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Bộ não : Brain

Phổi : lung

Dạ dày : stomach

Ruột : intestine

Gan : liver

Lá lách : spleen

Thận : kidney

Bàng quang : bladder

Tử cung : uterus

16 tháng 10 2021

Bộ não : Brain

Phổi : lung

Dạ dày : stomach

Gan : liver 

lá lách : spleen 

Thận : kidney

Bàng quang : bladder

Tử cung : uterus

HT

Đề thi đánh giá năng lực

13 tháng 10 2021
I dont known ok
13 tháng 10 2021

* Paragraph 1: Habitat and location of the species below. (Đoạn 1: Môi trường sống và địa điểm của các loài được liệt kê bên dưới.)

Example:
- Komodo dragons are found in the wild... (Rồng Komodo được tìm thấy trong hoang dã ...)

- They live in forests,... (Chúng sống trong rừng, ...)

* Paragraph 2: Physical features and diet (Đặc điểm về hình thể và chế độ ăn uống)

Example:
- Although they are called dragons, they look ... (Mặc dù chúng được gọi là rồng nhưng chúng trông giống ...)

* Paragraph 3: Population and conservation status (Số lượng đàn và tình trạng bảo tồn)

Example:
- There are about 6,000... (Có khoảng 6.000 con ...)

-According to the IUCN Red List, Komodo dragons are classified as... (Theo sách đỏ của Tổ chức Bảo tồn Thiên nhiên Quốc tế, rồng Komodo được xếp vào....)
 

Blue whales are the largest animals to have ever existed.

(Các voi xanh là động vật lớn nhất từng tồn tại.)

They live in the cold waters of the Arc and Antarc but they migrate to tropical seas to breed.

(Chúng sống ở vùng nước lạnh ở Bắc Cực và Nam Cực nhưng chúng di cư đến vùng biển nhiệt đới để sinh sản.)

This breeding season lasts for about four months.

(Mùa sinh sản thường kéo dài tới bốn tháng.)

Blue whales are mammals but they look fish.

(Cá voi xanh là động vật có vú nhưng chúng nhìn giống như cá.)

They are 30 meters long and weigh about 150-200 tons.

(Chúng dài khoảng 30 mét và nặng khoảng 150-200 tấn.)

The earth's largest animal, the blue whale, usually eats very small shellfish and can eat 4 to 8 tons of krill per day.

(Là động vật lớn nhất trên trái đất nhưng cá voi xanh thường ăn các loại sinh vật có vỏ rất nhỏ và có thể ăn từ 4 tới 8 tấn nhuyễn thể mỗi ngày.)

A blue whale's tongue alone can weigh as much as an elephant — its heart as much as an automobile.

(Riêng lưỡi của cá voi xanh nặng bằng một con voi và trái tim của nó có thể nặng bằng một chiếc ô tô.)

There are about 14,000 blue whales in total (10,000 in the Antarc and 4,000 in the Arc).

(Có tổng số khoảng 14 nghìn con cá voi xanh (trong đó 10 nghìn con ở Nam Cực và 4 nghìn con ở Bắc Cực).)

According to the World Conservation Union (IUCN) Red List, blue whales are classified as endangered.

(Theo Sách đỏ của Cơ quan Bảo tồn Quốc tế, cá voi xanh được phân loại là có nguy cơ bị tuyệt chủng.)

Blue whales have few predators but are known to be victims in attacks by sharks and killer whales, and many are injured or die each year from collisions with large ships.

(Cá voi xanh có ít kẻ săn mồi nhưng chúng được cho là nạn nhân trong các đợt tấn công của cá mập và cá voi ăn thịt và nhiều con bị thương hoặc chết mỗi năm do va chạm với tàu lớn.)

Their lives are also badly affected by pollution and global warming.

(Cuộc sống của chúng cũng bị ảnh hưởng nghiêm trọng bởi ô nhiễm và hiện tượng trái đất nóng lên.)

In order to protect blue whales and stop them from declining, there are many recovery plans that have been launched.

(Để bảo vệ các voi xanh và ngăn chặn số lượng loài này bị suy giảm, có nhiều giải pháp khôi phục đã được đưa ra.)

