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We're now living in an information 4ge, m that TV, cell           1.________

phones and the Web are wide used.It seems that many people    2.________

cannot enjoy them without them.However, if I had to give      3._______

up one of them, I will turn off the TV ratter than switch off        4.________

my ceil phone and cut off the Internet.I could do without TV     5._______

because few show take my fancy and there're too many commercials.6._______

Besides, most programs on the TV are also available elsewhere.  7._______

As for cell phones and the Web, they are more necessary to me.   8._______

I need a cell phone to keep touch with m> friends and family, and   9.________

almost all information can be gather on the Internet.            10._______

 

【答案】

1.That→which

2.wide→widely 

3.them→themselves

4.will→would

5.and→or   

6.show→shows 

7.去掉the 

8.正确 

9.Keep后加 in

10.gather-leathered

【解析】略

 

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My household now has four mobile phones: one for me; one each for my eldest children, the twin boys; and one for my 15-year-old daughter. Only my 12-year-old son does not (yet) have his own mobile. In other words, we’re now in line with national figures, which show that Australia has 19 million mobile phones for a population of just over 20 million people. Among 15-to 17-year-olds, nearly nine out of 10.

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Of course, there are good and bad sides to mobiles. In my global media world, I’ve lived with a mobile switched on 24 hours a day, seven days a week, for the past ten years. At the same time, here in Perth, I started a movement on talkback radio called CAMPIR (Campaign Against Mobile Phones in Restaurants). Nothing annoys me more than people who feel that an incoming mobile call is more important than the company they are with at a restaurant or even at their dining table at home, but I believe that in the long term, we will have a revolt against the intrusion of mobiles into our personal lives.

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