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Crickets live underground.
Details People's Education Edition: Compulsory Education Curriculum Standard Experimental Textbook Chinese Fourth Grade Volume I Lesson 7).
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People's Education Edition: Compulsory Education Curriculum Standard Experimental Textbook Chinese Fourth Grade Volume I Lesson 7.
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Grade 4 Volume I Lesson 7).
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Summary. 1. Why does the cricket's home refuse to be at peace with the encounter?
2. Why should crickets have good drainage and mild sunlight in their homes?
3. Why do crickets make a house in October?
4. Can cricket accommodation be considered a great project?
5. Why are people surprised by the fruits of cricket's labor?
Read about what are the problems with the dwelling of crickets.
1. Why does the cricket's home refuse to be at peace with the encounter? 2. Why should crickets have good drainage and mild sunlight in their homes? 3. Why do crickets make a house in October?
4. Can cricket accommodation be considered a great project? 5. Why are people surprised by the fruits of cricket's labor?
Hope mine can help you.
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"The Cricket's Dwelling" is a fourth-grade text.
The Cricket's Dwelling" is an excerpt from the French entomologist Fabre's "Insects".
The Cricket's Residence describes the characteristics of the cricket house and the process of building the house, and praises the cricket's spirit of enduring hardships and standing hard work under harsh conditions.
Appreciation. The full-text narrative is true and accurate, which is inseparable from the author's continuous and meticulous observations. When introducing the characteristics of the cricket dwelling, "sloping tunnel", "curved along the terrain", "up to nine inches deep, one finger wide", and "a clump of grass is half-hidden", these sentences are very accurate to describe the depth and width of the dwelling, as well as the characteristics of easy drainage, concealment and safety.
When introducing how crickets build houses, the author carefully describes a series of actions such as "picking, moving, stepping, pushing, and laying", and accurately describes how tools such as "front feet, pliers, hind feet, and hind legs" work in a coordinated and orderly manner.
In order to observe the crickets building houses, the author "watched them for two hours in a row", from "October" and "the early cold of autumn" to "winter". Reading between the lines, we can feel that the author's observations are rigorous, serious, persevering, and meticulous.
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The Dwelling of the Crickets is an observation diary written by the famous French scientist Fabre in the 19th century. In the text, Fabre describes the characteristics of the cricket dwellings he has observed and the talent of crickets for building dwellings. The author also compares crickets with most other insects, saying that crickets are characterized by their refusal to "go with the flow" and "not to use ready-made burrows", but to "dig little by little on their own".
From the characteristics of the dwelling to the tools of excavation, the author has become a great contrast between "great engineering" and "weak tools", and he can't help but be surprised and admired by the fruits of his labor!
Reading between the lines of the text, I can feel that the author discovered the unknown secrets of this insect world through long-term and in-depth observation.
I studied this text, and I felt that the cricket is a very intelligent little insect that can create a comfortable environment for itself and protect itself, and its tools are so weak, but it can create such a beautiful home!
I also think Fabre is a discovery, careful, and persistent scientist, and I want to learn from him! In the future, we should always pay attention to the little things in our lives.
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"The Cricket's Dwelling" asks five questions:
1. Why does the cricket's home refuse to be at peace with the encounter?
2. Why should crickets have good drainage and mild sunlight in their homes?
3. Why do crickets make a house in October?
4. Can cricket accommodation be considered a great project?
5. Why are people surprised by the fruits of cricket's labor?
The Dwelling of the Crickets is an excerpt from The Book of Insects, written by the famous French entomologist Jean-Henri Casimir Fabre (1823-1915). The article is included in the 7th lesson of the fourth grade of the primary school Chinese of the People's Education Edition, and the 26th lesson of the second volume of the sixth grade of the Jijiao edition of the primary school Chinese, which mainly introduces the characteristics and construction process of the cricket cave.
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The dwellings of the crickets usually have a sloping tunnel, about nine inches deep and a finger's width wide, which follows the terrain and curves along the top; The door of the house is half-covered with a grass door, which is not only conducive to drainage, but also conducive to the penetration of sunlight; A flat platform was specially built at the entrance for playing the harp; The interior of the house is clean and dry, and the walls are smooth and level, and the cleaning is well organized.
In general, the dwellings are very simple, clean, dry and hygienic. The tools used by crickets to dig are so simple, and this house is truly a great project.
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I first chose a sunny and dry lawn on the hillside, which would be good for drainage and allow me to enjoy the sun. I didn't have to ask for help, so I used my forefoot to pick up the dirt, then used pliers to remove the larger clods, and the two rows of saws on my hind legs helped me push the dirt to the back. Then I spread the soil at an angle to form a corridor so that even if there were showers, my home would not get water.
It was October, a crisp autumn season, and when I felt tired, I would rest for a while in front of the unfinished house--- sharpen my knife and cut wood!
A winding hallway leads to my living room, which is three fingers long and two fingers wide, with very smooth groomed walls and gravel floors. The living room is not particularly furnished as I like simplicity, cleanliness, dryness and hygiene.
There is a clump of grass growing at the mouth of the corridor, which happens to be half-covered in the corridor, just like a door, I go to the outside to eat grass farther away, but I never touch this clump of grass, hehe, as the saying goes: rabbits don't eat the grass by the nest! The slightly sloping doorway, carefully swept by me, is very flat, my friends love this platform, and when I play the piano on the platform, my friends come to respond.
My life is so comfortable, I love my house, you have your own favorite home!
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