2017--2018学年人教版必修三Unit 5 Canada-The True North Using language课时作业
2017--2018学年人教版必修三Unit 5 Canada-The True North Using language课时作业第3页

  4.When Americans began making their own hot dogs, they ________.

  A.learned from each other

  B.made hot dogs that looked very interesting

  C.developed their own style of hot dogs

  D.asked for advice from Nathan's Famous

  5.Which might NOT be considered to find the best American hot dogs?

  A.The whole experience.

  B.The cost of the hot dog.

  C.Reviews on the Internet.

  D.Whether it has a unique style.

  6.Ben's Chili Bowl in Washington, D. C. is most probably ________.

  A.popular B.expensive

  C.big D.new

  7.The underlined part in Paragraph 4 means some famous stands ________.

  A.didn't cut their hot dogs

  B.failed to appear on the list

  C.weren't really that famous

  D.didn't change their hot dogs

  C

  

  After the semester, I'm finally on the winter break. This means full access to my parents' Amazon Prime account, guilt­free Netflixing, Mom's home­cooked meals, and my favorite thing - sleeping.

  As college students, we sacrifice our mental and physical wellness in exchange for telling proudly "I just pulled an all­nighter". I mean that I get it. It came to me that the longest period of my life was the finals week. I saw my peers posting pictures of sunrise from the windows of our campus libraries. But it wasn't just finals week when I saw this pattern. Throughout the semester, answers to my questions of "How are you?" typically ranged from "Busy!" to "Surviving!" to "Just holding up!"

Unfortunately, we link this fast­paced habit to success, but this go­go­go thought is damaging us. Success and wellness aren't mutually exclusive (排外的). At least, they shouldn't be that. They should coexist, and the more we take care of our wellness, the more successful we can be.