Câu hỏi:
22/07/2024 270
33______, many countries’ current economic woes are self-inflicted, owing to policy errors 34______ have been as harmful as they were predictable.
A. those
A. those
B. whom
C. when
D. which
Trả lời:
Đại từ quan hệ:
Ta dùng đại từ quan hệ ‘which’ thay cho danh từ ‘policy errors’.
Tạm dịch: Moreover, many countries’ current economic woes are self-inflicted, owing to policy errors which have been as harmful as they were predictable.
(Hơn nữa, những khó khăn kinh tế hiện tại của nhiều quốc gia là do chính họ gây ra, do những sai lầm về chính sách có hại như chúng có thể dự đoán được.)
→ Chọn đáp án D
Đại từ quan hệ:
Ta dùng đại từ quan hệ ‘which’ thay cho danh từ ‘policy errors’.
Tạm dịch: Moreover, many countries’ current economic woes are self-inflicted, owing to policy errors which have been as harmful as they were predictable.
(Hơn nữa, những khó khăn kinh tế hiện tại của nhiều quốc gia là do chính họ gây ra, do những sai lầm về chính sách có hại như chúng có thể dự đoán được.)
→ Chọn đáp án D
CÂU HỎI HOT CÙNG CHỦ ĐỀ
Câu 1:
Learners have voiced their complaints to the language centre that its services are inadequate and not entirely dependent.
Câu 2:
At the age of 11, Taylor Swift already succeeded in_______ a record deal in Nashville.
Câu 5:
There's been a white van sitting_______ for the past ten miles.
Câu 6:
Peter and Mary are talking about a book they have just read.
- Peter: "The book is really interesting and educational."
- Mary:"___________”
Peter and Mary are talking about a book they have just read.
- Peter: "The book is really interesting and educational."
- Mary:"___________”
Câu 10:
We are an extended family so what programme to watch is always a bone of contention in our family.
Câu 12:
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 from 36 to 42.
Ever since 1859, when Charles Darwin published his theory of evolution, a desperate race had been on between scientists to discover the evolutionary intermediate between apes and humans. But this so-called 'missing link' was proving very elusive. In 1912, an amateur archaeologist called Charles Dawson said he had found a skull in Barkham Manor, Piltdown, in Sussex, England. At the time, scientists thought the skull was genuine, and that Dawson had indeed discovered the missing link. He became famous almost overnight. Nevertheless, it later transpired that the skull was a forgery, made from a human skull only about 500 years old with its jaw replaced by that of a female orangutan, with the bones stained to make them appear older.
It remains unknown, however, who made the skull, and whether Dawson knew it was a fake. Fingers have been pointed not only at Dawson, but at various other scientists and people said to be his enemies, but nobody knows for sure. The motivation for the hoax is also unknown. One theory is patriotism. Given that sensational discoveries of early humans had recently occurred, first in Germany and then in France, and given the patriotic one-upmanship of pre-First World War Europe, huge pressure was on British scientists to show that Britain had also played a major role in human evolution. Piltdown man seemed a godsend in this respect since it made Britain seem to be the birthplace of mankind. Even if patriotism was not the motivation for Piltdown. man, it certainly made it harder for British scientists to see it for the hoax that it was. Indeed, despite its inconsistencies with other early humans discovered in the wake of Piltdown, which would normally have precipitated critical testing much sooner, it was over 40 years before re-examination showed the Piltdown skull to be a fake.
Which of the following is the best title for the passage?
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 from 36 to 42.
Ever since 1859, when Charles Darwin published his theory of evolution, a desperate race had been on between scientists to discover the evolutionary intermediate between apes and humans. But this so-called 'missing link' was proving very elusive. In 1912, an amateur archaeologist called Charles Dawson said he had found a skull in Barkham Manor, Piltdown, in Sussex, England. At the time, scientists thought the skull was genuine, and that Dawson had indeed discovered the missing link. He became famous almost overnight. Nevertheless, it later transpired that the skull was a forgery, made from a human skull only about 500 years old with its jaw replaced by that of a female orangutan, with the bones stained to make them appear older.
It remains unknown, however, who made the skull, and whether Dawson knew it was a fake. Fingers have been pointed not only at Dawson, but at various other scientists and people said to be his enemies, but nobody knows for sure. The motivation for the hoax is also unknown. One theory is patriotism. Given that sensational discoveries of early humans had recently occurred, first in Germany and then in France, and given the patriotic one-upmanship of pre-First World War Europe, huge pressure was on British scientists to show that Britain had also played a major role in human evolution. Piltdown man seemed a godsend in this respect since it made Britain seem to be the birthplace of mankind. Even if patriotism was not the motivation for Piltdown. man, it certainly made it harder for British scientists to see it for the hoax that it was. Indeed, despite its inconsistencies with other early humans discovered in the wake of Piltdown, which would normally have precipitated critical testing much sooner, it was over 40 years before re-examination showed the Piltdown skull to be a fake.
Which of the following is the best title for the passage?
Câu 14:
It's________ knowledge that eating vegetables and doing exercise regularly do us good.