Danh sách câu hỏi:

Câu 11:

If you had listened to my advice, you ____________ into trouble now.

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Câu 15:

By the time you come back next year, they ____________ their house.

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Câu 19:

Lisa ___________ at 8 o’clock next week. She’ll be on holiday!

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Câu 21:

The working environment was so bad that Hoa eventually decided to hand in his notice.

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Câu 25:

Peter: “Sarah doesn’t seem very happy at the moment. Does she find the course difficult?” - Mary: “____________ “

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Câu 32:

Water energy can be harnessed by using which of the following tools?

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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 from 36 to 42.

The concept of urban agriculture may conjure up images of rooftop, backyard or community gardens scattered among downtown city streets and surrounding neighborhoods. But in the Seattle area, and within and beyond the Puget Sound region, it means a great deal more. “Urban agriculture doesn’t necessarily equate to production that occurs only in a metropolitan urban area", says Jason Niebler, who directs the Sustainable Agriculture Education (SAgE) Initiative at Seattle Central Community College. “It means we are providing for growing population food needs from surrounding rural landscapes, as well as from the core urban landscape.”

Picture a series of concentric circles, with an urban core that produces some food at varying capacities, surrounded by a series of outlying rings of small farms that become increasingly more rural with distance. The hope is that such land use planning, from the inner core to the outer rings, will encourage local ecologically sound sustainable food production. This, in turn, will create local jobs and decrease reliance on distant food products that originate from petroleum-intensive large scale farms.

That’s the idea behind SAgE, believed to be the nation’s first metropolitan-based community college sustainable agriculture program that emphasizes farming practices across diverse landscape types from urban centers to surrounding rural environs. “It’s small scale agriculture with an urban focus,” Niebler says. “Any urban population, large or small, can practice sustainable agriculture, improve food security and protect the environment, which ultimately results in resilient food systems and communities.”

SAgE is a part of National Science Foundation’s Advanced Technological Education (ATE) Program, which is providing the project with $157,375 over two years. ATE’s goal is to support projects that strengthen the skills of technicians who work in industries regarded as vital to the national’s prosperity and security. The support largely goes to community colleges that work in partnership with universities, secondary schools, businesses and industries, as well as government agencies, which design and implement model workforce initiatives.

The SAgE project focuses on the environmental, socioeconomic, political and cultural issues related to sustainable food systems, within Puget Sound watersheds through student and community education and research, and technological innovation. The curriculum offers courses that cover such issues as agricultural ecology, urban food systems, food politics and ethics, soil science, sustainable food production and technology, the integration of food and forests, and career opportunities.

“We’ve created a curriculum that is fundamental in nature, addressing the principles of sustainable agriculture and what a food system is – how it functions both locally and globally,” Niebler says. “These courses are challenging, robust and inspirational. One of the really wonderful things about them is that we offer service learning opportunities, where students volunteer a portion of their time to working with local partner organizations. They can do a research project, or a service learning option. The ideal would be to prompt students into careers that involve sustainable practices in an urban agriculture setting.”

(Adapted from “Promoting Sustainable Agriculture” by Mariene Cimons)

It is stated in the passage that Jason Niebler ________.

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Câu 37:

It can be inferred from the passage that the conventional idea of urban agriculture __________.

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Câu 38:

Which of the following is supposed to be an outcome of the SAgE’s new land use planning?

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Câu 39:

The curriculum of SAgE at Seattle Central Community College offers courses covering the following EXCEPT ________.

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Câu 40:

In Niebler’s opinion, the courses offered by the SAgE project are ________.

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Câu 41:

The word “them” in paragraph 6 refer to ________.

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Câu 42:

Which of the following is NOT true according to the passage?

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Câu 46:

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.

“How beautiful the dress you have just bought is!” Peter said to Mary.

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Câu 47:

Thanks to her high grades at university, Linh is offered the position.

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Câu 48:

He played volleyball with his friends, then he went home.

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Câu 49:

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.

I did not turn on the television. I was afraid of waking the baby up.

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Câu 50:

Fossil fuels come from dead plants and animals. These plants and animals died millions of years ago.

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