Assorted Test 3 PART A. LISTENING (40 Points) : Page 1 of 17
Assorted Test 3 PART A. LISTENING (40 Points) : Page 1 of 17
Assorted Test 3 PART A. LISTENING (40 Points) : Page 1 of 17
II. Listen to five descriptions of an event. For each description, decide if it is TRUE or FALSE. (10 p)
1. A dog ran on during the match and one of the linesmen caught it.
2. A golfer sneezed at the same time as playing a shot and ended up playing a bad one.
3. The winner of the race was angry with another competitor.
4. A young boy played a few points because the professional was angry with himself.
5. When the fight started, the other players didn’t try to stop it.
Your answers:
1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
III. You will hear part of a talk about dolls. For questions 1 – 10, complete the sentences. (20 p)
DOLLS
The first known dolls were found in (1) _____________________ in ancient Egypt
The earliest dolls in the museum date from the (2)_____________________
Early European dolls were dressed like (3)_____________________
On the 17th-century dolls, you can see details like the (4)_____________________
17th-century dolls may cost as much as (5) ___________________________ each.
Collectors look for examples in perfect condition, with their (6) _____________________
19th-century dolls had (7) _____________________ and real hair.
If you can take off the doll's hair, you may see the (8)_______________________ underneath.
Before the 20th century, all dolls were (9)_____________________________, not babies.
From the 1930s, dolls were made of (10)________________________________.
Your answers:
II. There are ten mistakes in the following passage. Find and correct them. Number 0 has been done as
an example. (10 p)
Line
1 In the last twenty year, the country has done great technological progress,
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2 culminating in our entering the space age earlier this year with the launch of our first
3 telecommunication satellite. From a health perspective, there has been a major modern
4 programme in public hospitals. This has involved the purchase of the latest scanning and
5 diagnosis equipment, as well as the refurbishment of major operating theatres with state-
6 of-the-art surgical equipment. As far as the superstructure of the country is concerned,
7 several major projects are on progress, included the construction of three major
8 motorways, a hydroelectric power station and a new international airport. All of these
9 public works are being carried out using the latest technology. With the increased use of
10 computer technology, the future of our country looks very bright indeed. It anticipates
11 that, in the very near future, all government offices will be computered and networked to
12 central mainframe computers in the capital.
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IV. Write the correct form of each bracketed word in the numbered space provided. There is an example
at the beginning (0). (20 p)
Thor Heyerdahl and the Kon-Tiki expedition
The Norwegian explorer and (0. ARCHAEOLOGY) --> ARCHAEOLOGIST, Thor Heyerdahl,
accomplished many things during his life but his name has become (1. SEPARABLE) ....................... linked
with the Kon-Tiki voyage. In 1937, while doing research in the western Pacific, Heyerdahl became (2.
INCREASE) ............................. interested in how the Polynesian islands had become populated. He made
the observation that ocean currents flowed across the Pacific from east to west. Since there were cultural (3.
SIMILAR) ........................ to be found on either side of this ocean, he was convinced that South Americans
had sailed westwards to populate these islands before the eleventh century.
The (4. CENTRE) .......................... argument against Heyerdahl’s theory was lack of evidence that,
at that time, boats existed with the (5. CAPABLE) .............................. to cross such an (6. EXPAND)
…………..... of ocean. So a determined Heyerdahl built a primitive raft of balsa wood, named it Kon-Tiki,
and on April 28th, 1947, left Peru with a crew at five. Moved along by the ocean currents, the fragile raft
Kon-Tiki sailed a steady 70 kilometers a day.
Despite heavy storms, failure never crossed the crew’s minds. After 97 days, they caught (7. SEE)
…………….... of tone of the islands. However, due to unusually high winds they could not land and,
realising that a reef presented an (8. AVOID) …………..... obstacle, they prepared for the inevitable (9.
COLLIDE) ..................... . Amazingly, they all survived the crash, and Heyerdahl had his (10. PROVE)
…………......
Your answers:
PART C: READING (60 POINTS)
I. Read the text below and then decide which word (A, B, C, D) best fits each space. (15 p)
People’s personalities _____ (1) considerably from one another as there are no two alike. Our
ingrained characteristics which _____ (2) the patterns of our behaviour, our reactions and temperaments are
unparalleled on _____ (3) of the diversified processes that _____ (4) our personality in the earliest _____ (5)
of human development.
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Some _____ (6) of character may to some _____ (7) be hereditary simulating the attributes that
_____ (8) our parents. Others may _____ (9) from the conditions experienced during pregnancy and infancy
in this way reflecting the parents’ approach towards _____ (10) their offspring. Consequently, the
environmental factor _____ (11) a crucial role in strengthening or eliminating certain behavioural systems
making an individual more prone to _____ (12) to the patterns that _____ (13) a prize.
Undoubtedly, human personality _____ (14) the most profound and irreverible formation during the
first period of its development, yet, certain characteristics may still be _____ (15) to considerable changes
conditioned by different circumstances and situations.
