Lê Quỳnh  Anh

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 that follow.

Music can bring us to tears or to our feet, drive us into battle or lull us to sleep. Music is indeed remarkable in its power over all humankind, and perhaps for that very reason, no human culture on earth has ever lived without it. From discoveries made in France and Slovenia, even Neanderthal man, as long as 53,000 years ago, had developed surprisingly sophisticated, sweet-sounding flutes carved from animal bones. It is perhaps then, no accident that music should strike such a chord with the limbic system – an ancient part of our brain, evolutionarily speaking, and one that we share with much of the animal kingdom. Some researchers even propose that music came into this world long before the human race ever did. For example, the fact that whale and human music have so much in common even though our evolutionary paths have not intersected for nearly 60 million years suggests that music may predate humans. They assert that rather than being the inventors of music, we are latecomers to the musical scene.

Humpback whale composers employ many of the same tricks that human songwriters do. In addition to using similar rhythms, humpbacks keep musical phrases to a few seconds, creating themes out of several phrases before singing the next one. Whale songs in general are no longer than symphony movements, perhaps because they have a similar attention span. Even though they can sing over a range of seven octaves, the whales typically sing in key, spreading adjacent notes no farther apart than a scale. They mix percussive and pure tones in pretty much the same ratios as human composers – and follow their ABA form, in which a theme is presented, elaborated on and then revisited in a slightly modified form. Perhaps most amazing, humpback whale songs include repeating refrains that rhyme. It has been suggested that whales might use rhymes for exactly the same reasons that we do: as devices to help them remember. Whale songs can also be rather catchy. When a few humpbacks from the Indian Ocean strayed into the Pacific, some of the whales they met there quickly changed their tunes – singing the new whales’ songs within three short years. Some scientists are even tempted to speculate that a universal music awaits discovery.

 

Which of the following can be inferred from the passage?

A. Music may have an influence on the whale brain

B. The earliest human beings came from France and Slovenia

C. The research of musical brain always leads to a discovery of a universal music

D. Humpback whales imitate the way human composers work in creating their own music

Dương Hoàn Anh
2 tháng 5 2019 lúc 9:30

Đáp án A

Điều nào sau đây có thể suy ra từ đoạn văn?

A. Âm nhạc có thể có ảnh hưởng đến bộ não cá voi.

B. Những con người xuất hiện sớm nhất đến từ Pháp và Slovenia.

C. Nghiên cứu về bộ não âm nhạc luôn dẫn tới khám phá về một loại âm nhạc phổ quát.

D. Cá voi lưng gù bắt chước theo cách mà các nhà soạn nhạc con người làm trong việc tạo ra âm nhạc của riêng chúng.

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