—Yes, but I love _______ air after it rains. It smells so fresh.
— I don't think so. You can ask more ______ by using “could” instead of “can”.
— Tom, I think. He's always careful and serious.
___ You're right. I need some walking exercise.
—You'd better not. I'll help you _______ it.
Today, I want to tell you a story about something I did when I was 14 years old. I made some friends in school 1 they turned out to be bad. They were some boys who stole(偷盗) 2 and sold them. Whenever we were stealing a bike, a boy named John would break the lock 3 two other boys were watching out. Then one of us would 4 the bike to a cave (洞穴). The next day, we would meet there and repaint the bike. When we stole four or five bikes, we would sell them 5 a few hundred dollars.
One 6 afternoon, we went to an apartment in Bukit Batok. We found a bike on the fifth floor and started to work on the 7. It was hard to break. We spent 10 minutes 8 it. We were about to escape with the bike when the owner of the bike came out of the elevator. “My bike!” he 9.
We dropped the bike and ran down but two policemen nearby 10 us. We were taken to the police station. Our parents were called and our teachers were told what had happened. The police took down what we had done. The next day, a bright Sunday, I 11 to the Boys' Home.
Life in the Boys' Home was very hard but it 12 me a very important lesson. I learnt that stealing was not right. At the Boys' Home, the officers helped me and encouraged me 13 my ways. I decided to 14 stealing.
To this day, I feel so 15 for what I have done. I hope you will learn something from my story.
Everyone is afraid of something.
Tommy, 11, is afraid of the dark. Rachel, 11, is most afraid of the big jellyfish (水母)in Australia. Morgan, 9, wishes she would stop being afraid to ride a bike on busy streets.
What's fear? Fear is a feeling that everyone has, and that's a good thing because fear is there to protect us. When the fear comes, it means we may meet something dangerous.
For the fear of dark, a kid could have much imagination. What's under my bed? Is there someone breaking into (闯入)my house? With the help of a parent, kids can get more comfortable in the dark. Using a night light to see that there's nothing there can also help fight that fear.
For other fears, we needn't fight. If you're afraid to ride your bike on a busy street, you're right! You should be afraid because it's dangerous. There's no need to fight a fear like that. Find a better place to ride.
It's also ok for Rachel to be afraid of the big jellyfish because it's really dangerous. But it lives only in some waters. So when she's not swimming in one of them, there should be no worries about the big jellyfish.
Here is some advice about fighting fears from kids.
Monique,10, says when you are scared, just think about happy times. Eight-year-old Jessica finds that taking a deep breath helps when you're scared. Amanda, 10, thinks kids should talk with a parent. Dustin, 11, likes to talk with a group of friends.
Children laugh often and easily. But as we grow up, we laugh less and feel more stressed. Try laughing for no reason at all. That's how thousands of people start their day at Laughter Clubs around the world, and doctors now think that having a good laugh may be one of the best ways to stay healthy. The first Laughter Club was started in Mumbai, India, in June,1995 by Dr Madam Kataria. “Young children laugh about 300 times a day. Adults laugh between 7 and 15 times a day, ”says Dr Kataria. “Everyone's naturally good at laughing. We want people to feel happy with their lives.” There are now more than 500 Laughter Clubs in India and over 1,300 worldwide.
Place: 264 North Main Street, East Longmeadow. We're in an office building near the entrance. Walk down the hall and we're on the right.
When: Every Sunday afternoon from 3:45 p.m. to 4:45 p.m.
Cost: Free. Donation will be welcomed.
Ages: Adults from 18 to 75.
Parking (停车):If you're facing the building, the car park is on the right of the building.
Teacher: Robert Rivest.
More information, go to // www. robertrivest.com.
If you want to feel like a kid again, try our Laughter Club. You will get used to it in five minutes and begin to laugh for real in ten minutes and sometimes you just can't stop! You'll experience deeper pleasure in half an hour. You'll meet other people who want more fun and laughter. And you will feel so relaxed in about one hour!
Come and join us for laughter and a fun social experience!
Droughts (干旱)are common in Kenya. Before, they came every 10 years, but now they seem to be hitting us more often and for a longer time.
We gave the droughts names :“longoza”was the drought when many animals died ; there was the drought of the “planes” because food was dropped from the air by planes; and one particularly bad drought was called “ man who dies with his money in his fist (拳头)”,because, even if there was money, there was simply no food to buy.
