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called fettucfrie, and is boiled and drained like spaghetti, and served swimming in butter and
melted cheese. In Emilia, they prefer it served with a sauce of meat, tomato, herbs and mushrooms. In
Genoa, the same pasta, made in exactly the same way, is served al pesto-with an uncooked sauce of
garlic, herbs and olive oil.
136 -Housewives in Emilia ---- .
A) usually make the pasta special to their town
B) make the most economical pasta in Italy
C) usually cook for twelve or more people
D) make most of the pasta produced in Italy
E) are the best at making pasta in Italy
137-Clearly, in Rome, people ----- .
A) prefer fettucirte to taglierini
B) enjoy eating pasta with dairy products
C) would rather eat spaghetti than jettucihe
D) like to eat pasta on the riverbanks
E) cook fettucine in butter, not in water
138 -From what the author says about taglierini and al pesto, we can understand that---- .
A) they are cooked in different ways
B) the people in Genoa eat much less pasta
C) the Genoans generally use more herbs in cooking
D) they are the same pasta with different names
E) the people from Emilia like a thicker sauce
Trinity College, or Dublin University, in the Republic of Ireland, dates from the sixteenth century.
However, during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, many Irish students went abroad, to Italy,
Spain and France, to be educated, as Catholics, forming the majority of the population were
forbidden to have schools. During that time in Ireland, many teachers operated outside the law.
Known as Hedge Shoolmasters, they taught their pupils by the hedgerows in summer and in hillside
huts in winter due to a lack of buildings of their own. They managed to teach Latin and Greek well,
Without texts, masters and pupils had to rely on memory. Not until the nineteenth century did these
banned 'hedge' schools disappear, when a system of public education was finally approved by the
British Government.
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