John ___________ the key to his house and had to wait for long hours outside the house for his parents to return home.
A. is always losing
B. was always losing
C. has been lost
D. has lost
Đáp án đúng: B
Dịch: John luôn làm mất chìa khóa nhà và phải đợi hàng giờ đồng hồ bên ngoài nhà để bố mẹ anh trở về nhà.
We have got a few minutes to wait for the train. Let’s have a cup of coffee.
The green move emerged in the 1960s and 1970s. Its growth was driven by popular and scientific concerns about local and global degradation of the physical environment.
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 following questions.
In 1900, just 13 per cent of the world's people lived in cities. In 2008, the number passed 50 per cent for the first time in history. By 2050, the number will be about 70 per cent. The urban population in Asia and Africa will double, and there will be nearly 30 ‘megacities' – cities with more than 10 million people. So what will life be like for people in the cities of the future? Professor of human geography Ben Rhodes describes his vision of the urban world in 2050.
Life in cities will be very different from how it is today. Energy, especially oil, will be very expensive, so many people will probably work at home, or have their work places close to where they live. There will be less traffic on the roads, and it will be easier for people to be close to their families. For these reasons, cities won't have just one centre where everyone goes to work and shop. Instead, we'll probably see cities with many different centres.
It will be difficult to provide enough water, gas and electricity for really big cities, so these will probably stop growing. Many people from the countryside will move to smaller cities of 500,000 people or less. Transport over long distances will be a lot more expensive than it is now, so people will have to use food and energy from the countryside around their cities. They will use local materials for building, and perhaps traditional styles of architecture too.
The thing I really worry about is that energy may become too expensive for many people. In the end we might have two groups of people: a rich group which can afford energy and lives in clean, green areas, and a bigger, poorer group which can't afford energy and has to live in the more polluted parts of the city. This might lead to serious political problems.
By 2050, 70% of the population will live ___________.
Some of the biggest cities are losing population because people go back to live in rural areas, which is known as urbanization.
____________ pollutants in the air cannot be seen with our naked eyes, we don’t realize the sources of the increasing pollution level.
There is a chance tha the will not come and we may have to go without him.
Daniel has migrated to a major city. He is asking his friend, Anthony, for some information about the accommodation there.
Daniel: "Are there any flats to rent in the city center?" - Anthony: "_______________"
Tony was always in trouble with the police when he was young, but now he's a ________ married man.
The company has just ____________ its plans for the coming year, including the opening of new offices in Paris.
The holiday is also celebrated with small gifts for children and the distribution of food to _________ needy.
What this company needs is a ______ policy for investment in science and technology.
In recent years, there has been a sharp rise _________ the number of people out of work.
It is recommended that the government ____ urbanization to maintain sustainable urban areas.
If the students are overloaded with too much information in such a short period of time, they may switch off. Therefore, you should carefully consider what to give in your lecture.