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26 tháng 2 2022

26 tháng 2 2022

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 43 to 50. All over the country young people are entering a world of homelessness and poverty, according to a recent report by the housing group, Shelter. Nearly 150,000 young people aged between sixteen and twenty-five will become homeless this year, says Shelter. Some of the young homeless may sleep out in the open in such places as 'cardboard city' in...
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 43 to 50.

All over the country young people are entering a world of homelessness and poverty, according to a recent report by the housing group, Shelter. Nearly 150,000 young people aged between sixteen and twenty-five will become homeless this year, says Shelter. Some of the young homeless may sleep out in the open in such places as 'cardboard city' in London, where people of all ages sleep in the open air in their only homes - cardboard boxes. Others may find accommodation in shelters run by voluntary organizations or get a place in a hostel, which gives them board for up to ten weeks.’

But who are these people? Those who are seeking a roof over their heads are mostly not runaways but “throwaways” - people who have been thrown out of their homes or forced to leave because of parental divorce, an unsympathetic step-parent or one of many other reasons.

Take the case of one sixteen-year-old schoolgirl, Alice. She did not come from a poor home and had just passed her exams with good results. The Shelter team met her in a hostel where she was doing her physics homework. It turned out that her parents had thrown her out of her home for no other reason that she wanted to do Science Advanced Level exams - which her parents refused her permission to do, saying that sciences were unladylike!

Shelter says that the Government's laws do nothing to help these youngsters. Rising rents, the shortage of cheap housing and a cut in benefits for young people under the age of twenty-five are causing a national problem, according to Shelter. The recent changes in the benefit laws mean that someone aged between sixteen and twenty-five gets less than older people and they can only claim state help if they prove that they left home for a good reason.

Shelter believes that because of the major cuts in benefits to young people, more and more are being forced to sleep on the streets. Shelter also points out that if you are homeless, you can't get a job because employers will not hire someone without a permanent address; and if you can't get a job, you are homeless because you don't have any money to pay for accommodation. It's an impossible situation.

(Source: FCE success workbook)

 

Why was Alice turned out of her home? 

A. She refused to do her homework in the evening

B. She didn’t want to study for her Advanced Level Exams

C. She had not obtained desirable marks in her exams

D. Her parents didn’t argee with what she wanted to do

1
31 tháng 10 2017

Chọn D

Kiến thức: Đọc hiểu

Giải thích:

Tại sao Alice bị đuổi ra khỏi nhà?

  A. Cô ấy từ chối làm bài tập về nhà vào buổi tối.

  B. Cô đã không muốn học cho kỳ thi Giáo dục Phổ thông Bậc Cao của cô ấy.

  C. Cô ấy đã không đạt được điểm mong muốn trong các kỳ thi của cô ấy.

  D. Cha mẹ cô ấy đã không đồng ý với những gì cô ấy muốn làm.

Thông tin: her parents had thrown her out of her home for no other reason that she wanted to do Science Advanced Level exams - which her parents refused her permission to do

Tạm dịch: Cha mẹ cô ấy đã đuổi cô ấy ra khỏi nhà vì một lí do không gì khác ngoài việc cô ấy muốn làm bài thi Khoa học Giáo dục Phổ thông Bậc Cao – điều mà cha mẹ đã không cho phép

 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 43 to 50.All over the country young people are entering a world of homelessness and poverty, according to a recent report by the housing group, Shelter. Nearly 150,000 young people aged between sixteen and twenty-five will become homeless this year, says Shelter. Some of the young homeless may sleep out in the open in such places as 'cardboard city' in...
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 43 to 50.

All over the country young people are entering a world of homelessness and poverty, according to a recent report by the housing group, Shelter. Nearly 150,000 young people aged between sixteen and twenty-five will become homeless this year, says Shelter. Some of the young homeless may sleep out in the open in such places as 'cardboard city' in London, where people of all ages sleep in the open air in their only homes - cardboard boxes. Others may find accommodation in shelters run by voluntary organizations or get a place in a hostel, which gives them board for up to ten weeks.’

But who are these people? Those who are seeking a roof over their heads are mostly not runaways but “throwaways” - people who have been thrown out of their homes or forced to leave because of parental divorce, an unsympathetic step-parent or one of many other reasons.

