单项选择题

Response Time Is Critical

You, yes you, are responsible for ensuring that you are an interesting, fun person to have (26) , for being a positive player in the game of life. No matter what your level of (27) to use a given language, you’ll need to be fast. To be able to respond or begin speaking within the usual conversational pause of about half a second or break of (28) four seconds, you’ll need to be able to say something, anything, within those time limits, or you just won’t get a (29) .
We had an interesting example of this in class which accurately (30) real life "on the street". One student, who’d never left Japan and who spoke English at only sixty to seventy words per minute, could generally begin speaking within a second or so (31) he wanted to. His start was strong, but not always meaningful; "Yes, well, yes. Well what I wanted to say..." (32) student had lived and worked in England, could easily speak at one to two hundred words per minute and preferred to be precise (33) he said, taking two to four seconds to prepare before he spoke. By the end of the class round-table debate, the second student said he was feeling frustrated and (34) that no one would listen to him and had only been heard for a few minutes (35) over the hour long debate. On the other hand, the first, slower talking, student had totaled over twenty minutes of speaking time and been the most lucid (=expressive) (36) in the group of six. The first speaker had a hearing because his (37) and initiation time was very fast, while the (38) failed, no matter how much he wanted to talk, because his response time was too slow, slower than any other student. A secondary factor was that when the second student (39) before speaking his first few words were much quieter than his normal speaking volume. The interactive talking possible in lessons gave the second student chances to reduce his response time so that later in the course he could make himself (40) quickly and loudly enough for people to be interested in hearing what he wanted to say.

A. annoyed
B. enraged
C. exaggerated
D. infuriated