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22 tháng 1 2017

1. the regrets that she spent her (young) youth traveling and not studying.

2. jackson can't see anything because of his (blind) blindness

3. before our morden age , people had a more physical and (act) actual lifestyle

4. there were over 500 (apply) appliances for the job.

5. he was attacked for having put his (sign) signature to the deal

6. how much (teach) teaching do you actually do?

7. the explosion (complete) completely destroyed the building

8. maybe one of our (assit) assistants can help you make your choice?

9. i want to treat him with (kind) kindness and consideration.

10. i should have got a better price for the car , but i'm not much of a (busy) business

19 tháng 8 2018

Mary Started English Literature this term, and I am afraid that her (1) ___introduction____ to the subject has not been entirely (2)____successful___. She has not shown much enthusiasm, and does not always pay (3)__attention___ in class. Her assignments are often (4)___unreadable___, bacause she is so untidy and because of her (5)____failure____ to check her work thoroughly. She failed to do any (6)__revision___ bafore the end of term test, and had poor results. She seems to have the (7) ___mistaken___ idea that she can succeed without studying. She has also had many (8) __absences___ and has frequently arrived late for class. This has resulted in several severe (9)__punishment___. Although Mary is a (10) ___gifted____ student in some respects, she has not had a satisfactory term.

19 tháng 8 2018

Tại sao (6) revision và (9) punishment lại không có ''s'' ạ?

49. While she was preparing dinner, she cut her finger.→ While ____________________________, she cut her finger.50. Because she had a test coming, she spent the weekend studying.→ _______________________________ , she spent the weekend studying.51. While he was drinking his coffee, he thought about the problem.→ While ____________________________ his coffee, he thought about the problem.52. As he was impressed by my work, the manager extended my contract.→ ______________________________ , the...
Đọc tiếp

49. While she was preparing dinner, she cut her finger.
→ While ____________________________, she cut her finger.
50. Because she had a test coming, she spent the weekend studying.
→ _______________________________ , she spent the weekend studying.
51. While he was drinking his coffee, he thought about the problem.
→ While ____________________________ his coffee, he thought about the problem.
52. As he was impressed by my work, the manager extended my contract.
→ ______________________________ , the manager extended my contract.
53. If it is looked after carefully, the plant can live through the winter.
→ __________________________________ , the plant can live through the winter.
54. They were surprised by a sudden storm, and they had to seek shelter under a tree.
→ ________________________ by a sudden storm, they had to seek shelter under a tree.
55. After she had lived in Oxford for two years, she spoke English like a native speaker.
→ _____________________ in Oxford for two years, she spoke English like a native speaker.
56. After they had bought a house, they asked an architect to redecorate it.
→ After ___________________________________ , they asked an architect to redecorate it.
57. After the thief had been caught by the police, the thief admitted his crime.
→ ____________________________________ , the thief admitted his crime.
58. The agreement was typed by the secretary yesterday. The agreement was signed by the boss.
→ _____________________ by the secretary yesterday, the agreement was signed by the boss.
59. We are lying in the sun and we are enjoying life.
→ _______________________________ , we are enjoying life.

5

60. The students know how to do the exercise. The exercise was given by the teacher yesterday.
→ The students know how to do the exercise __________________ by the teacher yesterday.

