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  • Danh mục
    • Khóa học
      • Lớp 12
      • Lớp 11
      • Lớp 10
      • Lớp 9
      • Lớp 8
      • Lớp 7
      • Lớp 6
      • Lớp 5
      • Lớp 4
      • Lớp 3
    • Luyện thi Online
    • Thông tin tuyển sinh
    • Đáp án - Đề thi tốt nghiệp
  • Tiểu Học
    • Lớp 5
    • Lớp 4
    • Lớp 3
    • Lớp 2
    • Lớp 1

    Lớp 5

    • Kết nối tri thức

      Lịch sử & Địa lí Lớp 5 KNTT

      Tiếng Việt Lớp 5 KNTT

      Toán Lớp 5 KNTT

      Tiếng Anh Lớp 5 KNTT

      Khoa học Lớp 5 KNTT

      Đạo Đức Lớp 5 KNTT

      Hoạt động trải nghiệm Lớp 5 KNTT

      Tin học Lớp 5 KNTT

      Công nghệ Lớp 5 KNTT

    • Cánh diều

      Lịch sử & Địa lí Lớp 5 CD

      Tiếng Việt Lớp 5 CD

      Toán Lớp 5 CD

      Khoa học Lớp 5 CD

      Đạo Đức Lớp 5 CD

      Hoạt động trải nghiệm Lớp 5 CD

      Tin học Lớp 5 CD

      Công nghệ Lớp 5 CD

    • Chân trời sáng tạo

      Lịch sử & Địa lí Lớp 5 CTST

      Tiếng Việt Lớp 5 CTST

      Toán Lớp 5 CTST

      Khoa học Lớp 5 CTST

      Đạo Đức Lớp 5 CTST

      Hoạt động trải nghiệm Lớp 5 CTST

      Tin học Lớp 5 CTST

      Công nghệ Lớp 5 CTST

    Lớp 4

    • Kết nối tri thức

      Lịch sử & Địa lí Lớp 4 KNTT

      Tiếng Việt Lớp 4 KNTT

      Toán Lớp 4 KNTT

      Tiếng Anh Lớp 4 KNTT

      Khoa học Lớp 4 KNTT

      Đạo Đức Lớp 4 KNTT

      Hoạt động trải nghiệm Lớp 4 KNTT

      Tin học Lớp 4 KNTT

      Công nghệ Lớp 4 KNTT

    • Cánh diều

      Lịch sử & Địa lí Lớp 4 CD

      Tiếng Việt Lớp 4 CD

      Toán Lớp 4 CD

      Khoa học Lớp 4 CD

      Đạo Đức Lớp 4 CD

      Hoạt động trải nghiệm Lớp 4 CD

      Tin học Lớp 4 CD

      Công nghệ Lớp 4 CD

    • Chân trời sáng tạo

      Lịch sử & Địa lí Lớp 4 CTST

      Tiếng Việt Lớp 4 CTST

      Toán Lớp 4 CTST

      Khoa học Lớp 4 CTST

      Đạo Đức Lớp 4 CTST

      Hoạt động trải nghiệm Lớp 4 CTST

      Tin học Lớp 4 CTST

      Công nghệ Lớp 4 CTST

    Lớp 3

    • Kết nối tri thức

      Tiếng Việt Lớp 3 KNTT

      Toán Lớp 3 KNTT

      Tiếng Anh Lớp 3 KNTT

      Tự nhiên & Xã hội Lớp 3 KNTT

      Đạo Đức Lớp 3 KNTT

      Hoạt động trải nghiệm Lớp 3 KNTT

      Tin học Lớp 3 KNTT

      Công nghệ Lớp 3 KNTT

      Âm nhạc Lớp 3 KNTT

      Giáo dục thể chất Lớp 3 KNTT

    • Cánh diều

      Tiếng Việt Lớp 3 CD

      Toán Lớp 3 CD

      Tiếng Anh Lớp 3 CD

      Tự nhiên & Xã hội Lớp 3 CD

      Đạo Đức Lớp 3 CD

      Hoạt động trải nghiệm Lớp 3 CD

      Tin học Lớp 3 CD

      Công nghệ Lớp 3 CD

      Âm nhạc Lớp 3 CD

    • Chân trời sáng tạo

      Tiếng Việt Lớp 3 CTST

      Toán Lớp 3 CTST

      Tiếng Anh Lớp 3 CTST

      Tự nhiên & Xã hội Lớp 3 CTST

      Đạo Đức Lớp 3 CTST

      Hoạt động trải nghiệm Lớp 3 CTST

      Tin học Lớp 3 CTST

      Công nghệ Lớp 3 CTST

      Âm nhạc Lớp 3 CTST

    Lớp 2

    • Kết nối tri thức

      Tiếng Việt Lớp 2 KNTT

      Toán Lớp 2 KNTT

    • Cánh diều

      Tiếng Việt Lớp 2 CD

      Toán Lớp 2 CD

    • Chân trời sáng tạo

      Tiếng Việt Lớp 2 CTST

      Toán Lớp 2 CTST

    Lớp 1

    • Kết nối tri thức

      Tiếng Việt Lớp 1 KNTT

    • Cánh diều

      Tiếng Việt Lớp 1 CD

    • Chân trời sáng tạo

      Tiếng Việt Lớp 1 CTST

  • Trung học cơ sở
    • Lớp 9
    • Lớp 8
    • Lớp 7
    • Lớp 6

    Lớp 9

    • Kết nối tri thức

      Lịch sử & Địa lí Lớp 9 KNTT

      Văn Lớp 9 KNTT

      Toán Lớp 9 KNTT

      Tiếng Anh Lớp 9 KNTT

      Khoa học tự nhiên Lớp 9 KNTT

      Lịch sử Lớp 9 KNTT

      Địa lý Lớp 9 KNTT

      Giáo dục công dân Lớp 9 KNTT

      Hoạt động trải nghiệm Lớp 9 KNTT

      Tin học Lớp 9 KNTT

      Công nghệ Lớp 9 KNTT

    • Cánh diều

      Lịch sử & Địa lí Lớp 9 CD

      Văn Lớp 9 CD

      Toán Lớp 9 CD

      Khoa học tự nhiên Lớp 9 CD

      Lịch sử Lớp 9 CD

      Địa lý Lớp 9 CD

      Giáo dục công dân Lớp 9 CD

      Hoạt động trải nghiệm Lớp 9 CD

      Tin học Lớp 9 CD

      Công nghệ Lớp 9 CD

    • Chân trời sáng tạo

      Lịch sử & Địa lí Lớp 9 CTST

      Văn Lớp 9 CTST

      Toán Lớp 9 CTST

      Khoa học tự nhiên Lớp 9 CTST

      Lịch sử Lớp 9 CTST

      Địa lý Lớp 9 CTST

      Giáo dục công dân Lớp 9 CTST

      Hoạt động trải nghiệm Lớp 9 CTST

      Tin học Lớp 9 CTST

      Công nghệ Lớp 9 CTST

    Lớp 8

    • Kết nối tri thức

      Lịch sử & Địa lí Lớp 8 KNTT

      Văn Lớp 8 KNTT

      Toán Lớp 8 KNTT

      Tiếng Anh Lớp 8 KNTT

      Khoa học tự nhiên Lớp 8 KNTT

      Lịch sử Lớp 8 KNTT

      Địa lý Lớp 8 KNTT

      Giáo dục công dân Lớp 8 KNTT

      Hoạt động trải nghiệm Lớp 8 KNTT

      Tin học Lớp 8 KNTT

      Công nghệ Lớp 8 KNTT

    • Cánh diều

      Lịch sử & Địa lí Lớp 8 CD

      Văn Lớp 8 CD

      Toán Lớp 8 CD

      Khoa học tự nhiên Lớp 8 CD

      Lịch sử Lớp 8 CD

      Địa lý Lớp 8 CD

      Giáo dục công dân Lớp 8 CD

      Hoạt động trải nghiệm Lớp 8 CD

      Tin học Lớp 8 CD

      Công nghệ Lớp 8 CD

    • Chân trời sáng tạo

      Lịch sử & Địa lí Lớp 8 CTST

      Văn Lớp 8 CTST

      Toán Lớp 8 CTST

      Khoa học tự nhiên Lớp 8 CTST

      Lịch sử Lớp 8 CTST

      Địa lý Lớp 8 CTST

      Giáo dục công dân Lớp 8 CTST

      Hoạt động trải nghiệm Lớp 8 CTST

      Tin học Lớp 8 CTST

      Công nghệ Lớp 8 CTST

    Lớp 7

    • Kết nối tri thức

      Lịch sử & Địa lí Lớp 7 KNTT

      Văn Lớp 7 KNTT

      Tiếng Việt Lớp 7 KNTT

      Toán Lớp 7 KNTT

      Tiếng Anh Lớp 7 KNTT

      Khoa học tự nhiên Lớp 7 KNTT

      Lịch sử Lớp 7 KNTT

      Địa lý Lớp 7 KNTT

      Giáo dục công dân Lớp 7 KNTT

      Hoạt động trải nghiệm Lớp 7 KNTT

      Tin học Lớp 7 KNTT

      Công nghệ Lớp 7 KNTT

      Giáo dục thể chất Lớp 7 KNTT

    • Cánh diều

      Lịch sử & Địa lí Lớp 7 CD

      Văn Lớp 7 CD

      Toán Lớp 7 CD

      Tiếng Anh Lớp 7 CD

      Khoa học tự nhiên Lớp 7 CD

      Lịch sử Lớp 7 CD

      Địa lý Lớp 7 CD

      Giáo dục công dân Lớp 7 CD

      Hoạt động trải nghiệm Lớp 7 CD

      Tin học Lớp 7 CD

      Công nghệ Lớp 7 CD

      Giáo dục thể chất Lớp 7 CD

    • Chân trời sáng tạo

      Lịch sử & Địa lí Lớp 7 CTST

      Văn Lớp 7 CTST

      Toán Lớp 7 CTST

      Tiếng Anh Lớp 7 CTST

      Khoa học tự nhiên Lớp 7 CTST

      Lịch sử Lớp 7 CTST

      Địa lý Lớp 7 CTST

      Giáo dục công dân Lớp 7 CTST

      Hoạt động trải nghiệm Lớp 7 CTST

      Tin học Lớp 7 CTST

      Công nghệ Lớp 7 CTST

      Giáo dục thể chất Lớp 7 CTST

    Lớp 6

    • Kết nối tri thức

      Lịch sử & Địa lí Lớp 6 KNTT

      Văn Lớp 6 KNTT

      Toán Lớp 6 KNTT

      Tiếng Anh Lớp 6 KNTT

      Khoa học tự nhiên Lớp 6 KNTT

      Lịch sử Lớp 6 KNTT

      Địa lý Lớp 6 KNTT

      Giáo dục công dân Lớp 6 KNTT

      Tin học Lớp 6 KNTT

      Công nghệ Lớp 6 KNTT

    • Cánh diều

      Lịch sử & Địa lí Lớp 6 CD

      Văn Lớp 6 CD

      Toán Lớp 6 CD

      Tiếng Anh Lớp 6 CD

      Khoa học tự nhiên Lớp 6 CD

      Lịch sử Lớp 6 CD

      Địa lý Lớp 6 CD

      Giáo dục công dân Lớp 6 CD

      Hoạt động trải nghiệm Lớp 6 CD

      Tin học Lớp 6 CD

      Công nghệ Lớp 6 CD

      Âm nhạc Lớp 6 CD

    • Chân trời sáng tạo

      Lịch sử & Địa lí Lớp 6 CTST

      Tin học Lớp 6 CTST

      Công nghệ Lớp 6 CTST

      Âm nhạc Lớp 6 CTST

      Văn Lớp 6 CTST

      Toán Lớp 6 CTST

      Tiếng Anh Lớp 6 CTST

      Khoa học tự nhiên Lớp 6 CTST

      Lịch sử Lớp 6 CTST

      Địa lý Lớp 6 CTST

      Giáo dục công dân Lớp 6 CTST

      Hoạt động trải nghiệm Lớp 6 CTST

    • Chương trình khác

      Tiếng anh Right On Lớp 6

      Tiếng anh English Discovery Lớp 6

      Tiếng anh Learn Smart World Lớp 6

  • Trung học phổ thông
    • Tốt nghiệp THPT
    • Lớp 12
    • Lớp 11
    • Lớp 10

    Tốt nghiệp THPT

    • Văn

    • Toán

    • Vật lý

    • Hóa học

    • Tiếng Anh (mới)