Take the case of one sixteen-year-old schoolgirl, Alice. She did not come from a poor home and had just passed her exams with good results. The Shelter team met her in a hostel where she was doing her physics homework. It turned out that her parents had thrown her out of her home for no other reason that she wanted to do Science Advanced Level exams - which her parents refused her permission to do, saying that sciences were unladylike!

Shelter says that the Government's laws do nothing to help these youngsters. Rising rents, the shortage of cheap housing and a cut in benefits for young people under the age of twenty-five are causing a national problem, according to Shelter. The recent changes in the benefit laws mean that someone aged between sixteen and twenty-five gets less than older people and they can only claim state help if they prove that they left home for a good reason.

Shelter believes that because of the major cuts in benefits to young people, more and more are being forced to sleep on the streets. Shelter also points out that if you are homeless, you can't get a job because employers will not hire someone without a permanent address; and if you can't get a job, you are homeless because you don't have any money to pay for accommodation. It's an impossible situation.

(Source: FCE success workbook)

 

 

The word “Others” in paragraph 1 refers to _________. 

A. voluntary organizations 

B. young people 

C. people of all ages 

D. the young homeless 

1
3 tháng 10 2018

Chọn D

Kiến thức: Đọc hiểu

Giải thích:

Từ “Others” trong đoạn 1 đề cập đến _________.

  A. tổ chức tình nguyện                              

B. thanh niên              

C. người ở mọi lứa tuổi                                

D. người trẻ vô gia cư

Some of the young homeless may sleep out in the open in such places as 'cardboard city' in London, where people of all ages sleep in the open air in their only homes - cardboard boxes. Others may find accommodation in shelters run by voluntary organizations

Tạm dịch: Một số người trẻ vô gia cư có thể ngủ ngoài trời ở những nơi như “thành phố bằng bìa cứng” ở London, nơi mọi người ở mọi lứa tuổi ngủ ngoài trời trong ngôi nhà duy nhất của họ - hộp bìa các-tông. Những người khác có thể tìm chỗ ở trong các nhà tạm trú do các tổ chức tình nguyện quản lí

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 43 to 50.All over the country young people are entering a world of homelessness and poverty, according to a recent report by the housing group, Shelter. Nearly 150,000 young people aged between sixteen and twenty-five will become homeless this year, says Shelter. Some of the young homeless may sleep out in the open in such places as 'cardboard city' in...
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 43 to 50.

All over the country young people are entering a world of homelessness and poverty, according to a recent report by the housing group, Shelter. Nearly 150,000 young people aged between sixteen and twenty-five will become homeless this year, says Shelter. Some of the young homeless may sleep out in the open in such places as 'cardboard city' in London, where people of all ages sleep in the open air in their only homes - cardboard boxes. Others may find accommodation in shelters run by voluntary organizations or get a place in a hostel, which gives them board for up to ten weeks.’

But who are these people? Those who are seeking a roof over their heads are mostly not runaways but “throwaways” - people who have been thrown out of their homes or forced to leave because of parental divorce, an unsympathetic step-parent or one of many other reasons.

Take the case of one sixteen-year-old schoolgirl, Alice. She did not come from a poor home and had just passed her exams with good results. The Shelter team met her in a hostel where she was doing her physics homework. It turned out that her parents had thrown her out of her home for no other reason that she wanted to do Science Advanced Level exams - which her parents refused her permission to do, saying that sciences were unladylike!

Shelter says that the Government's laws do nothing to help these youngsters. Rising rents, the shortage of cheap housing and a cut in benefits for young people under the age of twenty-five are causing a national problem, according to Shelter. The recent changes in the benefit laws mean that someone aged between sixteen and twenty-five gets less than older people and they can only claim state help if they prove that they left home for a good reason.

Shelter believes that because of the major cuts in benefits to young people, more and more are being forced to sleep on the streets. Shelter also points out that if you are homeless, you can't get a job because employers will not hire someone without a permanent address; and if you can't get a job, you are homeless because you don't have any money to pay for accommodation. It's an impossible situation.

(Source: FCE success workbook)

 

The changes in the system of benefits mean that ___________. 

A. young people do not receive as much money as those over twenty-five 

B. anyone under twenty-five and not living at home will receive help with food and accommodation 

C. the under twenty-fives can claim money only if they have left home 

D. young people cannot claim money unless they are under sixteen or over twenty-five 

1
4 tháng 10 2017

Chọn A

Kiến thức: Đọc hiểu

Giải thích: ‘

Những thay đổi trong hệ thống lợi ích có nghĩa là ___________.

