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A) Điền từ thích hợp:(6 marks) 0. Elena................a Saturday job working in a library a few month ago. 1. On Saturdays, a lot of people visit the library where Elena works and it is always............................. 2. 'The job is.....................because I meeet a lot of different people,' Elena say. 3. Her job is to...................all the books when people bring them back. 4. Elena has to put all the books back on the...................shelf. 5.Sometimes...
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A) Điền từ thích hợp:(6 marks)

0. Elena................a Saturday job working in a library a few month ago.

1. On Saturdays, a lot of people visit the library where Elena works and it is always.............................

2. 'The job is.....................because I meeet a lot of different people,' Elena say.

3. Her job is to...................all the books when people bring them back.

4. Elena has to put all the books back on the...................shelf.

5.Sometimes people..................to return their books on time.

B) Khoanh đáp án đúng ( 6 marks)

0.Where do you come from?

a. New York

b. School

c. Home

1.Have a good holiday.

a. Thanks i will

b. i think so.

c. yes, very much

2. What about going shopping this afternoon?

a. I'm too tired!

b. That a pity!

c. That's not right!

3. I can't do my homework.

a. Can you be careful?

b. You can't have that.

c. Of course you can.

4. Which of the bots is your friend?

a. He says I'm right.

b. Yes he is, isn't he?

c. That one over there.

5. I've waited here for two hours!

a. Yes you do

TỒNG ĐIỂM: 12

b. I'm sorry about that

c. It didn't matter

1
19 tháng 2 2018

A) Điền từ thích hợp:(6 marks)

0. Elena........got........a Saturday job working in a library a few month ago.

1. On Saturdays, a lot of people visit the library where Elena works and it is always..............busy...............

2. 'The job is.........interesting............because I meeet a lot of different people,' Elena say.

3. Her job is to.........check..........all the books when people bring them back.

4. Elena has to put all the books back on the.........right.....shelf.

5.Sometimes people.......forget........to return their books on time.

B) Khoanh đáp án đúng ( 6 marks)

0.Where do you come from?

a. New York

b. School

c. Home

1.Have a good holiday.

a. Thanks i will

b. i think so.

c. yes, very much

2. What about going shopping this afternoon?

a. I'm too tired!

b. That a pity!

c. That's not right!

3. I can't do my homework.

a. Can you be careful?

b. You can't have that.

c. Of course you can.

4. Which of the bots is your friend?

a. He says I'm right.

b. Yes he is, isn't he?

c. That one over there.

5. I've waited here for two hours!

a. Yes you do

b. I'm sorry about that

c. It didn't matter

TỒNG ĐIỂM: 12

#Q

18 tháng 8 2017

1. A. Busy

2. B. Interesting

3. C. Check

4. C. Right

5. B. Forget

( Chúc bạn học tốt)

18 tháng 8 2017

1. On Saturday, a lot of people visit the library where Elena works and it is always..........

A. busy B. heavy C. strong

2. 'The job is ........ because I meet a lot of different people,' Elena says.

A. friendly B. interesting C. favourite

3. Her job is to ........ all the books when people bring them back.

A. look B. watch C. check

4. Elena has to put all the books back on the ........ shelf.

A. good B. possible C. right

5. Sometimes people ............ to return their books on time.

A. think B. forget C. mind

3 tháng 1 2020

1. a)

2. b)

3 tháng 1 2020

3. station

IX.Read the passage then say whether the statements are true (T), false (F) or no information (N). Last week I went with my elder brother to visit our National Library. We came there early in the morning and the library was crowded with school children. It was a Saturday morning. Before our country became free, it was known as “Raffles Library”. It is said to be one of the modern libraries in Asia. The library is situated in Stamford Road beside our National Museum. There are hundred...
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IX.Read the passage then say whether the statements are true (T), false (F) or no information (N).

