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B/ Fill in each blank with the correct form of the word given in the box to make meaningful
passages. There are TWO words you cannot use.
WIDTH ACCESS CONDITION PART SUBSIDY USE
LIVE INFORM CONNECT ACT SCRIPT SPECIFY
In a drive for greater (1)_______________ and efficiency, the British government has announced that it
plans to make all public services, from filing tax returns to ordering repeat medical (2)_______________, available
online within the next five years.
Already competitions between different government (3)_______________ are being used to encourage
civil servants to (4)_______________ their web sites and to present information in (5)_______________ fashion.
The government's new information portal, UK Online, will be (6)_______________ tailored to life events, such a
having a baby, dealing with crime or moving house. Eventually it will incorporate (7)_______________ services,
such as the ability to register the birth of a baby online.
The greatest challenge facing the UK Online project is to ensure that its services can reach everybody.
Currently only about a quarter of UK households have Internet access, so the threat of a (8)_______________
digital divide is real. With this in mind, the government is setting up centers in public libraries, schools and shopping
malls to give Internet access to those who do not have it at home.
Computer and Internet training courses will be heavily (9)_______________, while the unemployed will
be able to attend courses for nothing and will be offered free (10)_______________ computers.
OPEN CLOZE TEST: Fill in each blank with ONE suitable word to make meaningful passages.
A/
You wake up to the alarm clock and press the 'snooze' for five more minutes' (1)_______________
sleep. The alarm (2)_______________ off again. You are waiting for a bus on a hot Sunday afternoon in the
middle of (3)_______________, there's not a scrap of (4)_______________. Compare five of the minutes
in the latter case to those in the (5)_______________. That, you might say, is relativity. Time is no longer
the universal clock (6)_______________ behind the universe; now it is the fourth (7)_______________, as
commonplace as height, width and length.
Still, you might argue the example of the alarm clock (8)_______________ the late bus is one of
purely subjective time, and any observer would see the (9)_______________ five minutes pass. This,
however, is making the old assumption of the (10)_______________ observer, the scientist, coolly jotting
(11)_______________ figures in their notebook in a tiny, near-indecipherable hand. Lately this has been
called more and more into (12)_______________. Scientists have bad days too, and (13)_______________
they wish would end so they could go home and put their (14)_______________ up. The five minutes might
be (15)_______________ the more tortuous for them.
B/
Part of being a good parent is teaching your children how to feel anger without (1)_______________
to violence, but this may be more of a challenge than you think. After all, anger is an emotion we all feel at
times – in fact, it is an effective means of (2)_______________ our frustrations. It is not something we can
just switch (3)_______________.
The best way to change our children's behavior is to set a good (4)_______________. As they say,
actions speak louder than words. Perhaps you think this is easy – after all, you don't go around hitting people
who annoy you. However, you may want to reconsider. Have you ever been so furious that you've thrown
something? An honest answer here is the first step. The next thing you have to do is learn to stop and take a
deep (5)_______________ whenever you feel (6)_______________ on the verge of spinning out of
(7)_______________. If you can't calm yourself down in any other way, try a brisk walk or an hour's
(8)_______________ at the gym. Both are good ways of letting off (9)_______________. Don't deal with
situations unless you are feeling relatively calm and able to use your (10)_______________ of reasoning once
more.
C/
Look around you, and you'll likely notice a sea of different outfits. You might see similar
(1)_______________ of clothing — even the same ones — worn by different people, but rarely do you find
two pairings of tops, bottoms, shoes, and accessories that are (2)_______________ alike.
That wasn't always the case, said Deirdre Clemente, a historian of 20th century American culture at
the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, (3)_______________ research focuses on fashion and clothing.
Americans were far more formal, and formulaic dressers, not all that long ago. Men wore suits, almost
(4)_______________ fail — not just to work, but also at school. And women, for the most part, wore long
dresses.
Clemente has written extensively about the evolution of American dress in the 1900s, a period that,
she said, was marked, maybe more than anything else, (5)_______________ a single but powerful trend:
As everyday fashion (6)_______________ from tradition, it shed much of its socioeconomic implications
— people no longer dress to feign wealth like they once (7)_______________ — and took on a new
meaning.
The shift has, above all, led toward (8)_______________ in the way we dress. It can be seen on
college campuses, in classrooms, where students attend in sweatpants, and in the workplace, where Silicon
Valley busy bodies are outfitted with hoodies and T-shirts. That change, the change in how we dress here in
America, has been brewing since the 1920s, and owes (9)_______________ to the rise of specific articles
of clothing. What's (10)_______________, it underscores important shifts in the way we use and
understand the shirts and pants we wear.
D/
Napoleon Bonaparte’s (1)_______________ to control all the area around the Mediterranean Sea led
him and his French soldiers to Egypt. After losing a naval battle, they were forced to remain there for three
years. In 1779, while constructing a fort, a soldier discovered a piece of stele (a stone pillar bearing an
inscription) (2)_______________ as the Rosetta stone, in (3)_______________ of the town near the fort.
This famous stone, which would eventually lead to the (4)_______________ of an ancient Egyptian
hieroglyphics (5)_______________ to 3100 B.C., was written in three languages: hieroglyphics (picture
writing), demotic (a shorthand version of the Egyptian hieroglyphics) and Greek. Scientists discovered that the
characters, (6)_______________ those in English, could be written from right to left and in other
(7)_______________ as well. The direction (8)_______________ which they were read depended on how
the characters were (9)_______________. Living elements (animals, people and body parts) were often the
first symbols, and the direction that they faced indicated the direction for reading them.
Twenty-three years after the discovery of the Rosetta Stone, Jean Francois Champollion, a French
philologist fluent in several language, were (10)_______________ of deciphering the first word – Ptolemy –
the name of an Egyptian ruler. This name was written inside an oval called a “cartouche.”
(11)_______________ investigation revealed that cartouches contained names of important people of that
period. Champollion painstakingly continued his search and was able to increase his growing list of known
(12)_______________ signs. He and an Englishman, Thomas Young, worked (13)_______________ of each
other to unravel deeply hidden (14)_______________ of this strange language. Young believed that sound
values could be (15)_______________ to the symbols, while Champollion insisted that the pictures
represented the words.
ERROR CORRECTION:
Find out the mistakes in each of the following passages and correct them.
A/
Schindler's List is a 1993 American epic historic period drama, directed and co-produced by Steven
Spielberg and scripted by Steven Zaillian. It based on the novel Schindler's Ark by Thomas Keneally, an
Australian novelist. The film is based on the life of Oskar Schindler, a German businessman who saved the
lives of more than a thousand mostly Polish-Jewish refugees during the Holocaust by employing them in their
factories. It stars Liam Neeson as Schindler, Ralph Fiennes as Schutzstaffel (SS) officer Amon Goeth, and Ben
Kingsley as Schindler's Jewish accountant Itzhak Stern.
Ideas for a film about the Schindlerjuden (Schindler Jews) was proposed as early as 1963. Poldek
Pfefferberg, one of theSchindlerjuden, made it his life's mission to tell the story of Schindler. Spielberg became
interested in the story when executive Sid Sheinberg sent him a book review of Schindler's Ark. Universal
Studios bought the rights of the novel, but Spielberg, unsure if he was ready to make a film about the
Holocaust, tried to pass the project to several other directions before finally deciding to direct the film himself.
Oskar Schindler is a German businessman doesn’t hesitate using Jewish slave labor in his new factory.
A member of the Nazi party, Schindler is essentially apolitical but he knows how to deal with the bureaucracy
and those in power to get what he wants. Over time, he is deeply effected by the treatment of Jews and
begins to make steps to protect the 1500 or so people who work for him. He convinces the authorities to build
a new factory where the employees are interned and goes out of his way to hire those who face the wrath of
the camp commandant, Amon Goeth. When the camp is closed, he arranged for “his” Jews to transfer to a
new factory in Czechoslovakia. When the train carrying the women is diverted to Auschwitz, he races to have
them freed using a part of his fortune to have them released to him. By the end of the war, Schindler has lost
everything but has saved the lives of over 1000 of his employees. (12 mistakes)
B/
Internet addiction is described as an impulse control disorder, this does not involve use of an intoxicating
drug and is very similar to pathological gambling. Some Internet users may develop an emotional attachment
for on-line friends and activities they create on their computer screens. Internet users may enjoy aspects of the
Internet that allow them to meet, socialize, and exchange ideas through the usage of chat rooms, social
networking websites, or "virtual communities." Other Internet users spend endless hours research topics of
interest Online or "blogging". Blogging is a contraction of the term "Web log", in which an individual will post
commentary and keep regular chronicle of events. It can be viewed as journaling and the entries are primary
textual.
Similar to other addictions, those suffering from Internet addiction use the virtual fantasy world to
connect with real people through the Internet, as a substitution for real-life human connection, which they are
unable to achieve normalcy.