1
21 tháng 1 2023

49. While she was preparing dinner, she cut her finger.
→ While ___dinner was being prepared (by her)_________________________, she cut her finger.
50. Because she had a test coming, she spent the weekend studying.
→ __Because of having a test coming__________________________ , she spent the weekend studying.
51. While he was drinking his coffee, he thought about the problem.
→ While _____his coffee was being drunk (by him)_______________________, he thought about the problem.
52. As he was impressed by my work, the manager extended my contract.
→ _____Because my work impressed him_________________________ , the manager extended my contract.
53. If it is looked after carefully, the plant can live through the winter.
→ __If they look after it carefully________________________________ , the plant can live through the winter.
54. They were surprised by a sudden storm, and they had to seek shelter under a tree.
→ ____Being suprised____________________ by a sudden storm, they had to seek shelter under a tree.
55. After she had lived in Oxford for two years, she spoke English like a native speaker.
→ ______After having lived_______________ in Oxford for two years, she spoke English like a native speaker.
56. After they had bought a house, they asked an architect to redecorate it.
→ After ___having bought a house________________________________ , they asked an architect to redecorate it.
57. After the thief had been caught by the police, the thief admitted his crime.
→ _____After having been caught by the police_______________________________ , the thief admitted his crime.
58. The agreement was typed by the secretary yesterday. The agreement was signed by the boss.
→ __After being typed___________________ by the secretary yesterday, the agreement was signed by the boss.
59. We are lying in the sun and we are enjoying life.
→ ___Lying in the sun____________________________ , we are enjoying life.

60. The students know how to do the exercise. The exercise was given by the teacher yesterday.
→ The students know how to do the exercise ___which was given_______________ by the teacher yesterday.

* 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 the...
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 the “cardboard city” in London, where people of all ages sleep in the open air in their only home - cardboard boxes. Others may find accommodation in shelters run by voluntary organisations or get a place in a hostel, which gives them board 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 six teen-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. 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 permissionjo do, saying that studying sciences was unladylike!

  Shelter says that the government’s laws do nothing to help these youngsters. Rising rents, the shortage of cheap housing and the 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 forced onto the streets,___________.

A. their benefits will be severely cut 

B. they will never go back home again 

C. they will find it difficult to find work 

D. they will encourage their friends to do the same

1
17 tháng 1 2018

Chọn C       Theo Shelter, một khi những người trẻ tuổi đã buộc phải lên đường, _________ .

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

B. họ sẽ không bao giờ trở về nhà một lần nữa

C. họ sẽ thấy khó tìm việc

D. họ sẽ khuyến khích bạn bè của họ làm như vậy

Đáp án C.

Dẫn chứng trong đoạn 6: 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. - Shelter cũng chỉ ra rằng nếu bạn vô gia cư, bạn không thế kiếm được việc làm vì người chủ sẽ không thuê người không có địa chỉ thường trú; và nếu bạn không thể kiếm được việc làm, bạn vô gia cư vì bạn không có tiền để trả tiền ăn ở.

* 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 the...
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 the “cardboard city” in London, where people of all ages sleep in the open air in their only home - cardboard boxes. Others may find accommodation in shelters run by voluntary organisations or get a place in a hostel, which gives them board 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 six teen-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. 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 permissionjo do, saying that studying sciences was unladylike!

  Shelter says that the government’s laws do nothing to help these youngsters. Rising rents, the shortage of cheap housing and the 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)

Most young people become homeless because_________

A. circumstances make it impossible 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
2 tháng 4 2018

Chọn A       Tại sao Alice lại ra khỏi nhà của mình?

A. Bố mẹ cô không đồng ý với những gì cô muốn làm.

B. Cô ấy không muốn học cho bài kiểm nâng cao cấp độ của mình.

C. Cô đã không đạt được điểm cao trong các kì thi của mình.

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

Đáp án A.

Dẫn chứng trong đoạn 4: “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 studying sciences was unladylike! - Cha mẹ cô đã đuổi cô ra khỏi nhà không có lí do nào khác ngoài cô muốn làm bài kiểm tra trình độ nâng cao khoa học - thứ mà cha mẹ đã từ chối cho phép, nói rằng khoa học nghiên cứu không giống như vậy!”

Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C, or D to indicate the correct answer to each of the questions.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 the "cardboard city” in London, where people of all...
Đọc tiếp

Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C, or D to indicate the correct answer to each of the questions.

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 the "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 organisations or get a place in a hostel, which gives them board 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. 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 studying sciences was unladylike!

Shelter says that the government's laws do nothing to help these youngsters. Rising rents, the shortage of cheap housing and the 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.

Question. Most young people become homeless because ____.

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

Bthey 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
20 tháng 2 2017

Đáp án A

Thông tin: 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.

