Просмотр связанных заданий №33649, №33650, №33651, №33652, №33653, №33654, №33655

  • 12 линия№33649Не выполнено
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    According to the author, Swee Jing paid quite a lot of money to …

    1) have a private hospital room.
    2) undergo a surgery.
    3) to reattach her legs.
    4) to fix her broken legs.

    Stretch my legs, Doc!

    Swee Jing paid more money than most Chinese people earn in a year to have both her legs broken and stretched. The pretty college graduate is now lying in a hospital bed, clearly still in pain, after the doctors sawed through the flesh and bone of both legs in eight places. Each leg now has eight steel rods sticking out of it below the knee, and these are connected to a steel cage surrounding each leg. Once the broken bones start to heal the doctors will begin to turn the screws on the cage pushing the steel rods apart and so stretching the leg. It is a slow and painful process that will take 18 months to add 8 cm to Swee Jing's height. 

    Despite the agony, the cost and the inconvenience, the 23-year-old says she does not regret a thing. "It hurts, but it will be worth it to be taller. I'll have more opportunities in life and a better chance of finding a good job and husband."

    In part, the popularity of such surgery can be explained by the surge of interest in fashion and beauty in a country where things like fashion magazines and beauty contests used to be banned. The once closed society is now more open to western influences, and the relatively prosperous middle classes have the money to explore cosmetic possibilities. Shops and magazines in the citiesshow endless images of long-legged western models, inevitably putting pressure on young women.

    There are also domestic pressures. Height is listed among the criteria required on job advertisements. To get a post in the foreign ministry, for instance, male applicants need not bother applying unless they are at least 170 cm, while women must be at least 160 cm. Chinese diplomats are expected to be tall to match the height of their foreign counterparts.

    For more glamorous positions the conditions are even tougher: air stewardesses have to be over 165 cm. But height discrimination is evident even at ground level: in some places, people under 160 cm are not even eligible to take a driving test. Height requirements are also frequently mentioned in the personal ads of newspapers and magazines.

    Even successful operations can bring pain several months after the initial operation. "During the final weeks of the stretching, I was in so much discomfort that I couldn't sleep at night," says one young woman from Beijing who gave her name as Susan. The 27-year-old is in hospital recovering from an operation to remove the steel rods that have been inside her legs for the past 18 months. Each leg now bears eight circular scars.

    Now that she is 8cm taller than before, Susan says she would not hesitate to recommend the procedure to her friends. "It hurt at first and had a big impact on my life for a long time because I couldn't walk freely. But it has worked, and I feel very good about that. Before, nobody paid any attention to me because I was short, but now they'll look at me."

  • 13 линия№33650Не выполнено
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    The Chinese girl doesn’t feel bad about what she’s gone through because …

    1) it made her stronger.
    2) it raised her self-esteem.
    3) it made her husband proud of her.
    4) it gave her a better chance to succeed in life.

    Stretch my legs, Doc!

    Swee Jing paid more money than most Chinese people earn in a year to have both her legs broken and stretched. The pretty college graduate is now lying in a hospital bed, clearly still in pain, after the doctors sawed through the flesh and bone of both legs in eight places. Each leg now has eight steel rods sticking out of it below the knee, and these are connected to a steel cage surrounding each leg. Once the broken bones start to heal the doctors will begin to turn the screws on the cage pushing the steel rods apart and so stretching the leg. It is a slow and painful process that will take 18 months to add 8 cm to Swee Jing's height. 

    Despite the agony, the cost and the inconvenience, the 23-year-old says she does not regret a thing. "It hurts, but it will be worth it to be taller. I'll have more opportunities in life and a better chance of finding a good job and husband."

    In part, the popularity of such surgery can be explained by the surge of interest in fashion and beauty in a country where things like fashion magazines and beauty contests used to be banned. The once closed society is now more open to western influences, and the relatively prosperous middle classes have the money to explore cosmetic possibilities. Shops and magazines in the citiesshow endless images of long-legged western models, inevitably putting pressure on young women.

    There are also domestic pressures. Height is listed among the criteria required on job advertisements. To get a post in the foreign ministry, for instance, male applicants need not bother applying unless they are at least 170 cm, while women must be at least 160 cm. Chinese diplomats are expected to be tall to match the height of their foreign counterparts.

    For more glamorous positions the conditions are even tougher: air stewardesses have to be over 165 cm. But height discrimination is evident even at ground level: in some places, people under 160 cm are not even eligible to take a driving test. Height requirements are also frequently mentioned in the personal ads of newspapers and magazines.

