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25 tháng 3 2019

New York state wildlife expert Richard Thomas found that a woodchuck could (and does) chuck around 35 cubic feet of dirt in the course of digging a burrow. Thomas reasoned that if a woodchuck could chuck wood, he would chuck an amount equivalent to the weight of the dirt, or 700 pounds.

25 tháng 3 2019

He would chuck, he would,

as much as he could,

And chuck as much as,

a wood chuck would, 

IF THE WOOD CHUCK COULD CHUCK WOOD!!! :P

11 tháng 6 2021

. Nền đen, nền nâu

2. Một chiếc chum gỗ sẽ chuck được bao nhiêu gỗ nếu một chiếc chum có thể chuck được gỗ?

3. Phù thủy nào đã đánh tráo đồng hồ đeo tay Thụy Sĩ?

4. Cô ấy bán vỏ sò bên bờ biển

5. Can you can a can as a canner lon lon a lon?

#HT#

11 tháng 6 2021

chắc bạn Sơn dùng google dịch phải không?

Read the pasage then answer the following questions: "Don't you hate splitting wood?" asked Charlie, as he sat down on a log to hinder Rob for a while."No, I rather like it. When I get hold of a tough old fellow, I say, 'See here, now, you think you're the stronger, and are going to beat me; so I'll split you up into kindling wood." "Pshaw!" said Charlie, laughing; "and it's only a stick of wood." "Yes; but you see I pretend it's a lesson, or a tough job of any kind, and it's nice to conquer...
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Read the pasage then answer the following questions:

"Don't you hate splitting wood?" asked Charlie, as he sat down on a log to hinder Rob for a while."No, I rather like it. When I get hold of a tough old fellow, I say, 'See here, now, you think you're the stronger, and are going to beat me; so I'll split you up into kindling wood." "Pshaw!" said Charlie, laughing; "and it's only a stick of wood." "Yes; but you see I pretend it's a lesson, or a tough job of any kind, and it's nice to conquer it.""I don't want to conquer such things; I don't care what becomes of them. I wish I were a man, and a rich one." "Well, Charlie, if you live long enough you'll be a man, without wishing for it; and as for the rich part, I mean to be that myself." "You do. How do you expect to get your money? By sawing wood?" "Maybe - some of it; that's as good a way as any, so long as it lasts. I don't care how I get rich, you know, as long as it's in an honest and useful way." "I'd like to sleep over the next ten years, and wake up to find myself a young man with a splendid education and plenty of money." "Humph! I am not sleepy - a night at a time is enough for me.I mean to work the next ten yearsYou see there are things that you've got to work out - you can't sleep them out." "I hate work," said Charlie, "that is, such work as sawing and splitting wood, and doing chores. I'd like to do some big work, like being a clerk in a bank or something of that sort." "Wood has to be sawed and split before it can be burned," said Rob. "I don't know but I'll be a clerk in a bank some time; I'm working towards it. I'm keeping father's accounts for him."How Charlie laughed! "I should think that was a long way from being a bank clerk. I suppose your father sells two tables and six chairs, some days, doesn't he?" "Sometimes more than that, and sometimes not so much," said Rob, in perfect good humor."I didn't say I was a bank clerk now. I said I was working towards it. Am I not nearer it by keeping a little bit of a book than I should be if I didn't keep any book at all?" "Not a whit - such things happen," said Charlie, as he started to go.Now, which of these boys, do you think, grew up to be a rich and useful man, and which of them joined a party oftramps before he was thirty years old?

1. What is this story mostly about?

A/Cutting wood.

B/Being a bank clerk. CA man who is useful at his job. D/Two boys talking about their futures. 2. Why does Charlie laugh at Rob for keeping his father's books? A/Because Charlie has a lot to prove to Rob. B/Because Charlie is afraid that Rob will do better than him in school. C/Because Charlie's father is much more wealthy than Rob's.

D/Because Rob's father doesn't make much money from his business.

3. What causes Rob to keep his father's books?

A/Charlie wants to work toward his dream of chopping wood.

B/Rob wants to work toward his dream of becoming a bank clerk.

C/Charlie wants to work toward his dream of becoming a bank clerk. D/Rob wants to work toward his dream of chopping wood. 4. How are Rob's and Charlie's plans for the future different? A/Charlie wants to work for his dreams and Rob doesn't. B/Charlie wants to chop wood forever and Rob doesn't. C/Rob wants to work for his dreams and Charlie doesn't. ​D/Charlie wants to work at a bank and Rob doesn't. 5. What do you think happened to Charlie in the future? A/He became a bank clerk. B/He joined a band of tramps. C/He works for Rob's father. D/He continued to chop wood. ​
1
28 tháng 7 2017

Read the pasage then answer the following questions:

