A. The tourism in New Zealand
Đáp án D
Giải thích:
Ý chính của bài là gì?
A. Du lịch ở New Zealand
B. Các điểm du lịch ở New Zealand
C. Trang web của New Zealand
D. Trang web về du lịch của New Zealand
Thông tin: A key feature of the campaign was the website www.newzealand.com, which provided potential visitors to New Zealand with a single gateway to everything the destination had to offer... To communicate the New Zealand experience, the site also carried features relating to famous people and places.
Tạm dịch: Một tính năng chính của chiến dịch là trang web www.newzealand.com, cung cấp cho du khách tiềm năng đến New Zealand một cửa ngõ duy nhất để đến mọi thứ mà điểm đến phải cung cấp... Để quảng bá kinh nghiệm của New Zealand, trang web cũng cung cấp các tính năng liên quan đến những người và địa điểm nổi tiếng.
Chọn D.
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Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to each of the following questions.
Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the word(s) CLOSEST in meaning to the underlined word(s) in each of the following questions.
Many species are threatened in the wild due to habitat destruction by man.
After it had been ___________ the air for only two months, the series was cancelled.
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.
There are two main hypotheses when it comes to explaining the emergence of modern humans. The "Out of Africa" theory holds that homo sapiens burst onto the scene as a new species around 150,000 to 200,000 years ago in Africa and subsequently replaced archaic humans such as the Neanderthals. The other model, known as multi-regional evolution or regional continuity, posits far more ancient and diverse roots for our kind. Proponents of this view believe that homo sapiens arose in Africa some 2 million years ago and evolved as a single species spreading across the Old World, with populations in different regions linked through genetic and cultural exchange.
Of these two models, Out of Africa, which was originally developed based on fossil evidence, and supported by much genetic research, has been favored by the majority of evolution scholars. The vast majority of these genetic studies have focused on DNA from living populations, and although some small progress has been made in recovering DNA from Neanderthal that appears to support multi-regionalism, the chance of recovering nuclear DNA from early human fossils is quite slim at present. Fossils thus remain very much a part of the human origins debate.
Another means of gathering theoretical evidence is through bones. Examinations of early modern human skulls from Central Europe and Australia dated to between 20,000 and 30,000 years old have suggested that both groups apparently exhibit traits seen in their Middle Eastern and African predecessors. But the early modern specimens from Central Europe also display Neanderthal traits, and the early modern Australians showed affinities to archaic Homo from Indonesia. Meanwhile, the debate among paleoanthropologists continues, as supporters of the two hypotheses challenge the evidence and conclusions of each other.