1967-05-09 — Page 22

華僑日報 All

贊二第張六第

第一初月四年未了屉友

WAH KIU YAT PO

日九月五年七六九一起公年六十五國民革中

英文中學會考試題預習爵欄

英文中學F.I

英文科先備專欄

分閔陶

星期二周

中文中學會考試題預習專欄

英文科

(十八)

許籓芳

英文科

(廿八)

Lesson 1

201

ENGLISH

The Bentence)

The Tsentence must have a subjeqt"and a

Complete verb." It must begin with a capital letter.

and end with a full stop or question

窗字母,向句末则另一句照我問號

Examples of sentences *

1.Jane had a little lamb.

7. He cannot e

[01.]

3. Girls do not play football.

a. QisTcrying?

5.1 The old woman wrote a letter,

6. The church bell is ringing.

(a) The subject of the sentence:

(一)

The part which names the person or thing we are talking about.Tis called the subject of the Yeantenco. ) ( 2 $8 2 # MINTE A A A DI (b) The predicate of, the sentence's

The part, which tells comething about “the, subject, is called the predicate of the sentence. (il in ML A £ & 2 13 6345 44 ]

Subject

Jana

2. Ee

3.

Girls

Tho

The old womaKI

SENTENCE

The church bell

Predicate

had a little lamb.

cannot swim

do not play football.

is crying?

wrote a letter.

is ringing.

Bagh of the predicates of the above

sentences is ande with two parts :-( ve 2 69 9 34p]{

由两部份咀

Senteros

Subject

Subject Predicate:

Predicate

Yorb

Jane

had

Girls

do not play

football

#zo old woman

letter

Bach of the **

15 takes an object (

Unice

the Santanses 1. 3

句的豹刻印有受词)

Sentence Subject + Predicate

Subject? Verb

Object

10

the following groupe of words włas

Sentences 1,

(a) Jane is a good girl.

b) The boy fell in the water.)

(a) the opening.

Are they both absent to-day?

•), Mary 48 singing,

The dog barked.

Henry 11

She ad carrying s[DADY:

1).Biras fly.

3) Tom and Henry will not.

xercise

Underline the subiect in each of the following

sentences

You work hard..

The Onila

tho

are broken.

nderline the predicate in each of the following

sentencen

will come with me,

(a)

NUB WEB Very stormy's

Home moTAY

Ahser to the previous verendise

A. I told him that whether ne liked it or not, he would

have to go. I said there was only one man I knew who was capable of doing the job and that man was himself. Meester now much he wanted to be paid. He said that that did not come leto it; if the job had to be done, It had to be done. But he bald he did not like it and

old me frankly he would mich rather I found someone else. I said that there was nobody else and that he knew that: 1s well as I did. He conitted with a wry smile that he Båd not minded taking riska in the old days. But he said ). that things were different now that he had a wife to consider. He wondered what Penelope was going to say about the whole idea. I reminded him that Penelope was also my daughter and that she meant as much to me as she did to bim..

B.a. He suffered no bad affects,

b. entirely favourable,

c. in a bad state of health or business.

d. There is always somebody who benefits even from”al

calamity,

e. immoral.

C.1. the¡ ̄x} _x; ̄x;\x; ̃an"

2. x; the; the; x; the. 3. The; the; x; x; the..

4. *; * *; the; at a¡ ̄a; x] 5 the xia; x; an; at x: a

D.1. The soldiers being starving, their ammition expended, 'their clothes being in raya, and their leaders being

dead."the enemy easily defeated them,f

(2. In prisoner, he made a hole in the brick wall to talkTM

to his friend in the next cell.1

5. His Criends having assembled to offer him their

congratulations upon his safe return and everybody being confortably ceased, ne described all his adven tures

4. He camed the hatred of all good men by faciting youths

to crime fumishing them with means son kapring sately out 4 the way in time of dancer

He had not sufficient courage to¬iate the apros of his caste fellows or to go away from his native place to begin life afresh.

