what is called body language is so   40    a part of us that it's actually often unnoticed. And misunderstandings occur as a result of it.   41   , different societies treat the   42   between people differently. Northern Europeans usually do not like having  43   contact(接触)
even with friends, certainly not with  44   . People from Latin American countries,  45  , touch each other quite a lot. Therefore, it's possible that in  46 , it may look like a Latino is  47  a Norwegian all over the room. The Latino, trying to express friendship, will keep moving   48   . The Norwegian, very probably seeing this as pushiness, will keep  49   - which the Latino will in return regard as 50 _.
Clearly, a great deal is going on when people  51  . And only a part of it is in the words themselves. And when parties are from  52   cultures, there's a strong possibility of  53  . But whatever the situation, the best  54  is to obey the Golden Rule: treat others as you would like to be  55 _.

A.straighter B.louder C.harder D.further

A.sounds B.invitations C.feelings D.messages

A.hope B.receive C.discover D.mean

A.immediate B.misleading C.important D.difficult

A.well B.far C.much D.long

A.For example B.Thus C.However D.In short

A.trade B.distance C.connections D.greetings

A.eye B.verbal C.bodily D.telephone

A.strangers B.relatives C.neighbours D.enemies

A.in other words B.on the other hand C.in a similar way D.by all means

A.trouble B.conversation C.silence D.experiment

A.disturbing B.helping C.guiding D.following

A.closer B.faster C.in D.away

A.stepping forward B.going on C.backing away D.coming out

A.weakness B.carelessness C.friendliness D.coldness

A.talk B.travel C.laugh D.think

A.different B.European C.Latino D.rich

A.curiosity B.excitement C.misunderstanding D.nervousness

A.chance B.time C.result D.advice

A.noticed B.treated C.respected D.pleased

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阅读下面短文,从短文后各题的ABCD四个选项中,选出合适填入对应空白处的最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该选项涂黑。
In a land far away, once upon a time there was great poverty (贫困),and only the rich could manage without great _36_. Three of those rich men and their servants were_37_together on a road when they came to a very_38_village.
The first could not stand seeing the poverty, _39  he took all the gold and jewels from his wagons (四轮载重马车) and shared _40 out among the villagers. He wished them all the best of luck, and he left.
The second rich man, seeing the _41  situation, stopped for a short time and gave _42  all his food and drink, since he _43  see that money would be of little _44  to them. He made sure that they each _45   their fair share and would have enough food to _46   for some time. Then, he left.
The third rich man, on seeing such poverty, _47   and went straight through the _48   without stopping. The two other rich men saw this from a distance and commented with each other_49   the third rich man lacked sympathy. It was _50   that they themselves had been there to offer help.
However, three days later, they   51 the third rich man, who was coming in the opposite direction. He was 52 travelling quickly, but his wagons,  53  the gold and valuables they had been  54  ,were now full of farming tools and bags of  55  . He was rushing back to help them out of poverty.

