2019年整理中学生百科英语2.doc
中学生百科英语2The camel
The camel can go without water for a long time. Some people think it store water in its hump. This is not true. It stores food in its hump. The camel’s body changes the food into fat. Then it stores the fat into its hump. It doesn’t store the fat all over its body. Fat all over an animal’s body keeps the animal warm. Camels live in the desert. They do not want to be warm during the day.The desert is very hot. The camel gets hotter and hotter during the day. It stores the heat in its body because the nights are cool. The Arabian camel has one hump. The Bactrian camel of Central Asia has two humps. It also has long, thick hair because winters are cold in Centre Asia.There is a lot of sand in the desert. The camel has long eyelashes. The eyelashes keep the sand out of the camel’s eyes.Arabic has about 150 words to describe a camel. Many people who speak Arabic need all these words because the camel is very important to them.11. The camel can go without ____________ for a long time.12. The camel stores ___________ in its hump.13. The ____________ camel has one hump, but the ____________ camel has two humps.14. Long ______________ keep sand out of the camel’s eyes.15. The Bactrian camel has long thick hair because ________________ .。
中学生百科英语1-U2-L2-Why Do People Laugh
U2 - How? Why?: Lesson 2 - Why Do People Laugh?Do you laugh every day? Most people do. Scientists say that people laugh about 17 times a day. That is a lot of laughter.In India, there are hundreds of laughter clubs. The people in these clubs get together every morning. First they stretch their hands above their heads. Then they pretend to laugh. Soon everyone is laughing naturally.People say they feel good after laughing together.Scientists believe that laughter is good for you. Why? For one thing, laughter is good exercise. When you laugh, you exercise many muscles in your body. Scientists say that one hundred laughs equals ten minutes of running. When you laugh, you also breathe deeply. This helps you relax. That's good for you, too.Why do we laugh? That is a hard question to answer. We know that people laugh more often in a group. They don't laugh very often when they are alone. Many scientists believe that we use laughter to connect to other people. Laughter helps us feel part of a group.In English, people say that laughter is the best medicine. Some think that laughter helps sick people get well. Do you think so, too? (194 words)中学生百科英语1-第二单元How? Why? 1。
中学生百科英语
中学生百科英语2:Thoughts& Notions01 The Zipper02 The Postage Stamp03 Pencils and Pens04 The Umbrella05 The Metric System06 Thai Boxing07 Sumo Wrestling08Tarahumara Foot Races09 Olympic Sports10 Greatathletes11 The Puffer Fish12 Foods from Around the World13 Chocolate14 The Blue Revolution15 Twenty-One Days Without Food16 The Marie Celeste17 The Roanoke Settlement18 The Easter Island Statues19 The Tunguska Fireball20Mystery of the Monarchs21 The History of Money22 Mass Marketing23 Inflation24 Doing Business Around the World25 Credit Cards1 The ZipperThe zipper is a wonderful invention. How did people ever live without zippers?They are very common, so we forget that they are wonderful. They are very strong,but they open and close very easily. They come in many colors and sizes.In the 1890s, people in the United States wore high shoes with a long row of buttons. Clothes often had rows of buttons, too. People wished that clothes were easier to put on and take off.Whitcomb L. Judson, an engineer from the United States, invented the zipper in 1893. However, his zippers didn't stay closed very well. This was embarrassing, and people didn't buy many of them. Then Dr. Gideon Sundback from Sweden solved this problem. His zipper stayed closed.A zipper has three parts: 1.Thereare dozens of metal or plastic hooks (called teeth) in two rows. 2. These hooks are fastened to two strips of cloth. The cloth strips are flexible. They bend easily. 3. A fastener slides along and joins the hooks together.When it slides the other way, it takes the hooks apart.Dr. Sundback put the hooks on strips of cloth. The cloth holds all the hooks in place. They don't come apart very easily. This solved the problem of the first zippers.(212 words)2 The Postage StampBefore the invention of the postage stamp, it was difficult to send a letter to another country. The sender paid for the letter to travel in his or her own country.Then the person in the other country paid for the rest of the trip. If a letter crossed several countries, the problem was worse.Rowland Hill, a British teacher, had the idea of a postage stamp with glue on the back. The British post office made the first stamps in 1840. They were the Penny Black and the Twopence Blue. A person bought a stamp and put it on a letter. The post office delivered the letter. When people received letters, they didn't have to pay anything. The postage was prepaid.Postage stamps became popular in Great Britain immediately. Other countries started making their own postage stamps very quickly.There were still problems with international mail. Some countries did not want to accept letters with stamps from other countries. Finally, in 1874, a German organized the Universal Postal Union (UPU). Each country in the UPU agreed to accept letters with prepaid postage from the other members. Today, the offices of the UPU are in Switzerland. Almost every country in the world is a member of this organization. It takes care of any international mail problems.Today, post offices in every country sell beautiful stamps. Collecting stamps is one of the most popular hobbies in the world, and every stamp collector knows about the Penny Black and the Twopence Blue.(250 words)3 Pencils and PensNo one knows who invented pencils or when it happened. A Swiss described a pencil in a book in 1565. He said it was a piece of wood with lead inside it. (Lead is a very heavy, soft, dark gray metal.) Pencils weren't popular, and people continued to write with pens. They used bird feathers as pens.Then, in 1795, someone started making pencils from graphite, and they became very popular. Graphite is like coal. (Coal is black, and we burn it for heat and energy.) Today, people make pencils in the same way. They grind the graphite, make it into the shape of a stick, and bake it. Then they put it inside a piece of wood. One pencil can write 50,000 English words or make a line 55 kilometers long.People wrote with feather pens and then used pens with metal points. They had to dip the point into ink after every few letters. Next, someone invented a fountain pen that could hold ink inside it. A fountain pen can write several pages before you have to fill it again.Two Hungarian brothers, Ladislao and Georg Biro, invented the ballpoint pen.They left Hungary and started making ballpoint pens in England in 1943, during World War II. English pilots liked the pens. They couldn't write with fountain pens in airplanes because the ink leaked out. Later, a French company called Bic bought the Biros' company.Some people call ballpoint pens "Bics." Australians call them "biros." Whatever we call them, we use them every day.(256 words)4 The UmbrellaThe umbrella is a very ordinary object. It keeps the rain and the sun off people.Most umbrellas fold up, so it is easy to carry them.However, the umbrella has not always been an ordinary object. In the past, it was a sign of royalty or importance. Some African tribes still use umbrellas in this way.Someone carries an umbrella and walks behind the king or important person.Umbrellas are very old. The Chinese had them more than 3,000 years ago. From there, umbrellas traveled to India, Persia, and Egypt. In Greece and Rome, men wouldn't use them. They believed umbrellas were only for women.When the Spanish explorers went to Mexico, they saw the Aztec kings using umbrellas. English explorers saw Native American princes carrying umbrellas on the east coast of North America. It seems that people in different parts of the world invented umbrellas at different times.England was probably the first country in Europe where ordinary people used umbrellas against the rain. England has a rainy climate, and umbrellas are very useful there.Everybody uses umbrellas today. The next time you carry one, remember that for centuries only great men and women used them. Perhaps you are really a king or queen, a princess or prince.(210 words)5 The Metric SystemPeople all over the world use grams, kilograms (kilos), meters, and liters. These are all ways to measure things. They are all part of the metric system.During the French Revolution (1789-1799) against the king, the revolutionary government started the metric system. Before that, every part of France had a different system for measuring things. Also, cloth makers measured cloth with one system. Jewelers used another system. Carpenters used another. Other countries used different systems. The revolutionary government wanted one scientific system of measurement. They asked a group of scientists and mathematicians to invent a system.The mathematicians and scientists decided to use the numbers ten, hundred, and thousand for their system.Next, they had to decide on a "natural" length. They chose one ten-millionth (1/ 10,000,000) of the distance from the equator to the North Pole. They called this distance the meter. Then they chose the gram for weighing things. A cubic centimeter of water weighs 1 gram.Mathematicians and scientists worked for 20 years until they finally had a complete measuring system. The biggest problem was measuring the meter.The metric system was a wonderful gift to the world. There are only a few countries that don't use it. The United States is one. The metric system is truly an international system.(214 words)6 Thai BoxingBoxing is popular in many countries. Two fighters wear boxing gloves on their hands. The boxers hit each other until one is knocked out or until the final bell rings.Each part of the fight is three minutes long. It is called a round.Thai boxing is different.The boxing match begins with music. Then the two fighters kneel and pray to God. Next, they do a slow dance that copies the movements of Thai boxing. During this dance, each fighter tries to show the other that he is best.Then the fight begins. In Thai boxing, the fighters can kick with their feet and hit each other with their elbows and knees. Of course, they hit with their hands, too.Each round is three minutes long. Then the boxers have a two-minute rest. Most boxers can fight only five rounds because this kind of fighting is very difficult.Thai boxing began over 500 years ago. If a soldier lost his weapons in a battle, he needed to fight with just his body. The soldiers learned how to use all the parts of their bodies. In 1560, the Burmese army captured Naresuen, the King of Thailand, in a war. King Naresuen was a very good boxer. He won his freedom from Burma by defeating all the best Burmese fighters. When he returned to Thailand, his people were very proud of him. Thai boxing became a popular sport.(237 words)7 Sumo WrestlingSumo wrestling is a national sport in Japan. Every year there are six tournaments,and millions of Japanese watch them on television. A tournament is a series of matches.Sumo is almost as old as the nation of Japan itself. Stories say that there was sumo wrestling over 2,000 years ago. There are written records of national sumo tournaments in the 8th century.In many sports, athletes are thin and can move very quickly. However, sumo wrestlers weigh from 100 to 160 kilos (kilograms). One famous wrestler weighed 195kilos. Sumo wrestlers do not move quickly, and sumo wrestling is a very slow sport.Sumo wrestlers start training when they are boys. They exercise to make their bodies strong. They also eat a lot.They wrestle in a round ring with a sand floor. A wrestler loses the match if he leaves the ring. He is also the loser if any part of his body except his feet touches the floor. Each wrestler tries to push the other down on the floor or out of the ring.Sometimes one wrestler just steps aside when the other wrestler rushes toward him.Then, the wrestler who is rushing falls down or moves out of the ring.Sumo is not very popular in other countries, but the Japanese think that it is a very exciting sport.(223 words)8Tarahumara Foot RacesThe Tarahumara live in the mountains in the state of Chihuahua in northern Mexico. This is an area of high mountains and deep tropical valleys. It sometimes snows in the mountains in winter. There are not many roads.The Tarahumara walk wherever they need to go. They carry heavy baskets on their backs. Perhaps this is why the Tarahumara can run many kilometers without getting tired. They are excellent runners, and they like to organize races.When the men race,they kick a wooden ball ahead of them while they run. Before they start racing, they plan where and how long they will run. They might run just a few minutes, or they might run for several hours. Sometimes they run in teams, and sometimes each person runs as an individual.The women's races are similar except that the women do not kick a ball. They throw a wooden hoop in front of them with a stick. A hoop is a ring, or a circle.The Tarahumara play other games and sports. However, they are famous because they can run so fast and so far.(185 words)9 Olympic SportsThe first modern Olympic Games took place in Athens, Greece, in the year 1896.Athletes from only 13 countries participated in the Games that year. They competed in 43 different events in just 9 sports (track and field, swimming, cycling, fencing,gymnastics, shooting, tennis, weight lifting, and wrestling). In 2004, the summer Olympic Games took place once again in Athens, Greece. This time athletes from 202 countries competed in 300 events in 28 sports.Only five sports have been in every Olympic Games. They are track and field,swimming, fencing, cycling, and gymnastics. Other sports come and go in the Olympic Games. For example, tennis was an Olympic sport from 1896 until 1924.Then it disappeared from the Olympics until 1988. Baseball, badminton, and taekwondo are more recent additions to the Olympic Games.It is the job of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) to add and remove sports from the Olympic Games. A sport has to be popular in at least 50 countries on three continents before it can be added. However, the IOC doesn't want to add more sports to the Olympic Games without eliminating others. The IOC is afraid that there will be too many sports in the Olympics.Artistic events were also a part of the Olympic Games from 1912 to 1948. There were contests in architecture, music, literature, and painting. Today some people think that artistic events and games such as chess should be part of the Olympics.However, many people oppose this idea.The Olympic Games today are very different from the first modern Olympic Games in 1896. These differences reflect the changing definition and popularity of sports.(273 words)10 Great AthletesYou might think that Olympic athletes are the healthiest people in the world. It's true that many are. However, it's also true that quite a few Olympic athletes had to overcome illnesses early in their lives.One excellent example is Wilma Rudolph. She competed in track-and-field events in the 1960 Olympics. She didn't win just one gold medal. She won three. At the time, people called her "the fastest woman in the world."As a young child, Wilma Rudolph could not participate in sports. She had a series of serious illnesses, and then, at the age of 4, she got polio. She lost the use of her left leg, and the doctors said she would never walk again.The people in Rudolph's family did everything they could to help her walk again.Wilma and her mother frequently traveled 100 miles to get treatments for her leg. Her brothers and sisters took turns giving her leg a daily massage. Four times a day, they helped her do special exercises for her leg. Amazingly, by the time Rudolph was 9years old, she was able to walk again. Before long, she started playing basketball and running. In high school, she was a track star, and then she went to the Olympics.Wilma Rudolph retired from her career as a runner when she was 22 years old.She then became a teacher and track coach. Her story encouraged many people to work hard and to overcome difficulties.(244 words)11The Puffer FishMost people avoid eating dangerous foods. They don't want to get sick. However,there is one food that can be deadly, yet some people eat it on purpose. It's called the puffer fish.This kind of fish, called fugu in Japanese, lives in the Pacific Ocean. Some people die every year from eating fugu. In fact, the Emperor of Japan is not allowed to touch it. Why? Well, the insides of the puffer fish are very poisonous. They contain a poison 275 times more powerful than the deadly poison cyanide.Usually nothing bad happens when fugu is on a restaurant's menu. Customers feel great after the meal. That's because chefs are trained to remove the insides of the puffer fish before they give it to customers. If they miss even a small amount, the fish is not safe to eat.Puffer fish is very expensive. A plate of fugu costs more than $200 in some restaurants in Tokyo. Besides being dangerous to eat, the fish is very ugly, with spines all over its body. Also, it can puff, or blow, itself up to double its normal size.Why do the Japanese risk so much for such an ugly and dangerous fish? Well, some people like taking risks. And fugu tastes wonderful.(211 words)12 Foods from Around the WorldFoods that are well known to you may not be familiar to people from other countries. Tourists and other travelers almost always get to try some unfamiliar food.That is part of the fun of traveling. Here are four people's experiences with foreign food.Shao Wong is a student in France. He comes from China. "I never had cheese or even milk before I came to France. Cattle are rare in my part of China, so there are no dairy products. I drank some milk when I first arrived in France. I hated it ! I tried cheese, too, but I didn't like it. I love ice cream, though, and that's made from milk."Birgit is from Sweden. She traveled to Australia on vacation. "I was in a restaurant that specialized in fish, and I heard some other customers order flake. So I ordered some, too, and it was delicious. Later, I found out that flake is an Australian term for shark. Now, whenever I see a new food, I try it on purpose. You know why? I remember how much I enjoyed flake."Chandra is a dentist in Texas. She is from India. "I'm afraid to try new foods because they might contain beef. I'm a Hindu, and my religion forbids me to eat meat from the cow. That's why I can't eat hamburgers or spaghetti with meatballs."Nathan is from the United States. He taught for a year in China. "My friends gave me some 100-year-old eggs to eat. I didn't like their appearance at all. The eggs were green inside, but my friends said the color was normal. The Chinese put chemicals on fresh eggs. Then they bury them in the earth for three months. So the eggs weren't really very old. Even so, I didn't want to touch them."Life in a new country can be scary, but it also can be fun. Would you eat a 100-year-old egg? Would you order shark in a restaurant?(328 words)13 ChocolateWe think of chocolate as something sweet. However, a long time ago, people thought of chocolate as something very bitter. For us, chocolate is a candy, but once it was a medicine. Today, chocolate can be a hot drink, a frozen dessert, or just a snack.Sometimes it's an ingredient in the main course of a meal. Mexicans make a hot chocolate sauce called mole and pour it over chicken. The Mexicans also eat chocolate with spices like chili peppers.Chocolate is a product of the tropical cacao tree. Cacao beans taste so bitter that even monkeys say "ugh!" and run away. The word chocolate comes from a Mayan word. The Mayas were an ancient people who once lived in Mexico. They valued the cacao tree. Some of the Mayas used cacao beans for money, while others ground them to make a bitter drink.When the Spaniards came to Mexico in the 16th century, they started drinking cacao, too. Because the drink was strong and bitter, they thought it was a medicine.When the Spaniards took the drink back to Europe, people discovered that sugar removed the bitter taste of cacao. Wealthy Spaniards heated the sweet drink and thought that it was good for their health.In the 19th century, an English company made the first solid block of sweetened chocolate. Now people could both drink and eat chocolate. Later, a Swiss company mixed milk and chocolate together. People liked the taste of milk chocolate even better.Besides the chocolate candy bar, one of the most popular American snacks is the chocolate-chip cookie. Favorite desserts are chocolate cream pie and, of course, an ice cream sundae with hot fudge sauce.(280 words)14 The Blue RevolutionThe population of the world is increasing rapidly. By 2020, there could be 7.5billion people on earth. Will there be enough food for all these people, or will we have a food shortage? Some scientists think fish farming could solve this problem.However, other scientists worry that fish farming could cause serious environmental problems.Fish farming is not a new thing. There were fish farms in China 3,000 years ago.Today, about one-third of the fish we eat comes from fish farms.Most fish farms raise plant-eating fish. Popular kinds of plant-eating fish are carp,tilapia, and catfish. Unfortunately, many fish farms are starting to raise meat-eating fish. A popular type of meat-eating fish is salmon. These meat-eating fish live on processed food made from wild fish. However, it takes up to 5 tons of wild fish to produce just 1 ton of farm-raised salmon. The supply of wild fish is already decreasing. Eventually, many types of wild fish could become extinct. What will we do then?Critics of fish farming also say that farm-raised fish is unhealthy for humans.They say the fish contains dangerous chemicals. They also criticize fish farming because it pollutes the water. Another criticism is that farm-raised fish can spread diseases to wild fish.Some people say that the farming methods being used now won't produce enough fish anyway. Instead of putting fish farms in lakes or near the coast, they say that the fish farms should be moved far out into the ocean. Several countries are already experimenting with deep-ocean farms. In the future, fish farms might be large cages that move across the ocean.Like most things, there is both a good and a bad side to fish farming. Fish farming may help to feed millions of people.At the same time, however, fish farming may damage the environment.(307 words)15 Twenty-One Days Without FoodWhy would someone decide to stop eating? We know that the body needs food in order to function well. However, many people fast at some time during their lives.Why is this?Some people fast for political reasons. In the early 20th century, women in England and the United States weren't allowed to vote. In protest, many women went on fasts. They hoped that fasting would bring attention to this injustice. Mohandas Gandhi, the famous Indian leader, fasted 17 times during his life. For Gandhi, fasting was a powerful political tool. In 1943, he fasted to bring attention to his country's need for independence. For 21 days, he went without food. Another famous faster was Cesar Chavez. In the 1960s, he fasted for three weeks. Why? His goal was to bring attention to the terrible working conditions of farm workers in the United States.Fasting is also a spiritual practice in many religions. Every year during the month of Ramadan, which is a religious holiday, Muslims fast from sunrise to sunset. Many Hindus fast on special occasions, as do some Christians and Buddhists.Of course, not everyone fasts for political or religious reasons. Some people occasionally fast just because it makes them feel better. The American writer Mark Twain thought fasting was the best medicine for common illnesses. Whenever he had a cold or a fever, he stopped eating completely. He said that this always made his cold or fever go away. Another American writer, Upton Sinclair, discovered fasting after years of overeating, indigestion, and headaches. His first fast lasted for 12 days.During this time, his headaches and stomachaches went away.Sinclair said that fasting also made him more alert and energetic.Choosing to go without food can be very dangerous. However, that doesn't stop people from fasting for political, religious, or health reasons.(305 words)16 The Marie CelesteThere are many stories about the ocean. One of the strangest is a true story about a sailing ship. It is a mystery even today.In 1872, the Marie Celeste started on a trip across the Atlantic Ocean with a crew of ten people.Sometime later, the captain of another ship, the Dei Gratia, saw the Marie Celeste. There was something strange about its appearance. The captain called out, but there was no answer. The Marie Celeste seemed deserted.When the captain went to inspect the ship, no one came to meet him. He knew something was wrong, but there were no signs of violence. Nothing was missing, and there was no damage to the ship's instruments. And strangely enough, there was food on the table. Where was everyone? Did the crew jump from the Marie Celeste? Or did something come up from the ocean and take the captain and crew away?The captain of the Dei Gratia looked around for clues. The last entry in the Marie Celeste's diary was ten days earlier. However, the food on the table was only a few days old. Someone was on the ship a few days before, but they didn't write anything in the ship's diary. Why?There were many different explanations for the mystery of the Marie Celeste.Some people thought that a huge octopus ate the crew. Others said bad weather carried them away. A few people believed that the Marie Celeste was under a curse,because it sank on a later voyage. Now that the Marie Celeste lies somewhere at the bottom of the ocean, no one can ever solve the mystery.(274 words)17 The Roanoke SettlementOnly a few Europeans lived in North America in the 16th century. Most of them settled on the northeast coast. In 1587, a small group of about 100 people decided to 11/20go south. They moved to the small island of Roanoke. That area later became part of the state of North Carolina.Unfortunately, the Roanoke settlers weren't well prepared. They didn't have enough food for the winter, and there wasn't enough grain for future crops. Their leader, Captain White, decided to sail back to England to get supplies. However,there was a war in Europe, and three years passed before he returned to North America.When Captain White came back to Roanoke in 1590, he was eager to see the settlers. He looked out from his ship, but no one was there to meet him. There were no signs of life. The settlement was deserted.No one knows why the Roanoke settlers disappeared. Many people thought that hostile Native Americans killed them, but there were no signs of a fight. Some thought that the settlers died from hunger or disease, but they couldn't explain the absence of bodies.Many years later, more settlers came to North Carolina. One of them met a Native American group called the Lumbee. They were unusual looking compared to the black-haired, brown-eyed Native Americans in the north. Some Lumbee had blonde hair and gray eyes. Then he listened to their speech and almost fell off his horse.They seemed to speak an odd kind of English!He asked where they were from. None of them knew, but they said that their grandparents "talked from a book." Did they mean that their grandparents were able to read? As he rode back home,he asked himself a question: Were the Lumbee people the descendants of the Roanoke settlers?People are still asking the identical question. Because there are no written records,we can't be certain. However, there is one interesting fact. Today, some of the Lumbee people have names like Sampson, Dare, and Cooper. They are identical to the names of the vanished settlers ofRoanoke Island.(350 words)18 The Easter Island StatuesWhen the first sailing ship came to Easter Island in 1722 the captain and crew were afraid to land. They saw giants looking down at them from the high cliffs. The giants didn't move, so the ship slowly moved closer. Finally, the sailors realized that the giants were statues. Who made these huge statues? How did they get there?Easter Island is a very small island in the Pacific Ocean. It is more than 2,000miles from the nearest continent (South America). It is one of the most isolated places on earth.The biggest statue on Easter Island is over 60 feet high and weighs over 100 tons.There are hundreds of smaller ones, about 15 feet high. All of the statues are made of stone, and some wear stone hats. Their faces are solemn and unsmiling.Earlier inhabitants of Easter Island made the statues from the rocks in a volcanic crater. Next, they had to move the statues a long distance. In some cases, they moved the statues to locations more than ten miles away.No one knows for certain how the inhabitants were able to move the statues. Some scientists say that palm trees grew on Easter Island in the past. They think the inhabitants cut the trees down and placed the heavy statues on the trees. Then groups of 70 or more people rolled the statues to their present locations. Other scientists disagree with this theory because there are no palm trees on the island today. More important, the purpose of the statues is still a mystery. Was the purpose of the statues to prevent strangers from landing on the island?The result, however, has been the opposite. Large groups of eager people come to look at the statues. Easter Island now has a modern airport, and people come from all over the world to visit.。
中学生百科英语2
