English folk songs and square dance songs

Night arrival, from (home), from (unit? From (street), people came in unison and gathered in the square to take part in the annual folk festival.

The fill-in-the-blank part of this sentence is the place, and where it comes from is to fill in several different places. Such as home, work, street and so on.

When making a sentence, pay attention to the format of the sentence for the first time, and then imitate it according to the format of the imitation sentence. When copying, we should pay attention to the use of vocabulary, the format is very strict, and the number of words can not be too much or too little, just like couplets, a few words in a place are just a few words.

Extended data:

Using adjectives to make sentences can describe the action, expression or shape of things in detail. For example, make a sentence with "silence": "The classroom is silent, no one laughs and frolics anymore, no one walks around at will, and even the atmosphere is afraid to go out." This makes "silence" concrete.

Some adjectives can be combined with a pair of antonyms or positive and negative words, and strong contrast can play a better role in expression. For example, use "glory" to make a sentence: "It is shameful to talk about hygiene and glory." Comparing "honor" and "shame", it is emphasized that hygiene is a virtue.

Using analogy words to make sentences can make sentences vivid through association and imagination. If you use "as if" to make a sentence: "It's particularly cold today, and the wind blows on your face like a knife."

When making sentences with related words, we must pay attention to the reasonable collocation of words. This requires us to distinguish and remember several kinds of related words in our daily study.