Internet addiction results from personal, family, academic, financial, and occupational problems that are
characteristic of other addictions. Impairments of real life relationships are disrupted as a result of excessive use
of the Internet. Individuals suffer from Internet addiction spend more time in solitary seclusion, spend less time
with real people in their lives, and are often viewed as socially awkward. Arguments may result due to the
volume of time spent on-line. Those suffering from Internet addiction may attempt to conceal the number of
time spent on-line, which results in distrust and the disturbance of quality in once stable relationships.
Some suffering from Internet addiction may create on-line personas or profiles which they are able to
alter their identities and pretend to be someone other than himself or herself. Those at higher risk for creation
of a secret life are those who suffer from low self-esteem feelings of inadequacy, and fear of disapproval. Such
negative self-concepts lead to clinical problems of depression and anxiety. (12 mistakes)
C/
Various psychologists and researchers have wrestled with the ways that parents collude to convince
young children of the existence of Santa Claus, and have wondered whether children's abilities to critical
weigh real-world evidence may be undermined by their belief in this or other imaginary figures. For example,
University of Texas psychology professor Jacqueline Woolley helped conduct a study that found, to the
contrary, that children seemed competent in their use of logic, evidences, and comparative reasoning even
though they might conclude that Santa Claus or other fanciful creatures were real:
The adults they count on to provide reliant information about the world introduce them to Santa. Then
his existence is affirmed by friends, books, TV and movies. It is also validated by hard evidence: the half-
eating cookies and empty milk glasses by the tree on Christmas morning. In other words, children do a great
job of scientifically evaluating Santa. And adults do a great job of duping them.
Woolley posited that it is perhaps "kinship with the adult world" that causes children not to be angry
that they were lied for so long. However, the criticism about this deception is not that it is a simple lie, then
a complicated series of very large lies. Objections include that it is unethical for parents to lie to children
without good cause, and that it discourages healthful skepticism in children. With no greater good at the
heart of the lie, some have charged that it is more about the parents as it is about the children. For instance,
writer Austin Cline posed the question: "Is it not possible that kids would find at least as much pleasure in
knowing that parents are responsible for Christmas, not a supernatural stranger?"
Others, however, see no harm in the belief in Santa Claus. Psychologist Tamar Murachver said that
because it is a cultural, not parental, lie, it does not undermine parental trust. The New Zealand Skeptics also
see no harm in parents tell their children that Santa is real. Spokesperson Vicki Hyde said, "It would be a
hard-hearted parent indeed who frowned at the innocent joys of our children's cultural heritage. We save our
bah humbugs for the things that exploit the vulnerable." (10 mistakes)
D/
Christmas pudding is a type of pudding traditionally served as part of the Christmas dinner in Britain,
Ireland and in other countries where it has been brought by British and Irish immigrants. It has its origins in
medieval England, and is sometimes known as plum pudding or just "pud", however this can also refer to
other kinds of boiled pudding involved dried fruit. Despite the name "plum pudding", the pudding contains no
actual plums due to the pre-Victorian use of the word "plums" as a term for raisins. The pudding composed
of many dried fruits held together by egg and suet, sometimes moistened by treacle or molasses and flavoured
with cinnamon, nutmeg, cloves, ginger, and other spices. The pudding is aged for a month or even a year;
the high alcohol content of the pudding prevents it from spoiling during this time.
Many households have their own recipes in Christmas pudding, some handed down through families
for generations. Essentially the recipe brings together that traditionally were expensive or luxurious
ingredients — notably the sweet spices that are so important in developing its distinctively rich aroma, and
usually made with suet. It is very dark in appearance — very nearly black — as a result of the dark sugars
and black treacle in most recipes, and its long cooking time. The mixture can be moistened with the juice of
citrus fruits, brandy and other alcohol (some recipes call for dark beers such as mild, stout or porter).
Christmas puddings are often dried out on hooks for weeks prior to serving in order to enhance the
flavour. This pudding has been prepared with a traditional cloth other than a basin.
Prior to the 19th century, the English Christmas pudding was boiled in a pudding cloth, and often
represented as round. The new Victorian era fashion involved putting the batter into a basin and then steam
it, followed by unwrapping the pudding, placing it on a platter, and decorating the top for a sprig of holly.
Initial cooking usually involves steaming for many hours. To serve, the pudding is reheated again by
steaming once more, and dressed with warm brandy which is set alight. It can be eaten with hard sauce
(usually brandy butter or rum butter), cream, lemon cream, ice cream, custard, or sweetened béchamel, and
is sometimes sprinkled with caster sugar. (10 mistakes)
E/
Jane Austen came into the world on December 16th, 1775. Born to Reverend George Austen of the
Steventon rectory and Cassandra Austen of the Leigh family. She was to be their seventh child and only the
second daughter to a couple. Her siblings were made up largely from brothers, which in some ways forced a
close relationship with her elder sister, Cassandra (not to be confused with the mother who also carried the
name Cassandra - but further referred to as Mrs. Austen). Of all the brothers, it would be Henry to whom
Jane would form the closest bond with, playing the part of Jane's literary agent in the later stages of her
writing.
Growing up, the Austen children lived in an environment of open learning, creation and dialogue. Mr.
Austen worked away in the rectory but also tried his hand at farming on the side to earn more money for the
growing family. Additionally, he would take on teaching roles within the home to outside children for additional
extra funds. The Austen children would all grow within this close-knit family with Jane herself forming an
exceptional bond with her father.
In 1783, at the age of 8, Jane and her sister Cassandra were sent off to boarded school for their
formal educations. Education would consist the appropriate teachings of the time, which included foreign
language (mainly French), music and dancing. Returning home, the rest of Jane's education centered mainly
around what her father and brothers could teach her and, of course, what she could learn from her own
reading. As Mr. Austen was part of the church, he kept a large collection of literature in his home library. This
library was open to Jane and Cassandra as well and the two made extensively use of it in both reading and
writing endeavors, with Jane took the lead in both. Mr. Austen fed Jane's interest in writing by supplying his
books, paper and writing tools to allow her exploring her creative side. By all accounts, life inside the Austen
homestead was a casual environment where many an attempt at humor was made with some very good
debating going on on the side. (10 mistakes)
- TO BE CONTINUED -
SỞ GIÁO DỤC VÀ ĐÀO TẠO BÌNH DƯƠNG KỲ THI CHỌN ĐỘI TUYỂN HỌC SINH GIỎI
TRƯỜNG CHUYÊN HÙNG VƯƠNG NĂM HỌC 2021 – 2022
Part 1. For questions 1-5, listen to a news report about virtual classes and decide whether the following
statements are True (T) or False (F) according to what you hear. Write your answers in the numbered
boxes provided.
1. Nearly two thousand people a day at this school are now going online for virtual lessons.
2. Students at schools everywhere have different feelings when their learning is disrupted by Coronavirus.
3. Despite obvious obstacles, the school’s class schedules remain unchanged.
4. One of the speakers is really happy with all that the students are doing in the period of Coronavirus.
5. People are trying their best to bring things back to normal.
Your answers:
1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
Part 2. For questions 6-10, listen to part of an interview about the new vaccine for COVID-19 and answer
the questions. Write NO MORE THAN FOUR WORDS taken from the recording for each answer.
6. What country is the first to approve the Pfizer and Bayern Tech vaccine?
__________________________________________________
10. When will the possible side effects of Pfizer vaccine become apparent?
__________________________________________________
Page 1 of 12 pages
Part 3. For questions 11-15, listen to part of an interview with Colin Fraser, a psychologist, about cultural
identity and choose the answer A, B, C or D which fits best according to what you hear. Write your answers
in the corresponding numbered boxes provided.
11. What aspect does Colin reveal when talking about his own cultural identity?
A. His resilience to changing cultures. B. His unorthodox family background.
C. His ability to adapt. D. His feeling of alienation.
12. According to Colin, what is the defining aspect of a person's cultural identity?
A. The sense of birth right. B. The emotion it generates.
C. The physical proximity to heritage. D. The symbols of tradition.
13. What is the influence of a culture attributed to?
A. The dissemination of wisdom. B. Connection between societies.
C. Knowledge of one's background. D. The practice of archaic rituals.
14. According to Colin, the success of a culture on the global scene is attributed to ______.
A. its capacity for tolerance B. its isolation from the mainstream
C. its aptitude for resolving conflicts D. its ability to be self-effacing
15. What is Colin doing during the conversation?
A. Distinguishing between birthplace and residence.
B. Advocating the celebration of heritage.
C. Highlighting the differences in societies.
D. Addressing the issues raised by conflicting cultures.
Your answers:
11. 12. 13. 14. 15.
Part 4. For questions 16-25, listen to a news report about the father of personalized medicine and complete
the sentences below. Write NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS taken from the recording in each blank.
Dr. Larry Smarr has recently directed his own surgery after examining his anatomy in
(16)_________________________________.
He is quickly recognised as the father of personalized medicine, a title that reflects his
(17)_________________________________ and innovative thinking.
Dr. Larry, who likened his approach to bringing video games into (18)_____________________________,
realized the potential of combining breakthroughs in (19)_____________________________ and computer
graphics to produce transparent versions of people.
