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It appear that people don't need phone boxes any longer. In a small British village, people decided to turning a red phone box into a library. Now, the phone box is one of the country smallest libraries. About 150 books sit on shelves in a phone box. Villagers there can take whatever they want and leave their own books for exchanges. They can use the library around the clock when it's open 365 days a year and 24 hours a day. Since the library opened its bright door, people from all parts of the village paid it a visit. Among it there're senior citizens living in the neighbourhood, children getting off school buses and university students are stopping by late at night. It is convenient for them to use such a wonderful library.

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¡¾3¡¿country¸ÄΪcountry¡¯s¡£¿¼²éÃû´ÊËùÓиñ¡£¸ù¾Ýpeople decided to turning a red phone box into a library. Now, the phone box is one of the country smallest libraries¿ÉÖªÈËÃǾö¶¨½«ºìÉ«µç»°ºÐ×ÓÒѵ½Í¼Êé¹Ý£¬ÏÖÔÚ£¬ÄǸöµç»°ºÐ×ÓÊǹú¼Ò×îСµÄͼÊé¹ÝÖ®Ò»¡£ÓɾäÒâÖª¹ú¼Ò×÷ librariesµÄÇ°Öö¨Ó֮¼äΪ´ÓÊô¹Øϵ£¬¹ÊÓ¦ÓÃÃû´ÊËùÓиñÐÎʽ¡£¹Ê½«country¸ÄΪcountry¡¯s¡£

¡¾4¡¿a¸ÄΪthe¡£¿¼²é¹Ú´Ê¡£²»¶¨¹Ú´Êa/anÓÃÔÚ¿ÉÊýÃû´Êµ¥ÊýÇ°£¬±íʾһ¸ö¡¢Ò»Öֵȣ»the±íʾÌØÖ¸£¬ÓÃÀ´ÐÞÊÎÌض¨µÄÈË»òÎï»òÊÂÇ飬About 150 books sit on shelves in a phone box.ÖеÄphone boxÖ¸µÄÊÇÇ°ÎijöÏÖµÄred phone box£¬ÎªÌØÖ¸¡£¹Ê½«a¸ÄΪthe

¡¾5¡¿for¸ÄΪin¡£¿¼²é¹Ì¶¨´îÅä¡£Leave sth in exchange£ºÁôÏÂ..×÷Ϊ½»»»¡£Villagers there can take whatever they want and leave their own books for exchangesÒâΪ´åÃñ¿ÉÒÔÄÃ×ßÈκÎËûÃÇÏëÒªµÄÊé²¢ÁôÏÂËûÃÇ×Ô¼ºµÄÊé×÷Ϊ½»»»¡£¹Ê½«for¸ÄΪin

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¡¾7¡¿ÔÚvillage paidÖмä¼Óhave¡£¿¼²éʱ̬¡£Since the library opened its bright door, people from all parts of the village paid it a visitÖÐsinceÒýµ¼µÄʱ¼ä×´Ósince´Ë´¦ÒâΪ×Ô..ÒÔÀ´£¬ÆäÖ÷¾äÒ»°ãÓëÏÖÔÚÍê³ÉʱÁ¬Ó᣹ÊÔÚvillage paidÖмä¼Óhave

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¡¾9¡¿È¥µôstudents are stopping ÖеÄare¡£¿¼²éthere be¾äÐͽṹ¡£µÚ°Ë¾äÊÇthere be¾äÐ͵ÄÌØÊâÐÎʽ:there be sb doing,±íʾijµØÓÐijÈË»òijÎïÕýÔÚ×öijÊ£¬senior citizens living inthe neighborhood, children getting off school buses and university students shopping late at nightÊÇÈý¸ö²¢ÁеĽṹ¡£¹ÊÈ¥µôare¡£

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¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿Energy independence has a nice ring to it£®Doesn¡¯t it? If you think so, you¡¯re not alone, because energy independence has been the dream of American president for decades, and never more so than in the past few years, when the most recent oil price shock has been partly responsible for kicking off the great recession.

¡°Energy independence¡± and its rhetorical £¨Ð޴ǵģ© companion ¡°energy security¡± are, however, slippery concepts that are rarely though through£®What is it we want independence from, exactly?

Most people would probably say that they want to be independent from imported oil£®But there are reasons that we buy all that old from elsewhere.

The first reason is that we need it to keep our economy running£®Yes, there is a trickle£¨ä¸ä¸Ï¸Á÷£©of biofuel£¨ÉúÎïȼÁÏ£©available, and more may become available, but most biofuels cause economic waste and environmental destruction.

Second, Americans have basically decided that they don¡¯t really want to produce all their own oil£®They value the environmental quality they preserve over their oil imports from abroad£®Vast areas of the United States are off-limits to oil exploration and production in the name of environmental protection£®To what extent are Americans really willing to endure the environmental impacts of domestic energy production in order to cut back imports?