Dịch: Nhưng những người này là ai? Những người đang tìm kiếm một mái nhà trên đầu của họ hầu hết không phải là người bỏ trốn mà là người ném đá "- những người bị đuổi 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 the...
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 the “cardboard city” in London, where people of all ages sleep in the open air in their only home - cardboard boxes. Others may find accommodation in shelters run by voluntary organisations or get a place in a hostel, which gives them board 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 six teen-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. 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 permissionjo do, saying that studying sciences was unladylike!

  Shelter says that the government’s laws do nothing to help these youngsters. Rising rents, the shortage of cheap housing and the 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 2 refers to_________

A. people of all ages

B. young people 

C. the young homeless

D. voluntary organisations

1
25 tháng 1 2018

Chọn A       Hầu hết những người trẻ tuổi trở thành vô gia cư vì _________.

A. hoàn cảnh khiến họ không thể sống ở nhà

B. họ không muốn sống với cha mẹ đã li dị

C. họ đã chạy trốn khỏi nhà

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

Đáp án A.

Dẫn chứng ở đoạn 3: “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. - Những người đang tìm kiếm một mái nhà trên đầu họ hầu hết không phải là người chạy trốn mà là "những kẻ bị bỏ rơi ” - những người đã bị đuổi ra khỏi nhà của họ hoặc bị buộc phải rời đi vì cuộc li hôn của cha mẹ, một bậc cha mẹ không thông cảm hoặc một trong nhiều lí do khác.”

Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C, or D to indicate the correct answer to each of the questions.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 the "cardboard city” in London, where people of all...
Đọc tiếp

Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C, or D to indicate the correct answer to each of the questions.

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 the "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 organisations or get a place in a hostel, which gives them board 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. 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 studying sciences was unladylike!

Shelter says that the government's laws do nothing to help these youngsters. Rising rents, the shortage of cheap housing and the 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.

Question. The word “Others” in paragraph 2 refers to ____.

A. people of all ages

B. young people

C. the young homeless

D. voluntary organisations

1
24 tháng 5 2019

Đáp án C

Others thay thế cho “the young homeless”

Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C, or D to indicate the correct answer to each of the questions.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 the "cardboard city” in London, where people of all...
Đọc tiếp

Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C, or D to indicate the correct answer to each of the questions.

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 the "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 organisations or get a place in a hostel, which gives them board 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. 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 studying sciences was unladylike!

Shelter says that the government's laws do nothing to help these youngsters. Rising rents, the shortage of cheap housing and the 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.

Question. The changes in the system of benefits mean that ____.

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

Bthe under twenty-fives can claim money only if they have left home

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

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

1
19 tháng 3 2019

Đáp án C

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

Dịch: Những thay đổi gần đây trong luật lợi ích có nghĩa là một người trong độ tuổi từ mười sáu đến hai mươi lăm tuổi ít hơn người già

* 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 the...
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 the “cardboard city” in London, where people of all ages sleep in the open air in their only home - cardboard boxes. Others may find accommodation in shelters run by voluntary organisations or get a place in a hostel, which gives them board 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 six teen-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. 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 permissionjo do, saying that studying sciences was unladylike!

  Shelter says that the government’s laws do nothing to help these youngsters. Rising rents, the shortage of cheap housing and the 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. the under twenty-fives can claim money only if they have left home 

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

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

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

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22 tháng 10 2017

C       Theo Shelter, một khi những người trẻ tuổi đã buộc phải lên đường, _________ .

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

B. họ sẽ không bao giờ trở về nhà một lần nữa

C. họ sẽ thấy khó tìm việc

D. họ sẽ khuyến khích bạn bè của họ làm như vậy

Đáp án C.

Dẫn chứng trong đoạn 6: 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. - Shelter cũng chỉ ra rằng nếu bạn vô gia cư, bạn không thế kiếm được việc làm vì người chủ sẽ không thuê người không có địa chỉ thường trú; và nếu bạn không thể kiếm được việc làm, bạn vô gia cư vì bạn không có tiền để trả tiền ăn ở.