11. In particular, parents are afraid of changes in their children's ___________.
(PERSON)
mình cần gấp
Cho dạng đúng của từ:
1, My car is much too.......... to take on long journey .( rely)
2, He was too ......... to tell his teacher about the stupid mistake. ( shame)
3. I.............this morning and was late to school.( sleep)
4, Their study is getting on............( satisfy)
5, We need her..............before we can go ahead.(approve)
6, He spoke.........because he was too excited .( breath)
7, It' s very rude to interrupt someone in .........( sentence)
8, Third time lucky! After two .............attempts Mark' s finally passed his driving test.
9, In particularly, parents are afraid of changes in their children's .......... ( person)
Cho dạng đúng của từ:
1, My car is much too....unreliable...... to take on long journey .( rely)
2, He was too .....shameful.... to tell his teacher about the stupid mistake. ( shame)
3. I.......overslept......this morning and was late to school.( sleep)
4, Their study is getting on......satisfaction......( satisfy)
5, We need her.......approvement.......before we can go ahead.(approve)
6, He spoke.....breathlessly....because he was too excited .( breath)
7, It' s very rude to interrupt someone in ....mid-sentence.....( sentence)
8, Third time lucky! After two ......failed.......attempts Mark' s finally passed his driving test.
9, In particularly, parents are afraid of changes in their children's .....personality..... ( person)
Cho dạng đúng của từ:
1, My car is much too...ready....... to take on long journey .( rely)
2, He was too ..ashamed....... to tell his teacher about the stupid mistake. ( shame)
3. I....overslept.........this morning and was late to school.( sleep)
4, Their study is getting on...satisfactorily.........( satisfy)
5, We need her....approval..........before we can go ahead.(approve)
6, He spoke....breathlessly.....because he was too excited .( breath)
7, It' s very rude to interrupt someone in ...mid-sentence......( sentence)
8, Third time lucky! After two ...unsuccessful..........attempts Mark' s finally passed his driving test.
9, In particularly, parents are afraid of changes in their children's ....personalities...... ( person)
The family in Britain is changing. The once typical British family headed by two parents has undergone substantial changes during the twentieth century. In particular there has been a rise in the number of single-person households, which increased from 18 to 29 per cent of all households between 1971 and 2002. By the year 2020, it is estimated that there will be more single people than married people. Fifty years ago this would have been socially unacceptable in Britain.
In the past, people got married and stayed married. Divorce was very difficult, expensive and took a long time. Today, people's views on marriage are changing. Many couples, mostly in their twenties or thirties, live together (cohabit) without getting married. Only about 60% of these couples will eventually get married.
In the past, people married before they had children, but now about 40% of children in Britain are born to unmarried (cohabiting) parents. In 2000, around a quarter of unmarried people between the ages of 16 and 59 were cohabiting in Great Britain. Cohabiting couples are also starting families without first being married. Before 1960 this was very unusual, but in 2001 around 23 per cent of births in the UK were to cohabiting couples.
People are generally getting married at a later age now and many women do not want to have children immediately. They prefer to concentrate on their jobs and put off having a baby until late thirties.
The number of single-parent families is increasing. This is mainly due to more marriages ending in divorce, but some women are also choosing to have children as lone parents without being married.
1: which of the following could be the best title forr the passage ?
A. changing vuales and norms of the british family
B. changes inn marriage among british young generations
C. changing insights into and ideas of the british family
D. changes in viewpoints and lifestyles of british couples
2: the word WHICH in the passage refers to ....
A. the family in britain
B. substantial changes
C. typical british family
D. single-parent household
3: which of the following is NOT true according to the passage
A. in the past british people had to pay a lot if they wanted to get divorced
B. half of the children in britain now are born to unmarried couples
C. women in britain now do not want to have children right after marriage
D. there are more and more single - parent families in britain these days
Mark the letter A, B, C or D to indicate the underlined part that needs correction in each of the following questions.
Parents can help to solve their children's learned problems by volunteering in the classroom.
