A ream of paper containing 500 sheets is 5cm thick. Approximately how many sheets of this type of paper would there be in a stack 0.1cm high?
A ream of paper containing 500 sheets is 5cm thick. Approximately how many sheets of this type of paper would there be in a stack 0.1cm high?
Answer:
sheets
1cm =500:5=100 sấp giấy
Ta có 0,1cm=100:10=10(sấp giấy)
đs: 10 sấp giấy
A ream of paper containing 500 sheets is 5cm thick. Approximately how many sheets of this type of paper would there be in a stack 0.1cm high?
Answer: sheets.
Một ram giấy chứa 500 tờ là dày 5cm. Khoảng bao nhiêu tờ của loại giấy này sẽ có được trong một cao ngăn xếp 0.1cm?
Trả lời: tờ.
Read the passage carefully then answer the questions below:
Every day of the year throughout the world, about twenty million paper bags and newspapers are screwed and thrown away. Making paper requires a lot of wood pulp and the work of millions of workers. Many countries have had plans to recycle waste paper to save money and labor. In countries where there is the cooperation of the public, paper mills recycle as much as sixty percent of waste paper. Their simple work is to take away the ink, crush it up and make it into pulp again. For every ton of recycled newsprint, twelve trees can be saved. We can insist that the more paper people save, the more trees are preserved.
1. How many paper bags and newspapers are thrown away every day?
2. What have many countries done to save money and labor in making paper?
3. What do paper mills do to reuse waste paper?
4. How many trees can be saved for every ton of recycled newsprint?
5. Is recycling waste paper important?
Every day of the year throughout the world, about twenty million paper bags and newspapers are screwed and thrown away. Making paper requires a lot of wood pulp and the work of millions of workers. Many countries have had plans to recycle waste paper to save money and labor. In countries where there is the cooperation of the public, paper mills recycle as much as sixty percent of waste paper. Their simple work is to take away the ink, crush it up and make it into pulp again. For every ton of recycled newsprint, twelve trees can be saved. We can insist that the more paper people save, the more trees are preserved.
1. How many paper bags and newspapers are thrown away every day?
Every day of the year throughout the world, about twenty million paper bags and newspapers are screwed and thrown away.
2. What have many countries done to save money and labor in making paper?
Many countries have had plans to recycle waste paper to save money and labor.
3. What do paper mills do to reuse waste paper? They take away the ink, crush it up and make it into pulp again.
4. How many trees can be saved for every ton of recycled newsprint? For every ton of recycled newsprint, twelve trees can be saved.
5. Is recycling waste paper important?
Yes, it is.
Read the passage, then answer the questions.
Every day of the year throughout the world, about twenty million paper bags and newspapers are screwed and thrown away
Making paper requires a lot of wood pulp and the work of million of workers. Many countries have had plans to recycle waste paper to save money and labor. In countries where there is the cooperation of the public, paper mills recycle as much as sixty percent of waste paper. Their simple work is to take away the ink, crush it and make it into pulp again. For every ton of recycled newsprint, twelve trees can be saved. We can insist that the more paper people save, the more trees are preserved.
l. How many paper bags and newspapers are thrown away every day?
2. What material do paper mills need to make paper?
3. What have many countries done to save money and labor in making paper?
4. What percentage of waste paper is recycled with the help of the public?
5. What do the paper mills do to reuse waste paper?
6. How many trees can be saved for every ton of recycled newsprint?
Read the passage, then answer the questions.
Every day of the year throughout the world, about twenty million paper bags and newspapers are screwed and thrown away
Making paper requires a lot of wood pulp and the work of million of workers. Many countries have had plans to recycle waste paper to save money and labor. In countries where there is the cooperation of the public, paper mills recycle as much as sixty percent of waste paper. Their simple work is to take away the ink, crush it and make it into pulp again. For every ton of recycled newsprint, twelve trees can be saved. We can insist that the more paper people save, the more trees are preserved.
l. How many paper bags and newspapers are thrown away every day?
=> Every day of the year throughout the world, about twenty million paper bags and newspapers are screwed and thrown away.
2. What material do paper mills need to make paper?
=> Making paper requires a lot of wood pulp and the work of million of workers. .
3. What have many countries done to save money and labor in making paper?
=> Many countries have had plans to recycle waste paper to save money and labor.
