论文部分内容阅读
店老板说:“1美分能买到这些面包屑,你的运气已经相当不错了!”离开面包店,丽莎决心向1美分的硬币叫板。“1美分,我们还能买到什么?”2013年7月的一天,美国纽约8岁的小学生丽莎,在浏览一份晚报时,无意中看到这样一行字。在记忆中,她好像从来没拿1美分去买过东西,出于好奇,她津津有味地读完了整篇文章。所谓不读不知道,一读吓一跳。丽莎通过这份报纸了解到,看起来毫不起眼的1美分硬币,每年都会给国家造成巨额损失。
The shop owner said: “One cent can buy these breadcrumbs, and your luck is pretty good!” Lisa left the shop and she was determined to make a 1 cent coin. “One cent, what can we buy? ” One day in July 2013, Lisa, an 8-year-old primary school student in New York, USA, accidentally saw such a line during an evening newspaper. In memory, she never seems to take 1 cent to buy things, out of curiosity, she relished the whole article relish. The so-called do not read do not know, read a startled. Lisa learned through this newspaper that the one-cent coin that looks like the slightest remarkably amounts to huge losses to the country every year.