13 tháng 10 2021

em khong hieu em la hoc sinh lop 2

Bài 4: Chia động từ trong ngoặc cho phù hợp.1. Glastonbury festival _____________________ (organise) every year in the village of Pilton,England.2. In 1076, King Ly Nhan Tong _____________________ (build) the Imperial Academy as thefirst university of Vietnam.3. The first temples of My Son Sanctuary _____________________ (make) of wood in the 4thcentury.4. An altar to Chu Van An _____________________ (set) up in the Temple of Literature.5. We _____________________ (not do) any...
Đọc tiếp

Bài 4: Chia động từ trong ngoặc cho phù hợp.
1. Glastonbury festival _____________________ (organise) every year in the village of Pilton,
England.
2. In 1076, King Ly Nhan Tong _____________________ (build) the Imperial Academy as the
first university of Vietnam.
3. The first temples of My Son Sanctuary _____________________ (make) of wood in the 4
th
century.
4. An altar to Chu Van An _____________________ (set) up in the Temple of Literature.
5. We _____________________ (not do) any practice tests yet, so I’m not sure what they’ re
like.
6. Wait a minute, she _____________________ (speak) to someone on his mobile.
7. Many different languages _____________________ (speak) in Canada.
8. The Imperial City of Hue can _____________________ (divide) into two main parts.
9. You should _____________________ (rent) a bike if you want to travel around.
10. I don’t want to go to Huong Pagoda. How about _____________________ (visit) Ho Chi
Minh Mausoleum?

1

1. organizes

2. built

3. made

4. set

5. haven't

6. is speaking

7. are spoken

8. be divided

9. rent

10. visiting

Bài 3: Chọn đáp án đúng để hoàn thành các câu sau.1. Oxford University is regarded ________ the oldest university in the UK.a. as        b. in          c. for       d. of2. Tickets are a bit harder to buy right on the pot, so you’d better book ________ advance.a. for         b. of       c. by      d. in3. The stone stelae were ________ with the names and places of birth of 1307 graduates.a. written b. learnt c. carved d. selected4. Chu Van...
Đọc tiếp

Bài 3: Chọn đáp án đúng để hoàn thành các câu sau.
1. Oxford University is regarded ________ the oldest university in the UK.
a. as        b. in          c. for       d. of
2. Tickets are a bit harder to buy right on the pot, so you’d better book ________ advance.
a. for         b. of       c. by      d. in
3. The stone stelae were ________ with the names and places of birth of 1307 graduates.
a. written b. learnt c. carved d. selected
4. Chu Van An was one of the most famous ________ at the Imperial Academy.
a. founders              b. statues          c. teachers        d. doctors
5. The students of the Imperial Academy ________ by very famous scholars.
a. are studied          b. were taught             c. have learnt           d. was educated
6. We ________ leave now or we’ll miss the train.
a. can          b. shall        c. had better          c. shouldn’t
7. He bought a picture of the Temple of Literature as a ________ of his trip to Hanoi.
a. souvenir b. landmark c. symbol d. tablet
8. ________ was the University of Cambridge formed? – In 1209.
a. What          b. Where               c. How         d. When
9. Huong Pagoda is a great ________ spot in Hanoi.
a. see-sight         b. sight-see         c. seeing-sight         d. sight-seeing
10. ________ to Hanoi? – Yes, I went there last summer.
a. Were you ever       b. Have you ever been

c. Did you ever go        d. Were you ever go
 

1
12 tháng 10 2021

1-A

2-a

3-a

4-c

5-b

6-c

7-a

8-d

9-c

10-b

Cố lên anh nhé

READING PASSAGE 3History of telegraph in communicationJean-Antoine Nollet was a French clergyman and physicist. In 1746 he gathered about two hundred monks into a circle about a mile (1.6 km) in circumference, with pieces iron wire connecting them. He then discharged a battery of Leyden jars through the human chain and observed that each man reacted at substantially the same time to the electric shock, showing that the speed of electricity's propagation was very high. Given a more humane...
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READING PASSAGE 3

History of telegraph in communication

Jean-Antoine Nollet was a French clergyman and physicist. In 1746 he gathered about two hundred monks into a circle about a mile (1.6 km) in circumference, with pieces iron wire connecting them. He then discharged a battery of Leyden jars through the human chain and observed that each man reacted at substantially the same time to the electric shock, showing that the speed of electricity's propagation was very high. Given a more humane detection system, this could be a way of signaling over long distances. In 1 748, Nollet invented one of the first electrometers, the electroscope, which detected the presence of an electric charge by using electrostatic attraction and repulsion.

After the introduction of the European semaphore lines in 1792, the world's desire to further its ability to communicate from a distance only grew. People wanted a way to send and receive news from remote locations so that they could better understand what was happening in the world around them—not just what was going on in their immediate town or city. This type of communication not only appealed to the media industry, but also to private individuals and companies who wished to stay in touch with contacts. In 1840 Charles Wheatstone from Britain, with William Cooke, obtained a new patent for a telegraphic arrangement. The new apparatus required only a single pair of wires, but the telegraph was still too costly for general purposes. In 1 845, however, Cooke and Wheatstone succeeded in producing the single needle apparatus, which they patented,and from that time the electric telegraph became a practical instrument, soon adopted on all the railway lines of the country.

