ÐÂÎűêÌ⣺Ò˲ýÒÄÁêÇøÄÄÀïÓÐsatÅàѵ°à
Ò˲ýÒÄÁêÇøsatÊÇÒ˲ýÒÄÁêÇøsatÅàѵѧУµÄÖØµãרҵ£¬Ò˲ýÊÐÖªÃûµÄsatÅàѵ»ú¹¹£¬½ÌÓýÅàѵ֪ÃûÆ·ÅÆ£¬Ò˲ýÒÄÁêÇøsatÅàѵѧУʦ×ÊÁ¦Á¿ÐÛºñ£¬È«¹ú¸÷´ó³ÇÊоùÉèÓзÖУ£¬Ñ§Ð£»¶ÓÄãµÄ¼ÓÈë¡£
Ò˲ýÒÄÁêÇøsatÅàѵѧУ·Ö²¼Ò˲ýÊÐÎ÷ÁêÇø,Îé¼Ò¸ÚÇø,µã¾üÇø,ªVÍ¤Çø,ÒÄÁêÇø,Ò˶¼ÊÐ,µ±ÑôÊÐ,Ö¦½ÊÐ,Ô¶°²ÏØ,ÐËÉ½ÏØ,ïö¹éÏØ,³¤ÑôÍÁ¼Ò×å×ÔÖÎÏØ,Îå·åÍÁ¼Ò×å×ÔÖÎÏØµÈµØ,ÊÇÒ˲ýÊм«¾ßÓ°ÏìÁ¦µÄsatÅàѵ»ú¹¹¡£
¡¾·ÖÎö¡¿
Like the bluesy ¡°Strange Fruit¡± by Billie Holiday, this was meant as an anti-racismsong but unlike ¡°Strange Fruit¡±, it takes on a hopeful outlook for change in thefuture.
»õÎォ°´ÕÕÄãÃǵÄָʾ·¢Ë͹ýÀ´¡£
Õâ²ÅÊÇ×÷ÎÄ×î¹Ø¼üµÄ²¿·Ö¡£
¡¾ÎÄÕÂÄÚÈÝ·ÖÎö¡¿
¶ÈÀ´¿´£¬ÊÇin architectureºÍin somethingÔÚ×ö±È½Ï£¬¶øsomethingÀïÓÖ°üº¬ÁËÒ»¸öС²¢Áм´music or literature¡£D°Ñmusic or literatureÁªºÏ×÷Ϊһ¸ö±È½Ï¶ÔÏóºÍarchitecture±È½Ï£¬¶øEµÈÓÚÊǰÑmusicºÍliterature·Ö¿ª£¬·Ö±ðºÍarchitecture×÷±È½Ï¡£ÏÔÈ»£¬DµÄ±í´ï·½Ê½·ûºÏ´ó²¢ÁÐÀï°üº¬Ð¡²¢ÁеĹæÔò¡£
ÎÄÕ¿ª¶Ëʱ£¬ÍùÍùÐèÒª¶ÔÌâÄ¿µÄ¹Ûµã½øÐÐrestate£¬´ó¼ÒÔÚ×öÕâ¸ö±ØÒª¹¦¿Îʱ£¬Ò»¶¨Òª±ÜÃâÖØ³£¬¶øÓ¦¸ÃÊǸÄд£¬»òÕßÓÃ×Ô¼ºµÄÓïÑÔ¸´Êö£¬¸üºÃµÄÊÇÓÃÁíÒ»¾äÃûÑÔ½øÐÐÂÛÖ¤¡£
±ÈÈ磬ÎÊtalentºÍmotivationÄĸö¸üÖØÒª£¬Äã²»Ò»¶¨·ÇҪѡÆäÖÐÒ»¸ö£¬ÄãµÄ¹ÛµãÒ²¿ÉÒÔÊÇÁ½Õß¶¼ºÜÖØÒª¡£
½ÓÊÕmaster·¢Ë͹ýÀ´µÄ×ÓÊý×é
ÎÒ˵µÄÊÇÎÒÕâÖÖÇé¿ö¡£
In my social studies class, we had an assignment to interview an older person about the changes he or she had witnessed in his or her lifetime. I decided to interview my neighbor, Mrs. Fletcher. Since she had never spoken to me much before, I figured she would have little to say and I could completethe assignment quickly. Instead she started telling me all about life in our town before the civil rights movement. I was astonished to learn that in the 1950s, black went to separate schools, rode at the backs of buses, and were prevented from living in white neighborhoods. As Mrs. Fletcher talked about how she and other African Americans helped break the color barrier by insisting on being served at white-only lunch counters, I became filled with shame at my own ignorance. How could I have been so unaware?