A.loss B.expectations C.success D.problems

A.standing B.travelling C.gathering D.running

A.faraway B.poor C.different D.ancient

A.unless B.because C.so D.if

A.them B.anything C.nothing D.those

A.curious B.worrying C.dangerous D.puzzling

A.the villagers B.his servants C.the others D.the rest

A.could B.might C.should D.must

A.interest B.concern C.use D.attraction

A.returned B.gained C.offered D.received

A.remain B.last C.supply D.share

A.turned back B.set out C.showed off D.speededup

A.village B.land C.field D.road

A.whether B.how C.where D.when

A.good B.certain C.true D.strange

A.welcomed B.met C.accepted D.persuaded

A.still B.already C.always D.indeed

A.except for B.instead of C.apart from D.along with

A.loading B.treasuring C.carrying D.earning

A.food B.jewels C.money D.seeds

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The concept of solitude (独处) in the digital world is almost non-existent. In the world of digital technology, e-mail, social networking and online video games, information is meant to be____36___. Solitude can be hard to discover ___37____it has been given up. In this respect, new technologies have ___38____our culture.
The desire to be connected has brought solitude to a(n) ___39____as we’ve known it. People have become so ___40____in the world of networks and connections that one can often be contacted ____41___they’d rather not be. Today we can talk, text, e-mail, chat and blog (写博客), not only from our ___42____, but from our mobile phones as well.
Most developed nations have become ___43____on digital technology simply because they’ve grown accustomed to it, and at this point not ___44____it would make them an outsider. ___45____, many jobs and careers require people to be ___46____. From this point of view, technology has changed the culture of work. Being reachable might feel like a ___47____to those who may not want to be able to be contacted at all times.
I suppose the positive side is that solitude is still possible for anyone who ___48____wants it. Computers can be shut ___49____and mobile phones can be turned off. The ability to be “connected”and “ on”has many ___50____, as well as disadvantages. Travelers have ended up ___51____on mountains, and mobile phones have saved countless lives. They can also make people feel ___52____and forced to answer unwanted calls or___53____to unwanted texts.
Attitudes towards our connectedness as a society ___54____ across generations. Some find today’s technology a gift. Others consider it a curse. Regardless of anyone’s view on the subject, it’s hard to imagine what life would be like ___55____daily advancements in technology.

A.updated B.received C.shared D.collected

A.though B.until C.once D.before

A.respected B.shaped C.ignored D.preserved

A.edge B.stage C.end D.balance

A.sensitive B.intelligent C.considerate D.reachable

A.even if B.only if C.as if D.if only

A.media B.computers C.databases D.monitors

A.bent B.hard C.keen D.dependent

A.finding B.using C.protecting D.changing

A.Also B.Instead C.Otherwise D.Somehow

A.connected B.trained C.recommended D.interested

A.pleasure B.benefit C.burden D.disappointment

A.slightly B.hardly C.merely D.really

A.out B.down C.up D.in

A.aspects B.weaknesses C.advantages D.exceptions

A.hidden B.lost C.relaxed D.deserted

A.trapped B.excited C.confused D.amused

A.turn B.submit C.object D.reply

A.vary B.arise C.spread D.exist

A.beyond B.within C.despite D.without

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One minute means a lot in one's life.
During his college years, Roger   36   a summer in an Idaho logging camp. When the boss had to leave for a few days, he   37   Rogers in charge.
   38  if the men refuse to follow my orders?" Rogers asked. He thought of  Tony, an immigrant worker who troubled all day, giving the other men a  39   time.
‘‘Fire them,” the boss said.   Then, as if   40  Rogers' mind, he added,“I suppose you  think you are going  to  fire Tony if you get the   41   . I'd feel       42   about that. I have been logging for 40 years. Tony is the most__43   worker I've ever had. I know he is a troublemaker and that he__44   everybody and everything. But he comes in first and leaves last. There has not been an   45   for eight years on the hill where he works.”
Rogers_ 46  the next day. He went to Tony and spoke to him."Tony, do you know I’m in charge here today?" Tony grunted(嘟囔).“Iwas going to fire you the first time we tangled(纠缠),but I want you to know I’m not,”he told Tony,_ 47  what the boss had said.
When Rogers finished,Tony_48  the spadeful of sand he had held and tears streamed__49  his face.
That day Tony worked harder than ever before.
Twelve years later Rogers met Tony again who was now the  50   for railroad construction for one of the largest logging companies in the West. Rogers asked him how he came to California and happened to have such    51   .
Tony replied, "If it not be for the one   52   you talk to me back in Idaho, I kill somebody someday. One minute   53    my whole life."
Effective managers know the    54   0f taking a moment to point out what a worker is doing well. But what a    55   a minute of yes can make in any relationship!

