题干

阅读短文,根据短文内容完成表格,每空一词
    A small town named Bundanoon in Australia has decided to stop the sale of bottled water(瓶装水). They say that bottled water can cause environmental problems. Too many resources(资源) are used to make bottled water. When people finish drinking the water, the bottles will be thrown away and go into dustbins. So they require local people in the town to stop buying bottled water and use tap water to drink. Visitors are encouraged to get water from water stations in the main streets, and fill the water in bottles that can be used again. The decision has been supported(支持) by all the shopkeepers in the town. Bundanoon is the world's first town that has got its shop selling bottled water. Probably we should follow the example. Let’s stop buying bottled water and use tap water!

Australian Town Bans(禁止) Bottled Water     
Where bottled water is first bannedA small town with the ____  Bundanoon
____  bottled water is bannedTo help solve environmental problems
What local people use for____ Tap water, not bottled water
The place which visitors get water ____ Water stations in the main streets
Other people who have supported the plan____  the shopkeepers in the town
上一题 下一题 0.0难度 选择题 更新时间:2019-09-01 11:10:11

答案(点此获取答案解析)

name,Why,drinking,from,All

同类题4

阅读理解

    “How are you?” is a nice question. It's a friendly way that people in the U.S.A greet each other. But “How are you?” is also a very unusual question. It's a question that often doesn't need an answer. The person who asks “How are you?” hopes to hear the answer “Fine”, even if the person's friend isn't fine. The reason is that “How are you?” isn't really a question and “Fine” isn't really an answer. They are simply other ways of saying “Hello” or “Hi”.

    Sometimes, people also don't say exactly what they mean. For example, when someone asks “Do you agree?”, the other person might think, “No, I disagree. I think you're Wrong...” But it isn't very polite to disagree so strongly, so the other person might say “I'm not sure.” It's a nicer way to say that you don't agree with someone.

    People also don't say exactly what they are thinking when they finish talking with other people. For example, many talks over the phone finish when one person say “I've to go now.” Often, the person who wants to hang up gives an excuse(藉口): “Someone's at the door.” “Something is burning on the stove.” The excuses might be real, or not. Perhaps the person who wants to hang up simply doesn't want to talk any more, but it isn't polite to say that. The excuse is more polite, and it doesn't hurt the other person.

    Whether they are greeting each other, talking about an idea, or finishing a talk, people don't say exactly that they are thinking. It's an important way that people try to be nice to each other, and it's part of the game of language.