¹æÔò±ä»¯£ºµ¥Òô½Ú´ÊºÍÉÙÊýË«Òô½Ú´Ê£¬¼Ó´Êβ-er£¬-estÀ´¹¹³É±È½Ï¼¶ºÍ¸ß¼¶
×¢Ò⣺many,oldºÍfar±È½Ï¼¶¼°¸ß¼¶Ó÷¨µÄÇø±ð
¢ÙÈç¹ûºó½ÓÃû´Êʱ£¬much more +²»¿ÉÊýÃû´Ê£¬many more +¿ÉÊýÃû´Ê¸´Êý¡£
¢ÚoldÓÐÁ½ÖֱȽϼ¶ºÍ¸ß¼¶ÐÎʽ: older/oldest ºÍelder/eldest¡£elder£¬eldestÖ»ÓÃÓÚÐֵܽãÃõij¤Ó×¹ØÏµ¡£
Ïà¶Ô¶øÑÔ£¬report²»ÐèÒªÄÔ½îתÀ´×ªÈ¥£¬
¡¡¡¡6.After registering I began to prepare to settle baggage.
ÊÇÐж¯»¹ÊÇÓïÑÔ·´Ó³ÈËÃǵÄÕæÊµÃæÄ¿
be¶¯´Ê¹ýȥʱµÄ·ñ¶¨¾ä
¾äÐÍ£ºÖ÷Óï + was/were + not...
be¶¯´Ê¹ýȥʱµÄ·ñ¶¨¾ä½á¹¹ÊÇÔÚbe¶¯´Ê¹ýȥʽwas/wereºóÃæ¼ÓÉÏnot¡£·ñ¶¨Ê½µÄwas not£¬were not´ó¶àʹÓÃËõдÐÎʽwasn\'t(¶Á×÷/¡äw znt/)ºÍweren\'t(¶Á×÷/w nt/)£º
I was not here yesterday.×òÌìÎÒ²»ÔÚÕâÀï¡£
He wasn\'t busy the other day.ǰ¼¸ÌìËû²»Ã¦¡£
There weren\'t any students in the classroom.½ÌÊÒÀïÒ»¸öѧÉúҲûÓС£
4. be¶¯´Ê¹ýȥʱµÄÒ»°ãÒÉÎʾä
¾äÐÍ£ºWas/Were + Ö÷Óï...?
»Ø´ð·½Ê½£ºYes£¬Ö÷Óï + was/were...
No£¬Ö÷Óï + wasn\'t/weren\'t...
be¶¯´Ê¹ýȥʱµÄÒ»°ãÒÉÎʾä½á¹¹Êǽ«be¶¯´Ê¹ýȥʽwas/wereÖÃÓÚÖ÷Óï֮ǰ(´óдwas/wereµÄµÚÒ»¸ö×Öĸ)£¬ÔÚ¾äβ¼ÓÎʺÅ;ÕâÖÖÓïÐòÊÇÖ÷ÓïºÍνÓïµ¹×°ÓïÐò£º
Were you here yesterday? Yes£¬I was.Äã×òÌìÔÚÕâÀïÂð? ÊÇ£¬ÎÒÔÚ¡£
µ±ÈËÃǶÔδÀ´³äÂúÏ£Íûʱ£¬ËûÃDz»»áÁîÉú»îÏò±©Á¦Ó뼫¶ËÖ÷Ò帩Êס£
(E)it was decided about his not accepting the chairman's position
Ò˲ýÒÄÁêÇøsatÅàѵѧУ³É¾ÍÄãµÄÃÎÏëÖ®Âá£Ñ§sat¾ÍÀ´Ò˲ýÒÄÁêÇøsatÅàѵѧУ