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It is reported that some developed countries have shipped broken parts of computers to China. Last month, Hong Kong officers found 131,000 kilograms of broken computers, TVs and phones sent from Japan. Things like these are called electronic waste.

Dealing with e­waste is not an easy job. Every time an old computer breaks down, it needs to be dealt with safely. But at present, broken computer parts are usually buried. It may take hundreds of years before they really go in the earth.

Many places in China are polluted by e­waste. Guiyu in Guangdong province is one of them. This town is named “the e­waste capital of the world”. Many of the poisons (有毒物) in e­waste find their way into the environment. Plastic is burned outdoors and chemical water is poured into rivers. Greenpeace, an environmental group, has found that the air, the earth and the rivers in Guiyu are badly polluted.

The Chinese government wants the country to develop, but in a way that isn't harmful to the environment and people's life. This year, China makes a new protection law, the strictest one we have ever had. Computer companies like Lenovo and Dell will be asked to take back their old computers. This is because the companies that make computers know best how to deal with them safely. Hopefully, the problem with e­waste will be solved in the near future.

说明:25题完成句子;26~27题简略回答问题;28题找出并写下第二段的主题句;29题将文中画线句子译成汉语。

1.Things like broken computers, TVs and phones are called ________________.

2.How will broken computer parts usually be dealt with at present?

________________________________________________________________________

3.Which town is named “the e­waste capital of the world”?

________________________________________________________________________

4.________________________________________________________________________

5.________________________________________________________________________

九年级英语多任务混合问题中等难度题

少年,再来一题如何?
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