This document contains an English practice test with multiple sections:
Section 1 tests phonetic pronunciation of words. Section 2 tests lexico-grammar with fill-in-the-blank and multiple choice questions about grammar and vocabulary. Section 3 is a reading comprehension passage about the role of early 19th century US state governments in the economy, including chartering companies and encouraging internal improvements.
The document provides an English skills practice test covering a range of topics in phonics, grammar, vocabulary and reading comprehension.
This document contains an English practice test with multiple sections:
Section 1 tests phonetic pronunciation of words. Section 2 tests lexico-grammar with fill-in-the-blank and multiple choice questions about grammar and vocabulary. Section 3 is a reading comprehension passage about the role of early 19th century US state governments in the economy, including chartering companies and encouraging internal improvements.
The document provides an English skills practice test covering a range of topics in phonics, grammar, vocabulary and reading comprehension.
This document contains an English practice test with multiple sections:
Section 1 tests phonetic pronunciation of words. Section 2 tests lexico-grammar with fill-in-the-blank and multiple choice questions about grammar and vocabulary. Section 3 is a reading comprehension passage about the role of early 19th century US state governments in the economy, including chartering companies and encouraging internal improvements.
The document provides an English skills practice test covering a range of topics in phonics, grammar, vocabulary and reading comprehension.
This document contains an English practice test with multiple sections:
Section 1 tests phonetic pronunciation of words. Section 2 tests lexico-grammar with fill-in-the-blank and multiple choice questions about grammar and vocabulary. Section 3 is a reading comprehension passage about the role of early 19th century US state governments in the economy, including chartering companies and encouraging internal improvements.
The document provides an English skills practice test covering a range of topics in phonics, grammar, vocabulary and reading comprehension.
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ENGLISH PRACTICE 1
PART ONE: PHONETICS
I.Choose the word whose underlined part is pronounced differently from that of the others. 1. A. supposedly B. markedly C. allegedly D.determinedly 2. A. endure B. feature C. procedure D. measure 3. A. complete B. command C. common D. community 4. A. comb B. climb C. debt D.cable 5. A. neighbour B. height C. sleigh D.weight II. Choose the word whose stress pattern is different from that of the others. 1. A. possibility B. disappointed C. manufacture D.instrument 2. A. environment B. mystery C. contribute D. terrific 3. A. deficiency B. psychology C. ecological D. competitor 4. A. recommend B. difficulty C. admirable D. document 5. A. encouragement B. interviewer C. acknowledge D.miraculously PART TWO: LEXICO-GRAMMAR I. Choose the best option to complete each of the following sentences. 1. Only after the atomic bomb ___ and development in the air travel ___, ____science fiction really become popular A. had created/ had taken off/ was B. had been created/ had been taken off/ has C. had been created/ had taken off/ did D. had been created/ / had taken off/ had 2. We‘ve bought some ________ chairs for the garden so that they are easy to store away. A. adapting B. adjusting C. bending D. folding 3. I don‘t think she can get her message _______ to the students. She seems too nervous. A. across B. around C. out D. over 4. _______, it is obvious that the whole thing was a waste of time and effort. A. None of us wanted to go in the first place B. Staff meetings are often boring and have no apparent point to them C. Since the results were far more satisfactory than anyone had expected D. Seeing that we couldn‘t solve anything in the end 5. There are ___ words in English having more than one meaning. Pay close attention to this fact. A. a large many B. quite many C. a great many D. quite a lot 6. This car has many features including _________. A. stereo, safety devices, air condition, and it saves gas B. good music, safety devices, air conditioning, and gas C. stereo, safety devices, air conditioned, and good gas D. stereo, safety devices, air conditioning, and low gas mileage 7. Round and round ___________. A. the wheels of the engine went B. did the wheels of the engine go C. went the wheels of the engine D. going the wheels of the engine 8. The replacement of shops such as the groceries and chemists‘ by the café _______ the housewives with insufficient facilities for shopping. A. leave B. have left C. has left D. To have left 9. Your argument _______ that Britain is still a great power, but this is no longer the case. A. outlines B. presupposes C. Concerns D. presents 