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Đề ôn luyện thi vào lớp 10 Chuyên Sư phạm số 19

Quiz ID: 6583

Question 1 (Question ID: 13-264670)


Choose the word which has the underlined part pronounced differently from the others.
A. salmon
B. halve
C. calve
D. dilemma
Question 2 (Question ID: 13-264671)
Choose the word which has the underlined part pronounced differently from the others.
A. pour
B. flour
C. scour
D. sour
Question 3 (Question ID: 13-689668)
Choose the word that differs from the rest in the position of the main stress.
A. provoke
B. forbid
C. fatigued
D. censor
Question 4 (Question ID: 13-264673)
Choose the word that differs from the rest in the position of the main stress.
A. ascertain
B. auctioneer
C. agitate
D. lemonade
Question 5 (Question ID: 13-264674)
Choose the word that differs from the rest in the position of the main stress.
A. eradicate
B. kilometer
C. compatible
D. agriculture

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Question 6 (Question ID: 13-220209)
Donald Trump's pledge to rip up existing trade deals with Mexico would _____ substantial
damage on the US economy and kill the region's competitiveness on the world stage,
according to the Mexican economist who led the country's trade talks with the US.
A. induce
B. inflict
C. impose
D. wreak
Question 7 (Question ID: 13-220210)
Discontent among the ship's crew finally led to the _____.
A. riot
B. rebellion
C. mutiny
D. strike
Question 8 (Question ID: 13-220213)
The proposal would _____ a storm of protest around the country.
A. spark
B. sparkle
C. ignite
D. trigger
Question 9 (Question ID: 13-220217)
Obama expressed regret as a U.S drone strike has _____ killed innocent hostages.
A. incongruously
B. vehemently
C. inadvertently
D. graciously
Question 10 (Question ID: 13-220218)
_____, we missed our plane.
A. The train is late
B. The train was late
C. To be late
D. The train being late
Question 11 (Question ID: 13-220222)
His jeans and checked shirt, _____, looked clean and of good quality.
A. though it old and well-worn
B. though old and well-worn
C. even though are they old and well-worn
D. although them old but well-worn

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Question 12 (Question ID: 13-220223)
I hope you won't take it _____ if I suggest an alternative remedy.
A. offense
B. amiss
C. upset
D. most
Question 13 (Question ID: 13-220224)
Claims for compensation could _____ run into billions of pounds.
A. far
B. much
C. well
D. most
Question 14 (Question ID: 13-220226)
_____ the public's concern about the local environment, this new road scheme will have to be
abandoned.
A. As regards
B. In view of
C. In the event of
D. However much
Question 15 (Question ID: 13-220228)
My fingers are tired! I've been hammering away _____ this keyboard for hours.
A. on
B. at
C. onto
D. in
Question 16 (Question ID: 13-220233)
I _____ a small fortune when my uncle died but I managed to squander most of it. I'm
ashamed to say.
A. came into
B. came about
C. came round to
D. came down with
Question 17 (Question ID: 13-220234)
At the meeting, someone _____ the idea that there should be a student representative on the
committee.
A. put forward
B. put across
C. put about
D. put out

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Question 18 (Question ID: 13-220238)
The waiter tried to be friendly to his customers but a _____ can't change its spots and he was
still very rude.
A. leopard
B. lion
C. cheetah
D. wolf
Question 19 (Question ID: 13-220241)
Monsoon Wedding was described as a cinematic jewel when it hit the _____ screen.
A. golden
B. silver
C. bronze
D. diamond
Question 20 (Question ID: 13-220243)
The British prime minister is too apt to cling to Washington's _____ strings.
A. apron
B. violin
C. heart
D. taut

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Question 21 (Question ID: 13-220261)
Read the following passage and choose the best answer for each blank.
If you're an environmentalist, plastic is a word you tend to say with a sneer or a snarl. It has become
a symbol of our wasteful, throw-away society. But there seems little Q21.1.................... it is here to
stay, and the truth is, of course, that plastic has brought enormous Q21.2...................., even
environmental evil - it's the way society chooses to uses and abuse them.
Almost all the 50 or so different kinds of modern plastic are made from oil, gas, or coal-non-
renewable natural Q21.3..................... We Q21.4.................... well over three million tonnes of the
stuff in Britain each year and, sooner or later, most of it is thrown away. A high Q21.5....................
of our annual consumption is in the Q21.6.................... of packaging, and this Q21.7....................
about seven percent by weight of our domestic Q21.8..................... Almost all of it could be
recycled, but very little of it is, though the plastic recycling Q21.9.................... is growing fast.
The plastics themselves are extremely energy-rich they have a higher caloric value than coal and one
method of "recovery" strongly favored by the plastic manufacturers is the Q21.10.................... of
waste plastic into fuel.

