- Câu hỏi 569911:
Choose A, B, C or D to complete the following sentence:
I wish I ______ work tomorrow.
A. won’t have to
B. wouldn’t have to
C. don’t have to
D. needn’t
- Câu hỏi 569916:
Read the passage and circle the correct choice (A, B, C or D)
Passage 1
In 1881, a new type of weed began spreading across the northern Great Plains. Unlike other weeds, the tumbleweed did not spend its life rooted to the soil; instead, it tumbled and rolled across fields in the wind. The weed had sharp, spiny leaves that could lacerate the flesh of ranchers and horses alike. It exploited the vast area of the plains, thriving in regions too barren to support other plants. With its ability to generate and disseminate numerous seeds quickly, it soon became the scourge of the prairies.
To present-day Americans, the tumbleweed symbolizes the Old West. They read the Zane Grey novels in which tumbleweeds drift across stark western landscapes and see classic western movies in which tumbleweeds share scenes with cowboys and covered wagons. Yet just over a century ago, the tumbleweed was a newcomer. The first sign of the invasion occurred in North and South Dakota in the late 1870s.
Farmers had noticed the sudden appearance of the new, unusual weed. One group of immigrants, however, did not find the weed at all unfamiliar. The tumbleweed, it turns out, was a native of southern Russia, where it was known as Tartar thistle. It was imported to the United States by unknown means.
Frontier settlers gave the plants various names: saltwort, Russian cactus, and wind witch. But botanists at the Department of Agriculture preferred the designation Russian thistle as the plant’s common name. However, these botanists had a much harder time agreeing on the plant’s scientific name. In general, botanists compare a plant to published accounts of similar plants, or to samples kept as specimens. Unfortunately, no book described the weed and no samples existed in herbaria in the United States.
It is probable that the “group of immigrants” mentioned in paragraph 3
A. had lived in North and South Dakota for many years.
B. wrote several accounts about tumbleweeds.
C. was from southern Russia.
D. imported tumbleweeds into the United States.
- Câu hỏi 569917:
Choose A, B, C or D to complete the following sentence:
Mrs Lan ..................... a lot of vegetables in her garden.
A. grows
B. . does
C. have
D. is
- Câu hỏi 569922:
Choose A, B, C or D to complete the following sentence:
Is Hoa talking ................... her teacher? - Yes, she is.
- Câu hỏi 569924:
Choose A, B, C or D to complete the following sentence:
There are ................. students in the classroom.
- Câu hỏi 569925:
Choose A, B, C or D to complete the following sentence:
My father is the ..................... in my family.
A. tallest
B. tall
C. taller
D. most tall
- Câu hỏi 569933:
Choose A, B, C or D to complete the following sentence:
Come in and ....................... a seat!
- Câu hỏi 569934:
Choose A, B, C or D to complete the following sentence:
The growth of two-income families in the United States .................. of people moving to a new social class.
A. has resulted in millions
B. resulting in millions
C. millions of results
D. results of millions
- Câu hỏi 569936:
Choose A, B, C or D to complete the following sentence:
A well-known large natural lake is Lake Tahoe, ................. straddles the California-Nevada border.
A. which
B. and
C. since
D. for
- Câu hỏi 569946:
Mô tả câu hỏi
Read the texts and do the activities that follow.
What Do You Do?
This week - Chuck Hartman and Helen Reed
|
Chuck Hartman is a zookeeper in New York City. He works with lions, tigers, and other big cats. Chuck also works with animals from Australia.
"I work with some very beautiful animals," says Chuck. "Some of them are dangerous, but they know me, and they like me-I think!"
Does Chuck like his job? "Do I like my job?" Chuck smiles. "No, I don’t like my job. I love my job!”
|
Helen Reed is a window washer in London, England. She washes the windows on tall office buildings in the city center. She cleans windows eight hours a day, five days a week.
"One of the buildings is 40 floors high, and there are more than 5,000 windows," says Helen. "Cleaning the windows is like climbing down a mountain, and the view of London is fantastic."
Is she happy at her work? "Happy?" she says. "I'm delighted! It's the best job in the world!"
|
Read the article. Check True (T) for correct answers or False (F) for wrong answers
| 1. Chuck and Helen work in the same country |
...... |
| 2. Chuck works with lions and tigers. |
...... |
| 3. Chuck works in Australia. |
...... |
| 4. Helen washes the windows of very tall building. |
...... |
| 5. Helen climbs mountains at work. |
...... |
| 6. Helen thinks her job is boring. |
...... |