Trac Nghiem Tong Hop Trinh Do C

  • Upload
    newfull

  • View
    230

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Trac nghiem AV C

Citation preview

Trc nghim tng hp trnh C

Trc nghim tng hp trnh C

Top of Form

1. In 1950, a teenager was simply someone _________ between 13 and 19.

oldagedaginggrown oldBottom of Form

Top of Form

2. A whole series of industries, which were ________ at the teenage market, grew up during the 1950s.

pointedpinpointeddirectedsteeredBottom of Form

Top of Form

3. Therefore, cinemas became more expensive to get to, and in ________ audience numbers declined even more.

consequenceeventualitysequenceresultBottom of Form

Top of Form

4. A man's suit of 1925 would not have looked out of ________ in 1950 or 1985.

shapeconditionplacedisplayBottom of Form

Top of Form

5. ______________ mainly to changes in technology, clothes today are much cheaper.

DuePriorAccordingRelatedBottom of Form

Top of Form

6. My manager has ________ some questions about his business.

raisedarisenrisenarousedBottom of Form

Top of Form

7. As he always said, he took a scientific __________ in the unexplained.

attentionoutlookresearchinterestBottom of Form

Top of Form

8. The Hays Code was often the ___________ of jokes, very often because it was so specific.

topicsubjectaimobjectBottom of Form

Top of Form

9. By the time the children get to four or five, they have already been ________ into their social roles.

grownpreparedsuitedconditionedBottom of Form

Top of Form

10. Men still expect their jobs to take ____________.

superioritypriorityimpositionseniorityBottom of Form

Top of Form

11. Uncontrollable bush fires __________ by high winds engulfed nearly 300 houses in the states of Victoria and South Australia.

blowninflatedfannedflownBottom of Form

Top of Form

12. A six-meter shark dies after trying to swallow a man ______.

completeentirewholetotalBottom of Form

Top of Form

13. Help is _________ for sufferers from the flue epidemic which broke out before Christmas.

on the wayin the wayby the wayover the wayBottom of Form

Top of Form

14. In the late 1970s a newspaper _________ an opinion poll.

operatedconductedcreatedcausedBottom of Form

Top of Form

15. After a lot of difficulty, he __________ to open the door.

managedsucceededobtainedrealisedBottom of Form

Top of Form

16. Finding the money is just one of the problems _________ in buying a house.

gatheredunitedjoinedinvolvedBottom of Form

Top of Form

17. Modern architecture, in many _________ , is horribly ugly.

meansreasonsexamplescasesBottom of Form

Top of Form

18. The examiners often __________ extremely difficult questions for the literature exams.

setinventcomposecreateBottom of Form

Top of Form

19. ______________ that he only started learning it two years ago, his English is excellent.

WonderingAccountingThinkingConsideringBottom of Form

Top of Form

20. She ____________ 20 pounds out of the bank every Monday.

pullsdrawsextractstakesBottom of Form

Top of Form

21. Marietta had _______ (a ferocious) appetite after running that race.

an endlessa helpfula poora fierceBottom of Form

Top of Form

22. The tops of the _______ (a submerged) mountain chain form the islands of Japan.

a hugea spaciousan underwatera rockyBottom of Form

Top of Form

23. Hungting and killing lions was a favorite _________ (pastime) of Assyrian Kings.

hobbysportvocationmethodBottom of Form

Top of Form

24. he ______ (fervently) believed that the hard work would be worthwhile in the long run.

stronglybeautifullyhopefullyassiduouslyBottom of Form

Top of Form

25. There was no way to ________ (pacify) the workers once the strike had begun.

firecalm downassistpromoteBottom of Form

Top of Form

26. When the bell rang, the chemistry student ________ (jerked) her hand and spilled the acid.

abruptly pulledclappedgently movedrubbedBottom of Form

Top of Form

27. ________ (subsequent) events proved the man to be right.

