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Đăng Ngày: 11/05/2022

Lượt Test: 288,665

Bài Thi Môn ĐỌC HIỂU

Task 1

Read the text below and answer the questions. For each question, choose the correct answer A, B, C or D.

The American city of Detroit has an interesting history. It reminds me of the rise and fall of ancient empires that we studied in history classes at school. I remember reading about its decline, so I was pleasantly surprised to read that it is becoming a “good news” story now.

The city of Detroit, in the USA, was once compared to Paris. It had a broad river, smart streets and historically important architecture. Then, in the 20th century, it became ‘Motor City’. For a time, most of the world’s cars were made here. There was regular

work and a good salary in the motor industry. A worker at one of the car factories could own a home, plus a boat, maybe even a holiday cottage. Some say America’s middle class was born in Detroit – new highways certainly made it easy for workers to move from the city centre to the suburbs in the 1950s. But in the early years of the 21st century, Detroit became America’s poorest big city.

In less than five decades the once lively Motor City lost more than half its population. It became known as a city that was failing, full of ruined buildings, extensive poverty and crime. Newspapers and magazines told stories of derelict homes and empty streets. Photographers went to Detroit to record the strange beauty of buildings and city blocks where nature was taking over again. What went wrong in Detroit?

The city is now 69th among US cities for the number of people per square mile. The population fell for several reasons. Partly, it was because people moved to the suburbs in the 1950s. Then there were the shocking riots in 1967, which scared more people away from the city. Then there was the dramatic fall in car manufacture as companies like General Motors and Chrysler faced huge difficulties. And finally, in 2008, came the global financial crisis. Many of Detroit’s people are poor – half of the city’s families live on less than 25,000 dollars a year.
(A) It declared itself bankrupt. (B) It was the largest city bankruptcy in US history, at approximately 18-20 billion dollars. (C)Now that the city is free of debt, it has money to

do some of what needs to be done.(D) It has replaced about 40,000 streetlights so that places feel safer. The police arrive in answer to calls in less than 20 minutes now, instead of the hour it used to take. And about a hundred empty houses are demolished each week to make space for new buildings. With the nation’s biggest city bankruptcy behind it, Detroit is also attracting investors and young adventurers. The New Economy Initiative gave grants of 10,000 dollars to each of 30 new small businesses. It seems that every week a new business opens in Detroit – grocery stores, juice bars, coffee shops, even bicycle makers. Finally, the city is working again.

1

The city of Detroit, ...................

2

According to the first paragraph, what couldn’t be found in the city of Detroit?

3

Detroit ................... .

4

What was Detroit known as at the start of the 21st century?

5

According to the first paragraph...................

6

According to the second paragraph, what interested journalists in Detroit?

7

The main problem in Detroit was ___________.

8

Bankruptcy meant __________.

9

In which space (marked A, B, C and D in the passage) will the following sentence fit?

In 2013, the city did something unusual.

10

What is the best title for this reading passage?

Task 2

Read the text below and answer the questions. For each question, choose the correct answer A, B, C.or D.

Panel painting, common in thirteenth – and century fourteenth century Europe, involved a painstaking, laborious process. Wooden planks were joined, covered with gesso to prepare the surface for painting, and then polished smooth with special tools. On this perfect surface, the artist would sketch a composition with chalk, refined it with inks, and then begin the deliberate process of applying layers of egg tempera paint (egg yolk in which pigments are suspended) with small brushes. The successive layering of these meticulously applied paints produced the final, translucent colors.

Backgrounds of gold were made by carefully applying sheets of gold leaf, and then embellishing or decorating the gold leaf by punching it with a metal rod on which a pattern had been embossed. Every step in the process was slow and deliberate. The quick drying tempera demanded that the artist know exactly where each stroke be placed before the brush met the panel, and it required the use of fine brushes. It was, therefore, an ideal technique for emphasizing the hard linear edges and pure, fine areas of color that were so much a part of the overall aesthetic of the time. The notion that an artist could or would dash off an idea in a fit of spontaneous inspiration was completely alien to these deliberately produced works.

Furthermore, making these paintings was no time-consuming that it demanded assistance. All such work was done by collective enterprise in the workshops. The painter or master who is credited with having created the painting may have designed the work and overseen its production, but it is highly unlikely that the artist’s hand applied every stoke of the brush. More likely, numerous assistants, who had been trained to imitate the artist’s style, applied the pain. The carpenter’s shop probably provided the frame and perhaps supplied the panel, and yet another shop supplied the gold. Thus, not only many hands, but also many shops were involved in the final product.

In spite of problems with their condition, restoration, and preservation many panel paintings have survived and today many of them are housed in museum collections.

1

What aspect of panel paintings does the passage mainly discuss?

2

According to the passage, what was the first step in making a panel painting?

3

The word “it” in paragraph 1 refers to

4

The word “deliberate” in paragraph 2 is closest in meaning to

5

Which of the following processes produced the translucent colors found on panel paintings?

6

What characteristic of tempera paint is mentioned in the passage?

7

The collective enterprise mentioned in paragraph 3 includes all the following EXCEPT

8

The word “imitate” in paragraph 3 is closest in meaning to

9

The author mentioned all of the following as problems with the survival of panel paintings EXCEPT

10

The word “them” in paragraph 4 refers to