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,Text A,Text B,Text A,Text B,Text A,Text B,Text A,Text B,单击此处编辑母版标题样式,单击此处编辑母版文本样式,第二级,第三级,第四级,第五级,*,*,*,Text A,Text B,Text A-Before reading 1.-Main,Text A,Text A,Text B,Watch the Video Clip and Discuss,Lewis Carroll,Alices Adventures in Wonderland,An English Joke,1/104,Before reading 1.1,2/104,Before reading 1.2,1.On what kind of occasion does Alice leave the crowd and wander into the forest?,2.From where does Alice begin her adventures?,3.How many animals have you seen in this trailer?What are they?,Watch the video clip and discuss the following questions.,3/104,Before reading 1.3,Alice,meet me there at the gazebo in precisely ten minutes.,Alice Kingsleigh,will you be my wife?,Well,this has been happening too quickly.I,I think,I need a moment.,There is a place like no place on earth.Some say to survive it,you need to be as mad as a Hatter,which luckily I am.,Alice,its you!,4/104,Before reading 1.4,Youre back!,Alice?,Alice!,The Alice?,Youre absolutely Alice.I know you anywhere.,Youre all late for tea.,Alice has returned to Wonderland.,Since youve been gone,the Red Queen has taken over all of Wonderland.,5/104,Find her.,Help us make the world right again.,Off with her head.,I need a pig here.I love a warm pig belly for my aching feet.,Ah ha ha ha,Stop that!,We have our champion.,Hold on tight.,This is impossible.,Only if you believe it is.,Before reading 1.5,6/104,Lewis Carroll,Before reading 2.1,Lewis Carroll is the pen name of Charles Lutwidge Dodgson(1832,1898),a British author,mathematician,logician and photographer.The firstborn of 11 children,Carroll began at an early age to write poems for homemade newspapers.In 1854,he graduated from Christ Church College,Oxford.Carroll remained there,lecturing on mathematics.,7/104,Before reading 2.2,During his writing career,Carroll wrote short stories and poems,sending them to various magazines and enjoying moderate success.Years before,Alices Adventures in Wonderland,he was thinking up ideas for childrens books that would make money.The ideas got better as he got older.,Alices Adventures in Wonderland,and its sequel,Through the Looking-Glass,turned out to be his most famous writings.Carrolls facility at word play,logic and fantasy has delighted both children and adults.,Throughout his growing wealth and fame,Carroll continued to teach at Christ Church until 1881.He also published many mathematical papers and books under his own name.,8/104,Before reading 3.1,Alices Adventures in Wonderland,Have you ever read the novel,Alices Adventures in Wonderland,?It has been translated into over 50 languages.Now there are over a hundred editions of the book,as well as countless film and television adaptations of the story.In short,this novel is loved by children and adults alike and read all over the world.The story centers on the 7-year-old Alice,who falls asleep on a meadow,and dreams that she falls down a rabbit hole.She finds herself first too large and then too small,and she meets many strange characters.Finally she totally rejects the dream world and wakes up.,9/104,Pam received a parrot for her birthday.This parrot was fully grown,with a bad attitude and a worse vocabulary.Every other,was an expletive.Those that werent expletives were,to say the least,rude.,Pam tried hard to the birds attitude and was constantly saying polite words,playing soft music and anything she could think of.Nothing .,She yelled at the bird.The bird got worse.She shook the bird and the bird just got madder and ruder.,Before reading 4.1,An English Joke,Go through the joke,and then fill in the blanks.,word,_,change,_,worked,_,10/104,Before reading 4.2,Finally,in a moment of ,Pam put the bird in the freezer and shut the door.For a few moments she heard the bird squawking and kicking and then suddenly there was quiet.,Pam was frightened that she may have actually the bird and quickly opened the door.The parrot stepped out onto Pams extended arm and said,“Im sorry that I might have offended you with my language and actions and ask for your forgiveness.I will endeavor to my behavior.”,Pam was astonished at the birds change in attitude and was about to ask what had caused the change when the parrot continued:“Might I ask what the CHICKEN .”,desperation,_,hurt,_,calmly,_,correct,_,did,_,11/104,For Part 1 Multiple Choice,For Part 2 Sentence Completion,For Part 3 Questions and Answers,Global Reading-main,Part Division of the Text,Further Understanding,Warm-up Exercise,Text A,12/104,Part Division of the Text,Global Reading1.1,Alice suddenly found a White Rabbit and ran after it while she felt bored and had nothing to do.,Parts,Paragraphs,Main ideas,1,1 4,2,5 8,Alice fell into a well,and she fell for so long a time that she felt sleepy.,3,9 10,Alice found herself in a long hall and then she noticed a key to a door.,13/104,1.Who was Alice sitting by?,For Part 1.1,Read Part 1 carefully and choose the best answer to each question.,C,_,A)Her mother.,B)Her father.,C)Her sister.,D)Her brother.,For