2019_2020学年新教材高一英语寒假作业Unit4NaturaldisastersReadingforWriting新人教版必修1 联系客服

发布时间 : 星期五 文章2019_2020学年新教材高一英语寒假作业Unit4NaturaldisastersReadingforWriting新人教版必修1更新完毕开始阅读7a668d77ac51f01dc281e53a580216fc700a53ff

Unit 4 Natural disasters

Reading for Writing

1、The king

(发表)a televised speech to the nation on November 5.

(影响)of too many late nights. (长度)of the kitchen.

2、I can certainly feel the 3、This room is twice the

4、They are going to have a meeting to determine who will ____ _____ (执行) the plan. 5、A truck went out of control and

(碰撞)into the back of a bus.

6、Not all people are aware of the various _____(effect) of global warming on Earth. 7、On March 8, the three-foot-tall robot made the first _____(deliver) to some lucky residents in Brisbane, Australia.

8、The first thing that _____(strike) me was the fact that I was the only girl present. 9、The village _____(sweep) away when the dam burst; as a result, many people became homeless.

10、The park was full of people,

(enjoy) themselves in the sunshine.

11、sweep away, carry out, give up, as long as, put...up, strike out, be based on, in all directions 1.Turn off the water supply before 2.All doubts had been

.

your arm. repairs.

3.There’s a list of repairs 4.Darren has decided to 5.She couldn’t 6. The report

football at the end of this season.

at her critics.

figures from six different European cities.

.

7.When the police arrived, the crowd scattered(分散) 8.

your hand

if you need more paper.

12、 Children grow quickly, especially their feet, but many families cannot buy new shoes each time a child needs them. As a result, about 300 million children around the world go barefoot. Those children risk picking up diseases and parasites(寄生虫) from the soil.

An American man may have a solution for those barefoot kids—a shoe that grows with the child. Kenton Lee is the creator of The Shoe That Grows. He explains how the shoe works and how it is able to last so long.

“It grows in three places: the front; it can also grow on the side with Velcro; and on the back with our buckle. It can last up to five years. The bottom is compressed(压缩的) rubber like tire rubber. The top is just high-quality leather.” The shoe comes in two sizes: small that fits children aged 4 to 9 and large for children aged 9 to 14.

Lee says he got the idea for the shoe while working as a volunteer in an orphanage in Kenya....and there was a little girl in a white dress walking next to me. And I just remember looking down and seeing how small her shoes were. They were so small that she had to cut open the front of her shoes to let her toes stick out. And I just remember thinking, “Wouldn’t it be nice if there were a pair of shoes that could grow with her feet?”

However, Lee says it was not easy to turn his idea into a reality. “I kept writing down I should do this because of this or because of that.” Finally, in 2009 Lee founded a non-profit organization called Because International. In the office of Because International, Lee keeps a pair of his own shoes to help him remember his promise. “I told myself I would not get new shoes until the idea was done. So, those are the shoes that I wore for a little over five years.”

1.Which of the following is the characteristic of the newly invented shoes? A.They are more expensive. B.They are not so comfortable. C.They can grow with a child. D.They come in different sizes.

2.Who is this kind of newly invented shoes intended for? A.All the teenagers. B.Children aged 4 to 14. C.Middle-aged women in Africa. D.Senior citizens with low income.

3.Why does Kenton Lee keep a pair of his own shoes in the office? A.To remind him of his promise. B.To copy the design of them. C.To get a change conveniently. D.To use them as an example.

13、Mandara seemed to know something big was about to happen. So she let out a yell, caught hold of her 2-year-old daughter Kibibi and climbed up into a tree. She lives at the National Zoo in Washington D. C.

And on Tuesday , August 23 rd, witnesses said she seemed to sense the big earthquake that shook much of the East Coast before any humans knew what was going on. And she’s not the only one. In the moments before the quake, an orangutan (猩猩) let out a loud call and then climbed to the top of her shelter.\ \zookeeper. \they see or hear something highly unusual.\

But you can't see or hear an earthquake 15 minutes before it happens, can you? Maybe you can — if you're an animal. \range of hearing,\They're more sensitive to the environment, which is how they survive.\

Primates weren't the only animals that seemed to sense the quake before it happened. One of the elephants made a warning sound. And a huge lizard (蜥蜴) ran quickly for cover. The flamingoes ( a kind of birds) gathered before the quake and stayed together until the shaking stopped.

So what kind of vibrations (震动) were the animals picking up in the moments before the quake? Scientist Susan Hough said earthquakes produce two types of waves — a weak \wave and then a much stronger \wave. The \stands for \And the \stands for \She thinks the \wave might be what sets the animals off.

Not all the animals behaved unusually before the quake. For example, Smith said the zoo's giant pandas didn't jump up until the shaking actually began. But