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         Once a fox was roaming around in the dark. Unfortunately, he fell into a well. He tried his best to come out but all in vain. So, he had no other alternative but to remain there till the next morning. The next day, a goat came that way. She peeped into the well and saw the fox there. The goat asked  “ What are you doing there, Mr. Fox?”The sly fox replied, “ I came here to drink water. It is the best I have ever tasted. Come and see for yourself”. Without thinking even for a while, the...
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         Once a fox was roaming around in the dark. Unfortunately, he fell into a well. He tried his best to come out but all in vain. So, he had no other alternative but to remain there till the next morning. The next day, a goat came that way. She peeped into the well and saw the fox there. The goat asked  “ What are you doing there, Mr. Fox?”

The sly fox replied, “ I came here to drink water. It is the best I have ever tasted. Come and see for yourself”. Without thinking even for a while, the goat

jumped into the well, quenched her thirst and look for a way to get out. But just like the fox, she also found herself  helpless to come out.

         Then the fox said, “ I have an idea. You stand on your hind legs. I’ll climb on your head and get out. Then I shall help you come out too”. The goat innocent enough to understand the threwdness of the fox and did as the fox said and helped him get out of the well.

          While walking away, the fox said, “Had you been intelligent enough, you would never have got in without seeing how to get out”.

1. Circle the best anwers: (0.75 pts)

26. The fox was in the well because ………………………… .

A. she came there to drink water.

B. she unfortunately fell into the well.

C. the goat pushed her down.                                  

D. he jumped into the well.

27. The fox get out of the well by………………………

A. climbing on the wall.

B. using a ladder.

C. climbing on the goat’s head.                               

D. being helped by someone.

28.Which sentence is NOT true about the goat? ( according to the text)

A. The next day, the goat came to the well.

B.  The goat was cheated by the fox.

C. Without thinking the goat helped the fox

D. The goat also found herself  help to come out of the well.

2. Answer the questions: (1.0 pt)

29. Did the fox try his best to come out of the well but all in vain?

………………………………………………………………………………

 

30. What sentence did  the goat ask the fox at the well?

……………………………………………………………………………… 

2
6 tháng 11 2021

1. Circle the best anwers: (0.75 pts)

26. The fox was in the well because ………………………… .

A. she came there to drink water.

B. she unfortunately fell into the well.

C. the goat pushed her down.                                  

D. he jumped into the well.

27. The fox get out of the well by………………………

A. climbing on the wall.

B. using a ladder.

C. climbing on the goat’s head.                               

D. being helped by someone.

28.Which sentence is NOT true about the goat? ( according to the text)

A. The next day, the goat came to the well.

B.  The goat was cheated by the fox.

C. Without thinking the goat helped the fox

D. The goat also found herself  help to come out of the well.

2. Answer the questions: (1.0 pt)

29. Did the fox try his best to come out of the well but all in vain?

=> Yes, he did

30. What sentence did  the goat ask the fox at the well?

=> "She peeped into the well and saw the fox there."

1. Circle the best answers: (0.75 pts)

26. The fox was in the well because ………………………….

A. she came there to drink water.

B. she unfortunately fell into the well.

C. the goat pushed her down.                                  

D. he jumped into the well.

27. The fox gets out of the well by………………………

A. climbing on the wall.

B. using a ladder.

C. climbing on the goat’s head.                               

D. being helped by someone.

28. Which sentence is NOT true about the goat? ( according to the text)

A. The next day, the goat came to the well.

B.  The goat was cheated by the fox.

C. Without thinking the goat helped the fox

D. The goat also found herself help to come out of the well.

2. Answer the questions: (1.0 pt)

29. Did the fox try his best to come out of the well but all in vain?

- Yes, he did.

30. What sentence did the goat ask the fox at the well?

The goat asked, “ What are you doing there, Mr. Fox?”

