Danh sách câu hỏi:

Câu 1:

Bob will come soon. When Bob _______, we will see him.

Xem đáp án

Câu 1:

It was not until she had arrived home _____ her appointment with the doctor.

Xem đáp án

Câu 3:

Sheila will inherit everything ______ her uncle's death.

Xem đáp án

Câu 5:

The prom is permitted providing that everyone behaves responsibly.

Xem đáp án

Câu 6:

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.

Choosing a career may be one of the hardest jobs you ever have, and it must be done with care. View a career as an opportunity to do something you love, not simply as a way to earn a living. Investing the time and effort to thoroughly explore your options can mean the difference between finding a stimulating and rewarding career and move from job to unsatisfying job in an attempt to find the right one. Work influences virtually every aspect of your life, from your choice of friends to where you live. Here are just a few of the factors to consider.

Deciding what matters most to you is essential to make the right decision. You may want to begin by assessing your likes, dislikes, strengths, and weaknesses. Think about the classes, hobbies, and surroundings that you find most appealing. Ask yourself questions, such as “Would you like to travel? Do you want to work with children? Are you more suited to solitary or cooperative work?” There are no right or wrong answers; only you know what is important to you. Determine which job features you require, which ones you would prefer, and which ones you cannot accept. Then rank them in order of importance to you.

The setting of the job is one factor to take into account. You may not want to sit at a desk all day. If not, there are diversity occupation – building inspector, supervisor, real estate agent – that involve a great deal of time away from the office. Geographical location may be a concern, and employment in some fields in concentrated in certain regions. Advertising job can generally be found only in large cities. On the other hand, many industries such as hospitality, law education, and retail sales are found in all regions of the country. If a high salary is important to you, do not judge a career by its starting wages. Many jobs, such as insurance sales, offers relatively low starting salaries; however, pay substantially increases along with your experience, additional training, promotions and commission.

Don’t rule out any occupation without learning more about it. Some industries evoke positive or negative associations. The traveling life of a flight attendant appears glamorous, while that of a plumber does not. Remember that many jobs are not what they appear to be at first, and may have merits or demerits that are less obvious. Flight attendants must work long, grueling hours without sleeps, whereas plumbers can be as highly paid as some doctors.

Another point to consider is that as you mature, you will likely develop new interests and skills that may point the way to new opportunities. The choice you make today need not be your final one.

The author states that “There are no right or wrong answers” in paragraph 2 in order to

______.

Xem đáp án

Câu 7:

The word “them” in paragraph 2 refers to ______.

Xem đáp án

Câu 9:

The word “evoke” in paragraph 5 is closest in meaning to ______.

Xem đáp án

Câu 10:

The word “that” in paragraph 5 refers to ______.

Xem đáp án

Câu 11:

It can be inferred from the paragraph 5 that ______.

Xem đáp án

Câu 12:

In paragraph 6, the author suggests that ______.

Xem đáp án

Câu 13:

According to the passage, which of the following is TRUE?

Xem đáp án

Câu 14:

I'm sorry ____ that your enterprise has been declared bankrupt.

Xem đáp án

Câu 15:

We have to tell Mary about our change in plans.

Xem đáp án

Câu 18:

She went ______ a bad cold just before Christmas.

Xem đáp án

Câu 20:

In most discussions of cultural diversity, attention has focused on visible, explicit aspects of culture, such language, dress, food, religion, music, and social rituals. Although they are important, these visible expressions of culture, which are taught deliberately and learned consciously, are only the tip of the iceberg or culture. Much of culture is taught and learned implicitly, or outside awareness. Thus, neither cultural insiders nor cultural outsiders are aware that certain "invisible" aspects of their culture exist.

Invisible elements of culture are important to us. For example, how long we can be late before being impolite, what topics we should avoid in a conversation, how we show interest or attention through listening behavior, what we consider beautiful or ugly. These are all aspects of culture that we learn and use without being aware of it. When we meet other people whose invisible cultural assumptions differ from those we have learned implicitly, we usually do not recognize their behavior as cultural in origin.

Differences in invisible culture can cause problems in cross-cultural relations. Conflicts may arise when we are unable to recognize others’ behavioral differences as cultural rather than personal. We tend to misinterpret other people's behavior, blame them, or judge their intentions or competence without realizing that we are experiencing cultural rather than individual differences.

