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The elephant said to himself that there was something really wrong with my ears. This can be a full stop or an exclamation point, but it is a kind of self-talk that is a discourse.
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1.One day, the elephant was walking slowly on the road and met a little rabbit, what did the little rabbit say about the elephant's ears? Name students.
Can you imagine the demeanor and mental activity of a bunny? Grasp words such as "huh" and "must be sick". Read the tone of curiosity and surprise.
Named to read female students).
2.What happens to an elephant when a baby rabbit says elephant ears? Guided reading aloud repeatedly. And what did he think? (Confident) (boys read).
3.The elephant left the rabbit and met the lamb again, and the lamb said— (reading the questioning tone).
4.As the elephant continues to walk, who does it meet? What will they say to the elephants? Divide into small groups ** the language of fawns, ponies, and mice. Hints, you can start with demeanor, movements, mental activities, etc.
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This elephant is talking to himself, and a sentence is a statement of fact, so I think this sentence should be followed by a full stop.
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I think the elephant may be talking to himself, and this may be really wrong, and the words with the elephant can show that the elephant is skeptical of himself.
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The elephant naturally said to himself, "Is there really something wrong with my ears?" It should be a question mark. Because the elephant is asking itself rhetorically, it should be a question mark.
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The elephant naturally said to himself that there was really something wrong with my ears, and under normal circumstances, the description of the ears should be a full stop under normal circumstances.
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The elephant said to himself, "There's really something wrong with my ears, and there should be a question mark behind it."
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Sister-in-law, Lan Yan said to herself that there is really something wrong with my ears, it should be a question mark.
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The elephant naturally said to himself, "Is there really something wrong with my ears?" What's in the back? Elephants flood everywhere? But there was nothing wrong with her, her hearing was good.
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The elephant said to himself, "Is there really something wrong with my ears?" ”
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It understands that its ears are also useful.
"Elephant's Ears" tells that an elephant has ears that are pulled down, and the ears of rabbits, lambs, fawns, ponies and other animals are erected, and it thinks that it is sick, so it uses bamboo poles to erect its ears, but often small insects fly into its ears, making itself very uncomfortable. He chose to put his ears down, knowing that his ears were also useful.
This article tells us: when we meet some other people's different ways of looking at the leakage, we should stick to our own hearts, but also use the correct attitude to treat others to give their own views, don't blindly follow the trend, what is suitable for others is not necessarily suitable for themselves, we must learn to understand ourselves, we can not blindly imitate others, and it is best to start and lose what suits us.
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Meaning: others are others, oneself is oneself, you must look at other people's views correctly, and don't blindly change yourself.
Solution: In general, examining the understanding of a sentence in the original text is actually the central idea of this article. Therefore, the meaning of this sentence is the central idea of the article: look at other people's opinions correctly, and don't blindly change yourself.
Source: The text "Elephant's Ear" in Lesson 19 of the People's Education Edition Primary School Chinese Second Grade Volume II (2018 Spring Revised Edition).
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The teacher asked a question: What does an elephant's left ear look like? If you don't get it right, reflect on it.
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The teacher asked the following question: What does the left ear of an elephant look like? You can't think of the answer!