    • Tiếng Anh

    • Sinh học

    • Ôn thi khoa học xã hội

    • Tự nhiên & Xã hội

    • Lịch sử

    • Địa lý

    • Giáo dục công dân

    • Tin học

    • Công nghệ

    • Giáo dục Kinh tế và Pháp luật

    Lớp 12

    • Kết nối tri thức

      Văn Lớp 12 KNTT

      Toán Lớp 12 KNTT

      Vật lý Lớp 12 KNTT

      Hóa học Lớp 12 KNTT

      Tiếng Anh Lớp 12 KNTT

      Sinh học Lớp 12 KNTT

      Lịch sử Lớp 12 KNTT

      Địa lý Lớp 12 KNTT

      Tin học Lớp 12 KNTT

      Công nghệ Lớp 12 KNTT

      Giáo dục Quốc Phòng và An Ninh Lớp 12 KNTT

      Giáo dục Kinh tế và Pháp luật Lớp 12 KNTT

    • Cánh diều

      Văn Lớp 12 CD

      Toán Lớp 12 CD

      Vật lý Lớp 12 CD

      Hóa học Lớp 12 CD

      Tiếng Anh Lớp 12 CD

      Sinh học Lớp 12 CD

      Lịch sử Lớp 12 CD

      Địa lý Lớp 12 CD

      Tin học Lớp 12 CD

      Công nghệ Lớp 12 CD

      Giáo dục Quốc Phòng và An Ninh Lớp 12 CD

      Giáo dục Kinh tế và Pháp luật Lớp 12 CD

    • Chân trời sáng tạo

      Văn Lớp 12 CTST

      Toán Lớp 12 CTST

      Vật lý Lớp 12 CTST

      Hóa học Lớp 12 CTST

      Sinh học Lớp 12 CTST

      Lịch sử Lớp 12 CTST

      Địa lý Lớp 12 CTST

      Tin học Lớp 12 CTST

      Giáo dục Kinh tế và Pháp luật Lớp 12 CTST

    Lớp 11

    • Kết nối tri thức

      Văn Lớp 11 KNTT

      Toán Lớp 11 KNTT

      Vật lý Lớp 11 KNTT

      Hóa học Lớp 11 KNTT

      Tiếng Anh Lớp 11 KNTT

      Sinh học Lớp 11 KNTT

      Lịch sử Lớp 11 KNTT

      Địa lý Lớp 11 KNTT

      Hoạt động trải nghiệm Lớp 11 KNTT

      Tin học Lớp 11 KNTT

      Công nghệ Lớp 11 KNTT

      Giáo dục Quốc Phòng và An Ninh Lớp 11 KNTT

      Giáo dục Kinh tế và Pháp luật Lớp 11 KNTT

    • Cánh diều

      Văn Lớp 11 CD

      Toán Lớp 11 CD

      Vật lý Lớp 11 CD

      Hóa học Lớp 11 CD

      Sinh học Lớp 11 CD

      Lịch sử Lớp 11 CD

      Địa lý Lớp 11 CD

      Hoạt động trải nghiệm Lớp 11 CD

      Tin học Lớp 11 CD

      Công nghệ Lớp 11 CD

      Giáo dục Quốc Phòng và An Ninh Lớp 11 CD

      Giáo dục Kinh tế và Pháp luật Lớp 11 CD

    • Chân trời sáng tạo

      Văn Lớp 11 CTST

      Toán Lớp 11 CTST

      Vật lý Lớp 11 CTST

      Hóa học Lớp 11 CTST

      Sinh học Lớp 11 CTST

      Lịch sử Lớp 11 CTST

      Địa lý Lớp 11 CTST

      Hoạt động trải nghiệm Lớp 11 CTST

      Giáo dục Kinh tế và Pháp luật Lớp 11 CTST

    Lớp 10

    • Kết nối tri thức

      Văn Lớp 10 KNTT

      Toán Lớp 10 KNTT

      Vật lý Lớp 10 KNTT

      Hóa học Lớp 10 KNTT

      Tiếng Anh Lớp 10 KNTT

      Sinh học Lớp 10 KNTT

      Lịch sử Lớp 10 KNTT

      Địa lý Lớp 10 KNTT

      Hoạt động trải nghiệm Lớp 10 KNTT

      Tin học Lớp 10 KNTT

      Công nghệ Lớp 10 KNTT

      Giáo dục Quốc Phòng và An Ninh Lớp 10 KNTT

      Giáo dục thể chất Lớp 10 KNTT

      Giáo dục Kinh tế và Pháp luật Lớp 10 KNTT

    • Cánh diều

      Văn Lớp 10 CD

      Toán Lớp 10 CD

      Vật lý Lớp 10 CD

      Hóa học Lớp 10 CD

      Tiếng Anh Lớp 10 CD

      Sinh học Lớp 10 CD

      Lịch sử Lớp 10 CD

      Địa lý Lớp 10 CD

      Hoạt động trải nghiệm Lớp 10 CD

      Tin học Lớp 10 CD

      Công nghệ Lớp 10 CD

      Giáo dục Quốc Phòng và An Ninh Lớp 10 CD

      Giáo dục thể chất Lớp 10 CD

      Giáo dục Kinh tế và Pháp luật Lớp 10 CD

    • Chân trời sáng tạo

      Văn Lớp 10 CTST

      Toán Lớp 10 CTST

      Vật lý Lớp 10 CTST

      Hóa học Lớp 10 CTST

      Tiếng Anh Lớp 10 CTST

      Sinh học Lớp 10 CTST

      Lịch sử Lớp 10 CTST

      Địa lý Lớp 10 CTST

      Hoạt động trải nghiệm Lớp 10 CTST

      Tin học Lớp 10 CTST

      Giáo dục Quốc Phòng và An Ninh Lớp 10 CTST

      Giáo dục thể chất Lớp 10 CTST

      Giáo dục Kinh tế và Pháp luật Lớp 10 CTST

  • Đánh giá năng lực
    • Đánh giá năng lực
    • Trắc nghiệm tổng hợp

    Đánh giá năng lực

    • Bộ Công an

    • ĐH Bách Khoa

    • ĐHQG Hồ Chí Minh

    • ĐHQG Hà Nội

    Trắc nghiệm tổng hợp

    • Bằng lái xe

    • English Test

    • IT Test

    • Đại học

  • Đại học
    • Đại học

    Đại học

    • Luật

    • Y học

    • Xã hội nhân văn

    • Kế toán - Kiểm toán

    • Tài chính - Ngân hàng

    • Khoa học - Kỹ thuật

    • Kinh tế - Thương mại

    • Quản trị - Marketing

    • Các môn Đại cương

    • Học viện Báo chí và Tuyên truyền

    • Đại học Ngoại thương

    • Đại học Thương Mại

    • Đại học Luật HCM

    • ĐH Kinh doanh và Công nghệ Hà Nội

    • Đại học Y Hà Nội

    • Học viện Ngoại giao

    • Đại học Sư phạm

    • Đại học Kinh tế Quốc dân

    • ĐH Luật Hà Nội

    • ĐH Kinh tế - ĐHQG Hà Nội

    • ĐH Giáo dục - ĐHQG Hà Nội

    • ĐH Luật - ĐHQG Hà Nội

    • Học viện tài chính

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  1. Tốt nghiệp THPT
  2. Tiếng Anh (mới)
  3. 20 Đề thi thử Tiếng Anh năm 2020 chuẩn cấu trúc bộ giáo dục

ĐỀ 8

30 người thi tuần này 5.0 42.7 K lượt thi 50 câu hỏi 65 phút

  • Đề số 1
  • Đề số 2
  • Đề số 3
  • Đề số 4
  • Đề số 5
  • Đề số 6
  • Đề số 7
  • Đề số 8
  • Đề số 9
  • Đề số 10
  • Đề số 11
  • Đề số 12
  • Đề số 13
  • Đề số 14
  • Đề số 15
  • Đề số 16
  • Đề số 17
  • Đề số 18
  • Đề số 19
  • Đề số 20

🔥 Đề thi HOT:

670 người thi tuần này

20 Đề thi thử THPTQG môn Tiếng Anh cực hay có đáp án (Đề số 1)

150.3 K lượt thi 50 câu hỏi
316 người thi tuần này

Tổng hợp đề thi THPT quốc gia môn Tiếng anh năm 2022 có đáp án (Đề số 1)

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Đề thi THPT Quốc gia môn Tiếng anh năm 2022 chọn lọc, có lời giải (Đề số 1)

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Danh sách câu hỏi:

Câu 1

Mark the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the word that differs from the rest in the position of the main stress in each of the following questions.

Lời giải

Đáp án B