FewLaterEarlierManyBottom of Form

Top of Form

28. He is _______ (dubious) about the success of the plan.

confidentarticulateindifferentdoubtfulBottom of Form

Top of Form

29. His natural intelligence and his experience enabled him to ______ (cope) with the problem.

growplaydealstayBottom of Form

Top of Form

30. The man _______ (neglected) to file his income tax and therefore had to pay a fine.

hopedfailedpromisedrefusedBottom of Form

Top of Form

31. As soon as the consumer protection law was passed, some manufacturers began to ________ to have it changed.

object revoltcampaignquarrelBottom of Form

Top of Form

32. I'm so tired that I can't take __________ what you're saying.

upoutinonBottom of Form

Top of Form

33. Prizes are awarded _________ the number of points scored.

resulting fromadding uppresented toaccording toBottom of Form

Top of Form

34. When her millionaire father died, the heiress ____________ a fortune.

came intocame atcame throughcame toBottom of Form

Top of Form

35. After his grilfriend left him, George determined never ________ in love again.

to fallfallingfor to fallhaving fallenBottom of Form

Top of Form

36. __________, Nathan Hale was a young schoolteacher living in Connecticut.

When the American Revolution beganThe American RevolutionIt was when the American RevolutionThe beginning of the American RevolutionBottom of Form

Top of Form

37. Penguins usually do not get wet ____________ their feathers are kept oily by tiny oil glands.

sodespitebecauseyetBottom of Form

Top of Form

38. In explaining the theory of relativity, the scientist states that mechanical laws that are true in one place _____________ equally valid in any other place.

beingthey should beareto beBottom of Form

Top of Form

39. ____________ is called erosion.

The wearing away of landWhen the land wears awayLand which wears awayWearing away landBottom of Form

Top of Form

40. ___________ we drove the horses into the stable.

Aware that a tornado was brewingBecause a tornado brewingAlthough a tornado was brewingA tornado was brewingBottom of Form

Top of Form

41. _____________ to find stars in pairs.

It is very commonBeing very commonVery common isThat is very commonBottom of Form

Top of Form

42. For the first time ____________, large portions of the universe can be observed simultaneously.

since historyin historyhistory beganof the beginning of historyBottom of Form

Top of Form

43. The committee has met and ____________.

they have reached a decisionit has formulated themselves some opinionsits decision was reached atit has reached a decisionBottom of Form

Top of Form

44. Precausions are taken _____________ a hurricane threatens to strike the coast of the United States.

wheneverhoweveralwayswhetherBottom of Form

Top of Form

45. Tears _______ anger and tension naturally.

are relievedrelievingrelievewhat they relieveBottom of Form

Top of Form

46. In a single day, _________ are as many as thousands of people involved in business deals in one area.

yettheyeverthereBottom of Form

Top of Form

47. Paper ________ from cellulose fibers.

is producedproducingproducedwhich is producedBottom of Form

Top of Form

48. She wanted to serve some coffee to her guests; however, _______________.

she hadn't many sugarthere was not a great amount of the sugarshe did not have much sugarshe was lacking in amount of the sugarBottom of Form

Top of Form

49. Having been served lunch, __________________.

the problem was discussed by the members of the committeethe committee discussed the problemit was discussed by the committee members the problema discussion of the problem was made by the members of the committeeBottom of Form

Top of Form

50. __________________ received law degrees as today.

Never so many women haveNever have so many womenThe women aren't everWomen who have neverBottom of Form

Top of Form

51. Bigamy is a situation in which a man ___________ two women at the same time.

marries tois marry tomarriedis married toBottom of Form

Top of Form

52. Bees have compound eyes ____________ of almost 6000 tiny lenses.

made overmade inmade onmade upBottom of Form

Top of Form

53. ________________ the reactions of people with amnesia, scientists are learning more about the process of memory in the brain.

By studyingTo studyThey studyThey're studyingBottom of Form

Top of Form

54. ________________ in any electric typewriter is the ability to correct spelling errors.

There are many new featuresNew featuresThe new featuresOne of the new featuresBottom of Form

Top of Form

55. The weather in the far north is not _______________ it is near the Equator.

like humid asas humid ashumid asso humid thatBottom of Form

Top of Form

56. A dog __________ on his owner's lap may refuse to eat from a bowl on the floor.

fedis fedwas fedto feedBottom of Form

Top of Form

57. The impact of two vehicles can cause a lot of ________ to both.

damagedamagesdamagingdamagingsBottom of Form

Top of Form

58. The greatest ___________ between fresh water and sea water lies in its concentration of salt.

difference thatis a differencedifference is differenceBottom of Form

Top of Form

59. 'Sky-diving' must be one of the most exciting sport ____________.

