UNIT 35 NATURE( Ⅱ ) ANIMALWORLD Lesson 69 Part Ⅰ
UNIT 35 NATURE(Ⅱ) ANIMAL WORLD
Lesson 69
PartⅠ Warming-up Exercises
Sentence Structure
1.a.Tom was frightened.
b. Tom was frightening.
c. The animal was frightened.
2.a.The boy was amusing.
b. The boy was funny.
c. The monkeys were amusing.
3.a.The dog has stopped living together with the tiger.
b. The dog is going to live together with the tiger.
c. The dog lives together with the tiger.
4.a.I kept pigeons before,but I don't now.
b. I have never kept pigeons.
c. I still keep pigeons.
5.a.The zoo used to have few visitors.
b. The lion has become accustomed to seeing people.
c. The lion doesn't like seeing people.
6.a.The lion was frightened.
b. The lion frightened the girl.
c. The girl was frightening.
7.a.He was fascinated.
b. The elephant was fascinated.
c. She was fascinated.
8.a.Many visitors are interested in finding kangaroos.
b. Many people think kangaroos are interesting.
c. Kangaroos are found by interested visitors.
Score:____
Lesson 69 Part Ⅱ ShortDialogues (for practice in drawinginferences)
Lesson 69
Part Ⅱ Short Dialogues
(for practice in drawing inferences)
Exercises:
Ⅰ.(Dialogue 1)
How does the man feel about the interview?
Ⅱ.(Dialogue 2)
furious/angry/sorry/sarcastic/intolerant/puzzled/surprised/frightened/easy/just as important as other work
1.Why does Pat ask Mike to look at the floor? Why does Pat repeat Mike's question “What's wrong with it?”
2.How does Mike feel when he is told that his cigarettes are in the dustbin?
3.What is Pat's attitude towards Mike's habit of smoking?
4.Analyse Pat's psychological response to Mike's question “You don't go out to work, do you?”
5.“Oh, I see. So housework is different, is it?…”What feeling does Pat's tone of voice show when she says this?
6.How do Pat and Mike look upon housework?
Lesson 69 Part Ⅲ ThreeMonkeys
Lesson 69
Part Ⅲ Three Monkeys
Exercises:
Ⅰ.1.a.how intelligent the monkey was.
b. whether the monkey was more intelligent than other animals.
c. which animal was the most intelligent.
2.a.put some small boxes inside bigger ones.
b. observe people through the keyhole.
c. find the food hidden in a small box.
3.a.to wash dishes for her everyday.
b. to relieve herself of housework.
c. for companionship and amusement.
4.a.he can wash dishes.
b. he never breaks a dish.
c. he can throw dishes in all directions.
5.a.could help him catch birds.
b. was very clever.
c. always helped him by chasing away the flies when he was asleep.
6.a.monkeys,like people ,can be our good friends.
b. monkeys can do things which people can do.
c. people's good intentions may not necessarily produce good results.
Ⅱ.Retell the stories by using your own words.
UNIT 35 NATURE ( Ⅱ ) ANIMAL WORLD Lesson 69 PartⅠ
UNIT 35 NATURE (Ⅱ)
ANIMAL WORLD
Lesson 69
PartⅠWarming-up Exercise
Sentence Structure
Training Focus:
Understanding present participles and past participles;
Understanding“be used to”and“used to”
Directions: Listen carefully. Draw a circle around the letter beside the correct answer. There is only one best answer to each question.
Key:
1.Tom saw a frightening animal in the forest. (a)
2.The boy was amused by the funny monkeys. (c)
3.The dog is used to living together with the tiger. (c)
4.I used to keep pigeons as pets. (a)
5.The lion is used to seeing many people in the zoo. (b)
6.The girl was frightened when she saw the lion. (b)
7.Bob's sister said the elephant was a fascinating animal. (c)
8.Many visitors find kangaroos interesting. (b)
Lesson 69 PartⅡ
Ex.Ⅰ
Directions: Answer the question.
Key: (see tapescript)
Ex.Ⅱ
Directions: Choose the appropriate words or phrases from the given list to answer the questions.
Key: 1.She is angry.
2.Mike feels puzzled, surprised. Probably he thinks that Pat is fault-finding.
3.She is intolerant of Mike's habit of smoking. She is angry with it.
4.She is angry, furious and frustrated.