Formal organizations and institutions, such as schools, hospitals, workplaces, governments, and the legal system are collection sites for invisible cultural differences. If the differences were more visible, we might have less misunderstanding. For example, if we met a man in a courthouse who was wearing exotic clothes, speaking a language other than ours, and carrying food that looked strange, we would not assume that we understood his thoughts and feelings or that he understood ours. Yet when such a man is dressed similarly to us, speaks our language, and does not differ from us in other obvious ways, we may fail to recognize the invisible cultural differences between us. As a result, mutual misunderstanding may arise.

The word “deliberately” in paragraph 1 is closest in meaning to 

Xem đáp án

Câu 21:

The phrase “the tip of the iceberg” in paragraph 1 means that

Xem đáp án

Câu 22:

Which of the following was NOT mentioned as an example of Invisible culture?

Xem đáp án

Câu 23:

The word “those” in paragraph 2 refers to 

Xem đáp án

Câu 24:

It can be inferred from paragraph 3 that conflict results when

Xem đáp án

Câu 25:

According to the passage, which of the following is NOT true?

Xem đáp án

Câu 26:

The author implies that institutions such as school and workplaces

Xem đáp án

Câu 27:

Which of the following would most likely result in misunderstanding?

Xem đáp án

Câu 31:

Because of his poverty, he has to struggling to make ends meet. 

Xem đáp án

Câu 33:

______ the invention of the steam engine, most forms of transport were horse-drawn.

Xem đáp án

Câu 34:

He felt rather embarrassed at his daughter's willingness ______ in a topless costume.

Xem đáp án

Câu 35:

Michael took a deep breath and dived into the water.

Xem đáp án

Câu 37:

His car needs ______.

Xem đáp án

Câu 39:

Read the passage and mark A, B, C or D to indicate the correct answer to each of the questions.

The history of clinical nutrition, or the study of the relationship between health and how the body takes in and utilizes food substances, can be divided into four distinct eras: the first began in the nineteenth century and extended into the early twentieth century when it was recognized for the first time that food contained constituents that were essential for human function and that different foods provided different amounts of these essential agents. Near the end of this era, research studies demonstrated that rapid weight loss was associated with nitrogen imbalance and could only be rectified by providing adequate dietary protein associated with certain foods.

The second era was initiated in the early decades of the twentieth century and might be called “the vitamin period” Vitamins came to be recognized in foods, and deficiency syndromes were described. As vitamins became recognized as essential food constituents necessary for health, it became tempting to suggest that every disease and condition for which there had been no previous effective treatment might be responsive to vitamin therapy. At that point in time, medical schools started to become more interested in having their curricula integrate nutritional concepts into the basic sciences. Much of the focus of this education was on the recognition of deficiency symptoms. Herein lay the beginning of what ultimately turned from ignorance to denial of the value of nutritional therapies in medicine. Reckless claims were made for effects of vitamins that went far beyond what could actually be achieved from the use of them.

In the third era of nutritional history in the early 1950’s to mid-1960’s, vitamin therapy began to fall into disrepute. Concomitant with this, nutrition education in medical schools also became less popular. It was just a decade before this that many drug companies had found their vitamin sales skyrocketing and were quick to supply practicing physicians with generous samples of vitamins and literature extolling the virtue of supplementation for a variety of health-related conditions. Expectations as to the success of vitamins in disease control were exaggerated. As is known in retrospect, vitamin and mineral therapies are much less effective when applied to health-crisis conditions than when applied to long-term problems of under nutrition that lead to chronic health problems.

What does the passage mainly discuss?

Xem đáp án

Câu 40:

It can be inferred from the passage that which of the following discoveries was made during the first era in the history of nutrition?

Xem đáp án

Câu 41:

The word “tempting” is closest in meaning to

Xem đáp án

Câu 42:

It can be inferred from the passage that medical schools began to teach concepts of nutrition in order to

Xem đáp án

Câu 43:

The word “Reckless” is closest in meaning to

Xem đáp án

Câu 44:

The word “them” refers to

Xem đáp án

Câu 45:

Why did vitamin therapy begin losing favor in the 1950’s ?

