Blacken the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to each of the following questions.
He spent________dollars on food and drinks.
A. very a few
B. only a few
C. only a little
D. only few
Only a few + N (plural) : có rất ít ( nhấn mạnh )
Only a few + N( non - count) : có rất ít ( nhấn mạnh)
“dollars” là danh từ số nhiều nên đáp án đúng là B.
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Blacken the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the word whose underlined part is pronounced differently from the other three in each question.
Blacken the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to each of the following questions.
Doctors are supposed to________responsibility for humman life.
Read the following passage and blacken the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to the following questions.
A small but growing group of scholar, evolutionary, psychologists, are being to sketch the contours of the human mind as designed by natural selection. Some of them even anticipate the coming of a field called "mismatch theory", which would study maladies resulting from contrasts between the modern environment and the "ancestral environment". The one we were designed for.
There is no shortage of such maladies to study, Rates of depression have been doubling in some industrial countries roughly every 10 years. Suicide is the third most common cause of death among young adults, after car wrecks and homicides.
Evolutionary psychology is a long way from explaining all this with precision, but it is already shedding enough light to challenges some conventional wisdom. It suggests, for example, that the nostalgia for the nuclear family of the 1950s is in some way misguided - that the model family of husband at work and wife
at home is hardly a "natural" and healthful living arrangement, especially for the wives. Moreover, the bygone lifestyles that do look fairly natural in light of evolutionary psychology appear to have been eroded largely by commercialism. Perhaps the biggest surprise from evolutionary psychology it its depiction of the "animal" in us. Freud, and various thinkers since, saw "civilization" as an oppressive force that thwarts basic animal instincts and urges and transmutes them into psychopathology. However, evolutionary psychology suggests that a larger threat to metal health may be the way civilization thwarts civility. There is a gentler, kinder side of human nature, and it seems increasingly to be a victim of repression in modern society.
Question: The word "bygone" in line 11 could be replaced by
Read the following passage and blacken the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct word for each of the blanks in the following question.
Cultural diversity can be such a cool thing. I grew up in a predominantly white private school, (62)________
teaching in a place that is extremely diverse has been a joy. I can stand in the hall and (63)________Spanish, Russian, Polish, Korean, Mandarin, Hindu, etc. the list can go on and on. What we need to be careful of is not to make (64)________a big deal out of cultural diversity. I think that when we place too much (65)________ on the diversity it can become a polarizing act. Many students are very aware (66)________their differences, and most just don’t care. I think that cultural diversity is something that needs (67)________addressed be teachers in the schools as something that is positive. Often in rural areas there is not a lot of cultural diversity. (68)________a result, when a student is from a different culture there is a question of what do I do to (69)________their learning needs. It is important before a teacher can teach diverse population they need to (70)________that they are also multicultural. In addition, how much of a role will these beliefs (71)________within the education on the child.
Question 71
Read the following passage and blacken the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to the following questions.
In the American colonies there was little money. England did not supply the colonies with coins and did not allow the colonies to make their own coins, except for the Massachusetts Bay Colony, which received permission for a short period in 1652 to make several kinds of silver coins. England wanted to keep money out of America as a means of controlling trade: America was forced to trade only with England if it did not have the money to buy products from other countries. The result during this pre-revolutionary period was that the colonists used various goods in place of money: beaver pelts, Indian wampum, and tobacco leaves were all commonly used substitutes for money. The colonists also made use of any foreign coins they could obtain. Dutch, Spanish, French, and English coins were all in use in the American colonies.
During the Revolutionary War, funds were needed to finance the world, so each of the individual states and the Continental Congress issued paper money. So much of this paper money was printed that by the end of the war, almost no one would accept it. As a result, trade in goods and the use of foreign coins still flourished during this period.
By the time the Revolutionary War had been won by the American colonists, the monetary system was in a state of total disarray. To remedy this situation, the new Constitution of the United States, approved in 1789, allowed Congress to issue money. The individual States could no longer have their own money supply. A few years later, the Coinage Act of 1792 made the dollar the official currency of the United States and put the country on a bimetallic standard. In this bimetallic system, both gold and silver were legal money, and the rate of exchange of silver to gold was fixed by the government at sixteen to one.
Question:The passage indicates that during the colonial period, money was
Read the following passage and blacken the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct word for each of the blanks in the following question.