to watchfor watchfor watchingon watchBottom of Form

Top of Form

60. On Tuesday August 11th, 1911 a young artist, Louis Beraud, arrived at the Louvre in Paris __________ a painting of the Salen Carr.

who completewho completedto completeon completingBottom of Form

Top of Form

61. Questions 61- 68:Chester Arthur, the twenty-first President of the United States, was an unlikely holder of the highest office in the land. Born in Vermont in 1830, he was son of an Irish immigrant father and a New Hampshire mother. After becoming a lawyer in New York, he joined the Republican Party and eventually came to hold a number of state offices there, including a position as head of the New York Customs House. Though personally honest, Arthur's administration was marred by corrupt practices, and he was removed from office in 1878.When James Garfield was elected as the Republican Party's presidential candidate in 1880, Arthur, who belonged to a faction that had supported the renomination of President Grant, was offered the Vice-Presidency as a concilatory gesture. Arthur accepted, and then, in 1881, was elevated to the Presidency following Garfield's assasination.In view of his far-from-unblemished record and his lack of strong political support, even within his own party, Arthur's move to the White House was viewed with great concern by many Americans, but, to the astonishment of most, his administration proved to be a competent and honest one. However, he never was elected President in his own right, being defeated for the nomination at his party's convention in 1884, and dying in November two years later of Bright's disease during the presidency of a Democrat, Grover Cleveland.

61: How does the writer describe the fact that Arthur became President?

as dislikedas eventualas improbableas conciliatoryBottom of Form

Top of Form

62. Chester Arthur was ....

of mixed Iris-American stockborn of Irish parentsborn in New Hampshireborn in New YorkBottom of Form

Top of Form

63. Which of the following best describes Arthur's tenure as the head of the New York Customs House?

a thorougly corrupt admisnitrationone suffering from much corruption that Arthur, though not involved, failed to remedyone which, in spite of the efforts of honest officials, was made corrupt by its leaderone in which corruption was not eradicated from Arthur's office until 1878.Bottom of Form

Top of Form

64. Why was Arthur invited to become Garfield's running-mate?

because his support for President Grant was half-heartedbecause of his previous record in officebecause Garfield wanted to hold the Republican Party togetherbecause there was a danger of Garfield's being assasinatedBottom of Form

Top of Form

65. During his years as President, Arthur was

a cause of great concern to the American peoplea pleasant surprise to most peoplefar from unblemished in his conductthe focus of strong political supportBottom of Form

Top of Form

66. Who was the twentieth President of the United States?

Grover ClevelandUlysses S.GrantChester ArthurJames GarfieldBottom of Form

Top of Form

67. In his bid for re-election, Arthur was defeated by ...

a fellow RepublicanBrightGrover Clevelandan unnamed DemocratBottom of Form

Top of Form

68. How old was Chester Arthur when he died?

48515456Bottom of Form

Top of Form

69. Questions 69-75Horace Pippin, as an African-American soldier during World War I, was wounded in his right arm. He discovered, however, that by keeping his right wrist steady with his left hand, he could paint and draw. Pippin was not trained, but his artistic sensitivity and intuitive feel for two-dimensional design and the arrangement of color and patterns made him one of the finest Primitive artists America has produced.Pippin did a series of paintings on the abolitionist John Brown and one on his war experiences, but he shied away from social issues for the most part and achieved his greatest success with scenes of the people and places of his hometown of West Chester, Pennsylvania. His "Domino Players", featuring four women gathered around a wooden table in a simple kitchen setting, is an excellent example of his rural domestic scenes.

69: According to the passage, which of the following is NOT true about primitive art?

It is two-dimensional.Colors and patterns are importantArtists do not have to be trained for itIt is used primarily for paining portraitsBottom of Form

Top of Form

70. Horace Pippin discovered he could paint and draw...

during World War Iwhen he completed his artistic trainingwhen someone reminded him of his artistic sensitivityby holding his right wrist steady with his left hand.Bottom of Form

Top of Form

71. Where in the passage is the name of Pippin's hometown mentioned?

Lines 6-7Line 9Line 11Lines 13-14Bottom of Form

Top of Form

72. It may be inferred from the passage that Pippin

had a simple upbringingwas obsessed with the subject of abolitionwas devastated by his war experienceswanted nothing to do with his pastBottom of Form

