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_____from college. A. graduated B. have graduated C. had graduated D. graduate 7. Is this the first time you________Beijing? What’ s your impression of the city? A. visit B. visited C. have visited D. had visited 8. I’ m very sorry to have________you with so many questions on such an occasion. A. interrupted B. excused C. impressed D. bothered 9. Who else except a millionaire in the world could________to use such an expensive car? A. pay B. afford C. buy D. spend 10. Since we have failed many times, we should take a new approach ________ the problem. A. about solving B. to solving C. of solving D. in solving Ⅱ .閱讀理解 [來 (2020 年長春第一次調研 ) Someday a stranger will read your e mail without your permission or scan the websites you’ ve perhaps someone will casually glance through your credit card purchases or cell phone bills to find out your shopping preferences or calling habits. In fact, it’ s likely that some of these things have already happened to would watch you without your permission? It might be a spouse, a girlfriend, a marketing pany, a boss,a cop or a it is, they will see you in a way you never intended to be seen— 21st century is the equal of being caught naked. Psychologists tell us boundaries (dividing line) are healthy, and that it’ s important to reveal yourself to friends, family and lovers in stages, at appropriate few boundaries digital bread pieces you leave everywhere make it easy for strangers to reconstruct who you are, where you are and what you some cases, a simple Google search can reveal what you it or not, increasingly we_live_in_a_world_where you_simply_cannot key question is: Does that matter? When opinion polls (民意測驗 ) ask Americans about privacy, most say they are concerned about losing survey found an overwhelming (very large) pessimism about privacy, with 60 percent of respondents saying they feel their privacy is “ slipping away, and that bothers me.” But people say one thing and do a tiny part of Americans change any behaviors in an effort to protect their people turn down a tollbooth (收費站 ) to avoid using the EZ Pass system that can track automobile few turn down supermarket loyalty economist Alissanfro Acquisti has a series of tests that reveal that people will give personal information like Social Security numbers just to get their hands on a pitiful 50 cent off coupon (優(yōu)惠券 ).