选修7 Unit 4 Sharing A LETTER HOME(课文挖空,50个空)
班级 姓名 学号 批改人
Thanks for your letter, which took a 损者三友to arrive. It was wonderful to you. I know you're to hear all about my life here, so I've some photos which will help you the places I talk about.
You asked about my high school. Well, it's a bush school – the classrooms are made bamboo and the of grass. It takes me only a few minutes to walk to school down a track. When I reach the school grounds there are lots of "good mornings" for me from the boys. Many of them have walked a long way, sometimes 关于君子的名言to two hours, to get to school.
There's no electricity or water and even no textbooks either! l'm still trying to to the conditions. However, one thing is for sure, I've become more in my teaching. Science is my most subject as my students have no of doing experiments. In fact there is no , and if I need water I have to carry it from my hou in a bucket! The other day I was showing the boys the weekly chemistry experiment when, before I knew it,
the was bubbling over everywhere! The boys who had never 最高使命 anything like this before started jumping out of the windows. Sometimes I wonder how chemistry is the students, most of whom will be going back to their villages after Year 8 anyway. To be honest, I doubt whether I'm to the boys' lives at all.
You asked whether I'm getting to know any people. Well, that's actually quite difficult as I don't much of the local English dialect yet. But last weekend another teacher, Jenny, and I visit a village which is the home of one of the boys, Tombe. It was my first visit to a village. We walked for two and a half hours to get there - first up a mountain to a ridge we had fantastic views and then down a steep path to the valley below. When we arrived at the village, Tombe's mother, Kiak, who had been pulling weeds in her garden, started crying "ieee ieee". We shook hands with all the villagers. Everyone to be a relative of Tombe's.
好看的英文Tombe's father, Mukap, led us to his hou, a low bamboo hut with grass of the roof - this shows it is a man's hou. The huts were round, not like the school buildings.
There were no windows and the doorway was just big enough to get through. The hut was dark inside so it took time for our eyes to . Fresh grass had been on the floor and there was a newly made for Jenny and me to sleep on. Usually Kiak would sleep in her own hut, but that night she was going to the platform with us. Mukap and Tombe were to sleep on small beds in another part of the hut. There was a fireplace in the centre of the hut near the doorway. The only I could e were one broom, a few tin plates and cups and a couple of jars.
Outside Mukap was building a fire. Once the fire was going, he laid stones on it. When hot, he placed them in an empty oil drum with kau kau (sweet potato), corn and greens. He then covered the vegetables with banana leaves and left them to steam. I the food; it smelled delicious. We ate inside the hut sitting round the fire. I loved listening to the family softly to each other their language, even though I could not the conversation. Luckily, Tombe could be our .
Later, I noticed a tin can standing杨雪 on the grill over the fire. After a short time Tombe threw it out of the doorway.I was puzzled. Tombe told me that the can was heated
芭比娃娃蛋糕
to the leftover food. They believe that any leftovers evil spirits in the night, so the food is dried up in the can and the can is then thrown out of the hut. Otherwi they don't waste anything.
渴望做某事 We left the village the next morning after many goodbyes and firm handshakes. My muscles were aching and my knees shaking as we climbed down the mountain towards home. That evening I fell happily into bed. It was such a to have spent a day with Tombe's family.
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