Hung Vuong Phu Tho K10.de - Ok
Hung Vuong Phu Tho K10.de - Ok
PART 2.You will hear an interview with a professional athlete called Ann Brown.
For questions 6-10, choose the best answer (A, B or C).(10 points)
6. What does Ann say about her performance in the world championships?
A. She was disappointed not to win.
B. She wishes she'd been more prepared.
C. She did better than she'd been expecting to.
7. How does Ann feel about the place where she trains?
A. She finds it quite boring.
B. She enjoys looking at the scenery.
C. She pays little attention to where she is.
8. What is Ann's attitude towards the other competitors in races?
A. She avoids close social contact with them.
B. She's made a few good friends amongst them.
C. She finds it easy to talk to them when she has to.
9. How does Ann feel about being recognized in public?
A. She's relaxed about it.
B. She finds the attention exciting.
C. She dislikes signing autographs.
10. When thinking about the future, Ann _______.
A. plans around five years in advance.
B. admits to worrying about getting injured.
C. remains focused on winning important races
PART 3.You will hear two neighbors, a woman, Natasha, and a man. Colin, talking about running.
For question 11-15, decide if each sentence is correct or incorrect. If it is correct, write T for True. If it is
incorrect, write F for False. Write your answer in the space given.(10 points)
11. Natasha has decided to take the day off work to go running. ___________
12. Colin found running to work was bad for his health. ___________
13. Natasha would like to wear her sports clothes at work. ___________
14. Natasha will run in the big race because she hopes to win it. ___________
15. Colin and Natasha will prepare for the big race together. ___________
PART 4.You will hear a singer called Tim Tanner who sings with his twin brother Sam Tanner, talking
about their lives and career. For questions 16-25, complete the sentences.(20 points)
Singing twins: Tim and Sam Tanner
The name of the talent competition which the twins won is
(16)______________________.
Tim is exactly (17)______________________ older than Sam.
The twins were born in the month of (18)______________________.
The main physical difference between Tim and Sam is their
(19)_____________________.
Tim has a less (20)______________________ personality than Sam.
At school, both Tim and Sam were good at(21)___________________.
Sam started taking (22)_______________lessons when he was thirteen.
The fact that the twins share the same (23)_____________________sometimes leads to
arguments.
Tim says a key part of the twins' image is the(24)___________________they wear.
The title of the twins’ next album is (25)______________________.
SECTION II: LEXICO – GRAMMAR (50/200)
PART 1. Choose the best answer to each of the following questions. (20 points)
1. The contemporary dialogue for me struck a slightly _______ note.
A. disembodied B. discordant C. dismissive D. disconcerting
2. We decided to celebrate by going out and painting the town ________.
A. red B. purple C. gold D. brown
3. The series became so popular that it was moved to the ________ time spot of 8 pm.
A. leading B. prime C. main D. major
4. The current economic _______ is very good for small businesses.
A. disposition B. whirlwind C. climate D. daze
5. He hit the other boy reluctantly as his friends __________ him on.
A. happened B. egged C. ground D. played
6. The actors gave a very ________ performance, and the critics expressed their disapproval in their reports the
following day.
A. pie-in-the-sky B. run-of-the-mill C. good-for-nothing D. behind-the-scene
7. He was _________ devastated by the news.
A. utterly B. extremely C. deeply D. immensely
8. The Red Cross is ________ an international aid organization.
A. intriguingly B. intrusively C. intrinsicallyD. intrepidly
9. I know it’s got his name on the cover, but he used a ________.
A. correspondent B. model C. ghost writerD. fellow
10. Our lecturer _________ the importance of taking clear notes.
A. responded B. reiterated C. retained D. recruited
11. Suppose she _______ that outrageous story circulating around the office, she’d be furious.
A. has heard B. would hear C. were heard D. had heard
12. People can make themselves walk on nails or through fire. It’s a question of mind over ______.
A. body B. material C. matter D. facts
13. Our plan to start our own business seem ________to failure.
A. doomed B. fated C. compelled D. designed
14. ________ my buying tuna if you detest eating fish.
A. Is it any good B. As well as C. It’s not much use D. There is nothing good
15. We welcome the new regulations, which become________ on the first of next month.
A. effective B. efficient C. efficacious D. effete
16. The chemicals spilled over the road and left drivers ________ for breath.
A. suffocating B. inhaling C. gasping D. wheezing
17. It is impossible to miss the ______ of the Generation X in America.
A. manifestation B. advancement C. initiation D. acknowledgement
18. He has been trying to improve his grades but instead, they have remained as ______ as possible.
A. static B. on coming C. parasitic D. virtual
19. They go to the seaside _____ they should be disturbed by the noise of the city.
A. in order that B. for C. so that D. lest
20. I haven’t got the time to do my own work, ______ help you with yours.
A.leaving aside B. let alone C. apart D. aback
PART 2. Identify and correct 10 errors in the passage. (10 points)
The first self-service stores open in America in the 1920s but they didn’t catch up in Europe until later, when
the French forged ahead with their massive hypermarkets. Britain lagged behind. For the first self-service shop
and the first supermarket were opened in the early 1940s, it was thought that British housewives did not
particularly want proficiency and speed. Surveys showed that while American shoppers complained most about
delays in check-out queues. British ones rejected to being pushed and shoved by other customers.
The essence of supermarket shopping is impersonality, with no meditating salesman between seller and goods,
only the ‘silent persuaders’ of packaging and display. Besides, there is a current trend towards ‘boutiques’, with
personal service, within supermarkets – the butcher, the baker, the fishseller – and small specialist shops and
farmers’ markets are doing a comeback in Britain. In france, where every self-respecting provincial town,
ringed by supermarkets, retains their specialist food shops and weekly street market, the traditional co-exists
with the ancient.