10. They are happily married although, of course, they argue _______. A. most times B. from day to day C. every now and then D. on the occasion 11. He promised to mend the broken wheel soon without ___________ . A. fail B. failure C. trouble D.mistake 12. One of the first exercises in math class is ______ measure the radius of a circle. A. to learn and B. to learn how to C. learning to D. learn to 13. We were shocked to hear the news of your ________. A. having fired B. being fired C. having been fired D. to have been fired 14. I don‘t know French, but I‘ll ________. A. get Tom to translate it B. have it translate C. have Tom to translate it D. make it translate 15. _______ as taste is really a composite sense made up of both taste and smell. A. That we refer to B. What we refer to C. To which we refer D. What do we refer to 16. _______ have settled, one of their first concerns has been to locate an adequate water supply. A. Wherever people B. There are people who C. Where people D. People 17. Politicians should never lose ______ of the needs of the people they represent. A. view B. sight C. regard D. prospect 18. _______ team sports require cooperation. A. Of all B. They are all C. Why all are D. All 19. Studies indicate _________ collecting art today than ever before. A. there are that more people B. more people that are C. that there are more people D. people there are more 20. Doctors advise people who are deficient __________ vitamin C to eat more fruit and vegetables. A. from B. of C. In D. for 21. Dick put ____ ball in ____ net in _____ second half but ____ goal was disallowed. A. a - a - a - a B. the - the - the - the C. the - the - a - a D. a - a - the - the 22. There is a real possibility that these animals could be frightened _______ a sudden loud noise. A. being there B. should there be C. there was D. there have been 23. The computer has dramatically affected ______ photographic lenses are constructed. A. is the way B. that the way C. which way do D. the way 24. Six novels a year, you say? He‘s certainly a __________ writer. A. fruitful B. fertile C. Virile D. prolific 25. The handwriting is completely ______ . This note must have been written a long time ago. A. inedible B. indelible C. illegible D.unfeasible II. Give the correct form or tense of the verbs in brackets. a. The children were frightened because the lights suddenly (go)__ out and they (sit)___ in the dark. b. What tune (play) ________ when we (come) ________ in? c. She was badly hurt when her car hit another car. If she (wear) ______ her seat belt, she (not hurt) ________ so badly. d. It is vital that no one else (know) _______ about the secret government operation. e. It seems strange to be standing here, (look) _______ out at SydneyHarbor. f. Tom had a lucky escape. He (kill) ________ when a car crashed into the front of his house. g. _____ (Rank) as a masterpiece, a work of art must transcend the ideals of the period in which it was created. III. There are ten mistakes in the following passage. Find and correct them. (1.5 pt) It seems that the mystery of why the Pyramids were built may have solved. Until quite recently people got used to think that they were just tombs for pharaohs. Instead, the connection with astronomy seems much more important. Egyptologists have often asked them how long it spent to build them and why people built them in first place. Experts came up with a suggestion that the Egyptians may have believed in the River Nile was the earthly equivalent of the Milky Way. Many agree that the sizes of the three Giza Pyramids are in promotion to the three stars of Orion. Nothing, then, was by the chance. Rather, the souls of dead pharaohs were deliberately being project through shafts to reach at their goal of the Orion constellation. IV. Give the correct form of the word in each of the following brackets.(1.5 pt) It was not so long ago that we dealt with colleagues through face-to-face (1.INTERACT) ______ and with counterparts and customers by phone or letter. But the world of communication has undergone a dramatic transformation, not for all the good. Email, while (2.DOUBT) _____ a swift means of communication providing your server is fully (3.FUNCTION) ______ and that the address you have contains no (4. ACCURATE) _____ has had a (5. SIGNIFY) _____ effect on certain people‘s behaviour, both at home and business. For those people, the use of email has become irresistibly (6. ADDICT) _____ to the extent that it is (7. THREAT) _____ their mental and physical health. Addicts spend their day (8.COMPULSION) _____ checking for email and have a (9. TEND) ______ to panic if their server goes down. It is estimated that one in six people spend four hours a day sending and receiving messages, the equivalent to more than two working days a week. The negative effect on (10. PRODUCE) ________ is something employers are well aware of. PART THREE: READING (6.0 POINTS) I. Read the following passage and choose the option that indicates the correct answer to each of the following questions.