  A. những người trẻ tuổi không nhận được nhiều tiền như những người trên hai mươi lăm tuổi

  B. bất cứ ai dưới hai mươi lăm tuổi và không sống ở nhà sẽ nhận được sự giúp đỡ về thức ăn và chỗ ở

  C. những người dưới hai mươi tuổi chỉ có thể đòi tiền nếu họ rời khỏi nhà

  D. những người trẻ tuổi không thể đòi tiền trừ khi họ dưới mười sáu hoặc hơn hai mươi lăm tuổi

Thông tin: The recent changes in the benefit laws mean that someone aged between sixteen and twenty-five gets less than older people

Tạm dịch: Những thay đổi gần đây trong luật trợ cấp đồng nghĩa với việc những người trong khoảng 16-25 tuổi được nhận ít hơn những người lớn tuổi khác

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 43 to 50. All over the country young people are entering a world of homelessness and poverty, according to a recent report by the housing group, Shelter. Nearly 150,000 young people aged between sixteen and twenty-five will become homeless this year, says Shelter. Some of the young homeless may sleep out in the open in such places as 'cardboard city' in...
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 43 to 50.

All over the country young people are entering a world of homelessness and poverty, according to a recent report by the housing group, Shelter. Nearly 150,000 young people aged between sixteen and twenty-five will become homeless this year, says Shelter. Some of the young homeless may sleep out in the open in such places as 'cardboard city' in London, where people of all ages sleep in the open air in their only homes - cardboard boxes. Others may find accommodation in shelters run by voluntary organizations or get a place in a hostel, which gives them board for up to ten weeks.’

But who are these people? Those who are seeking a roof over their heads are mostly not runaways but “throwaways” - people who have been thrown out of their homes or forced to leave because of parental divorce, an unsympathetic step-parent or one of many other reasons.

Take the case of one sixteen-year-old schoolgirl, Alice. She did not come from a poor home and had just passed her exams with good results. The Shelter team met her in a hostel where she was doing her physics homework. It turned out that her parents had thrown her out of her home for no other reason that she wanted to do Science Advanced Level exams - which her parents refused her permission to do, saying that sciences were unladylike!

Shelter says that the Government's laws do nothing to help these youngsters. Rising rents, the shortage of cheap housing and a cut in benefits for young people under the age of twenty-five are causing a national problem, according to Shelter. The recent changes in the benefit laws mean that someone aged between sixteen and twenty-five gets less than older people and they can only claim state help if they prove that they left home for a good reason.

Shelter believes that because of the major cuts in benefits to young people, more and more are being forced to sleep on the streets. Shelter also points out that if you are homeless, you can't get a job because employers will not hire someone without a permanent address; and if you can't get a job, you are homeless because you don't have any money to pay for accommodation. It's an impossible situation.

(Source: FCE success workbook)

According to the passage, most young people become homeless because _________. 

A. circumstances make it possible for them to live at home 

B. they do not want to live with a divorced parent 

C. they have run away from home 

D. they have thrown away any chances of living at home by behaving badly 

1
16 tháng 11 2019

Chọn A

Kiến thức: Đọc hiểu

Giải thích:

Theo đoạn văn, hầu hết những người trẻ tuổi trở thành vô gia cư vì _________.

  A. hoàn cảnh khiến họ có thể sống ở nhà

  B. họ không muốn sống với cha mẹ ly dị

  C. họ đã bỏ nhà ra đi

  D. họ đã vứt bỏ mọi cơ hội sống ở nhà bằng cách cư xử tồi tệ

Thông tin: Those who are seeking a roof over their heads are mostly not runaways but “throwaways” - people who have been thrown out of their homes or forced to leave because of parental divorce, an unsympathetic step-parent or one of many other reasons.

Tạm dịch: Những người đang tìm kiếm một mái nhà để che nắng che mưa hầu hết không phải là kẻ chạy trốn mà là “người phải ra đi”, người phải ra khỏi nhà hoặc buộc phải rời đi vì ly hôn của cha mẹ, cha mẹ kế không thông cảm hoặc một trong nhiều lý do khác

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 43 to 50.All over the country young people are entering a world of homelessness and poverty, according to a recent report by the housing group, Shelter. Nearly 150,000 young people aged between sixteen and twenty-five will become homeless this year, says Shelter. Some of the young homeless may sleep out in the open in such places as 'cardboard city' in...
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 43 to 50.