中学生百科英语2:Thoughts& Notions01 The Zipper02 The Postage Stamp03 Pencils and Pens04 The Umbrella05 The Metric System06 Thai Boxing07 Sumo Wrestling08Tarahumara Foot Races09 Olympic Sports10 Greatathletes11 The Puffer Fish12 Foods from Around the World13 Chocolate14 The Blue Revolution15 Twenty-One Days Without Food16 The Marie Celeste17 The Roanoke Settlement18 The Easter Island Statues19 The Tunguska Fireball20Mystery of the Monarchs21 The History of Money22 Mass Marketing23 Inflation24 Doing Business Around the World25 Credit Cards1 The ZipperThe zipper is a wonderful invention. How did people ever live without zippers?They are very common, so we forget that they are wonderful. They are very strong,but they open and close very easily. They come in many colors and sizes.In the 1890s, people in the United States wore high shoes with a long row of buttons. Clothes often had rows of buttons, too. People wished that clothes were easier to put on and take off.Whitcomb L. Judson, an engineer from the United States, invented the zipper in 1893. However, his zippers didn't stay closed very well. This was embarrassing, and people didn't buy many of them. Then Dr. Gideon Sundback from Sweden solved this problem. His zipper stayed closed.A zipper has three parts: 1.Thereare dozens of metal or plastic hooks (called teeth) in two rows. 2. These hooks are fastened to two strips of cloth. The cloth strips are flexible. They bend easily. 3.A fastener slides along and joins the hooks together.When it slides the other way, it takes the hooks apart.Dr. Sundback put the hooks on strips of cloth. The cloth holds all the hooks in place. They don't come apart very easily. This solved the problem of the first zippers.(212 words)2 The Postage StampBefore the invention of the postage stamp, it was difficult to send a letter to another country. The sender paid for the letter to travel in his or her own country.Then the person in the other country paid for the rest of the trip. If a letter crossed several countries, the problem was worse.Rowland Hill, a British teacher, had the idea of a postage stamp with glue on the back. The British post office made the first stamps in 1840. They were the Penny Black and the Twopence Blue.A person bought a stamp and put it on a letter. The post office delivered the letter. When people received letters, they didn't have to pay anything. The postage was prepaid.Postage stamps became popular in Great Britain immediately. Other countries started making their own postage stamps very quickly.There were still problems with international mail. Some countries did not want to accept letters with stamps from other countries. Finally, in 1874, a German organized the Universal Postal Union (UPU). Each country in the UPU agreed to accept letters with prepaid postage from the other members. Today, the offices of the UPU are in Switzerland. Almost every country in the world is a member of this organization. It takes care of any international mail problems.Today, post offices in every country sell beautiful stamps. Collecting stamps is one of the most popular hobbies in the world, and every stamp collector knows about the Penny Black and the Twopence Blue.(250 words)3 Pencils and PensNo one knows who invented pencils or when it happened. A Swiss described a pencil in a book in 1565. He said it was a piece of wood with lead inside it. (Lead is a very heavy, soft, dark gray metal.) Pencils weren't popular, and people continued to write with pens. They used bird feathers as pens.Then, in 1795, someone started making pencils from graphite, and they became very popular. Graphite is like coal. (Coal is black, and we burn it for heat and energy.) Today, people make pencils in the same way. They grind the graphite, make it into the shape of a stick, and bake it. Then they put it inside a piece of wood. One pencil can write 50,000 English words or make a line 55 kilometers long.People wrote with feather pens and then used pens with metal points. They had to dip the point into ink after every few letters. Next, someone invented a fountain pen that could hold ink inside it. A fountain pen can write several pages before you have to fill it again.Two Hungarian brothers, Ladislao and Georg Biro, invented the ballpoint pen.They left Hungary and started making ballpoint pens in England in 1943, during World War II. English pilots liked the pens. They couldn't write with fountain pens in airplanes because the ink leaked out. Later, a French company called Bic bought the Biros' company.Some people call ballpoint pens "Bics." Australians call them "biros." Whatever we call them, we use them every day.(256 words)4 The UmbrellaThe umbrella is a very ordinary object. It keeps the rain and the sun off people.Most umbrellas fold up, so it is easy to carry them.However, the umbrella has not always been an ordinary object. In the past, it was a sign of royalty or importance. Some African tribes still use umbrellas in this way.Someone carries an umbrella and walks behind the king or important person.Umbrellas are very old. The Chinese had them more than 3,000 years ago. From there, umbrellas traveled to India, Persia, and Egypt. In Greece and Rome, men wouldn't use them. They believed umbrellas were only for women.When the Spanish explorers went to Mexico, they saw the Aztec kings using umbrellas. English explorers saw Native American princes carrying umbrellas on the east coast of North America. It seems that people in different parts of the world invented umbrellas at different times.England was probably the first country in Europe where ordinary people used umbrellas against the rain. England has a rainy climate, and umbrellas are very useful there.Everybody uses umbrellas today. The next time you carry one, remember that for centuries only great men and women used them. Perhaps you are really a king or queen, a princess or prince.(210 words)5 The Metric SystemPeople all over the world use grams, kilograms (kilos), meters, and liters. These are all ways to measure things. They are all part of the metric system.During the French Revolution (1789-1799) against the king, the revolutionary government started the metric system. Before that, every part of France had a different system for measuring things. Also, cloth makers measured cloth with one system. Jewelers used another system. Carpenters used another. Other countries used different systems. The revolutionary government wanted one scientific system of measurement. They asked a group of scientists and mathematicians to invent a system.The mathematicians and scientists decided to use the numbers ten, hundred, and thousand for their system.Next, they had to decide on a "natural" length. They chose one ten-millionth (1/ 10,000,000) of the distance from the equator to the North Pole. They called this distance the meter. Then they chose the gram for weighing things. A cubic centimeter of water weighs 1 gram.Mathematicians and scientists worked for 20 years until they finally had a complete measuring system. The biggest problem was measuring the meter.The metric system was a wonderful gift to the world. There are only a few countries that don't use it. The United States is one. The metric system is truly an international system.(214 words)6 Thai BoxingBoxing is popular in many countries. Two fighters wear boxing gloves on their hands. The boxers hit each other until one is knocked out or until the final bell rings.Each part of the fight is three minutes long. It is called a round.Thai boxing is different.The boxing match begins with music. Then the two fighters kneel and pray to God. Next, they do a slow dance that copies the movements of Thai boxing. During this dance, each fighter tries to show the other that he is best.Then the fight begins. In Thai boxing, the fighters can kick with their feet and hit each other with their elbows and knees. Of course, they hit with their hands, too.Each round is three minutes long. Then the boxers have a two-minute rest. Most boxers can fight only five rounds because this kind of fighting is very difficult.Thai boxing began over 500 years ago. If a soldier lost his weapons in a battle, he needed to fight with just his body. The soldiers learned how to use all the parts of their bodies. In 1560, the Burmese army captured Naresuen, the King of Thailand, in a war. King Naresuen was a very good boxer. He won his freedom from Burma by defeating all the best Burmese fighters. When he returned to Thailand, his people were very proud of him. Thai boxing became a popular sport.(237 words)7 Sumo WrestlingSumo wrestling is a national sport in Japan. Every year there are six tournaments,and millions of Japanese watch them on television. A tournament is a series of matches.Sumo is almost as old as the nation of Japan itself. Stories say that there was sumo wrestling over 2,000 years ago. There are written records of national sumo tournaments in the 8th century.In many sports, athletes are thin and can move very quickly. However, sumo wrestlers weigh from 100 to 160 kilos (kilograms). One famous wrestler weighed 195kilos. Sumo wrestlers do not move quickly, and sumo wrestling is a very slow sport.Sumo wrestlers start training when they are boys. They exercise to make their bodies strong. They also eat a lot.They wrestle in a round ring with a sand floor. A wrestler loses the match if he leaves the ring. He is also the loser if any part of his body except his feet touches the floor. Each wrestler tries to push the other down on the floor or out of the ring.Sometimes one wrestler just steps aside when the other wrestler rushes toward him.Then, the wrestler who is rushing falls down or moves out of the ring.Sumo is not very popular in other countries, but the Japanese think that it is a very exciting sport.(223 words)8Tarahumara Foot RacesThe Tarahumara live in the mountains in the state of Chihuahua in northern Mexico. This is an area of high mountains and deep tropical valleys. It sometimes snows in the mountains in winter. There are not many roads.The Tarahumara walk wherever they need to go. They carry heavy baskets on their backs. Perhaps this is why the Tarahumara can run many kilometers without getting tired. They are excellent runners, and they like to organize races.When the men race,they kick a wooden ball ahead of them while they run. Before they start racing, they plan where and how long they will run. They might run just a few minutes, or they might run for several hours. Sometimes they run in teams, and sometimes each person runs as an individual.The women's races are similar except that the women do not kick a ball. They throw a wooden hoop in front of them with a stick.A hoop is a ring, or a circle.The Tarahumara play other games and sports. However, they are famous because they can run so fast and so far.(185 words)9 Olympic SportsThe first modern Olympic Games took place in Athens, Greece, in the year 1896.Athletes from only 13 countries participated in the Games that year. They competed in 43 different events in just 9 sports (track and field, swimming, cycling, fencing,gymnastics, shooting, tennis, weight lifting, and wrestling). In 2004, the summer Olympic Games took place once again in Athens, Greece. This time athletes from 202 countries competed in 300 events in 28 sports.Only five sports have been in every Olympic Games. They are track and field,swimming, fencing, cycling, and gymnastics. Other sports come and go in the Olympic Games. For example, tennis was an Olympic sport from 1896 until 1924.Then it disappeared from the Olympics until 1988. Baseball, badminton, and taekwondo are more recent additions to the Olympic Games.It is the job of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) to add and remove sports from the Olympic Games. A sport has to be popular in at least 50 countries on three continents before it can be added. However, the IOC doesn't want to add more sports to the Olympic Games without eliminating others. The IOC is afraid that there will be too many sports in the Olympics.Artistic events were also a part of the Olympic Games from 1912 to 1948. There were contests in architecture, music, literature, and painting. Today some people think that artistic events and games such as chess should be part of the Olympics.However, many people oppose this idea.The Olympic Games today are very different from the first modern Olympic Games in 1896. These differences reflect the changing definition and popularity of sports.(273 words)10 Great AthletesYou might think that Olympic athletes are the healthiest people in the world. It's true that many are. However, it's also true that quite a few Olympic athletes had to overcome illnesses early in their lives.One excellent example is Wilma Rudolph. She competed in track-and-field events in the 1960 Olympics. She didn't win just one gold medal. She won three. At the time, people called her "the fastest woman in the world."As a young child, Wilma Rudolph could not participate in sports. She had a series of serious illnesses, and then, at the age of 4, she got polio. She lost the use of her left leg, and the doctors said she would never walk again.The people in Rudolph's family did everything they could to help her walk again.Wilma and her mother frequently traveled 100 miles to get treatments for her leg. Her brothers and sisters took turns giving her leg a daily massage. Four times a day, they helped her do special exercises for her leg. Amazingly, by the time Rudolph was 9years old, she was able to walk again. Before long, she started playing basketball and running. In high school, she was a track star, and then she went to the Olympics.Wilma Rudolph retired from her career as a runner when she was 22 years old.She then became a teacher and track coach. Her story encouraged many people to work hard and to overcome difficulties.(244 words)11The Puffer FishMost people avoid eating dangerous foods. They don't want to get sick. However,there is one food that can be deadly, yet some people eat it on purpose. It's called the puffer fish.This kind of fish, called fugu in Japanese, lives in the Pacific Ocean. Some people die every year from eating fugu. In fact, the Emperor of Japan is not allowed to touch it. Why? Well, the insides of the puffer fish are very poisonous. They contain a poison 275 times more powerful than the deadly poison cyanide.Usually nothing bad happens when fugu is on a restaurant's menu. Customers feel great after the meal. That's because chefs are trained to remove the insides of the puffer fish before they give it to customers. If they miss even a small amount, the fish is not safe to eat.Puffer fish is very expensive. A plate of fugu costs more than $200 in some restaurants in Tokyo. Besides being dangerous to eat, the fish is very ugly, with spines all over its body. Also, it can puff, or blow, itself up to double its normal size.Why do the Japanese risk so much for such an ugly and dangerous fish? Well, some people like taking risks. And fugu tastes wonderful.(211 words)12 Foods from Around the WorldFoods that are well known to you may not be familiar to people from other countries. Tourists and other travelers almost always get to try some unfamiliar food.That is part of the fun of traveling. Here are four people's experiences with foreign food.Shao Wong is a student in France. He comes from China. "I never had cheese or even milk before I came to France. Cattle are rare in my part of China, so there are no dairy products. I drank some milk when I first arrived in France. I hated it ! I tried cheese, too, but I didn't like it. I love ice cream, though, and that's made from milk."Birgit is from Sweden. She traveled to Australia on vacation. "I was in a restaurant that specialized in fish, and I heard some other customers order flake. So I ordered some, too, and it was delicious. Later, I found out that flake is an Australian term for shark. Now, whenever I see a new food, I try it on purpose. You know why? I remember how much I enjoyed flake."Chandra is a dentist in Texas. She is from India. "I'm afraid to try new foods because they might contain beef. I'm a Hindu, and my religion forbids me to eat meat from the cow. That's why I can't eat hamburgers or spaghetti with meatballs."Nathan is from the United States. He taught for a year in China. "My friends gave me some 100-year-old eggs to eat. I didn't like their appearance at all. The eggs were green inside, but my friends said the color was normal. The Chinese put chemicals on fresh eggs. Then they bury them in the earth for three months. So the eggs weren't really very old. Even so, I didn't want to touch them."Life in a new country can be scary, but it also can be fun. Would you eat a 100-year-old egg? Would you order shark in a restaurant?(328 words)13 ChocolateWe think of chocolate as something sweet. However, a long time ago, people thought of chocolate as something very bitter. For us, chocolate is a candy, but once it was a medicine. Today, chocolate can be a hot drink, a frozen dessert, or just a snack.Sometimes it's an ingredient in the main course of a meal. Mexicans make a hot chocolate sauce called mole and pour it over chicken. The Mexicans also eat chocolate with spices like chili peppers.Chocolate is a product of the tropical cacao tree. Cacao beans taste so bitter that even monkeys say "ugh!" and run away. The word chocolate comes from a Mayan word. The Mayas were an ancient people who once lived in Mexico. They valued the cacao tree. Some of the Mayas used cacao beans for money, while others ground them to make a bitter drink.When the Spaniards came to Mexico in the 16th century, they started drinking cacao, too. Because the drink was strong and bitter, they thought it was a medicine.When the Spaniards took the drink back to Europe, people discovered that sugar removed the bitter taste of cacao. Wealthy Spaniards heated the sweet drink and thought that it was good for their health.In the 19th century, an English company made the first solid block of sweetened chocolate. Now people could both drink and eat chocolate. Later, a Swiss company mixed milk and chocolate together. People liked the taste of milk chocolate even better.Besides the chocolate candy bar, one of the most popular American snacks is the chocolate-chip cookie. Favorite desserts are chocolate cream pie and, of course, an ice cream sundae with hot fudge sauce.(280 words)14 The Blue RevolutionThe population of the world is increasing rapidly. By 2020, there could be 7.5billion people on earth. Will there be enough food for all these people, or will we have a food shortage? Some scientists think fish farming could solve this problem.However, other scientists worry that fish farming could cause serious environmental problems.Fish farming is not a new thing. There were fish farms in China 3,000 years ago.Today, about one-third of the fish we eat comes from fish farms.Most fish farms raise plant-eating fish. Popular kinds of plant-eating fish are carp,tilapia, and catfish. Unfortunately, many fish farms are starting to raise meat-eating fish. A popular type of meat-eating fish is salmon. These meat-eating fish live on processed food made from wild fish. However, it takes up to 5 tons of wild fish to produce just 1 ton of farm-raised salmon. The supply of wild fish is already decreasing. Eventually, many types of wild fish could become extinct. What will we do then?Critics of fish farming also say that farm-raised fish is unhealthy for humans.They say the fish contains dangerous chemicals. They also criticize fish farming because it pollutes the water. Another criticism is that farm-raised fish can spread diseases to wild fish.Some people say that the farming methods being used now won't produce enough fish anyway. Instead of putting fish farms in lakes or near the coast, they say that the fish farms should be moved far out into the ocean. Several countries are already experimenting with deep-ocean farms. In the future, fish farms might be large cages that move across the ocean.Like most things, there is both a good and a bad side to fish farming. Fish farming may help to feed millions of people. At the same time, however, fish farming may damage the environment.(307 words)15 Twenty-One Days Without FoodWhy would someone decide to stop eating? We know that the body needs food in order to function well. However, many people fast at some time during their lives.Why is this?Some people fast for political reasons. In the early 20th century, women in England and the United States weren't allowed to vote. In protest, many women went on fasts. They hoped that fasting would bring attention to this injustice. Mohandas Gandhi, the famous Indian leader, fasted 17 times during his life. For Gandhi, fasting was a powerful political tool. In 1943, he fasted to bring attention to his country's need for independence. For 21 days, he went without food. Another famous faster was Cesar Chavez. In the 1960s, he fasted for three weeks. Why? His goal was to bring attention to the terrible working conditions of farm workers in the United States.Fasting is also a spiritual practice in many religions. Every year during the month of Ramadan, which is a religious holiday, Muslims fast from sunrise to sunset. Many Hindus fast on special occasions, as do some Christians and Buddhists.Of course, not everyone fasts for political or religious reasons. Some people occasionally fast just because it makes them feel better. The American writer Mark Twain thought fasting was the best medicine for common illnesses. Whenever he had a cold or a fever, he stopped eating completely. He said that this always made his cold or fever go away. Another American writer, Upton Sinclair, discovered fasting after years of overeating, indigestion, and headaches. His first fast lasted for 12 days.During this time, his headaches and stomachaches went away. Sinclair said that fasting also made him more alert and energetic.Choosing to go without food can be very dangerous. However, that doesn't stop people from fasting for political, religious, or health reasons.(305 words)16 The Marie CelesteThere are many stories about the ocean. One of the strangest is a true story about a sailing ship. It is a mystery even today.In 1872, the Marie Celeste started on a trip across the Atlantic Ocean with a crew of ten people.Sometime later, the captain of another ship, the Dei Gratia, saw the Marie Celeste. There was something strange about its appearance. The captain called out, but there was no answer. The Marie Celeste seemed deserted.When the captain went to inspect the ship, no one came to meet him. He knew something was wrong, but there were no signs of violence. Nothing was missing, and there was no damage to the ship's instruments. And strangely enough, there was food on the table. Where was everyone? Did the crew jump from the Marie Celeste? Or did something come up from the ocean and take the captain and crew away?The captain of the Dei Gratia looked around for clues. The last entry in the Marie Celeste's diary was ten days earlier. However, the food on the table was only a few days old. Someone was on the ship a few days before, but they didn't write anything in the ship's diary. Why?There were many different explanations for the mystery of the Marie Celeste.Some people thought that a huge octopus ate the crew. Others said bad weather carried them away. A few people believed that the Marie Celeste was under a curse,because it sank on a later voyage. Now that the Marie Celeste lies somewhere at the bottom of the ocean, no one can ever solve the mystery.(274 words)17 The Roanoke SettlementOnly a few Europeans lived in North America in the 16th century. Most of them settled on the northeast coast. In 1587, a small group of about 100 people decided to 11/20go south. They moved to the small island of Roanoke. That area later became part of the state of North Carolina.Unfortunately, the Roanoke settlers weren't well prepared. They didn't have enough food for the winter, and there wasn't enough grain for future crops. Their leader, Captain White, decided to sail back to England to get supplies. However,there was a war in Europe, and three years passed before he returned to North America.When Captain White came back to Roanoke in 1590, he was eager to see the settlers. He looked out from his ship, but no one was there to meet him. There were no signs of life. The settlement was deserted.No one knows why the Roanoke settlers disappeared. Many people thought that hostile Native Americans killed them, but there were no signs of a fight. Some thought that the settlers died from hunger or disease, but they couldn't explain the absence of bodies.Many years later, more settlers came to North Carolina. One of them met a Native American group called the Lumbee. They were unusual looking compared to the black-haired, brown-eyed NativeAmericans in the north. Some Lumbee had blonde hair and gray eyes. Then he listened to their speech and almost fell off his horse.They seemed to speak an odd kind of English!He asked where they were from. None of them knew, but they said that their grandparents "talked from a book." Did they mean that their grandparents were able to read? As he rode back home, he asked himself a question: Were the Lumbee people the descendants of the Roanoke settlers?People are still asking the identical question. Because there are no written records,we can't be certain. However, there is one interesting fact. Today, some of the Lumbee people have names like Sampson, Dare, and Cooper. They are identical to the names of the vanished settlers ofRoanoke Island.(350 words)18 The Easter Island StatuesWhen the first sailing ship came to Easter Island in 1722 the captain and crew were afraid to land. They saw giants looking down at them from the high cliffs. The giants didn't move, so the ship slowly moved closer. Finally, the sailors realized that the giants were statues. Who made these huge statues? How did they get there?Easter Island is a very small island in the Pacific Ocean. It is more than 2,000miles from the nearest continent (South America). It is one of the most isolated places on earth.The biggest statue on Easter Island is over 60 feet high and weighs over 100 tons.There are hundreds of smaller ones, about 15 feet high. All of the statues are made of stone, and some wear stone hats. Their faces are solemn and unsmiling.Earlier inhabitants of Easter Island made the statues from the rocks in a volcanic crater. Next, they had to move the statues a long distance. In some cases, they moved the statues to locations more than ten miles away.No one knows for certain how the inhabitants were able to move the statues. Some scientists say that palm trees grew on Easter Island in the past. They think the inhabitants cut the trees down and placed the heavy statues on the trees. Then groups of 70 or more people rolled the statues to their present locations. Other scientists disagree with this theory because there are no palm trees on the island today. More important, the purpose of the statues is still a mystery. Was the purpose of the statues to prevent strangers from landing on the island?The result, however, has been the opposite. Large groups of eager people come to look at the statues. Easter Island now has a modern airport, and people come from all over the world to visit.(309 words)。
中学生百科英语1第五单元lesson2
中学生百科英语1第五单元lesson2 Unit 5 Lesson 2: Healthy LivingIn Unit 5 Lesson 2 of Middle School Encyclopedia English 1, we will be exploring the topic of healthy living. Living a healthy lifestyle is essential for our overall well-being and can have a positive impact on our physical and mental health. In this lesson, we will learn about the importance of maintaining a healthy diet, getting regular exercise, and practicing good hygiene habits.1. Healthy DietEating a balanced diet is crucial for maintaining good health.A healthy diet should include a variety of foods such as fruits, vegetables, whole grains, lean proteins, and dairy products. It is important to avoid eating too much junk food, sugary drinks, and processed foods. These foods are high in calories, sugar, and unhealthy fats, which can lead to weight gain and increase the risk of developing chronic diseases such as diabetes and heart disease. Instead, focus on eating nutrient-dense foods that provide your body with essential vitamins, minerals, and antioxidants.2. Regular ExerciseRegular physical activity is also key to staying healthy. Exercise helps to strengthen your muscles, improve your cardiovascular health, and boost your mood. Aim to get at least 30 minutes of moderate exercise each day, such as walking, jogging, swimming, or biking. You can also try activities like dancing, yoga, or playing sports to keep things interesting. Find activities that you enjoy and make them a regular part of your routine to stay fit and healthy.3. Good Hygiene HabitsPracticing good hygiene habits is important for preventing the spread of germs and keeping yourself and others healthy. Make sure to wash your hands frequently with soap and water, especially before eating or after using the bathroom. Cover your mouth and nose with a tissue or your elbow when sneezing or coughing to prevent the spread of germs. Keep your living space clean and tidy to reduce the risk of infections. Remember to brush your teeth twice a day, floss regularly, and visit the dentist for check-ups to maintain good oral hygiene.In conclusion, living a healthy lifestyle is essential for our overall well-being. By maintaining a healthy diet, getting regular exercise, and practicing good hygiene habits, we can improve our physical and mental health and reduce the risk of developingchronic diseases. It is important to make healthy choices a priority in our daily lives and set a good example for others to follow. Let's commit to living a healthy lifestyle and taking care of ourselves to lead a happy and fulfilling life.。
中学生百科英语2
