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13 tháng 11 2021

where

13 tháng 11 2021

where 

11 tháng 5 2019

Đáp án là: acting.

6 tháng 11 2017

Đáp án C => when

mệnh đề quan hệ chỉ thời gian bổ nghĩa cho “in 1905”

2 tháng 4 2022

Sadly, her companion, Teddy has just run out of his nine lives.

Part 4: Read the text and look at the questions that follow it. In this reading comprehension, the questions are multiple choices.Three-year-old Teddy Lasry was napping yesterday in his cowboy outfit yesterday at his family's Fifth Ave. apartment when he shot up in bed screaming. A 3-foot-long black-and-white snake was coiled around his left arm and had just bitten his pinky."The baby-sitter freaked out," said Teddy's father, David Lasry, who, along with his wife, Evelyn, was at work when the...
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Part 4: Read the text and look at the questions that follow it. In this reading comprehension, the questions are multiple choices.

Three-year-old Teddy Lasry was napping yesterday in his cowboy outfit yesterday at his family's Fifth Ave. apartment when he shot up in bed screaming. A 3-foot-long black-and-white snake was coiled around his left arm and had just bitten his pinky.

"The baby-sitter freaked out," said Teddy's father, David Lasry, who, along with his wife, Evelyn, was at work when the reptile showed up about 4 p.m.

The horrified nanny called 911 and the building's doorman. The doorman and two cable TV workers helped pry the snake off the boy's arm and stow it in a garbage bag, Lasry said.

Police rushed Teddy to Mount Sinai Medical Center, where his parents said he spent two hours attached to a heart monitor as a precaution in case the snake was poisonous.

It wasn't. Experts at the snakebite treatment center at Jacobi Medical Center in the Bronx, where cops took the critter, determined it was a non-venomous California king snake.

But how did it end up in Teddy's bed?

A little sleuthing determined that the serpent had escaped two weeks ago from its cage in the apartment of a doctor whose family lives four floors below the Lasrys. The apologetic owner said his son's pet snake likely traveled up the radiator pipes and into his neighbor's apartment.

"It's a very docile, very harmless snake," he said. "It's handled by our family all the time."

Lasry, 42, a fine arts publisher, said he believed the pet was simply hungry after two weeks of cruising. Teddy's mother, Evelyn Lasry, 37, said her son seems to have gotten over his fright by thinking of himself as a hero cowboy as he rode in the back of the police cruiser to the hospital.

"I told Teddy he's a pretty snake, a nice pet snake who got out of his cage," Evelyn Lasry said. "But he asked, 'Why did he bite my finger, Mamma?' And I said, 'Because he saw that you are a big boy, Teddy, in your cowboy outfit and he got scared.'"

1. What did the babysitter do?

A.    She ran out of the apartment.           B.    She took the snake off Teddy's arm.

C.    She called for help.                                 D.    She called the television company.

2. What do we learn about the snake?

A.    It was poisonous.                                    B.    It had escaped from a zoo.

C.    It was about a meter long.                   D.    It had escaped earlier in the afternoon.

3. Which of these statements is true?

A.    Teddy was awake when the snake arrived.

B.    Teddy's father was working and his mother was at home.

C.    Teddy needed a heart machine to stay alive for two hours.

D.    The snake is used to being touched.

4. What does Teddy think now of the snake attack?

A.    He was attacked because the snake was scared of him.

B.    He was attacked because he was asleep.

C.    He was attacked because the snake was hungry.

D.    He was attacked because his parents weren't at home.

1
8 tháng 10 2021

Three-year-old Teddy Lasry was napping yesterday in his cowboy outfit yesterday at his family's Fifth Ave. apartment when he shot up in bed screaming. A 3-foot-long black-and-white snake was coiled around his left arm and had just bitten his pinky.

"The baby-sitter freaked out," said Teddy's father, David Lasry, who, along with his wife, Evelyn, was at work when the reptile showed up about 4 p.m.

The horrified nanny called 911 and the building's doorman. The doorman and two cable TV workers helped pry the snake off the boy's arm and stow it in a garbage bag, Lasry said.

Police rushed Teddy to Mount Sinai Medical Center, where his parents said he spent two hours attached to a heart monitor as a precaution in case the snake was poisonous.

It wasn't. Experts at the snakebite treatment center at Jacobi Medical Center in the Bronx, where cops took the critter, determined it was a non-venomous California king snake.