4. What percentage of waste paper is recycled with the help of the public?
=> In countries where there is the cooperation of the public, paper mills recycle as much as sixty percent of waste paper.
5. What do the paper mills do to reuse waste paper?
=> Their simple work is to take away the ink, crush it and make it into pulp again.
6. How many trees can be saved for every ton of recycled newsprint?
=> For every ton of recycled newsprint, twelve trees can be saved.
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.
The lack of printing regulations and the unenforceability of British copyright law in the American colonies made it possible for colonial printers occasionally to act as publishers. Although they rarely undertook major publishing project because it was difficult to sell books as cheaply as they could be imported from Europe, printers in Philadelphia did publish work that required only small amounts of capital, paper, and type. Broadsides could be published with minimal financial risk. Consisting of only one sheet of paper and requiring small amounts of type, broadsides involved lower investments of capital than longer works. Furthermore, the broadside format lent itself to subjects of high, if temporary, interest, enabling them to meet with ready sale. If the broadside printer would know this immediately, there would be no agonizing wait with large amounts of capital tied up, books gathering dust on the shelves, and creditors impatient for payment.
In addition to broadsides, book and pamphlets, consisting mainly of political tracts, catechisms, primers, and chapbooks were relatively inexpensive to print and to buy. Chapbook were pamphlet-sized books, usually containing popular tales, ballads, poems, short plays, and jokes, small, both in formal and number of pages, they were generally bound simply, in boards (a form of cardboard) or merely stitched in paper wrappers (a sewn antecedent of modern-day paperbacks). Pamphlets and chapbooks did not require fine paper or a great deal of type to produce they could thus be printed in large, cost-effective editions and sold cheaply.
By far, the most appealing publishing investments were to be found in small books that had proven to be steady sellers, providing a reasonably reliable source of income for the publisher. They would not, by nature, be highly topical or political, as such publications would prove of fleeting interest. Almanacs, annual publication that contained information on astronomy and weather patterns arranged according to the days, week, and months of a given year, provided the perfect steady seller because their information pertained to the locale in which they would be used.
All of the following are defined in the passage EXCEPT ________.
A. broadsides
B. catechisms
C. chapbooks
D. Almanacs
Đáp án B.
Keywords: defind, EXCEPT.
Clue: + “In addition to broadsides, books and pamphlets, consisting mainly of political tracts, catechisms, primers, and chapbooks were relatively inexpensive to print and to buy…” – Đáp án A.
+ “chapbooks were pamphlet-sized books…” – Đáp án C.
+ “Almanacs, annual publications that contained information on astronomy and weather patterns…” – Đáp án D.
Như vậy chỉ có đáp án B. catechisms không được định nghĩa trong bài.
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.
The lack of printing regulations and the unenforceability of British copyright law in the American colonies made it possible for colonial printers occasionally to act as publishers. Although they rarely undertook major publishing project because it was difficult to sell books as cheaply as they could be imported from Europe, printers in Philadelphia did publish work that required only small amounts of capital, paper, and type. Broadsides could be published with minimal financial risk. Consisting of only one sheet of paper and requiring small amounts of type, broadsides involved lower investments of capital than longer works. Furthermore, the broadside format lent itself to subjects of high, if temporary, interest, enabling them to meet with ready sale. If the broadside printer would know this immediately, there would be no agonizing wait with large amounts of capital tied up, books gathering dust on the shelves, and creditors impatient for payment.
In addition to broadsides, book and pamphlets, consisting mainly of political tracts, catechisms, primers, and chapbooks were relatively inexpensive to print and to buy. Chapbook were pamphlet-sized books, usually containing popular tales, ballads, poems, short plays, and jokes, small, both in formal and number of pages, they were generally bound simply, in boards (a form of cardboard) or merely stitched in paper wrappers (a sewn antecedent of modern-day paperbacks). Pamphlets and chapbooks did not require fine paper or a great deal of type to produce they could thus be printed in large, cost-effective editions and sold cheaply.
By far, the most appealing publishing investments were to be found in small books that had proven to be steady sellers, providing a reasonably reliable source of income for the publisher. They would not, by nature, be highly topical or political, as such publications would prove of fleeting interest. Almanacs, annual publication that contained information on astronomy and weather patterns arranged according to the days, week, and months of a given year, provided the perfect steady seller because their information pertained to the locale in which they would be used.
