đề 3 Key
đề 3 Key
đề 3 Key
Đề 3 - Key
ANSWERS: 1. D 2. C 3. C 4. A 5. C
Choose the word whose stress pattern is different from that of the others.
1.A. advantageous B. photography C. proverbial D. magnificent
2.A. magnetic B. substitute C. refusal D. phenomenon
3.A. referee B. engineer C. absentee D. attitude
4.A. contractor B. phonetic C. Pacific D. character
5.A. mature B. nature C. culture D. measure
ANSWERS: 1. A 2. B 3. D 4. D 5. A
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Anh 10
PASSAGE 2: Read the following passage and choose the best option to complete the blank or
answer the question. (10 points)
Until recently, hunting for treasure from shipwrecks was mostly fantasy: with
recent technological advances, however, the search for sunken treasure has become
more popular as a legitimate endeavor. This has caused a debate between those
wanting to salvage the wrecks and those wanting to preserve them.
Treasure hunters are spurred on bv the thought of finding caches of gold coins or
other valuable objects on a sunken ship. One team of salvagers, for instance,
searched the wreck of the RMS Republic, which sank outside the Boston harbor in 1909.
The search party, using side-scan sonar, a device that projects sound waves across the ocean
bottom and produces a profile of the sea floor, located the wreck in just two and a half days.
Before the use of this new technology, such searches could take months or years. The team of
45 divers searched the wreck for two months, finding silver tea services, crystal dinnerware,
and thousands of bottles of wine, but they did not find the five and a half tons of Ameri can
Gold Eagle coins they were searching for.
Preservationists focus on the historic value of a ship. They say that even if a shipwreck's
treasure does not have a high monetary value, it can be an invaluable source of historic
artifacts that are preserved in nearly mint condition. But once a salvage team has scoured a
site, much of the archaeological value is lost. Maritime archaeologists who are
preservationists worry that the success of salvagers will attract more treasure-hunting
expeditions and thus threaten remaining undiscovered wrecks. Preservationists are lobbying
their state lawmakers to legally restrict underwater searches and unregulated salvages. To
counter their efforts, treasure hunters argue that without the lure of gold and million-dollar
treasures, the wrecks and their historical artifacts would never be recovered at all.
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Anh 10
ANSWERS: 1.D 2. B 3. A 4. D 5. C
6.B 7.A 8. C 9. A 10. D
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Anh 10
simply key in your bank account code number and the amount you have spent, and thank you
politely. You won't have to dig (5)_________in your pockets for change. You may not even have a
number for your account as such, as the computer may by then be able to read your handprint. So
no more instances of credit card (6)_________. But I am afraid that I shall miss money. I have felt
(7)_______attached to it, ever since I received my first pocket (8) __________.When I was five,
and kept it in a money-box. Even if my credit card of the future will be able to tell me exactly how
much spending (9)_________I have left in the computer files, even if it lights up and plays a happy
(or sad) tune at the same time, nothing will be able to replace the (10)_________ pleasure I gained
from rattling the coins in my moneybox.
1. A. with B. as C. to D. in
2) 2. A. have B. see C. know D. believe
3) 3. A .cease B. stop C. fail D. conclude
4) 4. A .With reference to B. Further to C. According to D. Owing to
5) 5. A.far B. long C. tall D. deep
6) 6. A.deceit B. trickery C. pretence D. fraud
7) 7. A. heavily B. strongly C. widely D. largely
8) 8. A cash B. coins C. money D. gold
9) 9. A. capacity B. potential C. capability D. power
1 10. A. sheer B. complete C. entire D. downright
B. WRITTEN TEST
I. VERB FORM / TENSES (10 points)
Put the verbs into the correct forms
My parents and I came to live in the United States when I was five years old. Although
my family is now very comfortable, at first we had a hard time adjusting to life there. We (1.
think) ________ that everybody in the United States was very rich. Imagine our surprise
when we learnt that it was hard for many people, my father (2. include) ________, to make a
living. My father (3. work) ________as a dentist in Europe before we came here twenty
years ago. Here he couldn't work as a dentist right away because he (4. not pass) ________
the state examinations yet. While he was studying for the dentist examinations, he worked in a
dental laboratory in order 58. support) ________his family.
