用户名: 密码:  用户登录   新用户注册  忘记密码  账号激活
您的位置:教学资源网 >> 试题 >> 英语试题
高中英语编辑
2021届高三二轮复习强化专练考点13书面表达概要写作(英语 解析版).doc
下载扣金币方式下载扣金币方式
需消耗1金币 立即下载
0个贡献点 立即下载
0个黄金点 立即下载
VIP下载通道>>>
提示:本自然月内重复下载不再扣除金币
  • 资源类别试题
    资源子类二轮复习
  • 教材版本不限
    所属学科高中英语
  • 适用年级高三年级
    适用地区全国通用
  • 文件大小1003 K
    上传用户baibai9088
  • 更新时间2021/5/8 8:28:51
    下载统计今日0 总计2
  • 评论(0)发表评论  报错(0)我要报错  收藏
0
0
资源简介

 Directions: Read the following passage. Summarize the main idea and the main point(s) of the passage in no more than 60 words. Use your own wors as far as possible.

Pedestrians only

The concept of traffic-free shopping areas goes back a long time. During the Middle Ages, traffic-free shopping areas were built to allow people to shop in comfort and, more importantly, safety. The modern, traffic-free shopping street was born in Europe in the 1960s, when both city populations and car ownership increased rapidly. Dirty exhaust fumes from cars and the risks involved in crossing the road were beginning to make shopping an unpleasant and dangerous experience. Many believed the time was right for experimenting with car-free streets, and shopping areas seemed the best place to start.

At first, there was resistance from shopkeepers. They believed that such a move would be bad for business. They argued that people would avoid streets if they were unable to get to them in their cars. When the first streets in Europe were closed to traffic, there were even noisy demonstrations, as many shopkeepers predicted they would lose customers.

However, research carried out afterwards in several European cities revealed some unexpected statistics. In Munich, Cologne and Hamburg, visitors to shopping areas increased by 50 percent. On Copenhagen’s main shopping street, shopkeepers reported sales increases of 25-40 percent. Shopkeepers in Minneapolis, USA, were so impressed when they learnt this that they even offered to pay for the construction and maintenance costs of their own traffic-free streets.

With the arrival of the traffic-free shopping street, many shops, especially those selling things like clothes, food and smaller luxury items, prospered. Unfortunately, it wasn’t good news for everyone, as shops selling furniture and larger electrical appliances actually saw their sales drop. Many of these were forced to move elsewhere, away from the city centre. Today they are a common feature on the outskirts of towns and cities, often situated in out-of-town retail zones with their own car parks and other local facilities.

相关资源高级搜索
  • 暂时没有相关评论

请先登录网站关闭

  忘记密码  新用户注册