    Even successful operations can bring pain several months after the initial operation. "During the final weeks of the stretching, I was in so much discomfort that I couldn't sleep at night," says one young woman from Beijing who gave her name as Susan. The 27-year-old is in hospital recovering from an operation to remove the steel rods that have been inside her legs for the past 18 months. Each leg now bears eight circular scars.

    Now that she is 8cm taller than before, Susan says she would not hesitate to recommend the procedure to her friends. "It hurt at first and had a big impact on my life for a long time because I couldn't walk freely. But it has worked, and I feel very good about that. Before, nobody paid any attention to me because I was short, but now they'll look at me."

  • 14 линия№33651Не выполнено
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    Why do people get this kind of surgeries in countries like China nowadays?

    1) They are influenced by Western fashion.
    2) They earn enough money.
    3) They want to gain fame.
    4) They don’t want to be banned.

    Stretch my legs, Doc!

    Swee Jing paid more money than most Chinese people earn in a year to have both her legs broken and stretched. The pretty college graduate is now lying in a hospital bed, clearly still in pain, after the doctors sawed through the flesh and bone of both legs in eight places. Each leg now has eight steel rods sticking out of it below the knee, and these are connected to a steel cage surrounding each leg. Once the broken bones start to heal the doctors will begin to turn the screws on the cage pushing the steel rods apart and so stretching the leg. It is a slow and painful process that will take 18 months to add 8 cm to Swee Jing's height. 

    Despite the agony, the cost and the inconvenience, the 23-year-old says she does not regret a thing. "It hurts, but it will be worth it to be taller. I'll have more opportunities in life and a better chance of finding a good job and husband."

    In part, the popularity of such surgery can be explained by the surge of interest in fashion and beauty in a country where things like fashion magazines and beauty contests used to be banned. The once closed society is now more open to western influences, and the relatively prosperous middle classes have the money to explore cosmetic possibilities. Shops and magazines in the citiesshow endless images of long-legged western models, inevitably putting pressure on young women.

    There are also domestic pressures. Height is listed among the criteria required on job advertisements. To get a post in the foreign ministry, for instance, male applicants need not bother applying unless they are at least 170 cm, while women must be at least 160 cm. Chinese diplomats are expected to be tall to match the height of their foreign counterparts.

    For more glamorous positions the conditions are even tougher: air stewardesses have to be over 165 cm. But height discrimination is evident even at ground level: in some places, people under 160 cm are not even eligible to take a driving test. Height requirements are also frequently mentioned in the personal ads of newspapers and magazines.

    Even successful operations can bring pain several months after the initial operation. "During the final weeks of the stretching, I was in so much discomfort that I couldn't sleep at night," says one young woman from Beijing who gave her name as Susan. The 27-year-old is in hospital recovering from an operation to remove the steel rods that have been inside her legs for the past 18 months. Each leg now bears eight circular scars.

    Now that she is 8cm taller than before, Susan says she would not hesitate to recommend the procedure to her friends. "It hurt at first and had a big impact on my life for a long time because I couldn't walk freely. But it has worked, and I feel very good about that. Before, nobody paid any attention to me because I was short, but now they'll look at me."

  • 15 линия№33652Не выполнено
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    What are the domestic reasons for stretching legs?

    1) Lack of attention.
    2) A small salary.
    3) Lack of job opportunities.
    4) Impossibility to find a rich husband.

    Stretch my legs, Doc!

    Swee Jing paid more money than most Chinese people earn in a year to have both her legs broken and stretched. The pretty college graduate is now lying in a hospital bed, clearly still in pain, after the doctors sawed through the flesh and bone of both legs in eight places. Each leg now has eight steel rods sticking out of it below the knee, and these are connected to a steel cage surrounding each leg. Once the broken bones start to heal the doctors will begin to turn the screws on the cage pushing the steel rods apart and so stretching the leg. It is a slow and painful process that will take 18 months to add 8 cm to Swee Jing's height. 

    Despite the agony, the cost and the inconvenience, the 23-year-old says she does not regret a thing. "It hurts, but it will be worth it to be taller. I'll have more opportunities in life and a better chance of finding a good job and husband."

    In part, the popularity of such surgery can be explained by the surge of interest in fashion and beauty in a country where things like fashion magazines and beauty contests used to be banned. The once closed society is now more open to western influences, and the relatively prosperous middle classes have the money to explore cosmetic possibilities. Shops and magazines in the citiesshow endless images of long-legged western models, inevitably putting pressure on young women.