Q21.1. A. evidence B. doubt C. concern D. likelihood

Q21.2. A. benefits B. savings C. profits D. pleasures

Q21.3. A. resources B. fuels C. processes D. products

Q21.4. A. remove B. change C. import D. consume

Q21.5. A. amount B. rate C. proportion D. portion

Q21.6. A. way B. form C. type D. kind

Q21.7. A. constitutes B. carries C. makes D. takes

Q21.8. A. goods B. rubble C. requirements D. refuse

Q21.9. A. factory B. manufacture C. plant D. industry

Q21.10. A. conversion B. melting C. replacement D. change

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Question 22 (Question ID: 13-220288)
Fill each of the following blanks with ONE suitable word.
IS HONEST THE BEST POLICY?
Radical honesty therapy as it is known in the US, is the latest thing to be held up as the key to
happiness and success. It involves telling the truth all the time, Q22.1.................... no exceptions for
hurt feelings. But this is not as easy as it may Q22.2..................... Altruistic lies, rather than the
conniving, self-aggrandizing variety are an essential Q22.3.................... of polite society.
We all lie Q22.4.................... mad. It wears us out. It is the major source of all human stress, says
Brad Blanton, psychotherapist and founder of the Centre for Radical Honesty. He has become a
Q22.5.................... name in the US, where he spreads his message via day-time television talk
shows. He certainly has his work Q22.6.................... out for him. In a recent survey of Americans,
93 percent admitted to lying regularly, and habitually in the workplace. Dr. Blanton is typically blunt
about the consequences of being deceitful. 'Lying Q22.7.................... people,' he says.
Dr. Blanton is adamant that minor inconveniences are Q22.8.................... at all compared with the
huge benefits of truth-telling. 'Telling the truth, especially after hiding it for a long time, takes guts. It
isn't easy. But it is better than the Q22.9..................... 'This, he believes, is the stress of living in the
prison of the mind,' which results in depression and ill health. 'Your body stays tied up in
Q22.10.................... and is susceptible to illness," he says. 'Allergies, high blood pressure, and
insomnia are all made worse by lying. Good relationship skills, parenting skills, and management
skills are also dependent on telling the truth.

Read the following passage and do the tasks.


Bovids
A. The family of mammals called bovids belongs to the Artiodactyl class, which also includes
giraffes. Bovids are a highly diverse group consisting of 137 species, some of which are man’s most
important domestic animals.
B. Bovids are well represented in most parts of Eurasia and Southeast Asian islands, but they are by
far the most numerous and diverse in the latter. Some species of bovid are solitary, but others live in
large groups with complex social structures. Although bovids have adapted to a wide range of
habitats, from arctic tundra to deep tropical forest, the majority of species favour open grassland,
scrub or desert. This diversity of habitat is also matched by great diversity in size and form: at one
extreme is the royal antelope of West Africa, which stands a mere 25 cm at the shoulder; at the
other, the massively built bison of North America and Europe, growing to a shoulder height of
2.2m.
C. Despite differences in size and appearance, bovids are united by the possession of certain
common features. All species are ruminants, which means that they retain undigested food in their
stomachs, and regurgitate it as necessary. Bovids are almost exclusively herbivorous: plant-eating
“incisors: front teeth herbivorous”.
D. Typically their teeth are highly modified for browsing and grazing: grass or foliage is cropped

