寫作:六級(jí)四十天突破—講義與筆記(15)

字號(hào):

Passage 4
    British people don’t drink as many tea as they 1. much
    used to, but Great Britain still takes almost twenty-
    five per cent of all world exports of the commodity.
    The world largest producers of tea are India, China 2. world’s
    and the Sri Lanka. 3. 去掉
     The quantity of tea is affected by the climate, 4. quality
    by the latitude at which it is grown and also by
    that part of the tea bush is plucked. In fact, as 5. which
    Dominic Beddard, a tea taster, tells us, favour can 6. flavour
    even depend on which day the leaf is plucked:
    ”There are very considerable differences between teas
    from the same estate made on different day,” he says. 7. days
    Processing tea is a complicated procedure. After
    the green leaf has been plucked, it is processed in a
    factory. Quickly and carefully, the tea is reduced to 8. slowly
    a small brittle particle, which is then dried and looks
    like the tea you see in a packet. The tea companies
    then rely on tasters as Donimic to value the tea. This 9. 之前加such
    has to be done on a day-to-day basis because of
    fluctuations in quality. Having to taste up to six
    hundred cups of tea a day certainly causes Dominic’s 10. makes
    job an unusual one!
    Passage 5
    Parents can be supportive of suspicions. They
    can be helpful to the teacher, or are in need of help 1. be
    themselves. Sometimes, I think parents are too hard
    to their children. I have seen many parents of this 2. on
    kind. I often have the problem of parents coming in
    and telling me what they really treat their kids. They 3. how
    tell me that they usually stand over their kinds when
    they do their homework. They check their work and
    make big fuss over the grades. They criticize the kids 4. 之前加“a”
    over everything having to do with school. My
    response usually is: ”well, you know, he is really a
    good kid. He is fine in my class. Maybe you should
    not be too strict with them.” 5. him
     We want parents to realize the fact that teachers
    are professors at working with children. They have 6. professional
    observed many children and many parents. Because
    of this, and because of their specialized training,
    teachers can be realistic about children. Teachers
    know whether parents want their children to do well 7. that
    and to behave well. But teachers know less what 8. better
    children should be able to do at different ages and
    stages. They don’t expect the 8-year-olds to do the
    work that can only be done by the 12-year-olds.
    Parents, in the contrary, often expect their children 9. on
    to do what is usually beyond their age and ability.
    Obviously, this may make great harm to the 10. do
    children’s development.
    Passage 6
       Thus you experience success as you complete
     each chapter. While you have completed the overall 5. have not
     goal, you know you have progressed toward it.
    Passage 7
    although the tremendous amounts of money, time 3. despite
    and energy giving over to oral health.
    Critics, on the other hand, slam the profession.
    It can be conservatively estimated that at least
    15 percent of United States dentists are
    incompetent, honest, or both, says a former 10. dishonest
    Passage 8
    All these tokens of success are in a sense merely bribes
    provided by another person. Therefore, they can be 10. However\But
    effective and useful.
       Passage 9
    It is not just in academy that children are been pushed 4. being
    too far and too fast. Some parents start their preschool
    We need to abandon the false notions that we can
    create exceptional children by early instruction and
    such children are symbols of our competence as 8. 之前加“that”
     parents.