1. A. distinguish B. converge C. vary D. differentiate
2. A. denote B. resolve C. inflict D. determine
3. A. account B. means C. token D. event
4. A. mould B. design C. conceive D. fabricate
5. A. states B. instants C. stages D. terms
6. A. factors B. traits C. items D. breeds
7. A. scope B. area C. extent D. length
8. A. pertain B. recognize C. associate D. identify
9. A. stem B. relate C. rise D. formulate
10. A. breeding B. rearing C. growing D. yielding
11. A. makes B. does C. finds D. plays
12. A. comfort B. pledge C. aquiesce D. obey
13. A. yearn B. deserve C. wish D. necessitate
14. A. underacts B. undertakes C. undergoes D. underlies
15. A. practicable B. feasible C. subject D. potential
II. Fill each gap in the passage below with ONE appropriate word. (15 pts)
People around the world dance for different reasons and in different ways. Some dances can express
(1. _________) like sadness, anger, or joy. Other dances can tell a story.
In some cultures a shaman, or healer, might dance to (2. _________) an illness. Some societies use
dance to reach a state of trance so the (3. _________) can perform acts of strength or courage, such as
dancing on hot coals.
Dance probably has been (4. _________) about as long as people have. Cave paintings thousands of
years old show what look (5. _________) dancing figures. Dancers appear in the art of (6. _________)
Egypt and Greece. Through dance, societies (7. _________) their gods for good crops or bravery in battle.
Hundreds of years ago the Christian church frowned on dancing. But farmers and villagers still
danced for fun. Many of these dances developed into folk dances. Ballet grew out of dances at the (8.
_________) courts of France and Italy in the 1500s and 1600s.
Drama, acrobatics, and music are (9. _________) with dance in many cultures. People added make-
up, costumes, and masks to turn dance into theater. These performances tell a story using (10. _________)
rather than words.
III. Read the passage and mark the letter A, B, C or D to indicate the correct answer to each of the
questions from 1 to 10. (15 p)
Line
If food is allowed to stand for some time, it putrefies. When the putrefied material is
examined microscopically, it is found to be teeming with bacteria. Where do these
bacteria come from, since they are not seen in fresh food? Even until the mid-nineteenth
century, many people believed that such microorganisms originated by spontaneous
5 generation, a hypothetical process by which living organisms develop from nonliving
matter.
The most powerful opponent of the theory of spontaneous generation was the
French chemist and microbiologist Louis Pasteur (1822-1895). Pasteur showed that
structures present in air closely resemble the microorganisms seen in putrefying
10 materials. He did this by passing air through guncotton filters, the fibers of which stop
solid particles. After the guncotton was dissolved in a mixture of alcohol and ether, the
particles that it had trapped fell to the bottom of the liquid and were examined on a
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microscope slide. Pasteur found that in ordinary air these exists a variety of solid
structures ranging in size from 0.01 mm to more than 1.0 mm. Many of these bodies
15 resembled the reproductive structures of common molds, single-celled animals, and
various other microbial cells.
As many as 20 to 30 of them were found in fifteen liters of ordinary air, and they
could not be distinguished from the organisms found in much larger numbers in
putrefying materials. Pasteur concluded that the organisms found in putrefying materials
20 originated from the organized bodies present in the air. He postulated that these bodies
are constantly being deposited on all objects.
Pasteur showed that if a nutrient solution was sealed in a glass flask and heated to
boiling to destroy all the living organisms contaminating it, it never putrefied. The
proponents of spontaneous generation declared that fresh air was necessary for
25 spontaneous generation and that the air inside the sealed flask was affected in some way
by heating so that it would no longer support spontaneous generation. Pasteur constructed
a swan-necked flask in which putrefying materials could he heated to boiling, but air
could reenter. The bends in the neck prevented microorganisms from getting in the flask.
Material sterilized in such a flask did not putrefy.
30
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9. According to paragraph 3,proponents of spontaneous generation believed that which of the following was
important for the process to succeed ?
A. A sealed container B. Fresh air
C. Heat D. The presence of nutrients
10. It can be inferred from paragraph 3 that Pasteur employed a swam-necked flask to
A. store sterilized liquids for use in future experiments
B. prevent heat from building up in a solution
C. disprove a criticism of his conclusions
D. estimate the number of organisms in a liter of air
IV. Read the passage and answer the questions below (15 p)
1 The earliest stage of writing is called pre-writing or proto-literacy, and depends on direct representation
of objects, rather than representing them with letters or other symbols. Evidence for this stage, in the form of
rock and cave paintings, dates back to about 15,000 years ago, although the exact dates are debatable. This
kind of proto-literate cave painting has been found in Europe, with the best know examples in South-
Western France, but also in Africa and on parts of the American continent. These petrographs (pictures on
rock) show typical scenes of the period, and include representations of people, animals and activities. Most
are astonishingly beautiful, with a vibrancy and immediacy that we still recognise today. They are painted
with pigments made from natural materials including crushed stones and minerals, animal products such as
blood, ashes, plant materials of all kinds, and they produce a wide range of colours and hues.
