44. A. assistant B. shop C. glass D. door
45. A. approach B. call C. find D. look
46. A. checked B. examined C. noticed D. watched
47. A. expensive B. ordinary C. natural D. real
48. A. marked B. signed C. found D. recognized
49. A. feeling B. favour C. reason D. present
50. A. shook B. nodded C. held D. touched
51. A. decision B. answer C. offer D. solution
52. A. reduced B. gave C. suggested D. had
53. A. threw B. snatched C. brought D. forced
54. A. angrily B. disappointedly C. readily D. clearly
55. A. experience B. bargain C. advice D. balance
任务型阅读(共10小题,每小题1分,满分10分)
请认真阅读下列短文,并根据所读内容在文章后表格中的空格里填入最恰当的单词。
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Have you ever been in a meeting while someone was making a speech and realized suddenly that your mind was a million miles away? You probably felt sorry and made up your mind to pay attention and ever have been told that daydreaming is a waste of time.
"On the contrary," says L. Giambra, an expert in psychology, "daydreaming is quite necessary. Without it, the mind couldn't get done all the thinking it has to do during a normal day. You can't possibly do all your thinking with a conscious mind. Instead, your unconscious mind is working out problems all the time. Daydreaming then may be one way that the conscious and unconscious states of mind have silent dialogues."
Early experts in psychology paid no attention to the importance of daydreams or even considered them harmful. At one time daydreaming was thought to be a cause of some mental illnesses. They did not have a better understanding of daydreams until the late 1980s. Eric Klinger, a professor of psychology, is the writer of the book Daydreaming. Klinger says, "We know now that