Using (20)_________________________ along with three-dimensional visualizations gathered over nearly ten
years, Dr. Larry created his own (21)_____________________________ called “Transparent Larry”, thanks to
which he found out that he had a type of (22)_____________________________.
With (23)__________________________, both Larry and the team operating on him gained more confidence.
Dr. Larry is optimistic about a future in which the current (24)__________________________ will be transformed
into holistic digital healthcare, where we are responsible for (25)__________________________.
Page 2 of 12 pages
II. LEXICO-GRAMMAR (20 points)
Part 1. For questions 26-40, choose the correct answer A, B, C, or D to each of the following questions.
Write your answers in the corresponding numbered boxes provided.
26. She ______ up a clenched fist in a gesture of defiance when her boss asked her to run errands.
A. caught B. brought C. took D. held
27. We live in a ______ society where shopping is all-important.
A. consumer B. consumption C. procurement D. purchase
28. I ______ some friends and we went to the beach together.
A. rang off B. rounded up C. put on D. ran in
29. She ______ skirted around the topic of marriage with her forty-year-old son.
A. tactfully B. perceptively C. insightfully D. unselfishly
30. This hotel looked older and ______ in the name of the Lion's Cub.
A. desired B. relished C. envied D. rejoiced
31. Put a ______ of butter in the frying pan to make the steak taste better.
A. spring B. pile C. pinch D. knob
32. It’s Mum who ______ in our house, but she always consults Dad about every major and minor thing.
A. sits on the fence B. rules the roost
C. talks through her hat D. makes her hackles rise
33. That Italian restaurant is nowhere near as good since it changed ______.
A. hands B. fingers C. minds D. heads
34. Being ______ in the subtleties of cookery, Anne was unsure about the amount of sugar required.
A. uninitiated B. unversed C. unknowing D. unquoted
35. I knew that faking the tears would ______ her and end the punishment, but I refused because it is against
my personality.
A. insinuate B. ingratiate C. gratify D. pander
36. I ______ in this relationship and I make every decision.
A. pack my bags B. wear the trousers
C. tighten my belt D. knock my socks off
37. After lunch our host suggested, "Shall we ______ to the drawing room?”
A. retire B. retreat C. retract D. recede
38. After six months of stay-at-home orders, "COVID-19 Fatigue" is to be expected, but it's important to remain
______.
A. circumspect B. frugal C. cagey D. vigilant
39. It didn’t take much to ______ the old animosity lurking beneath the surface of their relationship.
A. regain B. recuperate C. rekindle D. revive
40. Our family ______ enjoyed our holiday in Vietnam – the places are beautiful and the people are nice.
A. strongly B. thoroughly C. deeply D. significantly
Your answers:
26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33.
34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40.
Part 2. For questions 41-45, write the correct form of each bracketed word in each sentence in the
numbered space provided in the column on the right.
Your answers:
41. If homeowners can't keep up the payments, they face (CLOSE). 41. __________________
42. A lot of the characters in the play have very trusting natures, and this (VARY) 42. __________________
leads to their downfall.
43. One of the duties of this post includes welcoming visiting (DIGNIFY) from foreign 43. __________________
countries.
44. Hopefully, our discoveries will (ACT) the cynicism of those who say that humans 44. __________________
are not destroying the world.
45. Some men feel (MASCULINE) if they work for a woman. 45. __________________
Page 3 of 12 pages
III. READING (50 points)
Part 1. For questions 46-55, read the text below and think of one word that fits each gap. Write your
answers in the corresponding numbered boxes provided.
BEACONS
We have become accustomed to the sight of an untidy collection of masts and antennas on just (46)______ every
high hill or mountaintop. They are all (47)______ the most of high vantage points to transmit and receive things
like television programmes and mobile phone calls. However, in the event of a (48)______ emergency, they will
provide vital help.
Modern telecommunications networks have (49)______ an ancient early-warning system where beacons, or fires,
were lit to form a chain of communication. In some cases, the (50)______ same vantage points we use today were
(51)______ used for that purpose.
The first beacon would typically be lit at a high point on the coast if invading ships were spotted. When this was
seen from the next point some (52)______ away, a second beacon was lit, followed by others (53)______ along
the chain. Each beacon would warn local communities, and the network could, within minutes, (54)______ a whole
country to the danger.
Of course, the message was not very sophisticated, (55)______ in most cases it was readily understood to mean,
“We are under attack".
Your answers:
46. 47. 48. 49. 50.
51. 52. 53. 54. 55.
Part 2. Read the following passage and do the tasks that follow.
LEARNING LESSONS FROM THE PAST
Many past societies collapsed or vanished, leaving behind monumental ruins such as those that the poet
Shelly imagined in his sonnet, Ozymandias. By collapse, I mean a drastic decrease in human population size and/
or political/ economic/ social complexity, over a considerable area, for an extended time. By those standards, most
people would consider the following past societies to have been famous victims of full-fledged collapses rather
than of just minor declines: the Anasazi and Cahokia within the boundaries of the modern US, the Maya cities in
Central America, Moche and Tiwanaku societies in South America, Norse Greenland, Mycenean Greece and
Minoan Crete in Europe, Great Zimbabwe in Africa, Angkor Wat and the Harappan Indus Valley cities in Asia, and
Easter Island in the Pacific Ocean.
The monumental ruins left behind by those past societies hold a fascination for all of us. We marvel at them
when as children we first learn of them through pictures. When we grow up, many of us plan vacations in order to
experience them at first hand. We feel drawn to their often spectacular and haunting beauty, and also to the
mysteries that they pose. The scales of the ruins testify to the former wealth and power of their builders. Yet these
builders vanished, abandoning the great structures that they had created at such effort. How could a society that
was once so mighty end up collapsing?
It has long been suspected that many of those mysterious abandonments were at least partly triggered by
ecological problems: people inadvertently destroying the environmental resources on which their societies
depended. This suspicion of unintended ecological suicides (ecocide) has been confirmed by discoveries made in
recent decades by archaeologists, climatologists, historians, paleontologists, and palynologists (pollen scientists).
The processes through which past societies have undermined themselves by damaging their environments fall
into eight categories, whose relative importance differs from case to case: deforestation and habitat destruction,
soil problems, water management problems, overhunting, overfishing, effects of introduced species on native
species, human population growth, and increased impact of people.
Those past collapses tended to follow somewhat similar courses constituting variations on a theme. Writers
find it tempting to draw analogies between the course of human societies and the course of individual human lives
– to talk of a society’s birth, growth, peak, old age and eventual death. But that metaphor proves erroneous for
many past societies: they declined rapidly after reaching peak numbers and power, and those rapid declines must
have come as surprise and shock to their citizens. Obviously, too, this trajectory is not one that all past societies
followed unvaryingly to completion: different societies collapsed to different degrees and in somewhat different
ways, while many societies did not collapse at all.
Today many people feel that environmental problems overshadow all the other threats to global civilization.
These environmental problems include the same eight that undermined past societies, plus four new ones: human-
caused climate change, build up of toxic chemicals in the environment, energy shortages, and full human utilization
of the Earth’s photosynthetic capacity. But the seriousness of those current environmental problems is vigourously
debated. Are the risks greatly exaggerated, or conversely, are they underestimated? Will modern technology solve
our problems, or is it creating new problems faster than it solves old ones? When we deplete one resource (e.g.
Page 4 of 12 pages
wood, oil or ocean fish), can we count on being able to substitute some new resource (e.g. plastics, wind and solar
energy, or farmed fish)? Isn’t the rate of human population growth declining, such that we’re already on course for
the world’s population to level off at some manageable number of people?
Questions like this illustrate why those famous collapses of past civilisations have taken on more meaning
than just that of a romantic mystery. Perhaps there are some practical lessons that we could learn from all those
past collapses. But there are also differences between the modern world and its problems, and those past societies
and their problems. We shouldn’t be so naïve as to think that study of the past will yield simple solutions, directly
transferrable to our society today. We differ from past societies in some respects that put us at lower risk than
them; some of those respects often mentioned include our powerful technology (i.e. its beneficial effects),
globalization, modern medicine, and greater knowledge of past societies and of distant modern societies. We also
differ from past societies in some respects that put us at greater risk than them: again our potent technology (i.e.
its unintended destructive effects), globalization (such that now a problem in one part of the world affects all the
rest), the dependence of millions of us on modern medicine for our survival, and our much larger human population.
Perhaps we can still learn from the past, but if only we think carefully about its lessons.
Questions 56 - 58 Choose the correct letter A, B, C or D. Write your answers in the numbered boxes provided.
56. When the writer describes the impact of monumental ruins today, he emphasizes
A. the income they generate from tourism. B. the area of land they occupy.
C. their archaeological value. D. their romantic appeal.
57. Recent findings concerning vanished civilisations have
A. overturned long-held beliefs.
B. caused controversy amongst scientists.
C. come from a variety of disciplines.
D. identified one main cause of environmental damage.
58. What does the writer say about ways in which former societies collapsed?
A. The pace of decline was usually similar.
B. The likelihood of collapse would have been foreseeable.
C. Deterioration invariably led to total collapse.
D. Individual citizens could sometimes influence the course of events.
Your answers:
56. 57. 58.
