Inourcitynowadays,peoplearenotallowedtousetheirmobilephoneswhiledriving.Butitseemspeoplecanusetheirmobilephoneswhiledoinganythingelse,anywhere,anytime.
Thisisoneofthemainproblemstoday—when,andhowshouldpeopleusetheirmobilephones?Inthepast,Britishpeopleusedtoturnawaywhenspeakingonthemobilephonewithsomeone.Theydidthissoasnottodisturbotherpeople.Nowadays,peopleoftentalkaboutverypersonalthingsinaplacewheretheyaresurroundedbystrangers—onabusortrain,orinarestaurant.Andtheytalkaboutthesethingsinveryloudvoices!Manypeoplefindthiskindofbehaviorveryrude.InJapan,thereisanewlawaboutusingmobilephonesontrains—insomepartsofthetrain,youcannotuseyourmobilephone.
Finally,trynottoloseyourmobilephone.Thephoneitselfmaynotbeexpensive,youcanalwaysgetanewone.Buttheinformationthatisstored(储存)inyourphoneisanothermatter.Allyourtelephonenumbersarestoredinyourphone.Andwithoutyourphone,whocouldyouphone?
Whenyouare________,youcannotuseamobilephone.A
onabus
B
inarestaurant
C
driving
Inthepast,Britishpeopleusedtobe________whenusingtheirmobilephones.A
careless
B
polite
C
boring
It'srudetotalk________.A
loudlyonyourmobilephoneinpublicplaces
B
aboutpersonalthingsonyourmobilephone
C
onyourmobilephoneamongstrangers
Accordingtoanewlawof________,wemustn'tusemobilephonesinsomepartsofthetrain.A
China
B
Britain
C
Japan
Whatdoestheunderlinedsentence“withoutyourphone,whocouldyouphone”mean?A
Youcannotbuyanothermobilephonebecauseit'sexpensive.
B
Ifyouloseyourmobilephone,you'llloseyourtelephonenumbers,too.
C
Youcangetintouchwithyourfriendseasilyafterlosingyourmobilephone.