中学生百科英语2:Thoughts& Notions01 The Zipper02 The Postage Stamp03 Pencils and Pens04 The Umbrella05 The Metric System06 Thai Boxing07 Sumo Wrestling08Tarahumara Foot Races09 Olympic Sports10 Greatathletes11 The Puffer Fish12 Foods from Around the World13 Chocolate14 The Blue Revolution15 Twenty-One Days Without Food16 The Marie Celeste17 The Roanoke Settlement18 The Easter Island Statues19 The Tunguska Fireball20Mystery of the Monarchs21 The History of Money22 Mass Marketing23 Inflation24 Doing Business Around the World25 Credit Cards1 The ZipperThe zipper is a wonderful invention. How did people ever live without zippers?They are very common, so we forget that they are wonderful. They are very strong,but they open and close very easily. They come in many colors and sizes.In the 1890s, people in the United States wore high shoes with a long row of buttons. Clothes often had rows of buttons, too. People wished that clothes were easier to put on and take off.Whitcomb L. Judson, an engineer from the United States, invented the zipper in 1893. However, his zippers didn't stay closed very well. This was embarrassing, and people didn't buy many of them. Then Dr. Gideon Sundback from Sweden solved this problem. His zipper stayed closed.A zipper has three parts: 1.Thereare dozens of metal or plastic hooks (called teeth) in two rows. 2. These hooks are fastened to two strips of cloth. The cloth strips are flexible. They bend easily. 3.A fastener slides along and joins the hooks together.When it slides the other way, it takes the hooks apart.Dr. Sundback put the hooks on strips of cloth. The cloth holds all the hooks in place. They don't come apart very easily. This solved the problem of the first zippers.(212 words)2 The Postage StampBefore the invention of the postage stamp, it was difficult to send a letter to another country. The sender paid for the letter to travel in his or her own country.Then the person in the other country paid for the rest of the trip. If a letter crossed several countries, the problem was worse.Rowland Hill, a British teacher, had the idea of a postage stamp with glue on the back. The British post office made the first stamps in 1840. They were the Penny Black and the Twopence Blue.A person bought a stamp and put it on a letter. The post office delivered the letter. When people received letters, they didn't have to pay anything. The postage was prepaid.Postage stamps became popular in Great Britain immediately. Other countries started making their own postage stamps very quickly.There were still problems with international mail. Some countries did not want to accept letters with stamps from other countries. Finally, in 1874, a German organized the Universal Postal Union (UPU). Each country in the UPU agreed to accept letters with prepaid postage from the other members. Today, the offices of the UPU are in Switzerland. Almost every country in the world is a member of this organization. It takes care of any international mail problems.Today, post offices in every country sell beautiful stamps. Collecting stamps is one of the most popular hobbies in the world, and every stamp collector knows about the Penny Black and the Twopence Blue.(250 words)3 Pencils and PensNo one knows who invented pencils or when it happened. A Swiss described a pencil in a book in 1565. He said it was a piece of wood with lead inside it. (Lead is a very heavy, soft, dark gray metal.) Pencils weren't popular, and people continued to write with pens. They used bird feathers as pens.Then, in 1795, someone started making pencils from graphite, and they became very popular. Graphite is like coal. (Coal is black, and we burn it for heat and energy.) Today, people make pencils in the same way. They grind the graphite, make it into the shape of a stick, and bake it. Then they put it inside a piece of wood. One pencil can write 50,000 English words or make a line 55 kilometers long.People wrote with feather pens and then used pens with metal points. They had to dip the point into ink after every few letters. Next, someone invented a fountain pen that could hold ink inside it. A fountain pen can write several pages before you have to fill it again.Two Hungarian brothers, Ladislao and Georg Biro, invented the ballpoint pen.They left Hungary and started making ballpoint pens in England in 1943, during World War II. English pilots liked the pens. They couldn't write with fountain pens in airplanes because the ink leaked out. Later, a French company called Bic bought the Biros' company.Some people call ballpoint pens "Bics." Australians call them "biros." Whatever we call them, we use them every day.(256 words)4 The UmbrellaThe umbrella is a very ordinary object. It keeps the rain and the sun off people.Most umbrellas fold up, so it is easy to carry them.However, the umbrella has not always been an ordinary object. In the past, it was a sign of royalty or importance. Some African tribes still use umbrellas in this way.Someone carries an umbrella and walks behind the king or important person.Umbrellas are very old. The Chinese had them more than 3,000 years ago. From there, umbrellas traveled to India, Persia, and Egypt. In Greece and Rome, men wouldn't use them. They believed umbrellas were only for women.When the Spanish explorers went to Mexico, they saw the Aztec kings using umbrellas. English explorers saw Native American princes carrying umbrellas on the east coast of North America. It seems that people in different parts of the world invented umbrellas at different times.England was probably the first country in Europe where ordinary people used umbrellas against the rain. England has a rainy climate, and umbrellas are very useful there.Everybody uses umbrellas today. The next time you carry one, remember that for centuries only great men and women used them. Perhaps you are really a king or queen, a princess or prince.(210 words)5 The Metric SystemPeople all over the world use grams, kilograms (kilos), meters, and liters. These are all ways to measure things. They are all part of the metric system.During the French Revolution (1789-1799) against the king, the revolutionary government started the metric system. Before that, every part of France had a different system for measuring things. Also, cloth makers measured cloth with one system. Jewelers used another system. Carpenters used another. Other countries used different systems. The revolutionary government wanted one scientific system of measurement. They asked a group of scientists and mathematicians to invent a system.The mathematicians and scientists decided to use the numbers ten, hundred, and thousand for their system.Next, they had to decide on a "natural" length. They chose one ten-millionth (1/ 10,000,000) of the distance from the equator to the North Pole. They called this distance the meter. Then they chose the gram for weighing things. A cubic centimeter of water weighs 1 gram.Mathematicians and scientists worked for 20 years until they finally had a complete measuring system. The biggest problem was measuring the meter.The metric system was a wonderful gift to the world. There are only a few countries that don't use it. The United States is one. The metric system is truly an international system.(214 words)6 Thai BoxingBoxing is popular in many countries. Two fighters wear boxing gloves on their hands. The boxers hit each other until one is knocked out or until the final bell rings.Each part of the fight is three minutes long. It is called a round.Thai boxing is different.The boxing match begins with music. Then the two fighters kneel and pray to God. Next, they do a slow dance that copies the movements of Thai boxing. During this dance, each fighter tries to show the other that he is best.Then the fight begins. In Thai boxing, the fighters can kick with their feet and hit each other with their elbows and knees. Of course, they hit with their hands, too.Each round is three minutes long. Then the boxers have a two-minute rest. Most boxers can fight only five rounds because this kind of fighting is very difficult.Thai boxing began over 500 years ago. If a soldier lost his weapons in a battle, he needed to fight with just his body. The soldiers learned how to use all the parts of their bodies. In 1560, the Burmese army captured Naresuen, the King of Thailand, in a war. King Naresuen was a very good boxer. He won his freedom from Burma by defeating all the best Burmese fighters. When he returned to Thailand, his people were very proud of him. Thai boxing became a popular sport.(237 words)7 Sumo WrestlingSumo wrestling is a national sport in Japan. Every year there are six tournaments,and millions of Japanese watch them on television. A tournament is a series of matches.Sumo is almost as old as the nation of Japan itself. Stories say that there was sumo wrestling over 2,000 years ago. There are written records of national sumo tournaments in the 8th century.In many sports, athletes are thin and can move very quickly. However, sumo wrestlers weigh from 100 to 160 kilos (kilograms). One famous wrestler weighed 195kilos. Sumo wrestlers do not move quickly, and sumo wrestling is a very slow sport.Sumo wrestlers start training when they are boys. They exercise to make their bodies strong. They also eat a lot.They wrestle in a round ring with a sand floor. A wrestler loses the match if he leaves the ring. He is also the loser if any part of his body except his feet touches the floor. Each wrestler tries to push the other down on the floor or out of the ring.Sometimes one wrestler just steps aside when the other wrestler rushes toward him.Then, the wrestler who is rushing falls down or moves out of the ring.Sumo is not very popular in other countries, but the Japanese think that it is a very exciting sport.(223 words)8Tarahumara Foot RacesThe Tarahumara live in the mountains in the state of Chihuahua in northern Mexico. This is an area of high mountains and deep tropical valleys. It sometimes snows in the mountains in winter. There are not many roads.The Tarahumara walk wherever they need to go. They carry heavy baskets on their backs. Perhaps this is why the Tarahumara can run many kilometers without getting tired. They are excellent runners, and they like to organize races.When the men race,they kick a wooden ball ahead of them while they run. Before they start racing, they plan where and how long they will run. They might run just a few minutes, or they might run for several hours. Sometimes they run in teams, and sometimes each person runs as an individual.The women's races are similar except that the women do not kick a ball. They throw a wooden hoop in front of them with a stick.A hoop is a ring, or a circle.The Tarahumara play other games and sports. However, they are famous because they can run so fast and so far.(185 words)9 Olympic SportsThe first modern Olympic Games took place in Athens, Greece, in the year 1896.Athletes from only 13 countries participated in the Games that year. They competed in 43 different events in just 9 sports (track and field, swimming, cycling, fencing,gymnastics, shooting, tennis, weight lifting, and wrestling). In 2004, the summer Olympic Games took place once again in Athens, Greece. This time athletes from 202 countries competed in 300 events in 28 sports.Only five sports have been in every Olympic Games. They are track and field,swimming, fencing, cycling, and gymnastics. Other sports come and go in the Olympic Games. For example, tennis was an Olympic sport from 1896 until 1924.Then it disappeared from the Olympics until 1988. Baseball, badminton, and taekwondo are more recent additions to the Olympic Games.It is the job of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) to add and remove sports from the Olympic Games. A sport has to be popular in at least 50 countries on three continents before it can be added. However, the IOC doesn't want to add more sports to the Olympic Games without eliminating others. The IOC is afraid that there will be too many sports in the Olympics.Artistic events were also a part of the Olympic Games from 1912 to 1948. There were contests in architecture, music, literature, and painting. Today some people think that artistic events and games such as chess should be part of the Olympics.However, many people oppose this idea.The Olympic Games today are very different from the first modern Olympic Games in 1896. These differences reflect the changing definition and popularity of sports.(273 words)10 Great AthletesYou might think that Olympic athletes are the healthiest people in the world. It's true that many are. However, it's also true that quite a few Olympic athletes had to overcome illnesses early in their lives.One excellent example is Wilma Rudolph. She competed in track-and-field events in the 1960 Olympics. She didn't win just one gold medal. She won three. At the time, people called her "the fastest woman in the world."As a young child, Wilma Rudolph could not participate in sports. She had a series of serious illnesses, and then, at the age of 4, she got polio. She lost the use of her left leg, and the doctors said she would never walk again.The people in Rudolph's family did everything they could to help her walk again.Wilma and her mother frequently traveled 100 miles to get treatments for her leg. Her brothers and sisters took turns giving her leg a daily massage. Four times a day, they helped her do special exercises for her leg. Amazingly, by the time Rudolph was 9years old, she was able to walk again. Before long, she started playing basketball and running. In high school, she was a track star, and then she went to the Olympics.Wilma Rudolph retired from her career as a runner when she was 22 years old.She then became a teacher and track coach. Her story encouraged many people to work hard and to overcome difficulties.(244 words)11The Puffer FishMost people avoid eating dangerous foods. They don't want to get sick. However,there is one food that can be deadly, yet some people eat it on purpose. It's called the puffer fish.This kind of fish, called fugu in Japanese, lives in the Pacific Ocean. Some people die every year from eating fugu. In fact, the Emperor of Japan is not allowed to touch it. Why? Well, the insides of the puffer fish are very poisonous. They contain a poison 275 times more powerful than the deadly poison cyanide.Usually nothing bad happens when fugu is on a restaurant's menu. Customers feel great after the meal. That's because chefs are trained to remove the insides of the puffer fish before they give it to customers. If they miss even a small amount, the fish is not safe to eat.Puffer fish is very expensive. A plate of fugu costs more than $200 in some restaurants in Tokyo. Besides being dangerous to eat, the fish is very ugly, with spines all over its body. Also, it can puff, or blow, itself up to double its normal size.Why do the Japanese risk so much for such an ugly and dangerous fish? Well, some people like taking risks. And fugu tastes wonderful.(211 words)12 Foods from Around the WorldFoods that are well known to you may not be familiar to people from other countries. Tourists and other travelers almost always get to try some unfamiliar food.That is part of the fun of traveling. Here are four people's experiences with foreign food.Shao Wong is a student in France. He comes from China. "I never had cheese or even milk before I came to France. Cattle are rare in my part of China, so there are no dairy products. I drank some milk when I first arrived in France. I hated it ! I tried cheese, too, but I didn't like it. I love ice cream, though, and that's made from milk."Birgit is from Sweden. She traveled to Australia on vacation. "I was in a restaurant that specialized in fish, and I heard some other customers order flake. So I ordered some, too, and it was delicious. Later, I found out that flake is an Australian term for shark. Now, whenever I see a new food, I try it on purpose. You know why? I remember how much I enjoyed flake."Chandra is a dentist in Texas. She is from India. "I'm afraid to try new foods because they might contain beef. I'm a Hindu, and my religion forbids me to eat meat from the cow. That's why I can't eat hamburgers or spaghetti with meatballs."Nathan is from the United States. He taught for a year in China. "My friends gave me some 100-year-old eggs to eat. I didn't like their appearance at all. The eggs were green inside, but my friends said the color was normal. The Chinese put chemicals on fresh eggs. Then they bury them in the earth for three months. So the eggs weren't really very old. Even so, I didn't want to touch them."Life in a new country can be scary, but it also can be fun. Would you eat a 100-year-old egg? Would you order shark in a restaurant?(328 words)13 ChocolateWe think of chocolate as something sweet. However, a long time ago, people thought of chocolate as something very bitter. For us, chocolate is a candy, but once it was a medicine. Today, chocolate can be a hot drink, a frozen dessert, or just a snack.Sometimes it's an ingredient in the main course of a meal. Mexicans make a hot chocolate sauce called mole and pour it over chicken. The Mexicans also eat chocolate with spices like chili peppers.Chocolate is a product of the tropical cacao tree. Cacao beans taste so bitter that even monkeys say "ugh!" and run away. The word chocolate comes from a Mayan word. The Mayas were an ancient people who once lived in Mexico. They valued the cacao tree. Some of the Mayas used cacao beans for money, while others ground them to make a bitter drink.When the Spaniards came to Mexico in the 16th century, they started drinking cacao, too. Because the drink was strong and bitter, they thought it was a medicine.When the Spaniards took the drink back to Europe, people discovered that sugar removed the bitter taste of cacao. Wealthy Spaniards heated the sweet drink and thought that it was good for their health.In the 19th century, an English company made the first solid block of sweetened chocolate. Now people could both drink and eat chocolate. Later, a Swiss company mixed milk and chocolate together. People liked the taste of milk chocolate even better.Besides the chocolate candy bar, one of the most popular American snacks is the chocolate-chip cookie. Favorite desserts are chocolate cream pie and, of course, an ice cream sundae with hot fudge sauce.(280 words)14 The Blue RevolutionThe population of the world is increasing rapidly. By 2020, there could be 7.5billion people on earth. Will there be enough food for all these people, or will we have a food shortage? Some scientists think fish farming could solve this problem.However, other scientists worry that fish farming could cause serious environmental problems.Fish farming is not a new thing. There were fish farms in China 3,000 years ago.Today, about one-third of the fish we eat comes from fish farms.Most fish farms raise plant-eating fish. Popular kinds of plant-eating fish are carp,tilapia, and catfish. Unfortunately, many fish farms are starting to raise meat-eating fish. A popular type of meat-eating fish is salmon. These meat-eating fish live on processed food made from wild fish. However, it takes up to 5 tons of wild fish to produce just 1 ton of farm-raised salmon. The supply of wild fish is already decreasing. Eventually, many types of wild fish could become extinct. What will we do then?Critics of fish farming also say that farm-raised fish is unhealthy for humans.They say the fish contains dangerous chemicals. They also criticize fish farming because it pollutes the water. Another criticism is that farm-raised fish can spread diseases to wild fish.Some people say that the farming methods being used now won't produce enough fish anyway. Instead of putting fish farms in lakes or near the coast, they say that the fish farms should be moved far out into the ocean. Several countries are already experimenting with deep-ocean farms. In the future, fish farms might be large cages that move across the ocean.Like most things, there is both a good and a bad side to fish farming. Fish farming may help to feed millions of people. At the same time, however, fish farming may damage the environment.(307 words)15 Twenty-One Days Without FoodWhy would someone decide to stop eating? We know that the body needs food in order to function well. However, many people fast at some time during their lives.Why is this?Some people fast for political reasons. In the early 20th century, women in England and the United States weren't allowed to vote. In protest, many women went on fasts. They hoped that fasting would bring attention to this injustice. Mohandas Gandhi, the famous Indian leader, fasted 17 times during his life. For Gandhi, fasting was a powerful political tool. In 1943, he fasted to bring attention to his country's need for independence. For 21 days, he went without food. Another famous faster was Cesar Chavez. In the 1960s, he fasted for three weeks. Why? His goal was to bring attention to the terrible working conditions of farm workers in the United States.Fasting is also a spiritual practice in many religions. Every year during the month of Ramadan, which is a religious holiday, Muslims fast from sunrise to sunset. Many Hindus fast on special occasions, as do some Christians and Buddhists.Of course, not everyone fasts for political or religious reasons. Some people occasionally fast just because it makes them feel better. The American writer Mark Twain thought fasting was the best medicine for common illnesses. Whenever he had a cold or a fever, he stopped eating completely. He said that this always made his cold or fever go away. Another American writer, Upton Sinclair, discovered fasting after years of overeating, indigestion, and headaches. His first fast lasted for 12 days.During this time, his headaches and stomachaches went away. Sinclair said that fasting also made him more alert and energetic.Choosing to go without food can be very dangerous. However, that doesn't stop people from fasting for political, religious, or health reasons.(305 words)16 The Marie CelesteThere are many stories about the ocean. One of the strangest is a true story about a sailing ship. It is a mystery even today.In 1872, the Marie Celeste started on a trip across the Atlantic Ocean with a crew of ten people.Sometime later, the captain of another ship, the Dei Gratia, saw the Marie Celeste. There was something strange about its appearance. The captain called out, but there was no answer. The Marie Celeste seemed deserted.When the captain went to inspect the ship, no one came to meet him. He knew something was wrong, but there were no signs of violence. Nothing was missing, and there was no damage to the ship's instruments. And strangely enough, there was food on the table. Where was everyone? Did the crew jump from the Marie Celeste? Or did something come up from the ocean and take the captain and crew away?The captain of the Dei Gratia looked around for clues. The last entry in the Marie Celeste's diary was ten days earlier. However, the food on the table was only a few days old. Someone was on the ship a few days before, but they didn't write anything in the ship's diary. Why?There were many different explanations for the mystery of the Marie Celeste.Some people thought that a huge octopus ate the crew. Others said bad weather carried them away. A few people believed that the Marie Celeste was under a curse,because it sank on a later voyage. Now that the Marie Celeste lies somewhere at the bottom of the ocean, no one can ever solve the mystery.(274 words)17 The Roanoke SettlementOnly a few Europeans lived in North America in the 16th century. Most of them settled on the northeast coast. In 1587, a small group of about 100 people decided to 11/20go south. They moved to the small island of Roanoke. That area later became part of the state of North Carolina.Unfortunately, the Roanoke settlers weren't well prepared. They didn't have enough food for the winter, and there wasn't enough grain for future crops. Their leader, Captain White, decided to sail back to England to get supplies. However,there was a war in Europe, and three years passed before he returned to North America.When Captain White came back to Roanoke in 1590, he was eager to see the settlers. He looked out from his ship, but no one was there to meet him. There were no signs of life. The settlement was deserted.No one knows why the Roanoke settlers disappeared. Many people thought that hostile Native Americans killed them, but there were no signs of a fight. Some thought that the settlers died from hunger or disease, but they couldn't explain the absence of bodies.Many years later, more settlers came to North Carolina. One of them met a Native American group called the Lumbee. They were unusual looking compared to the black-haired, brown-eyed NativeAmericans in the north. Some Lumbee had blonde hair and gray eyes. Then he listened to their speech and almost fell off his horse.They seemed to speak an odd kind of English!He asked where they were from. None of them knew, but they said that their grandparents "talked from a book." Did they mean that their grandparents were able to read? As he rode back home, he asked himself a question: Were the Lumbee people the descendants of the Roanoke settlers?People are still asking the identical question. Because there are no written records,we can't be certain. However, there is one interesting fact. Today, some of the Lumbee people have names like Sampson, Dare, and Cooper. They are identical to the names of the vanished settlers ofRoanoke Island.(350 words)18 The Easter Island StatuesWhen the first sailing ship came to Easter Island in 1722 the captain and crew were afraid to land. They saw giants looking down at them from the high cliffs. The giants didn't move, so the ship slowly moved closer. Finally, the sailors realized that the giants were statues. Who made these huge statues? How did they get there?Easter Island is a very small island in the Pacific Ocean. It is more than 2,000miles from the nearest continent (South America). It is one of the most isolated places on earth.The biggest statue on Easter Island is over 60 feet high and weighs over 100 tons.There are hundreds of smaller ones, about 15 feet high. All of the statues are made of stone, and some wear stone hats. Their faces are solemn and unsmiling.Earlier inhabitants of Easter Island made the statues from the rocks in a volcanic crater. Next, they had to move the statues a long distance. In some cases, they moved the statues to locations more than ten miles away.No one knows for certain how the inhabitants were able to move the statues. Some scientists say that palm trees grew on Easter Island in the past. They think the inhabitants cut the trees down and placed the heavy statues on the trees. Then groups of 70 or more people rolled the statues to their present locations. Other scientists disagree with this theory because there are no palm trees on the island today. More important, the purpose of the statues is still a mystery. Was the purpose of the statues to prevent strangers from landing on the island?The result, however, has been the opposite. Large groups of eager people come to look at the statues. Easter Island now has a modern airport, and people come from all over the world to visit.(309 words)。
中学生百科英语2