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with the upper lip and lower incisors** (the upper incisors are usually absent), and then ground
down by the cheek teeth. As well as having cloven, or split, hooves, the males of ail bovid species
and the females of most carry horns. Bovid horns have bony cores covered in a sheath of horny
material that is constantly renewed from within; they are unbranched and never shed. They vary in
shape and size: the relatively simple horns of a large Indian buffalo may measure around 4 m from
tip to tip along the outer curve, while the various gazelles have horns with a variety of elegant
curves.
E. Five groups, or subfamilies, may be distinguished: Bovinae, Antelope, Caprinae, Cephalophinae
and Antilocapridae. The subfamily Bovinae comprises most of the larger bovids, including the
African bongo, and nilgae, eland, bison and cattle. Unlike most other bovids they are all non-
territorial. The ancestors of the various species of domestic cattle banteng, gaur, yak and water
buffalo are generally rare and endangered in the wild, while the auroch (the ancestor of the domestic
cattle of Europe) is extinct.
F. The term 'antelope' is not a very precise zoological name – it is used to loosely describe a number
of bovids that have followed different lines of development. Antelopes are typically long-legged,
fast-running species, often with long horns that may be laid along the back when the animal is in
full flight. There are two main sub-groups of antelope: Hippotraginae, which includes the oryx and
the addax, and Antilopinae, which generally contains slighter and more graceful animals such as
gazelle and the springbok. Antelopes are mainly grassland species, but many have adapted to
flooded grasslands: pukus, waterbucks and lechwes are all good at swimming, usually feeding in
deep water, while the sitatunga has long, splayed hooves that enable it to walk freely on swampy
ground.
G. The sub-family Caprinae includes the sheep and the goat, together with various relatives such as
the goral and the tahr. Most are woolly or have long hair. Several species, such as wild goats,
chamois and ibex, are agile cliff – and mountain-dwellers. Tolerance of extreme conditions is most
marked in this group: Barbary and bighorn sheep have adapted to arid deserts, while Rocky
Mountain sheep survive high up in mountains and musk oxen in arctic tundra.
H. The duiker of Africa belongs to the Cephalophinae subfamily. It is generally small and solitary,
often living in thick forest. Although mainly feeding on grass and leaves, some duikers – unlike
most other bovids – are believed to eat insects and feed on dead animal carcasses, and even to kill
small animals.
I. The pronghorn is the sole survivor of a New World sub-family of herbivorous ruminants, the
Antilocapridae in North America. It is similar in appearance and habits to the Old World antelope.
Although greatly reduced in numbers since the arrival of Europeans, and the subsequent enclosure
of grasslands, the pronghorn is still found in considerable numbers throughout North America,
from Washington State to Mexico. When alarmed by the approach of wolves or other predators,
hairs on the pronghorn’s rump stand erect, so showing and emphasizing the white patch there. At
this signal, the whole herd gallops off at speed of over 60 km per hour.

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Question 23 (Question ID: 13-699438)
In which region is the biggest range of bovids to be found?
A. Africa
B. Eurasia
C. North America
D. South-east Asia
Question 24 (Question ID: 13-699439)
Most bovids have a preference for living in _____.
A. isolation
B. small groups
C. tropical forest
D. wide open spaces
Question 25 (Question ID: 13-699440)
Which of the following features do all bovids have in common?
A. Their horns are shot.
B. They have upper incisors.
C. They store food in the body.
D. Their hooves are undivided.
Question 26 (Question ID: 13-699441)
Match each characteristic with the correct subfamily, A, B, C or D.

List of subfamilies
A. Antelope
B. Bovinae
C. Caprinae
D. Cephalophinae

NB You may use any letter more than once


can endure very harsh environments Q26.1....................
includes the ox and the cow Q26.2....................
may supplement its diet with meat Q26.3....................
can usually move a speed Q26.4....................
does not defend a particular area of land Q26.5....................

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Question 27 (Question ID: 13-699447)
Answer the questions below.
Choose NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS from the passage for each answer.
What is the smallest species of Bovid called? Q27.1....................
Which species of Bovinae has now died out? Q27.2....................
What facilitates the movement of the sitatunga over wetland? Q27.3....................
What sort of terrain do barbary sheep live in? Q27.4....................
What is the only living member of the Antilocapridae subfamily? Q27.5....................

