Home Breaking News . Likely just plain text with tags. We’ll output HTML.

. Likely just plain text with tags. We’ll output HTML.

0

. Likely just plain text with

tags. We’ll output HTML.

We need internal links 1-2 max to categories: likely Breaking News or Crime. This is a fire incident, could be Breaking News. We’ll add maybe one link to Breaking News.

External links: 0-1 max to Wikipedia or official gov site if directly relevant. Not needed.

SEO: Title 52-65 characters, include keyword ‘gurgaon’ naturally once.

Meta description 155-160 characters.

Excerpt: 2 sharp sentences.

Tags: 7-10 specific tags.

Now produce output.

First craft title: Must be different from original “Fire breaks out at Lifelong industrial warehouse in Gurgaon”. Something like “Blaze engulfs Lifelong warehouse on Pataudi Road, Gurgaon”. Count characters.

Let’s count: “Blaze engulfs Lifelong warehouse on Pataudi Road, Gurgaon”

Count characters including spaces: Let’s count.

B l a z e (5) + space =6
e n g u l f s (7) =>13
space=14
L i f e l o n g (8) =>22
space=23
w a r e h o u s e (9) =>32
space=33
o n (2) =>35
space=36
P a t a u d i (7) =>43
space=44
R o a d , (5 inc comma) =>49
space=50
G u r g a o n (7) =>57

So 57 characters. Within 52-65. Good. Include ‘gurgaon’ lowercase? It’s capitalized but still includes keyword. The rule says include keyword ‘gurgaon’ naturally once. It’s case-insensitive? We’ll use lowercase maybe. But title currently has Gurgaon capitalized. It’s okay as contains the word. We’ll keep.

Now meta description 155-160 chars. Let’s craft: “A major fire erupted at the Lifelong industrial warehouse in Jhund Sarai, Gurgaon, late Tuesday night, prompting 29 fire tenders to respond; no casualties reported.” Count characters.

Let’s count: We’ll count precisely.

“A major fire erupted at the Lifelong industrial warehouse in Jhund Sarai, Gurgaon, late Tuesday night, prompting 29 fire tenders to respond; no casualties reported.”

Count characters including spaces and punctuation.

I’ll count:

A(1) space2
m3 a4 j5 o6 r7 (space8) f9 i10 r11 e12 (space13) e14 r15 u16 p17 t18 e19 d20 (space21) a22 t23 (space24) t25 h26 e27 (space28) L29 i30 f31 e32 l33 l34 o35 n36 g37 (space38) i39 n40 d41 u42 s43 t44 r45 i46 a47 l48 (space49) w50 a51 r52 e53 h54 o55 u56 s57 e58 (space59) i60 n61 (space62) J63 u64 n65 d66 (space67) S68 a69 r70 a71 i72 ,73 (space74) G75 u76 r77 g78 a79 o80 n81 ,82 (space83) l84 a85 t86 e87 (space88) T89 u90 e91 s92 d93 a94 y95 (space96) n97 i98 g99 h100 t101 ,102 (space103) p104 r105 o106 m107 p108 t109 i110 n111 g112 (space113) 2 114 9 115 (space116) f117 i118 r119 e120 (space121) t122 e123 n124 d125 e126 r127 s128 (space129) t130 o131 (space132) r133 e134 s135 p136 o137 n138 d139 ;140 (space141) n142 o143 (space144) c145 a146 s147 u148 a149 l150 t151 i152 e153 s154 (space155) r156 e157 p158 o159 r160 t161 e162 d163 .164

Total 164 characters. Need 155-160. So too long. Need reduce to 155-160.

We can trim some words.

Let’s aim for 157 characters.

We can remove “late” maybe.

New: “A major fire erupted at the Lifelong industrial warehouse in Jhund Sarai, Gurgaon, Tuesday night, prompting 29 fire tenders to respond; no casualties reported.”

Count.

String: “A major fire erupted at the Lifelong industrial warehouse in Jhund Sarai, Gurgaon, Tuesday night, prompting 29 fire tenders to respond; no casualties reported.”

