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8 tháng 2 2019

D

Kiến thức: Từ vựng

Giải thích:

concentration (n): sự tập trung                         attention (n): sự chú ý

meditation (n): sự suy ngẫm                            focus (n): trọng điểm

seek (v): tìm kiếm

Attention Seeking Behavior: Hành vi tìm kiếm sự chú ý

Tạm dịch: Người giữ trẻ đã nói với cha mẹ Billy, về hành vi tìm kiếm sự chú ý của cậu bé và cách cậu bắt đầu hành động ngay khi họ rời khỏi nhà.

Chọn D

5 tháng 5 2019

Kiến thức: Từ vựng

Giải thích:

concentration (n): sự tập trung                        attention (n): sự chú ý

meditation (n): sự suy ngẫm                            focus (n): trọng điểm

seek (v): tìm kiếm

Attention Seeking Behavior: Hành vi tìm kiếm sự chú ý

Tạm dịch: Người giữ trẻ đã nói với cha mẹ Billy, về hành vi tìm kiếm sự chú ý của cậu bé và cách cậu bắt đầu hành động ngay khi họ rời khỏi nhà.

Chọn D

24 tháng 4 2019

Kiến thức: Từ vựng, danh từ ghép

Giải thích:

(to) seek: tìm kiếm

focus (n): tiêu điểm, tập trung                       meditation (n): sự suy ngẫm

attention (n): sự chú ý                                     concentration (n): sự tập trung

attention-seeking behaviour: hành vi tìm kiếm sự chú ý

Tạm dịch: Người giữ trẻ đã nói với cha mẹ của Billy về hành vi tìm kiếm sự chú ý của cậu bé và cách cậu bé bắt đầu hành động ngay khi họ rời khỏi nhà.

Chọn C

5 tháng 8 2019

1. The police (pay)....paid....no attention to her complaint because she (phone)....had phoned....them so many times before.

2. During the previous week, I (go).....went ....to the gym every morning.

3. By the time I (get)....got...back to the bathroom,the bath (overflow).....had overflown.....

4. The boy told me that he (lose)..had lost....his money and (not/know)...didn't know...how he would get home.

5. I was just about to leave when I (remember) .....remembered....my briefcase.

6. She (walk)...walked...into the station only to find that the train (leave)...had left...

7. At the conference, scientists reported that ehy (find)...had found..a cute for malaria.

8. By the time I(get)...got...to the party, most people (go)...had gone...home.

9. As soon as I (turn)....turned....the ignition key,the engine (catch).....caught...fire.

10. After they (eat)...had eaten...all the food,they (pick)....picked....up their bags and left.

11. When she (come)...came...into the hall, everyone (start)...started..cheerting.

5 tháng 8 2019

1. The police (pay) paid no attention to her complaint because she (phone) had phoned them so many times before.

2. During the previous week, I (go) went to the gym every morning.

3. By the time I (get) got back to the bathroom,the bath (overflow) had overflown.

4. The boy told me that he (lose) had lost his money and (not/know) didn't know how he would get home.

5. I was just about to leave when I (remember) remembered my briefcase.

6. She (walk) walked into the station only to find that the train (leave) had left.

7. At the conference, scientists reported that ehy (find) had found a cute for malaria.

8. By the time I(get) got to the party, most people (go) had gone home.

9. As soon as I (turn) turned the ignition key,the engine (catch) caught fire.

10. After they (eat) had eaten all the food,they (pick) picked up their bags and left.

11. When she (come) came into the hall, everyone (start) started cheerting.

Good luck!

Read the text and then choose the best answer A, B, C, or D.Geoffrey Hampden has a lot of friends and is very popular at parties. Everybody admired him for his fine sense of humour, except his six-year-old daughter, Jenny.Recently, one of Geoffrey's closest friends asked him to make a speech at a weeding reception. This is the sort of thing that Geoffrey loves. He prepared the speech carefully and went to the weeding with Jenny. He included a large number of funny stories in the speech and, of...
Đọc tiếp

Read the text and then choose the best answer A, B, C, or D.

Geoffrey Hampden has a lot of friends and is very popular at parties. Everybody admired him for his fine sense of humour, except his six-year-old daughter, Jenny.

