财政农业综合开发项目(精品)合作社玉米制种基地建设项目可行性研究报告定稿(编辑修改稿)内容摘要:

s a good pl ace to vi sit. If you do wel there, Ki ng Arthur m ay choose you to fi ght i n the bi g jousti ng tournam ent. Do you li ke anim als? Then vi sit the farm are, and learn how peopl e i n anci ent England rantheir farms and took care of thei r anim al s. To enter a worl d of fantasy about ancient Engl and, e to Camel ot Park! Fut uroscope – exci tement and l earning Last week I took a journey deep into space, to the end of the sol ar system , and was pul ed i nto a black hol e. Then I took a trp to Brazi l and experinced survi ving an ai rplane crash in the jungl e. After that, began with a report on the excel l ent nodl e harvest i n the south Swi tzerl and. The programm e mentioned two reasons for the good crop: an unusual y warm wi nter and the disappearance of the i nsect that attacked the noodl e crop every year. The reporter showed m any noodle trees wi th the farm ers pul i ng noodl es off them and putti ng them i nto baskets. The peopl e watchi ng were tol d that they m ay not have heard of noodl es from thi s part of the worl d because noodl es were grown as part of sm al fam il y busi nesses. The programm e m akers m akers reali zed that peopl e m ight wonder why noodl es were al ways the sam e si ze so that they explai ned that “i t was the resul t of many years’ pati ent research wi th the tree to produce noodl es of exactl y the sam e length. ” But even so they expl ai ned, the li fe of a noodl e farm er was not easy. “The l ast two weeks of March are an anxi ous tim e for noodl e farm ers. There i s al ways a chance of very col d weather spoil i ng thei r crop. Then it i s di ffi cul t for them to get top prices on the m arkets.” Many peopl e i n Engl and bel i eved thi s story. They rang the BBC to fi nd out hoe to grow thei r own noodl e tree. They were tol d to “pl ace a pi ece of nodl e i n a ti n of tom ato sauce and hope for the best. ” Thi s m ay seem very si l y, but i n the 1950s very few Bri ti sh people travel ed aboard for thei r holi days and even fewer of them ate noodl es. So i t seem ed possi bl e to im agi ne that noodl es grew on tree li ke apples, pears and nuts. Peopl e al so trusted the Panoram a programm e for i ts careful research and seri ous i nform ati on. So they were shocked to fi nd the next day that they had al l bel i eved an April Fool’s joke. Even today the report of the noodl e harvest i s rem em bered as one of the best April Fool’s jokes ever! Unit 4 Com muni cati on: No Probl em ? Yesterday, another student and I, representi ng our uni versi ty’s student associ ati on, went to the Capi tal Internati onal Ai rport to meet thi s year’s internati onal students. They were i ng to study at Bei ji ng Uni versi ty. We shoul d take them fi rst to their dormi tori es and then to the student cantee. After an hour of wai ting for thei r fli ght to arri ve, I saw several young peopl e enter the wai ti ng area l ooki ng around curi ousl y. I stood for a mi nute watchi ng them and then went to greet them. The fi rst person to arri ve was Tony Garci a from Col um bi a, cl osel y fol l owed by Juli a Sm ith from Bri tain. After I m et them and then i ntroduced them to each other, I was very surpri sed. Tony approached Jul i a, touched her shoulder and ki ssed her on the cheek! She stepped back appeari ng surpri sed and put up her hands, as i f in defence. I guessed that there was probabl y a m ajor mi sunderstandi ng. Then Aki ra N agata from Japan cam e i n smi li ng, together wi th Gee Cook from Canada. As they were i ntroduced, Gee reached hi s hand out to the Japanese student. Just at that m om ent, however, Aki ra bowed so hi s nose touched Gee’s m ovi ng hand. They both apol ogi zed another cul tural mi stake! Ahm ed Azi z, another internati onal student, was from Jordan. When we m et yesterday, he m oved very cl ose to m e as I i ntroduced myself. I m oved back a bi t, but he cam e cl oser to ask a questi on and then shook m y hand. When Darl ene Coul on from France came dashi ng through the door, she recogni zed Tony Garci a39。 s smi li ng face. They shook hand and then ki sed each other twi ce on each cheek, si nce that i s the France custom when adults m eet peopl e they know. Ahmed Aziz, on the contrary, sim pl y nodded at the gi rls. Men from Mi ddl e Eastern and other Musl im countri es wil l often stand qui te cl ose to other m en to tal k but wi l usual y not touch wom en. As I get to know m ore internati onal friends, I l earn m ore about thi s cultural “body l anguage”. Not al cul tures greet each other the sam e way, nor are they fortabl e in the sam e way wi th touchi ng or di stance between peopl e. In the sam e way that people m uni cate wi th spoken l anguage, they al so express their feeli ngs usi ng unspoken “l anguage” through physi cal di stance, acti ons or posture. Engli sh peopl e, for exam pl e, do not usual y stand very cl ose to others or touch strangers as soon as they m eet. H owever, peopl e from pl aces l i ke Spai n, Ital y or South Am erican countri es approach others cl osel y and are more l ikel y to touch them . Most peopl e around the worl d now greet each other by shaki ng hands, but som e cul tures use other greeti ngs as wel , such as the Japanese, who prefer to bow. These acti ons are not good or bad, but are sim pl y ways i n whi ch cultures have devel oped. I have seen, however, that cul tural custom s for body l anguage are very general not al m em bers of a cul ture behave i n the sam e way. In general, though, studyi ng i nternati onal custom s can certai nl y hel p avoi d diffi cul ti es i n today’s worl d cul tural crossroads! Showi ng our feel i ngs Body l anguage i s one of the m ost powerful s of m uni cati on, often even m ore powerful than spoken l anguage. Peopl e around the worl d show al l knds of feeli ngs, wi shes and atti tudes that they mi ght never speak al oud. It i s possi bl e to “read” others aroun。
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