A.wasted B.spent C.trained D.traveled

A.took B.provided C.put D.designed

A.What B.How C.Why D.Who

A.ridiculous B.surprising C.happy D.hard

A.recognizing B.having C.bearing D.reading

A.chance B.order C.support D.evidence

A.proudly B.badly C.uglily D.well

A.quarrelsome B.elegant C.reliable D.silent

A.respects B.protects C.hurts D.hates

A.accident B.anecdote C.opportunity D.argument

A.turned up B.set out C.joined up D.took over

A.lying B.adding C.smiling D.replying

A.threw B.dropped C.carried D.lifted

A.through B.on C.down D.in

A.boss B.worker C.engine-driver D.immigrant

A.railroad B.companies C.life D.success

A.word B.thing C.minute D.lesson

A.save B.change C.colour D.lose

A.importance B.method C.result D.influence

A.choice B.decision C.difference D.conclusion

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Directions: For each blank in the following passage there are four words or phrases marked A, B, C and D. Fill in each blank with the word or phrase that best fits the context.
In the past,most American mothers were at home to take care of their children during the day. Now,  36  , many mothers are working. More than half of the American women with young children have   37   outside the house.
American families solve the child care   38  in different ways. Some parents allow older children to stay at home alone after school. The parents   39   make sure that their children, usually not younger than 10 years old, understand   40   rules and can deal with emergencies (紧急情况). Other parents say they would   41 allow their children to be at home alone. They usually   42  someone to take care of the children.
Some parents in the U. S. find their own ways to cut the cost of child care. They join child care   43   . Each person in the group   44  for the children of other group members at different times. Some parents ask local churches, schools and social organizations to help   45   activities for the children. These child care choices often cost   46   or no money. Many American parents, however, still struggle with the problem of   47   good child care at a reasonable price.

A.therefore B.otherwise C.thus D.however

A.children B.jobs C.houses D.money

A.problem B.question C.chance D.choice

A.can B.must C.may D.ought

A.dangerous B.safety C.funny D.true

A.rather B.certainly C.always D.never

A.tell B.stop C.pay D.invite

A.schools B.groups C.clubs D.hospitals

A.cares B.sends C.asks D.pays

A.have B.offer C.play D.join

A.much B.little C.enough D.a great deal

A.taking B.finding C.losing D.suffering

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完型填空(共20小题;每小题1.5分,满分30分)
阅读下面短文,掌握其大意,然后从36—55各题所给的四个选项(A、B、C和D)中,选出可以填入空白处的最佳选项。
It’s Saturday morning. Tony’s sitting at the kitchen table,   36    with a piece of bread. He’s not even   37 . Is he ill? No, but he does have a   38  . He has nothing to do because the Internet is down. When he  39  up this morning, Tony was feeling  40 . He jumped out of bed full of plans for the weekend  41 . It would be a weekend like any other --- a great weekend. But that was  42   he turned on his computer and  43  he was unable to go online. Having no Internet changes everything.
Every weekend, Tony   44  goes online to email friends, read the  45   to keep up with what’s happening in the world and  46  a few online chess games with his cousin Helen to finish the weekend off. The perfect weekend --- online!
Just as Tony is  47  how he can possibly have a normal weekend without the Internet, his mum walks into the  48  . “Cheer up, Tony. Don’t  49   the Internet any more, OK?” Tony makes no   50  but sighs (叹气). “Go and play chess with Helen!” Tony’s mum  51 .
“Oh, yes! Helen lives just around the  52  . We can meet and play chess face to face for a  53 . Maybe this weekend won’t be so bad,” Tony   54   , as he walks to the phone. There is  55   without the Internet after all.