Recently, one of Geoffrey's closest friends asked him to make a speech at a weeding reception. This is the sort of thing that Geoffrey loves. He prepared the speech carefully and went to the weeding with Jenny. He included a large number of funny stories in the speech and, of course, it was a great success. As soon as he finished, Jenny told him she wanted to go home. Geoffrey was a little disappointed by this but he did as his daughter asked. On the way home, he asked Jenny if she enjoyed the speech. To his surprise, she said she didn't. Geoffrey asked her why this was so and she told him that she did not like to see so many people laughing at him!

Question. How did Geoffrey feel when his daughter asked him to take her home after his speech?

AAnnoyed.

B. Bored

CTerrified.

D. Disappointed

1
31 tháng 5 2019

Đáp án D

Thông tin: As soon as he finished, Jenny told him she wanted to go home. Geoffrey was a little disappointed by this but he did as his daughter asked.

Ngay khi anh nói xong, Jenny nói với anh rằng cô muốn về nhà. Geoffrey hơi thất vọng vì điều này nhưng anh đã làm như con gái anh yêu cầu.

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 following questions from 35 to 42. CUTTING THE APRON STRINGS There is substantial evidence that students going off to college have changed over the years. For one thing, studies show that they are emotionally closer to their parents and their parents to them. One thing that means is that they depend on each other more for happiness. It puts a burden on children for...
Đọc tiếp

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 following questions from 35 to 42.

CUTTING THE APRON STRINGS

There is substantial evidence that students going off to college have changed over the years. For one thing, studies show that they are emotionally closer to their parents and their parents to them. One thing that means is that they depend on each other more for happiness. It puts a burden on children for parents to use their children as vehicles for their own happiness - although today’s young people seem complicit in this arrangement, perhaps because they have known no other way even if it creates anxiety in the children. That’s one reason parents like to be involved in their children’s college experiences, and colleges have had to devise novel ways of getting parents off campus when they transport their kids to school.

There’s also evidence that students today seem to be choosing schools with reference to proximity to home. The closer a student is to home, the easier it is to bring the laundry home and to land in your old bed with tea and sympathy when you have the sniffles. And the easier it is for parents to visit you at university whenever the mood strikes. The amount of visiting parents do is far more than in generations past.

But in a real sense, students don’t really leave their parents behind. Their parents go to college right along with them - in their front pockets. That is, the parents are a speed dial away by cellphone. This, of course, significantly reduces independence. A student doesn’t get the chance to solve minor problems on his own - he just calls Mom or Dad. A student has initial problems getting along with a roommate? A roommate doesn’t do laundry as often as the other roommate wishes? A student gets a C grade on her first paper? Instead of absorbing the negative information and figuring out how to resolve the problem or how to do better, the call gets made to home, where Mom or Dad solves the problem, often by calling the school administration. This kind of behavior is, sadly, commonplace today and is a mark of the lack of coping skills among students because all the lumps and bumps have been taken out of life for them until now.

In addition to being tethered to parents, incoming freshmen are now very heavily connected by cellphone to classmates from high school, who are presumably at other colleges. So there isn’t the great impetus to mix and venture forth to meet new people, to get out of one’s comfort/one, to get drawn into new experiences, that has traditionally marked the beginning of freshman year. The laws of physics still apply, 6 and it is difficult to be meeting new people and seeking novel experiences while you are talking to your old pals.

Paragraph 1 shows that children ________.

A. are not willing to act as a means to their parents’ happiness 

B. tend to cling to their parents only as a source of finance 

C. are willing to act as an agent to their parents’ happiness 

D. demand a form of payment to go to college

1
9 tháng 9 2019

Chọn C.

Đáp án C. 
Dịch câu hỏi: Đoạn 1 cho thấy con cái __________.
A. không sẵn lòng làm phương tiện cho niềm vui của cha mẹ 
B. có xu hướng bám vào cha mẹ chỉ như một nguồn tài chính
C. sẵn lòng làm phương tiện cho niềm vui của cha mẹ 
D. yêu cầu một hình thức thanh toán để đi học đại học
Thông tin: “It puts a burden on children for parents to use their children as vehicles for their own happiness” (Điều đó đặt trọng trách lên con cái vì các bậc cha mẹ dùng chúng làm phương tiện cho niềm vui của mình.)

