增加:在缺词处加一个漏字符号(∧),并在其下面写出该加的词。
删除:把多余的词用斜线(\)划掉。
修改:在错的词下划一横线,并在该词下面写出修改后的词。
注意:1.每处错误及其修改均仅限一词;
2.只允许修改 10 处,多者(从第 11 处起)不计分。
One day when I was on my way to home from school, I found a building on fire. Immediately I called the firefighters.
Several minutes lately, the firefighters arrived and tried their best control the fire. With the help of the firefighters, a lot of peoples left the building safely. Sudden a foreign woman came in a hurry to tell the firefighters everything. But they couldn’t understand what she says. I went to the woman and asked her that was happening. She told me that his daughter was still in the building. I told the firefighters about it at once. They immediately ran into the building and rescued a little girl.
More than 220 people
Over 500 people were working in the building
3 . ROME— four people, including the wife of the factory's owner, died on Wednesday after explosions (爆炸)at the Barcelona Pozzo di Gotto fireworks company, Italian media reported.
According to online reports by La Republic and TGCOM24, at least one other person is missing and three others are seriously injured, with two of them in dangerous condition. Among the dead was 71-year-old Venera Mazzeo, the wife of the factory owner Vito Costa. Mazzeo reportedly died on the scene. Antonio Costa, the owner's son, was seriously injured and was transported to a hospital in the regional capital of Palermo for treatment. Less seriously injured persons were moved to the nearby Milazzo Hospital to be treated for burns and other injuries. Many were transported by local people who reached the scene before ambulances could arrive, reports said.
The factory, located near the northeast of the southern Italian island of Sicily, near the city of Messina, has been in operation for more than ten years without any accident. Police reports showed that two separate explosions took place, with the first explosion likely causing the second one. Media reports said that police have guessed that sparks (火花)from a repairing project reached some of the explosive material stored in the factory and was likely the cause of the first explosion.
Reports also showed that firefighters were able to control the flame, which burnt buildings on the factory and threatened nearby structures.
1. How many people lost their lives in the accident except Venera Mazzeo?A.Three. | B.Four. |
C.Five. | D.Six. |
A.One worker's cigarette spark. |
B.A fire nearby the factory. |
C.The explosive material in the factory. |
D.The sparks from a repairing project. |
A.Antonio Costa died on the scene because of the flame. |
B.Most injured persons were sent to hospital by ambulance. |
C.The factory had been in safe operation before the explosions. |
D.There were three explosions in total in the accident. |
A.A travel guide. | B.A newspaper. |
C.A magazine. | D.A science report. |
4 . Notre-Dame, the cathedral (大教堂) that serves as one of Paris’s most beloved monuments, is on fire. According to The New York Times, the fire began around 6: 30 p.m. local time, when tourists urgently rushed out of the building. While Andre Finot, a spokesman for the cathedral, told The Times, that the cause of the fire is still unknown and that no one has been hurt while damage to the building appears catastrophic(灾难性的).
CNN reports that over 400 firefighters have been sent to fight the fire, but that they may be unable to save the cathedral. Built in the 12th century, Notre-Dame houses several relics important to Catholics (天主教徒). NBC News reports that relics from Saint Genevieve and Saint Denis may been lost, together with a relic believed to be from Jesus Christ’s crown of thorns, but it states that authorities now believe that the cathedral has been saved from “total destruction”.
Notre-Dame is visited by a reported 30, 000 people a day and 13 million people per year. Its destruction represents a global cultural loss. “This is just horrible”, Mohamed Megdoul, 33, a film producer and witness to the fire told The Times, speaking through tears. “A thousand years of history is being wiped away. This belonged to the whole world, and now it’s disappearing.”
French President Emmanuel Macron expressed his sadness on Twitter. “Notre-Dame of Paris in flames,” reads an English translation of his statement. “Emotion for a whole nation. Thoughts for all Catholics and for all the French. Like all our countrymen, I’m sad together to see this part of us burn.” Other politicians, including Melanis Trump, London Mayor Sadiq Khan, U. K. Prime Minister Theresa May also shared their sadness on Twitter.
