45 đọc tiếng anh 5 EN36 024

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45  đọc   tiếng anh 5   EN36 024

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I The sons are composers and prize-winning musicians, while Dad makes the instruments Matthew Rye reports Whole families of musicians are not exactly rare However, it is unusual to come across one that includes not only writers and performers of music, but also an instrument maker When South Wales schoolteachers John and Hetty Watkins needed to get their ten-year-old son, Paul, a cello to suit his blossoming talents, they baulked at the costs involved ‘We had a look at various dealers and it was obvious it was going to be very expensive,’ John says ‘So I wondered if I could actually make one I discovered that the Welsh School of Instrument Making was not far from where I lived, and I went along for evening classes once a week for about three years.’ ‘After probably three or four goes with violins and violas, he had a crack at his first cello,’ Paul, now 28, adds ‘It turned out really well He made me another one a bit later, when he’d got the hang of it And that’s the one I used right up until a few months ago.’ John has since retired as a teacher to work as a full-time craftsman, and makes up to a dozen violins a year – selling one to the esteemed American player Jaime Laredo was ‘the icing on the cake’ Both Paul and his younger brother, Huw, were encouraged to play music from an early age The piano came first: ‘As soon as I was big enough to climb up and bang the keys, that’s what I did,’ Paul remembers But it wasn’t long before the cello beckoned ‘My folks were really quite keen for me to take up the violin, because Dad, who played the viola, used to play chamber music with his mates and they needed another violin to make up a string trio I learned it for about six weeks but didn’t take to it But I really took to the character who played the cello in Dad’s group I thought he was a very cool guy when I was six or seven So he said he’d give me some lessons, and that really started it all off Later, they suggested that my brother play the violin too, but he would have none of it.’ ‘My parents were both supportive and relaxed,’ Huw says ‘I don’t think I would have responded very well to being pushed And, rather than feeling threatened by Paul’s success, I found that I had something to aspire to.’ Now 22, he is beginning to make his own mark as a pianist and composer Meanwhile, John Watkins’ cello has done his elder son proud With it, Paul won the string final of the BBC Young Musician of the Year competition Then, at the remarkably youthful age of 20, he was appointed principal cellist of the BBC Symphony Orchestra, a position he held, still playing his father’s instrument, until last year Now, however, he has acquired a Francesco Rugeri cello, on loan from the Royal Academy of Music ‘Dad’s not said anything about me moving on, though recently he had the chance to run a bow across the strings of each in turn and had to admit that my new one is quite nice! I think the only thing Dad’s doesn’t have – and may acquire after about 50–100 years – is the power to project right to the back of large concert halls It will get richer with age, like my Rugeri, which is already 304 years old.’ Soon he will be seen on television playing the Rugeri as the soloist in Elgar’s Cello Concerto, which forms the heart of the second programme in the new series, Masterworks ‘The well-known performance history doesn’t affect the way I play the work,’ he says ‘I’m always going to it my way.’ But Paul won’t be able to watch himself on television – the same night he is playing at the Cheltenham Festival Nor will Huw, whose String Quartet is receiving its London premiere at the Wigmore Hall the same evening John and Hetty will have to be diplomatic – and energetic – if they are to keep track of all their sons’ musical activities over the coming weeks What does Paul say about the Rugeri cello? b The cello his father made may become as good as it What we learn in the third paragraph about the instruments John has made? a He is particularly pleased about what happened to one of them What does the word “they” in the fourth paragraph refer to? b Dad and Dad’s mates What will require some effort from John and Hetty Watkins? b Being aware of everything their sons are involved in What does Paul say about his performance of Elgar’s Cello Concerto? b It is typical of his approach to everything he plays What we learn about Huw’s musical development? b His brother’s achievements gave him an aim Paul first became interested in playing the cello because a he admired someone his father played music with Why did John Watkins decide to make a cello? d He wanted to avoid having to pay for one What is meant by ‘crack’ in the second paragraph? c attempt II By the time a child is six or seven she has all the essential avoidances well enough by heart to be trusted with the care of a younger child And she also develops a number of simple techniques She learns to weave firm square balls from palm leaves, to make pinwheels of palm leaves or frangipani blossoms, to climb a coconut tree by walking up the trunk on flexible little feet, to break open a coconut with one firm well-directed blow of a knife as long as she is tall, to play a number of group games and sing the songs which go with them, to tidy the house by picking up the litter on the stony floor, to bring water from the sea, to spread out the copra to dry and to help gather it in when rain threatens, to go to a neighboring house and bring back a lighted faggot for the chief's pipe or the cook-house