Đáp án: living in Hanoi when he was 12. Bình luận hoặc Báo cáo. về câu hỏi! Each of the following sentences has one mistake. Identify and correct the mistakes. I was listening to the radio last night when the doorbell rings. A . was listening. 11. When he was young, he lived in Ha Noi. He used_____ 12. They don't take a bus to school anymore. They used _____ 13. She usually got up late when she was young. She used to _____ 14. I lived on a farm once, but I don't live any more. (80) And the child grew.--We have no materials for filling up this brief outline of the thirty years that followed in the Baptist's life. The usual Jewish education, the observance of the Nazarite vow, the death of his parents while he was comparatively young, an early retirement from the world to the deserts that surrounded the western shores of the Dead Sea, study and meditation given to the follows The Rule of 1221 , but arranges things in better juridical order 1686 - 1689: General Constitutions are drawn up; Pope Innocent XI ratifies them in 1689 1883: Pope Leo XIII gives the Franciscan Third Order Secular a new Rule which contains three chapters and spells out what should and should not be done [for example, avoid extremes, avoid. Yoda was a legendary Jedi Master who led the Jedi Order in the years leading up to its destruction by the Sith and the transition of the Galactic Republic into the Galactic Empire. Small in stature but revered for his wisdom and power, Yoda trained generations of Jedi, ultimately serving as the Jedi Order's Grand Master. He played integral roles in defending the Republic during the Clone Wars Vay Tiền Nhanh. $\text{1. She started to live in Hanoi 2 years ago. for}$ $\text{⇒ She has lived in Hanoi for 2 years.} $ $\text{2. He began to study English when he was young. since}$ $\text{⇒ He studied English since he was young.}$ $\text{3. I have never eaten this kind of food before. This is}$ $\text{⇒ This is the first time I have ever eaten this kind of food.}$ $\text{ have never seen such a beautiful girl before. she is}$ $\text{⇒ She is the most beautiful girl I have ever seen.}$ $\text{5. This is the best novel I have ever read}$ $\text{⇒I have never read such a good novel before. } $ Hãy giúp mọi người biết câu trả lời này thế nào?starstarstarstarstarstarstarstarstarstarstarstarstarstarstarstarstarstarstarstarstarstarstarstarstarstarstarstarstarstar 25. When he was young, he lived in Hanoi. He used _____________________________________________________________________ 26. What a pity! I don’t have much time to get to know about your beautiful country. I wish _______________________________________________________________________ 27. The beauty of the city really impressed Maryam. Maryam _____________________________________________________________________ 28. Please keep quiet in the classroom. I’d rather you _________________________________________________________________ 29. What a pity my neighbors are unfriendly. I wish _______________________________________________________________________ 30. They are going to introduce a new style of jeans in Vietnam. A new style ___________________________________________________________________ 31. She was greatly encouraged by her parents to enter the contest. She received _________________________________________________________________ 32. When did you move to Ho Chi Minh City with your family? How long have _______________________________________________________________ 33. My sister studied hard enough to pass the entrance exam. Because _____________________________________________________________________34. With her fluency in speaking English, Emily can easily find a good job. Emily speaks _________________________________________________________________35. The weather was too bad for Liz to have a good trip. Because _____________________________________________________________________36. With the hard rain, we might as well delay our trip to Sapa. It ___________________________________________________________________________37. It really annoys me when my next-door neighbors play loud music at night. I wish _______________________________________________________________________38. I find it really annoying not to be able to make myself understood in English. I wish _______________________________________________________________________39. Her bad annoying habit was posting private photos on Facebook. I wish _______________________________________________________________________40. With her hard work, Emily can get promotion soon. Emily works __________________________________________________________________41. With her regular visit to the orphanage, Emily has received a special love from the orphans. Emily visits ___________________________________________________________________42. The food was too bad for the tourists to eat. The food was