更多"On Mobile Phone
1.对于手机,有人爱有人憎;
2."的相关试题:
[简答题]A Letter to the President
目前,大学生使用手机(mobile phone)的现象很普遍,在一定程度上影响了课堂教学的秩序,人们对此褒贬不一。假如你是康言,请你给校长写一封信,就这一现象谈谈你自己的看法。请注意心的格式。
[单项选择]
Do you know how to use a mobile phone (手机) without being rude to the people around you
Talking during a performance irritates (激怒) people. If you are expecting an emergency call, sit near the exit doors and set your phone to vibrate (振动). When your mobile phone vibrates, you can leave quietly and let the others enjoy the performance.
Think twice before using mobile phones in elevators, museums, churches or other indoor public places—especially enclosed spaces. Would you want to listen to someone’s conversation in these places Worse yet, how would you feel if a mobile phone rang suddenly during a funeral! It happens more often than you think. Avoid these embarrassing situations by making sure your mobile phone is switched off.
When eating at a restaurant with friends, don’t place your mobile phone on the table. This conveys the message that your phone calls are more important than those around you.
Mobile phones have sensitive micr
A. Call back after the performance.
B. Answer it near the exit door.
C. Talk outside the exit door.
D. Speak in a low voice.
[单项选择]A mobile phone is no longer just a phone -- it is also a music player, video camera and personal organizer. And mobile phones with television programming are just around the corner. But the more functions cell phone manufacturers add, the greater the amount of power the phones use and the less practical running them on lithium (锂) batteries becomes -- so the race to find a viable alternative is on.
Two of the world’s biggest electronics makers, Hitachi and Toshiba, are currently competing against each other to come up with an alternative, most likely to be micro fuel cells. The task has been set by Japan’s second largest mobile phone provider, KDDI, which wants its customers to soon be able to use special television programming on their handsets, and has asked the two electronics companies to come up with a better power source. Hitomi Murakami, of KDDI, says battery-operated mobile phones cannot keep up with the new applications. "We’re looking at various ways to expand content an
[单项选择]Passage Three
Mobile phone recycling is turning into big business for some kids in India. They were once street wanders, but now they are businessmen. The kids have been digging old mobile phones out of the rubbish and selling them to recycling centres. They now live in a small house, are able to go to school and they have food. These kids are marvelous and they are probably the future business leaders of their town. The mobile phone recycling industry is growing rapidly around the world as newer models come out and more people want to dispose of their old phones.
Every day there seems to be another story about the damage we have done to the environment. Mobile phones contain thing like lead, mercury(水银)and other harmful material s that can kill us if it reaches our water supply and is not treated properly. Mobile phone recycling keeps these phones out of wasteyards and water supplies.
Recycling centers are appearing all overt the world to tear things down, separate out
A. lead and mercury should not be used in mobile phones
B. people should not dispose of their old phones
C. mobile phones are harmful to our life
D. abandoned mobile phones may damage our environment