Generation Gap: “Micro-moments” Turning Into Macro-Drama • Reference: CN-02/2026 • Scope: family groups, school–home chats, neighborhood channels A growing number of residents say conflicts now start with digital micro-moments: a seen message (1) __________ no reply, a meme taken literally, or a parent forwarding a “health warning” at midnight. These patterns may look harmless, yet they can quietly stretch trust—especially when tone is (2) __________ through a screen. A common flashpoint is a screenshot (3) __________ to fit one person’s story, then passed around as “proof.” When tension rises, people often (4) __________ to conclusions, treating a delay as disrespect or a question as an attack. The result is predictable: more typing, less listening. A simple reset works: try (5) __________ the conversation for two minutes, then stating the goal in one sentence. Community centers also shared (6) __________ for group chats: privacy, consent, and “pause rules” before reacting. Question 1: A. for B. with C. into D. to Question 2: A. misreading B. misread C. misrecord D. misreadably Question 3: A. cropping B. to crop C. crop D. cropped Question 4: A. jump B. leap C. draw D. run Question 5: A. pause B. paused C. to pause D. pausing Question 6: A. chatting household norm B. household norms chated C. household norm chats D. household chat norms |