    There are also domestic pressures. Height is listed among the criteria required on job advertisements. To get a post in the foreign ministry, for instance, male applicants need not bother applying unless they are at least 170 cm, while women must be at least 160 cm. Chinese diplomats are expected to be tall to match the height of their foreign counterparts.

    For more glamorous positions the conditions are even tougher: air stewardesses have to be over 165 cm. But height discrimination is evident even at ground level: in some places, people under 160 cm are not even eligible to take a driving test. Height requirements are also frequently mentioned in the personal ads of newspapers and magazines.

    Even successful operations can bring pain several months after the initial operation. "During the final weeks of the stretching, I was in so much discomfort that I couldn't sleep at night," says one young woman from Beijing who gave her name as Susan. The 27-year-old is in hospital recovering from an operation to remove the steel rods that have been inside her legs for the past 18 months. Each leg now bears eight circular scars.

    Now that she is 8cm taller than before, Susan says she would not hesitate to recommend the procedure to her friends. "It hurt at first and had a big impact on my life for a long time because I couldn't walk freely. But it has worked, and I feel very good about that. Before, nobody paid any attention to me because I was short, but now they'll look at me."

  • 16 линия№33653Не выполнено
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    What aren’t short people allowed to do in some places?

    1) To get inside a car.
    2) To get driving licence.
    3) To get on board.
    4) To buy a car.

    Stretch my legs, Doc!

    Swee Jing paid more money than most Chinese people earn in a year to have both her legs broken and stretched. The pretty college graduate is now lying in a hospital bed, clearly still in pain, after the doctors sawed through the flesh and bone of both legs in eight places. Each leg now has eight steel rods sticking out of it below the knee, and these are connected to a steel cage surrounding each leg. Once the broken bones start to heal the doctors will begin to turn the screws on the cage pushing the steel rods apart and so stretching the leg. It is a slow and painful process that will take 18 months to add 8 cm to Swee Jing's height. 

    Despite the agony, the cost and the inconvenience, the 23-year-old says she does not regret a thing. "It hurts, but it will be worth it to be taller. I'll have more opportunities in life and a better chance of finding a good job and husband."

    In part, the popularity of such surgery can be explained by the surge of interest in fashion and beauty in a country where things like fashion magazines and beauty contests used to be banned. The once closed society is now more open to western influences, and the relatively prosperous middle classes have the money to explore cosmetic possibilities. Shops and magazines in the citiesshow endless images of long-legged western models, inevitably putting pressure on young women.

    There are also domestic pressures. Height is listed among the criteria required on job advertisements. To get a post in the foreign ministry, for instance, male applicants need not bother applying unless they are at least 170 cm, while women must be at least 160 cm. Chinese diplomats are expected to be tall to match the height of their foreign counterparts.

    For more glamorous positions the conditions are even tougher: air stewardesses have to be over 165 cm. But height discrimination is evident even at ground level: in some places, people under 160 cm are not even eligible to take a driving test. Height requirements are also frequently mentioned in the personal ads of newspapers and magazines.

    Even successful operations can bring pain several months after the initial operation. "During the final weeks of the stretching, I was in so much discomfort that I couldn't sleep at night," says one young woman from Beijing who gave her name as Susan. The 27-year-old is in hospital recovering from an operation to remove the steel rods that have been inside her legs for the past 18 months. Each leg now bears eight circular scars.

    Now that she is 8cm taller than before, Susan says she would not hesitate to recommend the procedure to her friends. "It hurt at first and had a big impact on my life for a long time because I couldn't walk freely. But it has worked, and I feel very good about that. Before, nobody paid any attention to me because I was short, but now they'll look at me."

  • 17 линия№33654Не выполнено
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    What will you face after getting the surgery, according to Susan?

    1) Consequences of an unsuccessful operation.
    2) A rapid recovery.
    3) Discomfort related to not being able to sleep.
    4) Almost unbearable ache.

    Stretch my legs, Doc!

    Swee Jing paid more money than most Chinese people earn in a year to have both her legs broken and stretched. The pretty college graduate is now lying in a hospital bed, clearly still in pain, after the doctors sawed through the flesh and bone of both legs in eight places. Each leg now has eight steel rods sticking out of it below the knee, and these are connected to a steel cage surrounding each leg. Once the broken bones start to heal the doctors will begin to turn the screws on the cage pushing the steel rods apart and so stretching the leg. It is a slow and painful process that will take 18 months to add 8 cm to Swee Jing's height. 

