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36. In______(anticipate) of bad weather they take plenty of warm clothes. 37. We’d better take a plane bound______China.38. He realised that most of his mistakes arose______his nervousness in the exam.(用適當(dāng)詞填空)39. The course normally attracts about 100 students per year, of whom up__________half will be from abroad. 40. Thus, the keyboard can determine people39。s identities, and by extension, whether they should be given access to the puter it39。s connected to—regardless__________whether someone gets the password right. 41. It is up___________you to settle the prior misunderstanding between us. 42. I39。m afraid the other kids will laugh__________me because I don39。t understand. 43. He played a joke__________me by pretending he had lost the tickets. 44. Some understanding of grammar is fundamental________learning a language. 45. Kelly loved her husband_________spite of the fact that he sometimes drank too much. 三、語法填空1閱讀下面材料,在空白處填入適當(dāng)?shù)膬?nèi)容(1 個(gè)單詞)或括號(hào)內(nèi)單詞的正確形式。Different countries have wildly different forms of greeting.In the USA, when you pass by someone you know, a nod is acceptable, and you usually shake hands with someone you first meet. But in Latin countries, a firm handshake46. (consider) rude. In my home country, Mauritius, when people meet, they usually kiss each other 47. the cheeks. This is also mon in France, 48. the act is called faire la bise. However, this is not 49. universal rule.During my first week in the USA, I kissed every single girl I met. My friends had to tell me that that was inappropriate,50. (leave) me in great embarrassment. What is mon here, however, is for friends51. (hug) each other – something I was not used to. Hugs always make me 52. (frighten) because I don’t really like that. This may seem strange since even kissing 53. (stranger) is normal in my country. Now that I think about it, I hate cheekkissing as well.Wouldn’t it be 54. (enjoy) to have a greeting code that is 55. (wide) acceptable? I’m not saying we should start doing that, but we can surely do something to avoid misunderstanding.2Red envelopes have played 56. important part in Chinese New Year for as long as anyone can remember. So what’s the story behind the red envelopes during Chinese New Year?One popular story 57. (date) back to the Qin Dynasty, when the elderly would thread coins onto a red string. This money 58. (call) yasui qian in Chinese, meaning “ money protecting oneself from evil spirits ” , and was believed to protect elder people from sickness and 59. (die). As the printing press became more mon, the yasui qian was replaced 60. red envelopes.Another legend tells of a village 61. a demon (惡魔)would terrorize children at night. It was believed that the demon would touch the children’s heads while they were asleep, 62. (cause) serious illness. From there, a theory emerged that when they prayed, the god would send eight fairies to protect the child. The fairies would disguise(偽裝) 63. (they) as eight coins and hide under the child’s pillow. When the demon got close, the coins would begin to shine very 64. (bright) , blinding the demon. Word began to spread and the villagers started giving red envelopes 65. (fill) with coins to each other to put under their pillows at night. As time passed, red envelopes became a way to bring good luck and prosperity to the receiver.