But how did it end up in Teddy's bed?

A little sleuthing determined that the serpent had escaped two weeks ago from its cage in the apartment of a doctor whose family lives four floors below the Lasrys. The apologetic owner said his son's pet snake likely traveled up the radiator pipes and into his neighbor's apartment.

"It's a very docile, very harmless snake," he said. "It's handled by our family all the time."

Lasry, 42, a fine arts publisher, said he believed the pet was simply hungry after two weeks of cruising. Teddy's mother, Evelyn Lasry, 37, said her son seems to have gotten over his fright by thinking of himself as a hero cowboy as he rode in the back of the police cruiser to the hospital.

"I told Teddy he's a pretty snake, a nice pet snake who got out of his cage," Evelyn Lasry said. "But he asked, 'Why did he bite my finger, Mamma?' And I said, 'Because he saw that you are a big boy, Teddy, in your cowboy outfit and he got scared.'"

1. What did the babysitter do?

A.    She ran out of the apartment.           B.    She took the snake off Teddy's arm.

C.    She called for help.                                 D.    She called the television company.

2. What do we learn about the snake?

A.    It was poisonous.                                    B.    It had escaped from a zoo.

C.    It was about a meter long.                   D.    It had escaped earlier in the afternoon.

3. Which of these statements is true?

A.    Teddy was awake when the snake arrived.

B.    Teddy's father was working and his mother was at home.

C.    Teddy needed a heart machine to stay alive for two hours.

D.    The snake is used to being touched.

4. What does Teddy think now of the snake attack?

A.    He was attacked because the snake was scared of him.

B.    He was attacked because he was asleep.

C.    He was attacked because the snake was hungry.

D.    He was attacked because his parents weren't at home.

Part 4: Read the text and look at the questions that follow it. In this reading comprehension, the questions are multiple choices.Three-year-old Teddy Lasry was napping yesterday in his cowboy outfit yesterday at his family's Fifth Ave. apartment when he shot up in bed screaming. A 3-foot-long black-and-white snake was coiled around his left arm and had just bitten his pinky."The baby-sitter freaked out," said Teddy's father, David Lasry, who, along with his wife, Evelyn, was at work when the...
Đọc tiếp

Part 4: Read the text and look at the questions that follow it. In this reading comprehension, the questions are multiple choices.

Three-year-old Teddy Lasry was napping yesterday in his cowboy outfit yesterday at his family's Fifth Ave. apartment when he shot up in bed screaming. A 3-foot-long black-and-white snake was coiled around his left arm and had just bitten his pinky.

"The baby-sitter freaked out," said Teddy's father, David Lasry, who, along with his wife, Evelyn, was at work when the reptile showed up about 4 p.m.

The horrified nanny called 911 and the building's doorman. The doorman and two cable TV workers helped pry the snake off the boy's arm and stow it in a garbage bag, Lasry said.

Police rushed Teddy to Mount Sinai Medical Center, where his parents said he spent two hours attached to a heart monitor as a precaution in case the snake was poisonous.

It wasn't. Experts at the snakebite treatment center at Jacobi Medical Center in the Bronx, where cops took the critter, determined it was a non-venomous California king snake.

But how did it end up in Teddy's bed?

A little sleuthing determined that the serpent had escaped two weeks ago from its cage in the apartment of a doctor whose family lives four floors below the Lasrys. The apologetic owner said his son's pet snake likely traveled up the radiator pipes and into his neighbor's apartment.

"It's a very docile, very harmless snake," he said. "It's handled by our family all the time."

Lasry, 42, a fine arts publisher, said he believed the pet was simply hungry after two weeks of cruising. Teddy's mother, Evelyn Lasry, 37, said her son seems to have gotten over his fright by thinking of himself as a hero cowboy as he rode in the back of the police cruiser to the hospital.

"I told Teddy he's a pretty snake, a nice pet snake who got out of his cage," Evelyn Lasry said. "But he asked, 'Why did he bite my finger, Mamma?' And I said, 'Because he saw that you are a big boy, Teddy, in your cowboy outfit and he got scared.'"

