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29 tháng 6 2018

Fill each gap with a suitable word from the list below:

I've still got some homework left before the end of the year. His volition in god gave him hope during difficult times. Since it would be a highly dangerours mission, the Lieutenant asked for caution. I'll have to take this work home wit me and finish it there. The article was about the international aid world.

18 tháng 7 2017

Give the correct form of thư words in brackets:

1.It's a lovely old house,I agree,but can we afford to(modern) MODERNIZE it?

2.Yesterday the headmaster gave a long but very interesting(speak) SPEECH to the newcomers.

3.Her ambition is to be an(economy) ECONOMIST when shen she grows up.

4.The situtation was(hope)HOPELESS .Nobody could do anything to help.

5.There were over fifty(music)MUSICIANS in the orchestra.

6.There are over one thousand(inhabit)INHABITANTS on the island.

7.I was upset by his(refuse)REFUSAL to cooperate.

8.In his national park,there are(vary)VARIous species of wildlife.

9.The(warm)WARMTH of the fire was very welcome after our long journey.

10.All students have tried hard to pass the university(enter)ENTRANCE exam.

24 tháng 10 2021

3 letting

4 will be stopped

5 will be - hears

6 to arrive

24 tháng 10 2021

3. let

4. will be stopped

5. would be, heard

6. to arrive

24 tháng 10 2021

1, letting

2, will be stopped

3, was, heard

4, to arrive

10 tháng 11 2021

Taking

15 tháng 8 2021

Give the correct word form of these words

 

1. (Friend) ……………friendship……….……..is based on shared interest.
2. I want to (large) ……………enlarge…….…….the lawn.
3. Don’t (entrance)………………enter……………….the room without knocking.
4. He gets very angry if you (agree)………….……disagree.……… with his idea.
5. Is there any (necessary)………necessity……………..… to treat her so badly?

 

II. Complete the following sentences with an appropriate form of the given word. 1. Good (educate)…………………………. can help people get rid of taking risk.2. Are there any youth (organize)………………………. in your country?3. These plants can grow (nature)………………………. in poor soils.4. The teacher asked the students to choose an (act)……………….. partner for the next   5. “When is the (enroll)……………….. in this school?” “It’s the first week of August”.6. “Who is your favorite (act)…………………………., Lan?” “I think it’s Tom...
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II. Complete the following sentences with an appropriate form of the given word.

1. Good (educate)…………………………. can help people get rid of taking risk.

2. Are there any youth (organize)………………………. in your country?

3. These plants can grow (nature)………………………. in poor soils.

4. The teacher asked the students to choose an (act)……………….. partner for the next   

5. “When is the (enroll)……………….. in this school?” “It’s the first week of August”.

6. “Who is your favorite (act)…………………………., Lan?” “I think it’s Tom Hank”.

7. If you want to be a member of the club, please fill out this (apply) ……………………..form.

8. What is the (deep)……………………… of the river?

9. There is some (similar)……………………….. in the way the two groups work.

10. He can’t get higher education because of his (poor)………………………………….

III. Fill in each blank with a suitable preposition.

1. She went out the room ________________ saying a word.

2. Hold____________ a minute while I get my breath back.

3. My parents are tired____________ living in the city.       

4. She’s still looking____________ a job.

5. The increase in population has led________ overcrowding in many cities.

GIẢI THÍCH LUÔN GIÚP MÌNH

1
18 tháng 2 2022

II. Complete the following sentences with an appropriate form of the given word.

1. Good (educate)……education……………………. can help people get rid of taking risk.

2. Are there any youth (organize)……………organization…………. in your country?

3. These plants can grow (nature)……naturally…………………. in poor soils.

4. The teacher asked the students to choose an (act)……activity………….. partner for the next   

5. “When is the (enroll)……enrollment………….. in this school?” “It’s the first week of August”.

6. “Who is your favorite (act)………actor…………………., Lan?” “I think it’s Tom Hank”.

7. If you want to be a member of the club, please fill out this (apply) ……………application………..form.

8. What is the (deep)……………depth………… of the river?

9. There is some (similar)………similarity……………….. in the way the two groups work.

10. He can’t get higher education because of his (poor)………poverty………………………….

III. Fill in each blank with a suitable preposition.

1. She went out the room ____without____________ saying a word.

2. Hold_____on_______ a minute while I get my breath back.

3. My parents are tired___of_________ living in the city.       

4. She’s still looking____for________ a job.

5. The increase in population has led____to____ overcrowding in many cities.

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 35 to 42.   The idea of preserving biological diversity gives most people a warm feeling inside. But what, exactly, is diversity? And which kind is most worth preserving? It may be anathema to save-the-lot environmentalists who hate setting such priorities, but academics are starting to cook up answers.   Andrew Solow, a mathematician at the Woods Hole...
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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 35 to 42.

  The idea of preserving biological diversity gives most people a warm feeling inside. But what, exactly, is diversity? And which kind is most worth preserving? It may be anathema to save-the-lot environmentalists who hate setting such priorities, but academics are starting to cook up answers.

  Andrew Solow, a mathematician at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, and his colleagues argue that in the eyes of conservation, all species should not be equal. Even more controversially, they suggest that preserving the rarest is not always the best approach. Their measure of diversity is the amount of evolutionary distance between species. They reckon that if choices must be made, then the number of times that cousins are removed from one another should be one of the criteria.

