29. The hospital is recognized as a centre of ..... in research and teaching ( Excellent )
30. it would be more ...... to switch the machine off at night ( Economy )
1/Everybody in the work must unite their efforts to maintain and protectq peace
2/she put on warm clothes so as not to catch cold
3/she locked the door so as not to be disturbed
4/he cut the hair so as to avoid being arrested by the police
5/we should take advantage of the scientific achievements ì the world so that we can develop our national money
1/Everybody in the work must unite their efforts to maintain and protectq peace
2/she put on warm clothes so as not to catch cold
3/she locked the door so as not to be disturbed
4/he cut the hair so as to avoid being arrested by the police
5/we should take advantage of the scientific achievements ì the world so that we can develop our national money
29 . over the last ten years , there's been a ............. in the number of children being born in this city . ( ruduce )
30 . should i write english or British as my ........... ? ( nation )
Underline the correct option:
1. Instructors should have appropriate facilitation/ facilitator skills and be able to develop learner autonomy.
2. As a former schoolmaster, he has always been a firm support/ supporter of traditional learning methods.
3. The company is one of the largest provisions/ providers of employment in the area.
4. Scientists make a prediction/ predictor that the earth will be deprived of certain natural resources for the coming generations.
5. Modern education/ educators prefer a different approach to the teaching of reading.
6. The online application/ appliance process is simple and can take a few minutes.
7. An employer/ employee is a vital component of the company and should be treated fairly.
8. Please complete this section before submitting to evaluation/ evaluator.
9. Some interviews/ interviewers make an effort to put canditdates at ease.
10. The Manufacturing Technology Skills in Chicago attracted nearly 90,000 attendes/ attendants and 1,200 exhibitors.
Reorder the words to make sentences:
1. outside/ and served/ the home/ traditionally,/ men/ for the family/ have worked/ as the sole breadwinner.
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2. at home/ raise the children/ in the past, / to stay/ women/ and take care of/ were expected/ the household.
->
3. who/ of men/ has doubled/ stay-at-home fathers/ the number/ are/ in the past 20 years.
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4. with/ women/ the financial burden/ their parents/ are capable of/ nowadays/ sharing.
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5. a significant role/ in helping/ women's time/ technology/ free up/ plays.
->
6. teachers/ be replaced/ some experts/ would never/ said that/ by educational robots.
->
7. challenging/ creating robotic teachers/ that/ all job demands/ can meet/ might be.
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8. the students/ important computer skills/ which/ online education/ play/ teachers/ in today's everyday life/ an important life.
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9. by 2040/ household chores/ thanks to/ according to futurologists, / robots, drones and AI / 90 percent of/ will be automated.
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10. we/ cook/ in the next 20 years/ appear/ virtual chefs/ as holograms/ will see/ every step of the way/ to help us.
->
Tìm lỗi sai và sửa lại
Children subjected to violence,exploitation,abuse and neglect are in risk of death,poor physical and mental health,HIV/ADIS infection,and educational problems
[1-10] Use the word given in brackets to form a word that fits in the gap.
The first one has been done as an example (0).
Example: (0). PROJECTIONS/ projections
Today, population growth largely means urban population growth. United Nation (UN) (0. PROJECT)____ show the world’s rural population has already stopped growing, but the world can expect to add close to 1.5 billion (1. URBAN)____ in the next 15 years, and 3 billion by 2050. How the world meets the challenge of sustainable development will be (2. INTIMACY)___ tied to this process.
For many people, cities represent a world of new opportunities, including jobs. There is a powerful link between urbanization and economic growth. Around the world, tows and cities are responsible for over 80 per cent of the gross national product. While urban poverty is growing around the world, this is largely because many people – including the poor – are moving to urban areas.
The opportunities there extend beyond just jobs. Cities also offer greater opportunities for (3. SOCIETY)____ mobilization and women’s empowerment. Many young people, especially young women, regard the move to cities as an opportunity to escape traditional patriarchy and experience new freedoms. Urban areas also offer greater access to education and health services, including sexual and reproductive health care, further (4. PROMOTE)____ women’s empowerment and the realization of their reproductive right. This contributes to significantly reduces (5. FERTILE)___ in urban areas changing the trajectory of overall population growth.
This process, which is particularly (6. PRONUNCIATION)____ in Africa and Asia, where much of the world’s population growth is taking place, is also an enormous opportunity for sustainability if the right policies are put in place. Urban living has the potential to use resources more (7. EFFICIENCY)___, to create more sustainable land use and to protect the (8. DIVERSE) ____ of natural ecosystems.
Still, the face of (9. EQUAL)___ is increasingly an urban one. Too many urban residents grapple with extreme poverty, (10. EXCLUDE)_____, vulnerability and marginalization.