Questions 59 – 65 Decide whether the following statements agree with the views of the writer in the reading
passage. Write your answer in the numbered boxes provided.
Write YES if the statement agrees with the view of the writer
NO if the statement contradicts the view of the writer
NOT GIVEN if it is impossible to say what the writer thinks about it
59. It is widely believed that environmental problems represent the main danger faced by the modern world.
60. The accumulation of poisonous substances is a relatively modern problem.
61. There is general agreement that the threats posed by environmental problems are very serious.
62. Some past societies resembled present-day societies more closely than others.
63. We should be careful when drawing comparisons between past and present.
Your answers:
59. 60. 61. 62. 63.
Questions 65 - 68 Complete each sentence with the correct ending A-F below
64. Evidence of the greatness of some former civilisations
65. The parallel between an individual’s life and the life of a society
66. The number of environmental problems that societies face
67. The power of technology
68. A consideration of historical events and trends
Your answers:
64. 65. 66. 67. 68.
Page 5 of 12 pages
Part 3. In the passage below, seven paragraphs have been removed. For questions 69-75, read the passage
choose from the paragraphs A–H the one which fits each gap. There is ONE extra paragraph which you
do not need to use. Write your answers in the numbered boxes provided.
PNEUMATICS IS MAKING A COMEBACK
Sometimes an email won't suffice, so it's time to breathe new life into an antique messaging technology.
In a windowless room in a London basement, there's a device on the wall that makes things disappear. Technicians
file in, grasping large containers shaped like capsules and stuff bags into them. One places his container into the
device, taps a code on a panel, and whoosh, it's gone. A few minutes later, the capsule reappears a kilometer
away.
69.
Pneumatic networks were once heralded as the future of communication and delivery. Indeed, some think their
history echoes the way current information technology developed. Yet while today's pneumatic market may be
modest by comparison, it is now proving essential for a few types of organisation such as this one in London. In a
digital age, why has this antique technology been embraced once more?
70.
By the turn of the 20th century, entrepreneurs — and even the American postmaster general — were predicting a
'pneumatic age', promising delivery of everything from household goods to hot food. Some people even dreamed
of pneumatic public transport. 'We had this utopian discourse about the pneumatic subway; the crazy notion that
you'd be able to travel under the Atlantic,' says Holly Kruse of Rogers State University in Oklahoma, who has
studied the social impact of pneumatic tubes.
71.
Tubes never formed a pneumatic internet, of course. One by one, citywide networks fell into disuse. Surprisingly,
perhaps, a few were still running in the late 20th century, but the last postal example, in Prague, was eventually
shut down in 2002 after a flood had damaged it beyond repair.
72.
In 2008, a UK-based organization called Foodtubes looked into the idea of distributing food to supermarkets via
networks of one-metre-wide underground tubes. Pneumatic transport was one of the methods explored. The
project attracted interest from at least one supermarket, but the up-front cost meant it never got off the ground.
Therefore, it appears that if a large-scale demonstration could be put in place to show that this form of transport is
cost-effective, it might just snowball.
73.
Yet the real booming market for modern pneumatics is in hospitals. 'They are used extensively in the healthcare
sector,' says Robert Beardsley of the international pneumatic tube firm Aerocom. The company has installed over
1000 hospital systems in around 80 countries for transporting samples and medicines.
74.
These installations are not merely pipes connecting point A to point B. They are highly complex networks with a
multitude of junctions and computer-controlled switches that serve to deliver the dispatched material to the
appropriate destination. Some are vast: Stanford Hospital in California, for example, has 124 stations.
75.
Pneumatic delivery has not revolutionized the world in the way its early advocates hoped it would. However, it has
found a niche because not everything can be reduced to 1s and 0s. It has also evolved from steampunk brass
systems to computerized ones and will continue to adapt as new technologies are developed.
Missing paragraphs
A. However, while the electronic age delivered many of the benefits foreseen by early tube enthusiasts, there are
some that have not been realised. Wires cannot transport physical goods, for example. You can order
practically anything online and have it delivered to your door, but until the 3D-printing revolution actually
happens, it must still be transported by road. Could tubes prove more efficient?
B. If the demand for pneumatic delivery systems increases, there is a chance that they will become as
indispensable as digital technology. They may even be used to distribute food and medicine to those who
cannot venture out on their own. Although this would require huge investment, it would create a more caring
society.
C. In fiction, pneumatic technology is often associated with a creaking bureaucratic dystopia, such as in George
Orwell's 1984, or in the satirical film Brazil. From the late 1900s, pneumatic tubes carried mail across the cities
of the US and Europe. They also carried cash, stock market messages and other objects inside buildings.
Tubes were the social network of their era. In 1890, pneumatic pipes beneath Milan, Italy, allowed composer
Page 6 of 12 pages
Giuseppe Verdi and his collaborator, Arrigo Boito, to shuttle messages concerning the opera they were working
on.
D. Pneumatic delivery of more limited proportions, though, has been embraced by many modern organisations. In
fact, in some places, it has never gone away. Banks and supermarkets use tubes to move money from cashiers
to the back office as cash collected by roving clerks has the potential to be lost or stolen.
E. The basic mechanics, though, are simple: fans blow air to push capsules one way, and suck to pull them in the
opposite direction. Air built up at the end of each tube provides a cushioning for brake. The modern twist comes
with computer-controlled routing and motorized junctions that allow multiple capsules to be transported at once.
And each capsule has a radio tracking tag.
F. The researcher argues that historical pneumatic efforts and the surrounding discussion echo facets of society
today, particularly our use of information technology. They foreshadowed the physical structure of computer
networks inside buildings. And as well as inspiring the same kind of hyperbole as the internet does, tubes also
prompted similar moral issues. In E.M. Forster's 1909 sci-fi story The Machine Stops, for instance, the
'pneumatic post' helps create a dark future in which nobody converses face to face.
G. This particular contraption employs a technology that was supposed to have faded away decades ago -
pneumatic tubes. Hidden in the walls is a vast computer-controlled network of pipes propelling capsules via air
pressure and vacuum. Installed in the early 2000s, it is present in one of many buildings worldwide that boasts
a high-tech pneumatic network. Some of them have hundreds of stations fed by several kilometres of tubes
and junctions.
H. The London basement houses one of those contemporary networks. There, tubes deliver blood and tissue for
testing to the pathology lab from about 50 stations on various wards. Sending capsules at 20 to 30 kilometres
per hour through an air-chute system is handy in a large hospital with dozens of patients waiting for urgent
treatment or diagnosis at any one time.
Your answers:
69. 70. 71. 72. 73. 74. 75.
Part 4. For questions 76-85, read the passage on the nature of symbols and choose the answer A, B, C or
D which fits best according to the passage. Write your answers in the corresponding numbered boxes
provided.
One of the current definitions of a symbol is that it is “something that stands for something else.” We can
differentiate between three kinds of symbols: the conventional, the accidental, and the universal symbol.
The conventional symbol is the best known of the three, since we employ it in everyday language. If we see
the word “table” or hear the sound “table,” the letters t-a-b-l-e stand for something else. They stand for the thing
“table” that we see, touch, and use. What is the connection between the word “table” and the thing “table”? Is there
any inherent relationship between them? Obviously not. The thing table has nothing to do with the sound table,
and the only reason the word symbolizes the thing is the convention of calling this particular thing by a name. We
learn this connection as children by the repeated experience of hearing the word in reference to the thing until a
lasting association is formed so that we don’t have to think to find the right word.
There are some words, however, in which the association is not only conventional. When we say “phooey,”
for instance, we make with our lips a movement of dispelling the air quickly. It is an expression of disgust in which
our mouths participate. By this quick expulsion of air we imitate and thus express our intention to expel something,
to get it out of our system. In this case, as in some others, the symbol has an inherent connection with the feeling
it symbolizes. But even if we assume that originally many or even all words had their origins in some such inherent
connection between symbol and the symbolized, most words no longer have this meaning for us when we learn a
language.
Words are not the only illustration for conventional symbols, although they are most frequent and best known
ones. Pictures also can be conventional symbols. A flag, for instance, may stand for a specific country, and yet
there is no intrinsic connection between the specific colors and the country for which they stand. They have been
accepted as denoting that particular country, and we translate the visual impression of the flag into the concept of
that country, again on conventional grounds.
The opposite to the conventional symbol is the accidental symbol, although they have one thing in common:
there is no intrinsic relationship between the symbol and that which it symbolizes. Let us assume that someone
has had a saddening experience in a certain city; when he hears the name of that city, he will easily connect the
name with a mood of sadness, just as he would connect it with a mood of joy had his experience been a happy
one. Quite obviously, there is nothing in the nature of the city that is either sad or joyful. It is the individual
experience connected with the city that makes it a symbol of a mood.
