题目内容
阅读理解。
When Ray Necochea was building his dream house four years ago, he wrote the story of his life
on a wooden beam below the rooftop, hoping a future relative might discover it.
With that beam and everything else inside the home destroyed in the firestorm that has struck
southern California this week, the 55-year-old electric company worker is promising to rebuild on
the same hilltop overlooking nearby farms and mountain-tops.
Such scenes of pain and hope for the future are taking place across southern California, where
officialsare gradually lifting evacuation orders to allow residents back into areas damaged by some
of the worst fires in the state's history. Officials say the fires destroyed more than 2,000 homes,
often with such fierceness that little remained.
As a "troubleman" or repair worker for the San Diego Gas & Electric Company, Necochea had
already seen his destroyed home on Monday, but returned on Thursday and mused(沉思) philosophically
on the nature of life and loss.
"I was so shocked," he said as he looked across what had once been a 4,600 square foot,
three-bedroom home with a swimming pool in an area where the sounds of cows, coyotes and birds,
not the din of modernity, are the soundtrack of daily life. "It was just a burning heap of ash. It was a
horrible feeling; I don't wish that on anyone."
on a wooden beam below the rooftop, hoping a future relative might discover it.
With that beam and everything else inside the home destroyed in the firestorm that has struck
southern California this week, the 55-year-old electric company worker is promising to rebuild on
the same hilltop overlooking nearby farms and mountain-tops.
Such scenes of pain and hope for the future are taking place across southern California, where
officialsare gradually lifting evacuation orders to allow residents back into areas damaged by some
of the worst fires in the state's history. Officials say the fires destroyed more than 2,000 homes,
often with such fierceness that little remained.
As a "troubleman" or repair worker for the San Diego Gas & Electric Company, Necochea had
already seen his destroyed home on Monday, but returned on Thursday and mused(沉思) philosophically
on the nature of life and loss.
"I was so shocked," he said as he looked across what had once been a 4,600 square foot,
three-bedroom home with a swimming pool in an area where the sounds of cows, coyotes and birds,
not the din of modernity, are the soundtrack of daily life. "It was just a burning heap of ash. It was a
horrible feeling; I don't wish that on anyone."
1. The fire that struck southern California this week ______.
A. was the worst in the human history
B. made residents there suffer a lot
C. was set by somone on purpose
D. made local officials upset
B. made residents there suffer a lot
C. was set by somone on purpose
D. made local officials upset
2. When did Necochea first see his destroyed home?
A. On Monday.
B. On Tuesday.
C. On Wednesday.
D. On Thursday.
B. On Tuesday.
C. On Wednesday.
D. On Thursday.
3. Judging by Necochea's words, we know he felt ______.
A. terrible
B. calm
C. optimistic
D. excited
B. calm
C. optimistic
D. excited
1-3BAA
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