Từ Vựng Ets 2022 Test 1

Từ Vựng Ets 2022 Test 1

Để giúp các em chuẩn bị tốt cho bài thi TOEIC, nên thầy tiếp tục cập nhật cho các bạn một số từ vựng quan trọng được thầy liệt kê từ phần giải đề trong các lớp.

Để giúp các em chuẩn bị tốt cho bài thi TOEIC, nên thầy tiếp tục cập nhật cho các bạn một số từ vựng quan trọng được thầy liệt kê từ phần giải đề trong các lớp.

Học từ vựng ETS 2024 miễn phí trên Quizlet như thế nào?

Để giúp các bạn chuẩn bị tốt nhất, mình đã tạo ra một lớp học miễn phí trên nền tảng Quizlet. Lớp học này tổng hợp toàn bộ các từ vựng mới từ bộ đề ETS 2024 và chia theo từng bài test. Điều này giúp các bạn luyện tập và ghi nhớ từ vựng một cách hệ thống và hiệu quả. Trên Quizlet, chúng ta sẽ học theo dạng flash card. Bạn sẽ xem mặt trước với từ vựng bằng tiếng Anh, đoán nghĩa của từ, và lật mặt sau để kiểm tra kết quả. Cách học này được đánh giá là hiệu quả và dễ nhớ hơn so với cách học truyền thống.

Link đến lớp học từ vựng ETS 2024 Free trên Quizlet:

TOEIC LISTENING: https://quizlet.com/join/2Ra6EHeRB

TOEIC READING: https://quizlet.com/join/wXCgvKgdc

Mình cũng có public cho các bạn đang có nhu cầu luyện thi TOEIC trên cuốn ETS 2024 bộ video giải chi tiết tại đây. Đây là bộ video có giải thích chi tiết Part 5,6,7. Trong video mình sẽ giải từng câu, kết hợp với nhắc lại ngữ pháp và từ vựng nên rất phù hợp với các bạn đang chuẩn bị thi TOEIC hoặc cả những bạn muốn củng cố lại kiến thức của mình.

Nếu bạn muốn xem đầy đủ video giải hết Part 5,6,7 10 test thì hãy đăng ký khóa này nhé:

https://tuvotoeic.com/2024/01/20/khoa-giai-ets-2024-part-567-qua-video-toeic-reading-10-tests

Trong video, mình sẽ giải từng câu và nhắc lại ngữ pháp cùng từ vựng. Cách này phù hợp cho các bạn chuẩn bị thi TOEIC hoặc muốn củng cố lại kiến thức của mình.

Questions 186-190 refer to the following emails and schedule.

Dear Ada County Library members:

Our long-awaited spring lecture schedule has been finalized. We expect an excellent turnout for these lectures. A highlight is a presentation on Arabic poetry translation.

presented by a lecturer who will make her first visit to Ada County Library.

Access to library events is always free and is on a first-come, first-served basis, so please plan accordingly, especially for events in our two smallest venues. the Helms Room, which seals 35, and the Avery Room. which has only 20 computer stations.

To: Mary Carlton

From: Jax Morrison

Subject: Scheduled library event

I am writing to let you know that my planned event at the library on May 8 will need to be rescheduled, as I will be away for business that week. I have already prepared some

exciting materials that I think library patrons enjoy, so I will really am still interested in giving the lecture. It is currently scheduled to take place in the Stokes Room, which is the perfect size for the crowd I hope to draw. It also has all the necessary technology for my lecture, so I would still like to use that room. I apologize for the inconvenience of needing to reschedule. but I appreciate your help in getting this event rebooked. as I am excited to present my topic.

Tại sao bạn cần cập nhật từ vựng từ bộ đề ETS 2024?

So với năm 2023, bộ đề luyện thi dự đoán TOEIC – ETS 2024 đã có nhiều điều chỉnh quan trọng. Bổ xung thêm về từ vựng, cũng như cập nhật thêm các xu hướng từ vựng mới. Để đạt điểm cao, việc nắm vững các từ vựng là điều bắt buộc. Chính vì vậy, việc cập nhật từ vựng theo những thay đổi hàng năm là một yếu tố quan trọng để đảm bảo bạn sẽ có sự chuẩn bị tốt nhất và tự tin tham gia kỳ thi TOEIC sắp tới.

Khóa video giải chi tiết 10 test trong bộ đề ETS 2024

Với các bạn chuẩn bị thi TOEIC, sự chuẩn bị và kỹ năng thi quan trọng không kém kiến thức. Làm quen đề, từ vựng, và dạng câu hỏi trong sẽ giúp ích rất nhiều khi thi thực sự. Chúc các bạn một năm mới 2024 tràn đầy kiến thức và cơ hội mới. Đặc biệt, đạt điểm TOEIC cao để dễ dàng ra trường, xin việc, lên lương, hoặc đơn giản là FLEX với bạn bè.