Top of Form

73. The word "arrangement" in the passage could best be replaced by which of the following?

purposefixturecompositionblendBottom of Form

Top of Form

74. With which of the following statements would the author probably agree?

Horace Pippin was a poorly trained, mediocre artist.Primitive art is an excuse for lack of training and talent.Horace Pippin made a significant contribution to American art.Horace Pippin placed too much emphasis on social issues in his work.Bottom of Form

Top of Form

75. This passage would most likely be required reading in which course?

AnthropologyDramaSociologyArt HistoryBottom of Form

Top of Form

76. Questions 76-80A preventive medicine specialist may have found the reason for the "addictive" properties of regular exercise. The finding may also explain why athletes often fail to notice an injury until after the competition is over. Dr. Lee S. Berk has found that persons who exercise regularly produce high levels of a natural opiate called beta-endorphin in response to strenuous activity. This substance, a hormone produced by brain and the pituitary gland, increases pain tolerance, counters stress, and imparts a feeling of well-being. In his study of six men and six women who were tested on a treadmill, those who jogged regularly and were physically fit produced beta-endprphin more rapidly and in far greater amounts than those who were usually sedentary. After the activity was stopped, beta-endorphin vevels drops back to normal. In the nonrunners, only a small rise in beta-endorphin occured while they exercised. However, a larger increase in beta-endorphin production was noted some time after the activity was finished, when it was ineffective. Dr.Berk noted that beta-endorphin production may also account for other benefits of vigorous exercise, sich as its ability to lower blood pressure and suppress appetite, both of which are known effects of the hormone. "Beta-endorphin may also explain why people become addicted to exercise," Dr. Berk said.

76: According to the passage, all of the following are direct effects of beta-endorphin, EXCEPT

reduced stressa feeling of well-beingan increased tolerance of painimproved physical strengthBottom of Form

Top of Form

77. In persons who exercise regularly, beta-endorphin is produced

while they are exercisingafter vigorous activity is overas soon as an injury occurswhenever their blood pressure risesBottom of Form

Top of Form

78. How many people participated in the study?

6121824Bottom of Form

Top of Form

79. According to the passage, which of the following is true of people who get no strenuous physical exercise?

They usually have high blood pressure.They do not generally feel well.They produce little beta-endorphin.They outnumber those who jog regularly.Bottom of Form

Top of Form

80. It can be inferred from the passage that which of the following people might benefit the most from the effects of beta-endorphin?

Those who want to lose weight.Those addicted to opiates.Those who work inefficiently.Those with low blood pressureBottom of Form

Top of Form

81. Questions 81-90

Botany, the study of plants, occupies a peculiar position in the history of human knowledge. For many thousands of years, it was the one field of awareness about which humans had anything more than the vaguest of insights. It is impossible to know today just what our Stone Age ancestors knew about plants, but from what we can observe of preindustrial societies that still exist, a detailed learning of plants and their properties must be extremely ancient. This is logical. Plants are the basis of the food pyramid for all living things, even for other plants. They have always been enormously important to the welfare of people, not only for food, but alsoo for clothing, weapons, tools, dyes, medicines, shelter and a great many other purposes. Tribes living today in the jungles of the Amazon recognize literally hundreds of plants and know many properties of each. To them, botany, as such, has no name and is probably not even recognized as a special branch of "knowledge" at all.Unfortunately, the more industrialized we become the farther away we move from direct contact with plants, and the less distinct our knowldge of botany grows. Yet everyone comes unconsciously on an amazing amount of botanical knowledge, and few people will fail to recognize a rose, an apple, or an orchid. When our Neolithic ancestors, living in the Middle East about 10,000 years ago, discovered that certain grasses could be harvested and their seeds planted for richer yields the next season, the first great step in a new association of plants and humans was taken. Grains were discovered and from them flowed the marvel of agriculture: cultivated crops. From then on, humans would increasingly take their living from the controlled production of a few plants, rather than getting a little here and a little there from many varieties that grew wild - and the accumulated knowledge of tens of thousands of years of experience and intimacy with plants in the wild would begin to fade away.

81: Which of the following assumptionsabout early humans is expressed in the passage?

