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A. to make
B. for making
C. of making
D. about to make
2. Despite the fact that both of them have won a lot of tournaments,
to my mind Richard isn’t as …… a tennis player as Bob.
A. well
B. best
C. good
D. better
3. My mum is very pleased that you often …… the poncho she knitted
for your twentieth birthday.
A. are wearing
C. wear
D. will be wearing
4 . Alexander did not call you back …… it was quite late when he
arrived and he just didn’t want to bother you.
A. while
B. so
C. as
D. neither
5 . You do not have to stay awake and wait for her as I am sure that
when she …… home, she will go straight to bed.
A. gets
B. will get
C. got
D. has gotten
6. In spite of the fact that we caught a taxi, the film we all really
wanted to see …… by the time we got to the cinema.
A. started
C. was starting
D. had started
A. didn’t use to
B. uses to
C. used to
D. use to
A. don’t oversleep
C. won’t be oversleeping
D. are oversleeping
A. I said
B. did I say
C. I have said
D. I will say
10. It is extremely hot now, but the local people say that it …… get
very cold here at times.
A. can
B. might
C. would
D. will
11. Since we are all fed up with the local seaside resorts, we …… to
spend our summer vacation abroad this year.
A. will
B. will be
C. will be going
D. are going
II. Read the text below. Then, read the questions that follow it and
choose the best answer to each question correspondingly among A,
B, C or D, marking the answer on your answer sheet.
In due time a message saying that Pollyanna would arrive the next
day at four o’clock arrived. Miss Polly read it, frowned, then climbed
the stairs to the attic room. She frowned yet more as she looked
about her.
The room contained nothing more than a small bed, neatly made,
two straight-backed chairs, a washbasin, a desk and a dressing table.
There were no curtains, and no pictures on the walls. All day the sun
had been pouring down upon the roof, and the little room was like an
oven. As there were no blinds, the windows had not been opened. A
big fly was buzzing angrily at one of them now.
Miss Polly killed the fly, swept it through the window, straightened a
chair, frowned again, and left the room.
“Nancy,” she said a few minutes later, at the kitchen door, “I found a
fly in Miss Pollyanna’s room. The window must have been opened at
some time. I have ordered blinds, but until they come I shall expect
you to see that the windows remain closed. My niece will arrive
tomorrow afternoon. I want you to meet her at the station. Timothy
will drive you over. The message says ‘fair hair, red checked dress and
straw hat’. That is all I know.”
“Yes; but…you…”
Miss Polly evidently read the pause correctly, for she frowned and
said crisply: “No, I shall not go. It is not necessary, I think. That is all.”
And she turned away.
The next afternoon, Timothy and Nancy went to the station to meet
the expected guest. Timothy was a good-natured youth, and he and
Nancy were good friends. Today, however, Nancy was too full of her
mission to be her usual talkative self. Over and over in her mind she
was saying “light hair, red checked dress, straw hat” and wondering
just what sort of child this Pollyanna was. “I hope for her sake she’s
quiet and sensible, and doesn’t drop knives or bang doors,” she
sighed to Timothy.
“Oh, Timothy, I think it was mean to send me,” said the suddenly
frightened Nancy, as she turned and hurried to a point where she
could best watch the passengers alight. It was not long before Nancy
saw a slim little girl in a straw hat above an eager, freckled little face
turning to the right and to the left, plainly searching for someone.
Nancy knew at once it was her, but for some time she couldn’t
control her shaking knees sufficiently to go to her.
by Eleanor H. Porter
A. dirty.
B. untidy.
C. cold.
D. bare.
A. learn to drive.
B. do more housework.
C. know Pollyanna better.
24. Timothy and Nancy thought Polly and Pollyanna would get along
only if ……