Xem đáp án

Câu 46:

The phrase “concomitant with” is closest in meaning to

Xem đáp án

Câu 48:

The storm ripped our tent to ______.

Xem đáp án

Câu 49:

When your father (die)? I (not know) when he (die).

Xem đáp án

Câu 50:

He seemed to be worried about something.

Xem đáp án

Câu 52:

I slept badly last night and am feeling particularly _____ this morning.

Xem đáp án

Câu 53:

Read the following passage and choose the best answer to each question.

Madison Square Garden, a world-famous sporting venue in New York City, has actually been a series of buildings in varied locations rather than a single building in one spot. In 1873, P.T. Barnum built Barnum’s Monster Classical and Geological Hippodrome at the corner of Madison Avenue and 26th Street, across from Madison Square Park. Two years later, the bandleader Patrick Gilmore bought the property, added statues and fountains, and renamed it Gilmore’s Gardens. When Cornelius Vanderbilt bought the property in 1879, it was renamed Madison Square Garden.

A second very lavish Madison Square Garden was built at the same location in 1890, with a ballroom, a restaurant, a theater, a rooftop garden, and a main arena with seating for 15,000. However, this elaborate Madison Square Garden lasted until 1924 when it was torn down to make way for a forty-storey skyscraper.

When the second Madison Square Garden had been replaced in its location across from Madison Square Park, the boxing promoter Tex Rickard raised six million dollars to build a new Madison Square Garden. This new Madison Square Garden was constructed in a different location, on 8th Avenue and 50th Street and quite some distance from Madison Square Park and Madison Avenue. Rickard’s Madison Square Garden served primarily as an arena for boxing prize fights and circus events until it outgrew its usefulness by the late 1950s.

A new location was found for a fourth for Madison Square Garden, a top Pennsylvania Railroad Station, and plans were announced for its construction in 1960. This current edifice, which includes a huge sports arena, a bowling center, a 5,000-seat amphitheater, and a twenty-nine-storey office building, does retain the traditional name Madison Square Garden. However, the name is actually quite a misnomer. The building is not located near Madison Square, nor does it have the flowery gardens that contributed to the original name.

The main point of this passage is that Madison Square Garden ________.

Xem đáp án

Câu 54:

Which paragraph discusses the third location of Madison Square Garden?

Xem đáp án

Câu 55:

What is a “venue” in paragraph 1?

Xem đáp án

Câu 56:

According to the passage, Patrick Gilmore did all of the following EXCEPT that he ________.

Xem đáp án

Câu 58:

How long did the second Madison Square Garden last?

Xem đáp án

Câu 59:

Which of the following would most likely have taken place at Rickard’s Madison Square Garden

Xem đáp án

Câu 60:

An “edifice” in paragraph 3 is most likely________.

Xem đáp án

Câu 62:

Which of the following statements is NOT TRUE according to the passage?

Xem đáp án

Câu 63:

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.

The passage mainly discusses ___________.

Xem đáp án

Câu 64:

The passage indicates that during the colonial period, money was ___________.

Xem đáp án

Câu 65:

The Massachusetts Bay Colony was allowed to make coins ___________.

Xem đáp án

Câu 66:

The expression “a means of” in paragraph 1 could be best replaced by _________.

Xem đáp án

Câu 68:

The pronoun “it” in paragraph 2 refers to which of the following ___________.

Xem đáp án

Câu 69:

It is implied in the passage that at the end of the Revolutionary War, a paper dollar was worth ___________.

Xem đáp án

Câu 71:

How was the monetary system arranged in the Constitution?

Xem đáp án

Câu 72:

According to the passage, which of the following is NOT true about the bimetallic monetary system?  

Xem đáp án

Câu 76:

________ becoming extinct is of great concern to zoologists.

Xem đáp án

Câu 79:

They had a boy _______ that yesterday.

Xem đáp án

Câu 81:

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.

Success in the academic field depends on your number of qualifications.

Xem đáp án

Câu 82:

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 following questions from 1 to 5.