FILL IN THE GAPS WITH CAN ( N'T) / COULD(N'T) BE ABLE TO 1 she was very strong . she .... swim all day and dance all night . 2 the car fell into the river . the workers .... get it out but the driver was dead. 3 when I was younger I ........ stay up all night and not get tired 4 we had no keys , so we ........ open the door . ( negative ) 5 I looked very carefully and I ........ see a car in the distance . 6 a boy fell into the sea but luckily we ........ help him. 7 my son will never...
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FILL IN THE GAPS WITH CAN ( N'T) / COULD(N'T) BE ABLE TO

1 she was very strong . she .... swim all day and dance all night .

2 the car fell into the river . the workers .... get it out but the driver was dead.

3 when I was younger I ........ stay up all night and not get tired

4 we had no keys , so we ........ open the door . ( negative )

5 I looked very carefully and I ........ see a car in the distance .

6 a boy fell into the sea but luckily we ........ help him.

7 my son will never ...... to play the piano.

8 at four years old he ........ read quite well.

9 I am sorry I ......... come to the meeting next week .

10 before he had the car accident , he ......... run very fast

11 I..................... remember his name at the time because we met only one time.

12 diana ..................... the piano now .

13 she will .........come on holiday next month if her parents giver her permission

14 they ............. go . they weather was too bad.

15 kemal .................... afford this weather was too bad .

1
14 tháng 8 2018

FILL IN THE GAPS WITH CAN ( N'T) / COULD(N'T) BE ABLE TO

1 she was very strong . she ..could.. swim all day and dance all night .

2 the car fell into the river . the workers ..could.. get it out but the driver was dead.

3 when I was younger I ...could..... stay up all night and not get tired

4 we had no keys , so we ....could negative.... open the door . ( negative )

5 I looked very carefully and I .....could.. see a car in the distance .

6 a boy fell into the sea but luckily we .....could... help him.

7 my son will never ...be able ... to play the piano.

8 at four years old he ...could..... read quite well.

9 I am sorry I ....won't be able to..... come to the meeting next week .

10 before he had the car accident , he ....could..... run very fast

11 I..........could........... remember his name at the time because we met only one time.

12 diana ........can play............. the piano now .

13 she will ....be able to.....come on holiday next month if her parents giver her permission

14 they ...couldn't.......... go . they weather was too bad.

15 kemal ...........couldn't......... afford this weather was too bad

14 tháng 8 2018

câu 4 là couldn't mà ??

as -all -already- any- attract -both -break -by -could - even - fewer- in-instead living - might - most - spent - that- them- whose- staying - must Austin's luck finally ran out on day 92 when a cobra bit him on the arm . He had wanted to \ (1)...............the world record for (2)........in a glass cage with poisonous snakes .It was (3)..........part of a publicity stunt to (4).........visitors to a snake and animal park in South Africa . His companions had been no (5).............than 36...
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as -all -already- any- attract -both -break -by -could - even - fewer- in-instead living - might - most - spent - that- them- whose- staying - must Austin's luck finally ran out on day 92 when a cobra bit him on the arm . He had wanted to \

(1)...............the world record for (2)........in a glass cage with poisonous snakes .It was (3)..........part of a publicity stunt to (4).........visitors to a snake and animal park in South Africa . His companions had been no (5).............than 36 deadly snakes .They included 20 cobras and , (6)............dangerous of all ,six black mambas (7).............bite can kill in under a minute . He hadn't been able to relax for a moment as (8)...........movement which was made excited his " roommates ''. He fed (9)............on live mice but had to make sure (10)............he didn't touch them in case he was mistaken for food too ! By day 92 he had (11) ........been bitten twice , but on (12)........occasions ,(13)...............a miracle , no venom entered his bloodstream .One day he (14).......... fell on top of a black mamba .Fortunately for him ,(15).......... of striking the mamba shot across to the other side of the cage . When he was bitten for the third time , Austin (16).............have left the cage but decided wait for the antidote to arrive. Even though he was (17)........... terrible pain , he thought he (18).........as well die trying to break the record . (19).....it was , he managed to survive and (20).......... a further two weeks in the cage to set a new record of 107 days .