Within a year, he had passed the examinations and had established himself in practice
with a local dentist. He (6. practise) ________here for twenty years now and (7. gain)
________ some recognition. On the fifteenth of next month, his colleagues (8. have)
________a diner to honor him for his work with poor immigrants.
My mother, too, has been happy here. She got a degree in finance five years ago and now
(9. own) ________ and operates her own profitable copy center. She (10. take)
________courses for a long time before she actually got her degree. She took only one or two
courses a semester because she was busy looking after my father, my brother and me.
ANSWERS:
1. had thought 2. included 3. had been working 4. hadn’t passed
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Anh 10
The increase in the number of available TV channels world wide is bound to have far reaching
effects. Up to now, television has been a uniquely unifying national phenomenon. Never before have
so many people had such a common core of shared cultural experiences. (1) ________creates a
durable communal bond. You may not know the names of your next-door (2) ________ but you can be
fairly sure that over the past few days they have seen some of the same programmes you have.
Before long with the vast expansion of television programming, everyone will be able to watch (3)
__________different _ "Me TV" perhaps - just as each Internet user (4)________explore a different
selection of websites. The television will become a personal (5) __________of equipmentmore like a
mobile phone than a communal source of entertainment. But it is also possible that on these
personalised machines, people will actually (6) ________ up watching fewer programmes: that
television will become more like the movie business with a number of blockbusters attracting vast
global (7) __________ .
Viewers in all countries will one day be able to pick their programmes in a global market. People
may still choose to watch their own national programmes since programmes (8) _____ at international
markets, with the partial exception of those from America, (9) ___________ to have smaller audiences
than do national products. But. armed (10) ___________ a credit card and a remote control, people
"will eventually order television programmes from anywhere they choose. The television business will
then become truly global. So, perhaps, will thecultural values it instils.
Passage 2:
Most people I know would never go to a martial arts movie, even if you paid them, but I defy
anyone not to enjoy 70 minutes in the dark with Jackie Chan. For a start, Chan is simply interested in
evading the bullies who want to do him over - and if he bumps into someone as he's running away, he's
(1) ___________ apologetic. His screen persona is never (2) _________ to bombast. Chan is a
likeable, bumbling Everyman who tries to extricate himself from scrapes with his astounding athletic
(3)__________: as he leaps up the side of a building, you would swear he was on wires. With the kind
of lightness and agility (4) ________ limited to monkeys and flies, Chan seems (5) _________ of
scuttering up any surface. And it is extremely (6) ________ for him to go on the offensive. The films
of lesser action stars like Jean- Claude Van Damme provide a diet of relentless violence, punctuated
every now and then by some semi-moronic 'witticism', but Chan's balletic altercations with his enemies
are as a (7) ___________ oriented around the art of comic evasion. True, nobody (8)___________ever
win a screen-writing Oscar for one of his films: they're the sort of film where villains very frequently
deliver lines like 'I'm sorry we didn't get the tape, four of our guys got blown up'. They (9) ________ to
be a series of stunt sequences, all devised by Chan himself, wrapped around the most tenuous of plots.
He uses no stunt double or state of the art technology or computer-generated tricks. He is simply a
person ofgreat charm with an enormous flair for physical comedy. And what is so (10) ________ is
that this seasoned campaigner should still be making such films at the age of fifty.