Read the following passage and choose which of the headings from A - L match the blanks.
There are two extra headings, which do not match any of the paragraphs.
A. The problems with the Julian calendar
B. The calendar in Eastern fun
C. Early adoption of the Gregorian calendar
D. The problems with the early Roman calendar
E. Why some countries were late to change their calendars
F. Priests and the calendar
G. How the Julian calendar works
H. The problem with the solar year
I. Current rules for leap years
K. The development of the Gregorian calendar
L. The length of a year
Question 28 (Question ID: 13-265391)
Calendars Through the Years
1. Q28.1....................
How many days are there in a year? You might say 365, with an extra 'leap day' added to the end of
February every four years. This averages out to a quarter of a day every year, so that every year is
365.25 days. This is because the actual length of a solar year - that is, the time it takes for the Earth
to complete a full rotation of the Sun - is a little bit more than 365 days. Throughout history, most
calendars have tried to match their year to the length of a solar year, with varying degrees of
accuracy.
2. Q28.2....................
The calendar used in much of the world today is based on the one used by the Romans. Because
Romans thought that even numbers were unlucky, the earliest Roman calendar had months of 29 or
31 days, with 28 days in February. Since the year had 355 days, they would add a leap month of 27
days between February and March every 3 to 5 years, as determined by priests called pontifices. As
a result, the average year was anywhere from 360 to 364 days, so it is no surprise that the calendar
very quickly deviated from the solar year.
3. Q28.3....................
Julius Caesar decided that the calendar should be based on the solar year, following a special year of

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445 days in 46 BC that readjusted the months to their proper seasons. From 45 BC onwards, the
months were given the current lengths of 30 or 31 days, retaining 28 for February but adding the
29th February every four years to account for the accumulated extra quarter days. The names of the
months used by the Romans remain in English today, either with a slight adjustment to spelling
(e.g., they called it Aprilis, we call it April) or in the exact same form (e.g., they also called
September, October, November and December by those very names).
4. Q28.4....................
The calendar used from 45 BC onwards - known as the Julian calendar, after the man who imposed
it on the world - is far more accurate than any earlier calendar. Even so, the Julian calendar deviates
from the solar year by 1 day every 128 years. This is because the exact length of the solar year is
actually 365.2422 days, or about 11 minutes shorter than the 365.25 days calculated by the Romans.
5. Q28.5....................
By the 16th century AD, the discrepancy between the solar year and the Julian calendar was notable
enough that something had to be done. It took several decades of consultation among
mathematicians and astronomers until it was finally decided to end the Julian calendar and move to
a new system of calculating leap years. Pope Gregory XIII decreed that the Julian calendar would
end on Thursday 4th October 1582 and that the following day would be Friday 15th October. This
would remove the 10 days that had been added in error by the Julian system for leap years, and
readjust the calendar to the seasons in the solar year.
6. Q28.6....................
The Gregorian calendar was put into use immediately in Italy, Portugal, Spain, Poland and most of
France, and in Austria, Hungary and much of Germany in the next few years. However, the new
calendar was not implemented by the United Kingdom and its overseas territories, such as the
colonies that are known today as Canada and the United States, until 1752. By then, the adjustment
required was 11 days, so the Parliament decided that the British would go to bed at the end of the
day on 2nd September 1752 and wake up the next morning on 14th September. Sweden followed
the British in moving to the Gregorian calendar the next year.
7. Q28.7....................
An even longer adjustment was required when the Gregorian calendar was adopted by Japan in
1872, and in the early 20th century by China, Bulgaria, Estonia, Russia, Greece and Turkey. Many
of these countries that were among the last to adopt the Gregorian calendar for civic purposes used
the Byzantine calendar, a variant of the Julian calendar, prior to the change. Many people in these
same nations continue to use the Eastern Orthodox calendar (also based on the Julian calendar) for
religious feasts and festivals. Similarly, in China and Japan, a traditional calendar is still used to
select dates for weddings, funerals and new ventures. These last two countries did not exactly delay
the move to the Gregorian calendar; rather, they started using it once it became beneficial, due to the
more extensive connections with other countries on that calendar.
8. Q28.8....................
As we can see from this brief history of calendars, one of the key challenges in making any calendar
is the decision about how to account for the variations between the calendar year and the solar year,
since the latter includes a fraction of a day. The Gregorian calendar improved considerably on the