Trọng âm nhấn âm số 1, âm còn lại nhấn âm số 2

A. /kənˈteɪn/

B. /ˈpɜːtʃəs/    

C. /rɪˈflekt/  

D. /səˈdʒest/

Câu 2

Mark the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the word that differs from the rest in the position of the main stress in each of the following questions.

Lời giải

Đáp án D

Trọng âm nhấn âm số 3, âm còn lại nhấn âm số 2

A. /fəˈsɪlɪteɪt/         

B. /daɪˈmenʃənl/     

C. /hɪˈstɒrɪkl/           

D. /ɪnstrəˈmentl/

Câu 3

Mark the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the word whose underlined part differs from the other three in pronunciation in each of the following questions.

Lời giải

Đáp án C

Đọc là âm [g], còn lại đọc là âm [dʒ]

A. /tʃeɪndʒ/                           

B. /ˈdʒenərəs/                       

C. /ɡɪə(r)/                              

D. /ˈdʒeləs/

Câu 4

Mark the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the word whose underlined part differs from the other three in pronunciation in each of the following questions.

Lời giải

Đáp án A

Đọc là âm [əʊ], còn lại đọc là âm [əʊ]

A. /lɒst/       

B. /pəʊst/    

C. /ləʊn/        

D. /pəʊl/

Câu 5

Mark the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to each of the following questions.

The small, ______ farms of New England were not appropriate for the Midwest

Lời giải

Đáp án: A

Giải thích:

Vị trí cần điền là một tính từ đứng trước danh từ “farms” để bổ nghĩa cho danh từ, loại C và D.

Dùng dạng –ing mang nghĩa chủ động.

self-suporting (adj): tự cung tự cấp, tự mình mà không cần giúp đỡ từ bên ngoài

Dịch: Các trang trại nhỏ tự cung tự cấp ở New England không phù hợp với vùng Trung Tây.

Câu 6

Mark the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to each of the following questions.

The access __________ education and the change  __________ economic status have given women more freedom.

Lời giải

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Câu 7

Mark the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to each of the following questions.

He really deserved the award because he performed _________ what was expected of him.

Lời giải

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Câu 8

Mark the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to each of the following questions.

_______the phone rang later that night did Anna remember the appointment

Lời giải

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Câu 9

Mark the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to each of the following questions.

Everything is  __________  you. I cannot make __________ my mind yet.

Lời giải

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Câu 10

Mark the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to each of the following questions.

 ______ his brother, Mike is active and friendly

Lời giải

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Câu 11

Mark the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to each of the following questions.

It was announced that neither the passengers nor the driver _________in the crash

Lời giải

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Câu 12

Mark the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to each of the following questions.

I phoned the company, who ______ me that my goods had been dispatched.

Lời giải

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Câu 13

Mark the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to each of the following questions.

When the car was invented, I don’t think anyone could have predicted______it would change the world.

Lời giải

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Câu 14

Mark the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to each of the following questions.

Dry salt lakes _________ 70 kilometers long and 15 kilometers wide lie _________ long dunes  __________  crests 20 meters high

Lời giải

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Câu 15

Mark the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to each of the following questions.

He acted in an extremely__________ manner, which made him very unpopular.

Lời giải

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Câu 16

Mark the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to each of the following questions.

Have they __________ the "No Smoking" sign?

Lời giải

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Câu 17

Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the most suitable response to complete each of the following exchanges.

Daisy: “What an attractive hair style you have got, Mary!” - Mary: “_______”

Lời giải

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Câu 18

Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the most suitable response to complete each of the following exchanges.

Dick: “Sorry, Brian is not here.” - Peter: “_________” 

Lời giải

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Câu 19

Mark the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheets to indicate the word (s) SIMILAR in meaning to the underlined word (s) in each of the following questions.

By the end of the storm, the hikers had depleted even their emergency stores

Lời giải

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Câu 20

Mark the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheets to indicate the word (s) SIMILAR in meaning to the underlined word (s) in each of the following questions.

Originally the builders have me a price of $5,000, but now they say they underestimated it, and now it’s going to be at least $8,000

Lời giải

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Câu 21

Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct word or phrase for each of the blanks.

