ĐỀ SỐ 9 TP
ĐỀ SỐ 9 TP
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1 A great majority of adults in the industrial world – in fact, about 90 per cent – will be married some
time in their lives. Of those who do not, some may choose to remain single, but others will have no
choice. An alarming number who marry will divorce, but this is because marriage itself has lost its
attraction – instead people give up particular relationships and try back. For example, of four out
of ten American marriages that possibly end up divorce, 80 per cent are preludes to further unions.
5 Every society has its own definition of what a perfect marriage it should be. In the Western world,
it seems that a husband and wife have a perfect marriage if they love each other, have no other sex
partner, display trust, loyalty and intimacy, confide in each other, show mutual respect, are willing
to listen to their partner’s concern and agree on their children’s up- bringing. However, from time
to time the balance of social expectations shifts. For example, a study carried out in 1986 showed
that 74 per cent of American couples rating ‘equality in the relationship’ an important component
10 of marriage. We can be fair sure that their great-grandparents (and particularly their great-
grandfathers) did not place the same value in this.
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Section 3: (10 points) Fill in each blank with the correct form of one of the verbs, and one of the
particles in the box. Some words can be used more than once.
try go put carry stick get do look hold
against down over around out on up
1. At school, Luis got into a lot of trouble for something I did, and now he ____ it ____ me.
2. When I was in New York, I was able to ____ ______ several old friends I hadn’t seen for years.
3. The car’s in quite good condition but you can ____ it ____ before you make any decision to buy.
4. If I could ____ it ______ again, I’d do it differently.
5. The price of gas is expected to ____ __ to $1 a gallon within a month.
6. Stop worrying about it. Don’t let this failure _____ you ____.
7. If you __-------------_ working so hard, you’ll make yourself ill.
8. The light suddenly _--------------_, and I couldn’t see a thing.
9. Do you have to go already? Can’t you ----------_ for a few minutes?
10. You’d better _------------__ your cigarette because smoking isn’t allowed in here.
Section 4: (10 points) Give the correct form of the words in brackets.
The advances made by humans have made us the dominant species on our planet. However, several
eminent scientists are concerned that we have become too successful, that our way of life is putting an (1.
PRECEDE)… strain on the Earth's ecosystems and threatening our future as a species. We are confronting
environmental problems that are more taxing than ever before, some of them seemingly (2. SOLVE)…...
Many of the Earth's crises are (3. PERSIST)…….. and inexorably linked. Pollution is an obvious example of
this affecting our air, water and soil.
The air is polluted by (4. EMIT)…emission.. produced by cars and industry. Through acid rain and
greenhouse gases these same exhaust fumes can have a devastating impact on our climate. Climate change
is (5. ARGUE)……… the greatest environmental challenge facing our planet with increased storms, floods,
drought and species losses predicted. This will inevitably have a negative impact on (6. DIVERSIFY)……. and
thus our ecosystem.
The soil is contaminated by factories and power stations which can leave heavy metals in the soil. Other
human activities such as the (7. DEVELOP) …….of land and the clearing of trees also take their toll on the
quality of our soil; deforestation has been shown to cause soil (8. ERODE)…………………. Certain farming
practices can also pollute the land though the use of chemical pesticides and fertilizers. This contamination
in turn affects our rivers and waterways and damages life there. The chemicals enter our food chain,
moving from fish to mammals to us. Our crops are also grown on land that is far from ( 9. SPOIL)…...
Affected species include the polar bear, so not even the Arctic is immune.
Reducing waste and clearing up pollution costs money. Yet it is our quest for wealth that generates so much
of the refuse. There is an urgent need to find a way of life that is less damaging to the Earth. This is not easy,
but it is vital, because pollution is (10. PERVADE)…… and often life-threatening.
Earth is the only place we know of in the universe that can support human life. (1)_______ human
activities are making the planet less fit to live on. As the western world (2) _______ on consuming two-thirds
of the world's resources while half of the world's population do so (3) _______ to stay alive we are rapidly
destroying the (4) _______ resource we have by which all people can survive and prosper. Everywhere fertile
soil is (5) _______ built on or washed into the sea. Renewable resources are exploited so much that they will
never be able to recover (6) _______ We discharge pollutants into the atmosphere without any thought of the
consequences. As a (7) _______ the planet's ability to support people is being (8) _______at the very time when
rising human numbers and consumption are (9) _______ increasingly heavy demands on it.
The Earth's (10) _______ resources are there for us to use. We need food, water, air, energy, medicines,
warmth, shelter and minerals to keep us fed, comfortable, healthy and active. If we are sensible in how we
use the resources they will last indefinitely. But if we use them wastefully and excessively they will soon
run out and everyone will suffer.
Energy is one of the (1) ____ that many people are interested in. It is not an unfamiliar word. It is heard, said,
discussed day after day. It is close to everyone’s (2) ___ life. You turn on the lamp and it is (3) ____ that gives
you light. You turn on a TV and it is energy that gives you pictures and sound. You ride a motorcycle and it
is energy that gives you (4) ____. You cook your meals and it is energy that gives you heat to boil rice.
The problem is that the (5) ____ for energy is rising and that the price of energy is getting higher and
higher. The supply of energy on earth is limited. It cannot provide us all forever. The (6) ___ of energy in the
future is inevitable. Therefore, saving energy is a must if we want to (7) ____ to live in a safe and sound
world.
