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17£®The Great Fire of London started in the very early hours of 2September 1666£®In four days it destroyed more than three-quarters of the old city£¬where most of the houses were wooden and close together£®One hundred thousand people became homeless£¬but only a few lost their lives£®The fire started on Sunday morning in the house of the King's baker£¨Ãæ°üʦ£©in Pudding Lane£®The baker£¬with his wife and family£¬was able to get out through a window in the roof£®A strong wind blew the fire from the bakery£¨Ãæ°ü·¿£©into a small hotel next door£®Then it spread quickly into Thames Street£®That was the beginning£®
By eight o'clock three hundred houses were on fire£®On Monday nearly a kilometer of the city was burning along the River Thames£®Tuesday was the worst day£®The fire destroyed many well-known buildings£¬old St Paul's and the Guildhall among them£®
Samuel Pepys£¬the famous writer£¬wrote about the fire£®People threw their things into the river£®Many poor people stayed in their houses until the last moment£®Birds fell out of the air because of the heat£®
The fire stopped only when the King finally ordered people to destroy hundreds of buildings in the path of the fire£®With nothing left to burn£¬the fire became weak and finally died out£®
After the fire£¬Christopher Wren£¬the architect£¨½¨Öþʦ£©£¬wanted a city with wider streets and fine new houses of stone£®In fact£¬the streets are still narrow£» but he did build more than fifty churches£¬among them new St Paul's£®
The fire caused great pain and loss£¬but after it London was a better place£ºa city for the future and not just of the past£®
21£®The underlined word"family"in the second paragraph meansB£®
A£®home¡¡¡¡
B£®children
C£®wife and husband¡¡¡¡¡¡
D£®wife and children
22£®It seems that the writer of the text was most sorry for the fact thatC£®
A£®some people lost their lives
B£®the birds in the sky were killed by the fire
C£®many famous buildings were destroyed
D£®the King's bakery was burned down
23£®Why did the writer cite£¨ÒýÓã© Samuel Pepys£¿D
A£®Because Pepys was among those putting out the fire£®
B£®Because Pepys also wrote about the fire£®
C£®To show that poor people suffered most£®
D£®To give the reader a clearer picture of the fire£®
24£®How was the fire put out according to the text£¿D
A£®The king and his soldiers came to help£®
B£®All the wooden houses in the city were destroyed£®
C£®People managed to get enough water from the river£®
D£®Houses standing in the direction of the fire were pulled down£®
25£®Which of the following were reasons for the rapid spread of the big fire£¿B
£¨a£©There was a strong wind£®
£¨b£©The streets were very narrow£®
£¨c£©Many houses were made of wood£®
£¨d£©There was not enough water in the city£®
£¨e£©People did not discover the fire earlier£®
A£®£¨a£©and£¨b£©
B£®£¨a£©£¬£¨b£©and£¨c£©
C£®£¨a£©£¬£¨b£©£¬£¨c£©and£¨d£©
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½â´ð 21£®´ð°¸ B ´ÊÒå²Â²âÌ⣮¸ù¾Ý¶ÌÎĵڶþ¶ÎÖеÄThe baker£¬with hiswife and family£¬was able to get out through a window in the roof£®¿ÉÖªÆäÖеÄfamilyÓ¦¸ÃÖ¸µÄÊǺ¢×Ó£¬¹ÊÑ¡B£®
22£®´ð°¸ C ϸ½ÚÀí½âÌ⣮¸ù¾Ý¶ÌÎĵÚÈý¶ÎThe fire destroyed manywell-known buildings£¬old St Paul's and the Guildhall among them£®¿ÉÖª£¬±¾¾ä°µÊ¾×ÅÂ׶صÄÐí¶àÖøÃû½¨ÖþÔÚ´ó»ðÖж¼±»ÉÕ»ÙÁË£»¹ÊÑ¡C£®
23£®´ð°¸ D ÍÆÀíÅжÏÌ⣮¸ù¾Ý¶ÌÎĵÚËĶÎÄÚÈÝ¿ÉÖª£¬×÷ÕßÒýÓÃSamuel PepysµÄÃèÊöÊÇΪÁËÏò¶ÁÕßÃè»æÒ»¸öÇåÎú¡¢ÐÎÏóµÄ´ó»ð³¡¾°£»¹ÊÑ¡D£®£®
24£®´ð°¸ D ϸ½ÚÀí½âÌ⣮¸ù¾Ý¶ÌÎĵÚÎå¶ÎThefire stopped only when the King finally ordered people to destroy hundreds ofbuildings in the path of the fire£®¿ÉÖª£¬ÔÚ´ó»ðÑØ;µÄ½¨Öþ±»ÍƵ¹¶øÇÒûÓпÉÉյĶ«Î÷ºó´ó»ð²Å×îÖÕµÃÒÔƽϢ£»¹ÊÑ¡D£®
25£®´ð°¸ B ¸ÃÌâÊÇϸ½Ú¿¼²éÌ⣮ͨ¶ÁÈ«ÎĿɵóö´ó»ðµÄÔÒò£¬µÚÒ»¶ÎÖеÄwhere most of the houses were wooden and close together£¬¿ÉÍƳö£¨c£©µÚ¶þ¶ÎÖеÄA strong wind blew the firefrom the bakery£¨Ãæ°ü·¿£©into asmall hotel next door£¬¿ÉÍƳö£¨a£©µÚÁù¶ÎÖеÄAfter thefire£¬Christopher Wren£¬the architect£¨½¨Öþʦ£©£¬wanted a citywith wider streets and fine new houses of stone£¬¿ÉÍƳö£¨b£©The streets were very narrow£®¹Ê´ð°¸ÎªB
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A£® | hurt | B£® | injured | C£® | destroyed | D£® | Affected |
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A£® | realize | B£® | know | C£® | recognize | D£® | see |
A£® | Except for | B£® | Apart from | C£® | Rather than | D£® | Instead of |
A£® | offer | B£® | give | C£® | provide | D£® | afford |