chủ đề tiếng anh.Cần gấp!!!!

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dung_92bn

[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.

mình đang rất cần mấy chủ đề này, các bạn ai biết giúp mình đc hok, mình cần gấp trong ngày mai;mỗi chủ đề tầm 10 câu thôi,phát biểu ý kiến đồng ý hay không đồng ý với mỗi chủ đề và nêu lí do
1. Nowadays we spend to much time watchinh sport on TV.
2. It is important to find out about good manners in orther culture.
3. A good work - life balance is very important.
4. Men and women have very different interests.
5. Nothing happens if you complain in shops and restaurant.
6. People are either born lucky or unlucky
7. Cheating in sport is very common nowadays.
8. People over 65 should take their driving test again
9. In the ficture we will spend less time with our families and more time with ous friends.
10. You should never give up on a dream.
11. Schools nowadays are not as strict as they used to be.
12. It is impossible for a man land a woman to be close friends
 
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nhapanh

Bạn có thể tham khảo quyển 185 Toefl Essay hoặc chỉ cần google những topic này là có những thông tin liên quan rồi ghi lại những thứ bạn muốn dùng để nói là ok mà.
Chứ để viết những bài này để bạn có thể nói thì hơi khó và mất thời gian ấy.
Hoặc cần quá thì nhờ vài người bạn học ngoại ngữ mỗi người viết hộ 1-2 bài gì đấy.
Mình đoán ko nhầm thì bạn này học đại học rồi à?
 
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tomcangxanh

1.


Nowaday, TV becomes an essential part in our life. By watching TV, we can see everything happening in the world, such as entartainment, films, exhibitions and of course, sports. People now seem to prefer stay at home and watching sports to playing themselves. I don't agree with this statement.

According to ACNielson every day over 3.7 million people in the United Kingdom watch television. Research shows that children age 2 to 5 watch an average of 25 hours of television a week. Those aged 6 to 11 average 22 hours per week, and 12 to 17, 23 hours per week. At this rate which is only average children spend as much time watching television as they do in school.

According to ACNielson men who watch 3 or more hours of television a day are twice as likely to be obese. Watching television slows down the body’s metabolism. But then again television and other electronic things are making young people more and more informed. Also another drawback of the digital age is that people spend far too much time on the gadgets and do hardly any exercise therefore this is resulting in obesity.


Television has a major impact on children’s attitude and behavior, a survey called kids’ take on media conducted in 2003 shows that watching television is a daily past time for 75% of Canadian, both boys and girls aged from 6-11. Television can affect a child’s learning and how they do in school if it cuts into activities such as reading, writing and taking part in sports. Television has been proven to be a very important factor in childhood obesity simply because more active activities are being replaced by television.

Playing sports is fun. It gives your child something to do and a group to belong to. They have a group of friends that has the same goals and interests. Research has found that kids that play sports, especially girls, are more likely to have a positive body image and higher self-esteem. They also are less likely to be overweight. Kids involved in sports are less likely to take drugs or smoke because they realize the impact that these destructive activities can have upon their performance. Girls who play sports are also less likely to become pregnant. Sports help develop teamwork and leadership skills. Kids quickly learn that they have to work together as a team to win the game.

So in conclusion, people should take part in sports instead of watching them only. Doing exercise is good for our health much more than sit all day long on the sofa and enjoy ourselves with television.

 
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tomcangxanh

7. Cheating in sport is very common nowadays.

So plainly, this is not a peak time of year for professional sports. But still: it is noteworthy how many of the articles in the paper have nothing to do with the games themselves, but rather the cheating that surrounds the games. Andy Pettitte apologizes to his teammates and Yankees fans for using HGH, and reveals that his friendship with Roger Clemens is strained … Clemens pulls out of an ESPN event so he doesn’t cause “a distraction” … there are drug-testing articles about Alex Rodriguez, Miguel Tejada, and Eric Gagne.

And that’s just baseball! You can also read about Bill Belichick’s denial of taping opponents’ practices and the continuing tale of doping cyclists. There are a few N.B.A. articles, too (though nothing lately about refs’ gambling), and soccer (though nothing lately on match fixing), but by and large, the sports section that arrives each morning feels more like a cheating section.

Maybe, however, this is just how we like it. As much as we profess to like the games for the games’ sake, perhaps cheating is part of the appeal, a natural extension of sport that people condemn on moral grounds but secretly embrace as what makes sports most compelling. For all the talk of how cheating “destroys the integrity of the game,” maybe that’s not true at all? Perhaps cheating actually adds a layer of interest — a cat-and-mouse element, a detective-story element — that complements the game?

Also, we love to applaud cheaters who have confessed their ways. Pettitte, for instance, got a hero’s welcome for talking about his HGH mistakes; Clemens, meanwhile, with every further denial seems to be soaking up ill will like a sponge. (Given the reception Pettitte got, I do wonder if Clemens is rethinking his retrenchment strategy; perhaps he will come forward someday and claim that he himself “misremembered” using HGH or steroids.) Just as the theological concept of the Resurrection is so powerful), and just as a harsh winter is followed by an insistent spring, I wonder if our interest in sport too springs eternal, not in spite of the cheating scandals, but because of them?
 
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