READING TEST 8
PASSAGE 1 QUESTIONS 1 - 10
While smoking rates have fallen in developed countries - to less than one in five in the US - they have risen in China, as cigarettes have become more available and consumers have become richer.
Authorities have shown concern over the rise, with Beijing even introducing a public smoking ban. But efforts have been hampered by the habit's popularity, and its usefulness as a source of tax - the government collects about 428 billion yuan (£ 44 billion, $ 67 billion) in tobacco taxes each year.
Globally, tobacco kills up to half of its users, according to the World Health Organization.
Câu 1: _______ of Chinese men start to smoke before the age of 20.
- A. One-third
- B. Two-thirds
- C. Half
- D. All
- A. Men who smoke under the age of 20
- B. Men who smoke above the age of 20
- C. Men who give up smoking
- D. Men who smoke in public
- A. One million
- B. Two million
- C. Three million
- D. Four million
- A. Before a meal
- B. After a meal
- C. Before they go to sleep
- D. When they get up
- A. One-third
- B. One-fourth
- C. One-fifth
- D. Half
- A. China
- B. The city of Beijing
- C. The Chinese government
- D. People who live in Beijing
- A. He doesn't believe that people will give up smoking.
- B. He is disappointed with the Chinese government.
- C. He thinks that people possibly stop smoking if they see reasons.
- D. He is sure about the rise of future deaths in China.
- A. Basket
- B. Assist
- C. Prohibit
- D. Restrict
- A. To argue over smoking policy in China
- B. To support smoking in China
- C. To warn and prevent smoking in China
- D. To report the result of a research paper
- A. They do not want to stop people from smoking
- B. They have tried to stop people from smoking in public but with little success.
- C. They have tried to close tobacco companies.
- D. They do not care about smoking.
PASSAGE 2 QUESTIONS 11 - 20
The evidence that humans are causing global warming is strong, but the question of what to do about it remains controversial. Economics, sociology, and politics are all important factors in planning for the future.
Even if we stopped emitting greenhouse gases (GHGs) today, the Earth would still warm by another degree Fahrenheit or so. But what we do from today forward makes a big difference. Depending on our choices, scientists predict that the Earth could eventually warm by as little as 2.5 degrees or as much as 10 degrees Fahrenheit.
A commonly cited goal is to stabilize GHG concentrations around 450-550 parts per million (ppm), or about twice pre-industrial levels. This is the point at which many believe the most damaging impacts of climate change can be avoided. Current concentrations are about 380 ppm, which means there isn't much time to lose. According to the IPCC, we'd have to reduce GHG emissions by 50% to 80% of what they're on track to be in the next century to reach this level.
Is this possible?
Many people and governments are already working hard to cut greenhouse gases, and everyone can help.
Researchers Stephen Pacala and Robert Socolow at Princeton University have suggested one approach that they call "stabilization wedges". This means reducing GHG emissions from a variety of sources with technologies available in the next few decades, rather than relying on an enormous change in a single area. They suggest 7 wedges that could each reduce emissions, and all of them together could hold emissions at approximately current levels for the next 50 years, putting us on a potential path to stabilize around 500 ppm.
There are many possible wedges, including improvements to energy efficiency and vehicle fuel economy (so less energy has to be produced), and increases in wind and solar power, hydrogen produced from renewable sources, biofuels (produced from crops), natural gas, and nuclear power. There is also the potential to capture the carbon dioxide emitted from fossil fuels and store it underground - a process called "carbon sequestration".
In addition to reducing the gases we emit to the atmosphere, we can also increase the amount of gases we take out of the atmosphere. Plants and trees absorb CO2 as they grow, "sequestering" carbon naturally. Increasing forestlands and making changes to the way we farm could increase the amount of carbon we're storing.
Some of these technologies have drawbacks, and different communities will make different decisions about how to power their lives, but the good news is that there are a variety of options to put us on a path toward a stable climate.
Câu 11: The word "we" in paragraph 2 refers to _______.
- A. humans
- B. economists, sociologists, and politicians
- C. animals
- D. scientists
- A. 2.5
- B. 2.5 or 10
- C. 10
- D. From 2.5 to 10
- A. To avoid the most serious effects of climate change
- B. To avoid all damaging impacts of climate change
- C. To mend the most damaging impacts of climate change
- D. To stop climate change
- A. Current concentrations
- B. That current concentrations are about 380 ppm
- C. 380 ppm
- D. Ppm
- A. To introduce two researchers in the field
- B. To proves that researchers are working to reduce GHG emission
- C. To introduce one way to reduce GHG emission
- D. To introduce Princeton University
- A. Create environment-friendly materials
- B. Capture and store carbon dioxide underground
- C. Increase the use of renewable energy
- D. Grow more trees
- A. Researchers
- B. Humans
- C. Renewable resources
- D. Wedges
- A. Arguments over Global Warming
- B. Global Warming and its Causes
- C. Global Warming Solutions
- D. Global Warming's Effect on Earth
- A. absorb
- B. isolate
- C. release
- D. emit
- A. To introduce the disadvantages of solutions in the following paragraph
- B. To emphasize the disadvantages of the solutions in the previous paragraph
- C. To recommend readers not to use the solutions
- D. To emphasize the advantages of the solutions in different contexts
