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The Family Dinner on Spring Festival Eve

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The Family Dinner on Spring Festival Eve

The family dinner on Spring Festival Eve is the most important dinner in traditional Chinese culture. On Spring Festival Eve, family members get together to enjoy the dinner.

There are all kinds of delicious food and drinks. Many of them usually have great meanings. For example, in Wenzhou, New Year cake is often the first dish, which means "having more luck and becoming better in Chinese pronunciation. Another dish is fish, which means "having more than we need". Children all like this family dinner. At dinner they receive not only best wishes but also lucky money from their parents.

It is a Chinese tradition that we have kept for thousands of years.

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¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿ Living on an island might sound wonderful. But what it you left for a trip and found you could never return? What if your home, and even the land it stood on, was gone forever? For people living in the Pacific Islands, this is really possible.

Why? Climate£¨Æøºò)change. Climate change is causing the sea to rise. That¡¯s bad news for the Pacific Islands. Young people on the islands are even starting to wonder: Will they be the last generation(Ò»´úÈË)?

Not if the islanders have anything to do about it. These people are deeply connected to their homelands. The Pacific Islands are made up of 1l different countries: the Marshall Islands, Fuji, Samoa, and others. But now, those countries are working together. They're joining forces to fight climate change.

Why is climate change such a huge threat to this part of the world? Islands are low elevations(º£°Î). So they are among the first places influenced by rising sea levels. That's why countries of the Pacific Islands are working together to do their part.

But these are small countries. When it comes to climate change, can they make a big difference? They can, because most of the things that people on islands buy are brought by ships. This is very harmful to the environment. After all, ships put out almost 3 percent of the world's carbon emissions (̼ÅÅ·Å), That makes climate change worse.

Pacific Islanders realize the problem. So, in 2019, six countries got together: Fuji, the Marshall islands, Samoa, Vanuatu, the Solomon Islands and Tuvalu, They came up with a plan. They agreed to cut carbon emissions from shipping by 40 percent by 2030. And by 2050, they expect zero-carbon shipping.

How will they pull this off? They plan to use some really to use some really cool carbon-free technologies. They'll make use of solar and wind energy.

Sea levels are rising, but hopes aren't sinking in the Pacific Islands.

¡¾1¡¿What is the bad news for the Pacific Islands according to the passage?

A.Some Pacific Island countries have disappeared.

B.The sea level is going up because of climate change.

C.All the shipping to the Pacific Islands has been stopped.

D.The Pacific Islanders have nothing to do about the climate change.

¡¾2¡¿The underlined word "threat" in Paragraph 4 probably means"_________".

A.riskB.stepC.projectD.development

¡¾3¡¿It can be inferred from the passage that _________.

A.there will never be zero carbon emissions from shipping

B.solar and wind energy will make climate change worse

C.all the Pacific Islanders may leave their homelands by 2050

D.some Pacific Island countries may have hopes to make a difference

¡¾4¡¿The passage mainly talks about ________.

A.why other countries are helping the Pacific Islanders fight climate change

B.how some countries are working hard to develop carbon-free technologies

C.how Pacific Island countries are working together to fight shipping pollution

D.why Pacific Island countries put out so much of the world's carbon emissions

¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿ It's late at night, the weather is bad, and you're hungry. Your favourite restaurant is less than a mile away, but you don't want to pay a $5 delivery (µÝËÍ) fee. So, what do you do? Back in the old days, you would have braved the weather. But those days are coming to an end, at least in Washington.

A group of about 20 knee-high robots recently has come out on the sidewalks (ÈËÐеÀ) of the nation's capital. Their tasks are to bring take-out food from restaurants to hungry customers at home while keeping the delivery cost to around a dollar.

The robots are European, created in Estonia by a company called Starship Technologies. Each of them is a middle-sized cooler on six wheels, and drives at an average (ƽ¾ùµÄ) speed of about 4 miles per hour, about the speed of a walker. It has lights and a tall, bright orange flag so that it can be noticed by people on the sidewalk.

Here in Washington, Starship has teamed up with Postmates, the online delivery service, and the robots already are completing deliveries around the city. They move almost silently. They are electric, so there isn't much sound, except for their wheels. Their cameras recognize a lot-including traffic lights and stop signs.

The robots have only been in Washington for about a month, and they're still causing quite a stir (ºä¶¯), often getting stopped for photos. A young mother Maria Garcia is on the sidewalk, pointing out the robot to her daughter. "It's super cool," she says, "But the only thing that makes me worry about-is it going to put people out of jobs?

The company does not see robots as a replacement (´úÌæ), says Russell Cook, the director of Postmates. "We have people that drive cars, walk, and bike, and we see robots as another type of vehicle that helps us to offer deliveries," he says.

¡¾1¡¿What does the underlined word "It" refer to?

A.The walker.B.The robot.C.The company.D.The car.

¡¾2¡¿What do we know about the robots mentioned in the passage?

A.They were developed by a US company.B.They are able to travel at a high speed.

C.They create little noise while working.D.They can communicate with walkers.

¡¾3¡¿What is the mother's worry about the robots?

A.They may not be as safe as expected.B.They may cause a stir on the sidewalk.

C.They may be destroyed by some people.D.They may take the place of deliverymen.

¡¾4¡¿What is the text mainly about?

A.A leading online delivery company.B.Delivery robots in Washington, D. C..

C.The recent development of Postmates.D.People's growing worry about robots.

¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿ The places authors live in often inspire their works. Shen Congwen, for example, is known for writing about his home¨Cthe western part of Hunan province. ¡¾1¡¿. A five-episode (Î弯µÄ) documentary called Day-to-day Literature (¡¶ÎÄѧµÄÈÕ³£¡·) reveals (³ÊÏÖ) how Chinese authors were influenced by their surroundings (ÖÜÔâ»·¾³) and daily lives. ¡¾2¡¿. It features (°üÀ¨) five authors, including Ma Yuan, an avant-garde (ÏÈ·æÅÉ) author, and Ma Jiahui, who is from Hong Kong.

Ma Yuan is shown living like a hermit (ÒþÊ¿) in Xishuangbanna, Yunnan. After learning that he had cancer in 2008, he moved there. Ma lives like the locals. He works on a farm, raises chickens and walks in the forest every day. ¡¾3¡¿. He also learned about many historical legends and stories. In 2018, he published a book about his experience there.

Unlike Ma Yuan, Ma Jiahui enjoys the hustle and bustle (ÎõÎõÈÁÈÁ) of city life. Born in Wanchai, Hong Kong, Ma Jiahui takes viewers to several places he used to visit in his childhood, including a bookstore, pawnshop (µ±ÆÌ) and hotpot restaurant. ¡¾4¡¿. While he reads parts of the novel that take place in these places, it's hard to know what's fiction and what's fact. ¡¾5¡¿. "I live my life as a novel," he said.

A.Living like this showed him what local life was like

B.Mo Yan set many of his stories in Gaomi, Shandong, where he grew up

C.Perhaps the two are never separated (·Ö¿ªµÄ) at all

D.It started to air on Youku on April 16

E.These places are all featured in his latest novel

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