Cultural diversity can be such a cool thing. I grew up in a predominantly white private school, (62)________
teaching in a place that is extremely diverse has been a joy. I can stand in the hall and (63)________Spanish, Russian, Polish, Korean, Mandarin, Hindu, etc. the list can go on and on. What we need to be careful of is not to make (64)________a big deal out of cultural diversity. I think that when we place too much (65)________ on the diversity it can become a polarizing act. Many students are very aware (66)________their differences, and most just don’t care. I think that cultural diversity is something that needs (67)________addressed be teachers in the schools as something that is positive. Often in rural areas there is not a lot of cultural diversity. (68)________a result, when a student is from a different culture there is a question of what do I do to (69)________their learning needs. It is important before a teacher can teach diverse population they need to (70)________that they are also multicultural. In addition, how much of a role will these beliefs (71)________within the education on the child.
Question 70
Blacken the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to show the underlined part that needs correction.
I didn’t see Marry since she went to live in the capital
Read the following passage and blacken the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to the following questions.
A small but growing group of scholar, evolutionary, psychologists, are being to sketch the contours of the human mind as designed by natural selection. Some of them even anticipate the coming of a field called "mismatch theory", which would study maladies resulting from contrasts between the modern environment and the "ancestral environment". The one we were designed for.
There is no shortage of such maladies to study, Rates of depression have been doubling in some industrial countries roughly every 10 years. Suicide is the third most common cause of death among young adults, after car wrecks and homicides.
Evolutionary psychology is a long way from explaining all this with precision, but it is already shedding enough light to challenges some conventional wisdom. It suggests, for example, that the nostalgia for the nuclear family of the 1950s is in some way misguided - that the model family of husband at work and wife
at home is hardly a "natural" and healthful living arrangement, especially for the wives. Moreover, the bygone lifestyles that do look fairly natural in light of evolutionary psychology appear to have been eroded largely by commercialism. Perhaps the biggest surprise from evolutionary psychology it its depiction of the "animal" in us. Freud, and various thinkers since, saw "civilization" as an oppressive force that thwarts basic animal instincts and urges and transmutes them into psychopathology. However, evolutionary psychology suggests that a larger threat to metal health may be the way civilization thwarts civility. There is a gentler, kinder side of human nature, and it seems increasingly to be a victim of repression in modern society.
Question: Which of the following is the main topic of the passage?
Read the following passage and blacken the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct word for each of the blanks in the following question.
Cultural diversity can be such a cool thing. I grew up in a predominantly white private school, (62)________
teaching in a place that is extremely diverse has been a joy. I can stand in the hall and (63)________Spanish, Russian, Polish, Korean, Mandarin, Hindu, etc. the list can go on and on. What we need to be careful of is not to make (64)________a big deal out of cultural diversity. I think that when we place too much (65)________ on the diversity it can become a polarizing act. Many students are very aware (66)________their differences, and most just don’t care. I think that cultural diversity is something that needs (67)________addressed be teachers in the schools as something that is positive. Often in rural areas there is not a lot of cultural diversity. (68)________a result, when a student is from a different culture there is a question of what do I do to (69)________their learning needs. It is important before a teacher can teach diverse population they need to (70)________that they are also multicultural. In addition, how much of a role will these beliefs (71)________within the education on the child.
Question 67
Read the following passage and blacken the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to the following questions.
In the American colonies there was little money. England did not supply the colonies with coins and did not allow the colonies to make their own coins, except for the Massachusetts Bay Colony, which received permission for a short period in 1652 to make several kinds of silver coins. England wanted to keep money out of America as a means of controlling trade: America was forced to trade only with England if it did not have the money to buy products from other countries. The result during this pre-revolutionary period was that the colonists used various goods in place of money: beaver pelts, Indian wampum, and tobacco leaves were all commonly used substitutes for money. The colonists also made use of any foreign coins they could obtain. Dutch, Spanish, French, and English coins were all in use in the American colonies.
During the Revolutionary War, funds were needed to finance the world, so each of the individual states and the Continental Congress issued paper money. So much of this paper money was printed that by the end of the war, almost no one would accept it. As a result, trade in goods and the use of foreign coins still flourished during this period.
By the time the Revolutionary War had been won by the American colonists, the monetary system was in a state of total disarray. To remedy this situation, the new Constitution of the United States, approved in 1789, allowed Congress to issue money. The individual States could no longer have their own money supply. A few years later, the Coinage Act of 1792 made the dollar the official currency of the United States and put the country on a bimetallic standard. In this bimetallic system, both gold and silver were legal money, and the rate of exchange of silver to gold was fixed by the government at sixteen to one.
Question: The pronoun “it” in paragraph 2 refers to which of the following
Read the following passage and blacken the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct word for each of the blanks in the following question.
