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 38 to 42.
The growth of cities, the construction of hundreds of new factories, and the spread of railroads in the United States before 1850 had increased the need for better illumination. But the lighting in American homes had improved very little over that of ancient times. Through the colonial period, homes were lit with tallow candles or with a lamp of the kind used in ancient Rome - a dish of fish oil or other animal or vegetable oil in which a twisted rag served as a wick. Some people used lard, but they had to heat charcoal underneath to keep it soft and burnable. The sperm whale provided superior burning oil, but this was expensive. In 1830 a new substance called “camphene” was patented, and it proved to be an excellent illuminant. But while camphene gave a bright light it too remained expensive, had an unpleasant odor, and also was dangerously explosive.
Between 1830 and 1850, it seemed that the only hope for cheaper illumination in the United States was the wider use of gas. In the 1840s, American gas manufacturers adopted improved British techniques for producing illuminating gas from coal. But the expense of piping gas to the consumer remained so high that until the mid-nineteenth century gas lighting was feasible only in urban areas, and only for public buildings for the wealthy. In 1854, a Canadian doctor, Abraham Gesner, patented a process for distilling a pitch like mineral found in New Brunswick and Nova Scotia that produced illuminating gas and an oil that he called “kerosene” (from “keros”, the Greek word for wax, and “ene” because it resembled camphene). Kerosene, though cheaper than camphene, had an unpleasant odor, and Gesner never made his fortune from it. But Gesner had aroused a new hope for making illuminating oil from a product coming out of North American mines.
Question 41. The word “resembled” in paragraph 2 is closest in meaning to___________.
cost the same as
was made from
sounded like
was similar to
Question 41. Đáp án D
Dịch đề bài: Từ “resembled” ở đpạn 2 gần nghĩa nhất với từ nào...
Câu hỏi về từ vựng, “resembled” (v): giống. Chọn đáp án D - was similar to: giống với - là gần nghĩa nhất với từ đề bài cho.
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Question 14. If something electricity and heat, it allows electricity or heat to___________travel along and through it.
Question 16. The newspaper article which includes a gruesome description of the murder has___________a lot of attention from the public.
Question 7. ___________the Nobel Prize, he retired from politics.
Mark the letter A, B, C, or Don your answer sheet to indicate the underlined part that needs correction in each of the following questions.
Question 21. Like many rich kids, Georgie was raised by a successor of underpaid nannies.
Question 15. We really regret to___________you that the course you are interested in is now full.
Question 18. Our mother was not happy with our work and made us___________.
Mark the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to each of the following questions
Question 5. Before the man could say anything more, Peter___________off towards the station.
Question 8. The divorce rate in Vietnam is now higher___________half a century ago.
Mark the letter A, B, C, or Don your answer sheet to indicate the underlined part that needs correction in each of the following questions.
Question 19. She grew more and more fascinated by the subject as times went by.
Question 13. There might be a___________to cheat if students sit too close together in exam rooms.
Mark the letter A, B, C, or Don your answer sheet to indicate the underlined part that needs correction in each of the following questions.
Question 20. I pretended not seeing her and carried on walking down the main street leading to the downtown.
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 43 to 50.
Dark matter in the universe is believed by some scientists to be a substance that is not readily observable because it does not directly refract light or energy. Its existence can only be deduced because of the effect that it has on surrounding matter. In fact, some members of the scientific community have argued that dark matter does not actually exist. Others, however, believe in its existence, in part because the scientific community does not have a complete understanding of gravity science. On the other hand, some would argue that it is the understanding of gravitational science that leads most scientists to believe in the existence of dark matter, because without dark matter, there are many cosmological phenomena that are difficult to explain.
For example, dark matter in the universe may have a peculiar effect on the Milky Way galaxy. Some scientists believe that the interaction between dark matter and other smaller, nearby galaxies is causing the Milky Way galaxy to take on a warped profile. It has been asserted that not only does dark matter exist, it may also be responsible for the Milky Way’s unusual shape. The interaction referenced involves two smaller galaxies near the Milky Way, called Magellanic clouds, moving through an enormous amount of dark matter, which, in effect, enhances the gravitational pull that the two Magellanic clouds could have on the Milky Way and other surrounding bodies. Without the existence of the dark matter, the Magellanic clouds would not have sufficient mass to have such a strong effect on the bend of the Milky Way galaxy.
The strongest evidence for the validity of this hypothesis rests in Newtonian physics, and the hypothesis that anything with mass will exert a gravitational pull. The Milky Way and other galaxies with peculiar warped shapes are being molded by a gravitational force. However, there is nothing readily observable with sufficient mass that could cause such a high level of distortion via gravitational pull in the vicinity of the Milky Way. Therefore, something that is not easily observed must be exerting the necessary force to create the warped shape of the galaxy.
Aaron Romanowsky and several colleagues have questioned the effect that dark matter might have on galaxies. They point to the existence of several elliptical galaxies surrounded by very
little dark matter as evidence that dark matter is not, in fact, the cause of the warped galaxies. While
they do not claim that their findings should be interpreted to conclude that dark matter does not exist, they apparently believe that the results of their studies cast doubt on some of the conventional theories of galaxy formation and manipulation.
Several models constructed by researchers from the University of California at Berkeley, however, point to the idea that dark matter is the most likely explanation for the distorted shape of the Milky Way and other galaxies. Using computer models, they have mapped the likely interactions between certain galaxies and the surrounding dark matter, and those models have shown not only the possibility that dark matter is responsible for the warped shape of the Milky Way, but that the relationship between the dark matter and the Magellanic clouds is dynamic; the movement of the clouds through the dark matter seems to create a wake that enhances their gravitational influence on the Milky Way.
Question 50. The passage supports which of the following statements about dark matter?
Question 9. Would that the council___________in detail the issue of mercury pollution in the city during the conference last week.
Question 6. For the engine to work properly, the green lever___________be in the up position.
Question 10. The waiter enquired whether___________near the window.