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人教PEP2024版小学英语五上 晨读材料(知识清单)
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这是一份人教PEP2024版小学英语五上 晨读材料(知识清单),共23页。
One pleasant day in summer an ant was hard at wrk getting fd, which she laid away fr winter.
The grasshpper flew dwn beside her, and laughed t see her at her til.
"I wuld nt wrk like that," he said. "Why d yu nt have sme fun, as I d?"
"And what is yur fun?" asked the ant.
"Oh, I dance!" replied the grasshpper.
When winter came, the ant had her cellar fall f fd.
The pr, shivering grasshpper had nthing t eat; s he came t the ant fr help.
"I danced the summer away, and nw I have nthing t eat," he said. "If I had wrked like yu, I need nt have been hungry."
SPRING HAS COME.
LESSON 12
PLAYING STORE
One day in May, when Mark had planned t g fishing, it began t rain.
Hw it rained! Nt patter, patter, patter; but pur, pur, pur.
Mark std at the windw, with his nse flattened against the pane. "Oh, dear!" he sighed, "Oh, dear!" But the wind blew s hard that nbdy heard.
"Oh, dear!" he began again. And then—hw can I tell it? —a tear as big as a raindrp rlled dwn the windw pane!
Yu may be sure Grandma saw that. Grandma always seemed t knw when anything went wrng with Mark.
"Why! why! why!" said Grandma, lking ver her spectacles. "Rain utside and rain inside. What shall we d?"
Mark turned away frm the windw, and brushed away a tear.
"There's n fun anywhere," he said, trying nt t cry. "Saturday, and a puring rain! What can I d?"
"Read yur new bk," said Grandma.
"I've read it."
"Read it again."
"I have."
"Spin yur tp."
"I've lst my string."
"Well, then," said Grandma, "this is just the time fr yu t play with me. Yu can keep a stre, and I will buy frm yu."
Mark liked t play with Grandma. He frgt the rain, and ran t find smething with which t build his stre.
He placed chairs in a rw fr a cunter. Upn the chairs he piled bxes, bks, dishes, papers, —anything he culd find.
Then he put a pencil ver his ear, tk a little bk in his hand, climbed upn his chair hrse, and was ff t take rders.
"Wha!" he cried, as he drve up t Grandma's dr in Playtwn.
He threw the reins ver the hrse's back, kncked at the dr, and stepped in when Grandma called "Cme!"
"Gd mrning, Mr. Jnes!" said Grandma. "Gd mrning, Mrs. Smith! Can I d anything fr yu t-day?"
"Yes, indeed. I want a great many things. Have yu any sugar?"
"Yes, I have very gd sugar." "Then yu may bring me five yards f sugar," said Grandma.
Mark almst smiled, but he was t plite t laugh.
"Excuse me," he said; "we d nt sell sugar by the yard."
"Dear me!" said Grandma. "Hw d yu sell sugar?"
"By the pund."
"T be sure! Please bring me ten punds f sugar and tw punds f vinegar."
"Oh! excuse me," said Mark; "we d nt sell vinegar by the pund."
"Dear me!" said Grandma, gravely. "Hw d yu sell it?"
"By the quart r galln.
"T be sure!" said Grandma. "Please bring me tw quarts f vinegar and tw quarts f eggs."
Mark fund it very hard t keep frm laughing nw. "We sell eggs by the dzen, Madam."
"T be sure! Then please bring me a dzen eggs and a dzen peanuts."
Nw Mark laughed. "O Grandma!" he said, "we sell peanuts by the pint!"
"Yes, yes, yes," said Grandma, knitting very fast, and lking ver her glasses. "Hw much I have t learn! Please bring me a pint f peanuts and a pint f blue ribbn."
Then Mark laughed till he cried.
Perhaps yu can tell why.
With that the sun came ut.
"Oh! Nw yu can run ut t play," said Grandma.
"It's fun t play with yu, Grandma. May I deliver yur gds the next time it rains?" asked Mark.
"With all my heart," said Grandma. "I think it is fun t play with yu. What shuld I d when it rained if yu were nt here t make a gd time fr me?
