Bahasa Dan Sastra Inggris
Bahasa Dan Sastra Inggris
Bahasa Dan Sastra Inggris
1
SALES MANAGER
National Air
is hiring full-time representative for Sales & Reservation. Talk to our employees and discover
why we’re the best thing in the air. Interviews on the spot!
The barn owl is one of the most popular birds in Britain but is now extremely rare. The birds favors open habitats such as
grasslands, hedgerows, the edges of fields or woodlands, stubble fields, drainage ditches, and farmyards.
The barn owl is a carnivore and hunts for its favorite diet of small mammals and birds. It usually flies slowly back and forth,
about three meters above the ground, using its large eyes and sensitive hearing to spot likely prey. If suitable perches, such as fence
posts, are available, the bird may save energy by hunting from these. Once it has swooped silently down, a hooked beak tears into
victim. Food is often swallowed whole and the indigestible parts, such as bones and fur, are regurgitated in the form of pellets.
When see in the flight, the general impression is of a large white bird. However, the upper parts are a beautiful golden buff
color, delicately marked in varying shades of buff and grey. It is only the face, and undersides that are mostly white.
After choosing a suitable hole in a tree or a ledge in an old building, the female barn owl lays between four and seven eggs
in April each year. The owlets are fully developed after ten weeks and leave the nest after about fourteen weeks, by which time they
must be able to survive alone. As many as one in four young barns owls die within a year for a variety of reasons.
The number of barn owls in Britain is decreasing. There are now fever habitats where they can find mice, voles, and other
prey. In some areas, owls have been affected by chemicals and cannot lay proper eggs. This means that they cannot breed and increase
their numbers. In addition, many birds have been killed accidentally as they fly across major roads and motorways.
The barn owl is one of the most popular birds in Britain but is now extremely rare. The birds favors open habitats such as
grasslands, hedgerows, the edges of fields or woodlands, stubble fields, drainage ditches, and farmyards.
The barn owl is a carnivore and hunts for its favorite diet of small mammals and birds. It usually flies slowly back and forth,
about three meters above the ground, using its large eyes and sensitive hearing to spot likely prey. If suitable perches, such as fence
posts, are available, the bird may save energy by hunting from these. Once it has swooped silently down, a hooked beak tears into
victim. Food is often swallowed whole and the indigestible parts, such as bones and fur, are regurgitated in the form of pellets.
When see in the flight, the general impression is of a large white bird. However, the upper parts are a beautiful golden buff
color, delicately marked in varying shades of buff and grey. It is only the face, and undersides that are mostly white.
After choosing a suitable hole in a tree or a ledge in an old building, the female barn owl lays between four and seven eggs
in April each year. The owlets are fully developed after ten weeks and leave the nest after about fourteen weeks, by which time they
must be able to survive alone. As many as one in four young barns owls die within a year for a variety of reasons.
The number of barn owls in Britain is decreasing. There are now fever habitats where they can find mice, voles, and other
prey. In some areas, owls have been affected by chemicals and cannot lay proper eggs. This means that they cannot breed and increase
their numbers. In addition, many birds have been killed accidentally as they fly across major roads and motorways.
The barn owl is one of the most popular birds in Britain but is now extremely rare. The birds favors open habitats such as
grasslands, hedgerows, the edges of fields or woodlands, stubble fields, drainage ditches, and farmyards.
The barn owl is a carnivore and hunts for its favorite diet of small mammals and birds. It usually flies slowly back and forth,
about three meters above the ground, using its large eyes and sensitive hearing to spot likely prey. If suitable perches, such as fence
posts, are available, the bird may save energy by hunting from these. Once it has swooped silently down, a hooked beak tears into
victim. Food is often swallowed whole and the indigestible parts, such as bones and fur, are regurgitated in the form of pellets.
When see in the flight, the general impression is of a large white bird. However, the upper parts are a beautiful golden buff
color, delicately marked in varying shades of buff and grey. It is only the face, and undersides that are mostly white.
After choosing a suitable hole in a tree or a ledge in an old building, the female barn owl lays between four and seven eggs
in April each year. The owlets are fully developed after ten weeks and leave the nest after about fourteen weeks, by which time they
must be able to survive alone. As many as one in four young barns owls die within a year for a variety of reasons.