If we save energy, the environment will be (8) ____ polluted and our health will be better and we will
live a more meaningful life and more happily. Perhaps the best solution to the problem of energy is a (9)
_____ of clean energy coming from the sun: solar energy. This kind of energy is easily available, free, and
inexhaustible. Furthermore, it does not cause (10) ____.
Section 3: (15 points): Read the following passage and choose the best answers:
They are just four, five and six years old right now, but already they are making criminologists
nervous. They are growing up, too frequently, in abusive or broken homes, with little adult supervision and
few positive role models. Left to themselves, they spend much of their time hanging out on the streets or
soaking up violent TV shows. By the year 2005 they will be teenagers–a group that tends to be, in the view
of Northeastern University criminologist James Alan Fox, “temporary sociopaths–impulsive and immature.”
If they also have easy access to guns and drugs, they can be extremely dangerous.
For all the heartening news offered by recent crime statistics, there is an ominous flip side. While
the crime rate is dropping for adults, it is soaring for teens. Between 1990 and 1994, the rate at which
adults age 25 and older committed homicides declined 22%; yet the rate jumped 16% for youths between
14 and 17, the age group that in the early ’90s supplanted 18- to 24-year-olds as the most crime-prone. And
that is precisely the age group that will be booming in the next decade. There are currently 39 million
children under 10 in the U.S., more than at any time since the 1950s. “This is the calm before the crime
storm,” says Fox. “So long as we fool ourselves in thinking that we’re winning the war against crime, we
may be blindsided by this bloodbath of teenage violence that is lurking in the future.”
Demographics don’t have to be destiny, but other social trends do little to contradict the dire
predictions. Nearly all the factors that contribute to youth crime–single-parent households, child abuse,
deteriorating inner-city schools–are getting worse. At the same time, government is becoming less, not
more, interested in spending money to help break the cycle of poverty and crime. All of which has led John
J. DiIulio Jr., a professor of politics and public affairs at Princeton, to warn about a new generation of “super
predators,” youngsters who are coming of age in actual and “moral poverty,” without “the benefit of
parents, teachers, coaches and clergy to teach them right or wrong and show them unconditional love.”
Predicting a generation’s future crime patterns is, of course, risky; especially when outside factors
(Will crack use be up or down? Will gun laws be tightened?) remain unpredictable. Michael Tonry, a
professor of law and public policy at the University of Minnesota, argues that the demographic doomsayers
are unduly alarmist. “There will be a slightly larger number of people relative to the overall population who
are at high risk for doing bad things, so that’s going to have some effect,” he concedes. “But it’s not going to
be an apocalyptic effect.” Norval Morris, professor of law and criminology at the University of Chicago, finds
DiIulio’s notion of super predators too simplistic: “The human animal in young males is quite a violent
animal all over the world. The people who put forth the theory of moral poverty lack a sense of history and
comparative criminology.”
Yet other students of the inner city are more pessimistic. “All the basic elements that spawn teenage
crime are still in place, and in many cases the indicators are worse,” says Jonathan Kozol, author of Amazing
Grace, an examination of poverty in the South Bronx. “There’s a dramatic increase of children in foster care,
and that’s a very high-risk group of kids. We’re not creating new jobs, and we’re not improving education to
suit poor people for the jobs that exist.”
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Can anything defuse the demographic time bomb? Fox urges “reinvesting in children”: improving
schools, creating after-school programs and providing other alternatives to gangs and drugs. DiIulio, a law-
and-order conservative, advocates tougher prosecution and wants to strengthen religious institutions to
instill better values. Yet he opposes the Gingrich-led effort to make deep cuts in social programs. “A failure
to maintain existing welfare and health commitment for kids,” he says, “is to guarantee that the next wave
of juvenile predators will be even worse than we’re dealing with today.” DiIulio urges fellow conservatives
to think of Medicaid not as a health-care program but as “an anticrime policy.”
(Source: Time Magazine)
Questions 1-6: The following reading passage has seven paragraphs A-G.
Choose the correct heading for paragraphs B-G from the list of headings below.
List of Headings
i Why some early social science methods lost popularity
ii The cost implications of research
iii Looking ahead to an unbiased assessment of research
iv A range of social issues that have been usefully studied
v An example of a poor decision that was made too quickly
vi What happens when the figures are wrong
vii One area of research that is rigorously carried out
viii The changing nature of medical trials
ix An investigative study that may lead to a new system
x Why some scientists' theories are considered second-rate
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3. Paragraph D ……………
4. Paragraph E ……………
5. Paragraph F ……………
6. Paragraph G ……………
Questions 7-10: Complete the summary below.
Choose NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the passage for each answer.
Fighting Crime
Some criminals in England are agreeing to take part in a trial designed to help reduce their chances
of (7)....................... . The idea is that while one group of randomly selected criminals undergoes the
usual (8)....................... the other group will discuss the possibility of making some repayment for the crime
by meeting the (9) ....................... . It is yet to be seen whether this system, known as (10) ....................... will
work.
PART IV. WRITING (40 points)
Section 1: (20 points):
A. Rewrite the following sentences in such a way that it is as similar as possible in meaning to the
original sentence. Do Not change the form of the given word.
B. For each of the sentences below, write a new sentence as similar as possible in meaning to the
original one, using the word given.
1. Going to and fro with al the cases is what I can’t stand about holidays
It’s all……………………………………………………………………………..…..
2. The village shop is now being managed by a national supermarket chain.
3. This door is an emergency exit and must never be locked for any reason.
Section 2: (20 points): In a bout 250 – 300 words, write an essay to discuss the following topic:
“School violence is inreasing in schools. What are the causes and effests of this problem?”
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