中学生百科英语2:Thoughts& Notions01 The Zipper02 The Postage Stamp03 Pencils and Pens04 The Umbrella05 The Metric System06 Thai Boxing07 Sumo Wrestling08Tarahumara Foot Races09 Olympic Sports10 Greatathletes11 The Puffer Fish12 Foods from Around the World13 Chocolate14 The Blue Revolution15 Twenty-One Days Without Food16 The Marie Celeste17 The Roanoke Settlement18 The Easter Island Statues19 The Tunguska Fireball20Mystery of the Monarchs21 The History of Money22 Mass Marketing23 Inflation24 Doing Business Around the World25 Credit Cards1 The ZipperThe zipper is a wonderful invention. How did people ever live without zippers?They are very common, so we forget that they are wonderful. They are very strong,but they open and close very easily. They come in many colors and sizes.In the 1890s, people in the United States wore high shoes with a long row of buttons. Clothes often had rows of buttons, too. People wished that clothes were easier to put on and take off.Whitcomb L. Judson, an engineer from the United States, invented the zipper in 1893. However, his zippers didn't stay closed very well. This was embarrassing, and people didn't buy many of them. Then Dr. Gideon Sundback from Sweden solved this problem. His zipper stayed closed.A zipper has three parts: 1.Thereare dozens of metal or plastic hooks (called teeth) in two rows. 2. These hooks are fastened to two strips of cloth. The cloth strips are flexible. They bend easily. 3. A fastener slides along and joins the hooks together.When it slides the other way, it takes the hooks apart.Dr. Sundback put the hooks on strips of cloth. The cloth holds all the hooks in place. They don't come apart very easily. This solved the problem of the first zippers.(212 words)2 The Postage StampBefore the invention of the postage stamp, it was difficult to send a letter to another country. The sender paid for the letter to travel in his or her own country.Then the person in the other country paid for the rest of the trip. If a letter crossed several countries, the problem was worse.Rowland Hill, a British teacher, had the idea of a postage stamp with glue on the back. The British post office made the first stamps in 1840. They were the Penny Black and the Twopence Blue. A person bought a stamp and put it on a letter. The post office delivered the letter. When people received letters, they didn't have to pay anything. The postage was prepaid.Postage stamps became popular in Great Britain immediately. Other countries started making their own postage stamps very quickly.There were still problems with international mail. Some countries did not want to accept letters with stamps from other countries. Finally, in 1874, a German organized the Universal Postal Union (UPU). Each country in the UPU agreed to accept letters with prepaid postage from the other members. Today, the offices of the UPU are in Switzerland. Almost every country in the world is a member of this organization. It takes care of any international mail problems.Today, post offices in every country sell beautiful stamps. Collecting stamps is one of the most popular hobbies in the world, and every stamp collector knows about the Penny Black and the Twopence Blue.(250 words)3 Pencils and PensNo one knows who invented pencils or when it happened. A Swiss described a pencil in a book in 1565. He said it was a piece of wood with lead inside it. (Lead is a very heavy, soft, dark gray metal.) Pencils weren't popular, and people continued to write with pens. They used bird feathers as pens.Then, in 1795, someone started making pencils from graphite, and they became very popular. Graphite is like coal. (Coal is black, and we burn it for heat and energy.) Today, people make pencils in the same way. They grind the graphite, make it into the shape of a stick, and bake it. Then they put it inside a piece of wood. One pencil can write 50,000 English words or make a line 55 kilometers long.People wrote with feather pens and then used pens with metal points. They had to dip the point into ink after every few letters. Next, someone invented a fountain pen that could hold ink inside it. A fountain pen can write several pages before you have to fill it again.Two Hungarian brothers, Ladislao and Georg Biro, invented the ballpoint pen.They left Hungary and started making ballpoint pens in England in 1943, during World War II. English pilots liked the pens. They couldn't write with fountain pens in airplanes because the ink leaked out. Later, a French company called Bic bought the Biros' company.Some people call ballpoint pens "Bics." Australians call them "biros." Whatever we call them, we use them every day.(256 words)4 The UmbrellaThe umbrella is a very ordinary object. It keeps the rain and the sun off people.Most umbrellas fold up, so it is easy to carry them.However, the umbrella has not always been an ordinary object. In the past, it was a sign of royalty or importance. Some African tribes still use umbrellas in this way.Someone carries an umbrella and walks behind the king or important person.Umbrellas are very old. The Chinese had them more than 3,000 years ago. From there, umbrellas traveled to India, Persia, and Egypt. In Greece and Rome, men wouldn't use them. They believed umbrellas were only for women.When the Spanish explorers went to Mexico, they saw the Aztec kings using umbrellas. English explorers saw Native American princes carrying umbrellas on the east coast of North America. It seems that people in different parts of the world invented umbrellas at different times.England was probably the first country in Europe where ordinary people used umbrellas against the rain. England has a rainy climate, and umbrellas are very useful there.Everybody uses umbrellas today. The next time you carry one, remember that for centuries only great men and women used them. Perhaps you are really a king or queen, a princess or prince.(210 words)5 The Metric SystemPeople all over the world use grams, kilograms (kilos), meters, and liters. These are all ways to measure things. They are all part of the metric system.During the French Revolution (1789-1799) against the king, the revolutionary government started the metric system. Before that, every part of France had a different system for measuring things. Also, cloth makers measured cloth with one system. Jewelers used another system. Carpenters used another. Other countries used different systems. The revolutionary government wanted one scientific system of measurement. They asked a group of scientists and mathematicians to invent a system.The mathematicians and scientists decided to use the numbers ten, hundred, and thousand for their system.Next, they had to decide on a "natural" length. They chose one ten-millionth (1/ 10,000,000) of the distance from the equator to the North Pole. They called this distance the meter. Then they chose the gram for weighing things. A cubic centimeter of water weighs 1 gram.Mathematicians and scientists worked for 20 years until they finally had a complete measuring system. The biggest problem was measuring the meter.The metric system was a wonderful gift to the world. There are only a few countries that don't use it. The United States is one. The metric system is truly an international system.(214 words)6 Thai BoxingBoxing is popular in many countries. Two fighters wear boxing gloves on their hands. The boxers hit each other until one is knocked out or until the final bell rings.Each part of the fight is three minutes long. It is called a round.Thai boxing is different.The boxing match begins with music. Then the two fighters kneel and pray to God. Next, they do a slow dance that copies the movements of Thai boxing. During this dance, each fighter tries to show the other that he is best.Then the fight begins. In Thai boxing, the fighters can kick with their feet and hit each other with their elbows and knees. Of course, they hit with their hands, too.Each round is three minutes long. Then the boxers have a two-minute rest. Most boxers can fight only five rounds because this kind of fighting is very difficult.Thai boxing began over 500 years ago. If a soldier lost his weapons in a battle, he needed to fight with just his body. The soldiers learned how to use all the parts of their bodies. In 1560, the Burmese army captured Naresuen, the King of Thailand, in a war. King Naresuen was a very good boxer. He won his freedom from Burma by defeating all the best Burmese fighters. When he returned to Thailand, his people were very proud of him. Thai boxing became a popular sport.(237 words)7 Sumo WrestlingSumo wrestling is a national sport in Japan. Every year there are six tournaments,and millions of Japanese watch them on television. A tournament is a series of matches.Sumo is almost as old as the nation of Japan itself. Stories say that there was sumo wrestling over 2,000 years ago. There are written records of national sumo tournaments in the 8th century.In many sports, athletes are thin and can move very quickly. However, sumo wrestlers weigh from 100 to 160 kilos (kilograms). One famous wrestler weighed 195kilos. Sumo wrestlers do not move quickly, and sumo wrestling is a very slow sport.Sumo wrestlers start training when they are boys. They exercise to make their bodies strong. They also eat a lot.They wrestle in a round ring with a sand floor. A wrestler loses the match if he leaves the ring. He is also the loser if any part of his body except his feet touches the floor. Each wrestler tries to push the other down on the floor or out of the ring.Sometimes one wrestler just steps aside when the other wrestler rushes toward him.Then, the wrestler who is rushing falls down or moves out of the ring.Sumo is not very popular in other countries, but the Japanese think that it is a very exciting sport.(223 words)8Tarahumara Foot RacesThe Tarahumara live in the mountains in the state of Chihuahua in northern Mexico. This is an area of high mountains and deep tropical valleys. It sometimes snows in the mountains in winter. There are not many roads.The Tarahumara walk wherever they need to go. They carry heavy baskets on their backs. Perhaps this is why the Tarahumara can run many kilometers without getting tired. They are excellent runners, and they like to organize races.When the men race,they kick a wooden ball ahead of them while they run. Before they start racing, they plan where and how long they will run. They might run just a few minutes, or they might run for several hours. Sometimes they run in teams, and sometimes each person runs as an individual.The women's races are similar except that the women do not kick a ball. They throw a wooden hoop in front of them with a stick. A hoop is a ring, or a circle.The Tarahumara play other games and sports. However, they are famous because they can run so fast and so far.(185 words)9 Olympic SportsThe first modern Olympic Games took place in Athens, Greece, in the year 1896.Athletes from only 13 countries participated in the Games that year. They competed in 43 different events in just 9 sports (track and field, swimming, cycling, fencing,gymnastics, shooting, tennis, weight lifting, and wrestling). In 2004, the summer Olympic Games took place once again in Athens, Greece. This time athletes from 202 countries competed in 300 events in 28 sports.Only five sports have been in every Olympic Games. They are track and field,swimming, fencing, cycling, and gymnastics. Other sports come and go in the Olympic Games. For example, tennis was an Olympic sport from 1896 until 1924.Then it disappeared from the Olympics until 1988. Baseball, badminton, and taekwondo are more recent additions to the Olympic Games.It is the job of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) to add and remove sports from the Olympic Games. A sport has to be popular in at least 50 countries on three continents before it can be added. However, the IOC doesn't want to add more sports to the Olympic Games without eliminating others. The IOC is afraid that there will be too many sports in the Olympics.Artistic events were also a part of the Olympic Games from 1912 to 1948. There were contests in architecture, music, literature, and painting. Today some people think that artistic events and games such as chess should be part of the Olympics.However, many people oppose this idea.The Olympic Games today are very different from the first modern Olympic Games in 1896. These differences reflect the changing definition and popularity of sports.(273 words)10 Great AthletesYou might think that Olympic athletes are the healthiest people in the world. It's true that many are. However, it's also true that quite a few Olympic athletes had to overcome illnesses early in their lives.One excellent example is Wilma Rudolph. She competed in track-and-field events in the 1960 Olympics. She didn't win just one gold medal. She won three. At the time, people called her "the fastest woman in the world."As a young child, Wilma Rudolph could not participate in sports. She had a series of serious illnesses, and then, at the age of 4, she got polio. She lost the use of her left leg, and the doctors said she would never walk again.The people in Rudolph's family did everything they could to help her walk again.Wilma and her mother frequently traveled 100 miles to get treatments for her leg. Her brothers and sisters took turns giving her leg a daily massage. Four times a day, they helped her do special exercises for her leg. Amazingly, by the time Rudolph was 9years old, she was able to walk again. Before long, she started playing basketball and running. In high school, she was a track star, and then she went to the Olympics.Wilma Rudolph retired from her career as a runner when she was 22 years old.She then became a teacher and track coach. Her story encouraged many people to work hard and to overcome difficulties.(244 words)11The Puffer FishMost people avoid eating dangerous foods. They don't want to get sick. However,there is one food that can be deadly, yet some people eat it on purpose. It's called the puffer fish.This kind of fish, called fugu in Japanese, lives in the Pacific Ocean. Some people die every year from eating fugu. In fact, the Emperor of Japan is not allowed to touch it. Why? Well, the insides of the puffer fish are very poisonous. They contain a poison 275 times more powerful than the deadly poison cyanide.Usually nothing bad happens when fugu is on a restaurant's menu. Customers feel great after the meal. That's because chefs are trained to remove the insides of the puffer fish before they give it to customers. If they miss even a small amount, the fish is not safe to eat.Puffer fish is very expensive. A plate of fugu costs more than $200 in some restaurants in Tokyo. Besides being dangerous to eat, the fish is very ugly, with spines all over its body. Also, it can puff, or blow, itself up to double its normal size.Why do the Japanese risk so much for such an ugly and dangerous fish? Well, some people like taking risks. And fugu tastes wonderful.(211 words)12 Foods from Around the WorldFoods that are well known to you may not be familiar to people from other countries. Tourists and other travelers almost always get to try some unfamiliar food.That is part of the fun of traveling. Here are four people's experiences with foreign food.Shao Wong is a student in France. He comes from China. "I never had cheese or even milk before I came to France. Cattle are rare in my part of China, so there are no dairy products. I drank some milk when I first arrived in France. I hated it ! I tried cheese, too, but I didn't like it. I love ice cream, though, and that's made from milk."Birgit is from Sweden. She traveled to Australia on vacation. "I was in a restaurant that specialized in fish, and I heard some other customers order flake. So I ordered some, too, and it was delicious. Later, I found out that flake is an Australian term for shark. Now, whenever I see a new food, I try it on purpose. You know why? I remember how much I enjoyed flake."Chandra is a dentist in Texas. She is from India. "I'm afraid to try new foods because they might contain beef. I'm a Hindu, and my religion forbids me to eat meat from the cow. That's why I can't eat hamburgers or spaghetti with meatballs."Nathan is from the United States. He taught for a year in China. "My friends gave me some 100-year-old eggs to eat. I didn't like their appearance at all. The eggs were green inside, but my friends said the color was normal. The Chinese put chemicals on fresh eggs. Then they bury them in the earth for three months. So the eggs weren't really very old. Even so, I didn't want to touch them."Life in a new country can be scary, but it also can be fun. Would you eat a 100-year-old egg? Would you order shark in a restaurant?(328 words)13 ChocolateWe think of chocolate as something sweet. However, a long time ago, people thought of chocolate as something very bitter. For us, chocolate is a candy, but once it was a medicine. Today, chocolate can be a hot drink, a frozen dessert, or just a snack.Sometimes it's an ingredient in the main course of a meal. Mexicans make a hot chocolate sauce called mole and pour it over chicken. The Mexicans also eat chocolate with spices like chili peppers.Chocolate is a product of the tropical cacao tree. Cacao beans taste so bitter that even monkeys say "ugh!" and run away. The word chocolate comes from a Mayan word. The Mayas were an ancient people who once lived in Mexico. They valued the cacao tree. Some of the Mayas used cacao beans for money, while others ground them to make a bitter drink.When the Spaniards came to Mexico in the 16th century, they started drinking cacao, too. Because the drink was strong and bitter, they thought it was a medicine.When the Spaniards took the drink back to Europe, people discovered that sugar removed the bitter taste of cacao. Wealthy Spaniards heated the sweet drink and thought that it was good for their health.In the 19th century, an English company made the first solid block of sweetened chocolate. Now people could both drink and eat chocolate. Later, a Swiss company mixed milk and chocolate together. People liked the taste of milk chocolate even better.Besides the chocolate candy bar, one of the most popular American snacks is the chocolate-chip cookie. Favorite desserts are chocolate cream pie and, of course, an ice cream sundae with hot fudge sauce.(280 words)14 The Blue RevolutionThe population of the world is increasing rapidly. By 2020, there could be 7.5billion people on earth. Will there be enough food for all these people, or will we have a food shortage? Some scientists think fish farming could solve this problem.However, other scientists worry that fish farming could cause serious environmental problems.Fish farming is not a new thing. There were fish farms in China 3,000 years ago.Today, about one-third of the fish we eat comes from fish farms.Most fish farms raise plant-eating fish. Popular kinds of plant-eating fish are carp,tilapia, and catfish. Unfortunately, many fish farms are starting to raise meat-eating fish. A popular type of meat-eating fish is salmon. These meat-eating fish live on processed food made from wild fish. However, it takes up to 5 tons of wild fish to produce just 1 ton of farm-raised salmon. The supply of wild fish is already decreasing. Eventually, many types of wild fish could become extinct. What will we do then?Critics of fish farming also say that farm-raised fish is unhealthy for humans.They say the fish contains dangerous chemicals. They also criticize fish farming because it pollutes the water. Another criticism is that farm-raised fish can spread diseases to wild fish.Some people say that the farming methods being used now won't produce enough fish anyway. Instead of putting fish farms in lakes or near the coast, they say that the fish farms should be moved far out into the ocean. Several countries are already experimenting with deep-ocean farms. In the future, fish farms might be large cages that move across the ocean.Like most things, there is both a good and a bad side to fish farming. Fish farming may help to feed millions of people. At the same time, however, fish farming may damage the environment.(307 words)15 Twenty-One Days Without FoodWhy would someone decide to stop eating? We know that the body needs food in order to function well. However, many people fast at some time during their lives.Why is this?Some people fast for political reasons. In the early 20th century, women in England and the United States weren't allowed to vote. In protest, many women went on fasts. They hoped that fasting would bring attention to this injustice. Mohandas Gandhi, the famous Indian leader, fasted 17 times during his life. For Gandhi, fasting was a powerful political tool. In 1943, he fasted to bring attention to his country's need for independence. For 21 days, he went without food. Another famous faster was Cesar Chavez. In the 1960s, he fasted for three weeks. Why? His goal was to bring attention to the terrible working conditions of farm workers in the United States.Fasting is also a spiritual practice in many religions. Every year during the month of Ramadan, which is a religious holiday, Muslims fast from sunrise to sunset. Many Hindus fast on special occasions, as do some Christians and Buddhists.Of course, not everyone fasts for political or religious reasons. Some people occasionally fast just because it makes them feel better. The American writer Mark Twain thought fasting was the best medicine for common illnesses. Whenever he had a cold or a fever, he stopped eating completely. He said that this always made his cold or fever go away. Another American writer, Upton Sinclair, discovered fasting after years of overeating, indigestion, and headaches. His first fast lasted for 12 days.During this time, his headaches and stomachaches went away. Sinclair said that fasting also made him more alert and energetic.Choosing to go without food can be very dangerous. However, that doesn't stop people from fasting for political, religious, or health reasons.(305 words)16 The Marie CelesteThere are many stories about the ocean. One of the strangest is a true story about a sailing ship. It is a mystery even today.In 1872, the Marie Celeste started on a trip across the Atlantic Ocean with a crew of ten people.Sometime later, the captain of another ship, the Dei Gratia, saw the Marie Celeste. There was something strange about its appearance. The captain called out, but there was no answer. The Marie Celeste seemed deserted.When the captain went to inspect the ship, no one came to meet him. He knew something was wrong, but there were no signs of violence. Nothing was missing, and there was no damage to the ship's instruments. And strangely enough, there was food on the table. Where was everyone? Did the crew jump from the Marie Celeste? Or did something come up from the ocean and take the captain and crew away?The captain of the Dei Gratia looked around for clues. The last entry in the Marie Celeste's diary was ten days earlier. However, the food on the table was only a few days old. Someone was on the ship a few days before, but they didn't write anything in the ship's diary. Why?There were many different explanations for the mystery of the Marie Celeste.Some people thought that a huge octopus ate the crew. Others said bad weather carried them away. A few people believed that the Marie Celeste was under a curse,because it sank on a later voyage. Now that the Marie Celeste lies somewhere at the bottom of the ocean, no one can ever solve the mystery.(274 words)17 The Roanoke SettlementOnly a few Europeans lived in North America in the 16th century. Most of them settled on the northeast coast. In 1587, a small group of about 100 people decided to 11/20go south. They moved to the small island of Roanoke. That area later became part of the state of North Carolina.Unfortunately, the Roanoke settlers weren't well prepared. They didn't have enough food for the winter, and there wasn't enough grain for future crops. Their leader, Captain White, decided to sail back to England to get supplies. However,there was a war in Europe, and three years passed before he returned to North America.When Captain White came back to Roanoke in 1590, he was eager to see the settlers. He looked out from his ship, but no one was there to meet him. There were no signs of life. The settlement was deserted.No one knows why the Roanoke settlers disappeared. Many people thought that hostile Native Americans killed them, but there were no signs of a fight. Some thought that the settlers died from hunger or disease, but they couldn't explain the absence of bodies.Many years later, more settlers came to North Carolina. One of them met a Native American group called the Lumbee. They were unusual looking compared to the black-haired, brown-eyed Native Americans in the north. Some Lumbee had blonde hair and gray eyes. Then he listened to their speech and almost fell off his horse.They seemed to speak an odd kind of English!He asked where they were from. None of them knew, but they said that their grandparents "talked from a book." Did they mean that their grandparents were able to read? As he rode back home, he asked himself a question: Were the Lumbee people the descendants of the Roanoke settlers?People are still asking the identical question. Because there are no written records,we can't be certain. However, there is one interesting fact. Today, some of the Lumbee people have names like Sampson, Dare, and Cooper. They are identical to the names of the vanished settlers ofRoanoke Island.(350 words)18 The Easter Island StatuesWhen the first sailing ship came to Easter Island in 1722 the captain and crew were afraid to land. They saw giants looking down at them from the high cliffs. The giants didn't move, so the ship slowly moved closer. Finally, the sailors realized that the giants were statues. Who made these huge statues? How did they get there?Easter Island is a very small island in the Pacific Ocean. It is more than 2,000miles from the nearest continent (South America). It is one of the most isolated places on earth.The biggest statue on Easter Island is over 60 feet high and weighs over 100 tons.There are hundreds of smaller ones, about 15 feet high. All of the statues are made of stone, and some wear stone hats. Their faces are solemn and unsmiling.Earlier inhabitants of Easter Island made the statues from the rocks in a volcanic crater. Next, they had to move the statues a long distance. In some cases, they moved the statues to locations more than ten miles away.No one knows for certain how the inhabitants were able to move the statues. Some scientists say that palm trees grew on Easter Island in the past. They think the inhabitants cut the trees down and placed the heavy statues on the trees. Then groups of 70 or more people rolled the statues to their present locations. Other scientists disagree with this theory because there are no palm trees on the island today. More important, the purpose of the statues is still a mystery. Was the purpose of the statues to prevent strangers from landing on the island?The result, however, has been the opposite. Large groups of eager people come to look at the statues. Easter Island now has a modern airport, and people come from all over the world to visit.(309 words)。
最新中学生百科英语2
中学生百科英语2:Thoughts & Notions 12301 The Zipper402 The Postage Stamp503 Pencils and Pens604 The Umbrella705 The Metric System806 Thai Boxing907 Sumo Wrestling1008 Tarahumara Foot Races1109 Olympic Sports1210 Great athletes1311 The Puffer Fish1412 Foods from Around the World1513 Chocolate1614 The Blue Revolution1715 Twenty-One Days Without Food1816 The Marie Celeste1917 The Roanoke Settlement18 The Easter Island Statues202119 The Tunguska Fireball2220 Mystery of the Monarchs2321 The History of Money2422 Mass Marketing2523 Inflation2624 Doing Business Around the World 2725 Credit Cards281 The Zipper29The zipper is a wonderful invention. How did people ever live without 30zippers?31They are very common, so we forget that they are wonderful. They are 32very strong, but they open and close very easily. They come in many colors 33and sizes.34In the 1890s, people in the United States wore high shoes with a long 35row of buttons. Clothes often had rows of buttons, too. People wished that clothes were easier to put on and take off.3637Whitcomb L. Judson, an engineer from the United States, invented the 38zipper in 1893. However, his zippers didn't stay closed very well. This was 39embarrassing, and people didn't buy many of them. Then Dr. Gideon Sundback 40from Sweden solved this problem. His zipper stayed closed.41A zipper has three parts: 1. There are dozens of metal or plastic hooks(called teeth) in two rows. 2. These hooks are fastened to two strips of4243cloth. The cloth strips are flexible. They bend easily. 3. A fastener 44slides along and joins the hooks together.When it slides the other way, it takes the hooks apart.4546Dr. Sundback put the hooks on strips of cloth. The cloth holds all the 47hooks in place. They don't come apart very easily. This solved the problem of the first zippers.4849(212 words)2 The Postage Stamp5051Before the invention of the postage stamp, it was difficult to send a52letter to another country. The sender paid for the letter to travel in his53or her own country.54Then the person in the other country paid for the rest of the trip. If55a letter crossed several countries, the problem was worse.Rowland Hill, a British teacher, had the idea of a postage stamp with5657glue on the back. The British post office made the first stamps in 1840.58They were the Penny Black and the Twopence Blue. A person bought a stampand put it on a letter. The post office delivered the letter. When people 5960received letters, they didn't have to pay anything. The postage was prepaid.61Postage stamps became popular in Great Britain immediately. Other62countries started making their own postage stamps very quickly.63There were still problems with international mail. Some countries did64not want to accept letters with stamps from other countries. Finally, in1874, a German organized the Universal Postal Union (UPU). Each country in6566the UPU agreed to accept letters with prepaid postage from the other67members. Today, the offices of the UPU are in Switzerland. Almost every68country in the world is a member of this organization. It takes care of any69international mail problems.70Today, post offices in every country sell beautiful stamps. Collecting71stamps is one of the most popular hobbies in the world, and every stamp72collector knows about the Penny Black and the Twopence Blue.73(250 words)743 Pencils and Pens75No one knows who invented pencils or when it happened. A Swiss76described a pencil in a book in 1565. He said it was a piece of wood with77lead inside it. (Lead is a very heavy, soft, dark gray metal.) Pencilsweren't popular, and people continued to write with pens. They used bird 7879feathers as pens.80Then, in 1795, someone started making pencils from graphite, and theybecame very popular. Graphite is like coal. (Coal is black, and we burn it8182for heat and energy.) Today, people make pencils in the same way. They83grind the graphite, make it into the shape of a stick, and bake it. Then84they put it inside a piece of wood. One pencil can write 50,000 English85words or make a line 55 kilometers long.86People wrote with feather pens and then used pens with metal points.They had to dip the point into ink after every few letters. Next, someone8788invented a fountain pen that could hold ink inside it. A fountain pen can89write several pages before you have to fill it again.Two Hungarian brothers, Ladislao and Georg Biro, invented the ballpoint9091pen.92They left Hungary and started making ballpoint pens in England in 1943,93during World War II. English pilots liked the pens. They couldn't write94with fountain pens in airplanes because the ink leaked out. Later, a French95company called Bic bought the Biros' company.96Some people call ballpoint pens "Bics." Australians call them "biros."97Whatever we call them, we use them every day.98(256 words)4 The Umbrella99100The umbrella is a very ordinary object. It keeps the rain and the sun 101off people.Most umbrellas fold up, so it is easy to carry them.102103However, the umbrella has not always been an ordinary object. In the 104past, it was a sign of royalty or importance. Some African tribes still use 105umbrellas in this way.106Someone carries an umbrella and walks behind the king or important 107person.Umbrellas are very old. The Chinese had them more than 3,000 years ago. 108109From there, umbrellas traveled to India, Persia, and Egypt. In Greece and 110Rome, men wouldn't use them. They believed umbrellas were only for women.When the Spanish explorers went to Mexico, they saw the Aztec kings 111112using umbrellas. English explorers saw Native American princes carrying 113umbrellas on the east coast of North America. It seems that people in 114different parts of the world invented umbrellas at different times.115England was probably the first country in Europe where ordinary people 116used umbrellas against the rain. England has a rainy climate, and umbrellas are very useful there.117118Everybody uses umbrellas today. The next time you carry one, remember 119that for centuries only great men and women used them. Perhaps you are really a king or queen, a princess or prince.120121(210 words)5 The Metric System122123People all over the world use grams, kilograms (kilos), meters, and124liters. These are all ways to measure things. They are all part of the125metric system.126During the French Revolution (1789-1799) against the king, the127revolutionary government started the metric system. Before that, every partof France had a different system for measuring things. Also, cloth makers 128129measured cloth with one system. Jewelers used another system. Carpenters130used another. Other countries used different systems. The revolutionarygovernment wanted one scientific system of measurement. They asked a group 131132of scientists and mathematicians to invent a system.133The mathematicians and scientists decided to use the numbers ten,134hundred, and thousand for their system.135Next, they had to decide on a "natural" length. They chose one ten-136millionth (1/ 10,000,000) of the distance from the equator to the NorthPole. They called this distance the meter. Then they chose the gram for 137138weighing things. A cubic centimeter of water weighs 1 gram.139Mathematicians and scientists worked for 20 years until they finally140had a complete measuring system. The biggest problem was measuring the141meter.142The metric system was a wonderful gift to the world. There are only a143few countries that don't use it. The United States is one. The metric144system is truly an international system.145(214 words)6 Thai Boxing146147Boxing is popular in many countries. Two fighters wear boxing gloves on 148their hands. The boxers hit each other until one is knocked out or until 149the final bell rings.150Each part of the fight is three minutes long. It is called a round.151Thai boxing is different.The boxing match begins with music. Then the two fighters kneel and 152153pray to God. Next, they do a slow dance that copies the movements of Thai 154boxing. During this dance, each fighter tries to show the other that he is best.155156Then the fight begins. In Thai boxing, the fighters can kick with their 157feet and hit each other with their elbows and knees. Of course, they hit 158with their hands, too.159Each round is three minutes long. Then the boxers have a two-minute 160rest. Most boxers can fight only five rounds because this kind of fighting is very difficult.161162Thai boxing began over 500 years ago. If a soldier lost his weapons in 163a battle, he needed to fight with just his body. The soldiers learned how 164to use all the parts of their bodies. In 1560, the Burmese army captured 165Naresuen, the King of Thailand, in a war. King Naresuen was a very good 166boxer. He won his freedom from Burma by defeating all the best Burmese 167fighters. When he returned to Thailand, his people were very proud of him. 168Thai boxing became a popular sport.169(237 words)7 Sumo Wrestling170171Sumo wrestling is a national sport in Japan. Every year there are six172tournaments, and millions of Japanese watch them on television. Atournament is a series of matches.173174Sumo is almost as old as the nation of Japan itself. Stories say that175there was sumo wrestling over 2,000 years ago. There are written records of176national sumo tournaments in the 8th century.177In many sports, athletes are thin and can move very quickly. However,178sumo wrestlers weigh from 100 to 160 kilos (kilograms). One famous wrestlerweighed 195kilos. Sumo wrestlers do not move quickly, and sumo wrestling is 179180a very slow sport.181Sumo wrestlers start training when they are boys. They exercise to maketheir bodies strong. They also eat a lot.182183They wrestle in a round ring with a sand floor. A wrestler loses the184match if he leaves the ring. He is also the loser if any part of his body185except his feet touches the floor. Each wrestler tries to push the other186down on the floor or out of the ring.187Sometimes one wrestler just steps aside when the other wrestler rushestoward him.188189Then, the wrestler who is rushing falls down or moves out of the ring. 190Sumo is not very popular in other countries, but the Japanese thinkthat it is a very exciting sport.191192(223 words)8 Tarahumara Foot Races193194The Tarahumara live in the mountains in the state of Chihuahua in 195northern Mexico. This is an area of high mountains and deep tropical valleys. It sometimes snows in the mountains in winter. There are not many 196197roads.198The Tarahumara walk wherever they need to go. They carry heavy baskets 199on their backs. Perhaps this is why the Tarahumara can run many kilometers 200without getting tired. They are excellent runners, and they like to 201organize races.202When the men race, they kick a wooden ball ahead of them while they run. 203Before they start racing, they plan where and how long they will run. They 204might run just a few minutes, or they might run for several hours. 