2 Why did ancient people put such effort into making them? Various theories have been put forward, but
the most compelling include the idea that the pictures were records of heroic deeds or important events, that
they were part of magical ceremonies, or that they were a form of primitive calendar, recording the changes
in the seasons as to why man started to write.
3 A related theory suggests that the need for writing arose thereafter from the transactions and bartering
that went on. In parts of what is now Iraq and Iran, small pieces of fired earth-pottery- have been found
which appear to have been used as tokens to a casino, or money, today. Eventually, when the tokens
themselves became too numerous to handle easily, representations of the tokens were inscribed on clay
tablets.
4 An early form of writing is the use of pictograms, which are pictures used to communicate.Pictograms
have been found from almost every part of the world and every era of development, and are still in use in
primitive communities nowadays. They represent objects, ideas or concepts more or less directly. They tend
to be simple in the sense that they are not a complex or full picture, although they are impressively difficult
to interpret to an outsider unfamiliar with their iconography, which tends to be localised and to differ widely
form society to society. They were never intended to be a detailed testimony which could be interpreted by
outsiders, but to serve instead as aide- memoires to the author, rather as we might keep a diary in a personal
shorthand. However, some modern pictograms are more or less universally recognised, such as the signs
which indicate men’s and women’s toilets, or road signs, which tend to be very similar throughout the
world.
5 The first pictograms that we know of are Sumerian in origin, and date to about 8000 BC. They show
how images used to represent concrete objects could be expanded to include abstractions by adding symbols
together, or using associated symbols. One Sumerian pictogram, for example, indicates ‘death’ by
combining the symbols for ‘man’ and ‘winter’; another shows ‘power’ with the symbol for a man with the
hands enlarged.
6 By about 5,000 years ago, Sumerian pictograms had spread to other areas, and the Sumerians had
made a major advance towards modern writing with the development of the rebus principle, which meant
that symbols could be used to indicate sounds. This was done by using a particular symbol not only for the
thing it originally represented, but also for any thing which was pronounced in a similar way. So the
pictogram for na (meaning ‘animal’) could also be used to mean ‘old’ (which was also pronounced na). The
specific meaning of the pictogram (whether na meant ‘old’ or ‘animal’) could only be decided through its
context.
Question 1-6: This Reading Passage has seven paragraphs (1-6). Choose the most suitable headings for
paragraphs 1-6 from the list of headings below. Write the appropriate letters A-G in the corresponding
numbered boxes.
N.B. There are more headings than paragraphs, so you will not use them all.
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List of headings
A Magic and Heroes B Doing Business
C Early Developments D Sounds and Symbols
E Images on Stone F Stories and Seasons
G A Personal Record
1 Paragraph 1: _____ 2 Paragraph 2: _____ 3 Paragraph 3: _____
4 Paragraph 4: _____ 5 Paragraph 5: _____ 6 Paragraph 6: _____
Question 7-10: Complete the following notes using ONE or TWO WORDS from the Reading Passage
for each answer. Write your answers in the corresponding numbered boxes.
Notes on the Development of Writing
First stage of writing - pre-writing or proto-literacy - very old- 15,000 years. Evidence: cave and rock
paintings. Famous example- …………………….(7). Reasons for development of writing: primitive
ceremonies, recording events, …………………….(8), used on pottery to represent bartered objects. Next
stage: simple pictograms- pictures used to represent articles and…………………….(9). Very simple
drawings (but very difficult to understand). Then - 8000 BC – combined………………(10) to create new
concepts (eg. Man + winter = death). After this - started using same pictogram for different words with
sames sound, very important step.
PART D. WRITING (40 p)
I. Finish each of the following sentences in such a way that it means the same as the sentence printed
before it. (7.5p)
1. I won’t go all that way to visit him again on any account!
On no account ___________________________________________________
2. I wasn’t surprised when they refused to pay me.
As I ___________________________________________________________
3. We have credited the money to your current account at this bank.
We have placed __________________________________________________
4. Your silly questions distracted me.
You drove ______________________________________________________
5. Edward eventually organised himself and started work.
Edward eventually got his __________________________________________
II. Use the word given in bold and make any necessary additions to write a new sentence in such a way
that it is as similar as possible in meaning to the original sentence. Do not change the form of the given
word. (7.5p)
1. I don’t think this record will ever be popular. (CATCH)
.............................................................................................
2. Mike is never reluctant to make tough decisions as a manager. (SHRINKS)
.............................................................................................
3. You can’t possibly expect me to have supper ready by eight o’clock. (QUESTION)
.............................................................................................
4. It is my opinion that there is no advantage in further discussion. (SEE)
.............................................................................................
5. Please excuse Jane’s poor typing: she’s only been learning for a month.( ALLOWANCES)
.............................................................................................
III. Paragraph writing (25 p)
Do you agree or disagree with the following statement? “iPads provide plenty of ways for
teachers and students to enrich their lessons and ultimately to increase the quality of education.”
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