問題詳情

Birds do it. Cats do it. And Spaniards most especially do it—every day, in broad daylight. They nap. Grownadults—executives, teachers, civil servants—wink off in the middle of the workday. From 1 or 2 o’clock to 4:30 or soevery afternoon, Spain stops the world for a stroll home, a leisure meal, and a few z’s. Common Market technocratshave informed the Spanish that this is not the way things will get done in a unified Europe.At a time when productivity is the world’s largest religion, the siesta tradition lives on. In Spain, work operates underthe command of life, instead of the other way around. No task is so critical that it can’t wait a couple of hours whileyou attend to more important matters like eating, relaxing, or catching up on sleep. When the midday break hits, officesempty and streets clear. Befuddled foreigners quickly learn that they have entered a new circadian order.
46. During the midday break in Spain, people __________.
(A)go home for lunch or sleep
(B)do errands
(C)make business calls
(D)go shopping

參考答案

答案:A
難度:非常簡單1
統計:A(12),B(0),C(0),D(0),E(0)

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