205Sometimes they run in teams, and sometimes each person runs as an 206individual.207The women's races are similar except that the women do not kick a ball. 208They throw a wooden hoop in front of them with a stick. A hoop is a ring, 209or a circle.210The Tarahumara play other games and sports. However, they are famous because they can run so fast and so far.211212(185 words)9 Olympic Sports213214The first modern Olympic Games took place in Athens, Greece, in the 215year 1896.216Athletes from only 13 countries participated in the Games that year. 217They competed in 43 different events in just 9 sports (track and field, 218swimming, cycling, fencing, gymnastics, shooting, tennis, weight lifting, and wrestling). In 2004, the summer Olympic Games took place once again in 219220Athens, Greece. This time athletes from 202 countries competed in 300 221events in 28 sports.222Only five sports have been in every Olympic Games. They are track and 223field, swimming, fencing, cycling, and gymnastics. Other sports come and go 224in the Olympic Games. For example, tennis was an Olympic sport from 1896 until 1924.225226Then it disappeared from the Olympics until 1988. Baseball, badminton, 227and taekwondo are more recent additions to the Olympic Games.It is the job of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) to add and 228229remove sports from the Olympic Games. A sport has to be popular in at least 23050 countries on three continents before it can be added. However, the IOC 231doesn't want to add more sports to the Olympic Games without eliminating 232others. The IOC is afraid that there will be too many sports in the 233Olympics.234Artistic events were also a part of the Olympic Games from 1912 to 1948. 235There were contests in architecture, music, literature, and painting. Today 236some people think that artistic events and games such as chess should be part of the Olympics.237238However, many people oppose this idea.The Olympic Games today are very different from the first modern 239240Olympic Games in 1896. These differences reflect the changing definition 241and popularity of sports.242(273 words)10 Great Athletes243244You might think that Olympic athletes are the healthiest people in the245world. It's true that many are. However, it's also true that quite a few246Olympic athletes had to overcome illnesses early in their lives.247One excellent example is Wilma Rudolph. She competed in track-and-field248events in the 1960 Olympics. She didn't win just one gold medal. She wonthree. At the time, people called her "the fastest woman in the world." As 249250a young child, Wilma Rudolph could not participate in sports. She had a251series of serious illnesses, and then, at the age of 4, she got polio. Shelost the use of her left leg, and the doctors said she would never walk 252253again.254The people in Rudolph's family did everything they could to help her255walk again.256Wilma and her mother frequently traveled 100 miles to get treatments257for her leg. Her brothers and sisters took turns giving her leg a dailymassage. Four times a day, they helped her do special exercises for her leg. 258259Amazingly, by the time Rudolph was 9 years old, she was able to walk again.260Before long, she started playing basketball and running. In high school,261she was a track star, and then she went to the Olympics.262Wilma Rudolph retired from her career as a runner when she was 22 years263old.264She then became a teacher and track coach. Her story encouraged many265people to work hard and to overcome difficulties.266(244 words)11 The Puffer Fish267268Most people avoid eating dangerous foods. They don't want to get sick. 269However, there is one food that can be deadly, yet some people eat it on purpose. It's called the puffer fish.270271This kind of fish, called fugu in Japanese, lives in the Pacific Ocean. 272Some people die every year from eating fugu. In fact, the Emperor of Japan 273is not allowed to touch it. Why? Well, the insides of the puffer fish are 274very poisonous. They contain a poison 275 times more powerful than the 275deadly poison cyanide.276Usually nothing bad happens when fugu is on a restaurant's menu. 277Customers feel great after the meal. That's because chefs are trained to 278remove the insides of the puffer fish before they give it to customers. If 279they miss even a small amount, the fish is not safe to eat.280Puffer fish is very expensive. A plate of fugu costs more than $200 in 281some restaurants in Tokyo. Besides being dangerous to eat, the fish is very 282ugly, with spines all over its body. Also, it can puff, or blow, itself up 283to double its normal size.284Why do the Japanese risk so much for such an ugly and dangerous fish?Well, some people like taking risks. And fugu tastes wonderful.285286(211 words)12 Foods from Around the World287288Foods that are well known to you may not be familiar to people from 289other countries. Tourists and other travelers almost always get to try some 290unfamiliar food. That is part of the fun of traveling. Here are four 291people's experiences with foreign food.292Shao Wong is a student in France. He comes from China. "I never had cheese or even milk before I came to France. Cattle are rare in my part of 293294China, so there are no dairy products. I drank some milk when I first 295arrived in France. I hated it ! I tried cheese, too, but I didn't like it. 296I love ice cream, though, and that's made from milk."297Birgit is from Sweden. She traveled to Australia on vacation. "I was in 298a restaurant that specialized in fish, and I heard some other customersorder flake. So I ordered some, too, and it was delicious. Later, I found 299300out that flake is an Australian term for shark. Now, whenever I see a new 301food, I try it on purpose. You know why? I remember how much I enjoyed flake."302303Chandra is a dentist in Texas. She is from India. "I'm afraid to try 304new foods because they might contain beef. I'm a Hindu, and my religion 305forbids me to eat meat from the cow. That's why I can't eat hamburgers or 306spaghetti with meatballs."307Nathan is from the United States. He taught for a year in China. "My 308friends gave me some 100-year-old eggs to eat. I didn't like their 309appearance at all. The eggs were green inside, but my friends said the 310color was normal. The Chinese put chemicals on fresh eggs. Then they bury them in the earth for three months. So the eggs weren't really very old. 311312Even so, I didn't want to touch them."Life in a new country can be scary, but it also can be fun. Would you 313314eat a 100-year-old egg? Would you order shark in a restaurant?315(328 words)13 Chocolate316317We think of chocolate as something sweet. However, a long time ago, 318people thought of chocolate as something very bitter. For us, chocolate is 319a candy, but once it was a medicine. Today, chocolate can be a hot drink, a 320frozen dessert, or just a snack.321Sometimes it's an ingredient in the main course of a meal. Mexicans 322make a hot chocolate sauce called mole and pour it over chicken. The 323Mexicans also eat chocolate with spices like chili peppers.324Chocolate is a product of the tropical cacao tree. Cacao beans taste so 325bitter that even monkeys say "ugh!" and run away. The word chocolate comes 326from a Mayan word. The Mayas were an ancient people who once lived in 327Mexico. They valued the cacao tree. Some of the Mayas used cacao beans for money, while others ground them to make a bitter drink.328329When the Spaniards came to Mexico in the 16th century, they started 330drinking cacao, too. Because the drink was strong and bitter, they thought 331it was a medicine.332When the Spaniards took the drink back to Europe, people discovered 333that sugar removed the bitter taste of cacao. Wealthy Spaniards heated the sweet drink and thought that it was good for their health.334335In the 19th century, an English company made the first solid block of 336sweetened chocolate. Now people could both drink and eat chocolate. Later,a Swiss company mixed milk and chocolate together. People liked the taste 337338of milk chocolate even better.339Besides the chocolate candy bar, one of the most popular American 340snacks is the chocolate-chip cookie. Favorite desserts are chocolate cream 341pie and, of course, an ice cream sundae with hot fudge sauce.342(280 words)14 The Blue Revolution343344The population of the world is increasing rapidly. By 2020, there could 345be 7.5billion people on earth. Will there be enough food for all these 346people, or will we have a food shortage? Some scientists think fish farming 347could solve this problem. However, other scientists worry that fish farming 348could cause serious environmental problems.Fish farming is not a new thing. There were fish farms in China 3,000 349350years ago. Today, about one-third of the fish we eat comes from fish farms. 351Most fish farms raise plant-eating fish. Popular kinds of plant-eating 352fish are carp, tilapia, and catfish. Unfortunately, many fish farms are 353starting to raise meat-eating fish. A popular type of meat-eating fish is 354salmon. These meat-eating fish live on processed food made from wild fish.However, it takes up to 5 tons of wild fish to produce just 1 ton of farm-355356raised salmon. The supply of wild fish is already decreasing. Eventually, 357many types of wild fish could become extinct. What will we do then?Critics of fish farming also say that farm-raised fish is unhealthy for 358359humans. They say the fish contains dangerous chemicals. They also criticize 360fish farming because it pollutes the water. Another criticism is that farm-361raised fish can spread diseases to wild fish.362Some people say that the farming methods being used now won't produce 363enough fish anyway. Instead of putting fish farms in lakes or near the 364coast, they say that the fish farms should be moved far out into the ocean. 365Several countries are already experimenting with deep-ocean farms. In the 366future, fish farms might be large cages that move across the ocean.367Like most things, there is both a good and a bad side to fish farming. 368Fish farming may help to feed millions of people. At the same time, however, 369fish farming may damage the environment.(307 words)37037115 Twenty-One Days Without Food372373Why would someone decide to stop eating? We know that the body needs374food in order to function well. However, many people fast at some time375during their lives. Why is this?376Some people fast for political reasons. In the early 20th century,377women in England and the United States weren't allowed to vote. In protest,378many women went on fasts. They hoped that fasting would bring attention to379this injustice. Mohandas Gandhi, the famous Indian leader, fasted 17 times380during his life. For Gandhi, fasting was a powerful political tool. In 1943,he fasted to bring attention to his country's need for independence. For 21 381382days, he went without food. Another famous faster was Cesar Chavez. In the1960s, he fasted for three weeks. Why? His goal was to bring attention to 383384the terrible working conditions of farm workers in the United States.385Fasting is also a spiritual practice in many religions. Every year386during the month of Ramadan, which is a religious holiday, Muslims fast387from sunrise to sunset. Many Hindus fast on special occasions, as do some388Christians and Buddhists.Of course, not everyone fasts for political or religious reasons. Some 389390people occasionally fast just because it makes them feel better. The391American writer Mark Twain thought fasting was the best medicine for common392illnesses. Whenever he had a cold or a fever, he stopped eating completely.393He said that this always made his cold or fever go away. Another American394writer, Upton Sinclair, discovered fasting after years of overeating,395indigestion, and headaches. His first fast lasted for 12 days. During this396time, his headaches and stomachaches went away. Sinclair said that fasting397also made him more alert and energetic.398Choosing to go without food can be very dangerous. However, thatdoesn't stop people from fasting for political, religious, or health 399400reasons.401(305 words)40216 The Marie Celeste403There are many stories about the ocean. One of the strangest is a true404story about a sailing ship. It is a mystery even today.405In 1872, the Marie Celeste started on a trip across the Atlantic Oceanwith a crew of ten people. Some time later, the captain of another ship, 406407the Dei Gratia, saw the Marie Celeste. There was something strange about408its appearance. The captain called out, but there was no answer. The MarieCeleste seemed deserted.409410When the captain went to inspect the ship, no one came to meet him. He411knew something was wrong, but there were no signs of violence. Nothing was412missing, and there was no damage to the ship's instruments. And strangely413enough, there was food on the table. Where was everyone? Did the crew jump414from the Marie Celeste? Or did something come up from the ocean and takethe captain and crew away?415416The captain of the Dei Gratia looked around for clues. The last entry417in the Marie Celeste's diary was ten days earlier. However, the food on thetable was only a few days old. Someone was on the ship a few days before, 418419but they didn't write anything in the ship's diary. Why?420There were many different explanations for the mystery of the Marie421Celeste. Some people thought that a huge octopus ate the crew. Others said422bad weather carried them away. A few people believed that the Marie Celeste423was under a curse, because it sank on a later voyage. Now that the Marie424Celeste lies somewhere at the bottom of the ocean, no one can ever solve425the mystery.426(274 words)17 The Roanoke Settlement427428Only a few Europeans lived in North America in the 16th century. Most429of them settled on the northeast coast. In 1587, a small group of about 100430people decided to 11/20go south. They moved to the small island of Roanoke.431That area later became part of the state of North Carolina.432Unfortunately, the Roanoke settlers weren't well prepared. They didn'thave enough food for the winter, and there wasn't enough grain for future 433434crops. Their leader, Captain White, decided to sail back to England to get435supplies. However, there was a war in Europe, and three years passed beforehe returned to North America.436437When Captain White came back to Roanoke in 1590, he was eager to see438the settlers. He looked out from his ship, but no one was there to meet him.439There were no signs of life. The settlement was deserted.440No one knows why the Roanoke settlers disappeared. Many people thought441that hostile Native Americans killed them, but there were no signs of afight. Some thought that the settlers died from hunger or disease, but they 442443couldn't explain the absence of bodies.444Many years later, more settlers came to North Carolina. One of them met445a Native American group called the Lumbee. They were unusual looking446compared to the black-haired, brown-eyed Native Americans in the north.447Some Lumbee had blonde hair and gray eyes. Then he listened to their speech448and almost fell off his horse. They seemed to speak an odd kind of English! 449He asked where they were from. None of them knew, but they said that450their grandparents "talked from a book." Did they mean that their。
中学生百科英语
中学生百科英语2:Thoughts& Notions01 The Zipper02 The Postage Stamp03 Pencils and Pens04 The Umbrella05 The Metric System06 Thai Boxing07 Sumo Wrestling08Tarahumara Foot Races09 Olympic Sports10 Greatathletes11 The Puffer Fish12 Foods from Around the World13 Chocolate14 The Blue Revolution15 Twenty-One Days Without Food16 The Marie Celeste17 The Roanoke Settlement18 The Easter Island Statues19 The Tunguska Fireball20Mystery of the Monarchs21 The History of Money22 Mass Marketing23 Inflation24 Doing Business Around the World25 Credit Cards1 The ZipperThe zipper is a wonderful invention. How did people ever live without zippers?They are very common, so we forget that they are wonderful. They are very strong,but they open and close very easily. They come in many colors and sizes.In the 1890s, people in the United States wore high shoes with a long row of buttons. Clothes often had rows of buttons, too. People wished that clothes were easier to put on and take off.Whitcomb L. Judson, an engineer from the United States, invented the zipper in 1893. However, his zippers didn't stay closed very well. This was embarrassing, and people didn't buy many of them. Then Dr. Gideon Sundback from Sweden solved this problem. His zipper stayed closed.A zipper has three parts: 1.Thereare dozens of metal or plastic hooks (called teeth) in two rows. 2. These hooks are fastened to two strips of cloth. The cloth strips are flexible. They bend easily. 3. A fastener slides along and joins the hooks together.When it slides the other way, it takes the hooks apart.Dr. Sundback put the hooks on strips of cloth. The cloth holds all the hooks in place. They don't come apart very easily. This solved the problem of the first zippers.(212 words)2 The Postage StampBefore the invention of the postage stamp, it was difficult to send a letter to another country. The sender paid for the letter to travel in his or her own country.Then the person in the other country paid for the rest of the trip. If a letter crossed several countries, the problem was worse.Rowland Hill, a British teacher, had the idea of a postage stamp with glue on the back. The British post office made the first stamps in 1840. They were the Penny Black and the Twopence Blue. A person bought a stamp and put it on a letter. The post office delivered the letter. When people received letters, they didn't have to pay anything. The postage was prepaid.Postage stamps became popular in Great Britain immediately. Other countries started making their own postage stamps very quickly.There were still problems with international mail. Some countries did not want to accept letters with stamps from other countries. Finally, in 1874, a German organized the Universal Postal Union (UPU). Each country in the UPU agreed to accept letters with prepaid postage from the other members. Today, the offices of the UPU are in Switzerland. Almost every country in the world is a member of this organization. It takes care of any international mail problems.Today, post offices in every country sell beautiful stamps. Collecting stamps is one of the most popular hobbies in the world, and every stamp collector knows about the Penny Black and the Twopence Blue.(250 words)3 Pencils and PensNo one knows who invented pencils or when it happened. A Swiss described a pencil in a book in 1565. He said it was a piece of wood with lead inside it. (Lead is a very heavy, soft, dark gray metal.) Pencils weren't popular, and people continued to write with pens. They used bird feathers as pens.Then, in 1795, someone started making pencils from graphite, and they became very popular. Graphite is like coal. (Coal is black, and we burn it for heat and energy.) Today, people make pencils in the same way. They grind the graphite, make it into the shape of a stick, and bake it. Then they put it inside a piece of wood. One pencil can write 50,000 English words or make a line 55 kilometers long.People wrote with feather pens and then used pens with metal points. They had to dip the point into ink after every few letters. Next, someone invented a fountain pen that could hold ink inside it. A fountain pen can write several pages before you have to fill it again.Two Hungarian brothers, Ladislao and Georg Biro, invented the ballpoint pen.They left Hungary and started making ballpoint pens in England in 1943, during World War II. English pilots liked the pens. They couldn't write with fountain pens in airplanes because the ink leaked out. Later, a French company called Bic bought the Biros' company.Some people call ballpoint pens "Bics." Australians call them "biros." Whatever we call them, we use them every day.(256 words)4 The UmbrellaThe umbrella is a very ordinary object. It keeps the rain and the sun off people.Most umbrellas fold up, so it is easy to carry them.However, the umbrella has not always been an ordinary object. In the past, it was a sign of royalty or importance. Some African tribes still use umbrellas in this way.Someone carries an umbrella and walks behind the king or important person.Umbrellas are very old. The Chinese had them more than 3,000 years ago. From there, umbrellas traveled to India, Persia, and Egypt. In Greece and Rome, men wouldn't use them. They believed umbrellas were only for women.When the Spanish explorers went to Mexico, they saw the Aztec kings using umbrellas. English explorers saw Native American princes carrying umbrellas on the east coast of North America. It seems that people in different parts of the world invented umbrellas at different times.England was probably the first country in Europe where ordinary people used umbrellas against the rain. England has a rainy climate, and umbrellas are very useful there.Everybody uses umbrellas today. The next time you carry one, remember that for centuries only great men and women used them. Perhaps you are really a king or queen, a princess or prince.(210 words)5 The Metric SystemPeople all over the world use grams, kilograms (kilos), meters, and liters. These are all ways to measure things. They are all part of the metric system.During the French Revolution (1789-1799) against the king, the revolutionary government started the metric system. Before that, every part of France had a different system for measuring things. Also, cloth makers measured cloth with one system. Jewelers used another system. Carpenters used another. Other countries used different systems. The revolutionary government wanted one scientific system of measurement. They asked a group of scientists and mathematicians to invent a system.The mathematicians and scientists decided to use the numbers ten, hundred, and thousand for their system.Next, they had to decide on a "natural" length. They chose one ten-millionth (1/ 10,000,000) of the distance from the equator to the North Pole. They called this distance the meter. Then they chose the gram for weighing things. A cubic centimeter of water weighs 1 gram.Mathematicians and scientists worked for 20 years until they finally had a complete measuring system. The biggest problem was measuring the meter.The metric system was a wonderful gift to the world. There are only a few countries that don't use it. The United States is one. The metric system is truly an international system.(214 words)6 Thai BoxingBoxing is popular in many countries. Two fighters wear boxing gloves on their hands. The boxers hit each other until one is knocked out or until the final bell rings.Each part of the fight is three minutes long. It is called a round.Thai boxing is different.The boxing match begins with music. Then the two fighters kneel and pray to God. Next, they do a slow dance that copies the movements of Thai boxing. During this dance, each fighter tries to show the other that he is best.Then the fight begins. In Thai boxing, the fighters can kick with their feet and hit each other with their elbows and knees. Of course, they hit with their hands, too.Each round is three minutes long. Then the boxers have a two-minute rest. Most boxers can fight only five rounds because this kind of fighting is very difficult.Thai boxing began over 500 years ago. If a soldier lost his weapons in a battle, he needed to fight with just his body. The soldiers learned how to use all the parts of their bodies. In 1560, the Burmese army captured Naresuen, the King of Thailand, in a war. King Naresuen was a very good boxer. He won his freedom from Burma by defeating all the best Burmese fighters. When he returned to Thailand, his people were very proud of him. Thai boxing became a popular sport.(237 words)7 Sumo WrestlingSumo wrestling is a national sport in Japan. Every year there are six tournaments,and millions of Japanese watch them on television. A tournament is a series of matches.Sumo is almost as old as the nation of Japan itself. Stories say that there was sumo wrestling over 2,000 years ago. There are written records of national sumo tournaments in the 8th century.In many sports, athletes are thin and can move very quickly. However, sumo wrestlers weigh from 100 to 160 kilos (kilograms). One famous wrestler weighed 195kilos. Sumo wrestlers do not move quickly, and sumo wrestling is a very slow sport.Sumo wrestlers start training when they are boys. They exercise to make their bodies strong. They also eat a lot.They wrestle in a round ring with a sand floor. A wrestler loses the match if he leaves the ring. He is also the loser if any part of his body except his feet touches the floor. Each wrestler tries to push the other down on the floor or out of the ring.Sometimes one wrestler just steps aside when the other wrestler rushes toward him.Then, the wrestler who is rushing falls down or moves out of the ring.Sumo is not very popular in other countries, but the Japanese think that it is a very exciting sport.(223 words)8Tarahumara Foot RacesThe Tarahumara live in the mountains in the state of Chihuahua in northern Mexico. This is an area of high mountains and deep tropical valleys. It sometimes snows in the mountains in winter. There are not many roads.The Tarahumara walk wherever they need to go. They carry heavy baskets on their backs. Perhaps this is why the Tarahumara can run many kilometers without getting tired. They are excellent runners, and they like to organize races.When the men race,they kick a wooden ball ahead of them while they run. Before they start racing, they plan where and how long they will run. They might run just a few minutes, or they might run for several hours. Sometimes they run in teams, and sometimes each person runs as an individual.The women's races are similar except that the women do not kick a ball. They throw a wooden hoop in front of them with a stick. A hoop is a ring, or a circle.The Tarahumara play other games and sports. However, they are famous because they can run so fast and so far.