They probably had extensive knowledge of plants.They divided knowledge into well-defined fields.They did not enjoy the study of botany.They placed great importance on owndership of property.Bottom of Form

Top of Form

82. The word "peculiar" in the passage is closest in meaning to ....

clearlargeunusualimportantBottom of Form

Top of Form

83. What does the comment "This is logical" in the passage mean?

There is no clear way to determine the extent of our ancestors' knowledge of plants.It is not surprising that early humans had a detailed knowledge of plants.It is reasonable to assume that our ancestors behaved very much like people in preindustrial societies.Human knowledge of plants is well organized and very detailed.Bottom of Form

Top of Form

84. The phrase "properties of each" in the passage refers to each...

tribehundredplantpurposeBottom of Form

Top of Form

85. According to the passage, why has general knowledge of botany declined?

People no longer value plants as a useful resource.Botany is not recognized as a special branch of science.Research is unable to keep up with the increasing number of plants.Direct contact with a variety of plants had decreased.Bottom of Form

Top of Form

86. In the passage, what is the author's purpose in mentioning "a rose, an apple, or an orchid?"

To make the passage more poetic.To cite examples of plants that are attractive.To give botanical examples that most readers will recognizeTo illustrate the diversity of botanical life.Bottom of Form

Top of Form

87. According to the passage, what was the first great step toward the practice of agriculture?

The invention of agricultural implementations and machinery.The development of a system of names for plants.The discovery of grasses that could be harvested and replanted.The changing diets of early humans.Bottom of Form

Top of Form

88. The word "controlled" in the passage is closest in meaning to...

abundantmanagedrequiredadvancedBottom of Form

Top of Form

89. The relationship between botany and agriculture is similar to the relationship between zoology (the study of animals) and ...

deer huntingbird watchingsheep raisinghorseback ridingBottom of Form

Top of Form

90. Where in the passage does the author describe the benefits people derive from plants?

Lines 1-2Lines 8-12Lines 14-16Lines 19-22Bottom of Form

Top of Form

91. Questions 91-100

We live in a scientific age, which means that everything we do is based on rational decisions and careful investigation of the facts. Nobody is given a job because his eyes are blue, even though we sometimes refer to the boss's favourite as his "blue-eyed boy." Nobody buys a house because the moon shines through the bedroom windows on certain nights in the month. We would not dream of marrying someone simply because of the shape of their fingernails. No, we all agree that we act, or try to act, sensibly and as a result of using our brains.If this is the case, I should like to know what makes so many people read the horoscopes which are to be found in practically every newspaper and magazine in the country. They will tell you, of course, that they do not believe a word of it, that it is all nonsense, just a bit of fun. And yet horoscopes are big business. There is a good living to be made from writing "professional" horoscopes for people who are prepared to provide their full name, and the date, time and exact place of birth, together with a handsome fee. I recently got someone to do my horoscope. (I did not pay for it, so to that extent I feel superior!) and I would not mind reproducing part of it for you to see. I say "part of it" because it is very long and you might get bored after a while, although the lady who did it for me asserts that I only want you to see the bits that are most flattering.Now, of course, I do not believe in what she wrote, and I think she describes my character accurately for the simple reason that she knows me very well anyway. But I have been unnerved more than a few times in my life by being identified at once as a "Gemini" type by people who did not know anything about me, except what they had been able to learn from a short acquaintance.Similarly, I once had my palm read by a young lady who did not know me at all. Please understand that I did not really believe in palmistry at the time. My reason for letting her read my palm was that she was a very pretty young lady, and it seemed an excellent excuse for holding her hand, or rather letting her hold mine, and getting to know her better. Our relationship, I regret to say, did not develope owing to the sudden arrival of her regullar boy-friend, but she had had enough time by then to do a character sketch of me that was devastatingly accurate.I was so impressed by her performance that I got another lady (who was not quite so young or pretty, so at least I had no ulterior motive this time) to show me how to interpret the lines of the hand, and other features such as hand shape, relative length of the fingers and so on. I tried out my new-found knowledge in a number of light-hearted situations, but it soon became something more than a mere party trick. I have sometimes been so accurate in my interpretations of the good and bad features of character that I have unintentionally offended people I liked.It is important to distinguish between reading hands to interpret character, and reading hands to predict an individual's future; the former seems much more likely to have some basis of truth than the latter. All the same, we have all met people who have been told things about their future by gypsies, clairvoyants and the like, and who swear that these things have come true. Many quite ordinary people, who make no special claims to have the gift of foresight, have had premonitions of such misfortunes as illness, deaths in the family and accidents; so many, in fact, that there must be more to this business of foretelling the future than meets the eye.The paradox is that in this scientific age, when we claim to believe only what we can prove, we go on reading horoscopes or visiting the fortune teller at the fair, which are almost certainly worthless; but at the same time, we refuse to take seriously the few scientific investigations that have been made into what we might call the paranormal or the supernatural. Obviously, we want to have our cake and eat it. Personally, I remain completely sceptical about astrology, but I am convinced that our minds and our bodies are much mroe complex than we realise. Therefore; it is foolish to reject some kinds of human experience just because at the moment we cannot find any rational scientific explanation for them.

