填空题


While waiting for a friend in a Washington, D.C. hotel lobby and wanting to be both (1) and alone, I had seated myself in a solitary chair outside the normal stream of traffic. In such a setting most Americans follow a role, which can be stated as follows: as soon as a person stops or is seated in a public place, there balloons around him a small (2) of privacy which is considered (3) . Anyone who enters this zone and says there is intruding.
As I waited in the (4) lobby, a stranger walked up to where I was sitting and stood close enough so that not only could I easily touch him but I could even hear him breathing, If the lobby had been crowed with people, I would have understood his (5) , but in empty lobby his presence made me very uncomfortable. Feeling annoyed by this intrusion, I moved my body in such a way as to communicate (6) . Strangely enough, instead of moving away, my actions seemed to encourage him, because he moved even closer.
Fortunately, a group of people soon arrived whom my tormentor immediately joined. Their (7) explained his behavior, for I knew from both speech and (8) that they were Arabs. I have not been able to make this (9) identification by looking at him when he was alone because he was wearing American clothes.
For the Arab, there is no such thing as (10) in public. Public means public. If A is standing on a street comer and B wants his spot, B is within his rights if be does what he can to make A uncomfortable enough to move.
[A] mannerism [I] desert
[B] crucial [J] deserved
[C] behavior [K] gestures
[D] intrusion [L] visible
[E] inviolate [M] visionary
[F] annoyance [N] anxiously
[G] specify [O] interfere
[H] sphere

【参考答案】

[D]
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