Câu hỏi:
18/07/2024 107
According to the passage, which of the following is NOT true?
A. Jupiter is bigger than all the other planest in the solar system.
B. A day in Jupiter is nearly 10 hours long.
C. the Red Great Spot moves vertically than horizontally.
D. Scientists have proof showing that smaller red spots are increasing their size to become other Great Red Spots.
Trả lời:
Theođoạn văn, điều sau đây KHÔNG đúng?
A. Mộc tinh lớn hơn tất cả các hành tinh khác trong hệ mặt trời.
B. Một ngày ở sao Mộc kéo dài gần 10 giờ.
C. Điểm Đỏ di chuyển nhiều theo chiều dọc hơn chiều ngang.
D. Các nhà khoa học có bằng chứng cho thấy các đốm đỏ nhỏ hơn đang gia tăng kích thước của chúng để trở thành các Điểm Đỏ khác.
Thông tin: Several smaller red spots have been seen occasionally but have not lasted.
Tạm dịch: Một số đốm đỏ nhỏ hơn thỉnh thoảng được nhìn thấy nhưng không kéo dài.
Chọn D
Theođoạn văn, điều sau đây KHÔNG đúng?
A. Mộc tinh lớn hơn tất cả các hành tinh khác trong hệ mặt trời.
B. Một ngày ở sao Mộc kéo dài gần 10 giờ.
C. Điểm Đỏ di chuyển nhiều theo chiều dọc hơn chiều ngang.
D. Các nhà khoa học có bằng chứng cho thấy các đốm đỏ nhỏ hơn đang gia tăng kích thước của chúng để trở thành các Điểm Đỏ khác.
Thông tin: Several smaller red spots have been seen occasionally but have not lasted.
Tạm dịch: Một số đốm đỏ nhỏ hơn thỉnh thoảng được nhìn thấy nhưng không kéo dài.
Chọn D
CÂU HỎI HOT CÙNG CHỦ ĐỀ
Câu 2:
According to paragraph 3, teachers can recognize plagiarism because ______.
According to paragraph 3, teachers can recognize plagiarism because ______.
Câu 3:
The word “ detect” in paragraph 3 is closest in meaning to ____.
Câu 4:
Read the following passage and write the letter A, B, C or D on the top of the first page to indicate the correct answer to each of the questions.
The incredible growth of the Internet over recent years has caused problems for parents and teachers. Parents worry about which sites their children spend time on, who they chat to online and the possible effects that computer games might have on them. For teachers, meanwhile, the main worry is the way the Internet makes cheating easier!
Schools and universities say there has been a huge increase in plagiarism – taking other people‟s words and ideas and pretending that they are your own. In the past, anyone who wanted to copy had to go to a library, find the right books, read through them, find the sections they needed and then physically write down the words they wanted to use. Nowadays, though, students can simply copy extracts from websites- while really desperate students sometimes copy whole essays! As if this wasn‟t bad enough, sites offering to actually do homework – at a price – have also started appearing.
Despite all this, we shouldn‟t assume that the Internet only brings problems. Indeed, you could say that for every problem the Internet creates, it also brings a solution. Parents can now use sophisticated controls to stop kids accessing sites that might do them harm, while new software helps teachers to detect copied work immediately. Many, of course, are already able to recognize when someone is cheating! „Some students suddenly start using words they can‟t possibly understand like „dialectical antagonism‟,‟ explains one teacher, „or parts of their essays feel different.”
One of the hardest things for teachers today is deciding how to mix modern technology with traditional study skills – and how best to use the Web in class. As more and more schools install computers in every classroom, the role of the teacher is changing. Making sure students don‟t just copy things and do learn how to quote copied work properly is part of their job, but so is designing suitable projects to fully exploit the Web in helping students students learn about subjects and develop their life and social skills.
( adapted from Pre- Intermidiate Outcomes by Hugh Dellar $ Andrew Walkley)
Question 16: What is the passage mainly about?
Read the following passage and write the letter A, B, C or D on the top of the first page to indicate the correct answer to each of the questions.
The incredible growth of the Internet over recent years has caused problems for parents and teachers. Parents worry about which sites their children spend time on, who they chat to online and the possible effects that computer games might have on them. For teachers, meanwhile, the main worry is the way the Internet makes cheating easier!
Schools and universities say there has been a huge increase in plagiarism – taking other people‟s words and ideas and pretending that they are your own. In the past, anyone who wanted to copy had to go to a library, find the right books, read through them, find the sections they needed and then physically write down the words they wanted to use. Nowadays, though, students can simply copy extracts from websites- while really desperate students sometimes copy whole essays! As if this wasn‟t bad enough, sites offering to actually do homework – at a price – have also started appearing.