          School exams are, generally speaking, the first kind of test we take. They find out  how much knowledge we have gained. But do they really show how intelligent  we are? After all, isn’t it a fact that some people who are very academically successful don’t have any common sense.

      Intelligence is the speed ___(21)_____ which we can understand and react to new situations and it is usually tested by logic puzzles. Although scientist are now preparing ___(22)_____ computer technology that will be able to “read” our brains, for the present tests are still the most popular ways of measuring intelligence.

      A person’s IQ is their intelligence as it is measured by a special test. The most common IT tests are  ___(23)_____ by Mensa, an organization that was found in England in 1946. By 1976, it  had 1,300 members in Britain. Today there are 44,000 in Britain and 100,000 worldwide largely in the US.

          People taking the tests are judged in ___(24)_____ to an average score of 100, and those who score over 148 are entitled to join Mensa. This works out at 2 percent of the population. Anyone from the age of six can take tests. All the questions are straightforward and most people can answer them if allowed enough time. But that’s the problem; the whole ___(25)_____ of the test is that they’re against the clock

Điền ô số 21

Lời giải

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Câu 22

Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct word or phrase for each of the blanks.

          School exams are, generally speaking, the first kind of test we take. They find out  how much knowledge we have gained. But do they really show how intelligent  we are? After all, isn’t it a fact that some people who are very academically successful don’t have any common sense.

      Intelligence is the speed ___(21)_____ which we can understand and react to new situations and it is usually tested by logic puzzles. Although scientist are now preparing ___(22)_____ computer technology that will be able to “read” our brains, for the present tests are still the most popular ways of measuring intelligence.

      A person’s IQ is their intelligence as it is measured by a special test. The most common IT tests are  ___(23)_____ by Mensa, an organization that was found in England in 1946. By 1976, it  had 1,300 members in Britain. Today there are 44,000 in Britain and 100,000 worldwide largely in the US.

          People taking the tests are judged in ___(24)_____ to an average score of 100, and those who score over 148 are entitled to join Mensa. This works out at 2 percent of the population. Anyone from the age of six can take tests. All the questions are straightforward and most people can answer them if allowed enough time. But that’s the problem; the whole ___(25)_____ of the test is that they’re against the clock.

Điền ô số 22

Lời giải

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Câu 23

Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct word or phrase for each of the blanks.

          School exams are, generally speaking, the first kind of test we take. They find out  how much knowledge we have gained. But do they really show how intelligent  we are? After all, isn’t it a fact that some people who are very academically successful don’t have any common sense.

      Intelligence is the speed ___(21)_____ which we can understand and react to new situations and it is usually tested by logic puzzles. Although scientist are now preparing ___(22)_____ computer technology that will be able to “read” our brains, for the present tests are still the most popular ways of measuring intelligence.

      A person’s IQ is their intelligence as it is measured by a special test. The most common IT tests are  ___(23)_____ by Mensa, an organization that was found in England in 1946. By 1976, it  had 1,300 members in Britain. Today there are 44,000 in Britain and 100,000 worldwide largely in the US.

          People taking the tests are judged in ___(24)_____ to an average score of 100, and those who score over 148 are entitled to join Mensa. This works out at 2 percent of the population. Anyone from the age of six can take tests. All the questions are straightforward and most people can answer them if allowed enough time. But that’s the problem; the whole ___(25)_____ of the test is that they’re against the clock.

Điền ô số 23

Lời giải

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Câu 24

Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct word or phrase for each of the blanks.

          School exams are, generally speaking, the first kind of test we take. They find out  how much knowledge we have gained. But do they really show how intelligent  we are? After all, isn’t it a fact that some people who are very academically successful don’t have any common sense.

      Intelligence is the speed ___(21)_____ which we can understand and react to new situations and it is usually tested by logic puzzles. Although scientist are now preparing ___(22)_____ computer technology that will be able to “read” our brains, for the present tests are still the most popular ways of measuring intelligence.

      A person’s IQ is their intelligence as it is measured by a special test. The most common IT tests are  ___(23)_____ by Mensa, an organization that was found in England in 1946. By 1976, it  had 1,300 members in Britain. Today there are 44,000 in Britain and 100,000 worldwide largely in the US.

          People taking the tests are judged in ___(24)_____ to an average score of 100, and those who score over 148 are entitled to join Mensa. This works out at 2 percent of the population. Anyone from the age of six can take tests. All the questions are straightforward and most people can answer them if allowed enough time. But that’s the problem; the whole ___(25)_____ of the test is that they’re against the clock.

Điền ô số 24

Lời giải

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Câu 25

Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct word or phrase for each of the blanks.

          School exams are, generally speaking, the first kind of test we take. They find out  how much knowledge we have gained. But do they really show how intelligent  we are? After all, isn’t it a fact that some people who are very academically successful don’t have any common sense.

      Intelligence is the speed ___(21)_____ which we can understand and react to new situations and it is usually tested by logic puzzles. Although scientist are now preparing ___(22)_____ computer technology that will be able to “read” our brains, for the present tests are still the most popular ways of measuring intelligence.

      A person’s IQ is their intelligence as it is measured by a special test. The most common IT tests are  ___(23)_____ by Mensa, an organization that was found in England in 1946. By 1976, it  had 1,300 members in Britain. Today there are 44,000 in Britain and 100,000 worldwide largely in the US.

          People taking the tests are judged in ___(24)_____ to an average score of 100, and those who score over 148 are entitled to join Mensa. This works out at 2 percent of the population. Anyone from the age of six can take tests. All the questions are straightforward and most people can answer them if allowed enough time. But that’s the problem; the whole ___(25)_____ of the test is that they’re against the clock.

Điền ô số 25

Lời giải

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Câu 26

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

At 7 pm on a dark, cold November evening, thousands of people are making their way across a vast car park. They're not here to see a film, or the ballet, or even the circus. They are all here for what is, bizarrely, a global phenomenon: they are here to see Holiday on Ice. Given that most people don’t seem to be acquainted with anyone who's ever been, the show's statistics are extraordinary: nearly 300 million people have seen Holiday on Ice since it began in 1943; it is the most popular live entertainment in the world.

But what does the production involve? And why are so many people prepared to spend their lives travelling round Europe in caravans in order to appear in it? It can't be glamorous, and it's undoubtedly hard work. The backstage atmosphere is an odd mix of gym class and workplace. A curtained-off section at the back of the arena is laughably referred to as the girls' dressing room, but is more accurately described as a corridor, with beige, cracked walls and cheap temporary tables set up along the length of it. Each girl has a small area littered with pots of orange make-up, tubes of mascara and long false eyelashes.

As a place to work, it must rank pretty low down the scale: the area round the ice-rink is grey and mucky with rows of dirty blue and brown plastic seating and red carpet tiles. It's an unimpressive picture, but the show itself is an unquestionably vast, polished global enterprise: the lights come from a firm in Texas, the people who make the audio system are in California, but Montreal supplies the smoke effects; former British Olympic skater Robin Cousins is now creative director for the company and conducts a vast master class to make sure they're ready for the show's next performance.

The next day, as the music blares out from the sound system, the case start to go through their routines under Cousins' direction. Cousins says, 'The aim is to make sure they're all still getting to exactly the right place on the ice at the right time - largely because the banks of lights in the ceiling are set to those places, and if the skaters are all half a metre out they'll be illuminating empty ice. Our challenge, ' he continues, 'is to produce something they can sell in a number of countries at the same time. My theory is that you take those things that people want to see and you give it to them, but not in the way they expect to see it. You try to twist it. And you have to find music that is challenging to the skaters, because they have to do it every night.'

It may be a job which he took to pay the rent, but you can’t doubt his enthusiasm. 'They only place you'll see certain skating moves is an ice show,' he says, 'because you're not allowed to do them in competition. It's not in the rules. So the ice show word has things to offer which the competitive world just doesn't. Cousins knows what he's talking about because he skated for the show himself when he stopped competing - he was financially unable to retire. He learnt the hard way that you can't put on an Olympic performance every night. I'd be thinking, these people have paid their money, now do your stuff, and I suddenly thought, "I really can't cope. I'm not enjoying it".' The solution, he realized, was to give 75 per cent every night, rather than striving for the sort of twice-a-year excellence which won him medals.

To be honest, for those of us whose only experience of ice-skating is watching top-class Olympic skaters, some of the movements can look a bit amateurish, but then, who are we to judge? Equally, it's impossible not to be swept up in the whole thing; well, you'd have to try pretty hard not to enjoy it.