bad, ______________________________________________________________43. With Emily’s frequent absence from school, she can be repeated this year. Because ______________________________________________________________________44. The concert was too boring to attract the audience. The concert was boring, _________________________________________________________45. My neighbors are always singing karaoke late at night, which is so annoying. I wish ________________________________________________________________________46. With the outbreak of the pandemic, many public places have been in lockdown. The pandemic breaks ____________________________________________________________47. I feel tired of doing the same things day after day. I wish ________________________________________________________________________48. I get bored with doing a lot of exercises every night. I wish ________________________________________________________________________49. Her ability to speak English strongly impressed the tourists. Her ability to speak English makes a ________________________________________________50. To walk in the rain is so enjoyable. I enjoy _______________________________________________________________________ Bài 1 Rewrite the following sentences with " used to" 1. they used to live in Ha Noi 2. John used to smoke 3. Miss Chi used to teach us English when we were students 4. Ronaldo used to be a football player 5. My father used to take me to the city when I was a child 6. He used to be a secretary for my company 7. Linda used to be late in class 8. Her brother used to smoke cigarettes 9. He used to feed the pigs when he was young 10. This city used to have old buildings => Giải thích Used to +Vinf Hành động đã từng xảy ra trong quá khứ nhưng bây giờ không còn Bài 2 Rewrite these sentences without changing the meaning 1. I used to have a lot of money but I lost it all when my business failed 2, I used to not like classical music when I was younger 3, I used to have interest in my work 4, My brother used to have hishair cut short when he joined the army 5, Dennis used to smoke 6, My parents used to live in the USA when they were young 7, jim was my best friend, but we aren't friends any more 8, when he was younger,my uncle was a national swimming champion 9, I used to dislike eat ice-cream when I was a child 10, Mert used to not smoke at all when he was at the university => Giải thích Used to +Vinf Hành động đã từng xảy ra trong quá khứ nhưng bây giờ không còn 1 [TẶNG BẠN] TRỌN BỘ Bí kíp học tốt 08 môn Chắc suất Đại học top - Giữ chỗ ngay!! ĐĂNG BÀI NGAY để cùng trao đổi với các thành viên siêu nhiệt tình & dễ thương trên diễn đàn. 1. When he was young, he lived in Ha Noi -> He used 2. What a pity! I don't have a laptop -> I wish 3. The beauty of the city really impressed Maryam -> Maryam 4. Please keep quiet in the classroom -> I'd rather 5. We started learning English in 2005 -> We have 6. These students have already done the homework -> The homework 7. Jeans have never been out of fashion -> Jeans are 8. What type of clothing do you like best? -> What is Last edited 23 Tháng chín 2017 2 1. When he was young, he lived in Ha Noi -> He used to live in Ha Noi when he was young 2. What a pity! I don't have a laptop -> I wish I had a laptop 3. The beauty of the city really impressed Maryam -> Maryam was really impressed by the beauty of the city 4. Please keep quiet in the classroom -> I'd rather you kept quite in the classroom 3 1. When he was young, he lived in Ha Noi -> He used to live in Ha Noi when he was young 2. What a pity! I don't have a laptop -> I wish I had a laptop 3. The beauty of the city really impressed Maryam -> Maryam was really impressed by the beauty of the city 4. Please keep quiet in the classroom -> I'd rather you kept quite in the classroom Hồi nãy em quen còn 4 câu nữa giúp em với em mới sửa lai rồi 4 5. We started learning English in 2005 -> We have been learning English since 2005 6. These students have already done the homework -> The homework has been done by these students 7. Jeans have never been out of fashion -> Jeans are always in fashion 8. What type of clothing do you like best? -> What is your favorite clothing? 5 1. When he was young, he lived in Ha Noi -> He used to live in Ha Noi when he was young 2. What a pity! I don't have a laptop -> I wish I had a laptop 3. The beauty of the city really impressed Maryam -> Maryam was really impressed by the beauty of the city 4. Please keep quiet in the classroom -> I'd rather you kept quiet in the classroom 5. We started learning English in 2005 -> We have been learning/ have learnt English since 2005 6. These students have already done the homework -> The homework has already been done by these students 7. Jeans have never been out of fashion -> Jeans are always in fashion 8. What type of clothing do you like best? -> What is your favorite type of clothing? 