Last week I went with my elder brother to visit our National Library. We came there early in the morning and the library was crowded with school children. It was a Saturday morning. Before our country became free, it was known as “Raffles Library”. It is said to be one of the modern libraries in Asia.

The library is situated in Stamford Road beside our National Museum. There are hundred thousands of books in the library including valuable reference books, for university students. Almost all secondary school students are members of the library and they are allowed to borrow four books at a time.

STATEMENTS (T) (F) (N)

0. It was in the summer √

1. They went to the library last month

2. There were a lot of school children in the library

3. They came there on Sunday

4. That library used to have another name

5. It is the most well-known library in the world.

6. It is in front of the Nation Museum

7. There are few books in the library

8. Most of the members of the library are secondary school students

9. They can borrow four books in a school-year.

10. They will come there tomorrow

1
10 tháng 2 2019

1.F.

2.T.

3.F.

4.T.

5.N.

6.F.

7.F.

8.T

9.F.

10.N.

Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C , or D to indicate the correct answer to each of the questions.        These days it is easy for most of us to get a hold of the latest books or magazines. We can go to bookstores, order them through the Internet, or borrow them from the local libraries. Now imagine having to walk miles and miles through a hot sandy desert just to borrow a book. This is the reality for people living in the villages of the Carissa region of Kenya in East...
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Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C , or D to indicate the correct answer to each of the questions.

        These days it is easy for most of us to get a hold of the latest books or magazines. We can go to bookstores, order them through the Internet, or borrow them from the local libraries. Now imagine having to walk miles and miles through a hot sandy desert just to borrow a book. This is the reality for people living in the villages of the Carissa region of Kenya in East Africa.

        In 1996, librarian Wycliffe Oluoch used to spend each day waiting for people to come to borrow some of the 24,000 books in his library in Carissa. The library had no shortage of books, but people weren’t coming to read them. It was too much effort to walk through the desert just to borrow books. Oluoch racked his brain for ways to entice people into the library. After a lot of thought, he hit upon a great idea. If people wouldn’t come to the library, then he would have to take the library to them. Oluoch strapped boxes of books onto the backs of camels, and created the Mobile Camel Library.

        Starting with three camels in 1996, but more recently expanding the service to six camels, the Mobile Camel Library serves over one million people. Twice a month, the camel library can be seen carrying books all around the Carissa region. These hard-working animals need little water and can carry up to 500 pounds of books across the sands. A librarian, a library assistant, a herdsman, and a lookout all travel with the camels. The lookout helps protect the books from thieves.

        The children of Carissa love the camel library and appreciate Oluoch’s effort. Eleven-year-old Mohamud Mohamed reads his library books carefully and always returns them on time. He knows the Carissa library punishes people for losing books, just like any other library. However, the punishment is very stiff compared to that of other libraries. If a village loses a book, the camel library stops visiting.

(From Reading Challenge 2)

People did not visit the library in Carissa because _______ .

A. there were too few books

B. it was too difficult to walk there

C. people didn’t like the camels

D. people in Carissa didn’t like reading

1
10 tháng 4 2019

Chọn B

Người ta không đến thư viện cả Carissa vì:

A. có quá ít sách.

B. quá khó khăn để đi bộ đến đó.

C. người ta không thích những chú lạc đà.

D. người ở Carissa không thích đọc.

Dẫn chứng: “It was too much effort to walk through the desert just to borrow books.”

Tạm dịch: Nó mất quá nhiều công sức để băng qua sa mạc chỉ để mượn sách.

Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C , or D to indicate the correct answer to each of the questions   These days it is easy for most of us to get a hold of the latest books or magazines. We can go to bookstores, order them through the Internet, or borrow them from the local libraries. Now imagine having to walk miles and miles through a hot sandy desert just to borrow a book. This is the reality for people living in the villages of the Carissa region of Kenya in East Africa. ...
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Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C , or D to indicate the correct answer to each of the questions

   These days it is easy for most of us to get a hold of the latest books or magazines. We can go to bookstores, order them through the Internet, or borrow them from the local libraries. Now imagine having to walk miles and miles through a hot sandy desert just to borrow a book. This is the reality for people living in the villages of the Carissa region of Kenya in East Africa.