The writer describes the backstage area in order to show

Lời giải

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Câu 27

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

At 7 pm on a dark, cold November evening, thousands of people are making their way across a vast car park. They're not here to see a film, or the ballet, or even the circus. They are all here for what is, bizarrely, a global phenomenon: they are here to see Holiday on Ice. Given that most people don’t seem to be acquainted with anyone who's ever been, the show's statistics are extraordinary: nearly 300 million people have seen Holiday on Ice since it began in 1943; it is the most popular live entertainment in the world.

But what does the production involve? And why are so many people prepared to spend their lives travelling round Europe in caravans in order to appear in it? It can't be glamorous, and it's undoubtedly hard work. The backstage atmosphere is an odd mix of gym class and workplace. A curtained-off section at the back of the arena is laughably referred to as the girls' dressing room, but is more accurately described as a corridor, with beige, cracked walls and cheap temporary tables set up along the length of it. Each girl has a small area littered with pots of orange make-up, tubes of mascara and long false eyelashes.

As a place to work, it must rank pretty low down the scale: the area round the ice-rink is grey and mucky with rows of dirty blue and brown plastic seating and red carpet tiles. It's an unimpressive picture, but the show itself is an unquestionably vast, polished global enterprise: the lights come from a firm in Texas, the people who make the audio system are in California, but Montreal supplies the smoke effects; former British Olympic skater Robin Cousins is now creative director for the company and conducts a vast master class to make sure they're ready for the show's next performance.

The next day, as the music blares out from the sound system, the case start to go through their routines under Cousins' direction. Cousins says, 'The aim is to make sure they're all still getting to exactly the right place on the ice at the right time - largely because the banks of lights in the ceiling are set to those places, and if the skaters are all half a metre out they'll be illuminating empty ice. Our challenge, ' he continues, 'is to produce something they can sell in a number of countries at the same time. My theory is that you take those things that people want to see and you give it to them, but not in the way they expect to see it. You try to twist it. And you have to find music that is challenging to the skaters, because they have to do it every night.'

It may be a job which he took to pay the rent, but you can’t doubt his enthusiasm. 'They only place you'll see certain skating moves is an ice show,' he says, 'because you're not allowed to do them in competition. It's not in the rules. So the ice show word has things to offer which the competitive world just doesn't. Cousins knows what he's talking about because he skated for the show himself when he stopped competing - he was financially unable to retire. He learnt the hard way that you can't put on an Olympic performance every night. I'd be thinking, these people have paid their money, now do your stuff, and I suddenly thought, "I really can't cope. I'm not enjoying it".' The solution, he realized, was to give 75 per cent every night, rather than striving for the sort of twice-a-year excellence which won him medals.

To be honest, for those of us whose only experience of ice-skating is watching top-class Olympic skaters, some of the movements can look a bit amateurish, but then, who are we to judge? Equally, it's impossible not to be swept up in the whole thing; well, you'd have to try pretty hard not to enjoy it.

The word blares out in paragraph 4 is closest in meaning to

Lời giải

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Câu 28

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

At 7 pm on a dark, cold November evening, thousands of people are making their way across a vast car park. They're not here to see a film, or the ballet, or even the circus. They are all here for what is, bizarrely, a global phenomenon: they are here to see Holiday on Ice. Given that most people don’t seem to be acquainted with anyone who's ever been, the show's statistics are extraordinary: nearly 300 million people have seen Holiday on Ice since it began in 1943; it is the most popular live entertainment in the world.

But what does the production involve? And why are so many people prepared to spend their lives travelling round Europe in caravans in order to appear in it? It can't be glamorous, and it's undoubtedly hard work. The backstage atmosphere is an odd mix of gym class and workplace. A curtained-off section at the back of the arena is laughably referred to as the girls' dressing room, but is more accurately described as a corridor, with beige, cracked walls and cheap temporary tables set up along the length of it. Each girl has a small area littered with pots of orange make-up, tubes of mascara and long false eyelashes.

As a place to work, it must rank pretty low down the scale: the area round the ice-rink is grey and mucky with rows of dirty blue and brown plastic seating and red carpet tiles. It's an unimpressive picture, but the show itself is an unquestionably vast, polished global enterprise: the lights come from a firm in Texas, the people who make the audio system are in California, but Montreal supplies the smoke effects; former British Olympic skater Robin Cousins is now creative director for the company and conducts a vast master class to make sure they're ready for the show's next performance.

The next day, as the music blares out from the sound system, the case start to go through their routines under Cousins' direction. Cousins says, 'The aim is to make sure they're all still getting to exactly the right place on the ice at the right time - largely because the banks of lights in the ceiling are set to those places, and if the skaters are all half a metre out they'll be illuminating empty ice. Our challenge, ' he continues, 'is to produce something they can sell in a number of countries at the same time. My theory is that you take those things that people want to see and you give it to them, but not in the way they expect to see it. You try to twist it. And you have to find music that is challenging to the skaters, because they have to do it every night.'

It may be a job which he took to pay the rent, but you can’t doubt his enthusiasm. 'They only place you'll see certain skating moves is an ice show,' he says, 'because you're not allowed to do them in competition. It's not in the rules. So the ice show word has things to offer which the competitive world just doesn't. Cousins knows what he's talking about because he skated for the show himself when he stopped competing - he was financially unable to retire. He learnt the hard way that you can't put on an Olympic performance every night. I'd be thinking, these people have paid their money, now do your stuff, and I suddenly thought, "I really can't cope. I'm not enjoying it".' The solution, he realized, was to give 75 per cent every night, rather than striving for the sort of twice-a-year excellence which won him medals.

To be honest, for those of us whose only experience of ice-skating is watching top-class Olympic skaters, some of the movements can look a bit amateurish, but then, who are we to judge? Equally, it's impossible not to be swept up in the whole thing; well, you'd have to try pretty hard not to enjoy it.

What does the writer highlight about the show in the third paragraph?

Lời giải

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Câu 29

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

At 7 pm on a dark, cold November evening, thousands of people are making their way across a vast car park. They're not here to see a film, or the ballet, or even the circus. They are all here for what is, bizarrely, a global phenomenon: they are here to see Holiday on Ice. Given that most people don’t seem to be acquainted with anyone who's ever been, the show's statistics are extraordinary: nearly 300 million people have seen Holiday on Ice since it began in 1943; it is the most popular live entertainment in the world.

But what does the production involve? And why are so many people prepared to spend their lives travelling round Europe in caravans in order to appear in it? It can't be glamorous, and it's undoubtedly hard work. The backstage atmosphere is an odd mix of gym class and workplace. A curtained-off section at the back of the arena is laughably referred to as the girls' dressing room, but is more accurately described as a corridor, with beige, cracked walls and cheap temporary tables set up along the length of it. Each girl has a small area littered with pots of orange make-up, tubes of mascara and long false eyelashes.

As a place to work, it must rank pretty low down the scale: the area round the ice-rink is grey and mucky with rows of dirty blue and brown plastic seating and red carpet tiles. It's an unimpressive picture, but the show itself is an unquestionably vast, polished global enterprise: the lights come from a firm in Texas, the people who make the audio system are in California, but Montreal supplies the smoke effects; former British Olympic skater Robin Cousins is now creative director for the company and conducts a vast master class to make sure they're ready for the show's next performance.

The next day, as the music blares out from the sound system, the case start to go through their routines under Cousins' direction. Cousins says, 'The aim is to make sure they're all still getting to exactly the right place on the ice at the right time - largely because the banks of lights in the ceiling are set to those places, and if the skaters are all half a metre out they'll be illuminating empty ice. Our challenge, ' he continues, 'is to produce something they can sell in a number of countries at the same time. My theory is that you take those things that people want to see and you give it to them, but not in the way they expect to see it. You try to twist it. And you have to find music that is challenging to the skaters, because they have to do it every night.'

It may be a job which he took to pay the rent, but you can’t doubt his enthusiasm. 'They only place you'll see certain skating moves is an ice show,' he says, 'because you're not allowed to do them in competition. It's not in the rules. So the ice show word has things to offer which the competitive world just doesn't. Cousins knows what he's talking about because he skated for the show himself when he stopped competing - he was financially unable to retire. He learnt the hard way that you can't put on an Olympic performance every night. I'd be thinking, these people have paid their money, now do your stuff, and I suddenly thought, "I really can't cope. I'm not enjoying it".' The solution, he realized, was to give 75 per cent every night, rather than striving for the sort of twice-a-year excellence which won him medals.