0
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 from 40 to 49.On 26th May 1828, the people of Nuremberg in Germany found a teenage boy who waswandering alone through the streets. When they came across him, he had no possessions except for two old letters. Because of his behavior and appearance, they took him to the police station. Kaspar spent the next two months in prison, where he hardly spoke and...
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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 from 40 to 49.On 26th May 1828, the people of Nuremberg in Germany found a teenage boy who waswandering alone through the streets. When they came across him, he had no possessions except for two old letters. Because of his behavior and appearance, they took him to the police station. Kaspar spent t

he next two months in prison, where he hardly spoke and refused all food except for bread and water. Some people assumed that Kaspar had grown up alone in the forest, like a wild animal. But gradually, a different picture emerged.

Kaspar said he had spent his whole childhood in a small dark cell. He had never seen the world outside or left his cell. He had never met or spoken to another human being. The cell was empty apart from a small bed and one toy-a wooden horse. He claimed that he had found bread and water in his cell every morning. According to Kaspar’s account, a mysterious man had begun to call on him shortly before his release. The man never showed his face.

Kaspar became well-known throughout Germany and in other countries too, and people found his ascinating. Some suggested that Kaspar was the son of a rich and powerful man-a prince perhaps-who wanted to keep his identity secret. A schoolteacher called Friedrich Daumer met Kaspar and agreed to look after him. Daumer taught him various subjects and encouraged Kaspar’s talent for drawing.

One day in 1829, Kaspar was found with a knife wound to his head. He claimed that a man with a hood over his face had attacked him-the same man who had brought him to Nuremberg. It wasn’t a serious injury, and Kaspar got over it. But in 1833, Hauser came home with a deep knife wound in his chest, saying someone had attacked him in a garden. Three days later, Kaspar died from the wound. Just before he died, Kaspar told the police that his attacker had given him a bag, so the police went to the garden and looked for it. They found it, with a note inside. The note was in mirror writing and said in German: “I want to tell you about myself. I come from the Bavarian border, on the river.”

Over the years, books have been written about Kaspar’s stories and various historians have looked into them. Most have concluded that the stories were untrue and that Kaspar Hauser was a liar who killed himself (possibly by mistake). But for some people, Kaspar Hauser’s life and death remain one of the most mysterious stories in history.

Between 1829 and 1833, Kaspar Hauser suffered .

A. two knife wounds, but they weren’t serious   

B. two knife wounds, one small and one fatal

C. two very serious knife wounds              

D. two knife wound on the same occasion

1
10 tháng 3 2018

Chọn B
Đọc đoạn 4 ta có thể thấy Kapar bị 2 vết thương (1 vết nhẹ, 1 vết chí tử)

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 from 40 to 49.On 26th May 1828, the people of Nuremberg in Germany found a teenage boy who waswandering alone through the streets. When they came across him, he had no possessions except for two old letters. Because of his behavior and appearance, they took him to the police station. Kaspar spent the next two months in prison, where he hardly spoke and...
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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 from 40 to 49.

On 26th May 1828, the people of Nuremberg in Germany found a teenage boy who waswandering alone through the streets. When they came across him, he had no possessions except for two old letters. Because of his behavior and appearance, they took him to the police station. Kaspar spent the next two months in prison, where he hardly spoke and refused all food except for bread and water. Some people assumed that Kaspar had grown up alone in the forest, like a wild animal. But gradually, a different picture emerged.

Kaspar said he had spent his whole childhood in a small dark cell. He had never seen the world outside or left his cell. He had never met or spoken to another human being. The cell was empty apart from a small bed and one toy-a wooden horse. He claimed that he had found bread and water in his cell every morning. According to Kaspar’s account, a mysterious man had begun to call on him shortly before his release. The man never showed his face.

Kaspar became well-known throughout Germany and in other countries too, and people found his ascinating. Some suggested that Kaspar was the son of a rich and powerful man-a prince perhaps-who wanted to keep his identity secret. A schoolteacher called Friedrich Daumer met Kaspar and agreed to look after him. Daumer taught him various subjects and encouraged Kaspar’s talent for drawing.

One day in 1829, Kaspar was found with a knife wound to his head. He claimed that a man with a hood over his face had attacked him-the same man who had brought him to Nuremberg. It wasn’t a serious injury, and Kaspar got over it. But in 1833, Hauser came home with a deep knife wound in his chest, saying someone had attacked him in a garden. Three days later, Kaspar died from the wound. Just before he died, Kaspar told the police that his attacker had given him a bag, so the police went to the garden and looked for it. They found it, with a note inside. The note was in mirror writing and said in German: “I want to tell you about myself. I come from the Bavarian border, on the river.”