6 1. When he was young, he lived in Ha Noi -> He used to live in Ha Noi when he was young 2. What a pity! I don't have a laptop -> I wish I had a laptop 3. The beauty of the city really impressed Maryam -> Maryam was really impressed by the beauty of the city 4. Please keep quiet in the classroom -> I'd rather you kept quiet in the classroom 5. We started learning English in 2005 -> We have been learning/ have learnt English since 2005 6. These students have already done the homework -> The homework has already been done by these students 7. Jeans have never been out of fashion -> Jeans are always in fashion 8. What type of clothing do you like best? -> What is your favorite type of clothing? The North Vietnamese called it the Hỏa Lò prison, while American POWs ironically dubbed it the "Hanoi Hilton." Hundreds were tortured there with meat hooks and iron chains — including John the North Vietnamese city of Hanoi, hundreds of American soldiers were captured and kept prisoner in the Hỏa Lò prison, which the Americans ironically dubbed the “Hanoi Hilton.” Far from a luxury hotel, here the prisoners of war were kept in isolation for years on end, chained to rat-infested floors, and hung from rusty metal hooks. At the end of the war, these soldiers were finally freed from their own personal hell, many of them — including the late Arizona Senator John McCain — going on to become prominent politicians and public figures. But others were not so lucky. As many as 114 American POWs died in captivity during the Vietnam War, many within the unforgiving walls of the Hanoi Hotel. The History Of The Infamous Hanoi Hilton Rio Helmi/LightRocket/Getty ImagesDuring the French colonial period, Vietnamese prisoners were detained and tortured at the Hỏa Lò prison. During the Vietnam War, the North Vietnamese did the same to American soldiers. Before the American prisoners gave the prison its now-infamous name, the Hanoi Hilton was a French colonial prison called La Maison Centrale. The Vietnamese, however, knew it as the “Hỏa Lò” Prison, which translates to “fiery furnace.” Some Americans called it the “hell hole.” Built in the late 19th century, Hỏa Lò originally held up to 600 Vietnamese prisoners. By 1954, when the French were ousted from the area, more than 2,000 men were housed within its walls, living in squalid conditions. By the time the Americans sent combat forces into Vietnam in 1965, the Hỏa Lò Prison had been reclaimed by the Vietnamese. They were finally free to put their enemies behind its bars, and American soldiers became their prime targets. The Torture Of American Soldiers At Hỏa Lò David Hume Kennerly/Getty ImagesAmerican POW soldiers line up at the Hanoi Hilton prior to their release. March 29, 1973. Over nearly a decade, as the fought the North Vietnamese on land, air, and sea, more than 700 American prisoners of war were held captive by enemy forces. For those locked inside the Hanoi Hilton, this meant years of daily torture and abuse. In addition to extended solitary confinement, prisoners were regularly strapped down with iron stocks leftover from the French colonial era. Made for smaller wrists and ankles, these locks were so tight that they cut into the men’s skin, turning their hands black. Locked and with nowhere to move — or even to go to the bathroom — vermin became their only company. Attracted by the smells and screams, rats and cockroaches scurried over their weak bodies. Prisoners were forced to sit in their own excrement. They were also viciously beaten and forced to stand on stools for days on end. I thought perhaps I was going to die,’ said John McCain in this 1999 interview on his time at the Hanoi Hilton. He was kept there for five and a half years. As Cmdr. Jeremiah Denton later said, “They beat you with fists and fan belts. They warmed you up and threatened you with death. Then they really got serious and gave you something called the rope trick.” Prisoner Sam Johnson, later a representative for nearly two decades, described this “rope trick” in 2015 “As a POW in the Hanoi Hilton, I could recall nothing from military survival training that explained the use of a meat hook suspended from the ceiling. It would hang above you in the torture room like a sadistic tease — you couldn’t drag your gaze from it. During a routine torture session with the hook, the Vietnamese tied a prisoner’s hands and feet, then bound his hands to his ankles — sometimes behind the back, sometimes in front. The ropes were tightened to the point that you couldn’t breathe. Then, bowed or bent in half, the prisoner was hoisted up onto the hook to hang by ropes. Guards would return at intervals to tighten them until all feeling was gone, and the prisoner’s limbs turned purple and swelled to twice their normal size. This would go on for hours, sometimes even days on end.” AFP/Getty ImagesJohn McCain was captured in 1967 at a lake in Hanoi