外研版高中英语挖掘文本深度学习选择性必修三-UNIT6(学生版).docx
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1、2019外研版高中英语基于词、法、句挖掘文本深度学习选择性必修三green 21(move) in the Western world. It also earned Carson aposthumous Presidential Medal of Freedom and put her face on the 17-cent US stamp.Silent Spring was not, 22, received positively by everyone.Though Carsons research was strong and was supported by most scient
2、ists 23reviewed her work, the book quickly became a target for critics in the pesticide industry. They said that Carson did not understand the science behind her arguments because she was a marine biologist rather than 24 chemist. Some also said that her work was 25 (emotional) than scientific. Thes
3、e were attempts to damage Carsons reputation and stop her work from26(influence) publicpolicy, but she remained27(determine) to stand by her research.Carson appeared28public and on television to defend her claims -and today, more than 50 years after it was published, the voice of Silent Spring is st
4、ill29(ring) loud and clear.30(personal), I enjoy Carson*s book. She made a crucial but potentially difficult-to-understand subject interesting and 31(access) to millions of people. This is not so much because 32 thequality of her arguments, strong though they are, but because of the beauty and elega
5、nce of her33(write). Her book notonly changed the world; half a century later it remains a book that deserves to 34(reread) today, so that we can once again feelourselves warm to the fire of its passionate message. For35we dolisten to Rachel Carsons warning, one day we may wake up to the strange and
6、 quiet horror of another silent spring.22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29.30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 第三遍:基础句法精益求精English Sentence StructureSilent SpringThere was a strange stillness. The birds, for example - where bad they gone? Many people spoke of them, puzzled and disturbed. The feeding stations in the back
7、yards were deserted. The few birds seen anywhere were moribund; they trembled violently and could not fly.1. (这是一个寂静的春 天).On the mornings that bad once throbbed with the dawn chorus of robins, catbirds, doves, jays, wrens, and scores of other bird voices there was now no sound; only silence lay over
8、 the fields and woods and marsh.Rachel Carson was a scientist by profession, but these lines from the opening chapter of her 1962 book Silent Spring, A Fable for Tomorrow”, show her talent as a writer. By imagining a worldwithoutbirds,(她想要警告科学界,提醒公众,人类活动已经对自然界生态系统造成了破坏性的后果)- in particular, to the ha
9、rmful use of pesticides, such as DDT. She believed that the chemical industry was knowingly causing harm to plants, animals and even humans, and wished to see pesticides used in a more responsible, limited and carefully monitored way.(卡森敦促人们认清 事实,并且为此做出努力), Silent Spring contains a lot of scientific
10、 research and case studies. The book details the gypsy moth eradication programme, which killed birds, in addition to gypsy moths. Another case study was the fire-ant programme that killed cows, but not fire ants.(书中还讲了 几十个案彳列)of eradication programmes that did nothing to reduce the problems they we
11、re originally designed to solve. The 50 or so pages at the end of the book list Carsons sources, showing how thorough and precise she was as a scientist.Carsons message was very alarming, causing a great increase in environmental awareness. (它的效果立竿见影并影响深远):the use of DDT was banned and the Environme
12、ntal Protection Agency (EPA) was established in the US. Silent Spring was therefore regarded as a milestone in the launch of the green movement in the Western world. It also earned Carson a posthumous Presidential Medal of Freedom and put her face on the 17-cent US stamp.6.(但并不是所有人都支持寂静的春天).Though C
13、arsons research was strong and wa s supported by most scientists who reviewed her work, the book quickly became a tar get for critics in the pesticide industry. They said that Carson did not understand the s cience behind her arguments 7. (因为她是位海洋生物学家,而非化学家). Some also said that her work was more em
14、otional than scientific. These were attempts to damage Carson*s reputation and stop her work from influencing public policy, but she remained determined to stand by her research. 8. (卡森在公众面前、在电视节目中捍卫 自己的观点)-and today, more than 50 years after it was published, the voice of Sile nt Spring is still ri
15、nging loud and clear.(我个人很喜欢卡森的书).She made a crucial but potentially difficult-to-understand subject interesting and accessible to millions of people. This is not so much because of the quality of her arguments, strong though they are, but because of the beauty and elegance of her writing.(她的书不仅在当时改
16、变了世界);half a century later it remains a book that deserves to be reread today, so that we can once again feel ourselves warm to the fire of its passionate message. For unless we do listen to Rachel Carsons warning, one day we may wake up to the strange and quiet horror of another silent spring.Unit
17、6 Nature in WordsUnderstanding Ideas : First Snow过关斩将第一遍:词汇短语*ve:rl/a点黄山产c-Ir嚷WF1前wt雪一枚3sml1o8aiE8kiteuseiiecoHXUpntne胆lllse曙First SnowMr. Robert Lynd once said of Jane Austens c 1(人物;角 色): “They are people in whose lives a slight fall of snow is an event. Even at the risk of appearing to this f 2(公
18、正的)and witty reviewer asanother Mr. Woodhouse, I must i 3(坚持说)that last nights fallof snow here was an event. I was nearly as excited about it this morning as the children, whom I found all looking through the window at the magic outside and talking away as excitedly as if Christmas had s 4(突然地)come
19、 round again. The fact is, however, that thesnow was as strange and f 5(迷人的)to me as it was to them. It is the first fall we have had here this winter, and last year I was out of the country, sweating in a hot c 6(天气),during the snowyseason, so that it really does seem an age s 7(自从)I saw theground
20、so fantastically carpeted.The first f 8(降落)of snow is not only an event but it is amagical event. You go to bed in one kind of world and w9(醒来)10.up to find yourself in another quite d 10(不同的),and if this is not magic, then where is it to be found? The very s 11(秘密状态,保密)and quietness of the thing ma
21、kes it more magical.When I got up this morning the world was a cold place of dead white and p 12(浅淡的)blues. The light that came through thewindows was very strange, and it made the f 13 逸悉的)business of splashing and s 14(舌U 胡子)and brushing and dressing very strange too. Then the sun came out, and by
22、 the time I hadases1 s 3ASU& bsves8s5:3X3 zwgatiBadrowasajd QJQ 勰 isat down to breakfast it was shining bravely and f 15 (使发红) the snow with delicate pinks. The dining room window had been t 16 (转变成)into a lovely Japanese print. The little plum tree outside, with the f17(微弱的;模糊的)flushed snow lining
23、itsbranches and artfully d 18 (排歹U, 布置)along its trunk, stood in full sunlight.An hour or two later everything was a cold s 19 (闪耀,闪光) of white and blue. The world had completely changed again. The little Japanese prints had all d20(消失).I looked out of my studywindow, over the garden, the field, to
24、the low hills beyond, and the ground went on and on, the sky was t 21 (厚重的)grey, and all the trees so many black and threatening shapes. There was indeed something curiously disturbing about the whole p22(景色).Itwas as if our kindly countryside, close to the very heart of England, had been turned int
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