   In 1996, librarian Wycliffe Oluoch used to spend each day waiting for people to come to borrow some of the 24,000 books in his library in Carissa. The library had no shortage of books, but people weren’t coming to read them. It was too much effort to walk through the desert just to borrow books. Oluoch racked his brain for ways to entice people into the library. After a lot of thought, he hit upon a great idea. If people wouldn’t come to the library, then he would have to take the library to them. Oluoch strapped boxes of books onto the backs of camels, and created the Mobile Camel Library.

   Starting with three camels in 1996, but more recently expanding the service to six camels, the Mobile Camel Library serves over one million people. Twice a month, the camel library can be seen carrying books all around the Carissa region. These hard-working animals need little water and can carry up to 500 pounds of books across the sands. A librarian, a library assistant, a herdsman, and a lookout all travel with the camels. The lookout helps protect the books from thieves.

   The children of Carissa love the camel library and appreciate Oluoch’s effort. Eleven-year-old Mohamud Mohamed reads his library books carefully and always returns them on time. He knows the Carissa library punishes people for losing books, just like any other library. However, the punishment is very stiff compared to that of other libraries. If a village loses a book, the camel library stops visiting.

 

People did not visit the library in Carissa because _______ .

A. there were too few books 

B. it was too difficult to walk there

C. people didn’t like the camels

D. people in Carissa didn’t like reading

1
4 tháng 7 2019

Chọn B

Người ta không đến thư viện cả Carissa vì:

A. có quá ít sách.

B. quá khó khăn để đi bộ đến đó.

C. người ta không thích những chú lạc đà.

D. người ở Carissa không thích đọc.

Dẫn chứng: “It was too much effort to walk through the desert just to borrow books.”

Tạm dịch: Nó mất quá nhiều công sức để băng qua sa mạc chỉ để mượn sách.

Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C , or D to indicate the correct answer to each of the questions.        These days it is easy for most of us to get a hold of the latest books or magazines. We can go to bookstores, order them through the Internet, or borrow them from the local libraries. Now imagine having to walk miles and miles through a hot sandy desert just to borrow a book. This is the reality for people living in the villages of the Carissa region of Kenya in East...
Đọc tiếp

Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C , or D to indicate the correct answer to each of the questions.

        These days it is easy for most of us to get a hold of the latest books or magazines. We can go to bookstores, order them through the Internet, or borrow them from the local libraries. Now imagine having to walk miles and miles through a hot sandy desert just to borrow a book. This is the reality for people living in the villages of the Carissa region of Kenya in East Africa.

        In 1996, librarian Wycliffe Oluoch used to spend each day waiting for people to come to borrow some of the 24,000 books in his library in Carissa. The library had no shortage of books, but people weren’t coming to read them. It was too much effort to walk through the desert just to borrow books. Oluoch racked his brain for ways to entice people into the library. After a lot of thought, he hit upon a great idea. If people wouldn’t come to the library, then he would have to take the library to them. Oluoch strapped boxes of books onto the backs of camels, and created the Mobile Camel Library.

        Starting with three camels in 1996, but more recently expanding the service to six camels, the Mobile Camel Library serves over one million people. Twice a month, the camel library can be seen carrying books all around the Carissa region. These hard-working animals need little water and can carry up to 500 pounds of books across the sands. A librarian, a library assistant, a herdsman, and a lookout all travel with the camels. The lookout helps protect the books from thieves.

        The children of Carissa love the camel library and appreciate Oluoch’s effort. Eleven-year-old Mohamud Mohamed reads his library books carefully and always returns them on time. He knows the Carissa library punishes people for losing books, just like any other library. However, the punishment is very stiff compared to that of other libraries. If a village loses a book, the camel library stops visiting.

