How dangerous it would be if there was a fire! It is time for us (learn) more about fire, especially what (do) if we are caught in a fire.
Shout out. If you smell smoke or see fire, shout out“Fire! ".Shout as (loud) as you can, because people may be asleep.
Call 119. Never try to put out the fire yourself, even if it is a very small one! Get help your parents or call 119.
Keep down close to the floor. If there (be) a lot of smoke in your room, keep down close to the floor.
Test the door. Test the door .you open it. If the door is cool, open it (careful). If the door is hot, do not open it! Try to find a different way out.
Get out. If you can, get out of your home soon as possible.
Don't use the lift. Never use the lift during the fire. It also go wrong.
Don't go back. Never go back into a (burn) building!
We have been to Qingdao.
bad news! of people lost their lives in the earthquake in Nepal.
in his life he felt truly happy.
Please before having a meal.
You can't eat food in the library. Please .
My great-grandmother, Ethel, came from England to the United States in 1921. She brought almost nothing with her-just a few clothes and trinkets(小饰物). But she did bring some customs from "the old country" that she had learned as she grew up.
One custom was that if you dropped a glass or a cup and it broke, you would throw a little salt over your left shoulder. It was funny that she did that-she wasn't superstitious(迷信的) in other ways. I think that she grew up doing that, so she continued to do it as a connection to her childhood.
Ethel also taught us a New Year's Day custom that our family continues to follow today. To celebrate the new year, we would travel to a friend's house for a quick visit. My great-grandmother always took a pound of butter with her on our visits. We would enter the friend's house through the back door. The butter we brought was to give our friend a "gift of gold" to symbolize hope for prosperity in the new year.
After my great-grandmother died, we still visited people on the first day of January, but eventually we stopped bringing the butter. We never did throw salt over our shoulders after breaking a glass or a cup. Some customs are continued when they cross from one country to another, but some customs fade away.