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.CUTTING THE APRON STRINGS There is substantial evidence that students going off to college have changed over the years. For one thing, studies show that they are emotionally closer to their parents and their parents to them. One thing that means is that they depend on each other more for happiness. It puts a burden on children for parents to use their...
Đọc tiếp

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.

CUTTING THE APRON STRINGS

 There is substantial evidence that students going off to college have changed over the years. For one thing, studies show that they are emotionally closer to their parents and their parents to them. One thing that means is that they depend on each other more for happiness. It puts a burden on children for parents to use their children as vehicles for their own happiness- although today’s young people seem complicit in this arrangement, perhaps because they’ve known no other way-even if it creates anxiety in the children. That’s one reason parents like to be involved in their children’s college experiences, and colleges have had to devise novel ways of getting parents off campus when they transport their kids to school.

 There’s also evidence that students today seem to be choosing schools with reference to proximity to home. The closer a student is to home, the easier it is to bring the laundry home and to land in your old bed with tea and sympathy when you have the sniffles. And the easier it is for parents to visit you at university whenever the mood strikes. The amount of visiting parents do is far more than in generations past.

 But in a real sense, students don’t really leave their parents behind. Their parents go to college right along with them - in their front pockets. That is, the parents are a speed dial away by cell phone. This, of course, significantly reduces independence. A student doesn’t get the chance to solve minor problems on his own - he just calls Mom or Dad. A student has initial problems getting along with a roommate? A roommate doesn’t do laundry as often as the other roommate wishes? A student gets a C grade on her first paper? Instead of absorbing the negative information and figuring out how to resolve the problem or how to do better, the call gets made to home, where Mom or Dad solves the problem, often by calling the school administration. This kind of behavior is, sadly, commonplace today and is a mark of the lack of coping skills among students because all the lumps and bumps have been taken out of life for them until now.

 In addition to being tethered to parents, incoming freshmen are now very heavily connected by cell phone to classmates from high school, who are presumably at other colleges. So there isn’t the great impetus to mix and venture forth to meet new people, to get out of one’s comfort zone, to get drawn into new experiences, that has traditionally marked the beginning of freshman year. The laws of physics still apply, and it is difficult to be meeting new people and seeking novel experiences while you are talking to your old pals.

It can be inferred from paragraph 1 that children and their parents _________.

A. emotionally need each other 

B. only temporarily depend on each other

C. emotionally and physically depend on each other 

D. eternally depend on each other 

1
29 tháng 10 2017

Đáp án là A.

Có thể suy ra từ đoạn 1 rằng trẻ em và bố mẹ chúng

A. cần nhau về mặt tinh thần

B. chỉ phụ thuộc vào nhau tạm thời

C. phụ thuộc vào nhau về thể chất và tinh thần

D. phụ thuộc vào nhau ở vẻ bên ngoài

Dẫn chứng: For one thing, studies show that they are emotionally closer to their parents and their parents to them. One thing that means is that they depend on each other more for happiness. 

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.CUTTING THE APRON STRINGS There is substantial evidence that students going off to college have changed over the years. For one thing, studies show that they are emotionally closer to their parents and their parents to them. One thing that means is that they depend on each other more for happiness. It puts a burden on children for parents to use their...
Đọc tiếp

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.

CUTTING THE APRON STRINGS

 There is substantial evidence that students going off to college have changed over the years. For one thing, studies show that they are emotionally closer to their parents and their parents to them. One thing that means is that they depend on each other more for happiness. It puts a burden on children for parents to use their children as vehicles for their own happiness- although today’s young people seem complicit in this arrangement, perhaps because they’ve known no other way-even if it creates anxiety in the children. That’s one reason parents like to be involved in their children’s college experiences, and colleges have had to devise novel ways of getting parents off campus when they transport their kids to school.