(From Reading Challenge 2)

People did not visit the library in Carissa because _______ .

A. there were too few books

B. it was too difficult to walk there

C. people didn’t like the camels

D. people in Carissa didn’t like reading

1
15 tháng 4 2018

ĐÁP ÁN B

Người ta không đến thư viện cả Carissa vì:

A. có quá ít sách.

B. quá khó khăn để đi bộ đến đó.

C. người ta không thích những chú lạc đà.

D. người ở Carissa không thích đọc.

Dẫn chứng: “It was too much effort to walk through the desert just to borrow books.”

Tạm dịch: Nó mất quá nhiều công sức để băng qua sa mạc chỉ để mượn sách.

Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C , or D to indicate the correct answer to each of the questions.        These days it is easy for most of us to get a hold of the latest books or magazines. We can go to bookstores, order them through the Internet, or borrow them from the local libraries. Now imagine having to walk miles and miles through a hot sandy desert just to borrow a book. This is the reality for people living in the villages of the Carissa region of Kenya in East...
Đọc tiếp

Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C , or D to indicate the correct answer to each of the questions.

        These days it is easy for most of us to get a hold of the latest books or magazines. We can go to bookstores, order them through the Internet, or borrow them from the local libraries. Now imagine having to walk miles and miles through a hot sandy desert just to borrow a book. This is the reality for people living in the villages of the Carissa region of Kenya in East Africa.

        In 1996, librarian Wycliffe Oluoch used to spend each day waiting for people to come to borrow some of the 24,000 books in his library in Carissa. The library had no shortage of books, but people weren’t coming to read them. It was too much effort to walk through the desert just to borrow books. Oluoch racked his brain for ways to entice people into the library. After a lot of thought, he hit upon a great idea. If people wouldn’t come to the library, then he would have to take the library to them. Oluoch strapped boxes of books onto the backs of camels, and created the Mobile Camel Library.

        Starting with three camels in 1996, but more recently expanding the service to six camels, the Mobile Camel Library serves over one million people. Twice a month, the camel library can be seen carrying books all around the Carissa region. These hard-working animals need little water and can carry up to 500 pounds of books across the sands. A librarian, a library assistant, a herdsman, and a lookout all travel with the camels. The lookout helps protect the books from thieves.

        The children of Carissa love the camel library and appreciate Oluoch’s effort. Eleven-year-old Mohamud Mohamed reads his library books carefully and always returns them on time. He knows the Carissa library punishes people for losing books, just like any other library. However, the punishment is very stiff compared to that of other libraries. If a village loses a book, the camel library stops visiting.

(From Reading Challenge 2)

The word “stiff” is closest in meaning to _____ .

A. serious

B. enormous

C. easy

D. rough

1
11 tháng 7 2018

Chọn A

Từ “stiff” gần nghĩa với từ nào nhất?

A. serious (adj): nghiêm trọng = stiff (adj)

B. enormous (adj): khổng lồ

C. easy (adj): dễ dàng

D. rough (adj): khó khăn

Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C , or D to indicate the correct answer to each of the questions   These days it is easy for most of us to get a hold of the latest books or magazines. We can go to bookstores, order them through the Internet, or borrow them from the local libraries. Now imagine having to walk miles and miles through a hot sandy desert just to borrow a book. This is the reality for people living in the villages of the Carissa region of Kenya in East Africa. ...
Đọc tiếp

Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C , or D to indicate the correct answer to each of the questions

   These days it is easy for most of us to get a hold of the latest books or magazines. We can go to bookstores, order them through the Internet, or borrow them from the local libraries. Now imagine having to walk miles and miles through a hot sandy desert just to borrow a book. This is the reality for people living in the villages of the Carissa region of Kenya in East Africa.