B.1. out; z. out; over:-8. oft:rinzeusy;257:OLI:

7. UDHL 8. off/

Jesson'" (28)

and answer the,

Read the following passage question which follow:

All of o

Ahave feeling”

other's but that With a widen what they feel. To speak frame numerous and

compass that

see dimly, as a

a hill or a cloud or a

a radiant glow that moves hi

and so to make us also look

ith delight: nestly to share" his vision. We hear, as a dea man is conscious of a voice the acho of music in running water; but he heape the full clear melody and cells to us to listen more

ntently that we too may catch it. We all have wondered vaguely at the mystery and the majesty, of the stars, but he falls on his face before them and priest-like praya ua, "as many an hear him, to accompany him to the throne of ...

heavenl grace, and to say after him words that once spaken are felt to be the only ones worthy, yet such as we ours selves could never have found. And in many places where there is a shy and subtle beauty that most of us would never see, a post a eye discovers it and his voice makes it plain to us.

If the Invoivors of machinery, as vanuer Júlier savs have given mankind supplimentary extra-corporeal limbe, the poets have a far nobler gift for ust they have onenad new windows in our souls

The greatest poet le he who nas felt the most of all the things that move the hearts of men and felt them most deeply, and can touch the most hearte to sympathy. And that is why Shakespeare, whose heart was made out of the h.arts of all himanity and whose tongue had learned 611 human speach, sits and smiles alone: and that is why ve call him Göd-like.

explain the following wares and expressions:

in a measure, 2. senses, 3 radiant glow, 6. vision,

10. shy

9. vaguely

acute, 4, compasS, conscious, 8. Intently,' extra corooraal 12 Alone

In answer the following questionat-

How does the writer showty!

(1) That all of us are posts in a measure

(2) The difference between ordinary men and these we

call poets".

(8.7Howfare posts compared withiinvetore?

C.WhabidoesitherWriter: think they greatest poet should be?,

dawny do we call Shakespeare God-11ker

MeThe train stopped, suddenly.

Underline; the Tobject for the verb lo đáo

following sentences1)

[Patjat, down.

The cat caugnt afhouse yesterday. (c) olganad/myfchons laat night. (d)1 not Jack in the street.

Angwoze to the previous exerciser

1.4. If I were you I would not confide“the”seoraot”in him.

I

B. If I had taken that aeroplane, I would have been killed?

b. No sooner had he arrived then we took leave,

4. De is too stupid to learn English well.

a. The roca is so small that it dennot accommodate ́all of us.

f. He worked hard so that he nicht sein noze money for his

family.

E. The more we study the lose we feel we know,

1. The house where he lives is said to be haunted.

1. I am looking forward to visiting Parle in the coming summery d. What we have to do now is to work hard to pass the

examination.f

2. The police officer told the guests in the house that a mar had been killed in that house and they did not even kno vho he was. It might be that he had been murdered, he added, and until they were mire about that and until they had made sextain investigatione, not one of then must leave the atte premie. He said he hoped that by the next day they shoula have finished their work and that they would then be able do go. He said meanwhile they should. have to ask them all bome questions and he was sorry for any inanovanianos that would Bauma than.

33 The speaker declared," I mow plenty of people' Who have soon ghcete. I myself do not believe that ghoets exist, but I im quite mure that people see them. In dreams everyone continually see things that do not exist. If you look along the railway line you will see the rails converging in the distance; but they do not converge. Everyone knows that thay do nao bi thay ro an ansing it all the same When liberty goes it is not the first or the second of the third, it waits for all the rest to go me it is the last When the papary of the old martyrs 18 faded utterly WAY when the large names of patriote are laughed at, when Cha laws of the free ate grudgingly permitted and the lawa fos informers and eples are sweet to the taste of the people, when the soul takes pleasure in a man's cruel inferiority, when it,de better to be a rogus in offics at a high salary than the poorest free mechanio of farmer with his hat unmoved fron his head and firm eyes and a sincere and a generous hearty or rather whên 11 life add all the souls of gen and wanah discharged from any part of the earth, then only shall the instinct of liberty be discharged from that part of the earth.