The same reaction could occur in connection with a house, a street, a certain dress, certain scenery, or
anything once connected with a specific mood. We might find ourselves dreaming that we are in a certain city. We
ask ourselves why we happened to think of that city in our sleep and may discover that we had fallen asleep and
may discover that we had fallen asleep in a mood similar to the one symbolized by the city. The picture in the
dream represents this mood, the city “stands for” the mood once experienced in it. The connection between the
symbol and the experience symbolized is entirely accidental.
Page 7 of 12 pages
The universal symbol is one in which there is an intrinsic relationship between the symbol and that which it
represents. Take, for instance, the symbol of fire. We are fascinated by certain qualities of fire in a fireplace. First
of all, by its aliveness. It changes continuously, it moves all the time, and yet there is constancy in it. It remains the
same without being the same. It gives the impression of power, of energy, of grace and lightness. It is as if it were
dancing, and had an inexhaustible source of energy. When we use fire as a symbol, we describe the inner
experience characterized by the same elements which we notice in the sensory experience of fire – the mood of
energy, lightness, movement, grace, gaiety, sometimes one, sometimes another of these elements being
predominant in the feeling.
The universal symbol is the only one in which the relationship between the symbol and that which is
symbolized is not coincidental, but intrinsic. It is rooted in the experience of the affinity between an emotion or
thought, on the one hand, and a sensory experience, on the other. It can be called universal because it is shared
by all men, in contrast not only to the accidental symbol, which is by its very nature entirely personal, but also to
the conventional symbol, which is restricted to a group of people sharing the same convention. The universal
symbol is rooted in the properties of our body, our senses, and our mind, which are common to all men and,
therefore, not restricted to individuals or to specific groups. Indeed, the language of the universal symbol is the
one common tongue developed by the human race, a language which it forgot before it succeeded in developing
a universal conventional language.
76. The passage is primarily concerned with ______.
A. refuting an argument B. describing a process
C. disproving a thesis D. refining a definition
77. According to the passage, “table” and “phooey” differ in that ______.
A. only one is a conventional symbol
B. “phooey” has an inherent link with its meaning
C. “table” is a better known symbol than “phooey”
D. only one is used exclusively by children
78. According to the passage, which of the following is NOT correct?
A. Children can learn the conventional link between a word and a thing.
B. The conventional symbol is the most widely known.
C. Only words can illustrate conventional symbols.
D. The conventional and accidental symbols have something in common.
79. The author argues that conventional symbols ______.
A. are less meaningful than accidental ones
B. necessarily have a link with an emotion
C. are less familiar than universal symbols
D. can be pictorial as well as linguistic
80. Which of the following would the author be most likely to categorize as a conventional symbol?
A. a country road B. the Statue of Liberty C. a bonfire D. the city of London
81. According to the author’s argument, a relationship between the city of Paris and the mood of joy can best be
described as ______.
A. coincidental B. dreamlike C. elemental D. built-in
82. A major distinction of a universal symbol from conventional and accidental symbols is ______.
A. its origins in sensory experience B. its dependence on a specific occasion
C. the intensity of the mood experienced D. its unmemorable nature
83. According to the passage, which of the following is true?
A. Accidental and conventional symbols are entirely different.
B. Accidental symbols can be both personal and communal.
C. A word can be both inherently and conventionally associated with its meaning.
D. A universal symbol developed accidentally from the human desire to communicate.
84. According to the passage, universal symbols ______.
A. appeal to conventionally minded people
B. are shared only among a definite human community
C. are less familiar than conventional symbols
D. are shared by all human communities
85. The author contends that the language of the universal symbol ______.
A. restricts itself to those capable of comprehending symbolism
B. should be adopted as the common tongue for the human race
C. comes before the development of everyday conventional language
D. grew out of human efforts to create a universal conventional language
Your answers:
76. 77. 78. 79. 80.
81. 82. 83. 84. 85.
Page 8 of 12 pages
Part 5. The passage below consists of four paragraphs marked A, B, C, and D. For questions 86-95, read
the passage and do the task that follows. Write your answers in the corresponding numbered boxes
provided.
A. Mark
Although there is quite a lot of guided learning while you are at university, the element of individual research and
initiative increases as you progress towards earning your degree. A university education helps students to polish
their writing skills, thus enabling them to arrange, evaluate and summarize relevant material, argue and justify
points, and reach a conclusion. Another, and possibly even more important, part of the university experience is
meeting people from all sorts of different backgrounds, hearing their opinions and discussing the relative merits of
your different points of view. To my mind, this experience is invaluable preparation for success in any career. It is
for this reason that many employers are happy to take on a graduate regardless of what they actually studied for
their degree. Such employers appreciate the fact that the candidate has demonstrated the effort and discipline to
successfully graduate. Though you may not consider it essential to have been awarded a degree in order to go on
to a rewarding career, it is certainly highly desirable.
B. Vince
It is important to remember that not everybody’s definition of achievement is tied to the number of rungs on the
corporate ladder that they have managed to scale. Many highly desirable careers, in the arts, for example, require
very little in the way of a record of academic achievement. What counts is to make your mark and thus have your
talents recognized by the people who matter. Lots of people are talented, but being self-assured can give you the
edge on others. The same principle may apply in the arena of entrepreneurship. Of course, a degree in business
studies won’t harm you, but many successful entrepreneurs have an innate aptitude for making good deals. To
some extent, it is a person’s character and personality that seals their success. Such people are positive, optimistic
and highly skilled at networking. The fact that some of them may have failed to shine in secondary school is
irrelevant.
C. Fay
Nowadays, some fields of science are so advanced that even a postgraduate degree may not be enough for you
to get your foot in the door of your chosen career. Occasionally, however, it is possible for the unthinkable to
happen, enabling someone with a poor start in academic terms to find an unseen route to a successful career. My
best friend, Susanna, is a classic example of what I mean. After an unpromising and fairly miserable time at school,
she more or less had to quit before the end of her final school year. Her mother, however, managed to find her an
apprenticeship in a new industry. This was when the Siftex Company started manufacturing the Siftex, which was
the result of a completely new technological breakthrough. From then on, there was no looking back for Susanna.
She’s had a great career, working all over the world, and she has been the company’s senior troubleshooter for
the last decade. And just think – she was told that she would never have got her apprenticeship if she’d waited
until the end of the academic year!
D. Connor
Medicine, law, engineering, biotechnology – these are all fields where you need a good degree in order to get your
first job. Imagine, you even have to go to university in order to become a nurse in some countries! Getting a degree
would appear to be an essential stage in nearly anyone’s education if they want to do something more rewarding
than manual labor or assembly line work. One great aspect of this type of education is that, for a lot of careers,
you need to complement the academic side with a generous share of work experience. This is why there is very
close cooperation nowadays between businesses and universities. You can learn lots of theory at university, but
nothing in lectures can take the place of hands-on learning. For this reason, degree courses with sandwich years
for the non-academic side are becoming more the norm.
Which person gives each of these opinions about education? Your answers:
Good undergraduate qualifications are essential for immediately landing oneself a job. 86. _________
Self-confidence can be greatly significant in personal success. 87. _________
Graduates should have developed the art of writing which demonstrates high-order thinking skills. 88. _________
Even though you fail academically at university, it doesn’t mean that you can’t succeed in your career. 89. _________
Learning to think from other people’s perspectives can be valuable. 90. _________
Success is not always defined by getting a promotion in an organization. 91. _________
Luck can be an important factor in personal success. 92. _________
Extensive practical training should be added to improve university education. 93. _________
Some employers value graduates irrespective of what their degree is in. 94. _________
Some people succeed due to their ability to identify and cultivate useful contacts. 95. _________
Page 9 of 12 pages
IV. WRITING (60 points)
Part 1. Read the following extract and use your own words to summarise it. Your summary should be
between 100 and 120 words.
Alternative energy sources are resources that are constantly replaced and are usually less polluting. They
are not the result of the burning of fossil fuels or splitting of atoms. The use of renewable energy is contributing to
our energy supply. Some alternative energy sources are: biomass energy, geothermal energy and hydroelectric
power.
Biomass is renewable energy that is produced from organic matter. Biomass fuels include wood, forest and
mill residues, animal waste, grains, agricultural crops, and aquatic plants. These materials are used as fuel to heat
water for steam or processed into liquids and gases, which can be burned to do the same thing. With more use of
biomass at lower production costs and better technology, the United States could generate as much as four-and-
a-half times more biopower by 2020. It is estimated that biomass will have the largest increase among renewable
energy sources, rising by 80 percent and reaching 65.7 billion KW in 2020.
Geothermal energy uses heat from within the earth. Wells are drilled into geothermal reservoirs to bring the
hot water or steam to the surface. The steam then drives a turbine-generator to generate electricity in geothermal
plants. In some places this heat is used directly to heat homes and greenhouses, or to provide process heat for
businesses or industries. Reykjavik, Iceland, is heated by geothermal energy. Most geothermal resources are
concentrated in the western part of the United States. Geothermal heat pumps use shallow ground energy to heat
and cool homes, and this technique can be employed almost anywhere. With technological improvements much
more power could be generated from hydrothermal resources. Scientists have been experimenting by pumping
water into the hot dry rock that is 3-6 miles below the earth's surface for use in geothermal power plants.