Accustomed though we are to speaking of the films made before 1927 as “silent”, the film has never been, in the full sense of the word, silent. From the very beginning, music was regarded as an indispensable accompaniment; when the Lumiere films were shown at the first public film exhibition in the United States in February 1896, they were accompanied by piano improvisations on popular tunes. At first, the music played bore no special relationship to the films; an accompaniment of any kind was sufficient. Within a very short time, however, the incongruity of playing lively music to a solemn film became apparent, and film pianists began to take some care in matching their pieces to the mood of the film.

As movie theaters grew in number and importance, a violinist, and perhaps a cellist, would be added to the pianist in certain cases, and in the larger movie theaters small orchestras were formed. For a number of years the selection of music for each film program rested entirely in the hands of the conductor or leader of the orchestra, and very often the principal qualification for holding such a position was not skill or taste so much as the ownership of a large personal library of musical pieces. Since the conductor seldom saw the films until the night before the y were to be shown (if, indeed, the conductor was lucky enough to see them then), the musical arrangement was normally improvised in the greatest hurry.

To help meet this difficulty, film distributing companies started the practice of publishing suggestions for musical accompaniments. In 1909, for example, the Edison Company began issuing with their films such indications

of mood as “pleasant’, “sad”, “lively”. The suggestions became more explicit, and so emerged the musical cue sheet containing indications of mood, the titles of suitable pieces of music, and precise directions to show where one piece led into the next.

Certain films had music especially composed for them. The most famous of these early special scores was that composed and arranged for D. w. Griffith’s film Birth of a Nation, which was released in 1915.

It may be inferred from the passage that the first musical cue sheets appeared around _______ .

Xem đáp án

Câu 83:

The word “them” refers to _______ .

Xem đáp án

Câu 84:

Which of the following notations is most likely to have been included on a musical cue sheet of the early 1900's?

Xem đáp án

Câu 85:

According to the passage, what kind of business was the Edison Company?

Xem đáp án

Câu 86:

The passage mainly discusses music that was _______ .

Xem đáp án

Câu 89:

The (2) ________ on social life has been enormous.

Xem đáp án

Câu 94:

His dedication to the educational charity was truly ____.

Xem đáp án

Câu 95:

I’ve been meaning to … repairing that fence for ages.

Xem đáp án

Câu 96:

Mark the following passage and make the letter A,B,C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to each of the question

Composers today use a wider variety of sounds than ever before, including many that were once considered undesirable noises. Composer Edgard Varese (1883-1965)  called thus the “liberation of sound…the right to make music with any and all sounds.” Electronic music, for example – made with the aid of computers, synthesizers, and electronic instruments – may include sounds that in the past would not have been considered musical.

Enviromental sounds, such as thunder, and electronically generated hisses and blips can be recorded, manipulated, and then incorporated into a musical composition. But composers also draw novel sounds from voices and non-electronic instruments. Singers may be asked to scream, laugh, groan, sneeze, or to sing phonetic sounds rather than words. Wind and string players may lap or scrape their instruments. A brass or woodwind player may hum while playing, to produce two pitches at once; a pianist may reach inside the piano to pluck a string and then run a metal blade along it. In the music of the Western world, the greatest expansion and experimentation have involved percussion instruments, which outnumber strings and winds in many recent compositions. Traditional persussion instruments are struck with new types of beaters; and instruments that used to be couriered unconventional in Western music – tom-toms, bongos, slapsticks, maracas – are widely used.

In the search for novel sounds, increased use has been made in Western music of Microtones. Non-Western music typically divides and intervals between two pitches more finely than Western music does, thereby producing a greater number of distinct tones or micro tones, within the same interval. Composers such as Krzysztof Penderecki create sound that borders on electronic noise through tone clusters – closely spaced tones played together and heard as a mass, block, or band of sound. The directional aspect of sound has taken on new importance as well Loudspeakers or groups of instruments may be placed at opposite ends of the stage, in the balcony, or at the back and sides of the auditorium. Because standard music notation makes no provision for many of these innovations, recent music scores may contain graph like diagrams, new note shapes and symbols, and novel ways of arranging notation on the page.

What does the passage mainly discuss?

Xem đáp án

Câu 97:

The word "wider" in one 1 is closest in meaning to

Xem đáp án

Câu 98:

The passage suggests that Edgard Varese is an example of a composer who

Xem đáp án

Câu 99:

The word "it" in line 12 refers to

Xem đáp án

Câu 101:

The word "thereby" in line 20 is closest in meaning to

Xem đáp án

Câu 102:

According to the passage, Krzysztof Penderecki is known for which of the following practices?