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Anh 10
ANSWERS:
1. influential 2. ordained 3. conservatory 4. director 5. week ly
6. active 7. elsewhere 8. consistently 9. different 10. orchestral
Part 2: Complete the following passage with the correct forms of the given words. (10 points)
It’s 8.30 at the headquarters of the Boogy Woogers dance group,
a (1) ______ studio in Geneva. Dancers of all shapes REHEARSE
and sizes begin to tumble (2) ______ through the doors. ENERGY
Some begin lumbering up, others splinter off into groups to try
Out new moves. One woman, lost in her own (3) ______ THINK
Sits with her headphones on, preparing for the punishing routines
To follow. A long-haired man with a goatee beard puts a tape in
the hi-fi, and rap music blares out of the (4) _______ SPEAK
Soon the room is alive with whirling, spinning bodies and
(5) _______ fills the air. LAUGH
The Boogy Woogers are the brainchild of Tomas Seeler, who
Handpicked many of his troupe from local street dancers. Seeler’s
Own (6) _______ was in my gymnastics, but others come BACK
from the worlds of martial arts, bodybuilding and ballet. Many
different (7) ______ are represented in the group, NATIONAL
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Anh 10
ANSWERS:
1. rehearsal 2. energetically 3. thoughts 4. speakers 5. laughter
6. background 7. nationalities 8. overnight 9. creative 10. appearances
V. ARTICLES
Read this text and decide for each gap if you need to add nothing (the zero article) l a l an l the.
FUNNY HONEY
In 1642 (1) ________ General Assembly of Virginia solemnly passed (2) ________law
declaring tobacco the only valid currency in the colony. (3) ________ tobacco then remained
t h e basis of Virginian currency for over a century. This was not such a strange aberration as
it might seem. (4) ________ history shows that virtually anything scarce, durable and
desirable can become money.
In more recent times, the most varied objects have functioned as money, from dogs' teeth
in New Guinea to drums on (5) ________island of Alor in Indonesia. In Thailand, most parts
of a tiger could be used as cash, including (6) ________ claws and the tongue. In the course
of time, as in China, the real thing was replaced by (7) ________replica. Pieces of silver in
the shape of (8) ________ tiger's tongue were still changing hands in Thailand only (9)
________few years ago.
But the greatest success story among strange currencies was undoubtedly the cowrie shell.
For many centuries it was accepted in payment through much of Africa and Asia. In the
French Sudan, cowries remained an acceptable currency for paying taxes until 1907, when
they at lat succumbed to (10) ________ relentless advance of paper money and coins.
ANSWERS:
1. the 2. a 3. Ø 4. Ø 5. the 6. the 7. a 8. a 9. a 10. the
V. SENTENCE TRANSFORMATION
Rewrite the sentences with the given words or beginning in such a way that their meanings
remain unchanged.
1. I only called the police when I had tried everything else.
Resort
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Anh 10
…………………………………………………………………………………………………………
…………………
2. Women in this factor) work under the same conditions as men.
Terms
…………………………………………………………………………………………………………
…………………
…………………………………………………………………………………………………………
…………………
6. The workers only called off the strike after a new pay offer.
Only after
……………………………………………………………………………………………………………
…..
7. It wasn’t a bit surprised to hear that Karen had change her job.
It came.
…………………………………………………………………………………………………………
………..
8. The only reason the party was a success was that a famuos film star attended.
Had .……………………………………………………………………………………………………
9. The only thing keep us out of prison was the way he spoke the local dialect.
But for .
…………………………………………………………………………………………………………
…………
10. It’s sad , but unemployment is unlikely to go down this year .
Sad ……………………………………………………………………………………………………
ANSWERS:
1. I only called the police as a last resort
2. Women in this factory work on the same terms as men.
3. I doubt if he'll telephone this late at night
4. I took it for granted that you would ask me for a reference.
5 - Any correspondence from the London office must take priority over other matters.
Any correspondence from the London office must be given priority over other matters.
6. Only after a new pay offer did the workers call off the strike.
7. It came as no surprise ( to me ) (to hear ) that Karen had changed her job.
8. Had it not been for the attenendance / appearance of a famous film star the party would have
been a failure.
9. But for his command of the local dialect we would have been failed /put into jail.
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Anh 10
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