All over the country young people are entering a world of homelessness and poverty, according to a recent report by the housing group, Shelter. Nearly 150,000 young people aged between sixteen and twenty-five will become homeless this year, says Shelter. Some of the young homeless may sleep out in the open in such places as 'cardboard city' in London, where people of all ages sleep in the open air in their only homes - cardboard boxes. Others may find accommodation in shelters run by voluntary organizations or get a place in a hostel, which gives them board for up to ten weeks.’

But who are these people? Those who are seeking a roof over their heads are mostly not runaways but “throwaways” - people who have been thrown out of their homes or forced to leave because of parental divorce, an unsympathetic step-parent or one of many other reasons.

Take the case of one sixteen-year-old schoolgirl, Alice. She did not come from a poor home and had just passed her exams with good results. The Shelter team met her in a hostel where she was doing her physics homework. It turned out that her parents had thrown her out of her home for no other reason that she wanted to do Science Advanced Level exams - which her parents refused her permission to do, saying that sciences were unladylike!

Shelter says that the Government's laws do nothing to help these youngsters. Rising rents, the shortage of cheap housing and a cut in benefits for young people under the age of twenty-five are causing a national problem, according to Shelter. The recent changes in the benefit laws mean that someone aged between sixteen and twenty-five gets less than older people and they can only claim state help if they prove that they left home for a good reason.

Shelter believes that because of the major cuts in benefits to young people, more and more are being forced to sleep on the streets. Shelter also points out that if you are homeless, you can't get a job because employers will not hire someone without a permanent address; and if you can't get a job, you are homeless because you don't have any money to pay for accommodation. It's an impossible situation.

(Source: FCE success workbook)

 

According to Shelter, once young people have been forced onto the streets, __________

A. they will never go back home again 

B. their benefits will be severely cut 

C. they will encourage their friends to do the same 

D. they will find it difficult to find work 

1
9 tháng 5 2017

Chọn D

Kiến thức: Đọc hiểu

Giải thích:

Theo Shelter, một khi những người trẻ tuổi bị buộc phải ra đường, thì __________.

  A. họ sẽ không bao giờ trở về nhà nữa

  B. lợi ích của họ sẽ bị cắt giảm nghiêm trọng

  C. họ sẽ khuyến khích bạn bè của họ làm điều tương tự

  D. họ sẽ khó tìm việc

Thông tin: Shelter also points out that if you are homeless, you can't get a job

Tạm dịch: Shelter cũng chỉ ra rằng nếu bạn vô gia cư, bạn không thể có việc làm

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 43 to 50. All over the country young people are entering a world of homelessness and poverty, according to a recent report by the housing group, Shelter. Nearly 150,000 young people aged between sixteen and twenty-five will become homeless this year, says Shelter. Some of the young homeless may sleep out in the open in such places as 'cardboard city' in...
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 43 to 50.

All over the country young people are entering a world of homelessness and poverty, according to a recent report by the housing group, Shelter. Nearly 150,000 young people aged between sixteen and twenty-five will become homeless this year, says Shelter. Some of the young homeless may sleep out in the open in such places as 'cardboard city' in London, where people of all ages sleep in the open air in their only homes - cardboard boxes. Others may find accommodation in shelters run by voluntary organizations or get a place in a hostel, which gives them board for up to ten weeks.’

But who are these people? Those who are seeking a roof over their heads are mostly not runaways but “throwaways” - people who have been thrown out of their homes or forced to leave because of parental divorce, an unsympathetic step-parent or one of many other reasons.

Take the case of one sixteen-year-old schoolgirl, Alice. She did not come from a poor home and had just passed her exams with good results. The Shelter team met her in a hostel where she was doing her physics homework. It turned out that her parents had thrown her out of her home for no other reason that she wanted to do Science Advanced Level exams - which her parents refused her permission to do, saying that sciences were unladylike!

Shelter says that the Government's laws do nothing to help these youngsters. Rising rents, the shortage of cheap housing and a cut in benefits for young people under the age of twenty-five are causing a national problem, according to Shelter. The recent changes in the benefit laws mean that someone aged between sixteen and twenty-five gets less than older people and they can only claim state help if they prove that they left home for a good reason.

