内容正文:
Unit 2 Healthy Lifestyle Learning about Language课时练习(原卷版)
1、 根据首字母完成句子。
1. We all need to look for ways to reduce our carbon f .
2. The living conditions there severely r the children’s freedom to play.
3. She has expressed her dissatisfaction with this aspect of the p .
4. The problem at present is how to get enough food to s life.
5. The ice will m when the sun shines on it.
6. government has pledged to clean up industrial carbon e .
2、 阅读理解。
Conflict is on the menu tonight at the cafe La Chope. This evening, as on every Thursday night, psychologist Maud Leanne is leading two of France's favorite pastimes, coffee drinking and the “talking cure”. Here they are learning to get in touch with their true feelings. It isn't always easy. The customers — some thirty Parisians who pay just under $2 (plus drinks) per session — are quick to intellectualize (高谈阔论), slow to open up and connect. “You are forbidden to say ‘one feels,’ or ‘people think’,”Leanne told them.“Say ‘I think,’ ‘Think me’.”
A cafe society where no intellectualizing is allowed? It couldn't seem more unFrench. But Leanne’s psychology cafe(精神咖啡馆) is about more than knowing oneself: It's trying to help the city's troubled neighborhood cafes. Over the years, Parisian cafes have fallen victim to changes in the French lifestyle — longer working hours, a fast food boom and a younger generation's desire to spend more time at home. Dozens of new theme cafes appear to change the situation. Cafes focused around psychology, history, and engineering are catching on, filling tables well into the evening.
The city's “psychology cafes”, which offer great comfort, are among the most popular places. Middle-aged homemakers, retirees, and the unemployed come to such cafes to talk about lover, anger, and dreams with a psychologist. And they come to Leanne’s group just to learn to say what they feel. “There's a strong need in Paris for communication,” says Maurice Frisch, a cafe La Chope regu