It was the European optical telegraph, or semaphore, that was the predecessor of the electrical recording telegraph that changed the history of communication forever. Building on the success of the optical telegraph, Samuel F. B. Morse completed a working version of the electrical recording telegraph, which only required a single wire to send code of dots and dashes. At first, it was imagined that only a few highly skilled encoders would be able to use it but it soon became clear that many people could become proficient in Morse code. A system of lines strung on telegraph poles began to spread in Europe and America.

In the 1840s and 1850s several individuals proposed or advocated construction of a telegraph cable across the Atlantic Ocean, including Edward Thornton and Alonzo Jackman. At that time there was no material available for cable insulation and the first breakthrough came with the discovery of a rubber-like latex called gutta percha. Introduced to Britain in 1843, gutta percha is the gum of a tree native to the Malay Peninsula and Malaysia. After the failure of their first cable in 1850, the British brothers John and Jacob Brett laid a successful submarine cable from Dover to Calais in 1851. This used two layers of gutta percha insulation and an armoured outer layer. With thin wire and thick insulation, it floated and had to be weighed down with lead pipe.

In the case of first submarine-cable telegraphy, there was the limitation of knowledge of how its electrical properties were affected by water. The voltage which may be impressed on the cable was limited to a definite value. Moreover, for certain reasons, the cable had an impedance associated with it at the sending end which could make the voltage on the cable differ from the voltage applied to the sending-end apparatus. In fact, the cable was too big for a single boat, so two had to start in the middle of the Atlantic, join their cables and sail in opposite directions. Amazingly, the first official telegram to pass between two continents was a letter of congratulation from Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom to the President of the United States, James Buchanan, on August 16, 1 858. However, signal quality declined rapidly, slowing transmission to an almost unusable speed and the cable was destroyed the following month.

To complete the link between England and Australia, John Pender formed the British- Australian Telegraph Company. The first stage was to lay a 557nm cable from Singapore to Batavia on the island of Java in 1870. It seemed likely that it would come ashore qt the northern port of Darwin from where it might connect around the coast to Queensland and New South Wales. It was an undertaking more ambitious than spanning ocean. Flocks of sheep had to be driven with the 400 workers to provide food. They needed horses and bullock carts and, for the parched interior, camels. In the north, tropical rains left the teams flooded. In the centre, it seemed that they would die of thirst. One critical section in the red heart of Australia involved finding a route through the McDonnell mountain range and then finding water on the other side. The water was not only essential for the construction teams. There had to be telegraph repeater stations every few hundred miles to boost the signal and the staff obviously had to have a supply of water.

On August 22, 1872, the Northern and Southern sections of the Overland Telegraph Line were connected, uniting the Australian continent and within a few months, Australia was at last in direct contact with England via the submarine cable, too. This allowed the Australian Government to receive news from around the world almost instantaneously for the first time. It could cost several pounds to send a message and it might take several hours for it to reach its destination on the other side of the globe, but the world would never be the same again. The telegraph was the first form of communication over a great distance and was a landmark in human history.

 

Question 27 - 32

Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage In boxes 27-32 on your answer sheet, write TRUE if the statement agrees with the information FALSE if the statement contradicts the information NOT GIVEN if there is no information on this

8.  

Question 27 - 32

Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage In boxes 27-32 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE if the statement agrees with the information
FALSE if the statement contradicts the information
NOT GIVEN if there is no information on this

 

Question
Answer
27 - In the research of the French scientist, metal lines were used to send messages.
 True False Not Given   
 
28 - People increasingly hoped to explore ways of long-distance communication in the late eighteenth century.
 True False Not Given   
 
29 - Using Morse Code to send message needed special personnel to first simplify the message,
 True False Not Given   
 
30 - Morse was a famous inventor before he invented the code.
 True False Not Given   
 
31 - Water was significant to early telegraph repeater stations on the continent.
 True False Not Given   
 
32 - The Australian Government offered funds for the first overland line across the continent.
 True False Not Given   

Questions 33 - 40

Answer the questions below. Choose NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the passage for each answer. Write your answers in boxes 33-40 on your answer sheet.

Questions 33 - 40

Answer the questions below. Choose NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the passage for each answer.

Write your answers in boxes 33-40 on your answer sheet.

33. Why did Charles Wheatstone’s telegraph system fail to come into common use in the beginning?

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34. What material was used for insulating cable across the sea?

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35. What was used by British pioneers to increase the weight of the cable in the sea?

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36. What would occur in the submarine cable when the voltage was applied?

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37. Who was a message first sent to across the Atlantic by the Queen?

-> 

38. What animals were used to carry the cable through desert?

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39. What weather condition delayed construction in north Australia?

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40. How long did it take to send a telegraph message from Australia to England in 1872?

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0