《Canada-The True North》ppt34(6份)
- 资源简介:
人教新课标必修3 Unit 5 Canada-The True North Listening exercise 课件(共19张PPT)+素材 (6份打包)
U5 Listening.doc
U5 听力原文.doc
U5P5 Listening exercise.ppt
Using language-listening.mp3
Workbook-listening task.mp3
Workbook-listening.mp3
Using Language
WHAT IS A CANADIAN?
Listen again and fill in the blanks.
I am a Canadian and very ______ of my country. However, people sometimes don’t know what being Canadian really ______. People who come to Canada are _________ to be proud of their own culture and keep their own _______. Except for the Native Indians, everybody else who lives here came from another country or their ________ did. Canada is a _______ of many cultures and races. It is _____ we call a multicultural country.
We have ____ official languages, French and English. Even though we encourage people to keep their own customs, we ______ everyone to learn French or English in order to ____ in Canada. If you live in the province of Quebec, you are expected to speak _______. However, the Native Indians and the Inuit of Canada are still ______ to keep their languages alive. You can hear some of their languages in the names of ______ and _____ as well as cities. “Canada” means “village”. Toronto and Ottawa are also Native Indian names. There are ______ and television programmes, ___________ and magazines in over ___ different languages across Canada, and the Toronto city government offers help to people in ____ languages.
Many of our ____ cities have areas where people from the same culture live near each other - there might be a __________, a Little Italy, a Korea Town and so on. However, people whose _______ have lived in Canada for a long time are usually all ______ up. My own family is a mixture of English, Native Indian and French. My neighbour’s family is Chinese, German and _______!
When I say that I am proud to be a Canadian, maybe you can help me ______ what a Canadian is.
Workbook-Listening
A COMPARISON OF CHINA AND CANADA
Li Daiyu and Liu Qian’s Canadian friends asked them to tell them something about China. The two cousins decided to present a short report together, comparing China and Canada.
LD = Li Daiyu LQ = Liu Qian
Listen again and fill in the blanks.
LD: China is a very large country. It’s about _________ square kilometres in area, and ______ kilometres from east to west. It’s so big that it’s difficult to ________. Perhaps it’s easier to compare it to ________.
LQ: China has many of the _________ mountains in the world. They’Using Language
WHAT IS A CANADIAN?
Listen again and fill in the blanks.
I am a Canadian and very proud of my country. However, people sometimes don’t know what being Canadian really means. People who come to Canada are encouraged to be proud of their own culture and keep their own customs. Except for the Native Indians, everybody else who lives here came from another country or their ancestors did. Canada is a mixture of many cultures and races. It is what we call a multicultural country.
We have two official languages, French and English. Even though we encourage people to keep their own customs, we expect everyone to learn French or English in order to live in Canada. If you live in the province of Quebec, you are expected to speak French. However, the Native Indians and the Inuit of Canada are still trying to keep their languages alive. You can hear some of their languages in the names of rivers and lakes as well as cities. “Canada” means “village”. Toronto and Ottawa are also Native Indian names. There are radio and television programmes, newspapers and magazines in over 80 different languages across Canada, and the Toronto city government offers help to people in 70 languages.
Many of our big cities have areas where people from the same culture live near each other - there might be a Chinatown, a Little Italy, a Korea Town and so on. However, people whose families have lived in Canada for a long time are usually all mixed up. My own family is a mixture of English, Native Indian and French. My neighbour’s family is Chinese, German and African!
When I say that I am proud to be a Canadian, maybe you can help me decide what a Canadian is.
Workbook-Listening
A COMPARISON OF CHINA AND CANADA
Li Daiyu and Liu Qian’s Canadian friends asked them to tell them something about China. The two cousins decided to present a short report together, comparing China and Canada.
LD = Li Daiyu LQ = Liu Qian
Listen again and fill in the blanks.
LD: China is a very large country. It’s about 9,600,000 square kilometres in area, and 5,000 kilometres from east to west. It’s so big that it’s difficult to describe. Perhaps it’s easier to compare it to Canada.
LQ: China has many of the highest mountains in the world. They’re in the west of the country, as they are in Canada, but China has more mountains where many great rivers begin.
LD: China has two countries to the north, Mongolia and Russia, unlike Canada, which has no countries to its north, but only the Arctic ice and snow.
LQ: China has fourteen neighbouring countries. Its borders are over 20,000 kilometres long. Canada, however, has only one neighbour, the USA to the south. Both Canadians and Americans speak English, but it’s not so easy for Chinese to talk with their neighbours, even if they live close to the border.
LD: China’s Gobi Desert, in the northwest of China, is very special. There is nothing similar in Canada. In winter and spring sometimes the cold air blows dust southward from the Gobi Desert to the northern parts of China. Even the Great Wall cannot t the dust.
LQ: Both China and Canada have long rivers and many lakes as well as busy port cities on the Pacific Ocean. China is famous for the third longest river in the world, the Changjiang River, and Canada has the famous Niagara Falls.
LD: Canada, however, has nothing like China’s southern island of Hainan. While it is snowing and freezing in Mohe in north China on the Chinese-Russia