(185 words)9 Olympic SportsThe first modern Olympic Games took place in Athens, Greece, in the year 1896.Athletes from only 13 countries participated in the Games that year. They competed in 43 different events in just 9 sports (track and field, swimming, cycling, fencing,gymnastics, shooting, tennis, weight lifting, and wrestling). In 2004, the summer Olympic Games took place once again in Athens, Greece. This time athletes from 202 countries competed in 300 events in 28 sports.Only five sports have been in every Olympic Games. They are track and field,swimming, fencing, cycling, and gymnastics. Other sports come and go in the Olympic Games. For example, tennis was an Olympic sport from 1896 until 1924.Then it disappeared from the Olympics until 1988. Baseball, badminton, and taekwondo are more recent additions to the Olympic Games.It is the job of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) to add and remove sports from the Olympic Games. A sport has to be popular in at least 50 countries on three continents before it can be added. However, the IOC doesn't want to add more sports to the Olympic Games without eliminating others. The IOC is afraid that there will be too many sports in the Olympics.Artistic events were also a part of the Olympic Games from 1912 to 1948. There were contests in architecture, music, literature, and painting. Today some people think that artistic events and games such as chess should be part of the Olympics.However, many people oppose this idea.The Olympic Games today are very different from the first modern Olympic Games in 1896. These differences reflect the changing definition and popularity of sports.(273 words)10 Great AthletesYou might think that Olympic athletes are the healthiest people in the world. It's true that many are. However, it's also true that quite a few Olympic athletes had to overcome illnesses early in their lives.One excellent example is Wilma Rudolph. She competed in track-and-field events in the 1960 Olympics. She didn't win just one gold medal. She won three. At the time, people called her "the fastest woman in the world."As a young child, Wilma Rudolph could not participate in sports. She had a series of serious illnesses, and then, at the age of 4, she got polio. She lost the use of her left leg, and the doctors said she would never walk again.The people in Rudolph's family did everything they could to help her walk again.Wilma and her mother frequently traveled 100 miles to get treatments for her leg. Her brothers and sisters took turns giving her leg a daily massage. Four times a day, they helped her do special exercises for her leg. Amazingly, by the time Rudolph was 9years old, she was able to walk again. Before long, she started playing basketball and running. In high school, she was a track star, and then she went to the Olympics.Wilma Rudolph retired from her career as a runner when she was 22 years old.She then became a teacher and track coach. Her story encouraged many people to work hard and to overcome difficulties.(244 words)11The Puffer FishMost people avoid eating dangerous foods. They don't want to get sick. However,there is one food that can be deadly, yet some people eat it on purpose. It's called the puffer fish.This kind of fish, called fugu in Japanese, lives in the Pacific Ocean. Some people die every year from eating fugu. In fact, the Emperor of Japan is not allowed to touch it. Why? Well, the insides of the puffer fish are very poisonous. They contain a poison 275 times more powerful than the deadly poison cyanide.Usually nothing bad happens when fugu is on a restaurant's menu. Customers feel great after the meal. That's because chefs are trained to remove the insides of the puffer fish before they give it to customers. If they miss even a small amount, the fish is not safe to eat.Puffer fish is very expensive. A plate of fugu costs more than $200 in some restaurants in Tokyo. Besides being dangerous to eat, the fish is very ugly, with spines all over its body. Also, it can puff, or blow, itself up to double its normal size.Why do the Japanese risk so much for such an ugly and dangerous fish? Well, some people like taking risks. And fugu tastes wonderful.(211 words)12 Foods from Around the WorldFoods that are well known to you may not be familiar to people from other countries. Tourists and other travelers almost always get to try some unfamiliar food.That is part of the fun of traveling. Here are four people's experiences with foreign food.Shao Wong is a student in France. He comes from China. "I never had cheese or even milk before I came to France. Cattle are rare in my part of China, so there are no dairy products. I drank some milk when I first arrived in France.I hated it ! I tried cheese, too, but I didn't like it. I love ice cream, though, and that's made from milk."Birgit is from Sweden. She traveled to Australia on vacation. "I was in a restaurant that specialized in fish, and I heard some other customers order flake. So I ordered some, too, and it was delicious. Later, I found out that flake is an Australian term for shark. Now, whenever I see a new food, I try it on purpose. You know why? I remember how much I enjoyed flake."Chandra is a dentist in Texas. She is from India. "I'm afraid to try new foods because they might contain beef. I'm a Hindu, and my religion forbids me to eat meat from the cow. That's why I can't eat hamburgers or spaghetti with meatballs."Nathan is from the United States. He taught for a year in China. "My friends gave me some 100-year-old eggs to eat. I didn't like their appearance at all. The eggs were green inside, but my friends said the color was normal. The Chinese put chemicals on fresh eggs. Then they bury them in the earth for three months. So the eggs weren't really very old. Even so, I didn't want to touch them."Life in a new country can be scary, but it also can be fun. Would you eat a 100-year-old egg? Would you order shark in a restaurant?(328 words)13 ChocolateWe think of chocolate as something sweet. However, a long time ago, people thought of chocolate as something very bitter. For us, chocolate is a candy, but once it was a medicine. Today, chocolate can be a hot drink, a frozen dessert, or just a snack.Sometimes it's an ingredient in the main course of a meal. Mexicans make a hot chocolate sauce called mole and pour it over chicken. The Mexicans also eat chocolate with spices like chili peppers.Chocolate is a product of the tropical cacao tree. Cacao beans taste so bitter that even monkeys say "ugh!" and run away. The word chocolate comes from a Mayan word. The Mayas were an ancient people who once lived in Mexico. They valued the cacao tree. Some of the Mayas used cacao beans for money, while others ground them to make a bitter drink.When the Spaniards came to Mexico in the 16th century, they started drinking cacao, too. Because the drink was strong and bitter, they thought it was a medicine.When the Spaniards took the drink back to Europe, people discovered that sugar removed the bitter taste of cacao. Wealthy Spaniards heated the sweet drink and thought that it was good for their health.In the 19th century, an English company made the first solid block of sweetened chocolate. Now people could both drink and eat chocolate. Later, a Swiss company mixed milk and chocolate together. People liked the taste of milk chocolate even better.Besides the chocolate candy bar, one of the most popular American snacks is the chocolate-chip cookie. Favorite desserts are chocolate cream pie and, of course, an ice cream sundae with hot fudge sauce.(280 words)14 The Blue RevolutionThe population of the world is increasing rapidly. By 2020, there could be 7.5billion people on earth. Will there be enough food for all these people, or will we have a food shortage? Some scientists think fish farming could solve this problem.However, other scientists worry that fish farming could cause serious environmental problems.Fish farming is not a new thing. There were fish farms in China 3,000 years ago.Today, about one-third of the fish we eat comes from fish farms.Most fish farms raise plant-eating fish. Popular kinds of plant-eating fish are carp,tilapia, and catfish. Unfortunately, many fish farms are starting to raise meat-eating fish. A popular type of meat-eating fish is salmon. These meat-eating fish live on processed food made from wild fish. However, it takes up to 5 tons of wild fish to produce just 1 ton of farm-raised salmon. The supply of wild fish is already decreasing. Eventually, many types of wild fish could become extinct. What will we do then?Critics of fish farming also say that farm-raised fish is unhealthy for humans.They say the fish contains dangerous chemicals. They also criticize fish farming because it pollutes the water. Another criticism is that farm-raised fish can spread diseases to wild fish.Some people say that the farming methods being used now won't produce enough fish anyway. Instead of putting fish farms in lakes or near the coast, they say that the fish farms should be moved far out into the ocean. Several countries are already experimenting with deep-ocean farms. In the future, fish farms might be large cages that move across the ocean.Like most things, there is both a good and a bad side to fish farming. Fish farming may help to feed millions of people. At the same time, however, fish farming may damage the environment.(307 words)15 Twenty-One Days Without FoodWhy would someone decide to stop eating? We know that the body needs food in order to function well. However, many people fast at some time during their lives.Why is this?Some people fast for political reasons. In the early 20th century, women in England and the United States weren't allowed to vote. In protest, many women went on fasts. They hoped that fasting would bring attention to this injustice. Mohandas Gandhi, the famous Indian leader, fasted 17 times during his life. For Gandhi, fasting was a powerful political tool. In 1943, he fasted to bring attention to his country's need for independence. For 21 days, he went without food. Another famous faster was Cesar Chavez. In the 1960s, he fasted for three weeks. Why? His goal was to bring attention to the terrible working conditions of farm workers in the United States.Fasting is also a spiritual practice in many religions. Every year during the month of Ramadan, which is a religious holiday, Muslims fast from sunrise to sunset. Many Hindus fast on special occasions, as do some Christians and Buddhists.Of course, not everyone fasts for political or religious reasons. Some people occasionally fast just because it makes them feel better. The American writer Mark Twain thought fasting was the best medicine for common illnesses. Whenever he had a cold or a fever, he stopped eating completely. He said that this always made his cold or fever go away. Another American writer, Upton Sinclair, discovered fasting after years of overeating, indigestion, and headaches. His first fast lasted for 12 days.During this time, his headaches and stomachaches went away. Sinclair said that fasting also made him more alert and energetic.Choosing to go without food can be very dangerous. However, that doesn't stop people from fasting for political, religious, or health reasons.(305 words)16 The Marie CelesteThere are many stories about the ocean. One of the strangest is a true story about a sailing ship. It is a mystery even today.In 1872, the Marie Celeste started on a trip across the Atlantic Ocean with a crew of ten people.Sometime later, the captain of another ship, the Dei Gratia, saw the Marie Celeste. There was something strange about its appearance. The captain called out, but there was no answer. The Marie Celeste seemed deserted.When the captain went to inspect the ship, no one came to meet him. He knew something was wrong, but there were no signs of violence. Nothing was missing, and there was no damage to the ship's instruments. And strangely enough, there was food on the table. Where was everyone? Did the crew jump from the Marie Celeste? Or did something come up from the ocean and take the captain and crew away?The captain of the Dei Gratia looked around for clues. The last entry in the Marie Celeste's diary was ten days earlier. However, the food on the table was only a few days old. Someone was on the ship a few days before, but they didn't write anything in the ship's diary. Why?There were many different explanations for the mystery of the Marie Celeste.Some people thought that a huge octopus ate the crew. Others said bad weather carried them away. A few people believed that the Marie Celeste was under a curse,because it sank on a later voyage. Now that the Marie Celeste lies somewhere at the bottom of the ocean, no one can ever solve the mystery.(274 words)17 The Roanoke SettlementOnly a few Europeans lived in North America in the 16th century. Most of them settled on the northeast coast. In 1587, a small group of about 100 people decided to 11/20go south. They moved to the small island of Roanoke. That area later became part of the state of North Carolina.Unfortunately, the Roanoke settlers weren't well prepared. They didn't have enough food for the winter, and there wasn't enough grain for future crops. Their leader, Captain White, decided to sail back to England to get supplies. However,there was a war in Europe, and three years passed before he returned to North America.When Captain White came back to Roanoke in 1590, he was eager to see the settlers. He looked out from his ship, but no one was there to meet him. There were no signs of life. The settlement was deserted.No one knows why the Roanoke settlers disappeared. Many people thought that hostile Native Americans killed them, but there were no signs of a fight. Some thought that the settlers died from hunger or disease, but they couldn't explain the absence of bodies.Many years later, more settlers came to North Carolina. One of them met a Native American group called the Lumbee. They were unusual looking compared to the black-haired, brown-eyed Native Americans in the north. Some Lumbee had blonde hair and gray eyes. Then he listened to their speech and almost fell off his horse.They seemed to speak an odd kind of English!He asked where they were from. None of them knew, but they said that their grandparents "talked from a book." Did they mean that their grandparents were able to read? As he rode back home, he asked himself a question: Were the Lumbee people the descendants of the Roanoke settlers?People are still asking the identical question. Because there are no written records,we can't be certain. However, there is one interesting fact. Today, some of the Lumbee people have names like Sampson, Dare, and Cooper. They are identical to the names of the vanished settlers ofRoanoke Island.(350 words)18 The Easter Island StatuesWhen the first sailing ship came to Easter Island in 1722 the captain and crew were afraid to land. They saw giants looking down at them from the high cliffs. The giants didn't move, so the ship slowly moved closer. Finally, the sailors realized that the giants were statues. Who made these huge statues? How did they get there?Easter Island is a very small island in the Pacific Ocean. It is more than 2,000miles from the nearest continent (South America). It is one of the most isolated places on earth.The biggest statue on Easter Island is over 60 feet high and weighs over 100 tons.There are hundreds of smaller ones, about 15 feet high. All of the statues are made of stone, and some wear stone hats. Their faces are solemn and unsmiling.Earlier inhabitants of Easter Island made the statues from the rocks in a volcanic crater. Next, they had to move the statues a long distance. In some cases, they moved the statues to locations more than ten miles away.No one knows for certain how the inhabitants were able to move the statues. Some scientists say that palm trees grew on Easter Island in the past. They think the inhabitants cut the trees down and placed the heavy statues on the trees. Then groups of 70 or more people rolled the statues to their present locations. Other scientists disagree with this theory because there are no palm trees on the island today. More important, the purpose of the statues is still a mystery. Was the purpose of the statues to prevent strangers from landing on the island?The result, however, has been the opposite. Large groups of eager people come to look at the statues. Easter Island now has a modern airport, and people come from all over the world to visit.(309 words)。
中学生百科英语必背
Unit 1The Kiwi1.strange[streindʒ] adj. 奇怪的2.wing[wiŋ] n. 翅膀,翼3.tail[teil] n. 尾部4.feather['feðə] n. 羽毛5.each[i:tʃ] adj. 每个6.beak[bi:k] n. 鸟嘴7.around[ə'raund] prep. 在……周围8.sunlight['sʌnlait] n. 阳光9.smell[smel] v. 闻10.kill[kil] v. 杀ernment['gʌvənmənt] n. 政府The Camel1.camel['kæməl] n. 骆驼2.without[wið'aut] prep. 没有3.store[stɔ:] v. 储存4.hump[hʌmp]n. 驼峰5.true[tru:] adj. 真实的6.change[tʃeindʒ] v. 改变7.fat[fæt] n. 脂肪8.desert[ˈdezət]n. 沙漠9.heat[hi:t] n. 热量10.Arabian[ə'reibiən] adj. 阿拉伯(人)的11.Bactrian[ˈbæktriə]n. 双峰驼['eiʃə] n. 亚洲13.thick[θik] adj. 厚的14.eyelash[ˈaɪlæʃ]n. 睫毛15.Arabic['ærəbik] n. 阿拉伯语16.important[im'pɔ:tənt] adj. 重要的17.central [ˈsentrəl]The Polar Bear1.polar['pəulə] adj. 两极的2.inside['in'said] adv. 在里面3.arctic circle['ɑ:ktik] ['sə:kl]北极圈4.north pole[nɔ:θ] [pəul]北极5.meter['mi:tə] n. 米6.weigh[wei] v. 称重量7.kilogram['kiləgræm] n. 千克8.wide[waid] adj. 宽阔的9.afraid[ə'freid] adj. 害怕的10.united states[ju'naitid][steits] n. 美国The Hippopotamus1.hippopotamus[hipə'pɔtəməs] n. 河马2.Africa ['æfrikə] n. 非洲3.mammal['mæməl] n. 哺乳动物4.born[bɔ:n] adj. 天生的5.alive[ə'laiv] adj. 活着的6.plant [plɑ:nt] n. 植物ke [leik]n. 湖8.above [ə'bʌv] prep. 在...上面9.breathe [bri:ð] v.呼吸The Dolphin1.dolphin['dɔlfin] n. 海豚2.sound[saund] n. 声音3.feeling['fi:liŋ] n. 感觉4.group[gru:p] n. 群5.school[sku:l]n. 鱼群6.together[tə'geðə] adv. 一起rmation[infə'meiʃən] n. 信息8.scientist['saiəntist] n. 科学家9.tape[teip] n. 录音带10.aquarium[ə'kwɛriəm] n. 水族馆11.lonely ['ləunli] adj.孤独的;寂寞的12.save[seiv] v. 解救13.life[laif] n. 生命14.luck[lʌk] n. 运气U2Why Do We Yawn?1. yawn [jɔ:n] v.打呵欠2. quickly[ˈkwɪkli] adv. 快地3. contagious[kənˈteɪdʒə4. bored [bɔ5. might [maɪt]aux.可能6. however[haʊˈevə7. excited[ɪkˈsaɪtɪd]adj. 感到兴奋的8. race[reɪ9. alert[əˈlɜ:t]adj.警觉的;警惕的10. deeply[ˈ11. stretch[stretʃ]v.伸展; 延伸12. muscle[ˈmʌsl]n. 肌肉Why Do People Laugh?1. laugh [lɑ:f]v. 大笑2. club[klʌb]n.社团3. pretend[prɪˈ5. naturally[ˈnætʃrəli]6. exercise[ˈeksəsaɪz]n.练习v.锻炼7. equal[ˈi:kwəl]adj.平等的8. relax[rɪˈlæks]v.〔使〕放松9. hard[hɑ:d]adj.硬的; 困难的; 努力的;adv.努力地; 猛力地; 严重地10. connect[kəˈnekt]v.连接11. well[wel]adv. 好地; adj.健康的Why Is The Sea Salty?1. salt [sɔ:lt] n. 盐2. Earth [ɜ:θ] n. 地球3. mix [mɪks]v. 混合4. ocean [ˈəʊʃn] n. 海洋5. carry [ˈkæri] v. 携带6. move [mu:v] v. 移动7. cloud [klaʊd] n. 云8. evaporate [ɪˈvæpəreɪt] n. 蒸发9. percent [pə'sent]n. 百分之一10. famous [ˈfeɪməs] adj.著名的How Can A Plant Kill?1. enemy[ˈenəmi] n. 敌人2. kind [kaɪnd] n. 种类3. poisonous [ˈpɔɪzənəs] adj. 有毒的4. grow [grəʊ]v. 生长;种植5. tropics['trɒpɪ6. expensive[ɪkˈspensɪv]adj. 贵的7. cheap[tʃi:p]adj. 廉价的8. collect[kəˈlekt]v. 收集9. instead of [ɪnˈsted]adv. 代替How Do Many Hearing-Impaired People Talk?1. hearing-impaired [ɪmˈpeə2. sign [saɪn] n. 符号3. each other 彼此4. both [bəʊθ] pron. 两者都5. interpret [ɪnˈtɜ:prɪt] v. 解释6. whole[həʊl]adj. 全部的;完整的U3The Date Palm1. date [deɪt] n. 海枣2. palm [pɑ:m] n. 棕榈树3. wonderful [ˈwʌndəfl] adj. 美妙的4. feed [fi:d] v. 喂养5. leaf [li:f] n. 叶子6.wood [wʊ7. burn [bɜ:n] v. 燃烧8. stone [stəʊn] n. 石头9. museum [mjuˈzi:əm] n. 博物馆The Water Hyacinth1. hate [heɪt] v. 恨2. disease [dɪˈ3. crop [krɒp]n.农作物4. machine [məˈʃi:n]n. 机器5. fertilizer [ˈfɜ:təlaɪzə(r)] n. 肥料6. energy [ˈenədʒ7. Methane [ˈmi:θeɪn] n.甲烷,沼气Rice1. even [ˈ2. probably[ˈprɒbə3. soil [sɔɪ4. insect [ˈɪ5. broom [bru:m] n. 扫帚6. rug [rʌg] n. 小块地毯7. sandal [ˈsæOranges1. section [ˈsekʃn] n. 局部3. skin [skɪn]n. 皮肤;果皮4. shiny [ˈʃaɪ5. wild [waɪ6. raise [reɪ7. around [əˈraʊnd]adv.大约8. Spanish [ˈspænɪʃ]n. 西班牙人The Coffee Plant1. chance [tʃɑ:ns]n. 机会2. Brazil [brəˈzɪl]n. 巴西3. Indonesia [ˌɪndəʊ'ni:zjə] n. 印尼4. Ivory Coast [ˈaivəriˈkəust]象牙海岸〔非洲〕5. Ethiopia [ˌi:θɪ'əʊpɪə]n.埃塞俄比亚〔非洲东部国家〕6. produce [prəˈ7. typically [ˈtɪpɪkli]adv.通常; 典型地8. protect [prəˈ9. modern [ˈmɒ10. unfortunately [ʌnˈfɔ:tʃənəU4Music and Behaviour1. affect [əˈfekt]v.影响2. behave [bɪˈheɪv]v.表现; 举止端正3. classical [ˈklæsɪ4.background [ˈbækgraʊ5. loud [laʊd]adj.响亮的,大声的6. chew [tʃ7. careful [ˈkeəBlues and Jazz1. slave [sleɪv]n.奴隶2. century [ˈsentʃə4. Jazz [dʒæz]n.爵士乐5. express [ɪkˈ6. instrument [ˈɪnstrəmənt]n.仪器; 乐器7. guitar [gɪˈtɑ:(r)]n.吉他8. harmonica [hɑ:ˈmɒnɪkə]n.口琴9. poser [kəmˈpəʊzə(r)] n.作曲家10. add [æRock and Roll1. band [bænd]n.带; 乐队2. performer [pəˈfɔ:mə(r)]n. 表演者3. mixture [ˈmɪkstʃə(r)]n.混合;混合物4. fan [fæn]n.扇子;迷5. nervous[ˈnɜ:vəs]adj. 紧X的6. record[ˈrekɔ7. pact disc [kəmˈpækt disk]光盘8. pany[ˈkʌmpəCountry Western music1.cattle [ˈkætl] n.(总称) 牛,牲口2. dangerous [ˈdeɪndʒərə3. alone [əˈləʊn]adj.单独的4. calm[kɑ:m]adj.平静的5. peaceful[ˈ6. either[ˈaɪðə(r)] pron.〔两者之中〕任何一个7. violin [ˌvaɪəˈlɪn]n.小提琴8. can [kæn]n. 罐子Latin Music and Salsa1. mon[ˈkɒmən] adj.普通的2. enjoy[ɪnˈdʒɔɪ]v.喜欢; 享受; 过得快活3. beat [bi:t]v. 接连地击打4. orchestra[ˈɔ:kɪstrə5. while[waɪ…期间6. roast [rəʊst]v.烤7. bake[beɪ8. oven[ˈʌ9. fry [fraɪ]v.油炸10. taste[teɪst]n.滋味11. Portuguese [ˌpɔ:tʃuˈgi:z]n.葡萄牙语; 葡萄牙人12. international [ˌɪntəˈnæʃnəl]adj.国际的U5Work Hour1. enough [ɪˈnʌf] adj. 足够的2. vary[ˈveəri]v.变化3. employee[ɪmˈplɔɪi:]n.雇工4. extra [ˈekstrə5. earn[ɜ6. overtime[ˈəʊvətaɪm] adv.超时地; 加班地7. vacation[vəˈkeɪʃn]n. 假期8. average[ˈævərɪdʒ]adj.平均的9. dull[dʌl]adj.迟钝的Salaries1. salary [ˈsælə2. private[ˈpraɪvət]adj.私有的3. pilot[ˈpaɪlət]n.飞行员4. profession[prəˈfeʃn]n.职业5. waiter[ˈweɪtə(r)]n.服务员6. benefit[ˈbenɪfɪt]n.利益7. employer[ɪmˈplɔɪə8. health[helθ9. insurance[ɪnˈʃʊərəns]n.保险费10. plus[plʌs]prep.〔表示运算〕加Family-Friendly panies1. rule [ru:l]n. 规如此2. allow[əˈlaʊ3. flexible[ˈfleksə4. schedule [ˈʃedju:l][ˈskedʒ5. increase [ɪnˈ6. share[ʃeə8. female[ˈfi:meɪl]adj.女性的9. unpaid[ˌʌnˈpeɪd]adj.未付的10. male[meɪWork Clothes1. decision[dɪˈsɪʒn]n.决定2. uniform[ˈju:nɪfɔ:m]n.制服3. code[kəʊd]n. 代码;编码4. casual[ˈkæʒuə5. fortable[ˈkʌmftə6. special[ˈspeʃl]adj.特殊的; 专用的7. sportswear[ˈspɔ:tsweəTime Off1. mute[kəˈmju:t]v.通勤2. prepare[prɪˈpeə3. leisure[ˈleʒə(r)]n.闲暇4. obviously[ˈɒbviəsli]adv.明显地5. channel[ˈtʃænl]n. 频道6. program [ˈprəʊgræm]n.程序7. surf[sɜU6The Sami of Northern Europe1. Sami [ˈsæ2. Norway['nɔ:weɪ]n. 挪威〔欧洲国家〕3. Sweden['swi:dn] n.瑞典4. Finland['fɪnlənd] n.芬兰5. Russia['rʌʃə] n.(1917年以前的)俄罗斯帝国6. coast[kəʊ7. traditional[trəˈdɪʃə8. nomad[ˈnəʊmæ9. reindeer[ˈreɪndɪə(r)] n. 驯鹿10. dig[dɪg]n. 挖掘11. tent[tent]n. 帐篷12. less[les]adj. 较少的13. skis[skiː] v. 滑雪n. 滑雪板;雪橇14. sled[sled] n. <美>雪撬15. trip[trɪp]n. 旅行16. future['fjuːtʃə17. holiday['hɒlədeɪ] n. 假日TheAinu of Japan1. island['aɪlənd]n. 岛屿2. Hokkaido[hɔ'kaidəu]n.某某道(日本第二大岛)3. wavy['weɪvi] adj. 波浪形的4. mustache[mə'stɑːʃ5. pletely[kəm'pliː6. hunter['hʌntə7. religion[rɪ'lɪdʒən] n. 某某8. middle['mɪdl]adj. 中间的;中等的;中期的9. attend [ə'tend] v. 出席;参加10. right[raɪt]n. 权利11. promote[prə'məʊt] v. 促进;提升;推销;弘扬12.Ainu['aɪnʊ13. beard [bɪə14.demand[dɪ'mɑː15.response[rɪ'spɒns] n. 响应TheYanomamiof the Amazon1. perhaps[pə'hæps]adv. 也许;可能2. area['eəriə]n. 面积;地区3. outsider[ˌaʊt'saɪdə(r)] n. 外行;旁观者;局外人4. Venezuela[ˌvenə'zweɪlə5. spiritual['spɪrɪtʃuəl] adj. 精神的;心灵的6. miner['maɪnə7. logger['lɒɡə(r)] n. 樵夫;伐木工8. noise[nɔɪz] n. 噪声9. polluted[pə'luːtɪd] adj. 被污染的;喝醉的10. die[daɪ] v. 死11. destroy[dɪ'strɔɪ12. destruction[dɪˈstrʌkʃn]n.摧毁; 破坏13. progress['prəʊɡ15. Amazon[ˈæməzən]n.亚马逊河〔南美洲大河〕The Hopi of Arizona1. Hopi['həʊpi] n. 霍皮族(北美印第安人之一族);2. Arizonan. 亚利桑那(美国州名)3. highway ['haɪweɪ] n. 公路4. somehow['sʌmhaʊ] adv. 以某种方式5. freeze[friːz] v. 冻结6. blow[bləʊ] v. 吹7. goat[ɡəʊ8. truck[trʌ9. Kachina[keɪt'ʃaɪnə] n. 克奇纳神(霍皮印第安人崇拜的祖灵)10. alike[ə'laɪk] adj. 相似的;同样的11. adult['ædʌlt] n. 成年人12. nearby[ˌnɪə'baɪ] adj. 附近的 adv. 在附近The Maori of New Zealand1. Maori['maʊri] n. 毛利人;毛利语adj. 毛利人的;毛利语的2. Polynesian[ˌpɔlɪ'ni:zɪən] n. 波利尼西亚人;波利尼西亚语adj. 波利尼西亚的;波利尼亚人(语)的3. arrive[ə'raɪv] v. 到达4. over['əʊvə5. war[wɔː(r)] n. 战争;斗争6. population[ˌpɒpju'leɪʃn] n. 人口7. culture['kʌltʃə(r)] n. 文化;教养8. ceremony ['serəməni] n. 仪式;礼节;典礼9. yearly['jɪəli] adj. 每年的adv. 每年地;一年一次地10. among[ə'mʌŋ]prep. 在……之中11. petition[ˌkɒmpə'tɪʃn]n. 竞争;比赛12. practice['præktɪ13. win[wɪn] v. 赢;赢得;胜利U8The Polynesians1. explorer[ɪkˈsplɔ:rə(r)]v. 探险家2. current[ˈkʌrənt]n.水流3. shell[ʃel]n. 外壳4. Mongol [ˈmɒŋgəl]n. 蒙古族人5. toward[tə'wɔ:d]prep.向;对着6. reach[ri:tʃ]v. 到达7. invention[ɪnˈvenʃ8. sailor[seɪlə9. canoe[kəˈA Giraffe in Central Asia1. leader[ˈli:də2. ruler[ˈru:lə(r)]n. 统治者3. gift[gɪft]n.礼物;天赋4. ambassador[æmˈbæsədə5. jewelry['dʒu:əlrɪ]n.珠宝;首饰6. gold[gəʊ7. silver[ˈsɪlvə8. suppose[səˈpəʊz]n.认为;假定10. Cairo['kaɪərəʊ]n.开罗〔埃与首都〕11. Samarkand[ˌsæməˈkænd]n.撒马尔罕〔乌兹别克东部城市〕The First Woman on Mount Qomolangma1. Qomolangma[ˈtʃəuməuˌlɑ:ŋmə2. mountain[ˈmaʊntən]n. 山脉3. Nepal[nə'pɔ:l]n.尼泊尔〔南亚国家〕4. organize[ˈɔ:gənaɪz]v.组织; 安排5. avalanche[ˈævəlɑ:nʃ]n.雪崩6. injure[ˈɪndʒə(r)]v.损害; 伤害〔名誉、自尊等〕7. be able to8. ordinary[ˈɔ:dnri]adj.普通的; 一般的9. goal[gəʊl]n.球门; 目标10. environment[ɪnˈvaɪrənmənt]n. 环境The Iditarod Race2. trail[treɪl] n. 踪迹3. team[tiːm]n.队;组4. adventurer[əd'ventʃərə5. musher['mʌʃə(r)] n. 赶狗拉雪橇的人6. brave[breɪv] adj. 勇敢的7. storm[stɔː8. knee[niː] n. 膝盖9. below[bɪ'ləʊ]prep. 低于;在……下面10. footprint['fʊtprɪ11. shoot[ʃuː12. Celsius ['selsiəs] n. 摄氏Sailing Alone1. supply[səˈplaɪ2. equipment[ɪˈkwɪpmə3. problem['prɒbləm]n.问题;难题4. engine['endʒɪ5. quit[kwɪ6. electricity[ɪˌlek'trɪsə7. municate[kə'mjuːnɪkeɪ8. destination[ˌdestɪ'neɪʃ9. San Francisco[sæn fræn'siskə10. contact[ˈkɒntæ11. expect[ɪkˈ。
中学生百科英语必背
中学⽣百科英语必背Unit 1The Kiwi1.strange [streind?] adj. 奇怪的2.wing [wi?] n. 翅膀,翼3.tail [teil] n. 尾部4.feather ['fee?] n. ⽻⽑5.each [i:t?] adj. 每个6.beak [bi:k] n. 鸟嘴7.around [?'raund] prep. 在……周围8.sunlight ['s?nlait] n. 阳光9.smell [smel] v. 闻10.kill [kil] v. 杀/doc/1810747066.html ernment ['g?v?nm?nt] n. 政府The Camel1.camel ['k?m?l] n. 骆驼2.without [wie'aut] prep. 没有3.store [st?:] v. 储存4.hump [h?mp] n. 驼峰5.true [tru:] adj. 真实的6.change [t?eind?] v. 改变7.fat [f?t] n. 脂肪8.desert[?dez?t]n. 沙漠9.heat [hi:t] n. 热量10.Arabian [?'reibi?n] adj. 阿拉伯(⼈)的11.Bactrian[?b?ktri?] n. 双峰驼/doc/1810747066.html ['ei??] n. 亚洲13.thick [θik] adj. 厚的14.eyelash [?a?l??]n. 睫⽑15.Arabic ['?r?bik] n. 阿拉伯语16.important [im'p?:t?nt] adj. 重要的17.central [?sentr?l]adj. 中部的The Polar Bear1.polar ['p?ul?] adj. 两极的2.inside ['in'said] adv. 在⾥⾯3.arctic circle ['ɑ:ktik] ['s?:kl]北极圈4.north pole [n?:θ] [p?ul] 北极5.meter ['mi:t?] n. ⽶6.weigh [wei] v. 称重量7.kilogram ['kil?gr?m] n. 千克8.wide [waid] adj. 宽阔的9.afraid [?'freid] adj. 害怕的10.united states [ju'naitid] [steits] n. 美国The Hippopotamus1.hippopotamus [hip?'p?t?m?s] n. 河马2.Africa ['?frik?] n. ⾮洲3.mammal ['m?m?l] n. 哺乳动物4.born [b?:n] adj. 天⽣的5.alive [?'laiv] adj. 活着的6.plant [plɑ:nt] n. 植物/doc/1810747066.html ke [leik] n. 湖8.above [?'b?v] prep. 在...上⾯9.breathe [bri:e] v. 呼吸The Dolphin1.dolphin ['d?lfin] n. 海豚2.sound [saund] n. 声⾳3.feeling ['fi:li?] n. 感觉4.group [gru:p] n. 群5.school [sku:l] n. 鱼群6.together [t?'gee?] adv. ⼀起/doc/1810747066.html rmation [inf?'mei??n] n. 信息8.scientist ['sai?ntist] n. 科学家9.tape [teip] n. 录⾳带10.aquarium [?'kw?ri?m] n. ⽔族馆11.lonely ['l?unli] adj. 孤独的;寂寞的12.save [seiv] v. 解救13.life [laif] n. ⽣命14.luck [l?k] n. 运⽓U2Why Do We Yawn?1. yawn [j?:n] v. 打呵⽋2. quickly [?kw?kli] adv. 快地3. contagious [k?n?te?d??s] adj. 有传染性的4. bored [b?:d] adj. ⽆聊的5. might [ma?t] aux. 可能精品⽂档6. however [ha??ev?(r)] adv. 然⽽7. excited [?k?sa?t?d] adj. 感到兴奋的8. race [re?s] n. 赛跑9. alert[??l?:t]adj. 警觉的;警惕的10. deeply[?di:pli]adv. 在深处11. stretch [stret?] v. 伸展; 延伸12. muscle [?m?sl] n. 肌⾁Why Do People Laugh?1. laugh [lɑ:f]v. ⼤笑2. club [kl?b] n. 社团3. pretend [pr??tend] v. 假装4. soon [su:n] adv. 马上5. naturally [?n?t?r?li]adv. ⾃然地6. exercise [?eks?sa?z] n. 练习v. 锻炼7. equal [?i:kw?l] adj. 平等的v. 等于8. relax [r??l?ks] v. (使)放松9. hard [hɑ:d]adj. 硬的; 困难的; 努⼒的; adv. 努⼒地; 猛⼒地; 严重地10. connect [k??nekt] v. 连接11. well [wel] adv. 好地; adj.健康的Why Is The Sea Salty?1. salt [s?:lt] n. 盐2. Earth [?:θ] n. 地球3. mix [m?ks] v. 混合4. ocean [n] n. 海洋5. carry [?k?ri] v. 携带6. move [mu:v] v. 移动7. cloud [kla?d] n. 云8. evaporate [??v?p?re?t] n. 蒸发9. percent [p?'sent] n. 百分之⼀10. famous [?fe?m?s] adj. 著名的How Can A Plant Kill?1. enemy [?en?mi] n. 敌⼈2. kind [ka?nd] n. 种类3. poisonous [?p??z?n?s] adj. 有毒的4. grow [gr??] v. ⽣长;种植5. tropics ['tr?p?ks] n. 热带地区6. expensive [?k?spens?v] adj. 贵的7. cheap [t?i:p] adj. 便宜的8. collect [k??lekt] v. 收集9. instead of [?n?sted]adv. 代替How Do Many Hearing-Impaired People Talk?1. hearing-impaired [?m?pe?d] adj. 受损的2. sign [sa?n] n. 符号3. each other 彼此4. both [b??θ] pron. 两者都5. interpret [?n?t?:pr?t] v. 解释6. whole [h??l] adj. 全部的;完整的U3The Date Palm1. date [de?t] n. 海枣2. palm [pɑ:m] n. 棕榈树3. wonderful [?w?nd?fl] adj. 美妙的4. feed [fi:d] v. 喂养5. leaf [li:f] n. 叶⼦6.wood [w?d] n. ⽊材7. burn [b?:n] v. 燃烧8. stone [st??n] n. ⽯头9. museum [mju?zi:?m] n. 博物馆The Water Hyacinth1. hate [he?t] v. 恨2. disease [d??zi:z] n. 疾病3. crop [kr?p] n. 农作物4. machine [mi:n] n. 机器5. fertilizer [?f?:t?la?z?(r)] n. 肥料6. energy [?en?d?i] n. 能量7. Methane [?mi:θe?n] n. 甲烷,沼⽓Rice1. even [?i:vn]adv. 甚⾄2. probably [?pr?b?bli] adv. ⼤概3. soil [s??l] n. 泥⼟4. insect [??nsekt] n. 昆⾍5. broom [bru:m] n. 扫帚6. rug [r?g] n. ⼩块地毯7. sandal [?s?ndl]n. 凉鞋8. roof [ru:f] n. 屋顶Oranges1. section [?sek?n] n. 部分2. seed [si:d] n. 种⼦3. skin [sk?n] n. ⽪肤;果⽪4. shiny [??a?ni] adj. 发光的5. wild [wa?ld] adj. 野外的6. raise [re?z] v. 种植7. around [??ra?nd] adv. ⼤约8. Spanish [?sp?n??] n. 西班⽛⼈The Coffee Plant1. chance [t?ɑ:ns] n. 机会2. Brazil [br??z?l] n. 巴西3. Indonesia [??nd??'ni:zj?] n. 印尼4. Ivory Coast [?aiv?ri?k?ust] 象⽛海岸(⾮洲)5. Ethiopia [?i:θ?'??p??] n. 埃塞俄⽐亚(⾮洲东部国家)6. produce [pr??dju:s] v. 产⽣7. typically [?t?p?kli] adv. 通常; 典型地8. protect [pr??tekt] v. 保护9. modern [?m?dn] adj. 现代的10. unfortunately [?n?f?:t??n?tli] adv. 不幸地U4Music and Behaviour1. affect [??fekt] v. 影响2. behave [b??he?v] v. 表现; 举⽌端正3. classical [?kl?s?kl] adj. 古典的4.background [?b?kgra?nd] n. 背景5. loud [la?d] adj. 响亮的,⼤声的6. chew [t?u:] v. 咀嚼7. careful [?ke?fl] adj. 仔细的Blues and Jazz1. slave [sle?v] n. 奴⾪2. century [?sent??ri] n. 世纪3. blues [blu:z] n. 蓝调⾳乐4. Jazz [d??z] n. 爵⼠乐5. express [?k?spres]v. 表达6. instrument [??nstr?m?nt] n. 仪器; 乐器7. guitar [g??tɑ:(r)]n. 吉他8. harmonica [hɑ:?m?n?k?]n. ⼝琴9. composer [k?m?p??z?(r)] n. 作曲家10. add [?d] v. 增加Rock and Roll1. band [b?nd] n. 带; 乐队2. performer [p??f?:m?(r)] n. 表演者3. mixture [?m?kst??(r)] n. 混合;混合物4. fan [f?n] n. 扇⼦;迷5. nervous [?n?:v?s] adj. 紧张的6. record [?rek?:d] n. 唱⽚7. compact disc [k?m?p?kt disk]光盘8. company [?k?mp?ni] n. 