Eterðizo 281 Compréhension

}{xaba the following baBERES ORISIully and answer the questions)

listed below:

Mr. Sherlock Holmse, who was usually very late in the {mornings, save upon those not infrequent occasions when he was 1611 night, vas seated at the breakfast table. I stood upon the |hearth-rug and picked up the stick which our visitor had left

behind him the night before. It was a fine, thick piece of wood, Just under the head was a broad silver bänd, nearly an inch aoZORS

To Janes Mortiter, H.R.G.8., from his friends of the 0.C.B., WAB engraved upon itsepith the date "1684". It was just such a atiok as the o-fashioned family practitioner used to carry- 'dignified, enlid and reassuring. TUR

Watson, what do you make of it?)

Bolans was sitting with his back to me, and I had givền hìị

ign of my coounei fon

of did you know that I wábʻQulng?7;I believe või havs avi the back of your heka

I have at least. a well-polished. silver-plate

in front of no,” said he, “But,ztell me,

MAKE DI Our visitor a stick? Since we have

what to you

tas, to mise him and have no nation of his arrand

souvenir becomes of importance. Let me hear you TRO the man by an examination of it.

"I think,” said I. following so far as I could the methode of my companion, "that. Ir. Mortimer is a successful, elderly medical ban, well-ostogasd, since those who mow him give hío this merk of their appreciation."

""Good)" said Holmes. "Excellent

"I think 218o that the papbabiijay 18 za favout of his being country practitioner who does a great deal of his visiting on foot,

*Shy00?"

"Because this stick, though originally a very handsome one, has been so knooked about that I can hardly imagine a tow practitioner carrying it, The thick iron ferrule is worn dowas, so it is evident that he has dông à great amount of walking

"Perfeotly sound,” said Bozbas

"and then again, there is the 'friends of the C.0.8.• I should. guess that to be the Bodething Hunt the loos) hunt to whosa mambara he has possibly giver

loal assistance, and which has made hin a call

e

Holmes, puening as bound to say

good as to give

underrated Fourself luminous,

_____"Really, Katson, you szoel yourself, back his chair and ighting & digaratie. thất in all the accounts, which you have be of my own small achievements you have your own abilities. It may be that you but you are a conductos of light. Some people without possessing, lgenius have a remarkable power of stimulating it, I confessi"

my dear fellow, that I am very much in your debt."-

– He had never said as much before, and I must admit that hin worda gave me keen pleasure, for 1 bad often been annoyed by co | his indifference to my admiration and to the attempte whiôh 1 ( had made to give publicity to his methods. I was proud, too, to (think that I had so for mastered his system as to apply it in e way which earned his approval. He nav took the stick from my?? bands and amuined it for a few.minutes.", RAAMA **Interesting, though elementary." sala ne de be resurnen toi

Zenythang sacayed mer". I asked wita sode esir-ioportance. "I am afraid, my dear Nation that most of your conclusions were exzonequa. When I said that you stimulated me. I meant to be frank, that in onting your errors I was occasionally guided towards the truth,

1. In what circumstances would golmes be up early in the morning? 2. What attracted the attention of the author when he came

down for bread fast? :

why did the author say Holmes bad eyes in the back of his head?

How did Holmes know the, auznor was examining the stick?i who was the visitor?

6. Why did the author say the visitor vas a country practitioner?,

7. by whom and why was the stick given to the visitor nocording

to the author's opinion?

Did Foloss agree with the author të, gu9687

9. In what way did Hólmee aay the author was belorul to his?] 10. Explain the following:

practitioner

Bouvenir

habitually

notion

estrened

underrated

Terrand ferrul

The probability de in favour of his beinglafcountry

practitionez.

11ght

(made him e email uscentation an returna

Comments

Approved members can add comments, bookmarks, and private notes.

No comments yet.

Private Research Note

Private notes are available after approval.