1. What did the babysitter do?

A.    She ran out of the apartment.           B.    She took the snake off Teddy's arm.

C.    She called for help.                                 D.    She called the television company.

2. What do we learn about the snake?

A.    It was poisonous.                                    B.    It had escaped from a zoo.

C.    It was about a meter long.                   D.    It had escaped earlier in the afternoon.

3. Which of these statements is true?

A.    Teddy was awake when the snake arrived.

B.    Teddy's father was working and his mother was at home.

C.    Teddy needed a heart machine to stay alive for two hours.

D.    The snake is used to being touched.

4. What does Teddy think now of the snake attack?

A.    He was attacked because the snake was scared of him.

B.    He was attacked because he was asleep.

C.    He was attacked because the snake was hungry.

D.    He was attacked because his parents weren't at home.

0
Ai giúp em với ạ :(Part 4: Read the text and look at the questions that follow it. In this reading comprehension, the questions are multiple choices.Three-year-old Teddy Lasry was napping yesterday in his cowboy outfit yesterday at his family's Fifth Ave. apartment when he shot up in bed screaming. A 3-foot-long black-and-white snake was coiled around his left arm and had just bitten his pinky."The baby-sitter freaked out," said Teddy's father, David Lasry, who, along with his wife, Evelyn,...
Đọc tiếp

Ai giúp em với ạ :(

Part 4: Read the text and look at the questions that follow it. In this reading comprehension, the questions are multiple choices.

Three-year-old Teddy Lasry was napping yesterday in his cowboy outfit yesterday at his family's Fifth Ave. apartment when he shot up in bed screaming. A 3-foot-long black-and-white snake was coiled around his left arm and had just bitten his pinky.

"The baby-sitter freaked out," said Teddy's father, David Lasry, who, along with his wife, Evelyn, was at work when the reptile showed up about 4 p.m.

The horrified nanny called 911 and the building's doorman. The doorman and two cable TV workers helped pry the snake off the boy's arm and stow it in a garbage bag, Lasry said.

Police rushed Teddy to Mount Sinai Medical Center, where his parents said he spent two hours attached to a heart monitor as a precaution in case the snake was poisonous.

It wasn't. Experts at the snakebite treatment center at Jacobi Medical Center in the Bronx, where cops took the critter, determined it was a non-venomous California king snake.

But how did it end up in Teddy's bed?

A little sleuthing determined that the serpent had escaped two weeks ago from its cage in the apartment of a doctor whose family lives four floors below the Lasrys. The apologetic owner said his son's pet snake likely traveled up the radiator pipes and into his neighbor's apartment.

"It's a very docile, very harmless snake," he said. "It's handled by our family all the time."

Lasry, 42, a fine arts publisher, said he believed the pet was simply hungry after two weeks of cruising. Teddy's mother, Evelyn Lasry, 37, said her son seems to have gotten over his fright by thinking of himself as a hero cowboy as he rode in the back of the police cruiser to the hospital.

"I told Teddy he's a pretty snake, a nice pet snake who got out of his cage," Evelyn Lasry said. "But he asked, 'Why did he bite my finger, Mamma?' And I said, 'Because he saw that you are a big boy, Teddy, in your cowboy outfit and he got scared.'"

1. What did the babysitter do?

A.    She ran out of the apartment.           B.    She took the snake off Teddy's arm.

C.    She called for help.                                 D.    She called the television company.

2. What do we learn about the snake?

A.    It was poisonous.                                    B.    It had escaped from a zoo.

C.    It was about a meter long.                   D.    It had escaped earlier in the afternoon.

3. Which of these statements is true?

A.    Teddy was awake when the snake arrived.

B.    Teddy's father was working and his mother was at home.

C.    Teddy needed a heart machine to stay alive for two hours.

D.    The snake is used to being touched.

4. What does Teddy think now of the snake attack?

A.    He was attacked because the snake was scared of him.

B.    He was attacked because he was asleep.

C.    He was attacked because the snake was hungry.

D.    He was attacked because his parents weren't at home.

0
26 tháng 5 2017

He does his homework, play computer games and relax there.

19 tháng 3 2019

Chọn đáp án: D

Giải thích:

Dựa vào câu: “He does his homework, play computer games and relax here.”

Dịch: Cậu ấy làm bài tập, chơi điện tử và nghỉ ngơi ở đó.

14 tháng 6 2018

Đáp án: A

Giải thích: “because” có nghĩa là vì, dùng để nối 2 vế nguyên nhân kết quả

Dịch: Phòng khách là căn phòng ưa thích của cậu ấy, vì cậu ấy có thể ngồi trên ghế bành và xem ti vi với cả gia đình.