Unit OnePracticePassage 1: 1. C 2. APassage 2: 1. B 2. BPassage 3: 1. C 2. A 3. BPassage 4: 1. D 2. A 3. CReading Selection OneI. 1. T; 2. T; 3. F; 4. T; 5. T; 6. F; 7. T; 8. FII. 1. resulting in someones death2. so handsome that they attract everybody 3. very important4. adjusted in size 5. an exclamation of surprise; how terrible6. to pull7. helpful pieces of advice 8. to use9. very slightly10. not deep; superficial Reading Selection TwoI. Communication Patterns of Men and WomenMenWomenTalk less at home Talk more in the familyBonds between men are based on doing things togetherIntimacy is the fabric of relationship and talk is the thread from which it is wovenWhen talking, men sit at angles to each other and look elsewhere in the room, periodically glancing at each other When talking, women face each other directlyTend to jump from topic to topicFocus on one topicMen do not want to be pushed aroundTheir greatest fear is being pushed awayII. DBBABCIII.BCACD ADBVocabulary PracticeI.communication patterns closeness maintain interactive independence conversation relationships status misunderstandingII. p20 Make SentencesFor your reference only1.Those disabled people are particularly sensitive about the address he gave them.2.There is a widespread report about the expectations of success from the public.3.The issue discussed at the meeting will influence their social status.4.The social structure of peer interactions influences the development of both genders.5.She expects her husband to be an improved version of a best friend and this expectation becomes even more intense these days.III.1. improvement comes naturally2. habitual way of behavior3. attuned to each other4. eyes anchored on each others face5. jump from topic to topic6. extend a few turnsVocabulary ExpansionII.1.-d, 2-c, 3-a, 4-b, 5-j, 6-f, 7-i, 8-e, 9-g, 10-hGuided Writing and TranslationI. 1. An expository description2. From the general to the particularFrom the exterior to interiorFrom the most striking to the less noticeableFrom the center to the left and then to the rightII. 1. Feelings: secure dependence, abrupt end, world of strangers 2. Details: stuffed animals, stereos, etc., parting hugs and kisses TranslationMany a young person tells me he wants to be a writer. I always encourage such people, but I also explain that theres a big difference between being a writer and writing. In most cases, these individuals are dreaming of wealth and fame, not the long hours alone at a typewriter. Youve got to want to write, I say to them, not want to be a writer.The reality is that writing is a lonely, private and poor-paying affair. For every writer kissed by fortune there are thousands more whose longing is never rewarded.Part D: Literary AppreciationEmily Dickinson: The Soul Selects Her Own SocietyFor your reference only 1. Contrasting images: the Chariots, an Emperor vs. her low Gate, her Mat These contrasting images illustrate the great difference of the social status between the poet herself and those in the outside world, and meanwhile indicate the poet s disregard of social courtesy and routine obligation.an ample nation vs. OneThis pair of contrasting images presents a lonely yet self-sufficient human soul.2. Yes. It is conveyed especially from the words the poet chose in lines 3-4 and lines 9-12.3. The poet may use thedivine Majority to claim her equality with those most powerful in the outer world-they may be emperors, but she is divine Majority, and at the same time she asserts her difference from them.4. Because she has already selected her own Society, which is theOneshe chose from an ample nation . So, no morehere stands for those from the outside world,an ample nation.5. Yes. The poem challenges our ideas about what constitutes a social group. Consequently, the enclosed space of the souls house is more than adequate for a queenly life, and ambassadors of the external worlds glories, even emperors, can easily be scorned.6. It represents her dwelling as not a grand palace but rather a simple house.7. Yes.No. Theample nationis the outside world while thedivine majority is her inner world.8.ValvesandStone .9. Valves permit the flow of whatever they regulate in one direction only: here, from outside to inside. Either of the halves of a double door or any of the leaves of a folding door are valves. Valves seen as doors reinforce the poems house imagery, while their association with stone makes the walls separating soul from world so solid as to be, perhaps, prison-like.Prison-like because they allow no escape from the kinds of conflict, the kinds of terror, even, that must occur within.A BirdFor your reference only 1)Personification. Bit and ate are the words which are employed to signify the device as birds eat everything raw.2)We see verbs ate, bit in the first stanza and drank, hopped in the second stanza. These words describe the birds quick and irregular movement on the ground.3)Dickinson used both simile and metaphor to depict the rapid 。