Count:

A1 space2
m3 a4 j5 o6 r7 (space8) f9 i10 r11 e12 (space13) e14 r15 u16 p17 t18 e19 d20 (space21) a22 t23 (space24) t25 h26 e27 (space28) L29 i30 f31 e32 l33 l34 o35 n36 g37 (space38) i39 n40 d41 u42 s43 t44 r45 i46 a47 l48 (space49) w50 a51 r52 e53 h54 o55 u56 s57 e58 (space59) i60 n61 (space62) J63 u64 n65 d66 (space67) S68 a69 r70 a71 i72 ,73 (space74) G75 u76 r77 g78 a79 o80 n81 ,82 (space83) T84 u85 e86 s87 d88 a89 y90 (space91) n92 i93 g94 h95 t96 ,97 (space98) p99 r100 o101 p102 t103 i104 n105 g106 (space107) 2 108 9 109 (space110) f111 i112 r113 e114 (space115) t116 e117 n118 d119 e120 r121 s122 (space123) t124 o125 (space126) r127 e128 s129 p130 o131 n132 d133 ;134 (space135) n136 o137 (space138) c139 a140 s141 u142 l143 t144 i145 e146 s147 (space148) r149 e150 p151 o152 r153 t154 e155 d156 .157

157 characters. Good within 155-160.

Now excerpt: 2 sharp sentences. Maybe: “A fire broke out at the Lifelong warehouse on Pataudi Road, Gurgaon, late Tuesday night. No casualties were reported as 29 fire tenders battled the blaze.”

Check length not needed but okay.

Tags: 7-10 specific tags. Eg: Gurgaon fire, Lifelong warehouse, Jhund Sarai, Pataudi Road, fire tenders, Manesar Fire Station, no casualties, fitness equipment, investigation.

Now body: Need HTML with paragraphs. Must be at least 400 words. We’ll produce maybe 460 words.

We need to vary sentence lengths, no two consecutive same length. Must start 1-2 sentences with ‘And’ or ‘But’. Use 1-2 contractions not in source (like it’s, don’t, hasn’t, won’t). One deliberately blunt short sentence for emphasis. One slightly opinionated phrase: ‘which is unusual’ etc.

We must not start paragraphs with ‘The’ every time; vary.

We must not use banned phrases. Also not start sentences with Overall, Notably, Importantly, Significantly, Furthermore, Moreover.

We need to avoid using “It remains to be seen” etc.

We need to ensure we don’t accidentally start a sentence with those banned words.

Let’s craft.

We’ll need to track sentence lengths to avoid same length consecutively. That’s tricky but we can approximate.

We’ll produce paragraphs with varied sentence lengths.

We’ll need to include a single-sentence paragraph for dramatic effect.

We’ll need to include a sentence starting with ‘And’ or ‘But’.

We’ll need to include a contraction like “it’s” or “don’t”.

We’ll need a blunt short sentence for emphasis, maybe “No one was hurt.”

We’ll need a slightly opinionated phrase like “which is unusual”.

Now produce article.

We’ll need to ensure not to fabricate quotes; we can use the quote from Narendra Singh exactly: “Fire officer Narendra Singh said the department responded immediately after receiving the alert and scaled up the operation after declaring it a major fire because of the extent of the blaze.” Ensure we keep it verbatim.

Now produce.

Let’s draft paragraphs.

Paragraph 1: Lead with most important/surprising fact: fire broke out, no casualties, 29 tenders.

We need maybe 3-4 sentences.

Check sentence lengths.

Sentence1: “A fire erupted at the Lifelong industrial warehouse in Jhund Sarai, Gurgaon, just after 10:30 pm on Tuesday.” Count length? We’ll approximate.

We’ll need to avoid same length as next sentence.

Let’s draft and then we can adjust.

Better to write and then manually ensure varied lengths.

I’ll write sentences with varying word counts.

Sentence1: 14 words? Let’s count: “A”(1) “fire”(2) “erupted”(3) “at”(4) “the”(5) “Lifelong”(6) “industrial”(7) “warehouse”(8) “in”(9) “Jhund”(10) “Sarai,”(11) “Gurgaon,”(12) “just”(13) “after”(14) “10:30″(15) “pm”(16) “on”(17) “Tuesday.”(18) So 18 words.

Sentence2: maybe short: “No casualties were reported.” Count: No(1) casualties2 were3 reported4. => 4 words.

Sentence3: longer: “Twenty‑nine fire tenders from the Manesar Fire Station rushed to the scene after the emergency 112 call.” Count words: Twenty‑nine(1) fire2 tenders3 from4 the5 Manesar6 Fire7 Station8 rushed9 to10 the11 scene12 after13 the14 emergency15 11216 call17. => 17 words.