91: The writer sees a contradiction between the popualrity of horoscopes and the fact that...

most people say they are nonsense.we live in a scientific age.newsspaper horoscopes are not scientifically prepared.they are quite expensive when they are done professionally.Bottom of Form

Top of Form

92. The writer will reveal only parts of his horoscopes, not the whole thing, because he...

is ashamed of some parts of it.only wants us to see the complimentary parts.does not think we would be interested in the whole thing.simply wants to illustrate his argument (point of view).Bottom of Form

Top of Form

93. The writer thinks his horoscope was accurate because the woman who wrote it...

had spent many years studying astrology.already knew that he was born under the sign "Gemini".did it out of interest, not for money.already knew a lot about him.Bottom of Form

Top of Form

94. The first time the writer had his palm read, it was because he wanted to...

find out more about palmistry.hold a young lady's hand.get to know a young lady better.see how much the young lady knew about himBottom of Form

Top of Form

95. He wanted to learn how to read hands because...

he thought it would be an amusing thing to do at parties.his interest had been aroused by having his own hand read.he was looking for an excuse to know a young lady.it was a way of finding out if there was a scientific explanation for palmistryBottom of Form

Top of Form

96. The young lady who first read his palm gave a description which was...

very upsetting for him.very close to the truth about his character.very brief and sketchy.very amusing and light-heartedBottom of Form

Top of Form

97. As far as foretelling the future is concerned, the writer believes that...

even quite ordinary people can sometimes do it.only special gifted people can do it.nobody can really do it.most people only do it for money.Bottom of Form

Top of Form

98. The writer has sometimes upset people when reading their hands because he has...

placed too much emphasis on their bad features.left out a lot of important information.not taken it seriously enough.described their characters very accurately.Bottom of Form

Top of Form

99. According to the writer, our usual reaction to any scientific investigation into the paranormal is one of...

indifference - we really don't care very much.amazement - we are surprised by what is revealed.interest - we are fascinated by the subject.incomprehension - we really don't understand what it is all about.Bottom of Form

Top of Form

100. The writer's views about the paranormal can be summarised as follows: he thinks that we should...

make more scientific investigations into such phenomena.remain completely sceptical about such things.not dismiss the paranormal as nonsense just because we cannot explain everything scientifically at the time.be able to explain all paranormal phenomena in terms of natural laws.Bottom of Form