Cultural diversity can be such a cool thing. I grew up in a predominantly white private school, (62)________
teaching in a place that is extremely diverse has been a joy. I can stand in the hall and (63)________Spanish, Russian, Polish, Korean, Mandarin, Hindu, etc. the list can go on and on. What we need to be careful of is not to make (64)________a big deal out of cultural diversity. I think that when we place too much (65)________ on the diversity it can become a polarizing act. Many students are very aware (66)________their differences, and most just don’t care. I think that cultural diversity is something that needs (67)________addressed be teachers in the schools as something that is positive. Often in rural areas there is not a lot of cultural diversity. (68)________a result, when a student is from a different culture there is a question of what do I do to (69)________their learning needs. It is important before a teacher can teach diverse population they need to (70)________that they are also multicultural. In addition, how much of a role will these beliefs (71)________within the education on the child.
Question 64
Read the following passage and blacken the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to the following questions.
In the American colonies there was little money. England did not supply the colonies with coins and did not allow the colonies to make their own coins, except for the Massachusetts Bay Colony, which received permission for a short period in 1652 to make several kinds of silver coins. England wanted to keep money out of America as a means of controlling trade: America was forced to trade only with England if it did not have the money to buy products from other countries. The result during this pre-revolutionary period was that the colonists used various goods in place of money: beaver pelts, Indian wampum, and tobacco leaves were all commonly used substitutes for money. The colonists also made use of any foreign coins they could obtain. Dutch, Spanish, French, and English coins were all in use in the American colonies.
During the Revolutionary War, funds were needed to finance the world, so each of the individual states and the Continental Congress issued paper money. So much of this paper money was printed that by the end of the war, almost no one would accept it. As a result, trade in goods and the use of foreign coins still flourished during this period.
By the time the Revolutionary War had been won by the American colonists, the monetary system was in a state of total disarray. To remedy this situation, the new Constitution of the United States, approved in 1789, allowed Congress to issue money. The individual States could no longer have their own money supply. A few years later, the Coinage Act of 1792 made the dollar the official currency of the United States and put the country on a bimetallic standard. In this bimetallic system, both gold and silver were legal money, and the rate of exchange of silver to gold was fixed by the government at sixteen to one.
Question: The expression “a means of'’ in paragraph 1 could be best replaced by.
Read the following passage and blacken the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to the following questions.
In the American colonies there was little money. England did not supply the colonies with coins and did not allow the colonies to make their own coins, except for the Massachusetts Bay Colony, which received permission for a short period in 1652 to make several kinds of silver coins. England wanted to keep money out of America as a means of controlling trade: America was forced to trade only with England if it did not have the money to buy products from other countries. The result during this pre-revolutionary period was that the colonists used various goods in place of money: beaver pelts, Indian wampum, and tobacco leaves were all commonly used substitutes for money. The colonists also made use of any foreign coins they could obtain. Dutch, Spanish, French, and English coins were all in use in the American colonies.
During the Revolutionary War, funds were needed to finance the world, so each of the individual states and the Continental Congress issued paper money. So much of this paper money was printed that by the end of the war, almost no one would accept it. As a result, trade in goods and the use of foreign coins still flourished during this period.
By the time the Revolutionary War had been won by the American colonists, the monetary system was in a state of total disarray. To remedy this situation, the new Constitution of the United States, approved in 1789, allowed Congress to issue money. The individual States could no longer have their own money supply. A few years later, the Coinage Act of 1792 made the dollar the official currency of the United States and put the country on a bimetallic standard. In this bimetallic system, both gold and silver were legal money, and the rate of exchange of silver to gold was fixed by the government at sixteen to one.
Question: It is implied in the passage that at the end of the Revolutionary War, a paper dollar was worth
Read the following passage and blacken the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct word for each of the blanks in the following question.
Cultural diversity can be such a cool thing. I grew up in a predominantly white private school, (62)________
teaching in a place that is extremely diverse has been a joy. I can stand in the hall and (63)________Spanish, Russian, Polish, Korean, Mandarin, Hindu, etc. the list can go on and on. What we need to be careful of is not to make (64)________a big deal out of cultural diversity. I think that when we place too much (65)________ on the diversity it can become a polarizing act. Many students are very aware (66)________their differences, and most just don’t care. I think that cultural diversity is something that needs (67)________addressed be teachers in the schools as something that is positive. Often in rural areas there is not a lot of cultural diversity. (68)________a result, when a student is from a different culture there is a question of what do I do to (69)________their learning needs. It is important before a teacher can teach diverse population they need to (70)________that they are also multicultural. In addition, how much of a role will these beliefs (71)________within the education on the child.
Question 69
Blacken the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to each of the following questions.
Most of the computers in the laboratory are_______now.