Facilities:: Đế Số 06 Hsg Anh 9 (Huyện)
Facilities:: Đế Số 06 Hsg Anh 9 (Huyện)
Facilities:: Đế Số 06 Hsg Anh 9 (Huyện)
PART 1: LISTENING
I. You will hear a man talking to a group of people about a new sports center. For each of
the questions, fill in the missing information in the numbered space. Use NO MORE
THAN THREE WORDS for each answer.
II. You will hear an interview with a woman who works in a museum. As you listen, choose
the best answer to each question.
1. When she was at school, Clara wanted to become ________.
A. an actress B. a teacher C. a lawyer
2. Why did Clara not apply for the museum job sooner?
A. Her mother advised her to wait.
B. It seemed a very difficult job.
C. She thought it might be boring.
3. What surprised Clara on her first day at work?
A. She had to carry some items.
B. She was asked to give a speech.
C. She had to meet a lot of people.
4. Clara was told to improve her knowledge of ________.
A. computers B. languages C. mathematics
5. What part of her job does Clara enjoy the most?
A. planning large exhibitions
B. writing descriptions of objects
C. talking to visitors about the displays
PART 4. Reading
VIII. Read the text and choose the best answer.
Bats are not the dirty, bloodthirsty monsters that they are portrayed to be in vampire
films. These animals groom themselves carefully like cats and only rarely carry rabies. Of
the hundreds of species of bats, only three rely on blood meals. In fact, the majority eat
fruit, insects, spiders, or small animals. They consume an enormous number of pests,
pollinate many varieties of plant life, and help reforest barren land by excreting millions of
undigested seeds.
Almost all bats use echolocation to navigate, especially at night. As they fly, they emit
a series of high-pitched squeaks at the rate of about fifty per minute. As these signals
bounce off objects in their path, an echo is detected by the bats' sensitive ears which
informs them of the direction and distance of obstacles so that they can undertake
corrective or evasive action. But bats are not blind as widely assumed. In fact, all species of
bats can see, probably about as well as human beings.
It is also a little-known fact that bats are highly social creatures. Thousands or even
millions of individual bats may belong to a colony, hanging upside down in caves or in
trees. Within their social systems, bats assume specialized roles. Some may guard the