内容正文:
M11U1
Lingling: We're going to have some ___________(俄罗斯的) teachers at school tomorrow, and I'm welcoming the __________(观光者). How do I do that?
Betty: Lingling, you know, in __________(俄罗斯), people usually ________(吻) three __________(time), left, right, left.
Lingling: What! No. I didn't know that. We Chinese often shake __________ (hand) and _________(微笑) when we meet __________(visit), and sometimes we ________(点) our heads. But we never ________(亲吻). Only parents and children do that.
Betty: That's because people do different things in different _____________ (country).
Lingling: So what do people in the US usually do when they meet?
Betty: In the US some people __________(摇晃) hands, and some kiss or __________(拥抱) ________(各个) other. In _________(印度) people put their hands ___________ (一起) and __________(点头) their heads. And do you know what Maori people in New Zealand do when they meet?
Lingling: No. What do they do?
Betty: They ___________(触摸) _________(nose)!
M11U2
Body language around the world
_______ Wang Lingling
Our new ___________(外国的) students are going to arrive very soon, and here are some ways ______________(welcome) them.
How close do you stand when you talk to a friend? You can stand close ______ people in the Middle East but don't stand too close _____ North Americans! Give them more _____________(个人的) space.
How about __________(touch) people? Chinese girls often walk arm ______ arm with their friends. South Americans sometimes _________(握着) your arm when they talk to you, so you can't _________(移动) away! But in ___________ (不列颠) many people don't like other people _____________(touch) them _______all.
Do you look at people when you talk? In some places, it isn't __________ (礼貌的) ___________(look) at people when you talk, but in other countries it isn't __________ (礼貌的) ___________(look) _____________(某处) else. In ___________(British) and the US, people usually look at each other when they talk.
And how do you say go