公司Country Western music1.cattle [?k?tl] n. (总称) ⽜,牲⼝2. dangerous [?de?nd??r?s] adj. 危险的3. alone [??l??n] adj. 单独的4. calm [kɑ:m]adj. 平静的5. peaceful [?pi:sfl]adj. 和平的6. either [?a?e?(r)] pron. (两者之中)任何⼀个7. violin [?val?n] n. ⼩提琴8. can [k?n] n. 罐⼦Latin Music and Salsa1. common [?k?m?n] adj. 普通的2. enjoy [?n?d] v. 喜欢; 享受; 过得快活3. beat [bi:t] v. 接连地击打4. orchestra [??:k?str?] n. 管弦乐队5. while [wa?l] conj. 在…期间6. roast [r??st] v. 烤7. bake [be?k] v. 烘焙8. oven [??vn] n. 烤箱9. fry [fra?] v. 油炸10. taste [te?st] n. 滋味11. Portuguese [?p?:t?u?gi:z]n. 葡萄⽛语; 葡萄⽛⼈12. international [??nt??n??n?l] adj. 国际的U5Work Hour1. enough [??n?f] adj. ⾜够的2. vary [?ve?ri] v. 变化3. employee [?m?pl??i:] n. 雇⼯4. extra [?ekstr?] adj. 额外的5. earn [?:n] v. 赢得6. overtime [v?ta?m] adv. 超时地; 加班地7. vacation [v??ke??n] n. 假期8. average [??v?r?d?] adj. 平均的9. dull [d?l] adj. 迟钝的Salaries1. salary [?s?l?ri] n. 薪⽔2. private [?pra?v?t] adj. 私有的3. pilot [?pa?l?t] n. 飞⾏员4. profession [pr??fe?n] n. 职业5. waiter [?we?t?(r)] n. 服务员6. benefit [?ben?f?t] n. 利益7. employer [?m?pl(r)] n. 雇主8. health [helθ]n. 健康9. insurance [?nr?ns] n. 保险费10. plus [pl?s] prep. (表⽰运算)加Family-Friendly Companies1. rule [ru:l] n. 规则2. allow [??la?] v. 允许3. flexible [?fleks?bl] adj. 灵活的4. schedule [??edju:l][?sked?u:l] n. 时刻表5. increase [?n?kri:s]v. 增加6. share [?e?(r)] n. 分享7. leave [li:v] v. 离开8. female [?fi:me?l] adj. ⼥性的9. unpaid [??n?pe?d] adj. 未付的10. male [me?l] adj. 男性的Work Clothes1. decision [d??s??n] n. 决定2. uniform [?ju:n?f?:m] n. 制服3. code [k??d] n. 代码;编码4. casual [?k??u?l] adj. 随便的5. comfortable [?k?mft?bl] adj. 舒适的6. special [?spe?l] adj. 特殊的; 专⽤的7. sportswear [?sp?:tswe?(r)] n. 运动装Time Off1. commute [k??mju:t] v. 通勤2. prepare [pr??pe?(r)] v. 准备3. leisure [?le??(r)] n. 闲暇4. obviously [??bvi?sli] adv. 明显地5. channel [?t??nl] n. 频道6. program [?pr??gr?m] n. 程序7. surf [s?:f] v. 冲浪U6The Sami of Northern Europe1. Sami [?s?mi] n. 萨⽶⼈2. Norway ['n?:we?] n. 挪威(欧洲国家)3. Sweden ['swi:dn] n. 瑞典4. Finland ['f?nl?nd] n. 芬兰5. Russia ['r] n. (1917年以前的)俄罗斯帝国6. coast [k??st] n. 海岸7. traditional [tr??dnl] adj. 传统的8. nomad [?n??m?d] n. 游牧民9. reindeer[?re?nd??(r)] n. 驯⿅10. dig [d?g] n. 挖掘11. tent [tent] n. 帐篷12. less [les] adj. 较少的13. skis [ski?] v. 滑雪n. 滑雪板;雪橇14. sled [sled] n. <美>雪撬15. trip [tr?p] n. 旅⾏16. future ['fju?t??(r)] n. 将来17. holiday ['h?l?de?] n. 假⽇The Ainu of Japan1. island ['a?l?nd] n. 岛屿2. Hokkaido [h?'kaid?u] n. 北海道(⽇本第⼆⼤岛)3. wavy ['we?vi] adj. 波浪形的4. mustache [m?'stɑ??] n. ⼩胡⼦5. completely [k?m'pli?tli]adv. 完全地6. hunter ['h?nt?(r)] n. 猎⼈7. religion [r?'l?d??n] n. 宗教8. middle ['m?dl] adj. 中间的;中等的;中期的9. attend [?'tend] v. 出席;参加10. right [ra?t] n. 权利11. promote [pr?'m??t] v. 促进;提升;推销;弘扬12. Ainu ['a?n?] n. 阿伊努⼈13. beard [b??d] n. 胡须14. demand [d?'mɑ?nd]v. 要求15. response [r?'sp?ns] n. 响应The Yanomami of the Amazon1. perhaps [p?'h?ps] adv. 也许;可能2. area ['e?ri?] n. ⾯积;地区3. outsider [?a?t'sa?d?(r)] n. 外⾏;旁观者;局外⼈4. Venezuela [?ven?'zwe?l?] n. 委内瑞拉5. spiritual ['sp?r?t?u?l] adj. 精神的;⼼灵的6. miner ['ma?n?(r)] n. 矿⼯7. logger ['l?ɡ?(r)] n. 樵夫;伐⽊⼯8. noise [n??z] n. 噪声9. polluted [p?'lu?t?d] adj. 被污染的;喝醉的10. die [da?] v. 死11. destroy [d?'str??] v. 破坏12. destruction [d??str?k?n] n. 摧毁; 破坏13. progress ['pr??ɡres] n. 进步14. Yanomami n. 亚诺玛⽶⼈15. Amazon [??m?z?n] n. 亚马逊河(南美洲⼤河)The Hopi of Arizona1. Hopi['h??pi] n. 霍⽪族(北美印第安⼈之⼀族);2. Arizona n. 亚利桑那(美国州名)3. highway ['ha?we?] n. 公路4. somehow ['s?mha?] adv. 以某种⽅式5. freeze [fri?z] v. 冻结6. blow [bl??] v. 吹7. goat [ɡ??t]n. ⼭⽺8. truck [tr?k] n. 卡车9. Kachina [ke?t'?a?n?] n. 克奇纳神(霍⽪印第安⼈崇拜的祖灵)10. alike [?'la?k] adj. 相似的;同样的11. adult ['?d?lt] n. 成年⼈12. nearby [?n??'ba?] adj. 附近的adv. 在附近The Maori of New Zealand1. Maori ['ma?ri] n. ⽑利⼈;⽑利语adj. ⽑利⼈的;⽑利语的2. Polynesian [?p?l?'ni:z??n] n. 波利尼西亚⼈;波利尼西亚语adj. 波利尼西亚的;波利尼亚⼈(语)的3. arrive [?'ra?v] v. 到达4. over ['??v?(r)] prep. 多于5. war [w??(r)] n. 战争;⽃争6. population [?p?pju'le??n] n. ⼈⼝7. culture ['k?lt??(r)] n. ⽂化;教养8. ceremony ['ser?m?ni] n. 仪式;礼节;典礼9. yearly ['j??li] adj. 每年的adv. 每年地;⼀年⼀次地10. among [?'m??]prep. 在……之中11. competition [?k?mp?'t??n] n. 竞争;⽐赛12. practice ['pr?kt?s] v. 操练n. 操练13. win [w?n] v. 赢;赢得;胜利U8The Polynesians1. explorer [?k?spl?:r?(r)] v. 探险家2. current [?k?r?nt] n. ⽔流3. shell [?el] n. 外壳4. Mongol [?m??g?l] n. 蒙古族⼈5. toward [t?'w?:d] prep. 向;对着6. reach [ri:t?] v. 到达7. invention [?n?ven?n] n. 发明8. sailor [se?l?(r)] n. ⽔⼿9. canoe [k??nu: ] n. 独⽊⾈A Giraffe in Central Asia1. leader [?li:d?(r)] n. 领袖2. ruler [?ru:l?(r)] n. 统治者3. gift [g?ft] n. 礼物;天赋4. ambassador [?m?b?s?d?(r)] n. ⼤使5. jewelry ['d?u:?lr?] n. 珠宝;⾸饰6. gold [g??ld] n. ⾦⼦7. silver [?s?lv?(r)] n. 银⼦8. suppose [s??p??z] n. 认为;假定9. pleased [pli:zd] n. ⾼兴的10. Cairo ['ka??r??] n. 开罗(埃及⾸都)11. Samarkand[?s?m??k?nd] n. 撒马尔罕(乌兹别克东部城市)The First Woman on Mount Qomolangma1. Qomolangma [?t??um?u?lɑ:?m?]n. 珠穆朗玛2. mountain [?ma?nt?n] n. ⼭脉3. Nepal [n?'p?:l] n. 尼泊尔(南亚国家)4. organize [??:g?na?z] v. 组织; 安排5. avalanche [??v?lɑ:n?] n. 雪崩6. injure [??nd??(r)] v. 损害; 伤害(名誉、⾃尊等)7. be able to8. ordinary [??:dnri] adj. 普通的; ⼀般的9. goal [g??l] n. 球门; ⽬标10. environment [?n?va?r?nm?nt] n. 环境The Iditarod Race1. Iditarod n. 艾迪塔罗德精品⽂档2. trail [tre?l] n. 踪迹3. team [ti?m]n. 队;组4. adventurer [?d'vent??r?(r)] n. 冒险者5. musher ['m(r)] n. 赶狗拉雪橇的⼈6. brave [bre?v] adj. 勇敢的7. storm [st??m]n. 暴风⾬8. knee [ni?] n. 膝盖9. below [b?'l??] prep. 低于;在……下⾯10. footprint ['f?tpr?nt] n. 脚印11. shoot [?u?t]v. 发射12. Celsius ['selsi?s] n. 摄⽒Sailing Alone1. supply [s??pla?] n. 供给物2. equipment [??kw?pm?nt] n. 设备3. problem ['pr?bl?m] n. 问题;难题4. engine ['end??n] n. 引擎5. quit [kw?t] v. 退出6. electricity [??lek'tr?s?ti] n. 电7. communicate [k?'mju?n?ke?t] v. 交流8. destination [?dest?'ne??n] n. ⽬的地9. San Francisco [s?n fr?n'sisk?u]n. 旧⾦⼭10. contact [?k?nt?kt] v. n. 接触11. expect [?k?spekt] v. 期望。
中学生百科英语1第五单元lesson2
中学生百科英语1第五单元lesson2 Unit 5 Lesson 2: The EnvironmentIntroduction:In this lesson, we will discuss the topic of the environment and how it relates to our daily lives as teenagers. The environment refers to the natural world around us, including the air we breathe, the water we drink, and the land we live on. It is essential for our survival and the survival of all living beings on Earth.The Importance of the Environment:The environment plays a crucial role in our lives. It provides us with resources such as food, water, and energy that are essential for our survival. It also offers us beauty and inspiration, with its diverse landscapes and ecosystems. However, the environment is facing many challenges today, including pollution, deforestation, and climate change. As young people, it is essential for us to take action to protect and preserve the environment for future generations.Ways to Protect the Environment:There are many ways that we can help protect the environment in our daily lives. One way is to reduce our carbon footprint by using public transportation, biking, or walking instead of driving a car. Another way is to conserve water by taking shorter showers and fixing leaks in our homes. Additionally, we can reduce waste by recycling and composting our trash.Taking Action:As students, we can also take action to raise awareness about environmental issues in our schools and communities. We can organize clean-up events, recycling programs, and educational workshops to help spread the message of environmental conservation. By working together, we can make a positive impact on the environment and create a more sustainable future for all.Conclusion:In conclusion, the environment is a vital part of our lives, and it is our responsibility as young people to protect and preserve it for future generations. By taking action in our daily lives and working together to raise awareness, we can make a difference in the world. Let's all do our part to take care of the environment and create a healthier, more sustainable planet for everyone.。
中学生百科英语必背
Unit 1The Kiwi1. strange [streind?] adj. 奇怪的2. wing [wi?] n. 翅膀,翼3. tail [teil] n. 尾部4. feather ['fee?] n. 羽毛5. each [i:t ?] adj. 每个6. beak [bi:k] n. 鸟嘴7. around [?'raund] prep. 在……周围8. sunlight ['s?nlait] n. 阳光9. smell [smel] v. 闻1 0. kill [kil] v. 杀11.government ['g?v?nm?nt] n. 政府The Camel1. camel ['k?m ?l] n. 骆驼2. without [wie 'aut] prep. 没有3. store [st?:] v. 储存4. hump [h?mp] n. 驼峰5. true [tru:] adj. 真实的6. change [t?eind?] v. 改变7. fat [f?t] n. 脂肪8. desert [?dez?t] n. 沙漠9. heat [hi:t] n. 热量10. Arabian [?'reibi?n] adj. 阿拉伯(人)的11. Bactrian [?b?ktri ?] n. 双峰驼12. Asia ['ei??] n. 亚洲13. thick [0 ik] adj. 厚的14. eyelash [?a?l? ?] n. 睫毛15. Arabic ['?r ?bik] n. 阿拉伯语16. important [im'p?:t?nt] adj. 重要的17. central [?sentr?l] adj. 中部的The Polar Bear1 . polar ['p?ul?] adj. 两极的2 . inside ['in'said] adv. 在里面3 . arctic circle ['a :ktik] ['s?:kl] 北极圈4 . north pole [n?: 0[p] ?ul] 北极5 . meter ['mi:t?] n. 米6 . weigh [wei] v. 称重量7. kilogram ['kil ?gr?m] n.千克 8. wide [waid] adj. 宽阔的 9. afraid[?'freid] ad j. 害怕的10.united states[ju'naitid] [steits]n. 美国 The Hippopotamus1. hippopotamus [hip ?'p?t?m?s] n. 河马 2. Africa ['?frik ?] n. 非洲 3. mammal ['m?m ?l] n. 哺乳动物 4. born [b?:n] adj. 天生的 5. alive [?'laiv] adj. 活着的 6. plant [pl a :nt] n. 植物 7. lake [leik] n. 湖 8. above [?'b?v] prep. 在...上面 9.breathe[bri:e]v.呼吸The Dolphin1. dolphin ['d?lfin] n. 海豚2. sound [saund] n. 声音3. feeling ['fi:li?] n. 感觉4. group [gru:p] n. 群5. school [sku:l] n. 鱼群6. together [t?'gee?] adv. 一起7. information [inf ?'mei??n] n. 信息8. scientist ['sai?ntist] n. 科学家9. tape [teip] n. T. C录音带 10. aquarium [?'kw?ri?m] n. 水族馆 11. lonely ['l?unli] adj. 孤独的;寂寞的 12. save [seiv] v. 解救 13. life [laif] n. 生命 14.luck[l?k]n.运气U2Why Do We Yawn?1. yawn [j?:n] v. 打呵欠2. quickly [?kw?kli] adv. 快地3. contagious [k?n?ted???s] adj. 有传染性的4. bored [b?:d]adj. 无聊的 5. might[ma?t]aux.可能6. however [ha??ev?(r)] adv. 然而7. excited [?k?sat?d] adj. 感到兴奋的8. race [re?s] n. 赛跑9. alert [??l?:t] adj. 警觉的;警惕的10. deeply [?di:pli] adv. 在深处11. stretch [stret?] v. 伸展; 延伸12. muscle [?m?sl] n. 肌肉Why Do People Laugh ?1. laugh [l a :f] v. 大笑2. club [kl?b] n. 社团3. pretend [pr??tend] v. 假装4. soon [su:n] adv. 马上5. naturally [?n?t?r?li] adv. 自然地6. exercise [?eks?sa?z] n. 练习v. 锻炼7. equal [?i:kw?l] adj. 平等的v. 等于8. relax [r??l?ks] v. (使)放松9. hard [h a :d] adj. 硬的; 困难的; 努力的;adv. 努力地; 猛力地; 严重地10. connect [k??nekt] v. 连接11. well [wel] adv. 好地;adj.健康的Why Is The Sea Salty?1. salt [s?:lt] n. 盐2. Earth [?:0 ] n. 地球3. mix [m?ks] v. 混合4. ocean [????n] n. 海洋5. carry [?k?ri] v. 携带6. move [mu:v] v. 移动7. cloud [kla?d] n. 云8. evaporate [??v?p?re?t] n. 蒸发9. percent [p?'sent] n. 百分之一10. famous [?fe?m?s] adj. 著名的How Can A Plant Kill?1. enemy [?en?mi] n. 敌人2. kind [ka?nd] n. 种类3. poisonous [?p??z?n?s] adj. 有毒的4. grow [gr??] v. 生长;种植5. tropics ['tr?p?ks] n. 热带地区6. expensive [?k?spensv?] adj. 贵的7. cheap [t?i:p] adj. 便宜的8. collect [k??lekt] v. 收集9. instead of [?n?sted] adv. 代替How Do Many Hearing-Impaired People Talk?1 . hearing-impaired [ ?m?ped?] adj. 受损的2 . sign [sa?n] n. 符号3 . each other 彼此4 . both [b?? 9 ] pron. 两者都5. interpret [?n?t?:pr?t] v. 解释6.whole [h??l] adj. 全部的;完整的U3The Date Palm1. date [de?t] n. 海枣2. palm [p a :m] n. 棕榈树3. wonderful [?w?nd?fl] adj. 美妙的4. feed [fi:d] v. □田*喂养5. leaf [li:f] n. 叶子6.wood [w?d] n. 木材7. burn [b?:n] v. 燃烧8. stone [st??n] n. 石头9. museum [mju?zi:?m] n. 博物馆The Water Hyacinth1 . hate [he?t] v. 恨2 . disease [d??zi:z] n. 疾病3 . crop [kr?p] n. 农作物4 . machine [m???i:n] n. 机器5 . fertilizer [?f?:t?la?z?(r)]n. 肥料6 . energy [?en?d?i] n. 能量7.Methane [?mi: 0n$? n. 甲烷,沼气Rice1 . even [?i:vn] adv. 甚至2. probably [?pr?b?bli] adv. 大概3 . soil [s??l] n. 泥土4 . insect [??nsekt] n. 昆虫5 . broom [bru:m] n. 扫帚6 . rug [r?g] n. 小块地毯7 . sandal [?s?ndl] n. 凉鞋8.roof [ru:f] n. 屋顶Oranges1. section [?sek?n] n. 部分2. seed [si:d] n. 种子3. skin [sk?n] n. 皮肤;果皮4. shiny [??a?ni] adj. 发光的5. wild [wa?ld] adj. 野外的6. raise [re?z] v. 种植[??ra?nd] adv. 大约[?sp?n?]? n. 西班牙人The Coffee Plant1. chance [t? a ns] n. 机会2. Brazil [br??z?l] n. 巴西3. Indonesia [??nd??'ni:zj?] n. 印尼4. Ivory Coast [?aiv?ri?k?ust] 象牙海岸(非洲)5. Ethiopia [?i: '????? n. 埃塞俄比亚(非洲东部国家)6. produce [pr??dju:s] v. 产生7. typically [?t?p?kli] adv. 通常; 典型地8. protect [pr??tekt] v. 保护9. modern [?m?dn] adj. 现代的10. unfortunately [?n?f?:t??n?tli] adv. 不幸地7. around8. SpanishU4Music and Behaviour1. affect [??fekt]v. 影响2. behave [b??he?v] v. 表现 ; 举止端正3. classical [?kl?s?kl] adj. 古典的4.background [?b?kgra?nd] n. 背景5. loud [la?d] adj. 响亮的,大声的6. chew [t?u:] v. 咀嚼7. careful [?ke?fl]adj.仔细的Blues and Jazz1. slave [sle?v]n. 奴隶 2. century [?sent?r?i] n. 世纪 3. blues [blu:z] n. 蓝调音乐 4. Jazz [d??z] n. 爵士乐 5. express [?k?spres] v. 表达 6. instrument [??nstr?m?nt] n. 仪器 ; 乐器 7. guitar[g??a :(r)] n. 吉他 8. harmonica [h a :?m?n?k?] n. 口琴 9. composer [k?m?p??z?(r)]n. 作曲家 10. add [?d]v.增加Rock and Roll1. band [b?nd]n.带; 乐队 2. performer [p??f?:m?(r)] n. 表演者 3. mixture [?m?kst??(r)] n. 混合;混合物 4. fan [f?n]n. 扇子;迷 5. nervous [?n?:v?s] adj. 紧张的 6. record [?rek?:d] n.唱片 7. compact disc [k?m?p?kt disk]光盘 8.company [?k?mp?ni]n.公司Country Western music1.cattle[?k?tl]n. (总称 ) 牛,牲口2. dangerous [?de?nd??r?s] adj. 危险的3. alone [??l??n]adj. 单独的 4. calm [k a :m] adj. 平静的 5. peaceful [?pi:sfl] adj. 和平的6. either[?a?e?(r)] pron.(两者之中) 任何一个[?va??l?n] n. 小提琴[k?n] n. 罐子Latin Music and Salsa1. common [?k?m?n] adj. 普通的2. enjoy [?n?d??]? v. 喜欢; 享受; 过得快活3. beat [bi:t] v. 接连地击打4. orchestra [??:k?str?] n. 管弦乐队5. while [wa?l] conj. 在…期间6. roast [r??st] v. 烤7. bake [be?k] v. 烘焙8. oven [??vn] n. 烤箱9. fry [fra?] v. 油炸10. taste [te?st] n. 滋味11. Portuguese [?p?:t?u?gi:z] n. 葡萄牙语; 葡萄牙人12. international [??nt??n? ?n?l] adj. 国际的7. violin8. canU5 Work Hour1 . enough [??n?f] adj. 足够的2 . vary [?ve?ri] v. 变化3. employee [?m?pl?i?:] n. 雇工4 . extra [?ekstr?] adj. 额外的5 . earn [?:n] v. 赢得6 . overtime [???v?ta?m] adv. 超时地; 加班地7 . vacation [v??ke??n] n. 假期8 . average [??v?r?d?] adj. 平均的9.dull [d?l] adj. 迟钝的Salaries1. salary [?s?l?ri] n. 薪水2. private [?pra?v?t] adj. 私有的3. pilot [?pa?l?t] n. 飞行员4. profession [pr??fe?n] n. 职业5. waiter [?we?t?(r)] n. 服务员6. benefit [?ben?f?t] n. 利益7. employer [?m?pl??(?r)] n. 雇主8. health [hel 9]n. 健康9. insurance [?n???r??ns] n. 保险费10. plus [pl?s] prep. (表示运算)加Family-Friendly Companies1. rule [ru:l] n. 规则2. allow [??la?] v. 允许3. flexible [?fleks?bl] adj. 灵活的4. schedule [??edju:l][?sked?u:l] n. 时刻表5. increase [?n?kri:s] v. 增加6. share [?e?(r)] n. 分享7. leave [li:v] v. 离开8. female [?fi:me?l] adj. 女性的9. unpaid [??n?ped?] adj. 未付的10. male [me?l] adj. 男性的Work Clothes1 . decision [d??s??n] n. 决定2 . uniform [?ju:n?f?:m] n. 制服3 . code [k??d] n. 代码;编码4 . casual [?k??u?l] adj. 随便的5 . comfortable [?k?mft?bl] adj. 舒适的6. special [?spe?l] adj. 特殊的; 专用的7. sportswear [?sp?:tswe?(r)]n. 运动装Time Off1. commute [k ??mju:t] v. 通勤2. prepare [pr??pe?(r)] v. 准备3. leisure [?le??(r)] n. 闲暇4. obviously [??bvi ?sli] adv. 明显地5. channel [?t??nl] n. 频道6. program [?pr??gr?m] n. 程序7. surf [s?:f] v. 冲浪U6The Sami of Northern Europe1. Sami [?s?mi] n. 萨米人2. Norway ['n?:we?] n. 挪威(欧洲国家)3. Sweden ['swi:dn] n. 瑞典4. Finland ['f ?nl?nd] n. 芬兰5. Russia ['r???] n. (1917年以前的)俄罗斯帝国6. coast [k??st] n. 海岸7. traditional [tr??d???nl] adj. 传统的8. nomad [?n??m?d] n. 游牧民9. reindeer [?re?nd??(r)] n. 驯鹿10. dig [d?g] n. 挖掘11. tent [tent] n. 帐篷12. less [les] adj. 较少的13. skis [ski?] v. 滑雪n. 滑雪板;雪橇14. sled [sled] n. <美>雪撬15. trip [tr?p] n. 旅行16. future ['fju?t??(r)] n. 将来17. holiday ['h?l?de?] n. 假日The Ainu of Japan1. island ['a?l?nd] r. 岛屿2. Hokkaido [h?'kaid?u] r. 北海道(日本第二大岛)3. wavy ['we?vi] adj. 波浪形的4. mustache [m?'st a ??] r. 小胡子5. completely [k?m'pli?tli] adv. 完全地6. hunter ['h?nt?(r)] r. 猎人7. religion [r?'l?d??n] r. 宗教8. middle ['m?dl] adj. 中间的;中等的;中期的9. attend [?'tend] v. 出席;参加10. right [ra?t] r. 权利11. promote [pr?'m??t] v. 促进;提升;推销;弘扬12. Ainu ['a?n?] r. 阿伊努人13. beard [b??d] r. 胡须14. demand [d?m a ?rjd v. 要求15. response [r?'sp?ns] r. 响应The Yanomami of the Amazon1. perhaps [p?'h?ps] adv. 也许;可能2. area ['e?ri?] r. 面积;地区3. outsider [?a?t'sa?d?(r)] r. 外行;旁观者;局外人4. Verezuela [?ver?'zwe?l?] r. 委内瑞拉5. spiritual ['sp?r?t?u?l] adj. 精神的;心灵的6. mirer ['ma?r?(r)] r. 矿工7. logger ['i?g?)] r. 樵夫;伐木工8. roise [r??z] r. 噪声9. polluted [p?'lu?t?d] adj. 被污染的;喝醉的10. die [da?] v. 死11. destroy [d?'str??] v. 破坏12. destructior [d??str?k?r] r. 摧毁; 破坏13. progress ['pr??g res] r. 进步14. Yaromami r. 亚诺玛米人15. Amazor [??m?z?r] r. 亚马逊河(南美洲大河)The Hopi of Arizona1. Hopi ['h??pi] r. 霍皮族(北美印第安人之一族2. Arizora r. 亚利桑那(美国州名)3. highway ['ha?we?] r. 公路4. somehow ['s?mha?] adv. 以某种方式5. freeze [fri?z] v. 冻结6. blow [bl??] v. 吹7. goat [g ??t] n. 山羊8. truck [tr?k] n. 卡车9. Kachina [ke?t'?a?n?] n. 克奇纳神(霍皮印第安人崇拜的祖灵)10. alike [?'la?k] adj. 相似的;同样的11. adult ['?d?lt] n. 成年人12. nearby [?n??'ba?] adj. 附近的adv. 在附近The Maori of New Zealand1. Maori ['ma?ri] n.adj.毛利人;毛利语毛利人的;毛利语的2. Polynesian [?p?l?'ni:z??n] n. 波利尼西亚人;波利尼西亚语adj. 波利尼西亚的;波利尼亚人(语)的3. arrive [?'ra?v] v. 到达4. over ['??v?(r)] prep. 多于5. war [w??(r)] n. 战争;斗争6. population [?p?pju'le??n] n. 人口7. culture ['k?lt??(r)] n. 文化;教养8. ceremony ['ser?m?ni] n. 仪式;礼节;典礼9. yearly ['j??li] adj. 每年的adv. 每年地;一年一次地10. among [?'m??] prep. 在……之中11. competition [?k?mp?'t??n] n. 竞争;比赛12. practice ['pr?kt ?s] v. 操练n. 操练13. win [w?n] v. 赢;赢得;胜利U8The Polynesians1. explorer [?k?spl?:r?(r)] v. 探险家2. current [?k?r?nt] n. 水流3. shell [?el] n. 外壳■ t i ; r4. Mongol [?m??g?l] n. 蒙古族5. toward [t?'w?:d] prep. 向;对着6. reach [ri:t ?] v. 到达7. invention [?n?venn?] n. 发明8. sailor [se?l?(r)] n. 水手9. canoe [k??nu: ] n. 独木舟A Giraffe in Central Asia1. leader [?li:d?(r)] n. 领袖2. ruler [?ru:l?(r)] n. 统治者3. gift [g?ft] n. 礼物;天赋4. ambassador [?m?b?s?d?(r)] n. 大使5. jewelry ['d?u:?lr?] n. 珠宝;首饰6. gold [g??ld] n. 金子7. silver [?s?lv?(r)] n. 银子8. suppose [s??p??z] n. 认为;假定9. pleased [pli:zd] n. 高兴的10. Cairo ['ka??r??] n. 开罗(埃及首都)11. Samarkand [?s?m??k?nd] n. 撒马尔罕(乌兹别克东部城市)The First Woman on Mount Qomolangma1. Qomolangma [?t??im?u?la : ?m?]n.珠穆朗玛2. mountain [?ma?nt?n] n. 山脉3. Nepal [n?'p?:l] n. 尼泊尔(南亚国家)4. organize [??:g?na?z] v. 组织; 安排5. avalanche [??v?l a :n]? n. 雪崩6. injure [??nd??(r)] v. 损害; 伤害(名誉、自尊等)7. be able to8. ordinary [??:dnri] adj. 普通的; 一般的9. goal [g??l] n. 球门; 目标10. environment [?n?var?nm?nt]n. 环境The Iditarod Race1. Iditarod n. 艾迪塔罗德2. trail [tre?l] n. 踪迹3. team [ti?m] n. 队;组4. adventurer [?d'vent??r?(r)] n. 冒险者5. musher ['m???(r)] n. 赶狗拉雪橇的人6. brave [bre?v] adj. 勇敢的7. storm [st??m] n. 暴风雨8. knee [ni?] n. 膝盖9. below [b?'l??] prep. 低于;在•……下面10. footprint ['f ?tpr?nt] n. 脚印11. shoot [?u?t] v. 发射12. Celsius ['selsi?s] n. 摄氏Sailing Alone 1. supply [s??pla?] n. 供给物2. equipment [??kw ?pm?nt] n. 设备3. problem ['pr?bl?m] n. 问题;难题4. engine ['end??n] n. 引擎5. quit [kw ?t] v. 退出6. electricity [??lek'tr?s?ti] n. 电7. communicate [k ?'mju?nk?e?t] v. 交流8. destination [?dest'?ne??n] n. 目的地9. San Francisco [s?n fr?n'sisk ?u]n. 旧金山10. contact [?k?nt?kt] v. n. 接触11. expect [?k?spekt] v. 期望。
中学生百科英语必背
Unit1TheKiwi1.strange [streind j] adj. 奇怪的2.wing [wig] n. 翅膀,翼3.tail [teil] n. 尾部4.feather ['fed s] n. 羽毛5.each [i:tn adj. 每个6.beak [bi:k] n. 鸟嘴7.around [s'raund] prep. 在……周围8.sunlight ['s A nlait] n. 阳光9.smell [smel] v. 闻10.kill [kil] v. 杀ernment ['g A v s nm s nt] n. 政府TheCamel1.camel ['k田m s l] n. 骆驼2.without [wid'aut] prep. 没有3.store [st o:] v. 储存4.hump [h A mp] n. 驼峰5.true [tru:] adj. 真实的6.change [t f eind j] v. 改变7.fat [设t] n. 脂肪8.desert ['dezs t] n. 沙漠9.heat [hi:t] n. 热量10.Arabian [s'reibi s n] adj. 阿拉伯人的11.Bactrian ['b^ktri s] n. 双峰驼 [′ei fs] n. 亚洲13.thick [Oik] adj. 厚的14.eyelash ['ai l^f] n. 睫毛15.Arabic ['田r s bik] n. 阿拉伯语16.important [im'p o:t s nt] adj. 重要的17.central ['sentrs l] adj. 中部的ThePolarBear1.polar ['p s ul s] adj. 两极的2.inside ['in'said] adv. 在里面3.arcticcircle ['a:ktik]['ss:kl] 北极圈4.northpole [n o:O][p s ul] 北极5.meter ['mi:t s] n. 米6.weigh [wei] v. 称重量7. kilogram ['kil o gram] n. 千克8. wide [waid] adj. 宽阔9. afraid [o'freid] adj.害怕的10.unitedstates [ju'naitid][steits] n. 美国TheHippopotamus1. hippopotamus [hipdp o t o m g s]n. 河马2. Africa [屈frik o]n. 非洲3. mammal ['m田m o l] n. 哺乳动物4. born [b o:n] adj. 天生的5. alive [o'laiv] adj. 活着的6. plant [pl a:nt] n. 植物7. lake [leik] n. 湖8. above [o'b A v] prep. 在...上面9. breathe [bri:d] v. 呼吸TheDolphin1. dolphin ['d o lfin] n. 海豚2. sound [saund] n. 声音3. feeling 苒㈣n. 感觉4. group [gru:p] n. 群5. school [sku:l] n. 鱼群6. together [t o'ged o] adv. 一起7. information [inf o'mei jbn] n. 信息8. scientist ['sai o ntist] n. 科学家9. tape [teip] n. 录音带1 0. aquarium [o'kw e ri o m]n. 水族馆1 1. lonely ['l o unli] adj. 孤独的;寂寞的1 2. save [seiv] v. 解救1 3. life [laif] n. 生命14.luck [l A k] n. 运气U2WhyDoWeYawn?1.yawn [j o:n] v. 打呵欠2.quickly ['kwi kli] adv. 快地3.contagious [k on'tei d^o s] adj. 有传染性4.bored [b o:d] adj. 无聊的5.might [ma i t] aux. 可能6.however [ha u'ev s(r)] adv. 然而7.excited [ik'sai t i d] adj. 感到兴奋的8.race [re i s] n. 赛跑9.alert [°'l3:t] adj. 警觉的;警惕的10.deeply ['di:pli] adv. 在深处11.stretch [stret f] v. 伸展;延伸12.muscle ['mA sl] n. 肌肉WhyDoPeopleLaughugh [l a:f] v. 大笑2.club [kl A b] n. 社团3.pretend [pr i'tend] v. 假装4.soon [su:n] adv. 马上5.naturally ['n矶fYo li] adv. 自然地6.exercise ['ekso sa i z] n. 练习v. 锻炼7.equal ['i:kwo l] adj. 平等的v. 等于8.relax [r i'l田ks] v. (使)放松9.hard [h a:d] adj. 硬的;困难的;努力的;adv. 努力地;猛力地;严重地10.connect [k o'nekt] v. 连接11.well [wel] adv. 好地;adj.健康的WhyIsTheSeaSalty?1.salt [s o:lt] n. 盐2.Earth [3:0] n. 地球3.mix [m i ks] v. 混合4.ocean ['。
中学生百科英语必背
Unit 1The Kiwi1. strange [streind?] adj. 奇怪的2. wing [wi?] n. 翅膀,翼3. tail [teil] n. 尾部4. feather ['fee?] n. 羽毛5. each [i:t ?] adj. 每个6. beak [bi:k] n. 鸟嘴7. around [?'raund] prep. 在……周围8. sunlight ['s?nlait] n. 阳光9. smell [smel] v. 闻10. kill [kil] v. 杀11. government ['g?v?nm?nt] n. 政府The Camel1. camel ['k?m ?l] n. 骆驼2. without [wie 'aut] prep. 没有3. store [st?:] v. 储存4. hump [h?mp] n. 驼峰5. true [tru:] adj. 真实的6. change [t?eind?] v. 改变7. fat [f?t] n. 脂肪8. desert [?dez?t] n. 沙漠9. heat [hi:t] n. 热量10. Arabian [?'reibi?n] adj. 阿拉伯(人)的11. Bactrian [?b?ktri ?] n. 双峰驼12. Asia ['ei??] n. 亚洲13. thick [0 ik] adj. 厚的14. eyelash [?a?l? ?] n. 睫毛15. Arabic ['?r ?bik] n. 阿拉伯语16. important [im'p?:t?nt] adj. 重要的17. central [?sentr?l] adj. 中部的The Polar Bear1. polar ['p?ul?] adj. 两极的2. inside ['in'said] adv. 在里面3. arctic circle ['a :ktik] ['s?:kl] 北极圈4. north pole [n?: 0[p] ?ul] 北极5. meter ['mi:t?] n. 米6. weigh [wei] v. 称重量7. kilogram ['kil ?gr?m] n. 千克8. wide [waid] adj. 宽阔的9. afraid [?'freid] adj. 害怕的10. united states [ju'naitid] [steits] n. 美国The Hippopotamus1. hippopotamus [hip ?'p?t?m?s] n. 河马2. Africa ['?frik ?] n. 非洲3. mammal ['m?m ?l] n. 哺乳动物4. born [b?:n] adj. 天生的5. alive [?'laiv] adj. 活着的6. plant [pl a :nt] n. 植物7. lake [leik] n. 湖8. above [?'b?v] prep. 在...上面9. breathe [bri:e] v. 呼吸The Dolphin1. dolphin ['d?lfin] n. 海豚2. sound [saund] n. 声音3. feeling ['fi:li?] n. 感觉4. group [gru:p] n. 群5. school [sku:l] n. 鱼群6. together [t?'gee?] adv. 一起7. information [inf ?'mei??n] n. 信息8. scientist ['sai?ntist] n. 科学家9. tape [teip] n. T. C录音带10. aquarium [?'kw?ri?m] n. 水族馆11. lonely ['l?unli] adj. 孤独的;寂寞的12. save [seiv] v. 解救13. life [laif] n. 生命14. luck [l?k] n. 运气U2Why Do We Yawn?1. yawn [j?:n] v. 打呵欠2. quickly [?kw?kli] adv. 快地3. contagious [k?n?ted???s] adj. 有传染性的4. bored [b?:d] adj. 无聊的5. might [ma?t] aux. 可能6. however [ha??ev?(r)] adv. 然而7. excited [?k?sat?d] adj. 感到兴奋的8. race [re?s] n. 赛跑9. alert [??l?:t] adj. 警觉的;警惕的10. deeply [?di:pli] adv. 在深处11. stretch [stret?] v. 伸展; 延伸12. muscle [?m?sl] n. 肌肉Why Do People Laugh ?1. laugh [l a :f] v. 大笑2. club [kl?b] n. 社团3. pretend [pr??tend] v. 假装4. soon [su:n] adv. 马上5. naturally [?n?t?r?li] adv. 自然地6. exercise [?eks?sa?z] n. 练习v. 锻炼7. equal [?i:kw?l] adj. 平等的v. 等于8. relax [r??l?ks] v. (使)放松9. hard [h a :d] adj. 硬的; 困难的; 努力的;adv. 努力地; 猛力地; 严重地10. connect [k??nekt] v. 连接11. well [wel] adv. 好地;adj.健康的Why Is The Sea Salty?1. salt [s?:lt] n. 盐2. Earth [?:0 ] n. 地球3. mix [m?ks] v. 混合4. ocean [????n] n. 海洋5. carry [?k?ri] v. 携带6. move [mu:v] v. 移动7. cloud [kla?d] n. 云8. evaporate [??v?p?re?t] n. 蒸发9. percent [p?'sent] n. 百分之一10. famous [?fe?m?s] adj. 著名的How Can A Plant Kill?1. enemy [?en?mi] n. 敌人2. kind [ka?nd] n. 种类3. poisonous [?p??z?n?s] adj. 有毒的4. grow [gr??] v. 生长;种植5. tropics ['tr?p?ks] n. 热带地区6. expensive [?k?spensv?] adj. 贵的7. cheap [t?i:p] adj. 便宜的8. collect [k??lekt] v. 收集9. instead of [?n?sted] adv. 代替How Do Many Hearing-Impaired People Talk?1 . hearing-impaired [ ?m?ped?] adj. 受损的2 . sign [sa?n] n. 符号3 . each other 彼此4 . both [b?? 9 ] pron. 两者都5. interpret [?n?t?:pr?t] v. 解释6.whole [h??l] adj. 全部的;完整的U3The Date Palm1. date [de?t] n. 海枣2. palm [p a :m] n. 棕榈树3. wonderful [?w?nd?fl] adj. 美妙的4. feed [fi:d] v. □田*喂养5. leaf [li:f] n. 叶子6.wood [w?d] n. 木材7. burn [b?:n] v. 燃烧8. stone [st??n] n. 石头9. museum [mju?zi:?m] n. 博物馆The Water Hyacinth1. h ate [he?t] v. 恨2. d isease [d??zi:z] n. 疾病3. c rop [kr?p] n. 农作物4. m achine [m???i:n] n. 机器5. f ertilizer [?f?:t?la?z?(r)] n. 肥料6. e nergy [?en?d?i] n. 能量7. M ethane [?mi: 0n$? n. 甲烷,沼气Rice1. e ven [?i:vn] adv. 甚至2. probably [?pr?b?bli] adv. 大概3. soil [s??l] n. 泥土4. i nsect [??nsekt] n. 昆虫5. b room [bru:m] n. 扫帚6. r ug [r?g] n. 小块地毯7. sandal [?s?ndl] n. 凉鞋8. r oof [ru:f] n. 屋顶Oranges1. section [?sek?n] n. 部分2. seed [si:d] n. 种子3. skin [sk?n] n. 皮肤;果皮4. shiny [??a?ni] adj. 发光的5. wild [wa?ld] adj. 野外的6. raise [re?z] v. 种植[??ra?nd] adv. 大约 [?sp?n?]? n. 西班牙人The Coffee Plant1. chance[t? a ns]n. 机会 2. Brazil [br??z?l]n. 巴西 3. Indonesia [??nd??'ni:zj?] n. 印尼4. Ivory Coast [?aiv?ri?k?ust]象牙海岸(非洲)5. Ethiopia [?i: '????? n. 埃塞俄比亚(非洲东部国家)6. produce [pr??dju:s] v. 产生7. typically [?t?p?kli] adv. 通常 ; 典型地 8. protect [pr??tekt] v. 保护 9. modern[?m?dn]adj. 现代的 10. unfortunately[?n?f?:t??n?tli]adv.不幸地7. around 8. SpanishU4Music and Behaviour1. affect [??fekt] v. 影响2. behave [b??he?v] v. 表现; 举止端正3. classical [?kl?s?kl] adj. 古典的4.background [?b?kgra?nd] n. 背景5. loud [la?d] adj. 响亮的,大声的6. chew [t?u:] v. 咀嚼7. careful [?ke?fl] adj. 仔细的Blues and Jazz1. slave [sle?v] n. 奴隶2. century [?sent?r?i] n. 世纪3. blues [blu:z] n. 蓝调音乐4. Jazz [d??z] n. 爵士乐5. express [?k?spres] v. 表达6. instrument [??nstr?m?nt] n. 仪器; 乐器7. guitar [g??a :(r)] n. 吉他8. harmonica [h a :?m?n?k?] n. 口琴9. composer [k?m?p??z?(r)] n. 作曲家10. add [?d] v. 增加Rock and Roll1. b and [b?nd] n. 带; 乐队2. performer [p??f?:m?(r)] n. 表演者3. mixture [?m?kst??(r)] n. 混合;混合物4. f an [f?n] n. 扇子;迷5. n ervous [?n?:v?s] adj. 紧张的6. record [?rek?:d] n. 唱片7. compact disc [k?m?p?kt disk] 光盘8. c ompany [?k?mp?ni] n. 公司Country Western music1.cattle [?k?tl] n. (总称)牛,牲口2. dangerous [?de?nd??r?s] adj. 危险的3. alone [??l??n] adj. 单独的4. calm [k a :m] adj. 平静的5. peaceful [?pi:sfl] adj. 和平的6. either [?a?e?(r)] pron. (两者之中)任何一个[?va??l?n] n. 小提琴[k?n] n. 罐子Latin Music and Salsa1. common [?k?m?n] adj. 普通的2. enjoy [?n?d??]? v. 喜欢; 享受; 过得快活3. beat [bi:t] v. 接连地击打4. orchestra [??:k?str?] n. 管弦乐队5. while [wa?l] conj. 在…期间6. roast [r??st] v. 烤7. bake [be?k] v. 烘焙8. oven [??vn] n. 烤箱9. fry [fra?] v. 油炸10. taste [te?st] n. 滋味11. Portuguese [?p?:t?u?gi:z] n. 葡萄牙语; 葡萄牙人12. international [??nt??n? ?n?l] adj. 国际的7. violin8. canU5Work Hour1. e nough [??n?f] adj. 足够的2. v ary [?ve?ri] v. 变化3. employee [?m?pl?i?:] n. 雇工4. e xtra [?ekstr?] adj. 额外的5. e arn [?:n] v. 赢得6. o vertime [???v?ta?m] adv. 超时地; 加班地7. v acation [v??ke??n] n. 假期8. a verage [??v?r?d?] adj. 平均的9. d ull [d?l] adj. 迟钝的Salaries1. salary [?s?l?ri] n. 薪水2. private [?pra?v?t] adj. 私有的3. pilot [?pa?l?t] n. 飞行员4. profession [pr??fe?n] n. 职业5. waiter [?we?t?(r)] n. 服务员6. benefit [?ben?f?t] n. 利益7. employer [?m?pl??(?r)] n. 雇主8. health [hel 9]n. 健康9. insurance [?n???r??ns] n. 保险费10. plus [pl?s] prep. (表示运算)加Family-Friendly Companies1. rule [ru:l] n. 规则2. allow [??la?] v. 允许3. flexible [?fleks?bl] adj. 灵活的4. schedule [??edju:l][?sked?u:l] n. 时刻表5. increase [?n?kri:s] v. 增加6. share [?e?(r)] n. 分享7. leave [li:v] v. 离开8. female [?fi:me?l] adj. 女性的9. unpaid [??n?ped?] adj. 未付的10. male [me?l] adj. 男性的Work Clothes1. d ecision [d??s??n] n. 决定2. u niform [?ju:n?f?:m] n. 制服3. c ode [k??d] n. 代码;编码4. c asual [?k??u?l] adj. 随便的5. c omfortable [?k?mft?bl] adj. 舒适的6. special [?spe?l] adj. 特殊的; 专用的7. sportswear [?sp?:tswe?(r)] n. 运动装Time Off1. commute [k ??mju:t] v. 通勤2. prepare [pr??pe?(r)] v. 准备3. leisure [?le??(r)] n. 闲暇4. obviously [??bvi ?sli] adv. 明显地5. channel [?t??nl] n. 频道6. program [?pr??gr?m] n. 程序7. surf [s?:f] v. 冲浪U6The Sami of Northern Europe1. Sami [?s?mi] n. 萨米人2. Norway ['n?:we?] n. 挪威(欧洲国家)3. Sweden ['swi:dn] n. 瑞典4. Finland ['f ?nl?nd] n. 芬兰5. Russia ['r???] n. (1917年以前的)俄罗斯帝国6. coast [k??st] n. 海岸7. traditional [tr??d???nl] adj. 传统的8. nomad [?n??m?d] n. 游牧民9. reindeer [?re?nd??(r)] n. 驯鹿10. dig [d?g] n. 挖掘11. tent [tent] n. 帐篷12. less [les] adj. 较少的13. skis [ski?] v. 滑雪n. 滑雪板;雪橇14. sled [sled] n. <美>雪撬15. trip [tr?p] n. 旅行16. future ['fju?t??(r)] n. 将来17. holiday ['h?l?de?] n. 假日The Ainu of Japan1. island ['a?l?nd] r. 岛屿2. Hokkaido [h?'kaid?u] r. 北海道(日本第二大岛)3. wavy ['we?vi] adj. 波浪形的4. mustache [m?'st a ??] r. 小胡子5. completely [k?m'pli?tli] adv. 完全地6. hunter ['h?nt?(r)] r. 猎人7. religion [r?'l?d??n] r. 宗教8. middle ['m?dl] adj. 中间的;中等的;中期的9. attend [?'tend] v. 出席;参加10. right [ra?t] r. 权利11. promote [pr?'m??t] v. 促进;提升;推销;弘扬12. Ainu ['a?n?] r. 阿伊努人13. beard [b??d] r. 胡须14. demand [d?m a ?rjd v. 要求15. response [r?'sp?ns] r. 响应The Yanomami of the Amazon1. perhaps [p?'h?ps] adv. 也许;可能2. area ['e?ri?] r. 面积;地区3. outsider [?a?t'sa?d?(r)] r. 外行;旁观者;局外人4. Verezuela [?ver?'zwe?l?] r. 委内瑞拉5. spiritual ['sp?r?t?u?l] adj. 精神的;心灵的6. mirer ['ma?r?(r)] r. 矿工7. logger ['i?g?)] r. 樵夫;伐木工8. roise [r??z] r. 噪声9. polluted [p?'lu?t?d] adj. 被污染的;喝醉的10. die [da?] v. 死11. destroy [d?'str??] v. 破坏12. destructior [d??str?k?r] r. 摧毁; 破坏13. progress ['pr??g res] r. 进步14. Yaromami r. 亚诺玛米人15. Amazor [??m?z?r] r. 亚马逊河(南美洲大河)The Hopi of Arizona1. Hopi ['h??pi] r. 霍皮族(北美印第安人之一族2. Arizora r. 亚利桑那(美国州名)3. highway ['ha?we?] r. 公路4. somehow ['s?mha?] adv. 以某种方式5. freeze [fri?z] v. 冻结6. blow [bl??] v. 吹7. goat [g ??t] n. 山羊8. truck [tr?k] n. 卡车9. Kachina [ke?t'?a?n?] n. 克奇纳神(霍皮印第安人崇拜的祖灵)10. alike [?'la?k] adj. 相似的;同样的11. adult ['?d?lt] n. 成年人12. nearby [?n??'ba?] adj. 附近的adv. 在附近The Maori of New Zealand1. Maori ['ma?ri]毛利人;毛利语毛利人的;毛利语的n. adj.2. Polynesian [?p?l?'ni:z??n] n. 波利尼西亚人;波利尼西亚语adj. 波利尼西亚的;波利尼亚人(语)的3. arrive [?'ra?v] v. 到达4. over ['??v?(r)] prep. 多于5. war [w??(r)] n. 战争;斗争6. population [?p?pju'le??n] n. 人口7. culture ['k?lt??(r)] n. 文化;教养8. ceremony ['ser?m?ni] n. 仪式;礼节;典礼9. yearly ['j??li] adj. 每年的adv. 每年地;一年一次地10. among [?'m??] prep. 在……之中11. competition [?k?mp?'t??n] n. 竞争;比赛12. practice ['pr?kt ?s] v. 操练n. 操练13. win [w?n] v. 赢;赢得;胜利U8The Polynesians1. explorer [?k?spl?:r?(r)] v. 探险家2. current [?k?r?nt] n. 水流3. shell [?el] n. 外壳■ t i ; r K4. Mongol [?m??g?l] n. 蒙古族人5. toward [t?'w?:d] prep. 向;对着6. reach [ri:t ?] v. 到达7. invention [?n?venn?] n. 发明8. sailor [se?l?(r)] n. 水手9. canoe [k??nu: ] n. 独木舟A Giraffe in Central Asia1. leader [?li:d?(r)] n. 领袖2. ruler [?ru:l?(r)] n. 统治者3. gift [g?ft] n. 礼物;天赋4. ambassador [?m?b?s?d?(r)] n. 大使5. jewelry ['d?u:?lr?] n. 珠宝;首饰6. gold [g??ld] n. 金子7. silver [?s?lv?(r)] n. 银子8. suppose [s??p??z] n. 认为;假定9. pleased [pli:zd] n. 高兴的10. Cairo ['ka??r??] n. 开罗(埃及首都)11. Samarkand [?s?m??k?nd] n. 撒马尔罕(乌兹别克东部城市)The First Woman on Mount Qomolangma1. Qomolangma [?t??im?u?l a : ?m?] n. 珠穆朗玛2. mountain [?ma?nt?n] n. 山脉3. Nepal [n?'p?:l] n. 尼泊尔(南亚国家)4. organize [??:g?na?z] v. 组织; 安排5. avalanche [??v?l a :n]? n. 雪崩6. injure [??nd??(r)] v. 损害; 伤害(名誉、自尊等)7. be able to8. ordinary [??:dnri] adj. 普通的; 一般的9. goal [g??l] n. 球门; 目标n. 环境10. environment [?n?var?nm?nt]The Iditarod Race1. Iditarod 艾迪塔罗德n.2. trail [tre?l] n. 踪迹3. team [ti?m] n. 队;组4. adventurer [?d'vent??r?(r)] n. 冒险者5. musher ['m???(r)] n. 赶狗拉雪橇的人6. brave [bre?v] adj. 勇敢的7. storm [st??m] n. 暴风雨8. knee [ni?] n. 膝盖9. below [b?'l??] prep. 低于;在•……下面10. footprint ['f ?tpr?nt] n. 脚印11. shoot [?u?t] v. 发射12. Celsius ['selsi?s] n. 摄氏Sailing Alone1. supply [s??pla?] n. 供给物2. equipment [??kw ?pm?nt] n. 设备3. problem ['pr?bl?m] n. 问题;难题4. engine ['end??n] n. 引擎5. quit [kw ?t] v. 退出6. electricity [??lek'tr?s?ti] n. 电7. communicate [k ?'mju?nk?e?t] v. 交流8. destination [?dest'?ne??n] n. 目的地9. San Francisco [s?n fr?n'sisk ?u]n. 旧金山10. contact [?k?nt?kt] v. n. 接触11. expect [?k?spekt] v. 期望。