You will hear a conversation about astronomy.

Woman: This is “Magic Time” from the BBC. I am Faith. In today’s programme we invite a professor of astronomy. Welcome Lewis.

Woman: What magic information will you introduce to us?

Man: We all know the Leonids in August are coming, so today let’s talk about meteors.

Woman: Good topic. At one time or another, almost everyone has glimpsed a swift little streak of light dashing across the night sky. Nearly everyone makes wishes when they see them and blame both good and bad luck on their presence.

Man: Yes. These sudden celestial visitors are meteors. We often call it “shooting star”. The glowing trails are caused by the incineration of a piece of celestial debris entering our atmosphere.

Woman: Many meteors are quick flashes, but some last long enough for us to track their brief course across the sky.

Man: Right. Now and then, a meteor truly will light up the night, blazing brighter than Venus – although rarely, even brighter than the Moon – leaving in its wake a dimly glowing trail that may persist for minutes.

Woman: Lewis, can we see some meteors every night in one year?

Man: Yes. Under a dark sky, any observer can expect to see between two and seven meteors each hour any night of the year. These are sporadic meteors.

Man: Yes. Their source bodies –meteoroids – are part of the dusty background of the inner solar system . Several times during the year, Earth encounters swarms of small particles that greatly increase the number of meteors. The result is a meteor shower, during which observers may see dozens of meteors every hour. Concentrations of material within the swarms may produce better-than-average displays in some years, with rates of hundreds per hour. And we’re treated to a truly amazing display in which thousands of visible meteors can be seen for a brief period. The phenomenon is called meteor storms which are more magnificent than meteor showers.

Woman: Ah ha! That’s wonderful!

Man: Definitely. The meteors that appear during a meteor shower seem to come from one point in, the sky. This illusion is an effect of perspective, just as a roadway seems to converge in the distance. Usually, meteor showers get the name of the constellation from which the meteors appear to radiate. Such as during the Perseid shower in August, meteors seem to streak from a point in the constellation Perseus.

Woman: When is the biggest meteor storm?

Man: According to records, in 1833 a storm of 60,000 meteors an hour shocked the world.

Woman: 60,000? That’s unbelievable!

Man: By the 1860s , scientists had known that many meteor showers were annual – including the normally placid Leonids, which produced the big storm – and that they were somehow related to comets.

Man: Yes. But most of the meteors people have seen during one of the annual showers arise from fluffy particles not much larger than sand grains. As a particle enters Earth’s atmosphere, it collides with gas atoms and molecules. The particle becomes wrapped in a glowing sheath of hearted air and vaporized material boiled off its own surface.

Woman: Whether meteor is very near to us when it appears?

Man: No. In fact, it is an illusion. However even well-trained professionals can be fooled. Such as airline pilots have swerved to avoid meteors that were actually 160Km away. A meteor that appears brighter than any of the stars and planets is a fireball.

Woman: Fireball? That’s so interesting

Man: Yeah. Most meteors are seen 80-120 kilometres above the ground. Sometimes, someone will claim to see a viable land on a hilltop, but in fact a real fireball first appears at a height of about 125Km and loses its brightness while still at least 20 kilometres above the ground.

Woman: Yes. What colours do meteors have?

Man: Usually, most meteors look white. but some also appear blue, green, yellow, orange, or even red.

Woman: What will happen if a meteoroid gets to the surface of the Earth without being completely vaporised?

Woman: I heard meteorites were long ago thought to be cast down as gifts from angels.

Man: Yes. And others thought the gods were displaying their anger.

Man: As late as the 17th Century, many believed they fell from thunderstorms (they were nicknamed “thunderstones”). Many scientists didn’t believe the accounts of people who claim to have seen meteors and some experts were skeptical that stones could fall from the clouds or the heaven.

Man: One of the most significant meteorite events in recent history destroyed hundreds of square miles of forest in Siberia on June the 30th 1908. According to local witnesses a ball of fire streaked through the sky and seemed to enter the atmosphere at an oblique angle. It exploded, sending out hot winds and loud noises and shaking the ground enough to break windows in nearby villages. Small particles blown into the atmosphere lit the night sky for several days.

Woman: So, nowadays, the prevailing theory holds that a meteor exploded just above the surface?

Man: Yes. Most impact craters and basins larger than the Meteor Crater are heavily worn away or have been buried by rocks and dirt as the earth’s surface changed. At present, Chicxulub Basin centered in Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula is the largest one. The diameter of basin is around 300 kilometres. Rock samples obtained by drilling into the basin show that an asteroid struck the earth there about sixty five million years ago.