1………………………. 2………………………. 3……………………….
4………………………. 5………………………. 6……………………….
7………………………. 8………………………. 9……………………….
10……………………….
PART 3. Fill in the blanks with proper prepositions or adverbial particles. (10 points)
1. We met each other at the meeting ______ coincidence.
2. No one can function properly if he or she is deprived _______ adequate sleep.
3. The concert was given ______ the auspices of the Y.M.C.A.
4. When he suddenly brought ______ the subject of genetic engineering, there was an embarrassed silence.
5. After she ate the chocolates, her face broke ______ in a rash.
6. The situation is very confusing in that country and calls _______ diplomacy.
7. No witness of the accident has come _______ yet.
8. You shouldn’t have sent Peter that Valentine’s card. I think you’ve scared him ______.
9. The police are trying to crack _____ on drunken drivers.
10. He was very upset when the boss pushed him ______ and promoted a new comer to the assistant’s job.
PART 4. Fill in each blank with the most suitable form of the word in brackets. (10 points)
Rafflesia is a rare parasitic plant species found in Southeast Asia. Rafflesia has been 1.(LIKE) to a fungus
because it lacks chlorophyll and is incapable of photosynthesis. Perhaps the only part of Rafflesia that is
discernible as distinctly plant-like is the flower, which is said to be the world’s largest.
Many 2.(BOTANY) have been keen to discover why the flower is so large, so they recently conducted
3.(MOLECULE) analysis on the plant. This resulted in the 4.(REVEAL) that it has evolved almost 80 times
from its origin as a tiny bud to today's seven-kilo mega-bloom. Although this 5.(ORDINARY) transformation
took tens of millions of years, such an 6.(EVOLUTION) spurt is still one of the most dramatic size changes
ever reported. Such growth rates in humans would be 7.(COMPARE) to us being 146 meters tall today.
The plant is also unusual in another way. Its smell is extremely 8.(PLEASE) but this horrible trait
attracts such 9.(POLLINATE) as flies. It is thought that Rafflesia’s huge flower helps radiate the smell over
long 10.(DISTANT).
1………………………. 2………………………. 3……………………….
4………………………. 5………………………. 6……………………….
7………………………. 8………………………. 9……………………….
10……………………….
PART2. Read the text below and think of the word which best fits each space. Use only ONE word in
each space. (15 points)
Psychologists are interested in the reasons why some people like taking part in risky sports. (1) ____ they
studied people who were learning to jump from a plane with a parachute, they found that parachutists’ bodies
(2) ______ large amounts of two hormones, adrenaline and nor adrenaline, just (3)_____they made their jump.
These hormones help to prepare us for any sudden activity. Adrenaline increases the (4)______ rate and
provides more sugar for the muscles, while nor adrenaline does make us react more quickly. (5)_____, nor
adrenaline also stimulates a part of the brain which controls feelings of pleasure. Some psychologists (6)_____
concluded that it is a feeling of pleasure caused by this hormone which makes (7)_____ people want to
participate in dangerous sports.
Another possible reason is the level of arousal (8)_____ part of the brain. According to some psychologists, the
brain tries to maintain a certain level of arousal. They believe that people who normally have a low level of
arousal (9)____ for excitement and new experiences in order to stimulate themselves, whereas people who
usually have a high level of arousal try to avoid risks and unfamiliar (10)_____ in order not to become
overexcited. If the psychologists are right, people with a low arousal are the ones who enjoy participating in
dangerous sports and activities.
PART 3. Read the passage carefully and choose the best answer A, B, C or D. (10 points)
There are only a few clues in the rock record about climate in the Proterozoiccon. Much of our
information about climate in the more recent periods of geologic history comes from the fossil record, because
we have a reasonably good understanding of the types of environment in which many fossil organisms
flourished. The scarce fossils of the Proterozoic, mostly single-celled bacteria, provide little evidence in this
regard. However, the rocks themselves do include the earliest evidence for glaciation, probably a global ice age.
The inference that some types of sedimentary rocks are the result of glacial activity is based on the principle of
uniformitarianism, which posits that natural processes now at work on and within the Earth operated in the same
manner in the distant past. The deposits associated with present-day glaciers have been well studied, and some
of their characteristics are quite distinctive. In 2.3-billion-year-old rocks in Canada near Lake Huron (dating
from the early part of the Proterozoic age), there are thin laminae of fine-grained sediments that resemble
varves, the annual layers of sediment deposited in glacial lakes. Typically, present-day varves show two-layered
annual cycle, one layer corresponding to the rapid ice melting and sediment transport of the summer season, and
the other, finer-grained, layer corresponding to slower winter deposition. Although it is not easy to discern
such details in the Proterozoic examples, they are almost certainly glacial varves. These fine-grained, layered
sediments even contain occasional large pebbles or “dropstones,” a characteristic feature of glacial
environments where coarse material is sometimes carried on floating ice and dropped far from its source, into
otherwise very fine grained sediment. Glacial sediments of about the same age as those in Canada have
been found in other parts of North America and in Africa, India, and Europe. This indicates that the
glaciation was global, and that for a period of time in the early Proterozoic the Earth was gripped in an ice age.
Following the early Proterozoic glaciation, however, the climate appears to have been fairly benign for a
very long time. There is no evidence for glaciation for the next 1.5 billion years or so. Then, suddenly, the rock
record indicates a series of glacial episodes between about 850 and 600 million year ago, near the end of the
Proterozoiccon.
THE END