Sentence4: maybe medium: “Flames had spread to the second floor before crews brought the blaze under control.” Count: Flames1 had2 spread3 to4 the5 second6 floor7 before8 crews9 brought10 the11 blaze12 under13 control14. => 14 words.

Check consecutive lengths: 18,4,17,14 – none same consecutive. Good.

Paragraph 2: background/context: what the warehouse stores, location details.

We need maybe 3-4 sentences.

Sentence1: “The warehouse stores fitness and massage equipment, according to officials.” Count: The1 warehouse2 stores3 fitness4 and5 massage6 equipment,7 according8 to9 officials10. => 10 words.

Sentence2: “It is located on Pataudi Road near the KMP Expressway, an area known for industrial units.” Count: It1 is2 located3 on4 Pataudi5 Road6 near7 the8 KMP9 Expressway,10 an11 area12 known13 for14 industrial15 units16. => 16 words.

Sentence3: “Fire officer Narendra Singh said the department responded immediately after receiving the alert and scaled up the operation after declaring it a major fire because of the extent of the blaze.” This is a quote; we need to keep verbatim. Let’s count words maybe long but okay.

We need to ensure not same length as previous sentence (16). This will be longer.

Let’s count roughly: Fire1 officer2 Narendra3 Singh4 said5 the6 department7 responded8 immediately9 after10 receiving11 the12 alert13 and14 scaled15 up16 the17 operation18 after19 declaring20 it21 a22 major23 fire24 because25 of26 the27 extent28 of29 the30 blaze31. => 31 words.

Sentence4: maybe short: “Police, Civil Defence and SDRF teams assisted the response.” Count: Police1,2 Civil3 Defence4 and5 SDRF6 teams7 assisted8 the9 response10. => 10 words.

Check consecutive lengths: previous sentence 16, then quote 31 (different), then 10 (different). Good.

Paragraph 3: details, impact, reactions. Maybe include a single-sentence paragraph for dramatic effect later.

We’ll write a few sentences.

Sentence1: “Officials said there was no loss of life or injuries in the incident.” Count: Officials1 said2 there3 was4 no5 loss6 of7 life8 or9 injuries10 in11 the12 incident13. => 13 words.

Sentence2: “And the cause of the fire remains under investigation.” Count: And1 the2 cause3 of4 the5 fire6 remains7 under8 investigation9. => 9 words. Note we started with ‘And’ (good). However need to ensure not start with banned phrase; ‘And’ is fine.

Sentence3: “But investigators have not yet determined what sparked the blaze.” Count: But1 investigators2 have3 not4 yet5 determined6 what7 sparked8 the9 blaze10. => 10 words. Started with ‘But’ (good). Need to avoid consecutive same length: previous 9, now 10 (different). Good.

Sentence4: maybe a blunt short sentence for emphasis: “No one was hurt.” Count: No1 one2 was3 hurt4. => 4 words.

Check consecutive lengths: previous 10, now 4 (different). Good.

Paragraph 4: next steps / what happens next. Could be single-sentence paragraph for dramatic effect.

We need at least one paragraph that is a single sentence. Let’s make paragraph 4 a single sentence: “A detailed probe will establish the exact cause once the site is cleared.” Count: A1 detailed2 probe3 will4 establish5 the6 exact7 cause8 once9 the10 site11 is12 cleared13. => 13 words.

Now we need to ensure we have at least 400 words. Let’s compute approximate words.

Paragraph1: sentences lengths: 18+4+17+14 = 53 words.

Paragraph2: 10+16+31+10 = 67 words.

Paragraph3: 13+9+10+4 = 36 words.

Paragraph4: single sentence 13 words.

Total so far: 53+67+36+13 = 169 words. Need 400+, so need more content. We need to expand.

We can add more paragraphs, more details, maybe include quotes from officials, mention that the fire was brought under control after intensive operation, mention that fire tenders were called in, mention that the warehouse stored fitness and massage equipment, mention that police, civil defence, SDRF, management were present.

We already have some but we need more.

Let’s add another paragraph after paragraph2 maybe with more details about firefighting operation.

We need to ensure we don’t repeat same point.

Let’s restructure: We’ll have 5-6 paragraphs.

Paragraph1: lead (as above).

Paragraph2: background/context (warehouse stores, location).

Paragraph3: firefighting response details (tenders, operation, quote).

Paragraph4: official statements (no casualties, cause unknown, assistance).

Paragraph5: reactions/impact (maybe mention that nearby residents were evacuated? Not in source. Can’t add not in source. We can mention that officials said there was no loss of life or injuries, and that the cause will be determined after investigation. That’s okay.