 There’s also evidence that students today seem to be choosing schools with reference to proximity to home. The closer a student is to home, the easier it is to bring the laundry home and to land in your old bed with tea and sympathy when you have the sniffles. And the easier it is for parents to visit you at university whenever the mood strikes. The amount of visiting parents do is far more than in generations past.

 But in a real sense, students don’t really leave their parents behind. Their parents go to college right along with them - in their front pockets. That is, the parents are a speed dial away by cell phone. This, of course, significantly reduces independence. A student doesn’t get the chance to solve minor problems on his own - he just calls Mom or Dad. A student has initial problems getting along with a roommate? A roommate doesn’t do laundry as often as the other roommate wishes? A student gets a C grade on her first paper? Instead of absorbing the negative information and figuring out how to resolve the problem or how to do better, the call gets made to home, where Mom or Dad solves the problem, often by calling the school administration. This kind of behavior is, sadly, commonplace today and is a mark of the lack of coping skills among students because all the lumps and bumps have been taken out of life for them until now.

 In addition to being tethered to parents, incoming freshmen are now very heavily connected by cell phone to classmates from high school, who are presumably at other colleges. So there isn’t the great impetus to mix and venture forth to meet new people, to get out of one’s comfort zone, to get drawn into new experiences, that has traditionally marked the beginning of freshman year. The laws of physics still apply, and it is difficult to be meeting new people and seeking novel experiences while you are talking to your old pals.

Colleges have had to devise ways of getting parents off campus because _________.

A. children want complete freedom from their parents’ control 

B. the colleges want to keep parents in the dark about their activities

C. parents tend to get more involved in their children’s schoolwork

D. teachers themselves do not want to share information with the parents

1
21 tháng 9 2018

Đáp án là C.

Các trường đại học phải đưa ra nhiều cách để đưa bố mẹ ra khỏi khuôn viên trường bởi vì

A. trẻ con muốn hoàn toàn tự do khỏi sự kiểm soát của bố mẹ

B. trường đại học muốn bố mẹ hoàn toàn không biết về hoạt động của bọn trẻ

C. bố mẹ có xu hướng tham gia nhiều hơn vào việc học tập của con họ ở trường.

D. bản thân các giáo viên không muốn chia sẻ thông tin với bố mẹ

Dẫn chứng: That’s one reason parents like to be involved in their children’s college experiences, and colleges have had to devise novel ways of getting parents off campus when they transport their kids to school. 

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.CUTTING THE APRON STRINGS There is substantial evidence that students going off to college have changed over the years. For one thing, studies show that they are emotionally closer to their parents and their parents to them. One thing that means is that they depend on each other more for happiness. It puts a burden on children for parents to use their...
Đọc tiếp

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.

CUTTING THE APRON STRINGS

 There is substantial evidence that students going off to college have changed over the years. For one thing, studies show that they are emotionally closer to their parents and their parents to them. One thing that means is that they depend on each other more for happiness. It puts a burden on children for parents to use their children as vehicles for their own happiness- although today’s young people seem complicit in this arrangement, perhaps because they’ve known no other way-even if it creates anxiety in the children. That’s one reason parents like to be involved in their children’s college experiences, and colleges have had to devise novel ways of getting parents off campus when they transport their kids to school.

 There’s also evidence that students today seem to be choosing schools with reference to proximity to home. The closer a student is to home, the easier it is to bring the laundry home and to land in your old bed with tea and sympathy when you have the sniffles. And the easier it is for parents to visit you at university whenever the mood strikes. The amount of visiting parents do is far more than in generations past.

 But in a real sense, students don’t really leave their parents behind. Their parents go to college right along with them - in their front pockets. That is, the parents are a speed dial away by cell phone. This, of course, significantly reduces independence. A student doesn’t get the chance to solve minor problems on his own - he just calls Mom or Dad. A student has initial problems getting along with a roommate? A roommate doesn’t do laundry as often as the other roommate wishes? A student gets a C grade on her first paper? Instead of absorbing the negative information and figuring out how to resolve the problem or how to do better, the call gets made to home, where Mom or Dad solves the problem, often by calling the school administration. This kind of behavior is, sadly, commonplace today and is a mark of the lack of coping skills among students because all the lumps and bumps have been taken out of life for them until now.