fire But in the case of the little girls all these tasks are merely supplementary to the main business of baby-tending Very small boys also have some care of the younger children, but at eight or nine years of age they are usually relieved of it Whatever rough edges have not been smoothed off by this responsibility for younger children are worn off by their contact with older boys For little boys are admitted to interesting and important activities only so long as their behavior is circumspect and helpful Where small girls are brusquely pushed aside, small boys will be patiently tolerated and they become adept at making themselves useful The four or five little boys who all wish to assist at the important, business of helping a grown youth lasso reef eels, organize themselves into a highly efficient working team; one boy holds the bait, another holds an extra lasso, others poke eagerly about in holes in the reef looking for prey, while still another tucks the captured eels into his lavalava The small girls, burdened with heavy babies or the care of little staggerers who are too small to adventure on the reef, discouraged by the hostility of the small boys and the scorn of the older ones, have little opportunity for learning the more adventurous forms of work and play So while the little boys first undergo the chastening effects of baby-tending and then have many opportunities to learn effective cooperation under the supervision of older boys, the girls' education is less comprehensive They have a high standard of individual responsibility, but the community provides them with no lessons in cooperation with one another This is particularly apparent in the activities of young people: the boys organize quickly; the girls waste hours in bickering, innocent of any technique for quick and efficient cooperation The primary purpose of the passage with reference to the society under discussion is to… d explain some differences in the upbringing of girls and boys Which of the following is the best description of the author's technique in handling her material? b Both description and interpretation of observations The word 'brusquely' (line 9) most nearly means c abruptly The expression 'innocent of' (in the last paragraph) is best taken to mean b unskilled in It can be inferred that the 'high standard of individual responsibility' is b developed mainly through child-care duties The list of techniques in paragraph one could best be described as… a useful social skills It can be inferred that in the community under discussion all of the following are important except… d formal education Who the girls or boys work in tean better, according to the passage? Chọn câu trả lời: d boys III Individual girls cooperate with their mothers in looking after babies a I and II only III I chose a small house on the edge of the city It was an ideal place for me, because I wanted fresh mountain air, space, privacy, a place where one could feel the presence of ancient gods and the spirits of nature The house was merely an empty shell, but I chose it because it was on the sunny side of the valley, high enough to have a good view over the town, with sufficient breeze to diminish the occasionally stupefying heat It took me a good year to make the place inhabitable The first thing that I did was to dig out the well at the side of the house, which had caved in on itself and was full of mud and rocks I was helped in this by a Frenchman named Antoine, a man of considerable culture who had chosen to live here because he was attached to the people, with whom he had arrived in the original immigration We repaired the walls and the roof of the house, and painted the rooms completely white so that they became suddenly clean, bright, and spacious Antoine and I managed, at some danger to ourselves, to install electricity by connecting up a cable to the faltering system invented by a teacher This man was Professor Luis, who had set up a row of windmills to generate power; this was perfectly adequate for lighting, but was somewhat feeble when high amperage was required, so that the electric cooker that I had flown in by helicopter turned out to be more use as a storage cupboard It often happens when setting up a house that one finds quite suddenly that there is an urgent need for some item overlooked during the last expedition The track down from my house was a deeply pitted one that served as a watercourse each time that it rained, and although I have stabilised it since, it was to begin with only negotiable on foot or by mule, or by Antoine's ancient three-wheeled tractor This tractor had been half-buried in the mud of the flood at Chiriguana, but Senor Vivo's father, who is in fact General Sosa, governor of Cesar, had it dog out and brought in slung under a vast helicopter gunship, at his son's request It is commonly said in this country that General Sosa is the only member of the military hierarchy who ever does anything useful There was, at the far end of the town, a tienda that sold goods brought in by mule-train from Ipasueno, and so every few days I would find myself rattling and bumping my way to it on Antoine's formidable old tractor This shop was owned by a middle-aged couple who left the running of it to their daughter, a girl of twenty or so years whose name was Ena, as I discovered by overhearing the father asking of her the price of a bottle of Ron Cana Ena was small and strongly built; usually she wore a plain, faded blue dress, and her feet were always bare Sometimes I used to think that her head was very slightly too large for her, but she had an appealing and serene face framed by her long