Shelter believes that because of the major cuts in benefits to young people, more and more are being forced to sleep on the streets. Shelter also points out that if you are homeless, you can't get a job because employers will not hire someone without a permanent address; and if you can't get a job, you are homeless because you don't have any money to pay for accommodation. It's an impossible situation.

(Source: FCE success workbook)

The word “benefits” in paragraph 4 are probably _________. 

A. extra wages for part-time workers 

B. financial support for those in need 

C. a law about distributing money 

D. gifts of food and clothing 

1
10 tháng 11 2019

Chọn B

Kiến thức: Từ đồng nghĩa

Giải thích:

Từ “benefits” trong đoạn 4 có nghĩa là _______.

  A. tiền lương làm thêm cho người làm việc bán thời gian

  B. hỗ trợ tài chính cho những người có nhu cầu

  C. một luật về phân phối tiền

  D. quà tặng thực phẩm và quần áo

Thông tin: Shelter says that the Government's laws do nothing to help these youngsters. Rising rents, the shortage of cheap housing and a cut in benefits for young people

Tạm dịch: Shelter nói rằng luật pháp của Chính phủ không làm gì để giúp những người trẻ này. Giá thuê tăng, sự thiếu hụt nhà ở giá rẻ và cắt giảm lợi ích cho những người trẻ

 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 43 to 50.All over the country young people are entering a world of homelessness and poverty, according to a recent report by the housing group, Shelter. Nearly 150,000 young people aged between sixteen and twenty-five will become homeless this year, says Shelter. Some of the young homeless may sleep out in the open in such places as 'cardboard city' in...
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 43 to 50.

All over the country young people are entering a world of homelessness and poverty, according to a recent report by the housing group, Shelter. Nearly 150,000 young people aged between sixteen and twenty-five will become homeless this year, says Shelter. Some of the young homeless may sleep out in the open in such places as 'cardboard city' in London, where people of all ages sleep in the open air in their only homes - cardboard boxes. Others may find accommodation in shelters run by voluntary organizations or get a place in a hostel, which gives them board for up to ten weeks.’

But who are these people? Those who are seeking a roof over their heads are mostly not runaways but “throwaways” - people who have been thrown out of their homes or forced to leave because of parental divorce, an unsympathetic step-parent or one of many other reasons.

Take the case of one sixteen-year-old schoolgirl, Alice. She did not come from a poor home and had just passed her exams with good results. The Shelter team met her in a hostel where she was doing her physics homework. It turned out that her parents had thrown her out of her home for no other reason that she wanted to do Science Advanced Level exams - which her parents refused her permission to do, saying that sciences were unladylike!

Shelter says that the Government's laws do nothing to help these youngsters. Rising rents, the shortage of cheap housing and a cut in benefits for young people under the age of twenty-five are causing a national problem, according to Shelter. The recent changes in the benefit laws mean that someone aged between sixteen and twenty-five gets less than older people and they can only claim state help if they prove that they left home for a good reason.

Shelter believes that because of the major cuts in benefits to young people, more and more are being forced to sleep on the streets. Shelter also points out that if you are homeless, you can't get a job because employers will not hire someone without a permanent address; and if you can't get a job, you are homeless because you don't have any money to pay for accommodation. It's an impossible situation.

(Source: FCE success workbook)

 

 

What is the reading passage mainly about?

A. The problem of unemployed people all over the world 

B. Timely actions from the governement to fight homelessness 

C. The plight of young, homless people 

D. An increasingly popular trend among youngsters 

1
4 tháng 9 2017

Chọn C 

Kiến thức: Đọc hiểu

Giải thích:

Đoạn văn đọc chủ yếu nói về điều gì?

  A. Vấn đề người thất nghiệp trên toàn thế giới

  B. Hành động kịp thời từ chính quyền để chống lại tình trạng vô gia cư

  C. Hoàn cảnh của những người trẻ tuổi - vô gia cư

  D. Một xu hướng ngày càng phổ biến trong giới trẻ

Thông tin: All over the country young people are entering a world of homelessness and poverty

Đoạn 2: nói về nguyên nhân những người trẻ phải bỏ nhà ra đi

Đoạn 3: ví dụ cụ thể của một người trẻ bỏ nhà ra đi

Đoạn 4, 5: những bất lợi của người trẻ vô gia cư và những biên pháp của chính phủ

Tạm dịch: những người trẻ tuổi trên tất cả đất nước đang bước vào một thế giới vô gia cư và nghèo đói

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 43 to 50.All over the country young people are entering a world of homelessness and poverty, according to a recent report by the housing group, Shelter. Nearly 150,000 young people aged between sixteen and twenty-five will become homeless this year, says Shelter. Some of the young homeless may sleep out in the open in such places as 'cardboard city' in...
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 43 to 50.