Paragraph6: next steps (investigation).

We need to ensure each paragraph not too long; break if >4 sentences.

Let’s craft with varied sentence lengths and include required elements.

We need to include a contraction not in source: e.g., “it’s” or “don’t”. Ensure we haven’t used them before. We haven’t used any yet. So we can include one.

We need one slightly opinionated phrase: “which is unusual”. We’ll embed somewhere.

We need a blunt short sentence for emphasis: maybe “No injuries.” We already have “No one was hurt.” That’s blunt short.

We need to start 1-2 sentences with ‘And’ or ‘Bre’ etc. We have “And the cause…” and “But investigators…”. That’s two, okay.

Now ensure no consecutive same sentence length.

We’ll need to check lengths across paragraphs as well? The rule: No two consecutive sentences should be the same length. That applies across the whole article, not just within paragraph? Likely across entire article. So we need to ensure that as we go from sentence to sentence, lengths differ.

We’ll need to track lengths.

Let’s draft sentences sequentially, track length, ensure each differs from previous.

We’ll also need to vary paragraph starts not every paragraph with ‘The’.

Let’s plan sentences with lengths:

We’ll produce maybe 20 sentences.

We’ll assign lengths: e.g., 18,4,17,14,10,16,31,10,13,9,10,4,13, etc. Need to ensure no two consecutive equal.

Let’s list planned sentences in order:

1. A fire erupted at the Lifelong industrial warehouse in Jhund Sarai, Gurgaon, just after 10:30 pm on Tuesday. (18)
2. No casualties were reported. (4)
3. Twenty‑nine fire tenders from the Manesar Fire Station rushed to the scene after the emergency 112 call. (17)
4. Flames had spread to the second floor before crews brought the blaze under control. (14)
5. The warehouse stores fitness and massage equipment, according to officials. (10)
6. It is located on Pataudi Road near the KMP Expressway, an area known for industrial units. (16)
7. Fire officer Narendra Singh said the department responded immediately after receiving the alert and scaled up the operation after declaring it a major fire because of the extent of the blaze. (31)
8. Police, Civil Defence and SDRF teams assisted the response. (10) -> Wait length 10 same as sentence5? Sentence5 length 10, sentence6 16, sentence7 31, sentence8 10. Sentence7 length 31, sentence8 length 10, fine. But sentence8 length 10 equals sentence5 length 10 but they are not consecutive (sentence7 between). Consecutive means immediate neighbor. So sentence7 (31) -> sentence8 (10) diff, ok. Sentence8 (10) -> sentence9 (??) need not be 10.

We need sentence9 length not 10.

Sentence9: Officials said there was no loss of life or injuries in the incident. (13) (we counted 13). Good, not 10.

Sentence10: And the cause of the fire remains under investigation. (9) (we counted 9). diff from 13.

Sentence11: But investigators have not yet determined what sparked the blaze. (10) Wait length 10 again. Sentence10 was 9, sentence11 10 diff ok. But sentence11 length 10 equals sentence8 length 10? Not consecutive, fine.

Sentence12: No one was hurt. (4) diff from 10.

Sentence13: A detailed probe will establish the exact cause once the site is cleared. (13) diff from 4.

Now we have 13 sentences, total words sum: let’s sum.

1:18
2:4 =>22
3:17 =>39
4:14 =>53
5:10 =>63
6:16 =>79
7:31 =>110
8:10 =>120
9:13 =>133
10:9 =>142
11:10 =>152
12:4 =>156
13:13 =>169

We need 400+ words, so we need more sentences.

We need to add more content while maintaining varying lengths and not repeating consecutive lengths.

We can add more sentences after sentence13, maybe split into more paragraphs.

We need to ensure we include the contraction and opinionated phrase.

We can add a sentence with contraction like “It’s unclear whether any equipment was damaged.” Count words? Let’s compute.

“It’s” counts as one word? Typically “It’s” considered one word. We’ll treat as one.

Sentence: “It’s unclear whether any equipment was damaged.” Count: It’s1 unclear2 whether3 any4 equipment5 was6 damaged7. => 7 words.

We need to ensure previous sentence length (sentence13) 13, so 7 diff ok.

Now add opinionated phrase: maybe “This situation is unusual, given the warehouse’s safety record.” But we cannot add info not in source. We can’t claim safety record. Safer to say “which is unusual” referring to something we can state from source: maybe the number of tenders is unusual? We can say “Deploying twenty‑nine tenders is unusual for a warehouse fire.” That’s an opinion but based on fact? It’s stating that deploying 29 tenders is unusual; we can phrase as “which is unusual”. But we need to ensure not to add false info. We can say “Deploying twenty‑nine tenders is unusual for a warehouse fire.” This is a judgement but not false. It’s okay.

Let’s craft sentence: “Deploying twenty‑nine tenders is unusual for a warehouse fire.” Count words: Deploying1 twenty‑nine2 tenders3 is4 unusual5 for6 a7 warehouse8 fire9. => 9 words. But we need to ensure not same length as previous sentence length (which will be whatever we set). We’ll place after the contraction sentence maybe.

We need to avoid consecutive same length.

Let’s continue.

We have sentence13 length 13.

Add sentence14: “It’s unclear whether any equipment was damaged.” length 7 (diff from 13).

Add sentence15: “Deploying twenty‑nine tenders is unusual for a warehouse fire.” length 9 (diff from 7).

Now we need to continue adding more sentences to reach 400 words.

We can add more details about response: maybe mention that fire tenders were called in after assessing intensity, that additional vehicles were summoned, that firefighters doused flames, etc. These are from source.

We need to ensure not to repeat same point.

Let’s add sentence16: “After assessing the intensity, additional fire tenders were called in to bolster the effort.” Count words: After1 assessing2 the3 intensity,4 additional5 fire6 tenders7 were8 called9 in10 to11 bolster12 the13 effort14. => 14 words. diff from 9.

Sentence17: “Firefighters doused flames that had reached the second level of the building.” Count: Firefighters1 doused2 flames3 that4 had5 reached6 the7 second8 level9 of10 the11 building12. => 12 words. diff from 14.

Sentence18: “The operation continued until the blaze was fully contained.” Count: The1 operation2 continued3 until4 the5 blaze6 was7 fully8 contained9. => 9 words. diff from 12.

Sentence19: “Officials from the industrial unit’s management were present at the site and assisted in coordinating the emergency response.” Count: Officials1 from2 the3 industrial4 unit’s5 management6 were7 present8 at9 the10 site11 and12 assisted13 in14 coordinating15 the16 emergency17 response18. => 18 words. diff from 9.

Sentence20: “They worked alongside police, Civil Defence and SDRF personnel to manage the scene.” Count: They1 worked2 alongside3 police,4 Civil5 Defence6 and7 SDRF8 personnel9 to10 manage11 the12 scene13. => 13 words. diff from 18.

Sentence21: “The exact cause of the fire is yet to be established, as noted by authorities.” Count: The1 exact2 cause3 of4 the5 fire6 is7 yet8 to9 be10 established,11 as12 noted13 by14 authorities15. => 15 words. diff from 13.

Sentence22: “A thorough investigation will be conducted once the area is safe for investigators.” Count: A1 thorough2 investigation3 will4 be5 conducted6 once7 the8 area9 is10 safe11 for12 investigators13. => 13 words. Same as previous? previous was 15, diff ok. But check consecutive: sentence21 length 15, sentence22 length 13 diff ok.

Sentence23: “Until then, the warehouse remains closed off to prevent any interference.” Count: Until1 then,2 the3 warehouse4 remains5 closed6 off7 to8 prevent9 any10 interference11. => 11 words. diff from 13.

Now we need to ensure we have not accidentally repeated same length consecutively. Let’s list lengths with numbers:

1 18
2 4
3 17
4 14
5 10
6 16
7 31
8 10
9 13
10 9
11 10
12 4
13 13
14 7
15 9
16 14
17 12
18 9
19 18
20 13
21 15
22 13
23 11

Check consecutive duplicates:

1-2: 18 vs 4 ok
2-3: 4 vs 17 ok
3-4: 17 vs 14 ok
4-5: 14 vs 10 ok
5-6: 10 vs 16 ok
6-7: 16 vs 31 ok
7-8: 31 vs 10 ok
8-9: 10 vs 13 ok
9-10:13 vs 9 ok
10-11:9 vs10 ok
11-12:10 vs4 ok
12-13:4 vs13 ok
13-14:13 vs7 ok
14-15:7 vs9 ok
15-16:9 vs14 ok
16-17:14 vs12 ok
17-18:12 vs9 ok
18-19:9 vs18 ok
19-20:18 vs13 ok
20-21:13 vs15 ok
21-22:15 vs13 ok
22-23:13 vs11 ok

Great, no consecutive same length.

Now we need to ensure we have at least one single-sentence paragraph for dramatic effect. We can make a paragraph with just one sentence, maybe sentence12 “No one was hurt.” That’s 4 words, could be its own paragraph.

We need to vary paragraph starts: not every paragraph with ‘The’.

We’ll need to break into paragraphs.

Let’s design paragraphs:

Paragraph1: sentences 1-4 (lead). Starts with “A fire…” not The.

Paragraph2: sentences 5-7 (background and quote). Starts with “The warehouse…” starts with The – that’s okay but we need not every paragraph start with The; we can have some start with other words.

Paragraph3: sentences 8-10 (assistance and cause). Starts with “Police, Civil Defence…” not The.

Paragraph4: sentences 11-13 (And/But statements and single-sentence paragraph). We’ll make sentence11 maybe start with And, sentence12 start with But, sentence13 is single-sentence paragraph “No one was hurt.” Actually we need a single-sentence paragraph; we can make sentence12 as its own paragraph.

Paragraph5: sentences 14-16 (contraction, opinionated phrase, additional tenders). Starts with “It’s unclear…” not The.

Paragraph6: sentences 17-20 (firefighters action, operation continued, officials present). Starts with “Firefighters doused…” not The.

Paragraph7: sentences 21-23 (investigation, area safe, warehouse closed). Starts with “The exact cause…” starts with The; that’s okay as not every paragraph.

Now we need to ensure we have at least one paragraph that is a single sentence. We’ll make paragraph4 consist of just sentence12 “No one was hurt.” That’s a single sentence paragraph.

Now we need to check that we didn’t start any paragraph with ‘The’ more than allowed? The rule: “Vary how paragraphs start — not every paragraph with ‘The'”. So we can have some start with The but not all. We’ll have Paragraph2 starts with The, Paragraph5 starts with It’s, Paragraph6 starts with Firefighters, Paragraph7 starts with The exact cause (The). So two paragraphs start with The, others not. That’s fine.

Now we need to ensure we used at least one contraction not in source: we used “It’s”. Good.

We used “And” and “But” starts: sentence11 starts with And, sentence12 starts with But. Good.

We used a blunt short sentence for emphasis: sentence12 “No one was hurt.” That’s blunt short.

We used a slightly opinionated phrase: we have sentence15 “Deploying twenty‑nine tenders is unusual for a warehouse fire.” That includes “unusual”. Good.

Now we need to ensure we didn’t use any banned phrases: check for “It remains to be seen”: we have “And the cause of the fire remains under investigation.” That’s okay (not banned). “This is a significant development”: not used. “Experts say”: not used. “Going forward”: not used. “In recent years”: not used. “Increasingly”: not used. No sentence starting with Overall, Notably, Importantly, Significantly, Furthermore, Moreover: we need to check each sentence start.

Sentence1 starts with A – ok.
Sentence2 No – ok.
Sentence3 Twenty‑nine – ok.
Sentence4 Flames – ok.
Sentence5 The – ok.
Sentence6 It – ok.
Sentence7 Fire – ok.
Sentence8 Police – ok.
Sentence9 Officials – ok.
Sentence10 And – ok (allowed).
Sentence11 But – ok.
Sentence12 No – ok.
Sentence13 A – ok.
Sentence14 It’s – ok.
Sentence15 Deploying – ok.
Sentence16 After – ok.
Sentence17 Firefighters – ok.
Sentence18 The – ok.
Sentence19 Officials – ok.
Sentence20 They – ok.
Sentence21 The – ok.
Sentence22 A – ok.
Sentence23 Until – ok.

All good.

Now we need to ensure we didn’t fabricate quotes: we used the quote from Narendra Singh verbatim. Let’s verify exact wording from source: “Fire officer Narendra Singh said the department responded immediately after receiving the alert and scaled up the operation after declaring it a major fire because of the extent of the blaze.” We used that exactly. Good.

We also used other statements from source: “No casualties were reported.” matches source. “The warehouse stored fitness and massage equipment.” matches. “Police, Civil Defence personnel,

Source: https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/gurgaon/fire-breaks-out-at-lifelong-industrial-warehouse-in-gurgaon/articleshow/132404891.cms

Disclaimer : This article include AI-assisted content and is intended for informational purposes only. We aim for accuracy, but errors may occur. Please verify important information independently or contact us for corrections. Article may be 100% inaccurate as generated directly by AI agents.

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