Third, there are benefits to trade£®It allows for economic efficiency, and when we buy things from places that have lower production costs than we do, we benefit£®And although you don¡¯t read about this much, the United States is also a large exporter of oil products, selling about 2 million barrels of petroleum products per day to about 90 countries.

There is no question that the United States imports a great deal of energy and, in fact, relies on that steady flow to maintain its economy£®When that flow is interrupted, we feel the pain in short supplies and higher prices£®At the same time, we obtain massive economic benefits when we buy the most affordable energy on the world market and when we engage in energy trade around the world.

¡¾1¡¿What does the author say about energy independence for America?

A. It sounds very attractive£®

B. It ensures national security£®

C. It will bring oil prices down

D. It has long been everyone¡¯s dream.

¡¾2¡¿Why does America rely heavily on oil imports?

A. It wants to expand its storage of crude oil£¨Ô­ÓÍ£©.

B. Its own oil reserves are quickly running out.

C. It wants to keep its own environment undamaged.

D. Its own oil production falls short of demand£®

¡¾3¡¿What does the author say about oil trade?

A. It proves profitable to both sides£®

B. It improves economic efficiency£®

C. It makes for economic prosperity£®

D. It saves the cost of oil exploration£®

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Time to give thanks

When it comes to Thanksgiving, turkey may be the first thing that comes to mind. It¡¯s the right picture, but it¡¯s not complete.

Celebrated on the fourth Thursday in November every year, Thanksgiving Day is a time for thanksgiving and feasts. It¡¯s about expressing your gratitude to the important people and all the good things in your life.

Americans celebrate Thanksgiving with much warmth and keep many traditional customs. Here we introduce two of the rules Americans typically follow on this day.

1. Time for prayers and paying back

Thanksgiving Day has been associated with prayers in church and in homes for centuries. Attending church prayer services in the morning is the first step of many celebrators on Thanksgiving Day. The churches provide worship (Àñ°Ý) services and organize special events for the occasion.

Before Thanksgiving meals, some families gather together and read prayers to thank God for his kindness and the gifts he has bestowed upon (¸øÓè) them in the form of friends and family.

Some people also do voluntary community work on this day, as a way of paying back.

2. Family reunions and showing gratitude

Like China¡¯s Spring Festival, preparing a big meal and bringing the family together at home is a long-standing tradition of Thanksgiving. Distances don¡¯t really matter as relatives return home to be with their family, no matter how far away.

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¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿"A photograph that one has taken of oneself, typically with a smart phone or webcam and uploaded to a social media website" is the definition of "selfie" in the Oxford English Dictionary. In fact, it wasn't even in the dictionary until August of last year. It earned its place there because people are now so obsessed with (¶Ô¡­¡­³ÕÃÔ) selfies ©¤ we take them when we try on a new hat, play with our pets or when we meet a friend whom we haven't seen in a while.

But is there any scientific explanation for this obsession? Well, you should probably ask James Kilner, a neuroscientist(Éñ¾­ÏµÍ³¿Æѧ¼Ò) at University College London.

Through our lifetime we become experts at recognizing and interpreting other people's faces and facial expressions. In contrast, according to Kilner, we have a very poor understanding of our own faces since we have little experience of looking at them ©¤ we just feel them most of the time.

This has been proved in previous studies, according to the BBC.

Kilner found that most people chose the more attractive picture. This suggests that we tend to think of ourselves as better-looking than we actually are. To further test how we actually perceive our own faces, Kilner carried out another study. He showed people different versions of their own portrait ©¤ the original, one that had been edited to look less attractive and one that was made more attractive ©¤ and asked them to pick the version which they thought looked most like them. They chose the more attractive version.

But what does it say about settles? Well, isn't that obvious? Selfies give us the power to create a photograph ©¤ by taking it from various angles, with different poses, using filters (ÂËÉ«¾µ) and so on ©¤ that better matches our expectations with our actual faces.

"You suddenly have control in a way that you don't have in non-virtual(·ÇÐéÄâµÄ) interactions," Kilner told the Canada-based CTV News. Selfies allow you "to keep taking pictures until you manage to take one you're happy with" , he explained.

¡¾1¡¿What is the passage mainly about?

A. The definition and fun of taking selfies.

B. A study of why people love taking selfies.

C. How taking selfies influences people's daily lives.

D. How to interpret people's facial expressions in their selfies.

¡¾2¡¿The underlined word "perceive" in Paragraph 5 can be replaced by "______".

A. interpret B. beautify C. choose D. explain

¡¾3¡¿What did Kilner discover from his researches?

A. People interpret others' facial expressions worse than their own.

B. People tend to spend more time looking at their faces than at others'.

C. People tend to believe they look more attractive than they actually are.

D. People who like taking selfies know more about their facial expressions.

¡¾4¡¿According to Kilner, people like taking selfies probably because they think ______.

A. it is a good chance to learn more about their actual faces

B. it is a way to respond to others' facial expressions correctly

C. it enables them to interact with their friends in social media

D. it allows them to satisfy their expectations with their appearances

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