A. to solve
B. learned problems
C. volunteering
D. the
Đáp án B. learned => learning
Giải thích: learning problem (n) khó khăn trong học tập
Dịch nghĩa: Bố mẹ có thể giúp giải quyết những khó khăn trong học tập của con cái bằng những công việc tình nguyện trong các lớp học.
Mark the letter A, B, C or D to indicate the underlined part that needs correction in each of the following questions.
Parents can help to solve their children's learned problems by volunteering in the classroom.
A. to solve
B. learned problems
C. volunteering
D. the
Đáp án B. learned => learning
Giải thích: learning problem (n) khó khăn trong học tập
Dịch nghĩa: Bố mẹ có thể giúp giải quyết những khó khăn trong học tập của con cái bằng những công việc tình nguyện trong các lớp học.
Mark the letter A, B, C or D to indiz‘ate the correct answer to each ofthe following questions.
Choose the underlined part that needs correction
1.Because of poor healthy , it was necessary for himself to rest several hour a day in his study
2. Parents are afraid of that their children's mind will be polluted with the violence that they see on television
3, It's tradition for the two teams to shake hands before the game and exchange shirts after the game
himself => him
polluted=>contaminated
tradition=>traditional
Mark the letter A, B, C or D to indicate the underlined part that needs correction in each of the following questions.
Question 7: Parents can help to solve their children's learned problems by volunteering in the classroom.
A. to solve
B. learned problems
C. volunteering
D. the
Đáp án B. learned => learning
Giải thích: learning problem (n) khó khăn trong học tập
Dịch nghĩa: Bố mẹ có thể giúp giải quyết những khó khăn trong học tập của con cái bằng những công việc tình nguyện trong các lớp học.
Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C, or D to indicate the correct answer to each of the questions.
In American, although most men still do less housework than their wives, that gap has been halved since the 1960s. Today, 41 per cent of couples say they share childcare equally, compared with 25 percent in 1985. Men's greater involvement at home is good for their relationships with their spouses, and also good for their children. Hands-on fathers make better parents than men who let their wives do all the nurturing and childcare. They raise sons who are more expressive and daughters who are more likely to do well in school - especially in math and science.
In 1900, life expectancy in the United States was 47 years, and only four per cent of the population was 65 or older. Today, life expectancy is 76 years, and by 2025, it is estimated about 20 per cent of the U.S. population will be 65 or older. For the first time, a generation of adults must plan for the needs of both their parents and their children. Most Americans are responding with remarkable grace. One in four households gives the equivalent of a full day a week or more in unpaid care to an aging relative, and more than half say they expect to do so in the next 10 years. Older people are less likely to be impoverished or incapacitated by illness than in the past, and have more opportunity to develop a relationship with their grandchildren.
Even some of the choices that worry people the most are turning out to be manageable. Divorce rates are likely to remain high, and in many cases marital breakdown causes serious problems for both adults and kids. Yet when parents minimize conflict, family bonds can be maintained. And many families are doing this. More non-custodial parents are staying in touch with their children. Child-support receipts are rising. A lower proportion of children from divorced families are exhibiting problems than in earlier decades. And stepfamilies are learning to maximize children's access to supportive adults rather than cutting them off from one side of the family.
Question 2. Nowadays, ____ of men help take care of children.
A. 50%
B. 41%
C. 25%
D. 20%
Đáp án B
Thông tin: Today, 41 per cent of couples say they share childcare equally, compared with 25 percent in 1985.
family in Britain is changing. The once typical British family headed by two parents has undergone substantial changes during the twentieth century. In particular there has been a rise in the number of single-person households, which increased from 18 to 29 per cent of all households between 1971 and 2002. By the year 2020, it is estimated that there will be more single people than married people. Fifty years ago, this would have been socially unacceptable in Britain.
In the past, people got married and stayed married. Divorce was very difficult, expensive and took a long time.
(cohabit) without getting married. Only about 60% of these couples will eventually get married.