_1304761348.unknown

_1304761413.unknown

_1304761446.unknown

_1304761463.unknown

_1304761471.unknown

_1304761475.unknown

_1304761477.unknown

_1304761478.unknown

_1304761476.unknown

_1304761473.unknown

_1304761474.unknown

_1304761472.unknown

_1304761467.unknown

_1304761469.unknown

_1304761470.unknown

_1304761468.unknown

_1304761465.unknown

_1304761466.unknown

_1304761464.unknown

_1304761454.unknown

_1304761459.unknown

_1304761461.unknown

_1304761462.unknown

_1304761460.unknown

_1304761457.unknown

_1304761458.unknown

_1304761455.unknown

_1304761450.unknown

_1304761452.unknown

_1304761453.unknown

_1304761451.unknown

_1304761448.unknown

_1304761449.unknown

_1304761447.unknown

_1304761430.unknown

_1304761438.unknown

_1304761442.unknown

_1304761444.unknown

_1304761445.unknown

_1304761443.unknown

_1304761440.unknown

_1304761441.unknown

_1304761439.unknown

_1304761434.unknown

_1304761436.unknown

_1304761437.unknown

_1304761435.unknown

_1304761432.unknown

_1304761433.unknown

_1304761431.unknown

_1304761422.unknown

_1304761426.unknown

_1304761428.unknown

_1304761429.unknown

_1304761427.unknown

_1304761424.unknown

_1304761425.unknown

_1304761423.unknown

_1304761418.unknown

_1304761420.unknown

_1304761421.unknown

_1304761419.unknown

_1304761416.unknown

_1304761417.unknown

_1304761414.unknown

_1304761381.unknown

_1304761397.unknown

_1304761405.unknown

_1304761409.unknown

_1304761411.unknown

_1304761412.unknown

_1304761410.unknown

_1304761407.unknown

_1304761408.unknown

_1304761406.unknown

_1304761401.unknown

_1304761403.unknown

_1304761404.unknown

_1304761402.unknown

_1304761399.unknown

_1304761400.unknown

_1304761398.unknown

_1304761389.unknown

_1304761393.unknown

_1304761395.unknown

_1304761396.unknown

_1304761394.unknown

_1304761391.unknown

_1304761392.unknown

_1304761390.unknown

_1304761385.unknown

_1304761387.unknown

_1304761388.unknown

_1304761386.unknown

_1304761383.unknown

_1304761384.unknown

_1304761382.unknown

_1304761364.unknown

_1304761373.unknown

_1304761377.unknown

_1304761379.unknown

_1304761380.unknown

_1304761378.unknown

_1304761375.unknown

_1304761376.unknown

_1304761374.unknown

_1304761368.unknown

_1304761370.unknown

_1304761371.unknown

_1304761369.unknown

_1304761366.unknown

_1304761367.unknown

_1304761365.unknown

_1304761356.unknown

_1304761360.unknown

_1304761362.unknown

_1304761363.unknown

_1304761361.unknown

_1304761358.unknown

_1304761359.unknown

_1304761357.unknown

_1304761352.unknown

_1304761354.unknown

_1304761355.unknown

_1304761353.unknown

_1304761350.unknown

_1304761351.unknown

_1304761349.unknown

_1304761217.unknown

_1304761282.unknown

_1304761315.unknown

_1304761332.unknown

_1304761340.unknown

_1304761344.unknown

_1304761346.unknown

_1304761347.unknown

_1304761345.unknown

_1304761342.unknown

_1304761343.unknown

_1304761341.unknown

_1304761336.unknown

_1304761338.unknown

_1304761339.unknown

_1304761337.unknown

_1304761334.unknown

_1304761335.unknown

_1304761333.unknown

_1304761323.unknown

_1304761327.unknown

_1304761330.unknown

_1304761331.unknown

_1304761328.unknown

_1304761325.unknown

_1304761326.unknown

_1304761324.unknown

_1304761319.unknown

_1304761321.unknown

_1304761322.unknown

_1304761320.unknown

_1304761317.unknown

_1304761318.unknown

_1304761316.unknown

_1304761299.unknown

_1304761307.unknown

_1304761311.unknown

_1304761313.unknown

_1304761314.unknown

_1304761312.unknown

_1304761309.unknown

_1304761310.unknown

_1304761308.unknown

_1304761303.unknown

_1304761305.unknown

_1304761306.unknown

_1304761304.unknown

_1304761301.unknown

_1304761302.unknown

_1304761300.unknown

_1304761291.unknown

_1304761295.unknown

_1304761297.unknown

_1304761298.unknown

_1304761296.unknown

_1304761293.unknown

_1304761294.unknown

_1304761292.unknown

_1304761286.unknown

_1304761289.unknown

_1304761290.unknown

_1304761288.unknown

_1304761284.unknown

_1304761285.unknown

_1304761283.unknown

_1304761250.unknown

_1304761266.unknown

_1304761274.unknown

_1304761278.unknown

_1304761280.unknown

_1304761281.unknown

_1304761279.unknown