All over the country young people are entering a world of homelessness and poverty, according to a recent report by the housing group, Shelter. Nearly 150,000 young people aged between sixteen and twenty-five will become homeless this year, says Shelter. Some of the young homeless may sleep out in the open in such places as 'cardboard city' in London, where people of all ages sleep in the open air in their only homes - cardboard boxes. Others may find accommodation in shelters run by voluntary organizations or get a place in a hostel, which gives them board for up to ten weeks.’

But who are these people? Those who are seeking a roof over their heads are mostly not runaways but “throwaways” - people who have been thrown out of their homes or forced to leave because of parental divorce, an unsympathetic step-parent or one of many other reasons.

Take the case of one sixteen-year-old schoolgirl, Alice. She did not come from a poor home and had just passed her exams with good results. The Shelter team met her in a hostel where she was doing her physics homework. It turned out that her parents had thrown her out of her home for no other reason that she wanted to do Science Advanced Level exams - which her parents refused her permission to do, saying that sciences were unladylike!

Shelter says that the Government's laws do nothing to help these youngsters. Rising rents, the shortage of cheap housing and a cut in benefits for young people under the age of twenty-five are causing a national problem, according to Shelter. The recent changes in the benefit laws mean that someone aged between sixteen and twenty-five gets less than older people and they can only claim state help if they prove that they left home for a good reason.

Shelter believes that because of the major cuts in benefits to young people, more and more are being forced to sleep on the streets. Shelter also points out that if you are homeless, you can't get a job because employers will not hire someone without a permanent address; and if you can't get a job, you are homeless because you don't have any money to pay for accommodation. It's an impossible situation.

(Source: FCE success workbook)

 

 

The word “permanent” in paragraph 5 is closet meaning to ___________. 

A. flexible 

B. stable 

C. simple 

D. obvious 

1
24 tháng 2 2017

Chọn B

Kiến thức: Từ đồng nghĩa

Giải thích:

Từ “permanent” (cố định, lâu dài) trong đoạn 5 đồng nghĩa với từ ________.

  A. flexible (adj): linh hoạt                          

B. stable (adj): ổn định

  C. simple (adj): đơn giản                                                             

D. obvious (adj): rõ ràng, hiển nhiên

=> permanet = stable

Thông tin: Shelter also points out that if you are homeless, you can't get a job because employers will not hire someone without a permanent address; and if you can't get a job, you are homeless because you don't have any money to pay for accommodation.

Tạm dịch: Shelter cũng chỉ ra rằng nếu bạn vô gia cư, bạn không thể có việc làm vì nhà tuyển dụng sẽ không thuê ai đó mà không có địa chỉ thường trú; và nếu bạn không thể kiếm được một công việc, bạn vô gia cư vì bạn không có tiền để trả cho chỗ ở.

Dịch bài đọc:

Theo một báo cáo gần đây của nhóm nghiên cứu về dân cư Shelter, những người trẻ tuổi trên tất cả đất nước đang bước vào một thế giới của vô gia cư và nghèo đói. Gần 150.000 thanh niên từ mười sáu đến hai mươi lăm tuổi sẽ trở nên vô gia cư trong năm nay, theo Shelter. Một số người trẻ vô gia cư có thể ngủ ngoài trời ở những nơi như “thành phố bằng bìa cứng” ở London, nơi mọi người ở mọi lứa tuổi ngủ ngoài trời trong ngôi nhà duy nhất của họ - hộp bìa các-tông. Những người khác có thể tìm chỗ ở trong các nhà tạm trú do các tổ chức tình nguyện quản lí hoặc có được một chỗ trong ký túc xá, điều này cho phép họ ở đến mười tuần.

Nhưng những người này là ai? Những người đang tìm kiếm một mái nhà để che nắng che mưa, hầu hết không phải là kẻ chạy trốn mà là “người phải ra đi”, người phải ra khỏi nhà hoặc buộc phải rời đi vì cha mẹ ly hôn, cha mẹ kế không thông cảm hoặc một trong nhiều lý do khác.