Over the years, books have been written about Kaspar’s stories and various historians have looked into them. Most have concluded that the stories were untrue and that Kaspar Hauser was a liar who killed himself (possibly by mistake). But for some people, Kaspar Hauser’s life and death remain one of the most mysterious stories in history.

Some people suggested that Kaspar Hauser was 

A. from another country                            

B. really an artist

C. the son of a schoolteacher                      

D. from a wealthy family

1
15 tháng 3 2017

Chọn D
“Some suggested that Kaspar was the son of a rich and powerful man-a prince perhaps-who wanted to keep his identity
secret” => Kaspar đến từ 1 gia đình giàu có

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 from 40 to 49.On 26th May 1828, the people of Nuremberg in Germany found a teenage boy who waswandering alone through the streets. When they came across him, he had no possessions except for two old letters. Because of his behavior and appearance, they took him to the police station. Kaspar spent the next two months in prison, where he hardly spoke and...
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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 from 40 to 49.

On 26th May 1828, the people of Nuremberg in Germany found a teenage boy who waswandering alone through the streets. When they came across him, he had no possessions except for two old letters. Because of his behavior and appearance, they took him to the police station. Kaspar spent the next two months in prison, where he hardly spoke and refused all food except for bread and water. Some people assumed that Kaspar had grown up alone in the forest, like a wild animal. But gradually, a different picture emerged.

Kaspar said he had spent his whole childhood in a small dark cell. He had never seen the world outside or left his cell. He had never met or spoken to another human being. The cell was empty apart from a small bed and one toy-a wooden horse. He claimed that he had found bread and water in his cell every morning. According to Kaspar’s account, a mysterious man had begun to call on him shortly before his release. The man never showed his face.

Kaspar became well-known throughout Germany and in other countries too, and people found his ascinating. Some suggested that Kaspar was the son of a rich and powerful man-a prince perhaps-who wanted to keep his identity secret. A schoolteacher called Friedrich Daumer met Kaspar and agreed to look after him. Daumer taught him various subjects and encouraged Kaspar’s talent for drawing.

One day in 1829, Kaspar was found with a knife wound to his head. He claimed that a man with a hood over his face had attacked him-the same man who had brought him to Nuremberg. It wasn’t a serious injury, and Kaspar got over it. But in 1833, Hauser came home with a deep knife wound in his chest, saying someone had attacked him in a garden. Three days later, Kaspar died from the wound. Just before he died, Kaspar told the police that his attacker had given him a bag, so the police went to the garden and looked for it. They found it, with a note inside. The note was in mirror writing and said in German: “I want to tell you about myself. I come from the Bavarian border, on the river.”

Over the years, books have been written about Kaspar’s stories and various historians have looked into them. Most have concluded that the stories were untrue and that Kaspar Hauser was a liar who killed himself (possibly by mistake). But for some people, Kaspar Hauser’s life and death remain one of the most mysterious stories in history.

Police found a mysterious letter inside a bag .

A. in Kaspar Hauser’s room, after his death      

B. in the place where Kaspar Hauser died

C. near a river in Baravia                           

D. in the place where Kaspar Hauser was attacked

1
25 tháng 6 2017

Chọn D
“Just before he died, Kaspar told the police that his attacker had given him a bag, so the police went to the garden and
looked for it.” : ngay trước khi chết, Kaspar đã bảo cảnh sát rằng kẻ tấn công đưa cho anh ta 1 cái túi, vì thế cảnh sát đã
tới vườn và tìm nó.
ð Cảnh sát đã tìm thấy bức thư bí mật bên trong cái túi ở ngay tại nơi Kaspar bị tấn công

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 from 40 to 49.On 26th May 1828, the people of Nuremberg in Germany found a teenage boy who waswandering alone through the streets. When they came across him, he had no possessions except for two old letters. Because of his behavior and appearance, they took him to the police station. Kaspar spent the next two months in prison, where he hardly spoke and...
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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 from 40 to 49.