Part 1 Multiple Choice,14/104,For Part 1.2,2.Which of the following statements is NOT true?,A,_,A)The book her sister was reading had some pictures in it.,B)Suddenly a White Rabbit ran close by her.,C)Alice did not think it so,VERY,strange to hear the Rabbit say to itself,D)Down a large rabbit-hole,Alice went after the rabbit.,15/104,For Part 2.1,Read Part 2 carefully and supply the missing information.,1.Alice had not a moment to stop herself before,she found herself,falling down a very deep well,_,_.,2.She took down a jar from one of the shelves as she passed,but to her great disappointment,it was empty,_.,For Part 2 Sentence Completion,16/104,For Part 3.1,Read Part 3 carefully and answer the following questions.,1.Why was Alice wondering how she was ever to get out again?,2.What was the little three-legged table made of?,For Part 3 Questions and Answers,Because all the doors were locked.,It was made of solid glass.,17/104,Warm-up Exercise,Warm-up Exercise1.1,The following is a set of statements about the text,some true,others false.If a statement is true,put“T”in the brackets;if it is false,put“F”in the brackets and make necessary changes to turn it into a true one.,1.Alice thought that the book read by her sister was very interesting.,F,Alice thought that the book read by her sister was dull.It had no pictures or conversations in it.,(,),18/104,Warm-up Exercise1.2,2.Alice thought it very strange to hear a rabbit talking to itself.,3.The rabbit popped down a large hole and Alice went down after it.,F,Alice didnt think it very strange to hear a rabbit talking to itself.,(,),T,(,),19/104,Warm-up Exercise1.3,4.As Alice fell down a well,she didnt have time to look about her.,5.The sides of the well were filled with cupboards and bookshelves.,F,Alice had plenty of time to look about her as she went down,either because the well was very deep or because she fell very slowly.,(,),T,(,),20/104,Warm-up Exercise1.4,6.Alice wished her cat were with her.,7.Finally,Alice fell to a hall,where there were many unlocked doors.,8.There was a golden key on a little table,but it could not open any door of the hall.,T,(,),F,Finally,Alice fell to a hall,where there were many locked doors.,(,),F,The golden key on the little table could open a little door behind a low curtain.,(,),21/104,Detailed Reading1.1,In this story,you will enter a,fantasy,world together with a 7-year-old girl,where things do not seem to follow the usual path of logic.,Text A,22/104,Chapter I Down the,Rabbit,Hole,Alice was beginning to,get,very,tired of,sitting by her sister on the bank,and of having nothing to do.,Once or,twice,she had,peeped,into the book her sister was reading,but it had no pictures or conversations in it,“And what is the use of a book,”thought Alice,“without pictures or conversation?”,So she was considering what to do(as well as what she could do,for the hot day made her feel very sleepy),when suddenly a White Rabbit ran close by her.,Lewis Carroll,Detailed Reading1.2,Alices Adventures in Wonderland,23/104,There was nothing so,VERY,remarkable,in that;nor did Alice think it so,VERY,strange to hear the Rabbit say to itself,“Oh dear!Oh dear!I shall be late!”But when the Rabbit actually TOOK A WATCH OUT OF ITS WAISTCOAT-POCKET,and looked at it,and then hurried on,Alice jumped,to her feet,.For she had never before seen a rabbit with either a waistcoat-pocket,or a watch to take out of it.,Running,across the field,after,it,she was just in time to see it,pop,down a large rabbit-hole.,Down went Alice after it.,The rabbit-hole went,straight,on for some way,and then,dipped,suddenly down.Alice had not a moment to stop herself before she found herself falling down a very deep well.,Detailed Reading1.3,24/104,Either the well was very deep,or she fell very slowly,for she had,plenty,of time as she went down to look about her.The sides of the well were filled with,cupboards,and bookshelves;,here and there,she saw maps and pictures,hung,upon,pegs,.She took down a,jar,from one of the shelves as she passed,but to her great disappointment it was empty.She did not like to drop the jar,for fear of,killing somebody,so she,managed to,put it into one of the cupboards as she fell past it.,“Well!”thought Alice to herself,“after such a fall as this,I wouldnt say anything about it,even if I fell off the top of the house!”(which was very likely true.),Detailed Reading1.4,25/104,Down,down,down.There was nothing else to do,so Alice soon began talking again.“Dinahll miss me very much tonight!”(Dinah was the cat.)