A.cutting B.playing C.eating D.thinking

A.hungry B.generous C.equal D.confident

A.lifestyle B.problem C.pressure D.tradition

A.dialled B.rang C.stood D.woke

A.great B.peaceful C.urgent D.unusual

A.around B.above C.ahead D.away

A.after B.before C.until D.when

A.thought B.guessed C.surprised D.found

A.usually B.nearly C.especially D.already

A.disasters B.news C.reports D.documents

A.admire B.explore C.play D.involve

A.suffering B.wondering C.realizing D.supposing

A.living-room B.hall C.kitchen D.study

A.talk about B.care about C.think about D.look about

A.answer B.progress C.movement D.choice

A.requests B.cries C.solves D.suggests

A.edge B.distance C.corner D.end

A.challenge B.champion C.ceremony D.change

A.promotes B.smiles C.reacts D.continues

A.study B.task C.weekend D.life

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How often do you change your hairstyle or ask for new dresses? You may be   16   to follow trends(潮流)in Western countries, but young people in the United States don’t care as much about   17   as you do.
A recent survey among high school   18  in China, Japan, South Korea and the US found that   19   teenagers care more about their appearance than young people in the US.
This survey was held in 156 high schools in the four countries. More than 7,000 teenagers were  20   about their views on life and the world. South Koreans, at 83 per cent, cared most about their looks. They were   21   by the Chinese and Japanese, while US students showed the least interest in fashion at only 33 per cent.
“The different results show   22   of cultural background,” said Sun Yunxiao from the China Youth and Children Research Centre. He explained that in the US there are many different   23   of beauty, so teens are more   24   to be confident about their appearance.
US teenagers’ high self-confidence is displayed in the   25  . About 85 per cent are happy with themselves. The percentage of self-confident Chinese students stands at only 30 per cent.
What’s   26  , US students showed more individuality, with 88 per cent   27   that “people should follow their own interests rather than   28  of others”. This is much   29   than South Korea’s 69 per cent, China’s 49 and Japan’s 48.
Japanese students, at 52 per cent, are most dissatisfied with modern society. Chinese and Koreans follow at second and   30   most dissatisfied.
  31   to the survey, Chinese students are happy and disciplined. They have a strong wish to make a difference.   32   Chinese students need to be more independent and learn how to relax,” said Sun.
The students have different   33   backgrounds. But home and places where friends gather are the favorite places all teens seek happiness.
Exams and worries about life after graduation cause much   34   among most of the teens  35   for the survey.

A.absorbed B.willing C.careless D.unhappy

A.hairstyle B.dresses C.fashion D.culture

A.teachers B.students C.citizens D.colleagues

A.Asian B.American C.African D.Western

A.answered B.requested C.persuaded D.questioned

A.followed B.decreased C.reduced D.compared

A.relations B.attitudes C.customs D.differences

A.awareness B.standards C.duties D.expenses

A.admirable B.confused C.likely D.unbelievable

A.survey B.setting C.reference D.paper

A.worse B.better C.less D.more

A.disagreeing B.observing C.agreeing D.puzzling

A.those B.that C.it D.one

A.lower B.larger C.smaller D.higher

A.first B.third C.fourth D.last

A.Leading B.Devoting C.Appealing D.According

A.But B.And C.So D.Or

A.political B.cultural C.economical D.material

A.expectation B.hesitation C.concern D.conservation

A.interviewed B.advised C.overlooked D.invested

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Texting in the street—your funeral
Millions of people are putting their lives at risk by texting their friends as they walk along busy streets, reported the Daily Mail.
One in ten  41  users has already been  42  because they are so lost in their phones that they fail to  43  lamp-posts or cars, according to Joanna Lumdsen of Aston University.
To test the danger of texting while  44  , Lumdsen did an experiment in which volunteers followed a  45  path while trying to  46  in a message on the phone.
Around them, screens  47  up instructions to avoid stepping on  48  colors on the floor.
She found that people missed one in five  49  because they were so busy with their phones.
“In  50  life this means that one in five lamp-posts or moving cars is  51
to go unnoticed by people  52  and walking,” she said.
Her research is looking for ways cell phone makers could improve the  53
of phones to make texting on the move  54  . That could  55  easier-to-use voice operated phones, or phones that respond to gestures.
“The safest thing is  56  people not to text while they walk along,” she said. “ 57  a lot of people in business are  58  to carry a mobile phone and be in  59  24 hours a day, seven days a week. They are under pressure to reply to calls  60  , and to respond to text messages and emails straight away.

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