Mother's Day
Instruction!
Step 2: You will listen to an article about
Mother's Day. The article is about 5
minutes long. Listen only, and don't
worry about understanding everything.
Step 3: Read the article. Check in your dictionary any unknown
words. Now listen again. Can you understand more?
Step 4: Listen! Listen!
Listen! Listen to the article on
the train or in your free time. Each
time you listen, you will slowly improve!
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MOTHER'S
DAY
Mother's Day is a holiday to
honor and give thanks to our mothers.
People 1.celebrate the
day all over the world. In France, a
flower-shaped cake is part of the family meal.
In the U.S., most restaurants 2.claim this day as their busiest all year. In many other countries, carnations have a
special significance.
Although the holiday is very
commercial, it's not a Hallmark holiday.
In other words, it's not a holiday created by businesses to make money. Mother's Day actually has its origins long
ago in ancient Greece. Rome, which
copied much of the Greek way of life, had a similar holiday. So did other countries around the
Mediterranean Sea. Unlike today, though,
people 3.didn't honor their
own mothers. People honored the mother
of the gods, Rhea. After the Roman
Empire fell, Mother's Day disappeared.
So how did our modern version
of the holiday come about?
Many believe that Mother's Day
as we know it originated from the British holiday called "Mothering
Sunday." All through the Middle
Ages in Europe, people brought gifts to their home (or mother) church on the
fourth Sunday of Lent. Then in the 16th
century, people 4.began to
live greater and greater distances from where they had been born. About this time, it also became increasingly
common for children to work far from home as servants and apprentices. They would often 5.need the day off to make the journey, which also
allowed them to visit their mothers and family.
They would 6.bring a
cake and pick wildflowers to give as presents, too. From here the holiday was born.
Americans have had a great
influence on the holiday, too. A woman
named Julia Ward Howe 7.brought the
holiday from Britain in the 1870s. She
8.saw it as a way to honor mothers, of course, but also as a way to honor and
promote peace. Then in the early 1900s,
another woman campaigned for a national holiday for mothers. Her name was Anna Jarvis, and she 8. Sent letters to
business leaders, clergy members, women's clubs, and anyone else who might
help. Within a few years, forty-six
States celebrated the holiday. In 1914,
Mother's Day 9.became
an official holiday, and was quickly commercialized with cards, carnation
flowers, and chocolate candy. Anna
Jarvis "wanted it to be a day of sentiment, not profit." She also called greeting cards "a poor
excuse for the letter you are too lazy to write!"
Different countries celebrate
the holiday on different days. Different
countries 10.have adopted
different traditions. But one thing
remains the same everywhere: it's a day to say to your mom, "Thank
you."
Please send the answer to my
email warmoko@gmail.com subject listening
Before giving the exercises, you should present the lesson first. it's good exercise and it should be specified the answer (only noun,adj,or adverb,etc)
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