Which aspect of colonial printing does the passage mainly discuss?
A. Laws governing the printing industry
B. Competition among printers.
C. Types of publications produced.
D. Advances in printing technology
Đáp án C.
Câu hỏi: Khía cạnh nào của việc in ấn thuộc địa mà đoạn văn chủ yếu đề cập?
Các em làm câu hỏi này sau khi đã hoàn thành xong các câu hỏi khác.
A. Laws governing the printing industry: Bộ luật quản lí ngành công nghiệp in ấn.
B. Competiton among printers: Cạnh tranh giữa các nhà in.
C. Types of publications produced: Những loại ấn phẩm được sản xuất.
D. Advances in printing technology: Những tiến bộ trong công nghệ in ấn.
Chỉ có đáp án C là hợp lí vì chủ đề này được đề cập xuyên suốt đoạn văn, các đáp án còn lại đều không thích hợp.
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.
The lack of printing regulations and the unenforceability of British copyright law in the American colonies made it possible for colonial printers occasionally to act as publishers. Although they rarely undertook major publishing project because it was difficult to sell books as cheaply as they could be imported from Europe, printers in Philadelphia did publish work that required only small amounts of capital, paper, and type. Broadsides could be published with minimal financial risk. Consisting of only one sheet of paper and requiring small amounts of type, broadsides involved lower investments of capital than longer works. Furthermore, the broadside format lent itself to subjects of high, if temporary, interest, enabling them to meet with ready sale. If the broadside printer would know this immediately, there would be no agonizing wait with large amounts of capital tied up, books gathering dust on the shelves, and creditors impatient for payment.
In addition to broadsides, book and pamphlets, consisting mainly of political tracts, catechisms, primers, and chapbooks were relatively inexpensive to print and to buy. Chapbook were pamphlet-sized books, usually containing popular tales, ballads, poems, short plays, and jokes, small, both in formal and number of pages, they were generally bound simply, in boards (a form of cardboard) or merely stitched in paper wrappers (a sewn antecedent of modern-day paperbacks). Pamphlets and chapbooks did not require fine paper or a great deal of type to produce they could thus be printed in large, cost-effective editions and sold cheaply.
By far, the most appealing publishing investments were to be found in small books that had proven to be steady sellers, providing a reasonably reliable source of income for the publisher. They would not, by nature, be highly topical or political, as such publications would prove of fleeting interest. Almanacs, annual publication that contained information on astronomy and weather patterns arranged according to the days, week, and months of a given year, provided the perfect steady seller because their information pertained to the locale in which they would be used.
The word “they” in paragraph 2 refers to ________.
A. chapbooks
B. tales
C. jokes
D. pages
Đáp án A.
Keywords: they, paragraph 2, refers.
Clue: “Chapbooks were pamphlet-sized books…, they were generally bound simply”: Sách bỏ túi là những cuốn sách có kích thước nhỏ…, chúng thường được gói bọc đơn giản. Vậy “they” ở đoạn 2 là đang nói về “chapbooks” nên A là đáp án đúng. Các đáp án còn lại không đúng:
B. tales (n): truyện cổ tích
C. jokers (n): truyện cổ tích
D. pages (n): trang (sách)
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.
The lack of printing regulations and the unenforceability of British copyright law in the American colonies made it possible for colonial printers occasionally to act as publishers. Although they rarely undertook major publishing project because it was difficult to sell books as cheaply as they could be imported from Europe, printers in Philadelphia did publish work that required only small amounts of capital, paper, and type. Broadsides could be published with minimal financial risk. Consisting of only one sheet of paper and requiring small amounts of type, broadsides involved lower investments of capital than longer works. Furthermore, the broadside format lent itself to subjects of high, if temporary, interest, enabling them to meet with ready sale. If the broadside printer would know this immediately, there would be no agonizing wait with large amounts of capital tied up, books gathering dust on the shelves, and creditors impatient for payment.
In addition to broadsides, book and pamphlets, consisting mainly of political tracts, catechisms, primers, and chapbooks were relatively inexpensive to print and to buy. Chapbook were pamphlet-sized books, usually containing popular tales, ballads, poems, short plays, and jokes, small, both in formal and number of pages, they were generally bound simply, in boards (a form of cardboard) or merely stitched in paper wrappers (a sewn antecedent of modern-day paperbacks). Pamphlets and chapbooks did not require fine paper or a great deal of type to produce they could thus be printed in large, cost-effective editions and sold cheaply.