中学生百科英语1U1-U2
第一单元,第一课:无翼鸟The kiwi lives only in NewZealand. It is very strange bird .Because it can not kiwi is the same size as a has no wings or does not have feathers like other feathers look like foot has four 's beak is very long. A kiwi likes to have a lot of trees around it. It sleeps during the sunlight hurts its can smell things very smells things better than most birds kiwis eggs are very big.There're only a few kiwis in New Zealand now. People do not often see them. The government says that people can not kill kiwis. New Zealanders want their kiwis to is a picture of a kiwi in New Zealand money. People from New Zealand sometimes called "kiwis".无翼鸟住在新西兰,它是一只很奇怪的鸟,因为,它不会飞,无翼鸟跟小鸡的大小相同,它没有翅膀,也没有尾巴,它没有像别的鸟一样的尾巴,它的羽毛看起来很像头发,每只脚都有4个脚指头,它的嘴巴很长。
无翼鸟喜欢周围有很多树。
它白天睡觉,因为,阳光会伤害它的眼睛。
它的嗅觉非常好,它的嗅觉比大多数的鸟要好。
2019中考初中英语全部知识点(二)
2019中考初中英语全部知识点(二)各位读友大家好,此文档由网络收集而来,欢迎您下载,谢谢look/ see/ watchlook表示“看、瞧”,着重指认真看,强调看的动作,表示有意识地注意看,但不一定看到,以提醒对方注意。
,如:Look! The children are playing computer games. 瞧!孩子们在玩电脑游戏。
Look! What?s that over there? 看!那边那个是什么? 单独使用是不及物动词,如强调看某人/物,其后接介词at,才能带宾语,如:He?s looking at me。
他正在看着我。
see强调“看”的结果,着重的是look 这个动作的结果,意思是“看到”,see是及物动词,后面能直接跟宾语。
如:What can you see in the picture? 你能在图上看到什么? Look at the blackboard. What did you see on it?看黑板!你看到了什么?watch“观看,注视”,侧重于场面,表示全神贯注地观看、观察或注视某事务的活动,强调过程,常用于“看电视、看足球、看演出”等。
如:Yesterday we watched a football match on TV.昨天我们从电视上看了一场足球比赛。
put on/ / in puton意为“穿上,戴上”。
主要指“穿上”这一动作, 后面接表示服装、鞋帽的名词。
in是介词,表示“穿着”强调状态。
在句中可以做定语、标语和状语。
如:It?s cold outside, put on your coat. 外面冷,穿上你的外衣。
He puts on his hat and goes out. 他戴上帽子,走了出去。
The woman in a white blouse is John?s mother.穿白色衬衣的那个妇女是John的妈妈。
house/ home/family house:“房子”,指居住的建筑物; Home: “家”,指一个人同家人共同经常居住的地方; Family: “家庭“,“家庭成员”。
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中学生百科英语2:Thoughts& Notions01 The Zipper02 The Postage Stamp03 Pencils and Pens04 The Umbrella05 The Metric System06 Thai Boxing07 Sumo Wrestling08Tarahumara Foot Races09 Olympic Sports10 Greatathletes11 The Puffer Fish12 Foods from Around the World13 Chocolate14 The Blue Revolution15 Twenty-One Days Without Food16 The Marie Celeste17 The Roanoke Settlement18 The Easter Island Statues19 The Tunguska Fireball20Mystery of the Monarchs21 The History of Money22 Mass Marketing23 Inflation24 Doing Business Around the World25 Credit Cards1 The ZipperThe zipper is a wonderful invention. How did people ever live without zippers?They are very common, so we forget that they are wonderful. They are very strong,but they open and close very easily. They come in many colors and sizes.In the 1890s, people in the United States wore high shoes with a long row of buttons. Clothes often had rows of buttons, too. People wished that clothes were easier to put on and take off.Whitcomb L. Judson, an engineer from the United States, invented the zipper in 1893. However, his zippers didn't stay closed very well. This was embarrassing, and people didn't buy many of them. Then Dr. Gideon Sundback from Sweden solved this problem. His zipper stayed closed.A zipper has three parts: 1.Thereare dozens of metal or plastic hooks (called teeth) in two rows. 2. These hooks are fastened to two strips of cloth. The cloth strips are flexible. They bend easily. 3. A fastener slides along and joins the hooks together.When it slides the other way, it takes the hooks apart.Dr. Sundback put the hooks on strips of cloth. The cloth holds all the hooks in place. They don't come apart very easily. This solved the problem of the first zippers.(212 words)2 The Postage StampBefore the invention of the postage stamp, it was difficult to send a letter to another country. The sender paid for the letter to travel in his or her own country.Then the person in the other country paid for the rest of the trip. If a letter crossed several countries, the problem was worse.Rowland Hill, a British teacher, had the idea of a postage stamp with glue on the back. The British post office made the first stamps in 1840. They were the Penny Black and the Twopence Blue. A person bought a stamp and put it on a letter. The post office delivered the letter. When people received letters, they didn't have to pay anything. The postage was prepaid.Postage stamps became popular in Great Britain immediately. Other countries started making their own postage stamps very quickly.There were still problems with international mail. Some countries did not want to accept letters with stamps from other countries. Finally, in 1874, a German organized the Universal Postal Union (UPU). Each country in the UPU agreed to accept letters with prepaid postage from the other members. Today, the offices of the UPU are in Switzerland. Almost every country in the world is a member of this organization. It takes care of any international mail problems.Today, post offices in every country sell beautiful stamps. Collecting stamps is one of the most popular hobbies in the world, and every stamp collector knows about the Penny Black and the Twopence Blue.(250 words)3 Pencils and PensNo one knows who invented pencils or when it happened. A Swiss described a pencil in a book in 1565. He said it was a piece of wood with lead inside it. (Lead is a very heavy, soft, dark gray metal.) Pencils weren't popular, and people continued to write with pens. They used bird feathers as pens.Then, in 1795, someone started making pencils from graphite, and they became very popular. Graphite is like coal. (Coal is black, and we burn it for heat and energy.) Today, people make pencils in the same way. They grind the graphite, make it into the shape of a stick, and bake it. Then they put it inside a piece of wood. One pencil can write 50,000 English words or make a line 55 kilometers long.People wrote with feather pens and then used pens with metal points. They had to dip the point into ink after every few letters. Next, someone invented a fountain pen that could hold ink inside it. A fountain pen can write several pages before you have to fill it again.Two Hungarian brothers, Ladislao and Georg Biro, invented the ballpoint pen.They left Hungary and started making ballpoint pens in England in 1943, during World War II. English pilots liked the pens. They couldn't write with fountain pens in airplanes because the ink leaked out. Later, a French company called Bic bought the Biros' company.Some people call ballpoint pens "Bics." Australians call them "biros." Whatever we call them, we use them every day.(256 words)4 The UmbrellaThe umbrella is a very ordinary object. It keeps the rain and the sun off people.Most umbrellas fold up, so it is easy to carry them.However, the umbrella has not always been an ordinary object. In the past, it was a sign of royalty or importance. Some African tribes still use umbrellas in this way.Someone carries an umbrella and walks behind the king or important person.Umbrellas are very old. The Chinese had them more than 3,000 years ago. From there, umbrellas traveled to India, Persia, and Egypt. In Greece and Rome, men wouldn't use them. They believed umbrellas were only for women.When the Spanish explorers went to Mexico, they saw the Aztec kings using umbrellas. English explorers saw Native American princes carrying umbrellas on the east coast of North America. It seems that people in different parts of the world invented umbrellas at different times.England was probably the first country in Europe where ordinary people used umbrellas against the rain. England has a rainy climate, and umbrellas are very useful there.Everybody uses umbrellas today. The next time you carry one, remember that for centuries only great men and women used them. Perhaps you are really a king or queen, a princess or prince.(210 words)5 The Metric SystemPeople all over the world use grams, kilograms (kilos), meters, and liters. These are all ways to measure things. They are all part of the metric system.During the French Revolution (1789-1799) against the king, the revolutionary government started the metric system. Before that, every part of France had a different system for measuring things. Also, cloth makers measured cloth with one system. Jewelers used another system. Carpenters used another. Other countries used different systems. The revolutionary government wanted one scientific system of measurement. They asked a group of scientists and mathematicians to invent a system.The mathematicians and scientists decided to use the numbers ten, hundred, and thousand for their system.Next, they had to decide on a "natural" length. They chose one ten-millionth (1/ 10,000,000) of the distance from the equator to the North Pole. They called this distance the meter. Then they chose the gram for weighing things. A cubic centimeter of water weighs 1 gram.Mathematicians and scientists worked for 20 years until they finally had a complete measuring system. The biggest problem was measuring the meter.The metric system was a wonderful gift to the world. There are only a few countries that don't use it. The United States is one. The metric system is truly an international system.(214 words)6 Thai BoxingBoxing is popular in many countries. Two fighters wear boxing gloves on their hands. The boxers hit each other until one is knocked out or until the final bell rings.Each part of the fight is three minutes long. It is called a round.Thai boxing is different.The boxing match begins with music. Then the two fighters kneel and pray to God. Next, they do a slow dance that copies the movements of Thai boxing. During this dance, each fighter tries to show the other that he is best.Then the fight begins. In Thai boxing, the fighters can kick with their feet and hit each other with their elbows and knees. Of course, they hit with their hands, too.Each round is three minutes long. Then the boxers have a two-minute rest. Most boxers can fight only five rounds because this kind of fighting is very difficult.Thai boxing began over 500 years ago. If a soldier lost his weapons in a battle, he needed to fight with just his body. The soldiers learned how to use all the parts of their bodies. In 1560, the Burmese army captured Naresuen, the King of Thailand, in a war. King Naresuen was a very good boxer. He won his freedom from Burma by defeating all the best Burmese fighters. When he returned to Thailand, his people were very proud of him. Thai boxing became a popular sport.(237 words)7 Sumo WrestlingSumo wrestling is a national sport in Japan. Every year there are six tournaments,and millions of Japanese watch them on television. A tournament is a series of matches.Sumo is almost as old as the nation of Japan itself. Stories say that there was sumo wrestling over 2,000 years ago. There are written records of national sumo tournaments in the 8th century.In many sports, athletes are thin and can move very quickly. However, sumo wrestlers weigh from 100 to 160 kilos (kilograms). One famous wrestler weighed 195kilos. Sumo wrestlers do not move quickly, and sumo wrestling is a very slow sport.Sumo wrestlers start training when they are boys. They exercise to make their bodies strong. They also eat a lot.They wrestle in a round ring with a sand floor. A wrestler loses the match if he leaves the ring. He is also the loser if any part of his body except his feet touches the floor. Each wrestler tries to push the other down on the floor or out of the ring.Sometimes one wrestler just steps aside when the other wrestler rushes toward him.Then, the wrestler who is rushing falls down or moves out of the ring.Sumo is not very popular in other countries, but the Japanese think that it is a very exciting sport.(223 words)8Tarahumara Foot RacesThe Tarahumara live in the mountains in the state of Chihuahua in northern Mexico. This is an area of high mountains and deep tropical valleys. It sometimes snows in the mountains in winter. There are not many roads.The Tarahumara walk wherever they need to go. They carry heavy baskets on their backs. Perhaps this is why the Tarahumara can run many kilometers without getting tired. They are excellent runners, and they like to organize races.When the men race,they kick a wooden ball ahead of them while they run. Before they start racing, they plan where and how long they will run. They might run just a few minutes, or they might run for several hours. Sometimes they run in teams, and sometimes each person runs as an individual.The women's races are similar except that the women do not kick a ball. They throw a wooden hoop in front of them with a stick. A hoop is a ring, or a circle.The Tarahumara play other games and sports. However, they are famous because they can run so fast and so far.(185 words)9 Olympic SportsThe first modern Olympic Games took place in Athens, Greece, in the year 1896.Athletes from only 13 countries participated in the Games that year. They competed in 43 different events in just 9 sports (track and field, swimming, cycling, fencing,gymnastics, shooting, tennis, weight lifting, and wrestling). In 2004, the summer Olympic Games took place once again in Athens, Greece. This time athletes from 202 countries competed in 300 events in 28 sports.Only five sports have been in every Olympic Games. They are track and field,swimming, fencing, cycling, and gymnastics. Other sports come and go in the Olympic Games. For example, tennis was an Olympic sport from 1896 until 1924.Then it disappeared from the Olympics until 1988. Baseball, badminton, and taekwondo are more recent additions to the Olympic Games.It is the job of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) to add and remove sports from the Olympic Games. A sport has to be popular in at least 50 countries on three continents before it can be added. However, the IOC doesn't want to add more sports to the Olympic Games without eliminating others. The IOC is afraid that there will be too many sports in the Olympics.Artistic events were also a part of the Olympic Games from 1912 to 1948. There were contests in architecture, music, literature, and painting. Today some people think that artistic events and games such as chess should be part of the Olympics.However, many people oppose this idea.The Olympic Games today are very different from the first modern Olympic Games in 1896. These differences reflect the changing definition and popularity of sports.(273 words)10 Great AthletesYou might think that Olympic athletes are the healthiest people in the world. It's true that many are. However, it's also true that quite a few Olympic athletes had to overcome illnesses early in their lives.One excellent example is Wilma Rudolph. She competed in track-and-field events in the 1960 Olympics. She didn't win just one gold medal. She won three. At the time, people called her "the fastest woman in the world."As a young child, Wilma Rudolph could not participate in sports. She had a series of serious illnesses, and then, at the age of 4, she got polio. She lost the use of her left leg, and the doctors said she would never walk again.The people in Rudolph's family did everything they could to help her walk again.Wilma and her mother frequently traveled 100 miles to get treatments for her leg. Her brothers and sisters took turns giving her leg a daily massage. Four times a day, they helped her do special exercises for her leg. Amazingly, by the time Rudolph was 9years old, she was able to walk again. Before long, she started playing basketball and running. In high school, she was a track star, and then she went to the Olympics.Wilma Rudolph retired from her career as a runner when she was 22 years old.She then became a teacher and track coach. Her story encouraged many people to work hard and to overcome difficulties.(244 words)11The Puffer FishMost people avoid eating dangerous foods. They don't want to get sick. However,there is one food that can be deadly, yet some people eat it on purpose. It's called the puffer fish.This kind of fish, called fugu in Japanese, lives in the Pacific Ocean. Some people die every year from eating fugu. In fact, the Emperor of Japan is not allowed to touch it. Why? Well, the insides of the puffer fish are very poisonous. They contain a poison 275 times more powerful than the deadly poison cyanide.Usually nothing bad happens when fugu is on a restaurant's menu. Customers feel great after the meal. That's because chefs are trained to remove the insides of the puffer fish before they give it to customers. If they miss even a small amount, the fish is not safe to eat.Puffer fish is very expensive. A plate of fugu costs more than $200 in some restaurants in Tokyo. Besides being dangerous to eat, the fish is very ugly, with spines all over its body. Also, it can puff, or blow, itself up to double its normal size.Why do the Japanese risk so much for such an ugly and dangerous fish? Well, some people like taking risks. And fugu tastes wonderful.(211 words)12 Foods from Around the WorldFoods that are well known to you may not be familiar to people from other countries. Tourists and other travelers almost always get to try some unfamiliar food.That is part of the fun of traveling. Here are four people's experiences with foreign food.Shao Wong is a student in France. He comes from China. "I never had cheese or even milk before I came to France. Cattle are rare in my part of China, so there are no dairy products. I drank some milk when I first arrived in France. I hated it ! I tried cheese, too, but I didn't like it. I love ice cream, though, and that's made from milk."Birgit is from Sweden. She traveled to Australia on vacation. "I was in a restaurant that specialized in fish, and I heard some other customers order flake. So I ordered some, too, and it was delicious. Later, I found out that flake is an Australian term for shark. Now, whenever I see a new food, I try it on purpose. You know why? I remember how much I enjoyed flake."Chandra is a dentist in Texas. She is from India. "I'm afraid to try new foods because they might contain beef. I'm a Hindu, and my religion forbids me to eat meat from the cow. That's why I can't eat hamburgers or spaghetti with meatballs."Nathan is from the United States. He taught for a year in China. "My friends gave me some 100-year-old eggs to eat. I didn't like their appearance at all. The eggs were green inside, but my friends said the color was normal. The Chinese put chemicals on fresh eggs. Then they bury them in the earth for three months. So the eggs weren't really very old. Even so, I didn't want to touch them."Life in a new country can be scary, but it also can be fun. Would you eat a 100-year-old egg? Would you order shark in a restaurant?(328 words)13 ChocolateWe think of chocolate as something sweet. However, a long time ago, people thought of chocolate as something very bitter. For us, chocolate is a candy, but once it was a medicine. Today, chocolate can be a hot drink, a frozen dessert, or just a snack.Sometimes it's an ingredient in the main course of a meal. Mexicans make a hot chocolate sauce called mole and pour it over chicken. The Mexicans also eat chocolate with spices like chili peppers.Chocolate is a product of the tropical cacao tree. Cacao beans taste so bitter that even monkeys say "ugh!" and run away. The word chocolate comes from a Mayan word. The Mayas were an ancient people who once lived in Mexico. They valued the cacao tree. Some of the Mayas used cacao beans for money, while others ground them to make a bitter drink.When the Spaniards came to Mexico in the 16th century, they started drinking cacao, too. Because the drink was strong and bitter, they thought it was a medicine.When the Spaniards took the drink back to Europe, people discovered that sugar removed the bitter taste of cacao. Wealthy Spaniards heated the sweet drink and thought that it was good for their health.In the 19th century, an English company made the first solid block of sweetened chocolate. Now people could both drink and eat chocolate. Later, a Swiss company mixed milk and chocolate together. People liked the taste of milk chocolate even better.Besides the chocolate candy bar, one of the most popular American snacks is the chocolate-chip cookie. Favorite desserts are chocolate cream pie and, of course, an ice cream sundae with hot fudge sauce.(280 words)14 The Blue RevolutionThe population of the world is increasing rapidly. By 2020, there could be 7.5billion people on earth. Will there be enough food for all these people, or will we have a food shortage? Some scientists think fish farming could solve this problem.However, other scientists worry that fish farming could cause serious environmental problems.Fish farming is not a new thing. There were fish farms in China 3,000 years ago.Today, about one-third of the fish we eat comes from fish farms.Most fish farms raise plant-eating fish. Popular kinds of plant-eating fish are carp,tilapia, and catfish. Unfortunately, many fish farms are starting to raise meat-eating fish. A popular type of meat-eating fish is salmon. These meat-eating fish live on processed food made from wild fish. However, it takes up to 5 tons of wild fish to produce just 1 ton of farm-raised salmon. The supply of wild fish is already decreasing. Eventually, many types of wild fish could become extinct. What will we do then?Critics of fish farming also say that farm-raised fish is unhealthy for humans.They say the fish contains dangerous chemicals. They also criticize fish farming because it pollutes the water. Another criticism is that farm-raised fish can spread diseases to wild fish.Some people say that the farming methods being used now won't produce enough fish anyway. Instead of putting fish farms in lakes or near the coast, they say that the fish farms should be moved far out into the ocean. Several countries are already experimenting with deep-ocean farms. In the future, fish farms might be large cages that move across the ocean.Like most things, there is both a good and a bad side to fish farming. Fish farming may help to feed millions of people. At the same time, however, fish farming may damage the environment.(307 words)15 Twenty-One Days Without FoodWhy would someone decide to stop eating? We know that the body needs food in order to function well. However, many people fast at some time during their lives.Why is this?Some people fast for political reasons. In the early 20th century, women in England and the United States weren't allowed to vote. In protest, many women went on fasts. They hoped that fasting would bring attention to this injustice. Mohandas Gandhi, the famous Indian leader, fasted 17 times during his life. For Gandhi, fasting was a powerful political tool. In 1943, he fasted to bring attention to his country's need for independence. For 21 days, he went without food. Another famous faster was Cesar Chavez. In the 1960s, he fasted for three weeks. Why? His goal was to bring attention to the terrible working conditions of farm workers in the United States.Fasting is also a spiritual practice in many religions. Every year during the month of Ramadan, which is a religious holiday, Muslims fast from sunrise to sunset. Many Hindus fast on special occasions, as do some Christians and Buddhists.Of course, not everyone fasts for political or religious reasons. Some people occasionally fast just because it makes them feel better. The American writer Mark Twain thought fasting was the best medicine for common illnesses. Whenever he had a cold or a fever, he stopped eating completely. He said that this always made his cold or fever go away. Another American writer, Upton Sinclair, discovered fasting after years of overeating, indigestion, and headaches. His first fast lasted for 12 days.During this time, his headaches and stomachaches went away. Sinclair said that fasting also made him more alert and energetic.Choosing to go without food can be very dangerous. However, that doesn't stop people from fasting for political, religious, or health reasons.(305 words)16 The Marie CelesteThere are many stories about the ocean. One of the strangest is a true story about a sailing ship. It is a mystery even today.In 1872, the Marie Celeste started on a trip across the Atlantic Ocean with a crew of ten people.Sometime later, the captain of another ship, the Dei Gratia, saw the Marie Celeste. There was something strange about its appearance. The captain called out, but there was no answer. The Marie Celeste seemed deserted.When the captain went to inspect the ship, no one came to meet him. He knew something was wrong, but there were no signs of violence. Nothing was missing, and there was no damage to the ship's instruments. And strangely enough, there was food on the table. Where was everyone? Did the crew jump from the Marie Celeste? Or did something come up from the ocean and take the captain and crew away?The captain of the Dei Gratia looked around for clues. The last entry in the Marie Celeste's diary was ten days earlier. However, the food on the table was only a few days old. Someone was on the ship a few days before, but they didn't write anything in the ship's diary. Why?There were many different explanations for the mystery of the Marie Celeste.Some people thought that a huge octopus ate the crew. Others said bad weather carried them away. A few people believed that the Marie Celeste was under a curse,because it sank on a later voyage. Now that the Marie Celeste lies somewhere at the bottom of the ocean, no one can ever solve the mystery.(274 words)17 The Roanoke SettlementOnly a few Europeans lived in North America in the 16th century. Most of them settled on the northeast coast. In 1587, a small group of about 100 people decided to 11/20go south. They moved to the small island of Roanoke. That area later became part of the state of North Carolina.Unfortunately, the Roanoke settlers weren't well prepared. They didn't have enough food for the winter, and there wasn't enough grain for future crops. Their leader, Captain White, decided to sail back to England to get supplies. However,there was a war in Europe, and three years passed before he returned to North America.When Captain White came back to Roanoke in 1590, he was eager to see the settlers. He looked out from his ship, but no one was there to meet him. There were no signs of life. The settlement was deserted.No one knows why the Roanoke settlers disappeared. Many people thought that hostile Native Americans killed them, but there were no signs of a fight. Some thought that the settlers died from hunger or disease, but they couldn't explain the absence of bodies.Many years later, more settlers came to North Carolina. One of them met a Native American group called the Lumbee. They were unusual looking compared to the black-haired, brown-eyed Native Americans in the north. Some Lumbee had blonde hair and gray eyes. Then he listened to their speech and almost fell off his horse.They seemed to speak an odd kind of English!He asked where they were from. None of them knew, but they said that their grandparents "talked from a book." Did they mean that their grandparents were able to read? As he rode back home, he asked himself a question: Were the Lumbee people the descendants of the Roanoke settlers?People are still asking the identical question. Because there are no written records,we can't be certain. However, there is one interesting fact. Today, some of the Lumbee people have names like Sampson, Dare, and Cooper. They are identical to the names of the vanished settlers ofRoanoke Island.(350 words)18 The Easter Island StatuesWhen the first sailing ship came to Easter Island in 1722 the captain and crew were afraid to land. They saw giants looking down at them from the high cliffs. The giants didn't move, so the ship slowly moved closer. Finally, the sailors realized that the giants were statues. Who made these huge statues? How did they get there?Easter Island is a very small island in the Pacific Ocean. It is more than 2,000miles from the nearest continent (South America). It is one of the most isolated places on earth.The biggest statue on Easter Island is over 60 feet high and weighs over 100 tons.There are hundreds of smaller ones, about 15 feet high. All of the statues are made of stone, and some wear stone hats. Their faces are solemn and unsmiling.Earlier inhabitants of Easter Island made the statues from the rocks in a volcanic crater. Next, they had to move the statues a long distance. In some cases, they moved the statues to locations more than ten miles away.No one knows for certain how the inhabitants were able to move the statues. Some scientists say that palm trees grew on Easter Island in the past. They think the inhabitants cut the trees down and placed the heavy statues on the trees. Then groups of 70 or more people rolled the statues to their present locations. Other scientists disagree with this theory because there are no palm trees on the island today. More important, the purpose of the statues is still a mystery. Was the purpose of the statues to prevent strangers from landing on the island?The result, however, has been the opposite. Large groups of eager people come to look at the statues. Easter Island now has a modern airport, and people come from all over the world to visit.(309 words)。