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初中英語作文選讀:雨水對(duì)植物的重要性

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2019年03月29日

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We all know that water is very important for human beings, while rainwater is also very important for plants. Their mother gives their first life, but rainwater provides them the second life. Without rainwater, the plants, especially the wild plants will thirst to die. As living in the wilderness, they can’t get the attention from human beings. So they have to drink the natural water, which is from the rainwater. We all know that we can bear hunger for a short time, but we couldn’t stand thirsty. So do the plants. So, you can see how important rainwater is to plants.

我們都知道,水對(duì)人類來說是非常重要的,而雨水對(duì)于植物來說也是非常重要的。他們的母親給他們第一個(gè)生命,而雨水卻為他們提供了第二個(gè)生命。沒有雨水,植物,尤其是野生植物會(huì)渴死的。由于生活在野外,他們得不到人們的照顧。所以他們只能喝天然水,也就是從雨水中來的。我們大家都知道短期內(nèi)的饑餓我們是可以承受的,但是口渴我們卻是無法承受的。對(duì)于植物來說也是一樣的。所以,可見植物對(duì)雨水的重要性。

'We Were Eating Grass': Syrians Flee As Fight Pushes On Against Last ISIS Remnants

LEILA FADEL, HOST:

There are still refugees fleeing from the last pockets of ISIS-controlled areas in the country. Many say they held out for years but had to leave their homes recently because of the U.S.-led offensive to defeat the militants. There's been little word on what life has been like amid the fighting in the desert region. NPR's Ruth Sherlock was in Syria and talked to the refugees.

RUTH SHERLOCK, BYLINE: The al-Hol refugee camp is overwhelmed with new arrivals. Hundreds of women all dressed in black wait for tents and blankets in a long line in the bitterly cold wind. Seeing us arrive, they crowd around and beg for help.

(CROSSTALK)

SHERLOCK: These refugees have just fled towns where the U.S.-led coalition fights ISIS.

AHMED: (Speaking Arabic).

SHERLOCK: Fifteen-year-old Ahmed tells us he and his family worked for days to get out. Like most of the people we speak to in this camp, he's been through such an ordeal that he's scared even to give his full name.

AHMED: (Through interpreter) We couldn't leave by car. We escaped on foot.

FADEL: ISIS charged $1,500 for cars to get through their checkpoints, money most couldn't afford. And in any case, people were afraid that their vehicles would be targeted by coalition planes.

AHMED: (Through interpreter) We walked. We came with just the clothes on our backs. We slept in the desert in the rain.

FADEL: He says the freezing winter temperatures claimed victims on the journey.

AHMED: (Through interpreter) We escaped with other families. And on the way, a young girl and two men died on the road. They froze to death. Somebody in the group had shovels. So we buried their bodies.

SHERLOCK: In a concrete shelter in the middle of the camp, women cook on gas stoves on the floor. They held out living under ISIS for years. And 28-year-old Fatema Ahmed (ph) tells us it was the coalition airstrikes that ultimately forced them from their homes.

FATEMA AHMED: (Through interpreter) So many people have died who didn't deserve it. Even if you were just waiting in line outside for food, you could get hit. And there are no hospitals left for people to get treated. There's no medication because there was a siege. There's nothing left.

SHERLOCK: The subject of airstrikes is a controversy here. Shadi, a skinny man in his 20s, interrupts.

SHADI: (Speaking Arabic).

SHERLOCK: He's spent two years on the frontlines as a member of the U.S.'s locally allied militia, the SDF. He says he believes the coalition airstrikes are precise.

SHADI: (Speaking Arabic).

ABDULLAH BADRY: (Speaking Arabic).

SHERLOCK: But he's interrupted by Abdullah Badry, who lost his 4-year-old daughter in a strike.

BADRY: (Through interpreter) Precision? There's no precision. We were there while you were on the side of the frontline. So many of the people being bombed are civilians. The bombing is random. I swear for every ISIS person you kill, you hit 20 civilians. I lived this in real time.

SHERLOCK: Both men forget our interview and argue with each other.

BADRY: (Speaking in Arabic).

SHERLOCK: President Trump has decided to pull U.S. troops out of Syria. But, for now, they remain fighting ISIS, a group that the U.S. says threatens countries beyond these borders. I ask the refugees if they think this war is necessary.

AHMED: (Speaking Arabic).

SHERLOCK: No, they exclaim, talking over one another. Fatema says no one here really believes that ISIS is this great international threat.

AHMED: (Through interpreter) The only thing ISIS got involved with is telling us how to dress. We should cover ourselves and keep our voices low. Other than that, everybody is living their own life.

SHERLOCK: Even Shadi, the man who fights ISIS alongside the U.S., says most of the people he knows who joined ISIS aren't terrorists. They're motivated by local reasons, like to fight other militias in the Syrian civil war. And he subscribes to the common conspiracy theory that the claim the ISIS is a global threat is a cover story.

SHADI: (Through interpreter) This is for the media. There are things that are said on TV. And then there are things that happen under the table.

SHERLOCK: The real reason the U.S. is in Syria, he thinks, is for the control of land and oil. U.S. officials have repeatedly denied claims like these. In a statement to NPR, a spokesperson said the U.S. mission in Syria is to achieve the enduring defeat of ISIS. And the U.S. says it tries to avoid civilian deaths but is fighting a ruthless enemy that hides among civilians. But Syrians in this camp don't believe that reasoning.

BADRY: (Speaking Arabic).

SHERLOCK: And the man who lost his 4-year-old girl, Abdullah Badry, says this matters because if locals don't support the war, it's just going to create more extremism.

BADRY: (Through interpreter) Our children used to fear the word death. Now it's normal for children to see dead bodies. Now they stand over dead bodies, picking up the limbs with us - young children picking up limbs. This drives people to extremism because this strips people of their fear.

SHERLOCK: And he says, someday, the fear will be replaced by anger. Ruth Sherlock, NPR News, northeast Syria.


 


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