欧美成人猛片aaaaaaa_无码国产精品一区二区高潮_天天爽夜夜爽夜夜爽精品视频_92国产精品午夜福利免费_天堂在线WWW天堂中文在线_中国熟妇人妻videos_亚洲欧美日韩综合一区_内射小寡妇无码_国产猛男猛女超爽免费视频_99精产国品一二三产区区

登錄 / 注冊

費(fèi)

當(dāng)前位置:首頁>學(xué)習(xí)資源首頁>英語閱讀>Fire Prevention Week

Fire Prevention Week

2 10881 分享 來源:必克英語 2010-11-30

Commemorating a conflagration

     Fire Prevention Week was established to commemorate [k??mem?reit](紀(jì)念)the Great Chicago Fire, the tragic 1871 conflagration [?k?nfl??gre???n](大火災(zāi))that killed more than 250 people, left 100,000 homeless, destroyed more than 17,400 structures and burned more than 2,000 acres(英畝,公頃). The fire began on October 8, but continued into and did most of its damage on October 9, 1871.

     According to popular legend, the fire broke out (爆發(fā),發(fā)生)after a cow - belonging to Mrs. Catherine O'Leary - kicked over(踢倒) a lamp, setting first the barn, then the whole city on fire. Chances are you've heard some version of this story yourself; people have been blaming the Great Chicago Fire on the cow and Mrs. O'Leary, for more than 130 years. But recent research by Chicago historian [his?t?:ri?n]歷史學(xué)家)Robert Cromie has helped to debunk [di:?b??k]暴露,揭穿真面目)this version of events.

 

The 'Moo' myth [miθ](神話,神奇?zhèn)髡f)

       Like any good story, the 'case of the cow' has some truth to it. The great fire almost certainly started near the barn [bɑ:n](牲口棚)where Mrs. O'Leary kept her five milking cows. But there is no proof that O'Leary was in the barn when the fire broke out - or that a jumpy [?d??mpi:](激動緊張的)cow sparked (引發(fā))the blaze [bleiz](大火). Mrs. O'Leary herself swore that she'd been in bed early that night, and that the cows were also tucked in for the evening.

       But if a cow wasn't to blame for the huge fire, what was? Over the years, journalists and historians have offered plenty of theories. Some blamed the blaze on a couple of neighborhood boys who were near the barn sneaking cigarettes. Others believed that a neighbor of the O'Leary's may have started the fire. Some people have speculated that a fiery [?fai?ri](火的,火焰的,燃燒的)meteorite [?mi:ti:??ra?t](隕星,隕石)may have fallen to earth on October 8, starting several fires that day - in Michigan(密歇根,美國州名) and Wisconsin(威斯康星,美國州名), as well as in Chicago.

2