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18£®Traditionally£¬fashion retailers£¨ÁãÊÛÉÌ£©had four collections per year£¬one for each season but nowadays companies can design and manufacture £¨´óÁ¿Éú²ú£©clothes in as little as four weeks£®Fast fashion means that the latest designs that appear at the fashion shows in Paris£¬London£¬etc£®can be copied and shown within a month£®
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However£¬there are also a number of disadvantages to this approach£®One of them is the theft of ideas£®Fashion houses spend a lot of time and money on new ideas£¬only to see these ideas copied for free by fast-fashion companies£®Perhaps the greatest concern is the influence on the environment of wasted clothes£®Buying twelve new sets of clothes rather than four means that more clothes will be thrown away£®In addition£¬with fashions changing so quickly£¬cotton growers need to produce more cotton more cheaply£¬and that means using more chemicals£®
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32£®According to the attraction of fast-fashion clothes for people£¿A
A£®The low price£®
B£®The high quality£®
C£®The famous brand               
D£®The mass production£®
33£®Who are against fast fashion£¿A
A£®Fashion designers£®
B£®Clothes producers£®
C£®Customers                             
D£®Retailers£®
34£®What is people's biggest worry about fast fashion£¿A
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35£®What is the author's attitude towards fast fashion£¿D
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Her mother Ruby turned round and£¬seeing Ammie horribly burnt£¬called an ambulance which rushed her daughter to a nearby hospital£®Twenty percent of Ammie's body had been burned and all of her burns were third-degree£®There£¬using tissue£¨×éÖ¯£© taken from unburned areas of Ammie's body£¬doctors performed complex skin transplants£¨ÒÆÖ²£© to close her wounds and control her injuries£¬an operation that took about six hours£®Over the next 16years£¬Ammie underwent 12more operations to repair her body£®
When she started school at Maxwelton Primary at age 4£¬other pupils made cruel comments or simply wouldn't play with her£®"I was the only burned child in the street£¬the class and the school£¬"she recalled£¬"some children refused to become friends because of that£®"
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Studying carbon atoms£¨Ì¼Ô­×Ó£©locked up in tooth enamel£¨·©ÀÅÖÊ£©£¬two researchers argue against the widely held belief that hominids ate little more than fruits and leaves£®Sponheimer and Julia Lee-Thorp of the University of Cape Town£¬South Africa£¬report their findings in Friday's Science£®
There aren't many clues for us to know the life of early hominids£®The shape of hominids'teeth offered the first clues£®Large and flat-edged with thick enamel£¬they looked perfect for eating nuts and fruits£¬different from the sharp teeth one would want to tear into meat with£®The first stone tools£¬which would help in eating meat£¬didn't appear until about half a million years later£®
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What they found was that the teeth to the hominids had an in-between amount of carbon-13£¬which meant not only they were eating fruits£¬they were eating a lot of grasses£¬or animals eating grasses£®The lower carbon-13levels could also come from eating certain types of insects£®
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