"Don't you hate splitting wood?" asked Charlie, as he sat down on a log to hinder Rob for a while."No, I rather like it. When I get hold of a tough old fellow, I say, 'See here, now, you think you're the stronger, and are going to beat me; so I'll split you up into kindling wood." "Pshaw!" said Charlie, laughing; "and it's only a stick of wood." "Yes; but you see I pretend it's a lesson, or a tough job of any kind, and it's nice to conquer it.""I don't want to conquer such things; I don't care what becomes of them. I wish I were a man, and a rich one." "Well, Charlie, if you live long enough you'll be a man, without wishing for it; and as for the rich part, I mean to be that myself." "You do. How do you expect to get your money? By sawing wood?" "Maybe - some of it; that's as good a way as any, so long as it lasts. I don't care how I get rich, you know, as long as it's in an honest and useful way." "I'd like to sleep over the next ten years, and wake up to find myself a young man with a splendid education and plenty of money." "Humph! I am not sleepy - a night at a time is enough for me.I mean to work the next ten yearsYou see there are things that you've got to work out - you can't sleep them out." "I hate work," said Charlie, "that is, such work as sawing and splitting wood, and doing chores. I'd like to do some big work, like being a clerk in a bank or something of that sort." "Wood has to be sawed and split before it can be burned," said Rob. "I don't know but I'll be a clerk in a bank some time; I'm working towards it. I'm keeping father's accounts for him."How Charlie laughed! "I should think that was a long way from being a bank clerk. I suppose your father sells two tables and six chairs, some days, doesn't he?" "Sometimes more than that, and sometimes not so much," said Rob, in perfect good humor."I didn't say I was a bank clerk now. I said I was working towards it. Am I not nearer it by keeping a little bit of a book than I should be if I didn't keep any book at all?" "Not a whit - such things happen," said Charlie, as he started to go.Now, which of these boys, do you think, grew up to be a rich and useful man, and which of them joined a party oftramps before he was thirty years old?

1. What is this story mostly about?

A/Cutting wood.

B/Being a bank clerk.

C/A man who is useful at his job.

D/Two boys talking about their futures.

2. Why does Charlie laugh at Rob for keeping his father's books?

A/Because Charlie has a lot to prove to Rob.

B/Because Charlie is afraid that Rob will do better than him in school.

C/Because Charlie's father is much more wealthy than Rob's.

D/Because Rob's father doesn't make much money from his business.

3. What causes Rob to keep his father's books?

A/Charlie wants to work toward his dream of chopping wood.

B/Rob wants to work toward his dream of becoming a bank clerk.

C/Charlie wants to work toward his dream of becoming a bank clerk.

D/Rob wants to work toward his dream of chopping wood.

4. How are Rob's and Charlie's plans for the future different?

A/Charlie wants to work for his dreams and Rob doesn't.

B/Charlie wants to chop wood forever and Rob doesn't.

C/Rob wants to work for his dreams and Charlie doesn't.

​D/Charlie wants to work at a bank and Rob doesn't.

5. What do you think happened to Charlie in the future?

A/He became a bank clerk.

B/He joined a band of tramps.

C/He works for Rob's father.

D/He continued to chop wood. ​

5 tháng 10 2021

Being built of wood, the house was clearly a fire risk

21 tháng 8 2018

fill in each gap with a suitable article

2. We eat .....some...... soup with .....a..... spoon

3. I want ...a... glass of lemonade with ....some.... sugar in it

21 tháng 8 2018

fill in each gap with a suitable article

1.....the...... the table is made of ....the... wood

2. We eat ......the..... soup with .....a..... spoon

3. I want ...a... glass of lemonade with ....the.... sugar in it

10 tháng 10 2021

1 C

2 A

3 D

4 A

5 C (câu này đề sai đk bạn

sau although phải là clause chứ)

10 tháng 10 2021

1-ông hàng xóm

2-c

3c

4c

5c

Ko tin tao lm chó

19 tháng 10 2017

Đáp án C.

16 tháng 12 2017

Đáp án C.

30 tháng 4 2019

Đáp án A.

Part 3: Read the following sentences about the different forms of energy available. Match the sentences in Part One with correct sentences in Part Two.  (10 points)PART ONE0. Muscles and wood were the first sources of energy used by early man.1. Coal made the Industrial Revolution in the nineteenth century possible.2. Today we depend on oil more than any other fuels.3. Gas is considered as a “mineral” because, together with coal, it is part of the earth’s crust.4. Hydroelectric power is used to...
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Part 3: Read the following sentences about the different forms of energy available. Match the sentences in Part One with correct sentences in Part Two.  (10 points)

PART ONE

0. Muscles and wood were the first sources of energy used by early man.

1. Coal made the Industrial Revolution in the nineteenth century possible.

2. Today we depend on oil more than any other fuels.

3. Gas is considered as a “mineral” because, together with coal, it is part of the earth’s crust.

4. Hydroelectric power is used to produce electricity.

5. Geothermal energy is produced from the heat stored in the earth’s core.

6. The wind was used as a power source over 1,300 years ago in Persia when the first windmill was built to return a millstone.

7. Waves have enormous power.

8. Incoming tides can be trapped behind a dam across a bay or an estuary.

9. A huge amount of solar energy reaches the earth’s outer atmosphere.

10. Nuclear fuels, such as uranium-235 and plutonium, can be made to produce immense heat by a process called “fission”.

PART TWO

a. Like oil, it is a fossil fuel and is thus a non-renewable source of energy.

b. One danger, however, is in getting rid of the radioactive wastes which are produced.

c. They increase and decrease more slowly than the wind, thus making them easier to use as a source of energy.

d. It was the first fossil fuel to be used to power machinery.

e. However, it is thinly spread, and collecting it in countries like Britain and northern Europe is still difficult and expensive.

f. It is used as a fuel in cars, ships and aeroplanes, and even in rockets.

g. It is produced by the fall of water trapped in a dam.

h. It took thousands of years to progress to using coal on a large scale.

I.This internal heat helps to produce geysers and steam springs and can be used to generate eletricity in countries like New Zealand.

j. The water is then allowed to flow out past water wheels as the tide goes out.

k. For morden purposes, however, it is necessary to build a machine which can store the energy obtained for use on calm days.

Example:             0 – H

1........                   2. .......                  3.........                  4.........                  5........

                                                                6……                       7…….                      8….…                      9…….                      10…..

0