1. What do we know about Notre-Dame according to the passage?A.It has been completely destroyed by the fire. |
B.It’s a huge political loss to the world. |
C.It’s only meaningful to Catholics. |
D.The reason of the fire remained to be found out. |
A.The history of France is destroyed because of the fire. |
B.The loss the fire caused is huge. |
C.The damage of Notre-Dame is being wiped off. |
D.The cathedral has been saved from “total destruction”. |
A.To report a disaster of Notre-Dame. |
B.To express people’s sadness of the destruction. |
C.To emphasize the value of Notre-Dame. |
D.To show the concerns from the worldwide. |
A.See a doctor. | B.Stop physical exercise. | C.Turn to her teacher. |
Justin Foster,
1. Where does the conversation take place?
A.Inside a car. | B.In a parking lot. | C.On the side of a street. |
A.Look out of the window. | B.Answer her phone. | C.Do her hair. |
A.The woman damaged his car. |
B.The woman borrowed his car. |
C.The woman called the police. |
A.Worried. | B.Relaxed. | C.Surprised. |
1. What program was put off to next week?
A.Some news reports. | B.A talk show. | C.A football game. |
A.The teacher. | B.The bus driver. | C.The truck driver. |
A.20. | B.18. | C.2. |
A.Drunk driving. | B.Bad weather. | C.Speeding. |
A.He got help from a friend. | B.He asked a policeman for help. |
C.He found the way himself. |
10 . A teenage girl is fighting for her life today after being struck by lightning as severe thunderstorms swept across Britain. The girl was one of four teenage girls from London who were hit by lightning in the Parade Ground area of Hyde Park during a storm. Earlier, Joseph Wharton, 14, died as he was struck by lightning while camping in his friend’s backyard in the West Midlands.
A spokesman for Scotland Yard said the girl remained in serious condition at St. Mary’s Hospital in Paddington. She had stopped breathing by the time the first paramedic(护理人员) arrived on the scene just two minutes after the strike at 5:40 p.m. yesterday.
The other three girls hit by the bolt all had injuries, and were taken to University College Hospital. Their conditions were not serious, the spokesman added.
The strike lifted the girls into the air and then dropped them to the ground, a witness reported.
A spokesman for the London Ambulance Service said paramedics risked their lives to treat the girls. “The storm was still overhead and lightning was still coming down while they were treating the patients,” he said. “All staff involved acted very professionally in providing fast treatment to these patients in very difficult circumstances.” Scotland Yard said the incident was being looked into by officers from the Royal Parks’ Operational Command Unit.
Joseph Wharton of Byland Way, Bloxwich, was hit during the extended thunderstorm which struck the region yesterday morning. He was pronounced dead at Walsall Manor Hospital.
He had been sleeping in a tent while staying with school friend Michael Lees at a house on nearby Cresswell Crescent.
West Midlands Ambulance Service said paramedics were called at 7:50 a.m. and unsuccessful attempts were made to revive(使苏醒) the sports-mad teenager. A spokesman for the Royal Society for the Prevention of Accidents said four or five people die each year as a result of lightning strikes in the UK.
1. All four girls________.A.were killed by the lightning | B.were seriously injured |
C.were being treated at the same hospital | D.were lifted up and dropped to the ground |
A.thunder | B.rain |
C.storm | D.lightning |
A.The boy was killed after the four girls had been hit. |
B.The paramedics began to treat the girls after taking them to the hospital. |
C.First-aid was given to the girls during the storm. |
D.The boy was hit by lightning in the Parade Ground area of Hyde Park. |
A.many British people die from lightning strikes every year |
B.the writer blames the government for the accident |
C.the paramedics could also have been hit by lightning while aiding the girls |
D.Joseph had been playing in the open air before the strike |
A.magazine | B.newspaper |
C.science fiction | D.weather report |