Hydroelectric (hydropower) energy employs the force of falling water to drive turbine-generators to produce
electricity. Hydropower produces more electricity than any other alternative energy source. It has been estimated
that hydroelectric power will decline from 389 billion KW in the US in 1999 to 298 billion KW in 2020. This decline
is expected because most of the best sites for hydropower have already been developed and because of concerns
about the adverse impact that large-scale hydroelectric facilities may have on the environment.
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Page 10 of 12 pages
Part 2. The chart below shows the percentages of species expected to lose more than half their range by
2100 due to global warming.
Summarise the information by selecting and reporting the main features, and make comparisons where
relevant. You should write about 150 words.
26%
+3.2oC 3.2oC 44%
49%
8%
+2.0o2.0oC
C 16%
18%
4%
+1.5o1.5oC
C 8%
6%
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Page 11 of 12 pages
Part 3. Write an essay of 350 words on the following topic.
As for success in life, many of us think that our greatness lies in persistence, while others believe that only
realization of our limits in ability can bring true success. Discuss both views and give your opinions.
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(You may write overleaf if you need more space.)
– THE END –
Page 12 of 12 pages
SỞ GIÁO DỤC VÀ ĐÀO TẠO KỲ THI LẬP ĐỘI TUYỂN CỦA TỈNH
TỈNH QUẢNG NINH DỰ THI CHỌN HSGQG THPT NĂM HỌC 2021-2022
Môn thi: TIẾNG ANH
Ngày thi : 06/10/2021
ĐỀ THI CHÍNH THỨC Thời gian làm bài:180 phút, không kể thời gian giao đề
Part 1. For questions 1-5, choose from the list (A-H) what unexpected aspect each speaker
encountered while watching the film.
A. the versatility of the cast
B. the seamlessness of the images Speaker 1 1 __________
C. the authenticity of the scenes Speaker 2 2 __________
D. the film’s sense of humor Speaker 3 3 __________
E. the feeling elicited Speaker 4 4 __________
F. the scarcity of roles Speaker 5 5 __________
G. the impact of the soundtrack
H. the intensity of the special effects
Part 2. Listen to a talk about memory and answer the questions with NO MORE THAN THREE
WORDS for each answer. Write your answers in the space provided.
6. How was Dr. Federik Sullivan’s memory at first?
………………………………………………………………………………………..
7. Besides a computer, what can help you improve your memory?
………………………………………………………………………………………..
8. Besides prolonging life, what has a full and active memory been proved to be able to do?
………………………………………………………………………………………..
9. According to Sullivan, how is the human brain?
………………………………………………………………………………………..
10.What is the function of long-term memory?
………………………………………………………………………………………..
Part 3. For questions 11-15, listen to part of a discussion programme, in which a teacher called
Simon and a business journalist called Trina are talking about the issue of change, and choose the
answer (A, B, C or D) which fits best according to what you hear. Write your answers in the
corresponding numbered boxes provided.
11. What does Simon say about change when discussing linguistic expressions?
A. It is an inevitable part of life.
B. It is generally perceived as unwelcome.
C. Its significance has altered over time.
D. It brings improvements when they're least expected.
12. What do they agree about change in the business community?
A. It is regarded as synonymous with progress.
B. It is seen as unfortunate but necessary.
Page | 1
C. It never seems to be questioned.
D. It can lead to undesirable results.
13. What does Trina dislike about feedback forms?
A. the scale of the reaction they can provoke
B. the disharmony they can create within organizations
C. the extent of their use in the world of education
D. the justification they give to managers who want to introduce changes
14. When discussing day-to-day routines, Simon and Trina agree that people ______________
A. make too much fuss about small-scale changes.
B. find that changes in the workplace mirror those in daily life.
C. only like change that clearly benefits them personally.
D. experience an ongoing cycle of resisting and accepting change.
15. In Simon's view, people will really enjoy an activity if _____________
A. they do it on a regular basis.
B. they keep on changing it slightly.
C. it represents a change for them.
D. it coincides with their expectations.
Your answers:
11. 12. 13. 14. 15.
Part 4. For questions 16-25, listen to a talk about hacking and supply the blanks with the missing
information. Write NO MORE THAN FOUR WORDS taken from the recording for each answer in
the space provided.
THE SECRET LIVES OF THE HACKER
16. In broad terms, hacking can be conceived as ingenious __________________________ since this
activity aims to exploit the properties of things in an unanticipated manner.
17. The way that Galileo used crooked glass to _________________ can be seen as a hacking activity.
18. NASA engineers used a hack to save Apollo 13, with a book, a plastic bag and a
________________________.
19. In order to establish a call, phone providers utilized ____________________________________.
20. Many hackers are propelled by the desire to understand the operation of a system, to
__________________________ and hidden secrets.
21. Steve Wozniak found source of inspiration from his early explorations to embark on
____________________________.
22. There is an analogy between some types of hackers and security forces working to protect their
_________________________________.
23. Greed, fame, nonconformity and the yearnings to hurt others for ________________________ are
what propel hackers.
24. Another type of hackers is ___________________________________ who aim to deceive people.
25. While hackers themselves value their actions; other people deem what they do as
___________________________________.
Page | 2
29. I thought I had made it __________ that I didn’t want to discuss this matter anymore.
A. frank B. distinct C. plain D. straight
30. I went to see the boss about a pay rise and he __________ with a weak excuse about a business
dinner and left me standing there.
A. brushed me aside B. brushed me up C. brushed me off D. brushed me down
31. She was very fortunate to __________ an excellent private tutor to help her with her study.
A. think through B. seek out C. pick up D. light upon
32. We had to _______ in the back of the car for an hour to find the missing keys.
A. bed out B. rack up C. root around D. turn down
33. They spend so much time arguing that, when it comes to the _______, decisions are often deferred.
A. crunch B. outcry C. snag D. uproar
34. James never really broke the rules but he did _________ them a little bit when it suited him.
A. twist B. curve C. move D. bend
35. Take care that your love for him doesn't __________ your judgement.
A. cloud B. darken C. topple D. shadow
36. Don’t get yourself ________ up over such a trivial matter.
A. done B. worried C. whipped D. worked
37. Maria and Jean had a __________ romance, they met and married within two months.
A. hurricane B. cyclone C. whirlwind D. typhoon
38. After the football match the crowds ________ out of the stadium into the nearest bars and cafes.
A. leaked B. poured C. trickled D. dripped
39. I'm afraid we got our _________ crossed, I thought my husband would be picking up the children
and he thought I was doing it.
A. minds B. purposes C. wires D. fingers
40. Every year many small companies get __________ up by large multinationals.
A. swallowed B. digested C. drowned D. burnt
Your answers:
26. 27. 28. 29. 30.
31. 32. 33. 34. 35.
36. 37. 38. 39. 40.
Part 2. For questions 41-45, write the correct form of each bracketed word in the numbered space
provided in the column on the right.
41. She is totally (SUFFICE)_________ and doesn’t need help from anyone. 41.____________
42. The school is acknowledged as providing equal access and (TITLE) 42.____________
___________ to a rich and varied curriculum.
43. I cast my eyes (HEAVEN)_________ and saw the geese flying in V-line. 43.____________
44. It was sheer (SANE)___________ to try to drive through the mountains in 44.____________
that thunderstorm.
45. He was a modest and (ASSUME)__________ man who never gave the 45.____________
impression that he knew all the answers.
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rainy season, so it is hardly surprising that the resort there is much in (48) _____________ with
tourists.
Many go to enjoy the multitude of activities on (49) ____________, such as scuba diving and horse
riding. Yet more simply want to lounge about relaxing on the shore, taking the odd dip to cool down
(50) _____________ and then.
Yet few tourists seem to appreciate the fact that on the (51) __________ doorstep of their little
parasite- at the edge of their bubble, if you will- lies the evidence in microcosm of a desperately
impoverished country.
Kapeti Village, for example, is but a stone’s (52) ______________from the resort. Here, according to
local leaders, the prevalence of one particular very serious incurable illness is alarmingly at more than
33%. In other (53) ________, fewer than two in three people are free of the disease. (54) __________,
that incurable disease is far from the only problem, with malaria, cholera and other serious illnesses
also wreaking havoc.
But is the general apathy amongst tourists a sign that they care less? Well, it would seem not. Whilst it
may be a tall order to burst their bubble and remove the illusion of paradise found. Efforts to do so are
not entirely in (55) _____________. According to locals running village tours, it isn’t (56) _________
they see the extent of deprivation for themselves that tourists begin to appreciate the problem. Then
and only then do they begin to open their eyes, but at (57) ___________ it’s a start.
Part 2. Read the following passage and do the tasks that follow
AMERICA’S OLDEST ART?