On 26th May 1828, the people of Nuremberg in Germany found a teenage boy who waswandering alone through the streets. When they came across him, he had no possessions except for two old letters. Because of his behavior and appearance, they took him to the police station. Kaspar spent the next two months in prison, where he hardly spoke and refused all food except for bread and water. Some people assumed that Kaspar had grown up alone in the forest, like a wild animal. But gradually, a different picture emerged.

Kaspar said he had spent his whole childhood in a small dark cell. He had never seen the world outside or left his cell. He had never met or spoken to another human being. The cell was empty apart from a small bed and one toy-a wooden horse. He claimed that he had found bread and water in his cell every morning. According to Kaspar’s account, a mysterious man had begun to call on him shortly before his release. The man never showed his face.

Kaspar became well-known throughout Germany and in other countries too, and people found his ascinating. Some suggested that Kaspar was the son of a rich and powerful man-a prince perhaps-who wanted to keep his identity secret. A schoolteacher called Friedrich Daumer met Kaspar and agreed to look after him. Daumer taught him various subjects and encouraged Kaspar’s talent for drawing.

One day in 1829, Kaspar was found with a knife wound to his head. He claimed that a man with a hood over his face had attacked him-the same man who had brought him to Nuremberg. It wasn’t a serious injury, and Kaspar got over it. But in 1833, Hauser came home with a deep knife wound in his chest, saying someone had attacked him in a garden. Three days later, Kaspar died from the wound. Just before he died, Kaspar told the police that his attacker had given him a bag, so the police went to the garden and looked for it. They found it, with a note inside. The note was in mirror writing and said in German: “I want to tell you about myself. I come from the Bavarian border, on the river.”

Over the years, books have been written about Kaspar’s stories and various historians have looked into them. Most have concluded that the stories were untrue and that Kaspar Hauser was a liar who killed himself (possibly by mistake). But for some people, Kaspar Hauser’s life and death remain one of the most mysterious stories in history.

Most historians today believed that Kaspar Hauser .

A. was the son of a Baravian prince            

B. was one of the most mysterious poeple in history

C. invented the story of his life                   

D. did not really die from the knife wound

1
1 tháng 1 2017

Chọn C
“Most have concluded that the stories were untrue and that Kaspar Hauser was a liar who killed himself”: hầu hết kết luận
rằng câu chuyện là không có thật và Kaspar Hauser người mà đã tự sát thì thực chất là kẻ nói dối
ð Đáp án C( Kaspar đã bịa chuyện về cuộc đời 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 from 38 to 42.   "Did you see that?" Joe said to his friend Bill. "You're a great shooter!" Bill caught the basketball and bounced it before throwing it again. The ball flew into the net. "Bill, you never miss!" Joe said admiringly. "Unless I'm in a real game," Bill complained. "Then I miss all the time." Joe knew that Bill was right. Bill performed much...
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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 from 38 to 42.

  "Did you see that?" Joe said to his friend Bill. "You're a great shooter!"

Bill caught the basketball and bounced it before throwing it again. The ball flew into the net.

"Bill, you never miss!" Joe said admiringly.

"Unless I'm in a real game," Bill complained. "Then I miss all the time."

Joe knew that Bill was right. Bill performed much better when he was having fun with Joe in the school yard than he did when he was playing for the school team in front of a large crowd.

"Maybe you just need to practice more," Joe suggested.

"But I practice all the time with you!" Bill objected. He shook his head. "I just can't play well when people are watching me."

"You play well when I'm watching," Joe pointed out.

"That's because I've known you since we were five years old," Bill said with a smile. "I'm just not comfortable playing when other people are around."

Joe nodded and understood, but he also had an idea.

The next day Joe and Bill met in the school yard again to practice. After a few minutes, Joe excused himself.

"Practice without me," Joe said to his friend. "I'll be back in a minute."

Joe hurried through the school building, gathering together whomever he could find - two students, a math teacher, two secretaries, and a janitor. When Joe explained why he needed them, everyone was happy to help.

