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The Haskell Free Library and Opera House...

    The Haskell Free Library and Opera House might not be as well known as the Grand Canyon or the Statue of Liberty. 1.. Completed in 1904, the building is stationed directly between Stanstead, Quebec, and Derby Line, Vermont. with the official US -Canada borderline running right across the library's floor.

Martha Stewart Haskell and her son, Colonel Horace Stewart Haskell, both Canadians, built the building as a tribute(悼念) to Mrs Haskell's late husband, Carlos.2..

While the library’s official entrance is on the US side of the building, most of the books are on the Canadian side.3.. The Opera House is similarly split, with most of its seats in the US and its stage in Canada. As Atlas Obscura reported, it is often said that the Haskell is the only library in the US with no books, and the only opera house in the country with no stage.

Passports and other forms of identification aren’t required to cross from country to country in the library, though the Haskell's website notes that the border inside the building“ is real and it is enforced”. 4.. If they don't, they risk possible detention and fines.

Even beyond the building's unique position,library director Nancy Rumery told CTV News that Haskell staffers-Canadian and American alike-consider the institution to be like any other library in the world

“We’re just trying to be the best library we can.5..” she said. “These are all our neighbors and we do our very best to help them on their life-long learning journey. ”

A.The Haskell is full of mysterious places.

B.The Haskell is divided between the two countries.

C.Visitors have access to a variety of cultural resources.

D.Visitors are expected to their side of the border after a visit.

E.It’s undoubtedly one of America's most unique tourist attractions.

F.Our community is made up of people from two different countries

G.The family hoped that citizens would use it as a “center for learning and cultural enrichment”

 

1.E 2.G 3.B 4.D 5.F 【解析】 本文是说明文,介绍了跨美国和加拿大两个国家边境的一个独特的图书馆和歌剧院——Haskell 免费图书馆和歌剧院。 1. 此题线索是代词指代。选项E意思为:它无疑是美国最独特的旅游景点之一。选项E中的it指代前一句的“The Haskell Free Library and Opera House”;下文紧接着说明它的独特之处:美国和加拿大的官方边界正好穿过图书馆的地板。故选E项。 2. 选项G意思为:这家人希望市民们将其作为“学习和丰富文化的中心”。前一句中“加拿大人玛莎·斯图尔特·哈斯凯尔和她的儿子霍勒斯·斯图尔特·哈斯凯尔上校建造这座大楼是为了向哈斯凯尔夫人已故的丈夫卡洛斯致敬。”提到Martha Stewart Haskell一家人“Martha Stewart Haskell and her son, Colonel Horace Stewart Haskell …Mrs Haskell's late husband, Carlos.”;选项G中“the family”是指这一家人。故选G项。 3. 空前一句提到“虽然图书馆的正式入口在美国一侧,但大多数图书都在加拿大一侧”;选项B意思为:Haskell图书馆被这两个国家分开了。选项B是顺承空前一句的话题。故选B项。 4. 此题线索是代词指代。选项D意思为:游客在参观后应到他们(国家)那边的边境。空有一句中的they 指代选项D中的visitors;空后一句“如果不这样做,他们可能会面临被拘留和罚款的风险”是顺承选项D的话题。故选D项。 5. 此题线索是代词指代。选项F意思为:我们的社区由来自两个不同国家的人组成。空后一句“他们都是我们的邻居,我们尽最大努力帮助他们走上终身学习的道路”中的“these are all our neighbors”指代选项F中的“people from two different countries”。故选F项。
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The elders there are less likely than their counterparts in the United States to have heart disease, dementia(痴呆) or certain cancers. Their bones are stronger than those of similarly aged people around the world. Many of these residents are the subjects of one of the largest studies of centenarians ever conducted. Since 1976, nearly a thousand centenarians on the islands have been studied.

More than anything, the Okinawa diet has long captured the headlines. Before knowing what the Okinawans eat, there is a valuable lesson in how they eat.

Remember this term: hara hachi bu. It is translated into English as “Stop eating when you are 80% full.” With hara hachi bu, the philosophy is that you should still be a little hungry when you push the plate away. You are also advised to reduce your portion(食物的分量) sizes, use smaller plates and eat more slowly.

There is a basic biological (生物学的) reason this works. It takes about 20 minutes for the stomach to send signals to the brain that it is full. Unfortunately, most people can shovel down another several hundred calories in that short time. Instead, if you push the plate away and just wait, you will have eaten less and still feel satisfied.

Eating less is associated with longevity, but of course, that also depends on what you eat. Okinawans typically eat seven different fruits and vegetables and 18 different foods a day, and more than 200 different foods and spices regularly in their overall diet.

However, the younger generations are eating more meat and fast food instead of fish and soy. The elderly there are still widely revered(崇敬), but there are fewer of them, and they are less often living to 100 than in decades past.

1.What is the key to the high life expectancy in Okinawa?

A.What they eat B.How they eat

C.Where they live D.When they exercise

2.Which of the following has the closest meaning to the underlined part “shovel down” in Paragraph 5?

A.fill in B.put down

C.fill out D.push away

3.Which of the following statements about Okinawa is true?

A.The elderly are in bad need of mutual respect.

B.There are an increasing number of the elderly.

C.The younger generations have a varied diet.

D.Things are starting to change for the worse.

4.Which could be the best title for the passage?

A.Eat less to live longer.

B.Healthy diets build longevity.

C.The Okinawa: a place of longevity.

D.Improve life expectancy? Slow down.

 

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According to US sociologist Joel Stillerman, people who are educated and well-off are more likely to have a minimalist lifestyle. “These people are making the statement: ‘I can afford to have less.’,”he said.

But leading a minimalist lifestyle doesn't mean spending less. A report by UK market research company Euromonitor found young Chinese people spend less on possessions, but more on short holidays and visits to the movies.

“They are looking for a life that is all about culture,” Alison Angus, head of lifestyles at Euromonitor, said about Chinese youth.

So perhaps it all comes down to how we define(定义) “rich”. Is wealth in life about buying more and owning more, or is it about having a more colorful life?

1.The author mentioned the change of Lin Hanxing to _______.

A.introduce the minimalist lifestyle

B.encourage us readers to buy less

C.explain the popularity of owning less

D.explain the importance of a new lifestyle

2.What’s Lin Hanxing’s attitude towards the online challenge in the beginning?

A.She was very fond of it.

B.She thought it worth a try.

C.She was strongly against it.

D.She thought it must be painful.

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A.possessions B.culture

C.education D.clothes

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    James Dyson, the inventor of the bagless vacuum cleaner, is now the wealthiest person in Briton after his company posted a record profit for 2018. But how did he make his fortune?

My father died when I was nine, and I remember doing the household chores to help my mother. I hated changing the vacuum cleaner bag and picking up things the machine did not suck up.

Thirty years later, in 1979, I was doing chores at home alongside my wife. One day the vacuum cleaner was screaming away, and I had to empty the bag because I could not find a replacement for it. With this lifelong hatred of the way the machine worked, I decided to make a bagless vacuum cleaner.

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A.The death of his father B.The scream of his wife

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B.explain the development of the vacuum cleaner

C.introduce Dyson and his vacuum cleaner

D.urge people to accept risks and failure

 

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Is Fresh Air Really Good for You?

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5.While the sun’s rays can age and harm our skin, they also give us beneficial Vitamin D  . To make sure you get enough Vitamin D—but still protect your skin—put on sunscreen right as you head outside. It takes sunscreen about fifteen minutes to start working, and that’s plenty of time for your skin to absorb a day’s worth of Vitamin D  .

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