Set within treacherously steep cliffs, and hidden away in the secluded valleys of northeast
Brazil, is some of South America’s most significant and spectacular rock-art. Most of the art so far
discovered from the ongoing excavations comes from the archaeologically-important National Park of
the Serra da Capivara in the state of Piaui, and it is causing quite a controversy. The reason for the
uproar? The art is being dated to around 25,000 or perhaps, according to some archaeologists, even
36,000 years ago. If correct, this is set to challenge the widely held view that the Americas were first
colonized from the north, via the Bering Straits from eastern Siberia at around 10,000 BC, only
moving down into Central and South America in the millennia thereafter.
Prior to the designation of 130,000 hectares as a National Park, the rock-art sites were difficult
to get to, and often dangerous to enter. In ancient times, this inaccessibility must have heightened the
importance of the sites, and indeed of the people who painted on the rocks. Wild animals and human
figures dominate the art, and are incorporated into often-complex scenes involving hunting,
supernatural beings, fighting and dancing. The artists depicted the animals that roamed the local
ancient brushwood forest. The large mammals are usually painted in groups and tend to be shown in a
running stance, as though trying to escape from hunting parties. Processions - lines of human and
animal figures - also appear of great importance to these ancient artists. Might such lines represent
family units or groups of warriors? On a number of panels, rows of stylized figures, some numbering
up to 30 individual figures, were painted using the natural undulating contours of the rock surface, so
evoking the contours of the surrounding landscape. Other interesting, but very rare, occurrences are
scenes that show small human figures holding on to and dancing around a tree, possibly involved in
some form of a ritual dance.
Due to the favorable climatic conditions, the imagery on many panels is in a remarkable state
of preservation. Despite this, however, there are serious conservation issues that affect their long-term
survival. The chemical and mineral qualities of the rock on which the imagery is painted is fragile and
on several panels it is unstable. As well as the secretion of sodium carbonate on the rock surface,
complete panel sections have, over the ancient and recent past, broken away from the main rock
surface. These have then become buried and sealed into sometimes-ancient floor deposits. Perversely,
this form of natural erosion and subsequent deposition has assisted archaeologists in dating several
major rock-art sites. Of course, dating the art is extremely difficult given the non-existence of plant
and animal remains that might be scientifically dated. However, there are a small number of sites in
the Serra da Capivara that are giving up their secrets through good systematic excavation. Thus, at
Toca do Boqueirao da Pedra Furada, rock-art researcher Niede Guidon managed to obtain a number of
dates. At different levels of excavation, she located fallen painted rock fragments, which she was able
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to date to at least 36,000 years ago. Along with the painted fragments, crude stone tools were found.
Also discovered were a series of scientifically datable sites of fireplaces, or hearths, the earliest dated
to 46,000 BC, arguably the oldest dates for human habitation in the Americas.
However, these conclusions are not without controversy. Critics, mainly from North America,
have suggested that the hearths may in fact be a natural phenomenon, the result of seasonal brushwood
fires. Several North American researchers have gone further and suggested that the rock-art from this
site dates from no earlier than about 3,730 years ago, based on the results of limited radiocarbon
dating. Adding further fuel to the general debate is the fact that the artists in the area of the National
Park tended not to draw over old motifs (as often occurs with rock-art), which makes it hard to work
out the relative chronology of the images or styles. However, the diversity of imagery and the narrative
the paintings create from each of the many sites within the National Park suggests different artists were
probably making their art at different times, and potentially using each site over many thousands of
years.
With fierce debates thus raging over the dating, where these artists originate from is also still
very much open to speculation. The traditional view ignores all the early dating evidence from the
South American rock-art sites. In a revised scenario, some palaeo-anthropologists are now suggesting
that modern humans may have migrated from Africa using the strong currents of the Atlantic Ocean
some 60,000 years or more ago, while others suggest a more improbable colonization coming from the
Pacific Ocean. Yet, while either hypothesis is plausible, there is still no supporting archaeological
evidence between the South American coastline and the interior. Rather, it seems possible that there
were a number of waves of human colonization of the Americas occurring possibly over a 60,000-
100,000 year period, probably using the Bering Straits as a land-bridge to cross into the Americas.
Despite the compelling evidence from South America, it stands alone: the earliest secure
human evidence yet found in the state of Oregon in North America only dates to 12,300 years BC. So
this is a fierce debate that is likely to go on for many more years. However, the splendid rock-art and
its allied archaeology of northeast Brazil, described here, is playing a huge and significant role in the
discussion.
Questions 58-60. Choose the correct letter, A, B, C or D. Write your answers in the corresponding
numbered boxes provided.
58. According to the first paragraph, the rock-art in Serra da Capivara may revolutionize accepted
ideas about_______________.
A. the way primitive people lived in North America.
B. the date when the earliest people arrived in South America.
C. the origin of the people who crossed the Bering Straits.
D. the variety of cultures which developed in South America.
59. How did the ancient artists use the form of the rock where they painted?
A. to mimic the shape of the countryside nearby
B. to emphasize the shape of different animals
C. to give added light and shade to their paintings
D. to give the impression of distance in complex works
60. In the fourth paragraph, what does the writer say is unusual about the rock-artists of Serra da Capivara?
A. They had a very wide range of subject-matter.
B. Their work often appears to be illustrating a story.
C. They tended to use a variety of styles in one painting.
D. They rarely made new paintings on top of old ones.
Your answers:
58. 59. 60.
Questions 68-71. Complete each sentence with the correct ending, A-F, below. Write the correct
letter, A-F, on the boxes.
68. Materials derived from plants or animals
69.The discussions about the ancient hearths
70. Theories about where the first South Americans originated from
71. The finds of archaeologists in Oregon
Part 3. You are going to read an article about the social history of coffee houses. Seven paragraphs
have been removed from the extract. Choose from the paragraphs A-H the one which fits each gap
(72-78). There is one extra paragraph which you do not need to use.
Where do you go when you want to know the latest news, keep up with celebrity gossip, find out what
others think of a new book, or stay abreast of the latest scientific and technological developments?
Today, the answer is obvious: you log on to the internet. Three centuries ago, the answer was just as
easy: you went to your favorite coffee house.
72
What's more, rumors, news and gossip were often carried between them by their patrons and runners
would flit from one to another to report major events. Each establishment was, therefore, an integral
part of quite a complex web of contacts. But of even greater importance was their role as centers of
scientific education, literary and philosophical speculation, commercial innovation and, sometimes,
political fermentation.
73
This reputation accompanied its spread into Europe during the seventeenth century, at first as a
medicine, and then as a social beverage in the eastern tradition. It was reflected in the decor of the
dedicated coffee houses that began to appear in European cities, London in particular, where they were
often adorned with bookshelves, mirrors, gilt-framed pictures and good furniture.
74
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There was a new rationalism abroad in the spheres of both philosophy and commerce, and this ethos
struck exactly the right note, whilst coffee was the ideal accompaniment. The popularity of the
beverage owed much to the growing middle class of information workers - clerks, merchants and
businessmen - who did mental work in offices rather than performing physical labor in the open, and
found that it sharpened their mental faculties.
75
As with modern websites, the coffee houses an individual or group frequented reflected their interests,
for each coffee house attracted a particular clientele, usually by virtue of its location. Though coffee
houses were also popular in Paris, Venice and Amsterdam, this characteristic was particularly notable
in London, where eighty-two coffee houses had been set up by 1663, and more than five hundred by
1700. For many, coffee houses had become almost an extension of the home.
76
That said, most people frequented several houses for the purpose of furthering their commercial, social
or political interests. A merchant, for example, would generally oscillate between a financial house and
one specializing in shipping or trade with a particular region. The wide-ranging interests of Robert
Hooke, a scientist and polymath, were reflected in his visits to around sixty houses during the 1670s.
Not to visit one at all was to invite social exclusion.
77
This is exactly the kind of threat that worries some people today about the power of social-networking
sites. Interestingly, a proclamation of 1675 that sought to outlaw the coffee houses of London was met
by a public outcry, for they had become central to commercial as well as political life. When it became
clear that the proclamation would be ignored, it was toned down and then quietly dropped.
78
But history also provides a cautionary tale for those operators who would charge for access Coffee
houses used to charge for coffee, but gave away access to reading materials. Many coffee shops are
now following the same model, which could undermine the prospects for fee-based hotspots.
Information, both in the seventeenth century and today, wants to be free - and coffee drinking
customers, it seems, expect it to be.
A. According to local custom, social differences were left at the door when you entered such a
scholarly space, each of those details contributing to an ambience that fostered sober, respectful
behaviour. Indeed, anyone who started a quarrel had to atone for it by buying a coffee for all present.
In short, these were calm, well-ordered establishments that promoted polite conversation and
discussion.
B. But that was a risk some were willing to take, for coffee houses did have their detractors. Coffee
itself was held by some to be a harmful substance, although this was never taken particularly seriously.
The real opposition came from those who were alarmed at the houses’ potential for facilitating
political discussion and activity.