Lấy trường hợp của một nữ sinh mười sáu tuổi, Alice. Cô ấy không xuất thân từ một ngôi nhà nghèo khó và vừa trải qua kỳ thi với kết quả tốt. Đội ngũ Shelter gặp cô trong một nhà nghỉ nơi cô đang làm bài tập vật lý. Hóa ra cha mẹ cô đã đuổi cô ra khỏi nhà không vì lý do nào khác là cô muốn làm bài kiểm tra Khoa học Giáo dục Phổ thông Bậc Cao - mà cha mẹ cô đã không cho phép cô làm, họ nói rằng khoa học phù hợp với nữ giới!

Shelter nói rằng luật pháp của Chính phủ không làm gì để giúp những người trẻ này. Giá thuê tăng, sự thiếu hụt nhà ở giá rẻ và cắt giảm lợi ích cho những người trẻ dưới hai mươi lăm tuổi đang gây ra một vấn đề quốc gia, theo Shelter. Những thay đổi gần đây trong luật phúc lợi có nghĩa là một người trong độ tuổi từ mười sáu đến hai mươi lăm tuổi ít hơn người già và họ chỉ có thể yêu cầu trợ giúp của nhà nước nếu họ chứng minh rằng họ rời khỏi nhà vì một lý do chính đáng.

Shelter tin rằng vì những cắt giảm lợi ích lớn đối với những người trẻ tuổi, ngày càng có nhiều người bị buộc phải ngủ trên đường phố. Shelter cũng chỉ ra rằng nếu bạn vô gia cư, bạn không thể có việc làm vì nhà tuyển dụng sẽ không thuê ai đó mà không có địa chỉ thường trú; và nếu bạn không thể kiếm được một công việc, bạn vô gia cư vì bạn không có tiền để trả cho chỗ ở. Đó là một tình huống bất khả kháng

dịch đoạn văn sau : High-Tech Bulli​es Mariah Lopez, 12, didn’t have much to cheer about after cheerleading tryouts last month. Girls started a mean rumor about her. The tale spread throughout her school, where more lies started. Soon Mariah started to receive disturbing text messages and calls from numbers she didn’t recognize. When the messages turned into threats, Mariah reached out to adults for help. She told her parents and contacted her school principal. Today, the bully...
Đọc tiếp

dịch đoạn văn sau :

High-Tech Bulli​es

Mariah Lopez, 12, didn’t have much to cheer about after cheerleading tryouts last month. Girls started a mean rumor about her. The tale spread throughout her school, where more lies started. Soon Mariah started to receive disturbing text messages and calls from numbers she didn’t recognize. When the messages turned into threats, Mariah reached out to adults for help. She told her parents and contacted her school principal.

Today, the bully battles have moved to a new frontier-cyberspace. Using emails, instant messages, websites, and cell phones, cyberbullies deliberately harm or threaten others with their identities hidden behind computer their playground predecessors.

Bullying by the Numbers

Criminal-justice professors Justin Patchin and Sameer Hinduja surveyed 1,500 kids aged 10 to 17. They report that about one-third of the kids claimed to have been cyberbullied. Sue Limber and Roin Kowalski, researchers and teachers at Clemson University in South Carolina, recently finished a study of 3,767 students in grades six through eight. They found the most popular method of cyberbullying is instant messaging. Mean messages in chat rooms, emails, and on websites were close behind. Limber and Kowalski also found that girls were twice as likely as boys to be the victims of attacks.

That's E-Nough!

Several states either have laws or are working on laws that require school districts to ban cyberbullying and punish students who are involved. But cracking down on cyberbullying is challenging. Some officials question whether schools can legally punish students for those actions.

Finding out the identity of the bully and getting kids to report a problem pose additional problems. "It is difficult for someone who is being cyberbullied to know who is doing it because identities can often be hidden or false", Limber says. If you are a victim, she advises, ask an adult for help.

Something to Cheer About

Mariah was thankful that her parents and principal got involved. After the cyberbullies were identified, her principal confronted them. Mariah’s school district, which is in Highland, Utah, voted to add cyberbullying to its antibullying rules. Her school’s efforts could give other kids something to cheer about.

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3
3 tháng 5 2017

Ranh doi vai :v

3 tháng 5 2017

là sao?????