  This makes sense from both a practical and an aesthetic point of view. Close relatives have many genes in common. If those genes might be medically or agriculturally valuable, saving one is nearly as good as saving both. And different forms are more interesting to admire and study than lots of things that look the same. Dr Solow’s group illustrates its thesis with an example. Six species of crane are at some risk of extinction. Breeding in captivity might save them. But suppose there were only enough money to protect three. Which ones should be picked?

  The genetic distances between 14 species of cranes, including the six at risk, have already been established using a technique known as DNA hybridisation. The group estimated how likely it was that each of these 14 species would become extinct in the next 50 years. Unendangered species were assigned a 10% chance of meeting the Darwinian reaper-man; the most vulnerable, a 90% chance. Captive breeding was assumed to reduce an otherwise endangered species’ risk to the 10% level of the safest. Dr Solow’s computer permed all possible combinations of three from six and came to the conclusion that protecting the Siberian, white-naped and black-necked cranes gave the smallest likely loss of biological diversity over the next five decades. The other three had close relatives in little need of protection. Even if they became extinct, most of their genes would be saved.

  Building on the work of this group, Martin Weitzman, of Harvard University, argues that conservation policy needs to take account not only of some firm measure of the genetic relationships of species to each other and their likelihood of survival, but also the costs of preserving them. Where species are equally important in genetic terms, and - an important and improbable precondition - where the protection of one species can be assured at the expense of another, he argues for making safe species safer, rather than endangered species less endangered.

  In practice, it is difficult to choose between species. Most of those at risk - especially plants, the group most likely to yield useful medicines - are under threat because their habitats are in trouble, not because they are being shot, or plucked, to extinction. Nor can conservationists choose among the millions of species that theory predicts must exist, but that have not yet been classified by the biologists assigned to that tedious task.

  This is not necessarily cause for despair. At the moment, the usual way to save the genes in these creatures is to find the bits of the world with the largest number of species and try to protect them from the bulldozers. What economists require from biologists are more sophisticated ways to estimate the diversity of groups of organisms that happen to live together, as well as those which are related to each other. With clearer goals established, economic theory can then tell environmentalists where to go.

[from The Economist]

Most species are endangered because _____________.

A. biologists haven’t classified them 

B. they are hunted or picked 

C. we don’t care enough about them 

D. the places they live in are being destroyed

1
30 tháng 7 2018

Chọn D

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 35 to 42.   The idea of preserving biological diversity gives most people a warm feeling inside. But what, exactly, is diversity? And which kind is most worth preserving? It may be anathema to save-the-lot environmentalists who hate setting such priorities, but academics are starting to cook up answers.   Andrew Solow, a mathematician at the Woods Hole...
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 from 35 to 42.

  The idea of preserving biological diversity gives most people a warm feeling inside. But what, exactly, is diversity? And which kind is most worth preserving? It may be anathema to save-the-lot environmentalists who hate setting such priorities, but academics are starting to cook up answers.

  Andrew Solow, a mathematician at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, and his colleagues argue that in the eyes of conservation, all species should not be equal. Even more controversially, they suggest that preserving the rarest is not always the best approach. Their measure of diversity is the amount of evolutionary distance between species. They reckon that if choices must be made, then the number of times that cousins are removed from one another should be one of the criteria.

  This makes sense from both a practical and an aesthetic point of view. Close relatives have many genes in common. If those genes might be medically or agriculturally valuable, saving one is nearly as good as saving both. And different forms are more interesting to admire and study than lots of things that look the same. Dr Solow’s group illustrates its thesis with an example. Six species of crane are at some risk of extinction. Breeding in captivity might save them. But suppose there were only enough money to protect three. Which ones should be picked?

  The genetic distances between 14 species of cranes, including the six at risk, have already been established using a technique known as DNA hybridisation. The group estimated how likely it was that each of these 14 species would become extinct in the next 50 years. Unendangered species were assigned a 10% chance of meeting the Darwinian reaper-man; the most vulnerable, a 90% chance. Captive breeding was assumed to reduce an otherwise endangered species’ risk to the 10% level of the safest. Dr Solow’s computer permed all possible combinations of three from six and came to the conclusion that protecting the Siberian, white-naped and black-necked cranes gave the smallest likely loss of biological diversity over the next five decades. The other three had close relatives in little need of protection. Even if they became extinct, most of their genes would be saved.

  Building on the work of this group, Martin Weitzman, of Harvard University, argues that conservation policy needs to take account not only of some firm measure of the genetic relationships of species to each other and their likelihood of survival, but also the costs of preserving them. Where species are equally important in genetic terms, and - an important and improbable precondition - where the protection of one species can be assured at the expense of another, he argues for making safe species safer, rather than endangered species less endangered.

  In practice, it is difficult to choose between species. Most of those at risk - especially plants, the group most likely to yield useful medicines - are under threat because their habitats are in trouble, not because they are being shot, or plucked, to extinction. Nor can conservationists choose among the millions of species that theory predicts must exist, but that have not yet been classified by the biologists assigned to that tedious task.

  This is not necessarily cause for despair. At the moment, the usual way to save the genes in these creatures is to find the bits of the world with the largest number of species and try to protect them from the bulldozers. What economists require from biologists are more sophisticated ways to estimate the diversity of groups of organisms that happen to live together, as well as those which are related to each other. With clearer goals established, economic theory can then tell environmentalists where to go.

[from The Economist]

According to the writer what has to be done first is for _____________.

A. biologists to instruct economists 

B. biologists to classify undiscovered species 

C. developers to stop destroying habitats 

D. economists to instruct biologists

1
9 tháng 4 2018

Chọn A