    Despite the agony, the cost and the inconvenience, the 23-year-old says she does not regret a thing. "It hurts, but it will be worth it to be taller. I'll have more opportunities in life and a better chance of finding a good job and husband."

    In part, the popularity of such surgery can be explained by the surge of interest in fashion and beauty in a country where things like fashion magazines and beauty contests used to be banned. The once closed society is now more open to western influences, and the relatively prosperous middle classes have the money to explore cosmetic possibilities. Shops and magazines in the citiesshow endless images of long-legged western models, inevitably putting pressure on young women.

    There are also domestic pressures. Height is listed among the criteria required on job advertisements. To get a post in the foreign ministry, for instance, male applicants need not bother applying unless they are at least 170 cm, while women must be at least 160 cm. Chinese diplomats are expected to be tall to match the height of their foreign counterparts.

    For more glamorous positions the conditions are even tougher: air stewardesses have to be over 165 cm. But height discrimination is evident even at ground level: in some places, people under 160 cm are not even eligible to take a driving test. Height requirements are also frequently mentioned in the personal ads of newspapers and magazines.

    Even successful operations can bring pain several months after the initial operation. "During the final weeks of the stretching, I was in so much discomfort that I couldn't sleep at night," says one young woman from Beijing who gave her name as Susan. The 27-year-old is in hospital recovering from an operation to remove the steel rods that have been inside her legs for the past 18 months. Each leg now bears eight circular scars.

    Now that she is 8cm taller than before, Susan says she would not hesitate to recommend the procedure to her friends. "It hurt at first and had a big impact on my life for a long time because I couldn't walk freely. But it has worked, and I feel very good about that. Before, nobody paid any attention to me because I was short, but now they'll look at me."

  • 18 линия№33655Не выполнено
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    Why would Susan encourage her friends to undergo the surgery?

    1) It went successful.
    2) It helped her to get out of depression.
    3) It helped her find new friends.
    4) It made her feel good about herself.

    Stretch my legs, Doc!

    Swee Jing paid more money than most Chinese people earn in a year to have both her legs broken and stretched. The pretty college graduate is now lying in a hospital bed, clearly still in pain, after the doctors sawed through the flesh and bone of both legs in eight places. Each leg now has eight steel rods sticking out of it below the knee, and these are connected to a steel cage surrounding each leg. Once the broken bones start to heal the doctors will begin to turn the screws on the cage pushing the steel rods apart and so stretching the leg. It is a slow and painful process that will take 18 months to add 8 cm to Swee Jing's height. 

    Despite the agony, the cost and the inconvenience, the 23-year-old says she does not regret a thing. "It hurts, but it will be worth it to be taller. I'll have more opportunities in life and a better chance of finding a good job and husband."

    In part, the popularity of such surgery can be explained by the surge of interest in fashion and beauty in a country where things like fashion magazines and beauty contests used to be banned. The once closed society is now more open to western influences, and the relatively prosperous middle classes have the money to explore cosmetic possibilities. Shops and magazines in the citiesshow endless images of long-legged western models, inevitably putting pressure on young women.

    There are also domestic pressures. Height is listed among the criteria required on job advertisements. To get a post in the foreign ministry, for instance, male applicants need not bother applying unless they are at least 170 cm, while women must be at least 160 cm. Chinese diplomats are expected to be tall to match the height of their foreign counterparts.

    For more glamorous positions the conditions are even tougher: air stewardesses have to be over 165 cm. But height discrimination is evident even at ground level: in some places, people under 160 cm are not even eligible to take a driving test. Height requirements are also frequently mentioned in the personal ads of newspapers and magazines.

    Even successful operations can bring pain several months after the initial operation. "During the final weeks of the stretching, I was in so much discomfort that I couldn't sleep at night," says one young woman from Beijing who gave her name as Susan. The 27-year-old is in hospital recovering from an operation to remove the steel rods that have been inside her legs for the past 18 months. Each leg now bears eight circular scars.

    Now that she is 8cm taller than before, Susan says she would not hesitate to recommend the procedure to her friends. "It hurt at first and had a big impact on my life for a long time because I couldn't walk freely. But it has worked, and I feel very good about that. Before, nobody paid any attention to me because I was short, but now they'll look at me."