 In addition to being tethered to parents, incoming freshmen are now very heavily connected by cell phone to classmates from high school, who are presumably at other colleges. So there isn’t the great impetus to mix and venture forth to meet new people, to get out of one’s comfort zone, to get drawn into new experiences, that has traditionally marked the beginning of freshman year. The laws of physics still apply, and it is difficult to be meeting new people and seeking novel experiences while you are talking to your old pals.

Parents like to be involved in their children’s college experiences because

A. they are worried about the school’s carelessness 

B. the school often neglects their children

C. they are afraid of being deprived of happiness 

D. they find their children a source of happiness

1
22 tháng 10 2018

Đáp án là D.

Bố mẹ có vẻ như tham gia vào những trải nghiệm đại học của bố mẹ bởi vì

A. chúng lo lắng về sự bất cẩn ở trường

B. trường học thường không chú ý đến học sinh của chúng

C. chúng sợ bị tước đoạt niềm vui

D. họ cảm thấy con họ như là một niềm hạnh phúc

Dẫn chứng: It puts a burden on children for parents to use their children as vehicles for their own happiness-although today’s young people seem complicit in this arrangement, perhaps because they’ve known no other way-even if it creates anxiety in the children. 

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.CUTTING THE APRON STRINGS There is substantial evidence that students going off to college have changed over the years. For one thing, studies show that they are emotionally closer to their parents and their parents to them. One thing that means is that they depend on each other more for happiness. It puts a burden on children for parents to use their...
Đọc tiếp

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.

CUTTING THE APRON STRINGS

 There is substantial evidence that students going off to college have changed over the years. For one thing, studies show that they are emotionally closer to their parents and their parents to them. One thing that means is that they depend on each other more for happiness. It puts a burden on children for parents to use their children as vehicles for their own happiness- although today’s young people seem complicit in this arrangement, perhaps because they’ve known no other way-even if it creates anxiety in the children. That’s one reason parents like to be involved in their children’s college experiences, and colleges have had to devise novel ways of getting parents off campus when they transport their kids to school.

 There’s also evidence that students today seem to be choosing schools with reference to proximity to home. The closer a student is to home, the easier it is to bring the laundry home and to land in your old bed with tea and sympathy when you have the sniffles. And the easier it is for parents to visit you at university whenever the mood strikes. The amount of visiting parents do is far more than in generations past.

 But in a real sense, students don’t really leave their parents behind. Their parents go to college right along with them - in their front pockets. That is, the parents are a speed dial away by cell phone. This, of course, significantly reduces independence. A student doesn’t get the chance to solve minor problems on his own - he just calls Mom or Dad. A student has initial problems getting along with a roommate? A roommate doesn’t do laundry as often as the other roommate wishes? A student gets a C grade on her first paper? Instead of absorbing the negative information and figuring out how to resolve the problem or how to do better, the call gets made to home, where Mom or Dad solves the problem, often by calling the school administration. This kind of behavior is, sadly, commonplace today and is a mark of the lack of coping skills among students because all the lumps and bumps have been taken out of life for them until now.

 In addition to being tethered to parents, incoming freshmen are now very heavily connected by cell phone to classmates from high school, who are presumably at other colleges. So there isn’t the great impetus to mix and venture forth to meet new people, to get out of one’s comfort zone, to get drawn into new experiences, that has traditionally marked the beginning of freshman year. The laws of physics still apply, and it is difficult to be meeting new people and seeking novel experiences while you are talking to your old pals.

The provision of mobile phones for children, according to the author, _________.

A. reduces children’s dependence on their parents 

B. increases positive control by parents

C. decreases parental interference 

D. increases children’s dependence

1
10 tháng 10 2017

Đáp án là D.

Việc cung cấp điện thoại di động cho trẻ, theo tác giả

A. giảm sự phụ thuộc của trẻ em vào bố mẹ chung

B. tăng sự kiểm soát tích cực bởi bố mẹ chúng

C. giảm sự can thiệp của bố mẹ

D. tăng sự phụ thuộc của trẻ con

Dẫn chứng: That is, the parents are a speed dial away by cell phone. This, of course, significantly reduces independence.