更多"(Fighting) broke (out) (between) th"的相关试题:
[简答题]The war that broke out between the North and the South in 1861 is known in history as the American Civil War.
[填空题]The war between the two ______ broke out in ______.
[单项选择]The war broke out ()
A. suddenly in 1939 in Poland
B. in 1939 suddenly in Poland
C. suddenly in Poland in 1939
D. in Poland in 1939 suddenly
[单项选择]The Second World War broke out in ( ).
A. 1930s
B. the 1930es
C. the 1930s
D. 1930’s
[填空题]After World War I broke out, the German language was removed from the subjects in American schools.
[单项选择]The fire broke out in a bakery in the early hours of Sunday, 2 September 1666. The baker was a man called Thomas Farrinor, whose premises were in Pudding Lane. No-one knows exactly how it happened, but he probably left a pile of sticks too near the oven. They caught fire and then set the kitchen alight. The wooden houses nearby were very dry because of a long, hot summer and were joined together by narrow streets. A strong East wind caused the flames to spread quickly from the bakery to other houses.
At first, no-one took any notice of the fire. Samuel Pepys woke up at three a.m., but "thought it far enough off, and so to bed again and to sleep", as he wrote in his diary. The Lord Mayor, Sir Thomas Bludworth, also thought it was just a minor outbreak and so he too returned to bed. Many of the houses nearby, especially near the river, were warehouses full of oil and spirits. These very inflammable materials quickly added to the fire. By the morning over three hundred houses were
A. at midnight September 2, 1666
B. at 3:00 a,m. September 2, 1666
C. after 3:00 a,m, September 2,1666
D. before 3:00 a.m, September 2,1666
[填空题]The World War, Ⅱ broke out all of a sudden.
[填空题]When World War Ⅱ broke out, the speaker was in Liverpool on a year’s ______.
[单项选择]
On the night of September 2,1600, a fire broke out in a baker’s shop near Fish Street Hill in London. Before the flames were finally put out, nearly the entire city had been reduced to ashes. Over thirteen thousand homes, fifty churches, and numerous public buildings and hospitals were lost in the blaze. For all practical purposes, London was destroyed.
The Great Fire was not seen as a total tragedy, however. The miserable conditions of the city had been attacked by physicians and humanitarians for years before the fare, thus, with the opportunity clearly presented to create a shining new city, artists and craftsmen from all over England hurried to submit their designs for the rebuilding of London.
Among those who submitted plans was Sir Christopher Wren, one of England’s leading architects and the Surveyor General of London. The task of rebuilding the city was given to him. Wren realized that the Great Fire would not have been so damaging if the city
A. Elizabeth the First
B. General Surveyor
C. Sir Christopher Wren
D. Charles the First