"Yur smile is better than sunshine fr Grandma."
"Then lk fr it next time it rains, Grandma!" said Mark.
LESSON 13
THE BOY AND THE RIVER
A by was sent t market with butter and cheese t sell.
On his way he came t a river, which ran happily ver the stnes, singing in the sunshine.
"What shall I d?" thught the by. "This is a very wide stream. I will wait until it has run past."
S he laid himself dwn n the bank. Hur after hur he waited. At last night came n.
Then he began t be afraid, and ran hme t his mther.
"Hw is this, my sn?" asked the gd ld mther, "Here are the butter and cheese yu tk t market. Why are they nt sld?"
"Why, mther," said the by, "I came t a river, which has been running all day. I waited fr it t run past; but when I left, it was still ging."
"And s it will run, my by," said the mther, "lng after yu and I are frgtten."
FOR STUDY
A brk is a stream. A river is a stream.
Where d streams begin? Where d they g?
What wrk d they d? Have yu ever seen a brk?
Where was it? What grew beside it? What grew in it?
What happens t a stne which yu thrw int the brk?
What happens t a leaf which yu thrw int the brk?
What wrk d rivers d? What rivers have yu seen?
LESSON 14
SARAH'S PENNY
Sarah was a little girl, nt quite fur years ld.
One day a lady came t visit Sarah's mther.
When she went away she said t Sarah, "Yu are a very gd little girl, my dear. Wuld yu like this penny t keep?"
Sarah held ut her little hand, and the lady gave her a cpper penny, almst as large as a silver dllar.
Sarah smiled, and said, "Thank yu," s sweetly that the lady again said, "Yu are a gd little girl."
Hw Sarah liked that penny! She tk it ut f her pcket a hundred times a day, lked at it, and put it back again.
She hid it under her pillw at night, and lked fr it as sn as she wke in the mrning.
One day Sarah was playing in the yard with Nellie White. They were making mud pies.
"I like t make mud pies," said Nellie; "but I d wish they were gd t eat. I wish they were candy. I wish I had sme candy this minute."
"I haven't any candy," said Sarah, "but I will buy sme fr yu. I have a big penny in my pcket."
"Then let us g and spend it," said Nellie. Away they went withut anther wrd. They did nt think t ask their mthers nr t wash their hands, which were siled with making mud pies.
Sn they came t the candy stre. A kind ld lady kept the stre in a little frnt rm in her huse.
Nellie and Sarah walked int the little frnt rm.
"We came fr sme candy," said the children.
"What kind f candy d yu want?" asked the kind ld lady.
Nellie and Sarah std befre the glass case, and pinted t the candy with their brwn fingers.
"I wuld like sme f that, and sme f that, and sme f that," said Nellie, pinting t the candy she liked best. "And I chse this, and this," said Sarah.
The candy was piled up n the glass fr the children. They stretched ut their little hands t take it.
"Oh, n!" said the lady. "Yu have nt paid me yet! Candy csts mney."
"Oh, I frgt!" said Sarah. She put her hand int her pcket, tk ut her precius penny, and laid it n the candy case.
"Dear me! dear me!" said the candy seller. "That isn't a gd cent. That is an English penny. Little English girls buy candy with pennies like that; but n ne uses that mney here."
Pr children! they lked at the heap f candy, and then at the useless penny.
Sarah began t cry. She thught she had dne smething wrng.
"Dear me! dear me!" said the kind ld lady. "Dn't cry ver a penny; that is a fine penny t keep, and here is sme candy t eat. Yu shall each have a bag full."
S she gave them sme candy in a paper bag. Sarah dried her tears, and tk back her precius penny.
The children went hme with happy faces, t tell their mthers the stry f the penny and the kind ld lady.
FOR STUDY
These are tw little English girls. Tell the stry.
THE LITTLE CUSTOMERS
LESSON 15
THE BOYS AND THE FROGS
A party f little bys were playing n the banks f a frg pnd, where they had been sailing their bats and wading in the water.
One by saw a frg sitting upn a lg near the edge f the water. Befre he thught, he threw a stne t see if he culd hit it.