C. Coffee, the drink that fueled this vibrant network, originated in the highlands of Ethiopia, where its
beans were originally chewed rather than infused for their invigorating effects. Coffee spread into the
Islamic world during the fifteenth century, where it came to be regarded as stimulating mental activity
and heightening perception.
D. In the days before formal addresses or regular postal services were introduced, for example, it
became a common practice to use one as a mailing address. Regulars could pop in once or twice a day,
hear the latest news, and check to see if any post awaited them.
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E. Lavish entertainment at home was beyond the means of this social stratum but a few pence a day on
coffee could be afforded. What’s more, coffee houses provided a forum for education, debate and self-
improvement, and were nicknamed 'penny universities' in a contemporary English verse.
F. Such kinship was soon underlined by the establishment of so-called 'hotspots’. What’s more, from
the outset these often provided access in establishments where coffee was also on offer - this can’t
have been a coincidence.
G. The parallels are certainly striking. Originally the province of scientists, the Net also soon grew to
become a nexus of commercial, journalistic and political interchange. In discussion groups, gossip
passes freely - a little too freely, according to some regulators and governments, which have generally
failed in their attempts to rein them in.
H. The quality of the coffee wasn't the only factor governing which one this would be, however, for
these lively and often unreliable sources of information typically specialized in a particular topic or
political viewpoint. They also doubled as outlets for a stream of newsletters and pamphlets that
reflected the interests of their particular clientele.
Part 4. For questions 79 - 85, read the passage and choose the best answer to each of the questions
that follow. Write your answer in the corresponding numbered boxes.
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Within three years, it also, led the maths tables and pupils were excelling in science, too, and Finland
has consistently occupied a high position in all three areas ever since, without any blips, so it was
patently clear for all to see that this was not the endeavor of fluke. Counterintuitively, Finland’s pupils
excel in these standardized tests despite not being mandated to sit any on a regular basis in their own
educational system until the very end of their second-level schooling, nothing official exists prior and
other such testing is only carried out should individual schools undertake to do so of their own
volition.
More intriguingly, competition does not form any part of the education philosophy. Neither are the
decision-makers political, although Finnish schools are publicly funded and it is a state-driven
education system, politicians and business people are precluded from interfering. Nor are schools
vying for the best teacher candidates, irrespective of location, they have an equal shot of getting top
graduates, with all drawing from the same pool of resources in this respect. Furthermore, in the
absence of competitive, only national goals count, so there is no elite list of schools parents dream of
sending their children to, every child, whether schooled in a rural or urban environment, is afforded the
same standard of education. It is, therefore, arguably, one of the most equitable systems in the world.
This assertion is supported by the fact that refugees in this relatively homogenous country are not
greatly disadvantaged educationally and tend to catch up to their native peers before long. Indeed,
there is evidence on a broader level, too, of this equitability, since Finland has the lowest gap in the
OECD between its weakest and strongest pupils in performance terms. The stats make for very
impressive reading, yet, remarkably, Finland’s expenditure on education as a proportion of its overall
budget is much less then places like the United, which cannot boast nearly as impressive results.
79. What does the writer imply when she says “There is more to this formula than meets the eye”?
A. that it is not as easy as it sounds to produce top-quality teachers
B. that the success of Finland’s education system is down to various reasons
C. that the quality of teacher in the Finnish education system is not what it seems
D. that the Finnish education system is more impressive than it looks
80. What does the writer say about Finland’s small class sizes?
A. Finland has set a trend the rest of the world is trying to copy.
B. the country’s record is more impressive in relation to young learners.
C. the country’s character lends itself to smaller class sizes.
D. a government initiative is directly responsible for them.
81. In the third paragraph, we learn that Finland’s education system___________.
A. was revised during a period of economic strain
B. was first revised after the year 2000
C. enjoyed rapid success after changes were implemented
D. took over forty years to convert into the success it is today
82. What does the word “blips” in the fourth passage mean?
A. glitches B. drawbacks C. plethoras D. hindrances
83. What is the Finnish education system’s approach to standardized testing?
A. it regularly takes place in the area of Science, Literacy and Maths only.
B. standardized tests are not compulsory but schools are encouraged to use them.
C. it plays a key role at all levels of schooling.
D. this evaluation methods is only officially used as students exit secondary school.
84. The Finnish education system______________.
A. sets no goal or targets for schools to achieve
B. generally operates independent of state and commercial interference
C. is highly competitive in terms of schools’ efforts to attract the best teachers and students
D. encourages graduates to take up rural teaching roles with incentives.
85. Why does the writer mention refugees?
A. to exemplify how fair the Finnish education system is
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B. to highlight the lack of diversity in Finland
C. to show that the gap between topmost and lowest performing students is very low
D. to suggest what can be achieved if more money is invested in education
Your answers:
79. 80. 81. 82. 83. 84. 85.
Part 5. You are going to read an article about architecture. For questions 86-95, choose the best
answer from sections (A-D). The sections may be chosen more than once.
LOCKED IN TIME
What are the issues surrounding the preservation of good architecture?
A. Emerging from the Lincoln tunnel into midtown Manhattan in New York, a yellow cab from JFK
Airport takes you past an architectural masterpiece. Number 510 Fifth Avenue was originally the
Manufacturers Hanover Trust Bank and was designed in 1954 as a new kind of banking house,
something other than a thick-walled fortress. It was a glass temple of finance, inviting passers-by to
step through its cool transparency and be converted to its gleaming vision of the future.
Mid-twentieth-century banks were usually mundane but at 510 Fifth Avenue, the vault was displayed
behind the glazed faqade and the escalators became central to the composition, falling and rising
diagonally across the gridded lines like an updated game of snakes and ladders. The upper floor
featured a gilded screen by the artist Harry Bertoia.
B. But things are changing at 510 Fifth Avenue. As a very carefully-designed and much-admired
building, it now finds itself at the frontier between developers and preservationists and it’s turning into
quite a fight. For if there’s one thing in architecture that causes friction, it’s that our needs change, and
so buildings must evolve and adapt in order to stay useful. Within reason. Vornado Realty Trust, the
site’s owners and one of New York’s largest developers, has made the not unreasonable assumption
that this commercial building on the world’s primary shopping street should be adapted to suit its new
tenant, a retailer of lumberjack-style shirts. For this purpose, the gilded screen has been dismantled, the
entrance is to be moved, the escalator reversed and the vault moved. On the basis that the facades
remain intact, the Landmarks Preservation Commission approved these changes in April. But in July, a
judge halted work after a legal challenge by the Citizens’ Emergency Committee to Preserve
Preservation, which argues that, given the transparency of the facade, Landmark status must extend to
those interior features that contribute to the streetscape. Too late. It is now gutted, the interior features
broken from their positions of more than half a century.
C. Architects are often feted for designing buildings whose form follows function. And that’s
reasonable - intelligent design brings intellectual and physical beauty to the world. But architects are
no better at predicting the future than the rest of us. Hence, the flip side to architectural masterpieces:
the closer a building’s form follows its function, the bigger the upheaval when the original purpose no
longer needs to be served. Preservation groups are aware that conservation is an expensive business.
Arguments to preserve for preservation’s sake are weakened when loans are in short supply and the
economic buoyancy that might offer a long-term business case for the sensitive commercial usage of
old buildings starts to sink. The stronger argument is to update historic places so they can fund
themselves. In any repurposing of a historic building, something has to give. And it usually gives in
the direction of apartments, shops, restaurants or art galleries. It's a global picture.
D. The most exciting new place in New York is the High Line, built as an elevated railway through the
Meatpacking District and unused since the I 980s. It was scheduled to be torn down, but local residents
started a grass-roots movement in 1999. Three years on, they gained the authorities’ support for a
radical redevelopment as a city garden, a string of improbable greenery threading through an
overlooked quarter that has since spread economic fertilizer in its wake with hotels, boutiques and bars
abounding. Back in Fifth Avenue, there’s much hand-wringing over the stripped modern icon. Is it too
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late to hope the perfect tenant will turn up and want to strike a deal? If it’s not to change further, who
will put it back together, take care of it and run it as ... what - an icon?
the idea that a preservation project can regenerate the surrounding area? 86.__________
why a particular structure stood out amongst its contemporaries? 87.__________
the inescapable need to make compromises when structures find a new use? 88.__________
a successful attempt to halt the total destruction of an obsolete structure? 89.__________
a paradox regarding the work of highly renowned architects? 90.__________
an approach to saving the architectural heritage that cannot always be financed? 91.__________
how an architect made a feature of something which is usually obscured? 92.__________
a disagreement about how a principle should be applied in practice? 93.__________
a structure that embodied the optimism of its time? 94.__________
a feeling that alterations to a structure were justifiable? 95.__________
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Task 3: Write an essay of about 350 words on the following topic:
Some people prefer to spend their lives doing the same things and avoiding change. Others, however,
think that change is always a good thing.
Discuss both these views and give your own opinion.
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-THE END-
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VOCA 1:
VOCA 2:
VOCA 3:
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VOCA 8: