An extra difficulty may be the different expectations (35) __________ the host parents have of them in comparison with their own parents.
A. whose
Đáp án B
Đại từ quan hệ thay thế cho danh từ chỉ vật ‘expectations’ → dùng “which”
Thông tin: An extra difficulty may be the different expectations which the host parents have of them in comparison with their own parents.
Tạm dịch: Một khó khăn nữa có thể là những kỳ vọng khác nhau mà cha mẹ chủ nhà dành cho họ so với cha mẹ của chính họ.
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Hung is inviting Lan to join the youth club.
- Hung: “Would you like to join our youth club?”
- Lan: “_______”
Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the word that differs from the other three in the position of the primary stress in each of the following questions.
Reading the article about damages caused by the heavy storm really brought a lump to my _______.
Young children are advised to participate in community activities to improve his social skills.
Peter was bitterly disappointed at the test result, but I think he’ll soon _______ it.
Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the sentence that is closest in meaning to each of the following questions.
You’re not allowed to record the programme.
She hopes that the document __________ by a professional translator.
They _______ a big row about how to raise their child last night.
Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to each of the questions from 44 to 50.
The next time you’re out in a public place, like a park or a restaurant, look around you. What is happening? Some people are surfing the internet on their phones. Others are wearing headphones, listening to music on their MP3 players. That’s just the way life is today. We all spend a fair amount of our time connected to technology.
Now imagine living in a world without smartphones, tablets or any of the electronic gadgets we take for granted these days. There’s no internet and you go to the library and look at a book when you want to find anything out. You play outside with friends in the real world instead of playing online video games in virtual worlds. There are no texts, no DVDs and no email. Welcome to 1986!
That’s the world the McMillan family from Ontario, Canada, decided to live in for a year. Blair, 27, Morgan, 28, and their two sons Trey and Denton, aged five and three, got rid of their cable TV, smartphones, internet, new games console, digital camera, DVD player and sat nav, and instead used an old TV, a radio, old telephones, a VHS video player, an old games console and maps. They decided to try it after seeing how their young children were becoming dependent on technology. They aren’t alone. More and more parents today worry about the effect technology is having on their children, particularly very young children.
The McMillans decided to get back to basics to see how things have changed. So how did they find their year without modem technology? ‘I thought Blair was mad when he suggested doing this whole thing,’ says Morgan, but it’s made me realise how much time we wasted. We seem much more relaxed now, not checking in on email or Facebook all the time.’ The McMillans are now back in the present with a different attitude to today’s technology. Blair said, ‘I’m not anti-technology. I wanted to taste, and I wanted my kids to taste what it would be like without it, and to see if we could actually do it.”
(Adapted from Optimise by Malcolm Mann and Steve Taylore-Knowles)
Which best serves as the title for the passage?