The number of barn owls in Britain is decreasing. There are now fever habitats where they can find mice, voles, and other
prey. In some areas, owls have been affected by chemicals and cannot lay proper eggs. This means that they cannot breed and increase
their numbers. In addition, many birds have been killed accidentally as they fly across major roads and motorways.
The barn owl is one of the most popular birds in Britain but is now extremely rare. The birds favors open habitats such as
grasslands, hedgerows, the edges of fields or woodlands, stubble fields, drainage ditches, and farmyards.
The barn owl is a carnivore and hunts for its favorite diet of small mammals and birds. It usually flies slowly back and forth,
about three meters above the ground, using its large eyes and sensitive hearing to spot likely prey. If suitable perches, such as fence
posts, are available, the bird may save energy by hunting from these. Once it has swooped silently down, a hooked beak tears into
victim. Food is often swallowed whole and the indigestible parts, such as bones and fur, are regurgitated in the form of pellets.
When see in the flight, the general impression is of a large white bird. However, the upper parts are a beautiful golden buff
color, delicately marked in varying shades of buff and grey. It is only the face, and undersides that are mostly white.
After choosing a suitable hole in a tree or a ledge in an old building, the female barn owl lays between four and seven eggs
in April each year. The owlets are fully developed after ten weeks and leave the nest after about fourteen weeks, by which time they
must be able to survive alone. As many as one in four young barns owls die within a year for a variety of reasons.
The number of barn owls in Britain is decreasing. There are now fever habitats where they can find mice, voles, and other
prey. In some areas, owls have been affected by chemicals and cannot lay proper eggs. This means that they cannot breed and increase
their numbers. In addition, many birds have been killed accidentally as they fly across major roads and motorways.
The barn owl is one of the most popular birds in Britain but is now extremely rare. The birds favors open habitats such as
grasslands, hedgerows, the edges of fields or woodlands, stubble fields, drainage ditches, and farmyards.
The barn owl is a carnivore and hunts for its favorite diet of small mammals and birds. It usually flies slowly back and forth,
about three meters above the ground, using its large eyes and sensitive hearing to spot likely prey. If suitable perches, such as fence
posts, are available, the bird may save energy by hunting from these. Once it has swooped silently down, a hooked beak tears into
victim. Food is often swallowed whole and the indigestible parts, such as bones and fur, are regurgitated in the form of pellets.
When see in the flight, the general impression is of a large white bird. However, the upper parts are a beautiful golden buff
color, delicately marked in varying shades of buff and grey. It is only the face, and undersides that are mostly white.
After choosing a suitable hole in a tree or a ledge in an old building, the female barn owl lays between four and seven eggs
in April each year. The owlets are fully developed after ten weeks and leave the nest after about fourteen weeks, by which time they
must be able to survive alone. As many as one in four young barns owls die within a year for a variety of reasons.
The number of barn owls in Britain is decreasing. There are now fever habitats where they can find mice, voles, and other
prey. In some areas, owls have been affected by chemicals and cannot lay proper eggs. This means that they cannot breed and increase
their numbers. In addition, many birds have been killed accidentally as they fly across major roads and motorways.
The barn owl is one of the most popular birds in Britain but is now extremely rare. The birds favors open habitats such as
grasslands, hedgerows, the edges of fields or woodlands, stubble fields, drainage ditches, and farmyards.
The barn owl is a carnivore and hunts for its favorite diet of small mammals and birds. It usually flies slowly back and forth,
about three meters above the ground, using its large eyes and sensitive hearing to spot likely prey. If suitable perches, such as fence
posts, are available, the bird may save energy by hunting from these. Once it has swooped silently down, a hooked beak tears into
victim. Food is often swallowed whole and the indigestible parts, such as bones and fur, are regurgitated in the form of pellets.
When see in the flight, the general impression is of a large white bird. However, the upper parts are a beautiful golden buff
color, delicately marked in varying shades of buff and grey. It is only the face, and undersides that are mostly white.
After choosing a suitable hole in a tree or a ledge in an old building, the female barn owl lays between four and seven eggs
in April each year. The owlets are fully developed after ten weeks and leave the nest after about fourteen weeks, by which time they
must be able to survive alone. As many as one in four young barns owls die within a year for a variety of reasons.