By far, the most appealing publishing investments were to be found in small books that had proven to be steady sellers, providing a reasonably reliable source of income for the publisher. They would not, by nature, be highly topical or political, as such publications would prove of fleeting interest. Almanacs, annual publication that contained information on astronomy and weather patterns arranged according to the days, week, and months of a given year, provided the perfect steady seller because their information pertained to the locale in which they would be used.
What were “steady sellers”?
A. Printers whose incomes were quite large
B. People who traveled from town to town selling books and pamphlets
C. Investors who provided reliable financial support for new printers
D. Publications whose sales were usually consistent from year to year
Đáp án D.
Câu hỏi: “steady sellers” là gì?
Clue: “… steady sellers, providing a reasonably reliable source of income for the publisher”: … những ấn phẩm bán ổn định, chúng cung cấp một nguồn thu thập hợp lí và đáng tin cậy cho các nhà xuất bản.
Chọn D. Publications whose sales were usually consistent from year to year: những ấn phẩm có lượng bán ra thường rất ổn định qua từng năm.
Các đáp án còn lại là sai:
A. Printers whose imcomes were quite large: Những nhà in có thu thập khá cao.
B. People who traveled from town to town selling books and pamphlets: Những người đi từ thị trấn này sang thị trấn bán sách và tờ rơi.
C. Investors who provided reliable financial support for new printers: Nhà đầu tư đã cung cấp hỗ trợ tài chính đáng tin cậy cho các nhà in mới.
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.
The lack of printing regulations and the unenforceability of British copyright law in the American colonies made it possible for colonial printers occasionally to act as publishers. Although they rarely undertook major publishing project because it was difficult to sell books as cheaply as they could be imported from Europe, printers in Philadelphia did publish work that required only small amounts of capital, paper, and type. Broadsides could be published with minimal financial risk. Consisting of only one sheet of paper and requiring small amounts of type, broadsides involved lower investments of capital than longer works. Furthermore, the broadside format lent itself to subjects of high, if temporary, interest, enabling them to meet with ready sale. If the broadside printer miscalculated, however, and produced a sheet that did not sell, it was not likely to be a major loss, and the printer would know this immediately, there would be no agonizing wait with large amounts of capital tied up, books gathering dust on the shelves’ and creditors impatient for payment.
In addition to broadsides, books and pamphlets, consisting mainly of political tracts, catechisms, primers, and chapbooks were relatively inexpensive to print and to buy. Chapbook were pamphlet-sized books, usually containing popular tales, ballads, poems, short plays, and jokes, small, both in formal and number of pages, they were generally bound simply, in boards (a form of cardboard) or merely stitched in paper wrappers (a sewn antecedent of modern-day paperbacks). Pamphlets and chapbooks did not require me paper or a great deal of type to produce they could thus be printed in large, cost-effective editions and sold cheaply.
By far, the most appealing publishing investments were to be found in small books that had proven to be steady sellers, providing a reasonably reliable source of income for the publisher. They would not, by nature, be highly topical or political, as such publications would prove of fleeting interest. Almanacs, annual pu ications t at contained information on astronomy and weather patterns arranged according to the days, week, and months of a given year, provided the perfect steady seller because their information pertained to the locale in which they would be used.
The word “appealing” in paragraph 3 is closest in meaning to_________.
A. dependable
B. respectable
C. enduring
D. attractive
Đáp án D.
Keywords: appealing, paragraph 3, closest in meaning.
- appealing / ə'pi:lɪη / (adj): hấp dẫn, thu hút, độc đáo
A. dependable / dɪ'pendəbl/ (adj): đáng tin cậy
B. respectable / rɪ'spektəbl / (adj): đáng kính
C. enduring / ɪn'djʊərɪη / (adj): lâu dài, vĩnh viễn
D. attractive /ə'traektɪv/ (adj): hấp dẫn, thu hút
Như vậy ta chọn đáp án D.
Kiến thức cần nhớ |
- appealing (adj) = attractive - appeal (v) + (to sb) + to V sth: kêu gọi ai để làm gì |