To be honest, for those of us whose only experience of ice-skating is watching top-class Olympic skaters, some of the movements can look a bit amateurish, but then, who are we to judge? Equally, it's impossible not to be swept up in the whole thing; well, you'd have to try pretty hard not to enjoy it.

The word them in paragraph 5 refers to

Lời giải

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Câu 30

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

At 7 pm on a dark, cold November evening, thousands of people are making their way across a vast car park. They're not here to see a film, or the ballet, or even the circus. They are all here for what is, bizarrely, a global phenomenon: they are here to see Holiday on Ice. Given that most people don’t seem to be acquainted with anyone who's ever been, the show's statistics are extraordinary: nearly 300 million people have seen Holiday on Ice since it began in 1943; it is the most popular live entertainment in the world.

But what does the production involve? And why are so many people prepared to spend their lives travelling round Europe in caravans in order to appear in it? It can't be glamorous, and it's undoubtedly hard work. The backstage atmosphere is an odd mix of gym class and workplace. A curtained-off section at the back of the arena is laughably referred to as the girls' dressing room, but is more accurately described as a corridor, with beige, cracked walls and cheap temporary tables set up along the length of it. Each girl has a small area littered with pots of orange make-up, tubes of mascara and long false eyelashes.

As a place to work, it must rank pretty low down the scale: the area round the ice-rink is grey and mucky with rows of dirty blue and brown plastic seating and red carpet tiles. It's an unimpressive picture, but the show itself is an unquestionably vast, polished global enterprise: the lights come from a firm in Texas, the people who make the audio system are in California, but Montreal supplies the smoke effects; former British Olympic skater Robin Cousins is now creative director for the company and conducts a vast master class to make sure they're ready for the show's next performance.

The next day, as the music blares out from the sound system, the case start to go through their routines under Cousins' direction. Cousins says, 'The aim is to make sure they're all still getting to exactly the right place on the ice at the right time - largely because the banks of lights in the ceiling are set to those places, and if the skaters are all half a metre out they'll be illuminating empty ice. Our challenge, ' he continues, 'is to produce something they can sell in a number of countries at the same time. My theory is that you take those things that people want to see and you give it to them, but not in the way they expect to see it. You try to twist it. And you have to find music that is challenging to the skaters, because they have to do it every night.'

It may be a job which he took to pay the rent, but you can’t doubt his enthusiasm. 'They only place you'll see certain skating moves is an ice show,' he says, 'because you're not allowed to do them in competition. It's not in the rules. So the ice show word has things to offer which the competitive world just doesn't. Cousins knows what he's talking about because he skated for the show himself when he stopped competing - he was financially unable to retire. He learnt the hard way that you can't put on an Olympic performance every night. I'd be thinking, these people have paid their money, now do your stuff, and I suddenly thought, "I really can't cope. I'm not enjoying it".' The solution, he realized, was to give 75 per cent every night, rather than striving for the sort of twice-a-year excellence which won him medals.

To be honest, for those of us whose only experience of ice-skating is watching top-class Olympic skaters, some of the movements can look a bit amateurish, but then, who are we to judge? Equally, it's impossible not to be swept up in the whole thing; well, you'd have to try pretty hard not to enjoy it.

For Robin Cousins, the key point when rehearsing skating routines is

Lời giải

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Câu 31

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

At 7 pm on a dark, cold November evening, thousands of people are making their way across a vast car park. They're not here to see a film, or the ballet, or even the circus. They are all here for what is, bizarrely, a global phenomenon: they are here to see Holiday on Ice. Given that most people don’t seem to be acquainted with anyone who's ever been, the show's statistics are extraordinary: nearly 300 million people have seen Holiday on Ice since it began in 1943; it is the most popular live entertainment in the world.

But what does the production involve? And why are so many people prepared to spend their lives travelling round Europe in caravans in order to appear in it? It can't be glamorous, and it's undoubtedly hard work. The backstage atmosphere is an odd mix of gym class and workplace. A curtained-off section at the back of the arena is laughably referred to as the girls' dressing room, but is more accurately described as a corridor, with beige, cracked walls and cheap temporary tables set up along the length of it. Each girl has a small area littered with pots of orange make-up, tubes of mascara and long false eyelashes.

As a place to work, it must rank pretty low down the scale: the area round the ice-rink is grey and mucky with rows of dirty blue and brown plastic seating and red carpet tiles. It's an unimpressive picture, but the show itself is an unquestionably vast, polished global enterprise: the lights come from a firm in Texas, the people who make the audio system are in California, but Montreal supplies the smoke effects; former British Olympic skater Robin Cousins is now creative director for the company and conducts a vast master class to make sure they're ready for the show's next performance.

The next day, as the music blares out from the sound system, the case start to go through their routines under Cousins' direction. Cousins says, 'The aim is to make sure they're all still getting to exactly the right place on the ice at the right time - largely because the banks of lights in the ceiling are set to those places, and if the skaters are all half a metre out they'll be illuminating empty ice. Our challenge, ' he continues, 'is to produce something they can sell in a number of countries at the same time. My theory is that you take those things that people want to see and you give it to them, but not in the way they expect to see it. You try to twist it. And you have to find music that is challenging to the skaters, because they have to do it every night.'

It may be a job which he took to pay the rent, but you can’t doubt his enthusiasm. 'They only place you'll see certain skating moves is an ice show,' he says, 'because you're not allowed to do them in competition. It's not in the rules. So the ice show word has things to offer which the competitive world just doesn't. Cousins knows what he's talking about because he skated for the show himself when he stopped competing - he was financially unable to retire. He learnt the hard way that you can't put on an Olympic performance every night. I'd be thinking, these people have paid their money, now do your stuff, and I suddenly thought, "I really can't cope. I'm not enjoying it".' The solution, he realized, was to give 75 per cent every night, rather than striving for the sort of twice-a-year excellence which won him medals.

To be honest, for those of us whose only experience of ice-skating is watching top-class Olympic skaters, some of the movements can look a bit amateurish, but then, who are we to judge? Equally, it's impossible not to be swept up in the whole thing; well, you'd have to try pretty hard not to enjoy it.

Cousins believes that he can meet the challenge of producing shows for different audiences

Lời giải

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Câu 32

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

At 7 pm on a dark, cold November evening, thousands of people are making their way across a vast car park. They're not here to see a film, or the ballet, or even the circus. They are all here for what is, bizarrely, a global phenomenon: they are here to see Holiday on Ice. Given that most people don’t seem to be acquainted with anyone who's ever been, the show's statistics are extraordinary: nearly 300 million people have seen Holiday on Ice since it began in 1943; it is the most popular live entertainment in the world.

But what does the production involve? And why are so many people prepared to spend their lives travelling round Europe in caravans in order to appear in it? It can't be glamorous, and it's undoubtedly hard work. The backstage atmosphere is an odd mix of gym class and workplace. A curtained-off section at the back of the arena is laughably referred to as the girls' dressing room, but is more accurately described as a corridor, with beige, cracked walls and cheap temporary tables set up along the length of it. Each girl has a small area littered with pots of orange make-up, tubes of mascara and long false eyelashes.

As a place to work, it must rank pretty low down the scale: the area round the ice-rink is grey and mucky with rows of dirty blue and brown plastic seating and red carpet tiles. It's an unimpressive picture, but the show itself is an unquestionably vast, polished global enterprise: the lights come from a firm in Texas, the people who make the audio system are in California, but Montreal supplies the smoke effects; former British Olympic skater Robin Cousins is now creative director for the company and conducts a vast master class to make sure they're ready for the show's next performance.

The next day, as the music blares out from the sound system, the case start to go through their routines under Cousins' direction. Cousins says, 'The aim is to make sure they're all still getting to exactly the right place on the ice at the right time - largely because the banks of lights in the ceiling are set to those places, and if the skaters are all half a metre out they'll be illuminating empty ice. Our challenge, ' he continues, 'is to produce something they can sell in a number of countries at the same time. My theory is that you take those things that people want to see and you give it to them, but not in the way they expect to see it. You try to twist it. And you have to find music that is challenging to the skaters, because they have to do it every night.'

It may be a job which he took to pay the rent, but you can’t doubt his enthusiasm. 'They only place you'll see certain skating moves is an ice show,' he says, 'because you're not allowed to do them in competition. It's not in the rules. So the ice show word has things to offer which the competitive world just doesn't. Cousins knows what he's talking about because he skated for the show himself when he stopped competing - he was financially unable to retire. He learnt the hard way that you can't put on an Olympic performance every night. I'd be thinking, these people have paid their money, now do your stuff, and I suddenly thought, "I really can't cope. I'm not enjoying it".' The solution, he realized, was to give 75 per cent every night, rather than striving for the sort of twice-a-year excellence which won him medals.

