Оксана Иванова – English for Psychologists: Практикум по сериалу In Treatment (страница 2)
2). How long does Laura say she sat outside?
A) About four hours
B) About an hour
C) A few minutes
D) A whole day
3). What did Laura almost do before coming to Paul?
A) Knock on his door to ask for a sweater
B) Call the police
C) Go back to Andrew
D) Call a taxi
4). How does Laura describe the feeling of time waiting for the minute to pass?
A) Like it flew by
B) Like forever for one minute to turn into the next
C) She didn't watch the time
D) Fast and exciting
5). What happened between Laura and Andrew the night before?
A) They had a calm talk
B) They left on good terms
C) They had a big fight and she left him
D) They watched a film together
6). Who did Laura call after leaving Andrew?
A) Her friend Alona
B) A taxi
C) Paul
D) Her parents
7). Where did Laura and Alona go?
A) To a bar for a drink
B) To the park
C) To the hospital
D) To a restaurant
8). How does Laura feel about what she did at the bar?
A) Proud
B) Indifferent
C) Ashamed
D) Happy
9). Why does Laura stop and close her legs in the stall?
A) She was cold
B) She decided she could not go through with the sex
C) She was late
D) She felt sick
10). What did the man in the bathroom ask from Laura after she refused?
A) Money
B) A hug
C) A hand job
D) Her phone number
11). How does Laura describe the moment she imagined Paul at the bar?
A) He would ignore her
B) He would order coffee
C) He would sit next to her
D) He would call the police
12). What is the nature of Laura’s feeling toward Paul?
A) She hates him
B) She feels sexual desire and emotional attachment
C) She thinks he is a friend only
D) She wants to sue him
13). What ethical point does Paul remind Laura of?
A) That he can date patients
B) That he is her therapist and boundaries exist
C) That he will help her leave Andrew immediately
D) That therapy is optional
14). What ultimatum did Andrew give?
A) Leave the city or he will
B) Get married or split, with a day or two to decide
C) Stop seeing friends
D) Buy a house or leave