Despite all this, we shouldn‟t assume that the Internet only brings problems. Indeed, you could say that for every problem the Internet creates, it also brings a solution. Parents can now use sophisticated controls to stop kids accessing sites that might do them harm, while new software helps teachers to detect copied work immediately. Many, of course, are already able to recognize when someone is cheating! „Some students suddenly start using words they can‟t possibly understand like „dialectical antagonism‟,‟ explains one teacher, „or parts of their essays feel different.”
One of the hardest things for teachers today is deciding how to mix modern technology with traditional study skills – and how best to use the Web in class. As more and more schools install computers in every classroom, the role of the teacher is changing. Making sure students don‟t just copy things and do learn how to quote copied work properly is part of their job, but so is designing suitable projects to fully exploit the Web in helping students students learn about subjects and develop their life and social skills.
( adapted from Pre- Intermidiate Outcomes by Hugh Dellar $ Andrew Walkley)
Question 16: What is the passage mainly about?
Câu 5:
According to the passage, which of the following statements is NOT true?
According to the passage, which of the following statements is NOT true?
Câu 9:
The word ‘feat’ in the first paragraph is closet in meaning to ____.
The word ‘feat’ in the first paragraph is closet in meaning to ____.
Câu 12:
Read the following passage and mark letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to each of the questions
Until recently, hunting for treasure from shipwrecks was mostly fantasy; with recent technological advances, however, the search for sunken treasure has become more popular as a legitimate endeavor. This has caused a debate between those wanting to salvage the wrecks and those wanting to preserve them.
Treasure hunters are spurred on by the thought of finding caches of gold coins or other valuable objects on a sunken ship. One team of salvagers, for instance, searched the wreck of the RMS Republic, which sank outside the Boston harbor in 1900. The search party, using side-scan sonar, a device that projects sound waves across the ocean bottom and produces a profile of the sea floor, located the wreck in just two and a half days. Before the use of this new technology, such searches could take months or years. The team of divers searched the wreck for two months, finding silver tea services, crystal dinnerware, and thousands of bottles of wine, but they did not find the five and a half tons of American Gold Eagle coins they were searching for.
Preservationists focus on the historic value of a ship. They say that even if a shipwreck's treasure does not have a high monetary value, it can be an invaluable source of historic artifacts that are preserved in nearly mint condition. But once a salvage team has scoured a site, much of the archaeological value is lost. Maritime archaeologists who are preservationists worry that the success of salvagers will attract more treasure-hunting expeditions and thus threaten remaining undiscovered wrecks. Preservationists are lobbying their state lawmakers to legally restrict underwater searches and unregulated salvages. To counter their efforts, treasure hunters argue that without the lure of gold and million-dollar treasures, the wrecks and their historical artifacts would never be recovered at all.
Question 8: What is the main idea of this passage?
Read the following passage and mark letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to each of the questions
Until recently, hunting for treasure from shipwrecks was mostly fantasy; with recent technological advances, however, the search for sunken treasure has become more popular as a legitimate endeavor. This has caused a debate between those wanting to salvage the wrecks and those wanting to preserve them.
Treasure hunters are spurred on by the thought of finding caches of gold coins or other valuable objects on a sunken ship. One team of salvagers, for instance, searched the wreck of the RMS Republic, which sank outside the Boston harbor in 1900. The search party, using side-scan sonar, a device that projects sound waves across the ocean bottom and produces a profile of the sea floor, located the wreck in just two and a half days. Before the use of this new technology, such searches could take months or years. The team of divers searched the wreck for two months, finding silver tea services, crystal dinnerware, and thousands of bottles of wine, but they did not find the five and a half tons of American Gold Eagle coins they were searching for.
Preservationists focus on the historic value of a ship. They say that even if a shipwreck's treasure does not have a high monetary value, it can be an invaluable source of historic artifacts that are preserved in nearly mint condition. But once a salvage team has scoured a site, much of the archaeological value is lost. Maritime archaeologists who are preservationists worry that the success of salvagers will attract more treasure-hunting expeditions and thus threaten remaining undiscovered wrecks. Preservationists are lobbying their state lawmakers to legally restrict underwater searches and unregulated salvages. To counter their efforts, treasure hunters argue that without the lure of gold and million-dollar treasures, the wrecks and their historical artifacts would never be recovered at all.
Question 8: What is the main idea of this passage?
Câu 13:
The word “sunken” is closest in meaning to which of the following words?
The word “sunken” is closest in meaning to which of the following words?
Câu 14:
The phrase “susceptible to” in the second paragraph could best be replaced by
The phrase “susceptible to” in the second paragraph could best be replaced by
Câu 15:
The word “trigger” as used in the first paragraph is closest in meaning to which of the following?
The word “trigger” as used in the first paragraph is closest in meaning to which of the following?