To be honest, for those of us whose only experience of ice-skating is watching top-class Olympic skaters, some of the movements can look a bit amateurish, but then, who are we to judge? Equally, it's impossible not to be swept up in the whole thing; well, you'd have to try pretty hard not to enjoy it.

What is meant by 'the hard way'?

Lời giải

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Câu 33

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

At 7 pm on a dark, cold November evening, thousands of people are making their way across a vast car park. They're not here to see a film, or the ballet, or even the circus. They are all here for what is, bizarrely, a global phenomenon: they are here to see Holiday on Ice. Given that most people don’t seem to be acquainted with anyone who's ever been, the show's statistics are extraordinary: nearly 300 million people have seen Holiday on Ice since it began in 1943; it is the most popular live entertainment in the world.

But what does the production involve? And why are so many people prepared to spend their lives travelling round Europe in caravans in order to appear in it? It can't be glamorous, and it's undoubtedly hard work. The backstage atmosphere is an odd mix of gym class and workplace. A curtained-off section at the back of the arena is laughably referred to as the girls' dressing room, but is more accurately described as a corridor, with beige, cracked walls and cheap temporary tables set up along the length of it. Each girl has a small area littered with pots of orange make-up, tubes of mascara and long false eyelashes.

As a place to work, it must rank pretty low down the scale: the area round the ice-rink is grey and mucky with rows of dirty blue and brown plastic seating and red carpet tiles. It's an unimpressive picture, but the show itself is an unquestionably vast, polished global enterprise: the lights come from a firm in Texas, the people who make the audio system are in California, but Montreal supplies the smoke effects; former British Olympic skater Robin Cousins is now creative director for the company and conducts a vast master class to make sure they're ready for the show's next performance.

The next day, as the music blares out from the sound system, the case start to go through their routines under Cousins' direction. Cousins says, 'The aim is to make sure they're all still getting to exactly the right place on the ice at the right time - largely because the banks of lights in the ceiling are set to those places, and if the skaters are all half a metre out they'll be illuminating empty ice. Our challenge, ' he continues, 'is to produce something they can sell in a number of countries at the same time. My theory is that you take those things that people want to see and you give it to them, but not in the way they expect to see it. You try to twist it. And you have to find music that is challenging to the skaters, because they have to do it every night.'

It may be a job which he took to pay the rent, but you can’t doubt his enthusiasm. 'They only place you'll see certain skating moves is an ice show,' he says, 'because you're not allowed to do them in competition. It's not in the rules. So the ice show word has things to offer which the competitive world just doesn't. Cousins knows what he's talking about because he skated for the show himself when he stopped competing - he was financially unable to retire. He learnt the hard way that you can't put on an Olympic performance every night. I'd be thinking, these people have paid their money, now do your stuff, and I suddenly thought, "I really can't cope. I'm not enjoying it".' The solution, he realized, was to give 75 per cent every night, rather than striving for the sort of twice-a-year excellence which won him medals.

To be honest, for those of us whose only experience of ice-skating is watching top-class Olympic skaters, some of the movements can look a bit amateurish, but then, who are we to judge? Equally, it's impossible not to be swept up in the whole thing; well, you'd have to try pretty hard not to enjoy it.

What conclusion does the writer draw about Holiday on Ice?

Lời giải

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Câu 34

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

Before the 1500’s, the western plains of North America were dominated by farmers. One group, the Mandans, lived in the upper Missouri River country, primarily in present – day North Dakota. They had large villages of houses built close together. The tight arrangement enabled the Mandans to protect themselves more easily from the attacks of others who might seek to obtain some of the food these highly capable farmers stored from one year to the next.

The women had primary responsibility for the fields. They had to exercise considerable skill to produce the desired results, for their northern location meant fleeting growing seasons. Winter often lingered; autumn could be ushered in by severe frost. For good measure, during the spring and summer, drought, heat, hail, grasshoppers, and other frustrations might await the wary grower.

Under such conditions, Mandan women had to grow maize capable of weathering adversity. They began as early as it appeared feasible to do so in the spring, clearing the land, using fire to clear stubble from the fields and then planting. From this point until the first green corn could be harvested, the crop required labor and vigilance.

Harvesting proceeded in two stages. In August the Mandans picked a smaller amount of the crop before it had matured fully. This green corn was boiled, dried and shelled, with some of the maize slated for immediate consumption and the rest stored in animal – skin bags. Later in the fall, the people picked the rest of the corn. They saved the best of the harvest for seeds or for trade, with the remainder eaten right away or stored for alter use in underground reserves. With appropriate banking of the extra food, the Mandans protected themselves against the disaster of crop failure and accompany hunger.

The woman planted another staple, squash, about the first of June, and harvested it near the time of the green corn harvest. After they picked it, they sliced it, dried it, and strung the slices before they stored them. Once again, they saved the seeds from the best of the year’s crop. The Mandans also grew sunflowers and tobacco; the latter was the particular task of the older men.

What is the main topic of the passage ?

Lời giải

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Câu 35

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

Before the 1500’s, the western plains of North America were dominated by farmers. One group, the Mandans, lived in the upper Missouri River country, primarily in present – day North Dakota. They had large villages of houses built close together. The tight arrangement enabled the Mandans to protect themselves more easily from the attacks of others who might seek to obtain some of the food these highly capable farmers stored from one year to the next.

The women had primary responsibility for the fields. They had to exercise considerable skill to produce the desired results, for their northern location meant fleeting growing seasons. Winter often lingered; autumn could be ushered in by severe frost. For good measure, during the spring and summer, drought, heat, hail, grasshoppers, and other frustrations might await the wary grower.

Under such conditions, Mandan women had to grow maize capable of weathering adversity. They began as early as it appeared feasible to do so in the spring, clearing the land, using fire to clear stubble from the fields and then planting. From this point until the first green corn could be harvested, the crop required labor and vigilance.

Harvesting proceeded in two stages. In August the Mandans picked a smaller amount of the crop before it had matured fully. This green corn was boiled, dried and shelled, with some of the maize slated for immediate consumption and the rest stored in animal – skin bags. Later in the fall, the people picked the rest of the corn. They saved the best of the harvest for seeds or for trade, with the remainder eaten right away or stored for alter use in underground reserves. With appropriate banking of the extra food, the Mandans protected themselves against the disaster of crop failure and accompany hunger.

The woman planted another staple, squash, about the first of June, and harvested it near the time of the green corn harvest. After they picked it, they sliced it, dried it, and strung the slices before they stored them. Once again, they saved the seeds from the best of the year’s crop. The Mandans also grew sunflowers and tobacco; the latter was the particular task of the older men.

The Mandans built their houses close together in order to ____________.

Lời giải

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Câu 36

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

Before the 1500’s, the western plains of North America were dominated by farmers. One group, the Mandans, lived in the upper Missouri River country, primarily in present – day North Dakota. They had large villages of houses built close together. The tight arrangement enabled the Mandans to protect themselves more easily from the attacks of others who might seek to obtain some of the food these highly capable farmers stored from one year to the next.

The women had primary responsibility for the fields. They had to exercise considerable skill to produce the desired results, for their northern location meant fleeting growing seasons. Winter often lingered; autumn could be ushered in by severe frost. For good measure, during the spring and summer, drought, heat, hail, grasshoppers, and other frustrations might await the wary grower.

Under such conditions, Mandan women had to grow maize capable of weathering adversity. They began as early as it appeared feasible to do so in the spring, clearing the land, using fire to clear stubble from the fields and then planting. From this point until the first green corn could be harvested, the crop required labor and vigilance.

Harvesting proceeded in two stages. In August the Mandans picked a smaller amount of the crop before it had matured fully. This green corn was boiled, dried and shelled, with some of the maize slated for immediate consumption and the rest stored in animal – skin bags. Later in the fall, the people picked the rest of the corn. They saved the best of the harvest for seeds or for trade, with the remainder eaten right away or stored for alter use in underground reserves. With appropriate banking of the extra food, the Mandans protected themselves against the disaster of crop failure and accompany hunger.

The woman planted another staple, squash, about the first of June, and harvested it near the time of the green corn harvest. After they picked it, they sliced it, dried it, and strung the slices before they stored them. Once again, they saved the seeds from the best of the year’s crop. The Mandans also grew sunflowers and tobacco; the latter was the particular task of the older men.