The number of barn owls in Britain is decreasing. There are now fever habitats where they can find mice, voles, and other
prey. In some areas, owls have been affected by chemicals and cannot lay proper eggs. This means that they cannot breed and increase
their numbers. In addition, many birds have been killed accidentally as they fly across major roads and motorways.
The barn owl is one of the most popular birds in Britain but is now extremely rare. The birds favors open habitats such as
grasslands, hedgerows, the edges of fields or woodlands, stubble fields, drainage ditches, and farmyards.
The barn owl is a carnivore and hunts for its favorite diet of small mammals and birds. It usually flies slowly back and forth,
about three meters above the ground, using its large eyes and sensitive hearing to spot likely prey. If suitable perches, such as fence
posts, are available, the bird may save energy by hunting from these. Once it has swooped silently down, a hooked beak tears into
victim. Food is often swallowed whole and the indigestible parts, such as bones and fur, are regurgitated in the form of pellets.
When see in the flight, the general impression is of a large white bird. However, the upper parts are a beautiful golden buff
color, delicately marked in varying shades of buff and grey. It is only the face, and undersides that are mostly white.
After choosing a suitable hole in a tree or a ledge in an old building, the female barn owl lays between four and seven eggs
in April each year. The owlets are fully developed after ten weeks and leave the nest after about fourteen weeks, by which time they
must be able to survive alone. As many as one in four young barns owls die within a year for a variety of reasons.
The number of barn owls in Britain is decreasing. There are now fever habitats where they can find mice, voles, and other
prey. In some areas, owls have been affected by chemicals and cannot lay proper eggs. This means that they cannot breed and increase
their numbers. In addition, many birds have been killed accidentally as they fly across major roads and motorways.
The barn owl is one of the most popular birds in Britain but is now extremely rare. The birds favors open habitats such as
grasslands, hedgerows, the edges of fields or woodlands, stubble fields, drainage ditches, and farmyards.
The barn owl is a carnivore and hunts for its favorite diet of small mammals and birds. It usually flies slowly back and forth,
about three meters above the ground, using its large eyes and sensitive hearing to spot likely prey. If suitable perches, such as fence
posts, are available, the bird may save energy by hunting from these. Once it has swooped silently down, a hooked beak tears into
victim. Food is often swallowed whole and the indigestible parts, such as bones and fur, are regurgitated in the form of pellets.
When see in the flight, the general impression is of a large white bird. However, the upper parts are a beautiful golden buff
color, delicately marked in varying shades of buff and grey. It is only the face, and undersides that are mostly white.
After choosing a suitable hole in a tree or a ledge in an old building, the female barn owl lays between four and seven eggs
in April each year. The owlets are fully developed after ten weeks and leave the nest after about fourteen weeks, by which time they
must be able to survive alone. As many as one in four young barns owls die within a year for a variety of reasons.
The number of barn owls in Britain is decreasing. There are now fever habitats where they can find mice, voles, and other
prey. In some areas, owls have been affected by chemicals and cannot lay proper eggs. This means that they cannot breed and increase
their numbers. In addition, many birds have been killed accidentally as they fly across major roads and motorways.
Referring to the facts in paragraph 4, if a female owl lay eggs in the least number, what is the percentage of the owl
which cannot survive?
A 10%
B 15%
C 20 %
D 25%
E 30%
18 The British Barn Owl
The barn owl is one of the most popular birds in Britain but is now extremely rare. The birds favors open habitats such as
grasslands, hedgerows, the edges of fields or woodlands, stubble fields, drainage ditches, and farmyards.
The barn owl is a carnivore and hunts for its favorite diet of small mammals and birds. It usually flies slowly back and forth,
about three meters above the ground, using its large eyes and sensitive hearing to spot likely prey. If suitable perches, such as fence
posts, are available, the bird may save energy by hunting from these. Once it has swooped silently down, a hooked beak tears into
victim. Food is often swallowed whole and the indigestible parts, such as bones and fur, are regurgitated in the form of pellets.
When see in the flight, the general impression is of a large white bird. However, the upper parts are a beautiful golden buff
color, delicately marked in varying shades of buff and grey. It is only the face, and undersides that are mostly white.
After choosing a suitable hole in a tree or a ledge in an old building, the female barn owl lays between four and seven eggs
in April each year. The owlets are fully developed after ten weeks and leave the nest after about fourteen weeks, by which time they
must be able to survive alone. As many as one in four young barns owls die within a year for a variety of reasons.