black hair She reminded me forcibly of a Greek girl with whom I had once been in love, for she had the same smooth and soft olive skin, and big brown eyes beneath eyebrows almost heavy enough to meet in the middle On her forearms were the traces of soft black downy hair, which to be frank, is something that has always driven me crazy, and her fingers were slim and elegant The best thing about her, however, was her elfin spirit; she had an air of quiet amusement, an innocent devilry, that gave her the aura of having existed from all eternity, and of being able to see tbe funny side of everything I perceived that she had a streak of mischief in her, as was to be revealed when I discovered how it was that she had kept me for so long in ignorance What attracted the writer to the house? a where it was located According to the writer, Antoine b was a foreigner V The restaurant owner John Moore writes about his relationship with his son Gary, the famous TV chef I believe everyone's given a chance in life My son, Gary, was given his chance with cooking, and my chance was to run a restaurant When l heard about the opportunity, I rushed over to look at the place It was in a really bad state It was perfect for what I had in mind Coming into this business made me recall my childhood l can remember my mother going out to work in a factory and me being so upset because l was left alone With that in mind, I thought, 'We want time for family life.' My wife dedicated herself to looking after the children and did all my accounts, while I ran the business We lived over the restaurant in those days, and we always put a lot of emphasis on having meals together It's paid dividends with our children, Gary and Joe They're both very confident Also, from a very early age they would come down and talk to our regular customers It's given both of them a great start in life Gary was quite a lively child when he was really small We had a corner bath, and when he was about seven he thought he'd jump into it like a swimming pool, and he knocked himself out When he was older he had to work for pocket money He started off doing odd jobs and by the age of about ten he was in the kitchen every weekend, so he always had loads of money at school He had discipline He used to be up even before me in the morning If you run a family business, it's for the family, and it was nice to see him helping out Gary wasn't very academic, but he shone so much in the kitchen By the age of 15 he was as good as any of the men working there, and sometimes he was even left in charge He would produce over a hundred meals, and from then I knew he'd go into catering because he had that flair So when he came to me and said, 'Dad, I've got to work experience as part of my course at school,' I sent him to a friend of mine who's got a restaurant Gary recently took up playing the drums and now he has his own band Goodness knows what will happen to the cooking if the music takes off My advice to Gary would be: if you start chasing two hares, you end up catching neither, so chase the hare you know you're going to catch He understood when I said to him: 'Gary, if you're going to get anywhere in life, you've got to it by the age of 30 If you haven't done it by then, it's too late Gary went to catering college at the age of 17, and on his first day he and the other new students they're normally complete beginners - were given what's supposed to be a morning's work But within an hour Gary had chopped all his vegetables, sliced all his meats He'd prepared everything That's my son for you! In the end, he was helping other people out None of us can believe how successful Gary's TV cookery series has become I'm extremely proud of him I've always tried to tell him that if you want something, you've got to work jolly hard for it, because no one gives you anything He's seen the opportunity he's been given and grabbed hold of it with both hands You know, you talk to your children as they grow up, and if they only take in ten per cent of what you've told them, you've got to be happy with that The things Gary says, the things he does, I think, well, he must have listened sometimes How did the writer react to his own big chance? d He saw what could be done 2 As a young boy, Gary… a showed how determined he could be What does “done it” in Paragraph refer to? c Dachieved success What is Gary's father's attitude to Gary playing in a band? c concerned that music may interfere with his career How did the writer's childhood influence his own family life? a He made sure there was plenty of personal contact How does his father regard Gary’s upbringing? a Gary has learnt some essential things The word “shone” in Paragraph means c was very good What does the writer mean by 'paid dividends' in paragraph 2? c produced benefits VI It would be simple enough to follow him Roger was a man of habits, and even when his hours of work were irregular he would still take his mid-day meal, whenever he did take it, at Percy’s Miss Temple found an antique bookshop across the street where, as she was obliged to purchase something for standing so long watching through its window, she is on impulse selected a complete four-volume Illustrated Lives of Sea Martyrs The books were detailed enough for her to spend the time in the window, apparently examining the books, while actually watching Roger first enter and then, after an hour, exit alone, from the heavy doors across the street He walked straight back to his office in the Ministry courtyard Miss Temple arranged for her purchase to be delivered to the Boniface, and walked back into the street, feeling like a fool She had