“Dinah my dear!I wish you were down here with me!There are no mice in the air,but you might,catch,a,bat,and thats very like a mouse,you know.But do cats eat bats,I wonder?”And here Alice began to get,rather,sleepy.She felt that she was,dozing,off,and had just begun to dream that she was walking,hand in hand,with Dinah,and saying to her,“Now,Dinah,tell me the truth:did you ever eat a bat?”when,suddenly,thump,!Down she,came upon,a heap of,dry leaves,and the fall was over.,Detailed Reading1.5,26/104,Alice found herself in a long hall.There were doors all round,but they were all locked,leaving Alice wondering how she was ever to get out again.,Suddenly she came upon a little three-legged table,all made of,solid,glass.There was nothing on it except a tiny,golden,key.Alices first thought was that it might,belong to,one of the doors of the hall;but either the locks were too large,or the key was too small,for it would not open any of them.However,on the second time,round,she came upon a low curtain she had not noticed before,and behind it was a little door about fifteen inches high.She tried the little golden key in the lock,and to her great delight it,fitted,!,Detailed Reading1.6,27/104,fantasy,fantasy:,a situation that is not true,that you just,imagine;a product of the imagination,Examples:,The girl has fantasies about being a famous singer.,Some of the old fantasies about the space age are,coming true.,28/104,rabbit,rabbit:,a small animal with long ears,a small tail,and,soft white,gray,or brown fur,Examples:,Rabbits are good jumpers and can run very quickly.,The boy ran away like a rabbit.,29/104,get tired of,get tired of:,lose patience or interest in(sth.),Examples:,I am getting tired of watching television;lets go for,a walk.,The boy got tired of listening to the same story again,and again.,Synonymous expressions:,be bored with,;,be fed up with,30/104,twice,twice:,two times,Examples:,The doctor told me to take the medicine twice a day.,Ive been to New York twice once last year and,once in.,31/104,once or twice,once or twice:,a few times,Examples:,Julie has been to Baltimore once or twice and she,likes the city very much.,I wrote to Kevin once or twice,but he didnt reply.,32/104,peep,peep:,look(at sth.)quickly and secretly,Examples:,The mother peeped into the bedroom to see if her,child was asleep.,John didnt know that someone was peeping at him,through a keyhole.,33/104,remarkable,remarkable:,unusual or surprising and therefore deserving,attention or praise,Examples:,Karen prepared the report with remarkable speed.,It is remarkable that the streets are so clean after the,parade.,34/104,to ones feet,to ones feet:,to a standing position,Examples:,The lady got to her feet and made a speech.,Mary rose hurriedly to her feet when she heard the,doorbell.,35/104,run after,run after:,(1)run to try to catch sb./sth.,chase after,Example:,The dog was running after a rabbit.,(2)seek sbs company(in order to have a romantic or sexual relationship with sb.),Example:,She runs after every good-looking man she meets.,36/104,pop1,pop:,(1)move or appear quickly or suddenly,Examples:,Suddenly the little girl popped out from behind a tree.,After no one had heard from him for years,John popped up in town again.,37/104,pop2,(2)(cause to)make a short sharp explosive sound,Examples:,The popcorn popped as it cooked.,He blew the bag up and then popped it between his hands.,38/104,Down went Alice after it.1,Down went Alice after it.,Alice went down after it.,In this sentence,the main verb“went”is put in front of the subject(,主语,)“Alice”and the adverb showing the direction“down”is placed at the beginning.This is a type of inversion(,倒装,)in English,which is often used in description of actions for certain rhetorical(,修辞,)effects.,39/104,Down went Alice after it.2,Examples:,Out rushed the dog from the gate.,Up went the rocket into the sky.,N.B.:,If the subject of the sentence is a pronoun,this type of inversion cannot be used.For instance,we can say,They went away,or,Away they went,but NOT*,Away went they,.,40/104,straight,straight:,directly,Examples:,His hot pancakes are delicious.You buy them straight from the kitchen to eat in your hands.,Peter ran straight from the dorm to the classroom.,41/104,dip,dip:,go down to a lower level,Examples:,The price of oil dipped at the end of the week.,The moon dipped behind the trees.,42/104,plenty,plenty:,enough or more than enough;a large number or,quantity,Examples:,Have another orange there are plenty more.,“Would you like some more wine?”,“No thanks,Ive had plenty.”,43/104,cupboard,cupboard:,a piece of furniture with doors,or a set of,shelves with doors,where clothes,plates,food,etc.,can be stored,Examples:,I put the cans of soup in the cupboard.,The sugar and salt are in the kitchen cupboard.,44/104,here and there,here and there:,in different places,Examples:,There were toys lying here and there on the floor.,We could see small groups of people here and there along the beach.,45/104,hang,hang:,fix or put(sth.)in a position so that the bottom part,does not touch the ground,Examples:,Many of the painters pictures are hung in the National Gallery.,I hang my clothes in the closet every night.,46/104,peg,peg:,a small stick or hook fixed to a wall or door from which things,especially clothes,can hang,Examples:,My coat is hanging on the peg in the hall.,He hung his hat on a peg in the door.,47/104,jar,jar:,a short-necked wide-mouthed pot or bottle made of,glass,stone,etc.,Exa
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