Xem đáp án

Câu 104:

In paragraph 3, the author mentions diagrams as an example of a new way to

Xem đáp án

Câu 107:

“We need new curtains.” – “Okay, let's buy ______.”

Xem đáp án

Câu 108:

The tiger is _______ of extinction. It is difficult to find them in the wild.

Xem đáp án

Câu 112:

The spaceman felt as if he ______ in a paradise.

Xem đáp án

Câu 113:

I need someone to … at the ceremony.

Xem đáp án

Câu 114:

Early signs of the rebirth of civilization in Western Europe … to appear in the 11th century as trade … again in Italy.

Xem đáp án

Câu 116:

I got impatient waiting for my turn to ____.

Xem đáp án

Câu 117:

Jane failed to understand how serious her illness was until she spoke to the doctor.

Xem đáp án

Câu 120:

Our visit to Japan was delayed _______my wife’s illness.

Xem đáp án

Câu 121:

Couldn't you take a bus to the station this morning?

Xem đáp án

Câu 133:

The defenders _____the enemy until reinforcements arrived.

Xem đáp án

Câu 134:

I revised my views _____ comments from colleagues.

Xem đáp án

Câu 135:

He wasn't to blame for the accident.

Xem đáp án

Câu 137:

It is the ____ in that country for women to marry young.

Xem đáp án

Câu 139:

I’ll get Minh _________ this for you.

Xem đáp án

Câu 143:

They seemed to be _____ to the criticism and just carried on as before.

Xem đáp án

Câu 144:

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

In the world today, particular in the two most industrialized areas, North America and Europe, recycling is the big news. People are talking about it, practicing it, and discovering new ways to be sensitive to the environment. Recycling means finding ways to use products a second time. The motto of the recycling movement is “Reduce, Reuse, Recycle”.

The first step is to reduce garbage. In stores, a shopper has to buy products in blister packs, boxes and expensive plastic wrappings. A hamburger from a fast food restaurant comes in lots of packaging: usually paper, a box and a bag. All that packaging is wasted resources. People should try to buy things that are wrapped simply, and to reuse cups and utensils. Another way to reduce waste is to buy high-quality products. When low-quality appliances break, many customers throw them away and buy new ones - a loss of more resources and more energy. For example, if a customer buys a high-quality appliance that can be easily repaired, the manufacturer receives an important message. In the same way, if a customer chooses a product with less packaging, that customer sends an important message to the manufacturers. To reduce garbage, the throw-away must stop.

The second step is to reuse. It is better to buy juices and soft drinks in returnable bottles. After customers empty the bottles, they return them to the stores. The manufacturers of the drinks collect bottles, wash them, and then fill them again. The energy that is necessary to make new bottles is saved. In some parts of the world, returning bottles for money is a common practice. In those places, the garbage dumps have relatively little glass and plastic from throw-away bottles.

The third step being environmentally sensitive is to recycle. Spent motor oil can be cleaned and used again. Aluminum cans are expensive to make. It takes the same amount of energy to make one aluminum can as it does to run a color TV set for three hours. When people collect and recycle aluminum (for new cans), they help save one of the world’s precious resources.

Which area is considered one of the most industrialized?

Xem đáp án

Câu 145:

What does the word “sensitive” means?

Xem đáp án

Câu 146:

The word “motto” is closest in meaning to _______.

Xem đáp án

Câu 147:

It is a waste when customers buy low-quality products because _______.

Xem đáp án

Câu 148:

What is the topic of the passage?

Xem đáp án

Câu 149:

People can do the following to reduce waste EXCEPT _______.

Xem đáp án

Câu 150:

What best describe the process of reuse?

Xem đáp án

Câu 151:

The word “practice” is closest in meaning to _______.

Xem đáp án

Câu 152:

Garbage dumps in some areas have relatively little glass and plastic because _______.

Xem đáp án

Câu 153:

What are the two things mentioned as examples of recycling?

Xem đáp án

Câu 154:

The bank is reported in the local newpapers _________in the broad daylight.

Xem đáp án

4.6

5031 Đánh giá

50%

40%

0%

0%

0%