re-crossed the square before she convinced herself that she was not so much a fool as an inexperienced observer It was pointless to watch from outside the restaurant because only from inside could she have discovered whether or not Roger dined alone or with others, or with which particular others - all imponant information She had a pretty good feeling that the crime she believed he had committed was not to benefit his work, which meant she was likely to learn nothing from observing his working day It was after work that any real information would be gathered Abruptly, she entered a store whose windows were thick with all shapes of luggage, hampers, oilskins, lanterns telescopes, and a large assortment of walking sticks She left wearing a ladies’ black travelling cloak, with a deep hood and several well hidden pockets, opera glasses, a leather-bound notebook and an all-weather pencil Miss Temple then took her tea Between cups of tea and two cakes, she made entries in the notebook, summarising her plan and then describing the day’s work so far That she now had a kind of uniform and a set of tools made everything that much easier and much less about her particular feelings, for tasks requiring clothes and supporting equipment seemed somehow more objective, even scientific, in nature In keeping with this, she made a point to write her entries in a kind of code replacing proper names and places with synonyms or word-play that hopefully would not be understood by anyone but herself Miss Temple left the tea shop at four o'clock, knowing Roger to leave usually at five, and hired a carriage She instructed her driver in a low, direct tone of voice, after assuring him he would be well paid for his time, that they would be following a gentleman, most likely in another carriage, and that she would knock on the roof of the coach to indicate the man when he appeared The driver nodded, but said nothing else She took his silence to mean that this was a usual enough thing, and felt all the more sure of herself When Roger appeared, some forty minutes later, she nearly missed him, amusing herself for the moment by peering through the opera glasses into nearby open windows, but a sudden feeling caused her to glance back at the courtyard gates just in time to see Roger, standing in the road with an air of confidence and purpose that took her breath away, flag down a coach of his own Miss Temple knocked sharply on the roof of the coach and they were off The thrill of the chase, complicated by the nervousness of seeing Roger, was quietly lost when, after the first few turns it became obvious that Roger’s destination was nowhere more interesting than his own home What mistake did Miss Temple soon realise she had made? a She had waited for Roger in the wrong place What attitude does the writer have towards Roger? d The writer has a normal attitude towards him Miss Temple bought a book at the bookshop because c she needed an excuse to stay there Miss Temple’s excitement at following Roger a disappeared when she realised where he was going Which of the conclusions can be drawn from this extract? c Miss Temple has a detailed plan to follow Roger VII OTHER When Roger left his office at about five o’clock, Miss Temple a pretended to be looking into an open window b watched him through her new opera glasses 2 According to his father, what was typical about Gary’s behavior on his first day at college? a He impressed those in charge b He tried to make his father proud d He performed the task efficiently Miss Temple thought it would be easy to follow Roger because a he always took a break at the same time b she already knew the schedule of his working day c he always ate lunch at a particular location How did Miss Temple’s purchases make her feel about what she was doing? a less confused b less personally involved c better prepared According to his father, what was typical about Gary’s behavior on his first day at college? a He performed the task efficiently d He tried to make his father proud When Roger left his office at about five o’clock, Miss Temple d saw him just before he got into a carriage Miss Temple decided to follow Roger after work because d she believed that was the time she could find out what she wanted to know Which of the conclusions can be drawn from this passage? c The writer feels happy with the people he has met The writer uses the phrase ‘served as a watercourse’ (Paragraph 4) to show that the path a was sometimes flooded b was difficult to walk on c had many deep holes 10 What did the writer like best about Ena? d her sense of humour 11 What was boys’ attitude to girls when they worked in team to capture eels? c Hostile d cheerful 12 How did the writer find out what Ena's name was? b Someone mentioned her name 13 What was boys’ attitude to girls when they worked in team to capture eels? a They felt bored b Hostile 14 What impression does the writer give of the electricity supply? b It was too dangerous to use c It only worked when it was windy d It didn’t always work properly 15 Why was General Sosa unlike other military officers? b He had his own private helicopter c He managed to get things done d He liked helping his relatives ... see him helping out Gary wasn't very academic, but he shone so much in the kitchen By the age of 15 he was as good as any of the men working there, and sometimes he was even left in charge He would... It was too dangerous to use c It only worked when it was windy d It didn’t always work properly 15 Why was General Sosa unlike other military officers? b He had his own private helicopter c He

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