Joe reminded the group to stay quiet as they all went toward the school's basketball court. As Joe had hoped, Bill was still practicing basketball. He made five baskets in a row without noticing the silent people standing behind him.

"Hey, Bill!" Joe called out finally.

Bill turned. A look of surprise came over his face.

I just wanted to show you that you could play well with people watching you," Joe said. "Now you'll have nothing to worry about for the next game!"

What would be the best title for the story?

A. Practice Makes Perfect

B. Joe Joins the Team 

C. Bill Wins the Big Game

D. Bill's Basketball Problem

1
17 tháng 1 2019

What would be the best title for the story?

Đáp án D. Bill's Basketball Problem

Dẫn chứng: "Unless I'm in a real game," Bill complained. "Then I miss all the time."

Bill said with a smile. "I'm just not comfortable playing when other people are around."

IV. Read the following passage and choose the best answer from A,B, C or D:I had feared that my companion would talk, but it was soon plain (rõ ràng) that there was no such danger. Two days passed during which we did not exchange a single word. He seemed, indeed, absolutely unaware of my presence. He neither read nor wrote, but spent most of his time sitting at the table and looking out of the window across the pleasant parkland that surrounded the house. He sometimes talked to himself and said...
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IV. Read the following passage and choose the best answer from A,B, C or D:I had feared that my companion would talk, but it was soon plain (rõ ràng) that there was no such danger. Two days passed during which we did not exchange a single word. He seemed, indeed, absolutely unaware of my presence. He neither read nor wrote, but spent most of his time sitting at the table and looking out of the window across the pleasant parkland that surrounded the house. He sometimes talked to himself and said things half under his breath. He bit his nails and once he produced a penknife and dug holes in the furniture until one of the attendants (nhân viên) took it from him. I thought at first that perhaps he was mentally ill. During the second day I even began to feel a little nervous of him. He was extremely large, both broad and tall, with very wide shoulders and enormous hands. His huge head was usually sunk low between his shoulders. He had dark, rather untidy hair and a big shapeless mouth which open very now and then. Once or twice he began singing to himself, but broke off abruptly (bất ngờ) on each occasion - and this was the nearest he seemed to get to noticing my presence.
By the evening of the second day I was completely unable to go on with my work. Out of a mixture of nervousness and curiosity, I sat, too looking out of my window and blowing my nose, and wondering how to set about establishing the human contact which was by now becoming an absolute necessity. It ended of with my asking him for his name. He had been introduced to me when he arrived, but I had paid
no attention then. He turned towards me a very gently pair of dark eyes and said his name: Huge Belfounder. He added:" I thought you didn't want to talk." I said that I was not at all against talking, that I had just been rather busy with something when he arrived, and I begged his pardon if I had appeared rude.
It seemed to me, even from the way he spoke, that he was not only mentally ill, but was highly intelligent; and I began, almost automatically, to pack up my papers. I knew that from now on I should do no more work. I was sharing a room with a person of the greatest fascination.

1. How did Huge spend the first two days?
A. He worked as if the writer was not there.
B. He talked and sang to himself from time to time.
C. He spent his time making holes in the furniture.
D. He kept annoying the attendants.
2. On the second evening the writer
A. tried in vain to start a conversation.
B. was feeling bored.
C. began to fell frightened of his companion.
D. could not concentrate on his work.
3. Huge didn't talk to the writer at first because
A. he didn't realise the writer wished to.
B. he thought the writer was rude.
C. he was feeling ill.
D. he was too busy.
4. The writer's attitude to Huge changed from
A. fear to nervousness.
B. nervousness to interest.
C. curiosity to nervousness.
D. nervousness to unfriendliness

VIII. Fill in each gap in the sentence with the correct form of the word in capital letters:1. Alice had a ……………..… day at work and went to bed early. ( TIRE )
2. Food and clothing are ................................................ of life ( NECESSARY )
3. His dream is to be an ...............................like his father when he grows up. (economy)
4. Japan is an ………………………country. (industry)
5. She can find no ................................................ to her financial troubles. ( SOLVE )
6. The instructions are very..................................... I am not clear what I should do.( confuse)
7. The large dog is perfectly …………….........and he has never been known to attack anyone. (harm)
8. The party is …….…………, so you don’t have to dress up for it. ( FORM )
9. Travelling in big cities is becoming more ………….....…… everyday. ( TROUBLE )
10. We should learn all the new words by heart in order to ……..…………. our vocabulary. (rich)