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Julian calendar, limiting the discrepancy to one day every 3,336 years. While it is commonly
believed that every fourth year is a leap year, the actual rule imposed in 1582 is slightly more
complicated: we add a day to February in years that are divisible by 4, but not in years divisible by
100 unless they can be divided by 400. Thus, 1700, 1800 and 1900 were not leap years, but 1600 and
2000 were. This adjustment means that the average calendar year is only 26 seconds longer than a
solar year, so it won't be an issue again until the year 4918.
Question 29 (Question ID: 13-265490)
Read the text below and look carefully at each sentence. Some of the lines are correct, and some
have a word that should not be there. Find the redundant word in each line.

( 1 ) In 1978, a toddler named by Frank Nelson made his way to the top of a 12-foot slide in Hamlin
Park in Chicago, with his mother, Debra, a few steps behind him. ( 2 ) So the structure, installed
three years earlier, was known as a tornado slide because it twisted on the way down, but the boy
never made it that far. ( 3 ) He fell through the gap between the handrail and the steps and landed on
his head on the asphalt. ( 4 ) A other year later, his parents sued the Chicago Park District and the
two companies that had manufactured and installed the slide. ( 5 ) Frank had fractured his skull in
the fall and suffered permanent brain damage. ( 6 ) He was paralyzed on his left side and had hardly
speech and vision problems. ( 7 ) His attorneys noted that he was forced to wear a helmet all the
time to protect his fragile skull. ( 8 ) The Nelsons was extremely one of a number of lawsuits of that
era that fueled a backlash against potentially dangerous playground equipment. ( 9 ) Theodora
Briggs Sweeney, a consumer advocate and safety consultant from John Carroll University, near
Cleveland, testified at more dozens of trials and became a public crusader for playground reform. (
10 ) The name of the playground game will continue to be Russian roulette, with the child as
unsuspecting victim, Sweeney wrote in a 1979 paper published in Pediatrics. ( 11 ) She was
concerned about many things whether the heights of slides, the space between railings, the danger
of loose S-shaped hooks holding parts together but what she worried about most was asphalt and
dirt. ( 12 ) In her paper, Sweeney declared that lab simulations showed children could die from a fall
of as little as a foot if their head hit asphalt, or three feet if their head hit the dirt.

Line Từ lỗi Phương án sửa

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Question 30 (Question ID: 13-206335)
Complete the second sentence using the word given so that it has the same meaning to the first.
Finally, the new prime minister has been appointed. (LAST)
=> The ..........

Question 31 (Question ID: 13-206334)


Complete the second sentence using the word given so that it has the same meaning to the first.
It doesn't make any difference if they paint the board white or yellow. (MATTER)

Question 32 (Question ID: 13-206333)


Complete the second sentence using the word given so that it has the same meaning to the first.
Our representatives have been criticizing the new concept. (CRITICAL)
=> ..........

Question 33 (Question ID: 13-206332)


Complete the second sentence using the word given so that it has the same meaning to the first.
Jerry had terrible problems with solving the riddle. (HARDLY)
=> ..........

Question 34 (Question ID: 13-206331)


Complete the second sentence using the word given so that it has the same meaning to the first.
George won't lend his tape recorder to you if you don't promise to bring it back by Saturday.
(GIVE)
=> Unless ...........

Question 35 (Question ID: 13-176444)


Complete the second sentence so that it has the same meaning to the first.
You pay $20 a month for a period of one year.
=> You pay in ............

Question 36 (Question ID: 13-689973)


Complete the second sentence so that it has the same meaning to the first.
He didn't mention our previous conversation at all.
=> He made ..........

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Question 37 (Question ID: 13-200653)
Complete the second sentence so that it has the same meaning to the first.
It's a pity that you wrote that letter.
=> I .....

Question 38 (Question ID: 13-202663)


Complete the second sentence so that it has the same meaning to the first.
Success in the academic field depends on your ability to amass qualifications.
=> The ............

Question 39 (Question ID: 13-202656)


Complete the second sentence so that it has the same meaning to the first.
The president's bodyguards stood behind him watching.
=> Watchfully .....

