高三英语comprehension内容摘要:

ree I’ll stay on the bus, fet about us Put the blame on me, if I don’t see A yellow ribbon round the old oak tree Bus driver, please look for me ‘Cause I couldn’t bear to see what I might see what I might see I’m really still in prison And my love she holds the key A simple yellow ribbon’s what I need to set me free I wrote and told her please Today the British drink more tea than any other nation — an average of 4 kilos a head per annum, or 1 650 cups of tea a year. They drink it in bed in the morning, round the fire on winter afternoons and out in the garden on sunny summer days. In times of trouble the kettle is quickly put on, the tea is made and forting cups of the warm brown liquid are passed round. Tea has even played its part in wars. When Gee III of England tried to make the American colonists pay import duty on tea, a group of Americans disguised as Red Indians dumped 342 chests of tea into the sea in Boston Harbour — the Boston Tea Party which led to the war of Independence. In another war the Duke of Wellington sensibly had a cup。
阅读剩余 0%
本站所有文章资讯、展示的图片素材等内容均为注册用户上传(部分报媒/平媒内容转载自网络合作媒体),仅供学习参考。 用户通过本站上传、发布的任何内容的知识产权归属用户或原始著作权人所有。如有侵犯您的版权,请联系我们反馈本站将在三个工作日内改正。