Woman: Does that the same period with the dinosaurs disappeared?

Man: That’s right. Many scientists believe this debris caused climate

changes which made the dinosaurs not survive.

Woman: We do really hope that will never happen again.

Woman: OK. Thanks for watching today’s programme. See you next week.

(J – Jack; T – tutor)J: Hi! Am I bothering you? Is it OK to see you now?Hi Jack! No bother. Please come in. As your tutor this year, it’s my responsibility to oversee your assignments. Now, where are my notes? Oh yes, here they are. OK. I see that we were going to look at your case study on the challenges of urban planning in the 21st centuryand how to make it as ‘green’ as possible. How’s it all going?J: Actually, I’m pretty happy with it. Can I talk you through it to make sure I’m on the right track?T: Of course, please do. I’ll stop you if I have any questions.J: OK, well I started by giving an overview of what ‘green’ urban planning has been up until now. Firstly, there’s the idea of a green belt. This is the one that everyone’s heard of, but I found that while it was successful for a short time and in limited cases, it grossly over oversimplified things.T: Well that’s a good and practical start. What else did you look at? I hope that you also considered the idea of decentralization ?J: Yes, that was really interesting, as although there were no objections to it and it looked good on paper, it just, didn’t work in practice.T: Yes, a conundrum indeed. However, I think you’ll find that there are many fads that come and go in this area. It isn’t the first and it won’t be the last to simply disappear off the face of the planet. Well this is all very good so far. What did you look at next?J: I then researched the 1960s fad of building new towns on new sites, but I found that although there are isolated cases of success, they tended to cost too much time and money to build.T: Keeping to that theme, have you considered the idea of brown field sites? That is sites that previously had another use, being converted into residential areas?J: Like the idea of buildings that were once banks being turned into restaurants? That kind of thing?T: Yeah, that’s right.J: No, I hadn’t thought of that.T: Well. I’d say it’s a pretty important option in most urban areas today. Even though there have been issues with safety, if the land were contaminated in any way, at least it tends to attract no objections from local residents.J: OK, thanks. I’ll make sure I put that in.T: Anything else?J: Well, I’m not sure about this last one, but 1 thought the idea of pedestrianizing central areas was an interesting concept. Do you think it’s valid here?T: Oh, it’s certainly not a bad idea. The only thing is that it would probably intensify the problem of congestion in inner city areas and would disrupt local residents’ sleep, if the construction work were to happen during the night. The use of loud excavators to re-pave the area would be inevitable.J: Yes, I take your point, but in some older cities, I think it’s one of the few viable options .T: Well as long as you state that, then it can definitely be included.J: OK, so that’s my introduction to urban planning sorted , but now I come to the main part, which is the case study. It was really difficult to choose as there are so many good examples, but in the end I settled on Curitiba, which is the capital of the south Brazilian state of Parana.T: Ah, yes. Nice choice. How’s the research coming along?J: Well, to be honest, I’m finding the amount of material a bit too much. There’s such a diverse range of statistics that it makes it almost impossible to be selective .T: Well, tell me a bit more about what you’ve discovered, and then we’ll see if we can come up with a plan to tackle the problem.J: Well, it’s fascinating. Local authorities managed to achieve so much since the 1960s , principally because rather than waiting for central government initiatives they chose a cohesive strategy where residents were consulted. Then they took their ideas and implemented them into local government planning to come up with a plan everybody was happy with.T: A ha! A bottom-up approach . Do go on …J: Well, the transport system is a real example of the town’s eco-friendly image. Even though they have one of the highest number of cars per person in the country, they also have the highest number of people using public transport . This is because poor and elderly residents are able to benefit from a social fair that allows them to use the system for less. This has led to low levels of pollution which also encourages citizens to use bicycles more.T: Well, that’s really impressive Jack. Well done. But I do have some suggestions to help you with finalizing your case study.J: Please…T: If you are going to prove Curitiba’s success, you need to refer to specifics . You mentioned pedestrian only areas in your introduction, how about that?J: Yes, OK.T: And what about the amount of parking for all of those cars?J: I didn’t come across that in my research, but I can look it up.Yeah, I think it’s important.J: And what about considering where people live in relation to their place of work? If they live in the suburbs , how about mentioning how far they need to travel in order to get to work?T: And don’t forget about their recycling strategy, including how easy it is and how much they recycle, making sure you include statistics to back it up.J: OK, got it.T All in all Jack, you’ve really done your homework and I very much look forward to receiving your final draft.J: Thanks professor. You’ve been a great help.