5.She is angry, furious and frustrated. She is saying this in a sarcastic and challenging tone.
6.Pat thinks that doing housework is not east. Housework is just as important as other work, and it can be even more demanding than other work. Mike probably thinks that housework is not as important as work outside.
Tapescript:
Short Dialogues (2′14″)
(for practice in drawing inferences)
Dialogue 1
A: How did your interview go?
B: I couldn't feel better about it! The questions were very fair, and I seemed to find an answer for all of them.
Dialogue 2
Pat: Mike! Look at the floor!
Mike: What's wrong with it?
Pat: What's wrong with it! It's filthy!
Mike: Oh…
Pat: It's filthy because you never wipe your shoes.
Mike: Sorry, love.
Pat: What are you looking for now?
Mike: My cigarettes.
Pat: Well they're not here. They are in the dustbin.
Mike: In the dustbin! Why?
Pat: Because there's cigarette ash on every carpet in the house.
Mike: I don't drop ash on the carpets.
Pat: Oh yes you do. I know because I hoover them. Anyway, cigarettes are a waste of money.
Mike: Maybe they are, but I earn tile money! It doesn't grow on trees you know. I work eight hours a day. Remember?
Pat: Well, what about my money then?
Mike: What do you mean‘your money'? You don't go out to work, do you?
Pat: No, I don't go out to work. I work fifteen hours a day…here!
Mike: Well, housework is different…
Pat: Oh, I see…so housework is different, is it? Housework doesn't matter. Well you do it then.
Mike: Hey, wait a minute, Pat. Pat…
Lesson 69 Part Ⅲ
Ex.Ⅰ
Directions Choose a, b, or c to complete each statement you hear on the tape.
Key:
1.The purpose of the professor's experiments was to find out… (c)
2.The first monkey was considered intelligent because it could… (b)
3.The woman in the second story keeps a monkey… (c)
4.The interesting fact about the second monkey is that … (a)
5.The owner was fond of the monkey because it… (b)
6.The moral of the third story is that… (c)
Ex.Ⅱ
Directions: Retell the stories by using your own words.
Key: (see tapescript)
Tapescript:
Three Monkeys (3′24″)
A university professor recently made several experiments with different animals to find out which was the most intelligent. He found that the monkey was more intelligent than other animals.
In one experiment the professor put a monkey in a room where there were several small boxes. Some boxes were inside other boxes. One small box had some food inside of it. The professor wanted to watch the monkey and to find out how long it would take the monkey to find the food. The professor left the room. He waited a few minutes outside the door. Then he kneeled down and put his eye to the keyhole. What did he see? To his surprise he found himself looking directly into the eye of the monkey. The monkey was on the other side of the door, looking at the professor through the keyhole.
In a magazine recently there were several pictures of another clever monkey. This monkey belongs to a woman on Long Island. The woman is an American housewife. She has had the monkey many years. The monkey is a pet. Some people have dogs or cats as pets. This woman has the monkey as a pet. The interesting fact about this monkey is that it can wash dishes. He washes the dishes for the woman everyday. He likes to wash dishes. He will spend hour after hour washing dishes. He never breaks a dish. But sometimes he washes the same dishes over and over. If the woman tries to stop him, he then gets angry. He begins to throw the dishes in all directions. But this does not happen very often.
A third story about a monkey is a very old one. Aesop, a Greek writer, first told the story many years ago. This monkey belonged to an old man. The old man was very fond of the monkey. The monkey was very clever. When birds came to the garden he chased them away. He also helped the old mall in many other ways. The old man often fell asleep during the day in his chair. Then the monkey sat at the old man's side and chased the flies away from the old man's face. One hot afternoon in the summer the old man was asleep in his chair. A fly came and sat on the end of the old man's nose. The monkey chased it away. Soon the fly came back and sat on the old man's nose again. The monkey chased it away. This continued for five or six times. The monkey at last became very angry. He jumped up, ran to the garden, and picked up a large stone. The next time that the fly sat on the old man's nose the monkey hit it hard with the stone. He killed the fly, but unfortunately he also broke the old man's nose.
All of the stories of Aesop always had a moral. What is the moral of this story? The moral is that many people, even people who are our friends sometimes act exactly like this monkey. They do things too quickly, without thinking. Instead of doing good, they hurt us. Such friends are sometimes worse than enemies.