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Trắc Nghiệm Chủ Đề Đề thi THPT QG

Số lượng câu hỏi : 3876 bài

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Tham khảo 3876 câu hỏi trắc nghiệm về Đề thi THPT QG

  • Câu 1: Mã câu hỏi: 32589

    The word “unveiling” in paragraph 1 is closest in meaning to _____.

    • A. entrance
    • B. introduction
    • C. opening
    • D. promotion
  • Câu 2: Mã câu hỏi: 32590

    According to the passage, who is King Chow?

    • A. A scientist who discovered cloning technology.
    • B. A Professor of Biotechnology.
    • C. A famous Parkinson’s doctor.
    • D. A therapeutic cloning expert. 
  • Câu 3: Mã câu hỏi: 32592

    According to paragraph 4, what animals are in danger of extinction?

    • A. cows
    • B. giant pandas
    • C. all breeds of tiger
    • D. livestock
  • Câu 4: Mã câu hỏi: 32603

    The word “it” in paragraph 2 refers to ______.

    • A. reproductive cloning
    • B. the development of cloning technology
    • C. Hong Kong University of Science and Technology
    • D. the first cloned dog
  • Câu 5: Mã câu hỏi: 32605

    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 PRAISE OF FAST FOOD

    The media and a multitude of cookbook writers would have us believe that modern, fast, processed food is a disaster, and that it is a mark of sophistication to bemoan the steel roller mill and sliced white bread while yearning for stone-ground flour and a brick oven. Perhaps, we should call those scorn industrialised food, culinary Luddites, after the 19th-century English workers who rebelled against the machines that destroyed their way of life. Instead of technology, what these Luddites abhor is commercial sauces and any synthetic aid to flavouring our food.

    Eating fresh, natural food was regarded with suspicion verging on horror; only the uncivilised, the poor, and the starving resorted to it. The ancient Greeks regarded the consumption of greens and root vegetables as a sign of bad times, and many succeeding civilizations believed the same. Happiness was not a verdant garden abounding in fresh fruits, but a securely locked storehouse jammed with preserved, processed foods.

    What about the idea that the best food is handmade in the country? That food comes from the country goes without saying. However, the idea that country people eat better than city dwellers is preposterous. Very few of our ancestors working the land were independent peasants baking their own bread and salting down their own pig. Most were burdened with heavy taxes and rent, often paid directly by the food they produced. Many were ultimately serfs or slaves, who subsisted on what was left over; on watery soup and gritty flatbread.

    The dishes we call ethnic and assume to be of peasant origin were invented for the urban, or at least urbane, aristocrats who collected the surplus. This is as true of the lasagna of northern Italy as it is of the chicken korma of Mughal Delhi, the moo shu pork of imperial China, and the pilafs and baklava of the great Ottoman palace in Istanbul. Cities have always enjoyed the best food and have invariably been the focal points of culinary innovation.

    Preparing home-cooked breakfast, dinner, and tea for eight to ten people 365 days a year was servitude. Churning butter or skinning and cleaning rabbits, without the option of picking up the phone for a pizza if something went wrong, was unremitting, unforgiving toil. Not long ago, in Mexico, most women could expect to spend five hours a day kneeling at the grindstone preparing the dough for the family's tortillas.

    In the first half of the 20th century, Italians embraced factory-made pasta and canned tomatoes. In the second half, Japanese women welcomed factory-made bread because they could sleep a little longer instead of getting up to make rice. As supermarkets appeared in Eastern Europe, people rejoiced at the convenience of readymade goods. Culinary modernism had proved what was wanted: food that was processed, preservable, industrial, novel, and fast, the food of the elite at a price everyone could afford. Where modern food became available, people grew taller and stronger and lived longer.

    So the sunlit past of the culinary Luddites never existed and their ethos is based not on history but on a fairy tale. So what? Certainly no one would deny that an industrialised food supply has its own problems. Perhaps we should eat more fresh, natural, locally sourced, slow food. Does it matter if the history is not quite right? It matters quite a bit, I believe. If we do not understand that most people had no choice but to devote their lives to growing and cooking food, we are incapable of comprehending that modern food allows us unparalleled choices. If we urge the farmer to stay at his olive press and the housewife to remain at her stove, all so that we may eat traditionally pressed olive oil and home-cooked meals, we are assuming the mantle of the aristocrats of old. If we fail to understand how scant and monotonous most traditional diets were, we fail to appreciate the 'ethnic foods' we encounter.

    Culinary Luddites are right, though, about two important things: We need to know how to prepare good food, and we need a culinary ethos. As far as good food goes, they've done us all a service by teaching us how to use the bounty delivered to us by the global economy. Their ethos, though, is another matter. Were we able to turn back the clock, as they urge, most of us would be toiling all day in the fields or the kitchen, and many of us would be starving.

    The word “preposterous” in paragraph 3 is closest in meaning to ______.

    • A. sensible
    • B. popular
    • C. ridiculous
    • D. right
  • Câu 6: Mã câu hỏi: 32608

    Which of the following is NOT an important factor mentioned in paragraphs 5 and 6?

    • A. the development of take-away food as an option
    • B. the arduous nature of food preparation before mass-production
    • C. the global benefits of industrialised food production
    • D. the range of advantages that industrialised food production had
  • Câu 7: Mã câu hỏi: 32609

    What is the overall point that the writer makes in the reading passage?

    • A. People should learn the history of the food they consume.
    • B. Criticism of industrial food production is largely misplaced.
    • C. Modem industrial food is generally superior to raw and natural food.
    • D. People should be more grateful for the range of foods they can now choose from. 
  • Câu 8: Mã câu hỏi: 32610

    The word “its” in paragraph 7 refers to ______.

    • A. food supply’s
    • B. fairy tale’s
    • C. history’s
    • D. sunlit past’s
  • Câu 9: Mã câu hỏi: 32613

    What does the writer say about peasants?

    • A. They created imaginative soup and flatbread dishes.
    • B. Much of what they produced went to a landowner.
    • C. They were largely self-sufficient.
    • D. They had a better diet than most people living in cities.
  • Câu 10: Mã câu hỏi: 32616

    What is an important point the writer wishes to make in paragraph 7?

    • A. People need to have a balanced diet.
    • B. There are disadvantages to modem food production as well as advantages.
    • C. People everywhere now have a huge range of food to choose from.
    • D. Demand for food that is traditionally produced exploits the people that produce it. 
  • Câu 11: Mã câu hỏi: 32618

    Lasagna is an example of a dish ______.

    • A. that tastes like dishes from several other countries
    • B. that was only truly popular in northern Italy
    • C. invented by peasants
    • D. created for wealthy city-dwellers 
  • Câu 12: Mã câu hỏi: 32620

    The word “servitude” in paragraph 5 is closest in meaning to ______.

    • A. attitude
    • B. enslavement
    • C. capability
    • D. liberty
  • Câu 13: Mã câu hỏi: 32622

    Mark the letter A, B,  C, or  D on your answer sheet to indicate  the underlined part that needs correction in each of the following questions.

    Many people who live near the ocean depend on it as a source of food, recreation, and to have economic opportunities.

    • A. depend on
    • B. food
    • C. recreation
    • D. to have economic
  • Câu 14: Mã câu hỏi: 32623

    The techniques of science and magic are quite different, but their basic aims – to understand and control nature, they are very similar.

    • A. magic
    • B. different
    • C. to understand
    • D. they are
  • Câu 15: Mã câu hỏi: 32624

    The various parts of the body require so different surgical skills that many surgical specialties have developed.

    • A. they are
    • B. so
    • C. surgical
    • D. many
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