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2023 고1 6월 모의고사 영어 심층분석 + 변형문제 18~28번+32번

싸쌤 2023. 6. 6. 10:50
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2023 고1 6월 모의고사 영어 심층분석 + 변형문제 18~28번+32번

2023 고1 6월 모의고사 영어 심층분석-18번~28번 묶음파일[25,27,28번 제외]+32번.pdf
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수능특강싸쌤의 입시영어 : 네이버 카페

모의고사, 수능, 수능의감, 수능특강, 수능완성, 리딩파워, 수능특강라이트, 올림포스영어독해 심층분석

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18. ACC Travel Agency Customers: Have you ever wanted to enjoy a holiday in nature?

This summer is the best time to turn your dream into reality. We have a perfect travel package for you.

This travel package includes special trips to Lake Madison as well as massage and meditation to help you relax.

Also, we provide yoga lessons taught by experienced instructors. If you book this package, you will enjoy all this at a reasonable price.

We are sure that it will be an unforgettable experience for you. If you call us, we will be happy to give you more details.

 

19. When I woke up in our hotel room, it was almost midnight. I didn’t see my husband nor daughter.

I called them, but I heard their phones ringing in the room. Feeling worried, I went outside and walked down the street, but they were nowhere to be found.

When I decided I should ask someone for help, a crowd nearby caught my attention.

I approached, hoping to find my husband and daughter, and suddenly I saw two familiar faces.

I smiled, feeling calm. Just then, my daughter saw me and called, “Mom!” They were watching the magic show. Finally, I felt all my worries disappear.

 

20. Research shows that people who work have two calendars: one for work and one for their personal lives.

Although it may seem sensible, having two separate calendars for work and personal life can lead to distractions.

To check if something is missing, you will find yourself checking your to-do lists multiple times. Instead, organize all of your tasks in one place. It doesn’t matter if you use digital or paper media.

It’s okay to keep your professional and personal tasks in one place. This will give you a good idea of how time is divided between work and home.

This will allow you to make informed decisions about which tasks are most important.

 

21.  

Why do you care how a customer reacts to a purchase? Good question. By understanding postpurchase behavior, you can understand the influence and the likelihood of whether a buyer will repurchase the product (and whether she will keep it or return it).

You’ll also determine whether the buyer will encourage others to purchase the product from you. Satisfied customers can become unpaid ambassadors for your business, so customer satisfaction should be on the top of your to-do list.

People tend to believe the opinions of people they know. People trust friends over advertisements any day.

They know that advertisements are paid to tell the “good side” and that they’re used to persuade them to purchase products and services.

By continually monitoring your customer’s satisfaction after the sale, you have the ability to avoid negative word-of-mouth advertising.

 

22. The promise of a computerized society, we were told, was that it would pass to machines all of the repetitive drudgery of work, allowing us humans to pursue higher purposes and to have more leisure time.

It didn’t work out this way. Instead of more time, most of us have less. Companies large and small have offloaded work onto the backs of consumers.

Things that used to be done for us, as part of the valueadded service of working with a company, we are now expected to do ourselves.

With air travel, we’re now expected to complete our own reservations and checkin, jobs that used to be done by airline employees or travel agents.

At the grocery store, we’re expected to bag our own groceries and, in some supermarkets, to scan our own purchases.

 

23. We tend to believe that we possess a host of socially desirable characteristics, and that we are free of most of those that are socially undesirable.

For example, a large majority of the general public thinks that they are more intelligent, more fairminded, less prejudiced, and more skilled behind the wheel of an automobile than the average person.

This phenomenon is so reliable and ubiquitous that it has come to be known as the “Lake Wobegon effect,” after Garrison Keillor’s fictional community where “the women are strong, the men are goodlooking, and all the children are above average.”

A survey of one million high school seniors found that 70% thought they were above average in leadership ability, and only 2% thought they were below average.

In terms of ability to get along with others, all students thought they were above average, 60% thought they were in the top 10%, and 25% thought they were in the top 1%!

 

24.  

Few people will be surprised to hear that poverty tends to create stress: a 2006 study published in the American journal Psychosomatic Medicine, for example, noted that a lower socioeconomic status was associated with higher levels of stress hormones in the body.

However, richer economies have their own distinct stresses.

The key issue is time pressure.

A 1999 study of 31 countries by American psychologist Robert Levine and Canadian psychologist Ara Norenzayan found that wealthier, more industrialized nations had a faster pace of life which led to a higher standard of living, but at the same time left the population feeling a constant sense of urgency, as well as being more prone to heart disease.

In effect, fast-paced productivity creates wealth, but it also leads people to feel time-poor when they lack the time to relax and enjoy themselves.

 

26. Gary Becker was born in Pottsville, Pennsylvania in 1930 and grew up in Brooklyn, New York City.

His father, who was not well educated, had a deep interest in financial and political issues.

After graduating from high school, Becker went to Princeton University, where he majored in economics. He was dissatisfied with his economic education at Princeton University because “it didn’t seem to be handling real problems.”

He earned a doctor’s degree in economics from the University of Chicago in 1955. His doctoral paper on the economics of discrimination was mentioned by the Nobel Prize Committee as an important contribution to economics.

Since 1985, Becker had written a regular economics column in Business Week, explaining economic analysis and ideas to the general public. In 1992, he was awarded the Nobel Prize in economic science.

 

32. Think of the brain as a city. If you were to look out over a city and ask “where is the economy located?” you’d see there’s no good answer to the question.

Instead, the economy emerges from the interaction of all the elements from the stores and the banks to the merchants and the customers. And so it is with the brain’s operation: it doesn’t happen in one spot.

Just as in a city, no neighborhood of the brain operates in isolation.

In brains and in cities, everything emerges from the interaction between residents, at all scales, locally and distantly.

Just as trains bring materials and textiles into a city, which become processed into the economy, so the raw electrochemical signals from sensory organs are transported along superhighways of neurons. There the signals undergo processing and transformation into our conscious reality.

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