after his Navy warplane was been downed by the North Vietnamese. In 1967, McCain joined the prisoners at the Hanoi Hilton after his plane was shot down. His right knee and arms were broken in the crash, but he was denied medical care until the North Vietnamese government discovered that his father was a Navy admiral. He was transferred to a medical facility and woke up in a room filthy with mosquitoes and rats. Finally, they set him in a full-body cast, then cut the ligaments and cartilage from his knee. Even when the North Vietnamese offered McCain an early release — hoping to use him as a propaganda tool — McCain refused as an act of solidarity with his fellow prisoners. This, of course, earned him additional torture. During his time at the Hanoi Hilton, McCain’s hair turned completely white. American Resistance In Hỏa Lò Prison/h2> David Hume Kennerly/Getty ImagesAmerican POW soldiers inside their jail cell at the Hanoi Hilton prior to their release. March 29, 1973. Despite the endless torture, the American soldiers stayed strong the only way they knew how camaraderie. During his first four months in solitary confinement, Lt. Cmdr. Bob Shumaker noticed a fellow inmate regularly dumping his slop bucket outside. On a scrap of toilet paper that he hid in the wall by the toilets, he wrote, “Welcome to the Hanoi Hilton. If you get note, scratch balls as you are coming back.” The American soldier followed his instructions, and even managed to leave his own note, identifying himself as Air Force Capt. Ron Storz. This was one of many ways POWs figured out how to communicate. They eventually decided on using the “tap code” — something that couldn’t be understood by North Vietnamese forces. Usaf/Getty ImagesJohn McCain, leads a column of POW’s released from the Hanoi Hilton, awaiting transportation to Gia Lam Airport. March 14, 1973. By tapping on the prison walls, the prisoners would warn each other about the worst guards, explain what to expect in interrogations, and encourage each other not to break. They even used this code to tell jokes — a kick on the wall meant a laugh. Air Force pilot Ron Bliss later said the Hanoi Hilton “sounded like a den of runaway woodpeckers.” The ultimate example of Hỏa Lò Prison resistance was performed by Denton. Taken before TV cameras in order to film antiwar propaganda for the North Vietnamese, Denton blinked the work “torture” in Morse code — the first evidence that life at the Hanoi Hilton was not what the enemy forces made it seem. officials saw this tape and Denton was later awarded the Navy Cross for his bravery. Finally, after the and North Vietnam agreed to a ceasefire in early 1973, the 591 American POWs still in captivity were released. “Congratulations, men, we just left North Vietnam,'” former POW David Gray recalled his pilot saying. “And that’s when we cheered.” What Happened To The Horrific Prison? Wikimedia CommonsThe Hanoi Hilton in 1970. That delightful day in 1973 would not be the last time that some of the prisoners would see the Hanoi Hilton. John McCain returned to Hanoi decades later to find that most of the complex had been demolished in order to make room for luxury high-rise apartments. The rest became a museum called the Hỏa Lò Prison Memorial. Most of the museum is dedicated to the building’s time as the Maison Centrale, the colonial French prison, with cells on display that once held Vietnamese revolutionaries. There’s even an old French guillotine. Only one room in the back is dedicated to American POWs, though it doesn’t make any reference to torture — there are even videos detailing the “kind treatment” of the prisoners alongside photos of Americans playing sports on the prison grounds. What’s more, the museum displays a flight suit and parachute labeled as belonging to McCain, from when he was shot down over Hanoi — except they’re fake. Wikimedia CommonsJohn McCain’s alleged flight suit and parachute, on the display at the former Hanoi Hilton. “They cut my flight suit off of me when I was taken into the prison,” McCain said. “The museum’ is an excellent propaganda establishment with very little connection with the actual events that took place inside those walls.” But McCain, for one, still came to terms with his time at the horrific Hanoi Hilton. “Forty years later as I look back on that experience, believe it or not, I have somewhat mixed emotions in that it was a very difficult period,” he said in 2013. “But at the same time the bonds of friendship and love for my fellow prisoners will be the most enduring memory of my five and a half years of incarceration.” After reading about the gruesome conditions that awaited American POWs in the Hanoi Hilton, read about the Gulf of Tonkin incident, which first sparked the Vietnam War. Then learn take a look inside the Andersonville Prison, a brutal POW camp during the Civil War.

when he was young he lived in ha noi