I was born in 1951 in Machakos. From what my mother tells me, when I was 7, there was a serious drought. I clearly remember the terrible weather and the hunger. I can't tell you how many times I went to bed without eating. “ I slept like that, ” is how we described it. I can't count the number of days when “ I slept like that,” or describe the feeling of going to sleep hungry, knowing I'd wake up and there would still be no food for breakfast.
My father would leave early in the morning carrying a little basket to ask for food on credit (赊欠). Each night he would return home around 10:00p.m. My mother would try to encourage me by telling me to keep the water in our pot boiling so that when my father arrived we could quickly cook any food he brought in the already prepared water. I would keep the fire burning and the water boiling, along with the hopes that we would eat that night. But my father would arrive frustrated and empty -handed. And I would sleep like that.
While we are still children, most of us live at home with our parents, more or less peacefully. But as we become teenagers, things change, and we begin to grow apart from our parents. This means we are almost ready to leave the house where we grew up and make a new home of our own.
All humans must do this, but they don't all do it in the same way. If, for instance, you belong to a primitive tribe (原始部落) ,then as you grew up, you'd learn the skills you needed as an adult—how to catch fish, how to keep the house and look after children. You would be ready to marry in your early teens and you would build a house and live near your family in the village.
This seems a very old way of life, but it is what humans have been used to through hundreds of years. And it is what we are still used to in the 21st century, for man hasn't changed in the short time since he became civilized(文明的). But could you leave home and look after yourself during the teen years? Most people would not do very well. Why? Because although man hasn't changed very much, the society he lives in has changed greatly, which means that we have to learn more and more before we are ready to leave our parents' shelter( 居所 ) and live alone.
However, sometimes it is very frustrating to live at parents' home. Parents can be very upset about late nights, criticizing friends and always saying that we are noisy and dirty. But we still need our emotional (情感的) shelter till we finish our studies, and that is why we usually stay in our parents' home until we feel grown up enough to deal with living alone.
When Andy came to school, he was surprised to find he was the first to arrive that day. “Where is Susie?” he thought. She was the smartest student in the class and was always the earliest to class. Andy was always the second smartest and the second earliest.
In class, Andy learned that Susie went to visit her grandma in London and that she would not be back until Friday. He was happy because he was the smartest kid and also the earliest to class for four days. He was sad because he could not see Susie, the girl he was secretly in love with.
Over the following days, Andy felt bad about being the smartest kid and the earliest to class. .
When Andy entered the classroom, he found Susie was already there. At that moment he decided one thing: Susie was the smartest girl in the class, and he was the smartest boy in the class. And that was enough.
A. Finally, Friday came. B. Andy was happy and sad at the same time. C. It was like he was taking something that was not his. D. In all Andy's primary school life, Susie was never later than him. |
good, come, housework, work, parent, when have, nothing, how, necessary, if, take |
Lots of parents now buy everything that their children want to have. If they carry on with this habit, their children won't learn that money from hard work.
Some parents like to birthday parties for their children. If they keep on doing this, their children will think it's to have a birthday party every year. Year after year, maybe they will forget birthdays and only remember their own. It is against traditional habits.
Many parents don't let their children do . They think children only have one thing to do. They should study hard and do in their lessons. parents go on doing this, the children will only learn to open their mouth to be fed, and stretch out(伸出) their arms to be dressed every day. When the children grow up, they will be able to do , and they won't even find a job. Parents should teach the children to do housework because it can help them learn good habits, such as by themselves.
Bikes are popular in the Dutch(荷兰). In fact, nearly half of all travel in the Dutch is by bike. Now, one Dutch bike designer(设计师), Thomas, has taken the country's interest in bikes by making a school bus bike.
The big bike has eight sets of pedals (踏板) for kids, a driver seat for an adult, and three other seats, comfortably letting little kids for their trip to and from school. The bike even has a motor, which can help with high hills or at times when few kids on it.
So far, Thomas tells Fast Company, he's sold 25 school-hikes, at a price of $ 25,000 each—less than it would cost to buy a traditional school bus with the same number of seats. Along with the traditional color, the bikes are colored yellow so that they can be seen easily.
Thomas says he's sold school bus bikes to neighboring countries such as Belgium. England and Germany, but so far, the school bus bike hasn't been sold in the United States. If the U.S. agrees to buy this kind of school bus bike, it could do a lot of good to improve exercise for a young age and help them keep healthy.
It can help people (no more than 2 words)
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2)不少于90字左右。