首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
A、In an underground train. B、In the Paddington station. C、On that stage. D、In the Edgware Road Station. A
A、In an underground train. B、In the Paddington station. C、On that stage. D、In the Edgware Road Station. A
admin
2017-03-15
17
问题
My tiny walk-on role in London’s drama began shortly after nine in the morning. The underground train I was travelling on stopped sharply as we approached Paddington station. "Something’s happened on the line ahead," said the driver, "it must be serious." It was. Although at that stage I didn’t know it, a bomb had exploded on a train at the very next station Edgware Road killing and injuring dozens of people.
We were led along a section of track and up some stairs. On the roads outside, ambulance and police sirens wailed. Long suffering London commuters—still unaware of the cause or scale of what was happening—began to look for alternative routes. Strangers talked to strangers—a rare event in the morning rush hour. Everyone had a theory. A train crash, a power surge, a bomb attack—perhaps two bombs, maybe more.
Then it was clear, London had been attacked. People, ordinary people on buses and trains had been killed and injured. In my experience, there is a universal human response to such news. Whether it happens in London or Jerusalem, New York or Baghdad, Madrid or Bali. Find family and friends, call them now—make sure they’re OK—tell them you’re OK. Everything else can wait.
In my case, there was an instant sense of irony. For the past four years, I have lived with a young family in Jerusalem through one of the most intensive campaigns of suicide bombing that any single city has ever experienced. At times it has seemed that each bus might explode, that every restaurant, every cafe was a potential death trap. A number of friends and colleagues have had close shaves and as a journalist I’ve seen the horror such attacks can cause. But as I called my wife in Jerusalem to reassure her, I realised that this incident in London was as close as I’d ever been to getting caught up in a bombing myself.
Now, as the dust begins to settle, I can’t help wondering how all this might affect London in the long run. In Israel, repeated attacks against civilians over a period of years have led to a culture of extreme security—guards on the door of virtually every public place, vehicles checked before entering car parks, police roadblocks on busy shopping streets. Normal life does continue, but with constant reminders of the threat.
One of the joys of family visits to London in recent years has been the simple pleasure of extreme normality, a meal in a restaurant without constant glances toward the door, a long, relaxing bus ride across town, not having to explain to my daughters why soldiers with guns are stopping cars in the street. Above all, London is one of the great melting pots of world culture, where people of all races, all religions and cultures can and do live in relative harmony. Could this now be under threat?
In Jerusalem the ravages of history have left a city sharply divided—often literally street by street—Arab from Jew, Christian from Muslim, Secular from Religious. Only since living there have I grown to realise how much I took for granted growing up on London’s cosmopolitan streets.
And yet after the bombings here, the mood on those same streets seems clear. And absolute determination not to allow the killings to change London’s way of life in any substantial way. The newspapers are full of fiery resolve, of how Londoners have seen off the German Luftwaffe and the bombers of the IRA in the past and will now face down the islamic extremists suspected of this latest attack. And as I pack my bags to return to Jerusalem, I have little doubt that that’s exactly what my fellow Londoners will do.
16. Where was the speaker when the bomb attack happened?
17. When the attack happened everyone had a theory. Which one of the following is not mentioned?
18. Where was the speaker’s wife when the bomb exploded?
19. Which one of the following statements is true about the Middle East according to the speaker?
20. What exactly will the speaker’s fellow Londoners do after the bomb attack according to the speaker?
选项
A、In an underground train.
B、In the Paddington station.
C、On that stage.
D、In the Edgware Road Station.
答案
A
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://jikaoti.com/ti/fGCYFFFM
本试题收录于:
NAETI高级口译笔试题库外语翻译证书(NAETI)分类
0
NAETI高级口译笔试
外语翻译证书(NAETI)
相关试题推荐
Although"namingrights"haveproliferatedinAmericanhighereducationforthepastseveraldecades,thephenomenonhasrecentl
ThehappiestpeopleintheworldmayliveinScandinavia,anewstudysuggests.That’saccordingtotheUnitedNationsGeneralA
Beingbroughtupinaninstitutionorbyneglectfulparents,apregnancy,earlymarriage,andshowingpoorplanningskillswere
Scienceandtechnologyisamongthefactorsthathavetakenthehumancivilizationtothelevelitenjoystoday.Everymilestone
Scienceandtechnologyisamongthefactorsthathavetakenthehumancivilizationtothelevelitenjoystoday.Everymilestone
下面你将听到外国媒体有关中国能源形势的一段讲话。TightelectricitysupplyisconstrainingChina’seconomicgrowth—asituationlikelytopersistfor
年轻男性用酒精或者毒品来寻求刺激,或者他们认为这是一种让自己更受欢迎的方式。而年轻女性用香烟、毒品或者烈酒来让自己感觉更快乐、缓解压力或者减肥。
中华文明是世界古代文明中始终没有中断、连续五千多年发展至今的文明。中华民族在漫长历史发展中形成的独具特色的文化传统,深深影响了古代中国,也深深影响着当代中国。现时代中国强调的以人为本、与时俱进、社会和谐、和平发展,既有着中华文明的深厚根基,又体现了时代发展
ThirtyyearsagoIturnedonourfamily’sblack-and-whiteconsoleTVtowatchanorchestraconductornearlyashyperactiveasI
A、ShewassureAndrewwasjoking.B、Shehadneverheardaboutit.C、Shethoughtittotallyimpossible.D、Ithadneverbeenmenti
随机试题
叙述语言中对叙事有重要影响的性质是()
Pigs can act as the paratenic host of the following tapeworms
性联无丙种球蛋白血症患者出现临床症状的时间
治疗钩虫病和鞭虫病应首选
有关大寒日有效日照时间带时(h)的确定,下列表述正确的是:[2009-47]
全面建设小康社会进程中的()是关键问题。
为检验压力容器产品焊接接头的力学性能和弯曲性能,应制作()产品焊接试板。
科学研究中的问卷调查,关键问题是样本()
双关是指在一定的语言环境中,利用词的多义或同音的条件,有意使语句具有双重意义,言在此而意在彼的一种修辞手法。利用词的同义,有意使语句具有双重意义叫作意义双关;利用词的同音,有意使语句具有双重意义叫作谐音双关。根据上述定义,下列选项中运用了谐音双关修辞手法的
证明:当x>1时,
最新回复
(
0
)