In the past, people married before they had children, but now about 40% of children in Britain are born to unmarried cohabiting) parents. In 2000, around a quarter of unmarried people between the ages of 16 and 59 were cohabiting in Great Britain. Cohabiting couples are also starting families without first being married. Before 1960 this was very unusual, but in 2001 around 23 per cent of births in the UK were to cohabiting couples.
People are generally getting married at a later age now and many women do not want to have children immediately. They prefer to concentrate on their jobs and put off having a baby until late thirties.
The number of single-parent families is increasing. This is mainly due to more marriages ending in divorce, but some women are also choosing to have children as lone parents without being married.
19. Which of the following could be the best title for the passage?
A. Changing Values and Norms of the British Family B. Changes in Marriage among British Young Generations C. Changing Insights into and Ideas of the British Family
D. Changes in Viewpoints and Lifestyles of British Couples
20. The word "which" in the passage refers to _
A. the family in Britain
B. substantial changes C. typical British family
D. single-parent households
11
21. Which of the following is NOT true according to the passage?
A. In the past, British people had to pay a lot if they wanted to get divorced. B. Half of the children in Britain now are born to unmarried couples. C. Women in Britain now do not want to have children right after marriage. D. There are more and more single-parent families in Britain these days.
A. do not want
B. delay
C. start
D. do not intend
23. Which of the following best describes the overall tone of the passage?
B. positive
C. negative
D. predictive Except for a few
Read the passage and mark the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to answer the following questions.
In most families, conflict is more likely to be about Clothing, music, and leisure time than about more serious matters such as religion and core values. Family conflict is rarely about such major issues as adolescents' drug use and delinquency. Nevertheless, it has been estimated that in about 5 million American families (roughly 20 percent), parents and adolescents engage in intense, prolonged, unhealthy conflict. In its most serious form, this highly stressful environment is associated with a number of negative outcomes, including juvenile delinquency, moving away from home, increased school dropout rates, unplanned pregnancy, membership in religious cults, and drug abuse (Steinberg & Morris, 2001).
Many of the changes that define adolescence can lead to conflict in parent- adolescent relationships. Adolescents gain an increased capacity for logical reasoning, which leads them to demand reasons for things they previously accepted without question, and the chance to argue the other side (Maccoby, 1984). Their growing critical-thinking skills make them less likely to conform to parents' wishes the way they did in childhood. Their increasing cognitive sophistication and sense of idealism may compel them to point out logical flaws and inconsistencies in parents' positions and actions. Adolescents no longer accept their parents as unquestioned authorities. They recognize that other opinions also have merit and they are learning how to form and state their own opinions. Adolescents also tend toward ego-centrism, and may, as a result, be ultra-sensitive to a parent's casual remark. The dramatic changes of puberty and adolescence may make it difficult for parents to rely on their children's preadolescent behavior to predict future behavior. For example, adolescent children who were compliant in the past may become less willing to cooperate without what they feel is a satisfactory explanation.
Adolescents become less likely to comfort to parents' wishes the way they did in the past because ________.
A. the environment is highly stressful
B. their critical-thinking skills is growing
C. it is related to drug abuse
D. parent-adolescent relationships lead to conflicts
Đáp án D
Theo đoạn văn, từ “it” đề cập đến _______.
A. nhận xét. B. trẻ thành niên
C. thuyết lấy mình làm trung tâm D. không đáp án nào đúng
Căn cứ vào thông tin trong bài:
Tạm dịch: “The dramatic changes of puberty and adolescence may make it difficult for parents to rely on their children's preadolescent behavior to predict future behavior." (Những thay đổi mạnh mẽ của tuổi dậy thì và tuổi vị thành niên có thể khỉến cha mẹ khó mà dựa vào hành vi của trẻ trước tuổi để dự đoán hành vi trong tương lai.)
Ta có cấu trúc câu: Sth make(s) it + difficult + (for sb) + to do sth - Việc gì khiến ai đó rất khó để làm một việc khác - trong đó, đại từ it là tân ngữ giả, không dùng để thay thế cho bất cứ danh từ nào trước đó.