Why does the author believe that the Mandans were skilled farmers?

Lời giải

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Câu 37

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

Before the 1500’s, the western plains of North America were dominated by farmers. One group, the Mandans, lived in the upper Missouri River country, primarily in present – day North Dakota. They had large villages of houses built close together. The tight arrangement enabled the Mandans to protect themselves more easily from the attacks of others who might seek to obtain some of the food these highly capable farmers stored from one year to the next.

The women had primary responsibility for the fields. They had to exercise considerable skill to produce the desired results, for their northern location meant fleeting growing seasons. Winter often lingered; autumn could be ushered in by severe frost. For good measure, during the spring and summer, drought, heat, hail, grasshoppers, and other frustrations might await the wary grower.

Under such conditions, Mandan women had to grow maize capable of weathering adversity. They began as early as it appeared feasible to do so in the spring, clearing the land, using fire to clear stubble from the fields and then planting. From this point until the first green corn could be harvested, the crop required labor and vigilance.

Harvesting proceeded in two stages. In August the Mandans picked a smaller amount of the crop before it had matured fully. This green corn was boiled, dried and shelled, with some of the maize slated for immediate consumption and the rest stored in animal – skin bags. Later in the fall, the people picked the rest of the corn. They saved the best of the harvest for seeds or for trade, with the remainder eaten right away or stored for alter use in underground reserves. With appropriate banking of the extra food, the Mandans protected themselves against the disaster of crop failure and accompany hunger.

The woman planted another staple, squash, about the first of June, and harvested it near the time of the green corn harvest. After they picked it, they sliced it, dried it, and strung the slices before they stored them. Once again, they saved the seeds from the best of the year’s crop. The Mandans also grew sunflowers and tobacco; the latter was the particular task of the older men.

Which of the following processes does the author imply was done by both men and women?

Lời giải

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Câu 38

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

Before the 1500’s, the western plains of North America were dominated by farmers. One group, the Mandans, lived in the upper Missouri River country, primarily in present – day North Dakota. They had large villages of houses built close together. The tight arrangement enabled the Mandans to protect themselves more easily from the attacks of others who might seek to obtain some of the food these highly capable farmers stored from one year to the next.

The women had primary responsibility for the fields. They had to exercise considerable skill to produce the desired results, for their northern location meant fleeting growing seasons. Winter often lingered; autumn could be ushered in by severe frost. For good measure, during the spring and summer, drought, heat, hail, grasshoppers, and other frustrations might await the wary grower.

Under such conditions, Mandan women had to grow maize capable of weathering adversity. They began as early as it appeared feasible to do so in the spring, clearing the land, using fire to clear stubble from the fields and then planting. From this point until the first green corn could be harvested, the crop required labor and vigilance.

Harvesting proceeded in two stages. In August the Mandans picked a smaller amount of the crop before it had matured fully. This green corn was boiled, dried and shelled, with some of the maize slated for immediate consumption and the rest stored in animal – skin bags. Later in the fall, the people picked the rest of the corn. They saved the best of the harvest for seeds or for trade, with the remainder eaten right away or stored for alter use in underground reserves. With appropriate banking of the extra food, the Mandans protected themselves against the disaster of crop failure and accompany hunger.

The woman planted another staple, squash, about the first of June, and harvested it near the time of the green corn harvest. After they picked it, they sliced it, dried it, and strung the slices before they stored them. Once again, they saved the seeds from the best of the year’s crop. The Mandans also grew sunflowers and tobacco; the latter was the particular task of the older men.

The word “disaster” in paragraph 4 is closest in meaning to __________.

Lời giải

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Câu 39

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

Before the 1500’s, the western plains of North America were dominated by farmers. One group, the Mandans, lived in the upper Missouri River country, primarily in present – day North Dakota. They had large villages of houses built close together. The tight arrangement enabled the Mandans to protect themselves more easily from the attacks of others who might seek to obtain some of the food these highly capable farmers stored from one year to the next.

The women had primary responsibility for the fields. They had to exercise considerable skill to produce the desired results, for their northern location meant fleeting growing seasons. Winter often lingered; autumn could be ushered in by severe frost. For good measure, during the spring and summer, drought, heat, hail, grasshoppers, and other frustrations might await the wary grower.

Under such conditions, Mandan women had to grow maize capable of weathering adversity. They began as early as it appeared feasible to do so in the spring, clearing the land, using fire to clear stubble from the fields and then planting. From this point until the first green corn could be harvested, the crop required labor and vigilance.

Harvesting proceeded in two stages. In August the Mandans picked a smaller amount of the crop before it had matured fully. This green corn was boiled, dried and shelled, with some of the maize slated for immediate consumption and the rest stored in animal – skin bags. Later in the fall, the people picked the rest of the corn. They saved the best of the harvest for seeds or for trade, with the remainder eaten right away or stored for alter use in underground reserves. With appropriate banking of the extra food, the Mandans protected themselves against the disaster of crop failure and accompany hunger.

The woman planted another staple, squash, about the first of June, and harvested it near the time of the green corn harvest. After they picked it, they sliced it, dried it, and strung the slices before they stored them. Once again, they saved the seeds from the best of the year’s crop. The Mandans also grew sunflowers and tobacco; the latter was the particular task of the older men.

The word “them” in the last paragraph refers to _________

Lời giải

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Câu 40

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

Before the 1500’s, the western plains of North America were dominated by farmers. One group, the Mandans, lived in the upper Missouri River country, primarily in present – day North Dakota. They had large villages of houses built close together. The tight arrangement enabled the Mandans to protect themselves more easily from the attacks of others who might seek to obtain some of the food these highly capable farmers stored from one year to the next.

The women had primary responsibility for the fields. They had to exercise considerable skill to produce the desired results, for their northern location meant fleeting growing seasons. Winter often lingered; autumn could be ushered in by severe frost. For good measure, during the spring and summer, drought, heat, hail, grasshoppers, and other frustrations might await the wary grower.

Under such conditions, Mandan women had to grow maize capable of weathering adversity. They began as early as it appeared feasible to do so in the spring, clearing the land, using fire to clear stubble from the fields and then planting. From this point until the first green corn could be harvested, the crop required labor and vigilance.

Harvesting proceeded in two stages. In August the Mandans picked a smaller amount of the crop before it had matured fully. This green corn was boiled, dried and shelled, with some of the maize slated for immediate consumption and the rest stored in animal – skin bags. Later in the fall, the people picked the rest of the corn. They saved the best of the harvest for seeds or for trade, with the remainder eaten right away or stored for alter use in underground reserves. With appropriate banking of the extra food, the Mandans protected themselves against the disaster of crop failure and accompany hunger.

The woman planted another staple, squash, about the first of June, and harvested it near the time of the green corn harvest. After they picked it, they sliced it, dried it, and strung the slices before they stored them. Once again, they saved the seeds from the best of the year’s crop. The Mandans also grew sunflowers and tobacco; the latter was the particular task of the older men.

Throughout the passage, the author implies that the Mandans _________

Lời giải

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Câu 41

Mark the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the underlined part that needs correction in each of the following questions.

Economists have tried to discourage the use of the phrase “underdeveloped nation and encouraging the more accurate phase “developing nation” in order to suggest an ongoing process

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Câu 42

Mark the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the underlined part that needs correction in each of the following questions.

Being the biggest expanse of brackish water in the world, the Baltic Sea is of special interesting to scientists

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Câu 43

Mark the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the underlined part that needs correction in each of the following questions.

It is time the government helped the unemployment to find some jobs.

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Câu 44

Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the word(s) OPPOSITE in meaning to the underlined word(s) in each of the following questions

Why are you being so arrogant?

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Câu 45

Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the word(s) OPPOSITE in meaning to the underlined word(s) in each of the following questions

Strongly advocating health foods, Jane doesn’t eat any chocolate

Lời giải

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Câu 46

Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the sentence that best combines each pair of sentences in the following questions.

Nobody is helping me, so I can’t finish my science project on time.

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Câu 47

Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the sentence that best combines each pair of sentences in the following questions.

Although they taste nearly the same, both Sprite and Mountain Dew are two separate citrus – flavoured soft drinks made by different companies.

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Câu 48

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

I had no idea Clark spoke French until we went to Bordeaux

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Câu 49

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

One of the things I hate is noisy children.

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Câu 50

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

People who are unhappy sometimes try to compensate by eating too much.

Lời giải

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