_1304761276.unknown

_1304761277.unknown

_1304761275.unknown

_1304761270.unknown

_1304761272.unknown

_1304761273.unknown

_1304761271.unknown

_1304761268.unknown

_1304761269.unknown

_1304761267.unknown

_1304761258.unknown

_1304761262.unknown

_1304761264.unknown

_1304761265.unknown

_1304761263.unknown

_1304761260.unknown

_1304761261.unknown

_1304761259.unknown

_1304761254.unknown

_1304761256.unknown

_1304761257.unknown

_1304761255.unknown

_1304761252.unknown

_1304761253.unknown

_1304761251.unknown

_1304761233.unknown

_1304761241.unknown

_1304761246.unknown

_1304761248.unknown

_1304761249.unknown

_1304761247.unknown

_1304761243.unknown

_1304761245.unknown

_1304761242.unknown

_1304761237.unknown

_1304761239.unknown

_1304761240.unknown

_1304761238.unknown

_1304761235.unknown

_1304761236.unknown

_1304761234.unknown

_1304761225.unknown

_1304761229.unknown

_1304761231.unknown

_1304761232.unknown

_1304761230.unknown

_1304761227.unknown

_1304761228.unknown

_1304761226.unknown

_1304761221.unknown

_1304761223.unknown

_1304761224.unknown

_1304761222.unknown

_1304761219.unknown

_1304761220.unknown

_1304761218.unknown

_1304761150.unknown

_1304761183.unknown

_1304761200.unknown

_1304761208.unknown

_1304761213.unknown

_1304761215.unknown

_1304761216.unknown

_1304761214.unknown

_1304761211.unknown

_1304761212.unknown

_1304761209.unknown

_1304761204.unknown

_1304761206.unknown

_1304761207.unknown

_1304761205.unknown

_1304761202.unknown

_1304761203.unknown

_1304761201.unknown

_1304761192.unknown

_1304761196.unknown

_1304761198.unknown

_1304761199.unknown

_1304761197.unknown

_1304761194.unknown

_1304761195.unknown

_1304761193.unknown

_1304761188.unknown

_1304761190.unknown

_1304761191.unknown

_1304761189.unknown

_1304761185.unknown

_1304761186.unknown

_1304761184.unknown

_1304761166.unknown

_1304761175.unknown

_1304761179.unknown

_1304761181.unknown

_1304761182.unknown

_1304761180.unknown

_1304761177.unknown

_1304761178.unknown

_1304761176.unknown

_1304761171.unknown

_1304761173.unknown

_1304761174.unknown

_1304761172.unknown

_1304761169.unknown

_1304761170.unknown

_1304761168.unknown

_1304761158.unknown

_1304761162.unknown

_1304761164.unknown

_1304761165.unknown

_1304761163.unknown

_1304761160.unknown

_1304761161.unknown

_1304761159.unknown

_1304761154.unknown

_1304761156.unknown

_1304761157.unknown

_1304761155.unknown

_1304761152.unknown

_1304761153.unknown

_1304761151.unknown

_1304761116.unknown

_1304761133.unknown

_1304761141.unknown

_1304761146.unknown

_1304761148.unknown

_1304761149.unknown

_1304761147.unknown

_1304761143.unknown

_1304761145.unknown

_1304761142.unknown

_1304761137.unknown

_1304761139.unknown

_1304761140.unknown

_1304761138.unknown

_1304761135.unknown

_1304761136.unknown

_1304761134.unknown

_1304761125.unknown

_1304761129.unknown

_1304761131.unknown

_1304761132.unknown

_1304761130.unknown

_1304761127.unknown

_1304761128.unknown

_1304761126.unknown

_1304761121.unknown

_1304761123.unknown

_1304761124.unknown

_1304761122.unknown

_1304761119.unknown

_1304761120.unknown

_1304761117.unknown

_1304761100.unknown

_1304761108.unknown

_1304761112.unknown

_1304761114.unknown

_1304761115.unknown

_1304761113.unknown

_1304761110.unknown

_1304761111.unknown

_1304761109.unknown

_1304761104.unknown

_1304761106.unknown

_1304761107.unknown

_1304761105.unknown

_1304761102.unknown

_1304761103.unknown

_1304761101.unknown

_1304761092.unknown

_1304761096.unknown

_1304761098.unknown

_1304761099.unknown

_1304761097.unknown

_1304761094.unknown

_1304761095.unknown

_1304761093.unknown

_1304761084.unknown

_1304761088.unknown

_1304761090.unknown

_1304761091.unknown

_1304761089.unknown

_1304761086.unknown

_1304761087.unknown

_1304761085.unknown

_1304761080.unknown

_1304761082.unknown

_1304761083.unknown

_1304761081.unknown

_1304761075.unknown

_1304761078.unknown

_1304761079.unknown

_1304761077.unknown

_1304761071.unknown

_1304761073.unknown

_1304761074.unknown

_1304761072.unknown

_1304761069.unknown

_1304761070.unknown

_1304761068.unknown

_1304761067.unknown