Of curse the ther bys wanted t try, t; and sn the stnes flew thick and fast int the water.
"Pray, stp!" cried the frgs, which were trying t hide themselves under the bank. "Yu frget that what is fun fr yu is death t us."
LESSON 16
A CHILD'S PRAYER
Gd make my life a little light,
Within the wrld t glw;
A tiny flame that burns bright
Wherever I may g.
Gd make my life a little flwer,
That gives jy t all,
Cntent t blm in native bwer,
Althugh its place be small.
Gd make my life a little sng,
That cmfrts the sad;
That helps thers t be strng,
And makes the singer glad.
Gd make my life a little staff,
Wheren the weak may rest,
That s what health and strength I have
May serve my neighbrs best.
—M. BENTHAM-EDWARDS
LESSON 17
THE FOX AND THE CROW
Hear the stry f the fx and the crw.
A cal-black crw nce stle a piece f meat. She flew t a tree and held the meat in her beak.
A fx, wh saw her, wanted the meat fr himself, s he lked up int the tree and said, "Hw beautiful yu are, my friend! Yur feathers are fairer than the dve's.
"Is yur vice as sweet as yur frm is beautiful? If s, yu must be the queen f birds."
The crw was s happy in his praise that she pened her muth t shw hw she culd sing. Dwn fell the piece f meat.
The fx seized upn it and ran away.
FOR STUDY
1. Cpy twenty wrds f ne syllable.
2. Cpy ten wrds f tw syllables.
3. Find ten wrds which begin with m.
4. Write five wrds which rhyme with jump.
5. Make rhymes fr fly, g, run, make, tree, hen, man.
6. Make all the wrds yu can, using the letters in wnderfully.
7. Draw a picture f smething yu wuld like t eat.
8. Draw a picture f smething in the rm.
9. Cpy the stry f "The Kid and the Wlf".
10. Cpy wrds which begin with sh.
11. Draw a design fr a cver fr yur bk.
12. Draw pictures f the things yu wuld like fr Christmas presents.
13. Write the names f all the animals yu knw.
14. Cpy and learn these lines:
Thirty days hath[1] September,
April, June. and Nvember;
All the rest have thirty-ne,
Excepting February alne,
Which hath but twenty-eight, in fine,
Till leap year gives it twenty-nine.
————————————————————
[1] hath: has.
LESSON 18
FOOLISH FLIES
When the ck went int the pantry, she upset a pt f hney. The flies hurried t taste it befre she had time t clear it away. It tasted s gd that they came clser; but the sticky hney held their feet, and they culd nt get away.
They beat their tiny wings, but sn they, t, were held fast by the hney.
"What flish children we are!" they cried. "We die t pay fr a taste f hney."
LESSON 19
GOLDEN EGGS
Once upn a time there lived a wman wh wned a hen.
This was a wnderful hen, indeed, fr every day it laid a glden egg.
The wman culd hardly wait fr the new day t cme, she wanted the gld s badly.
At last she said t herself, "I will kill my hen and get the gld all at nce."
But when she had killed her hen, she fund her like all ther hens.
In her haste t becme rich, she had becme pr.
I am sure she wished she had nt been s greedy.
FOR STUDY
Shut yur bk, and tell the stry abut the Glden Eggs.
LESSON 20
THE DOG AND HIS IMAGE
Once upn a time, a dg fund a large piece f meat.
"Ah," he said t himself, "that is fine! I will take it hme and eat it by myself."
S he ran ff with it in his muth.
As he crssed the bridge ver the brk, he lked dwn int the water and saw his image.
He thught it was anther dg with anther piece f meat; s he jumped int the water t get it.
He drpped what he already had, and fund t late that there was nthing t gain. He was punished fr being s greedy.
FOR STUDY
These wrds are in the stry f Jack and Je. Find them in the stry. Cpy them. See if yu knw them all.
JACK AND JOE
twin brthers
large city
green grass
played marbles
arund the square
apple blssms
fresh air
beautiful
happened
cuntry
very glad
built a dam
sailed bats
new-mwn hay
pastures
berries
beans and peas
lettuce
rund and rsy
MISCHIEF BREWING.
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