The number of barn owls in Britain is decreasing. There are now fever habitats where they can find mice, voles, and other
prey. In some areas, owls have been affected by chemicals and cannot lay proper eggs. This means that they cannot breed and increase
their numbers. In addition, many birds have been killed accidentally as they fly across major roads and motorways.
The barn owl is one of the most popular birds in Britain but is now extremely rare. The birds favors open habitats such as
grasslands, hedgerows, the edges of fields or woodlands, stubble fields, drainage ditches, and farmyards.
The barn owl is a carnivore and hunts for its favorite diet of small mammals and birds. It usually flies slowly back and forth,
about three meters above the ground, using its large eyes and sensitive hearing to spot likely prey. If suitable perches, such as fence
posts, are available, the bird may save energy by hunting from these. Once it has swooped silently down, a hooked beak tears into
victim. Food is often swallowed whole and the indigestible parts, such as bones and fur, are regurgitated in the form of pellets.
When see in the flight, the general impression is of a large white bird. However, the upper parts are a beautiful golden buff
color, delicately marked in varying shades of buff and grey. It is only the face, and undersides that are mostly white.
After choosing a suitable hole in a tree or a ledge in an old building, the female barn owl lays between four and seven eggs
in April each year. The owlets are fully developed after ten weeks and leave the nest after about fourteen weeks, by which time they
must be able to survive alone. As many as one in four young barns owls die within a year for a variety of reasons.
The number of barn owls in Britain is decreasing. There are now fever habitats where they can find mice, voles, and other
prey. In some areas, owls have been affected by chemicals and cannot lay proper eggs. This means that they cannot breed and increase
their numbers. In addition, many birds have been killed accidentally as they fly across major roads and motorways.
In addition, many birds have been killed accidentally as they fly across major roads and motorways.” The underline
word means ….
A unintentionally
B on purpose
C Voluntary
D by design
E on target
20 The British Barn Owl
The barn owl is one of the most popular birds in Britain but is now extremely rare. The birds favors open habitats such as
grasslands, hedgerows, the edges of fields or woodlands, stubble fields, drainage ditches, and farmyards.
The barn owl is a carnivore and hunts for its favorite diet of small mammals and birds. It usually flies slowly back and forth,
about three meters above the ground, using its large eyes and sensitive hearing to spot likely prey. If suitable perches, such as fence
posts, are available, the bird may save energy by hunting from these. Once it has swooped silently down, a hooked beak tears into
victim. Food is often swallowed whole and the indigestible parts, such as bones and fur, are regurgitated in the form of pellets.
When see in the flight, the general impression is of a large white bird. However, the upper parts are a beautiful golden buff
color, delicately marked in varying shades of buff and grey. It is only the face, and undersides that are mostly white.
After choosing a suitable hole in a tree or a ledge in an old building, the female barn owl lays between four and seven eggs
in April each year. The owlets are fully developed after ten weeks and leave the nest after about fourteen weeks, by which time they
must be able to survive alone. As many as one in four young barns owls die within a year for a variety of reasons.
The number of barn owls in Britain is decreasing. There are now fever habitats where they can find mice, voles, and other
prey. In some areas, owls have been affected by chemicals and cannot lay proper eggs. This means that they cannot breed and increase
their numbers. In addition, many birds have been killed accidentally as they fly across major roads and motorways.
Which sentence that shows something will already completed by a certain time in the future ?
A I’ll check the engine for you
B I will have to pick up someone
C I will try
D I will call you when I have done
E I will have finished by then
25 Adit : Will you take a look at my car please?
Mechanic : What is the problem?
Adit : Well, I’m not sure. It’s not running very well and it won’t start easily.
Mechanic : I’ll check the engine again for you. And I’ll find out what the problem is.
Adit : Do you think you will have done it before 5 p.m.? I will have to pick up someone at the train
station this afternoon. Otherwise, she will be waiting too long there.
Mechanic : I’ll try. I hope I will have finished it by then.
Adit : Shall I give you a call first to see if you have finished it?
Mechanic : I will all you when I have done it.
Adit : Thank you.
Mechanic : Anytime.
“Otherwise, she will be waiting too long there..” The underline word has close meaning with ….
A However
B or else
C therefore
D Although
E because of