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Does the teacher approve it? Rating or not? Winter vacation homework is generally done at a glance, and sometimes teachers don't look at it.
You can just copy the book. Then add some comments, how well this is written, what is borrowed to metaphor people, written with feelings, good words just write a little bit. Our homework was 10 essays, and I finished one in 15 minutes just after the holidays.
The teacher doesn't even read it, as long as the number of words is enough.
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1. "Insects" is a book about the life of insects, involving more than 100 kinds of insects such as dung beetles, ants, and Sisyphus insects. In this world, there are about 1 million species of insects known to mankind, accounting for 5 6 of all known animal speciesAnd there are still millions of unknown insects that are still waiting to be discovered and understood. In the mid-19th century, while teaching at school, Fabre and his children observed various insects in the fields, and named and eulogized them.
2. "Insects" is divided into ten volumes, each volume is divided into 17 and 25 chapters, each chapter describes the life of one or several insects in detail and profoundly, and at the same time includes some biographical articles that tell about experiences and recall the past. In the book, the author describes the tireless efforts of small insects to survive and reproduce by the rules of nature.
3. Based on his lifelong experience and achievements in insect research, the author looks at insect nature with humanization, reflects social life with insect nature, focuses on the external morphology and biological habits of insects he observes and researches, and truly records the instincts, habits, labor, and death of several common insects.
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Mainly talking about the big peacock butterfly.
The main content of the Great Peacock Butterfly in "Insects": The Great Peacock Butterfly is the largest butterfly in Europe, wearing a maroon velvet coat and a white fur tie. The wings are full of gray and white spots, a pale white zigzag line passes through it, the periphery of the line is soot gray, and the wings have a round spot, like a big black eye, and the pupils are flashing with black, white, maroon, and cockscomb red rainbow-like unpredictable colors.
They make a living by eating apricot leaves.
The peacock moth's only purpose in life is to find a mate, and for this purpose they have inherited a very special gift: no matter how far the road is, how dark the road is, and how many obstacles there are in the way, it can always find its object. There are about two or three nights in their lifetime that they can spend several hours a night looking for their object.
If they can't find the object during this time. Then its life will also be over. Peacock moths don't know how to eat.
When many moths flew around the garden in swarms and sucked the honey, it never thought of eating. In this way, of course, its lifespan will not be long, it is only two or three days, and it will only have time to find a partner.
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The main content of "Insects" is that small insects abide by the rules of nature and make unremitting efforts to survive and reproduce. During Fabre's busy and fulfilling life, he spent a lot of effort studying insects, and finally discovered many unknown secrets of the insect world. In the text, Fabre uses many anthropomorphic techniques to make the insects vivid and interesting, and they are lovely.
Fabre uses insect nature to care for human nature, and uses insect nature to reflect on social life. The book profoundly depicts the lives of one or several insects: spiders, bees, praying mantises, scorpions, cicadas, beetles, crickets, and flies.
In an easy-to-understand, vivid and interesting manner, he introduces the external morphology and biological habits of the insects he has observed and studied in simple terms, and truly records the instincts, habits, labor, and death of several common insects, which not only expresses the author's love and respect for life and nature, but also disseminates scientific knowledge, and embodies the author's meticulous observation and tireless spirit of scientific exploration.
The Insect Chronicle is a book in which Fabre spent his life and energy observing in detail the lives of insects and the struggles they fought for their survival and reproduction. Each of the 10 volumes contains several chapters, each of which depicts in detail and profoundly the life of one or more insects: spiders, bees, praying mantises, scorpions, and cicadas. >>>More
It integrates the author's lifelong research results and life insights in a furnace, with human nature to care for insect nature, and use insect nature to reflect on social life, the insect world into a beautiful text for human beings to obtain knowledge, interest, beauty and thoughts, this book is faithful to the overall style and expression characteristics of the original French book as the selection principle, so that readers from the world can appreciate the daily life habits and characteristics of insects for the first time. "Insects" is a book in which Fabre spent his life and energy observing in detail the lives of insects and the struggles they fought for their livelihood and reproduction. Each of the 10 volumes of the Book of Insects contains several chapters, each of which depicts the life of one or more insects in detail and profoundly >>>More
Insect 1 Chapter 37 is summarizedEach volume contains several chapters, each detailing the life of one or more insects: spiders, bees, praying mantises, scorpions, cicadas, beetles, crickets. >>>More
Extraction code: R5my Souvenirs Entomologiques, also known as "The World of Insects", "Insect Story", "Entomological Notes" or "The Story of Insects", is a long biological work written by French entomologist and writer Jean-Henri Casimir Fabre, a long work of biology in ten volumes. The first volume was first published in 1879 and the entire book in 1907. >>>More
Chapter 5: The Vespa is documented.
The hexagonal hive was built, and how geometrically accurate its calculations were. >>>More