
Telling strange tales
Test yourself by reading interesting news and remembering new vocabulary. | |||
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Most of the space in the newspaper is taken up by the major stories of the day. These days that means war, disease, politics, crime and sports. However, on any day there are short, often interesting stories that are fun to share. This lesson is based on five of those. | |||
Here's what to do: First, read each of the stories and notice the words in bold print. Use the way they are used in the story to match them with the following meanings.
Now that you have learned the vocabulary for all the stories, read it again so that you understand it completely. | |||
OUR STORIES FROM THE BANGKOK POST ‘Amok’ cow shot A cow that escaped from a cattle market on Thursday enjoyed only a brief taste of freedom before it was shot dead by police who said they had no choice but to target the runaway animal as it bolted through Chippenham in southern England. "The animal was running amok and a decision was made to dispatch an armedresponse unit to try to contain it," a police spokesman said. "It was obvious the animal could not be captured and posed a significant danger to human life." Police tried to drive the cow into a field but it turned and charged officers. — AP
Mouse halts plane Zurich — A missing mouse grounded a Swiss airliner for more than a day as airline officials pumped carbon dioxide into the plane's cargo hold to kill the rodent Houdini . The mouse, being transported to a laboratory from Mexico, escaped from its container on a flight from Boston to Zurich on Wednesday, a spokesman for Swiss International Air Lines said on Friday. To prevent the rodent from gnawing on cables or cargo on future flights, the airline pumped carbon dioxide into the Airbus hold and let it stand for 24 hours. The spokesman said using cheese or a cat toretrieve the mouse — nicknamed Speedy Gonzalez — "would have taken much more time" and that it would not have suffered. The mouse was never found. The airline had to cancel a flight from Zurich to New York and back as a result, and diverted a flight from Geneva to pick up stranded passengers. — Reuters
‘Spider Granny’ Hong Kong — An 80-year-old widow scaled the outside of a Hong Kong high-rise block to retrieve a pair of jeans which fell from her ninth floor apartment, police said yesterday. "Spider Granny" shimmied down a drainpipe after her son's jeans fell from a washing line outside her apartment block onto a balcony two floors down. She got stuck as she tried to climb back up, however, and had to be rescued by firemen who pulled her to safety on the seventh floor, police said. The woman's 42-year-old son, whose jeans cost him about 1,000 baht, was sleeping at the time of his mother's exploits in Hong Kong's Kwai Chung district on Monday. The widow told police afterwards she shimmied down the drainpipe because she didn't wanted to disturb her neighbours downstairs by knocking on their door. — dpa
Alligator in car Tampa — Leslie Strickland said she had nothing but good intentions when she loaded a badly hurt two-metre-long alligator into the back seat of her car and took it home. The 49-year-old American woman had hit the animal with her car on Friday night and went back to rescue it on Saturday — but wound up spending a night in jail, charged with possession of an alligator, a felony in Florida. Police also charged her with driving with a suspended licence and leaving the scene of an accident, leaving the injured alligator in the back seat. "I knew I was in trouble, and I panicked and I left," Ms Strickland said. When the alligator started to thrash its tail she veered off the road and hit a mailbox. The game commission later removed the alligator from the car but it died later. — AP
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