Question 40 (Question ID: 13-690009)


Write a paragraph of approximately 140 words to answer the following question.
What is more important to people in their twenties - friends or family?

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Đáp án (Answer Key)
Quiz ID: 6583

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Question 1. D Question 2. A
Question 3. D Question 4. C
Question 5. D Question 6. B
Question 7. C Question 8. A
Question 9. C Question 10. D
Question 11. B Question 12. B
Question 13. C Question 14. B
Question 15. B Question 16. A
Question 17. A Question 18. A
Question 19. B Question 20. A
Question 21. Question 22.
21.1 B 21.2 A 21.3 A 21.4 C 22.1 with
21.5 C 21.6 B 21.7 A 21.8 D 22.2 sound
21.9 D 21.10 A 22.3 part
22.4 like
22.5 household
22.6 cut
22.7 kills / harms
22.8 nothing
22.9 alternative
22.10 knots
Question 23. D Question 24. D
Question 25. C Question 26.
26.1 C
26.2 B
26.3 D
26.4 A
26.5 B

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Question 27. Question 28.
27.1 royal antelope 28.1 L
27.2 the auroch 28.2 D
27.3 long, splayed hooves / splayed, long 28.3 G
hooves 28.4 A
27.4 arid deserts 28.5 K
27.5 pronghorn 28.6 C
28.7 E
28.8 I
Question 29. Question 30.
Read the text below and look carefully at each The new prime minister has been
sentence. Some of the lines are correct, and appointed at last.
some have a word that should not be there. Question 31.
Find the redundant word in each line. It doesn't matter whether they paint the
board white or yellow.
( 1 ) In 1978, a toddler named by (Từ thừa)
Question 32.
Frank Nelson made his way to the top of a 12-
Our representatives have been critical of
foot slide in Hamlin Park in Chicago, with his
the new concept.
mother, Debra, a few steps behind him. ( 2 ) So
Question 33.
(Từ thừa) the structure, installed three years
earlier, was known as a tornado slide because it Jerry could hardly solve the riddle.
twisted on the way down, but the boy never Hardly could Jerry solve the riddle.
made it that far. ( 3 ) He fell through the gap Question 34.
between the handrail and the steps and landed Unless you give George your own word
on his head on the asphalt. ( 4 ) A other (Từ that you 'll bring his tape recorder back by
thừa) year later, his parents sued the Chicago Saturday, he won't lend it to you.
Park District and the two companies that had Question 35.
manufactured and installed the slide. ( 5 )
You pay in 12 successive monthly
Frank had fractured his skull in the fall and
installments of 20 dollars.
suffered permanent brain damage. ( 6 ) He was
Question 36.
paralyzed on his left side and had hardly (Từ
He made no reference to our previous
thừa) speech and vision problems. ( 7 ) His
conversation at all.
attorneys noted that he was forced to wear a
helmet all the time to protect his fragile skull. ( Question 37.
8 ) The Nelsons was extremely (Từ thừa) one I would rather you hadn't written that letter.
of a number of lawsuits of that era that fueled a I would rather you hadn't written that letter.
backlash against potentially dangerous Question 38.
playground equipment. ( 9 ) Theodora Briggs The more qualifications you are able to
Sweeney, a consumer advocate and safety amass, the more success you will have in
consultant from John Carroll University, near the academic field.

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Cleveland, testified at more (Từ thừa) dozens The more qualifications you are able to
of trials and became a public crusader for amass, the more successful you are in the
playground reform. ( 10 ) The name of the academic field.
playground game will continue to be Russian The more qualifications you are able to
roulette, with the child as unsuspecting victim, amass, the more successful you will be in
Sweeney wrote in a 1979 paper published in the academic field.
Pediatrics. ( 11 ) She was concerned about Question 39.
many things whether (Từ thừa) the heights of
Watchfully standing behind the president
slides, the space between railings, the danger of
were his bodyguards.
loose S-shaped hooks holding parts together
but what she worried about most was asphalt
and dirt. ( 12 ) In her paper, Sweeney declared
that lab simulations showed children could die
from a fall of as little as a foot if their head hit
asphalt, or three feet if their head hit the dirt.

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