Xin chào tất cả các em, chúng mình cùng tiếp tục chuỗi các câu hỏi ôn tập thi vào lớp 10 môn Tiếng Anh cùng Hoc24 nhé!
Read the following article about how to be environmentally friendly and decide in which paragraph (A - E) the following are mentioned. Write your answer (A, B, C, D, or E). Write one letter for each answer. The paragraphs may be chosen more than once.
A. FAIR TRADE
Farmers in developing countries are some of the most vulnerable people on earth, prey to world commodity markets, middlemen and the weather. So-called “fair trade” arrangements guarantee co-operative groups a price above the world market and a bonus on top. The growing fair-trade market has distributed hundreds of millions of pounds to more than 50 million people worldwide. But critics say that fair trade will never lift a country out of poverty; indeed, it may keep it there, because the money generated from the sale goes almost in its entirety to rich countries which promote the products. As a simple guide, only about 5% of the sale price of a fair-trade chocolate bar may actually go to a poor country.
B. ORGANIC FOOD
For food to be organic it must be free of added chemicals, both in the growing of the food and in the killing of the pests that might damage the crop. In a world where many manufactured chemicals have never been properly tested for safety, this is a very big selling point. Parents are thus prepared to pay a premium for organic food, especially when chemicals suspected of causing a variety of problems have been found, albeit in tiny quantities, in most children’s blood. The problem is that many farmers have not switched to organic in sufficient numbers to satisfy this growing market. As a result, supermarkets are often forced to fly vegetables as they can label “organic” halfway around the world, at a great cost to the planet in extra greenhouse gases. Environmentalists are now urging shoppers to buy locally produced vegetables, even if they are not organic and have been sprayed with pesticides.
C. RECYCLING
A great shift has taken place in the way we think about rubbish. Where once we were happy to bury it in landfills or dump it at sea, we are now being urged by national and local governments to recycle it and think of waste as a resource. The wheelie-bin culture is being replaced by a series of kerbside collections for paper, metals, plastic, bottles, clothes and compost. The idea is to cut landfill as well as saving the planet. It is, however, having some unexpected consequences. Most of Britain's plastic and paper is now being sent for recycling in China or India, which creates more greenhouse gases just to get it there, plus workers then have to separate it. Meanwhile, some paper and bottles carefully sorted out by householders end up being dumped in landfills after all, because the demand for recycled materials constantly fluctuates.
D. BEING CARBON NEUTRAL
If you want to make yourself feel better about the planet, there are lots for you to ease your conscience by becoming “carbon neutral”. One of the most appealing methods is to pay for someone to plant trees, preferably creating or regenerating new forests. The theory is that trees grow by absorbing carbon dioxide and giving out oxygen storing the carbon in their trunks. But woods and forests create their own mini-climate, which collects and stores water and creates rainclouds. Added to this, there is the potential problem that planting trees often releases carbon stored in the soil – and what happens if the forests catch fire, or are chopped down and harvested for timber? Another and perhaps better solution might be to invest in small-scale hydro-electric schemes, so that people who live in the Himalayas, for example, and currently do not have electricity, can develop a 21st-century lifestyle without polluting the planet.
E. ECO-TOURISM
The idea of “green” tourism is to persuade local people not to chop down forests, shoot elephants or wipe out tigers, but to preserve them so rich tourists visit and peer at the wildlife through binoculars. Unfortunately, the best money is made from reintroducing animals for trophy hunting by the very rich- an idea which does not always meet with approval and has caused much debate. While tourists may help sustain some national parks, they often create as many problems as they solve. One is that they tend to demand all mod cons in their hotels, such as a great deal of water for showers; a luxury sometimes not available for locals. Eco-tourism, when properly managed, can offer the locals and the animals a brighter future. Sometimes, though, the only winners are a few business people who own hotels.
In which section is the following mentioned?
a controversial pastime that rises considerable money? | Question 1. ______ | |
an action that creates a different weather pattern | Question 2. ______ | |
an undesirable result of unnecessary global transportation (NB. You must provide two different option) | Question 3. ______ | Question 4. _____ |
inadequate research into harmful substances | Question 5. ______ | |
a continual change in what is required or needed | Question 6. ______ | |
people at the greatest risk from factors beyond their control | Question 7. ______ | |
a far-reaching change in official attitude | Question 8. ______ | |
a benefit for those the scheme was not originally intended for (NB. You must provide two different option) | Question 9. ______ | Question 10. _____ |
the bringing of a source of energy to remote areas | Question 11. _____ | |
a failure to adapt in order to meet increasing demands | Question 12. _____ |
Goodluck!