   In 1996, librarian Wycliffe Oluoch used to spend each day waiting for people to come to borrow some of the 24,000 books in his library in Carissa. The library had no shortage of books, but people weren’t coming to read them. It was too much effort to walk through the desert just to borrow books. Oluoch racked his brain for ways to entice people into the library. After a lot of thought, he hit upon a great idea. If people wouldn’t come to the library, then he would have to take the library to them. Oluoch strapped boxes of books onto the backs of camels, and created the Mobile Camel Library.

   Starting with three camels in 1996, but more recently expanding the service to six camels, the Mobile Camel Library serves over one million people. Twice a month, the camel library can be seen carrying books all around the Carissa region. These hard-working animals need little water and can carry up to 500 pounds of books across the sands. A librarian, a library assistant, a herdsman, and a lookout all travel with the camels. The lookout helps protect the books from thieves.

   The children of Carissa love the camel library and appreciate Oluoch’s effort. Eleven-year-old Mohamud Mohamed reads his library books carefully and always returns them on time. He knows the Carissa library punishes people for losing books, just like any other library. However, the punishment is very stiff compared to that of other libraries. If a village loses a book, the camel library stops visiting.

 

The word “stiff” is closest in meaning to _____ .

A. serious

B. enormous

C. easy

D. rough

1
9 tháng 6 2017

Chọn A

Từ “stiff” gần nghĩa với từ nào nhất?

A. serious (adj): nghiêm trọng = stiff (adj)

B. enormous (adj): khổng lồ

C. easy (adj): dễ dàng

D. rough (adj): khó khăn

Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C , or D to indicate the correct answer to each of the questions.        These days it is easy for most of us to get a hold of the latest books or magazines. We can go to bookstores, order them through the Internet, or borrow them from the local libraries. Now imagine having to walk miles and miles through a hot sandy desert just to borrow a book. This is the reality for people living in the villages of the Carissa region of Kenya in East...
Đọc tiếp

Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C , or D to indicate the correct answer to each of the questions.

        These days it is easy for most of us to get a hold of the latest books or magazines. We can go to bookstores, order them through the Internet, or borrow them from the local libraries. Now imagine having to walk miles and miles through a hot sandy desert just to borrow a book. This is the reality for people living in the villages of the Carissa region of Kenya in East Africa.

        In 1996, librarian Wycliffe Oluoch used to spend each day waiting for people to come to borrow some of the 24,000 books in his library in Carissa. The library had no shortage of books, but people weren’t coming to read them. It was too much effort to walk through the desert just to borrow books. Oluoch racked his brain for ways to entice people into the library. After a lot of thought, he hit upon a great idea. If people wouldn’t come to the library, then he would have to take the library to them. Oluoch strapped boxes of books onto the backs of camels, and created the Mobile Camel Library.

        Starting with three camels in 1996, but more recently expanding the service to six camels, the Mobile Camel Library serves over one million people. Twice a month, the camel library can be seen carrying books all around the Carissa region. These hard-working animals need little water and can carry up to 500 pounds of books across the sands. A librarian, a library assistant, a herdsman, and a lookout all travel with the camels. The lookout helps protect the books from thieves.

        The children of Carissa love the camel library and appreciate Oluoch’s effort. Eleven-year-old Mohamud Mohamed reads his library books carefully and always returns them on time. He knows the Carissa library punishes people for losing books, just like any other library. However, the punishment is very stiff compared to that of other libraries. If a village loses a book, the camel library stops visiting.

(From Reading Challenge 2)

The word “stiff” is closest in meaning to _____ .

A. serious 

B. enormous

C. easy

D. rough

1
19 tháng 11 2019

ĐÁP ÁN A

Từ “stiff” gần nghĩa với từ nào nhất?

A. serious (adj): nghiêm trọng = stiff (adj)

B. enormous (adj): khổng lồ

C. easy (adj): dễ dàng

D. rough (adj): khó khăn