2
20 tháng 8 2018

1. How did Huge spend the first two days?
A. He worked as if the writer was not there.
B. He talked and sang to himself from time to time.
C. He spent his time making holes in the furniture.
D. He kept annoying the attendants.
2. On the second evening the writer
A. tried in vain to start a conversation.
B. was feeling bored.
C. began to fell frightened of his companion.
D. could not concentrate on his work.
3. Huge didn't talk to the writer at first because
A. he didn't realise the writer wished to.
B. he thought the writer was rude.
C. he was feeling ill.
D. he was too busy.
4. The writer's attitude to Huge changed from
A. fear to nervousness.
B. nervousness to interest.
C. curiosity to nervousness.
D. nervousness to unfriendliness

20 tháng 8 2018

1. Alice had a ………tired……..… day at work and went to bed early. ( TIRE )
2. Food and clothing are ..............necessities .................................. of life ( NECESSARY )
3. His dream is to be an ................economist ...............like his father when he grows up. (economy)
4. Japan is an ………industrial ………………country. (industry)
5. She can find no ..................solution .............................. to her financial troubles. ( SOLVE )
6. The instructions are very...............confusing...................... I am not clear what I should do.( confuse)
7. The large dog is perfectly ……harmless ……….........and he has never been known to attack anyone. (harm)
8. The party is …….unformal…………, so you don’t have to dress up for it. ( FORM )
9. Travelling in big cities is becoming more ……troubling …….....…… everyday. ( TROUBLE )
10. We should learn all the new words by heart in order to ……..…enrich ………. our vocabulary. (rich)

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. "Did you see that?" Joe said to his friend Bill. "You're a great shooter!" Bill caught the basketball and bounced it before throwing it again. The ball flew into the net. "Bill, you never miss!" Joe said admiringly. "Unless I'm in a real game," Bill complained. "Then I miss all the time." Joe knew that Bill was right. Bill performed much better when he was...
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.

"Did you see that?" Joe said to his friend Bill. "You're a great shooter!"

Bill caught the basketball and bounced it before throwing it again. The ball flew into the net.

"Bill, you never miss!" Joe said admiringly.

"Unless I'm in a real game," Bill complained. "Then I miss all the time."

Joe knew that Bill was right. Bill performed much better when he was having fun with Joe in the school yard than he did when he was playing for the school team in front of a large crowd.

"Maybe you just need to practice more," Joe suggested.

"But I practice all the time with you!" Bill objected. He shook his head. "I just can't play well when people are watching me."

"You play well when I'm watching," Joe pointed out.

"That's because I've known you since we were five years old," Bill said with a smile. "I'm just not comfortable playing when other people are around."

Joe nodded and understood, but he also had an idea.

The next day Joe and Bill met in the school yard again to practice. After a few minutes, Joe excused himself.

"Practice without me," Joe said to his friend. "I'll be back in a minute."

Joe hurried through the school building, gathering together whomever he could find—two students, a math teacher, two secretaries, and a janitor. When Joe explained why he needed them, everyone was happy to help.

Joe reminded the group to stay quiet as they all went toward the school's basketball court. As Joe had hoped, Bill was still practicing basketball. He made five baskets in a row without noticing the silent people standing behind him.

"Hey, Bill!" Joe called out finally.

Bill turned. A look of surprise came over his face.

"I just wanted to show you that you could play well with people watching you," Joe said. "Now you'll have nothing to worry about for the next game!"

What would be the best title for the story?

A. Practice Makes Perfect

B. Joe Joins the Team

C. Bill Wins the Big Game

D. Bill's Basketball Problem

1
17 tháng 7 2017

Chọn D. Bill's Basketball Problem

"Unless I'm in a real game," Bill complained. "Then I miss all the time."

Bill said with a smile. "I'm just not comfortable playing when other people are around."