(2.0 pts) In the United States in the early 1800's, individual state governments had more effect on the economy than did the federal government. States chartered manufacturing, banking, mining, and transportation firms and participated in the construction of various internal improvements such as canals, turnpikes, and railroads. The states encouraged internal improvements in two distinct ways; first, by actually establishing state companies to build such improvements; second, by providing part of the capital for mixed public-private companies setting out to make a profit. In the early nineteenth century, state governments also engaged in a surprisingly large amount of direct regulatory activity, including extensive licensing and inspection programs. Licensing targets reflected both similarities and differences between the economy of the nineteenth century and that of today: in the nineteenth century, state regulation through licensing fell especially on peddlers, innkeepers, and retail merchants of various kinds. The perishable commodities of trade generally came understate inspection, and such important frontier staples as lumber and gunpowder were also subject to state control. Finally, state governments experimented with direct labor and business regulation designed to help the individual laborer or consumer, including setting maximum limits on hours of work and restrictions on price-fixing by businesses. Although the states dominated economic activity during this period, the federal government was not inactive. Its goals were the facilitation of western settlement and the development of native industries. Toward these ends, the federal government pursued several courses of action. It established a national bank to stabilize banking activities in the country and, in part, to provide a supply of relatively easy money to the frontier, where it was greatly needed for settlement. It permitted access to public western lands on increasingly easy terms, culminating in the Homestead Act of 1862, by which title to land could be claimed on the basis of residence alone. Finally, it set up a system of tariffs that was basically protectionist in effect, although maneuvering for position by various regional interests produced frequent changes in tariff rates throughout the nineteenth century. 1. What does the passage mainly discuss? A. States's rights versus federal rights. B. The participation of state governments in railroad, canal, and turnpike construction. C. The roles of state and federal governments in the economy of the nineteenthcentury. D. Regulatory activity by state governments. 2. The word “effect” in bold in paragraph 1 is closest in meaning to __________. A. value B. argument C. influence D. restraint 3. All of the following are mentioned in the passage as areas that involved statevernments in the nineteenth century EXCEPT _________. A. mining B. banking C. manufacturing D. higher education 4. The word “distinct” in bold in paragraph 1 is closest in meaning to_________. A. separate B. innovative C. alarming D. provocative 5. It can be inferred from the first paragraph that in the nineteenth century canals and railroads were _______. A. built with money that came from the federal government B. much more expensive to build than they had been previously C. built predominantly in the western part of the country D. sometimes built in part by state companies 6. The regulatory activities of state governments included all of the following EXCEPT_______. A. licensing of retail merchants B. inspecting materials used in turnpike maintenance C. imposing limits on price-fixing D. control of lumber 7. The word “setting” in bold in paragraph 2 is closest in meaning to _________. A. discussing B. analyzing C. establishing D. avoiding 8. The word “ends” in bold in paragraph 3 is closest in meaning to ________. A. benefits B. decisions C. services D. goals 9. According to the passage, which of the following is true of the Homestead Act of 1862? A. It made it increasingly possible for settlers to obtain land in the West. B. It was a law first passed by state governments in the West. C. It increased the money supply in the West. D. It established tariffs in a number of regions. 10. Which of the following activities was the responsibility of the federal government in the nineteenth century? A.Control of the manufacture of gunpowder. B. Determining the conditions under which individuals worked. C. Regulation of the supply of money. D. Inspection of new homes built on western lands. II. Read the text below and fill in each blank with ONE suitable word. (2.0 pts) The British are widely (1) _____ to be a very polite nation, and in (2)______ respects this is true. An Italian journalist once commented of the British that they need (3) _____ fewer than four thank you‖ merely to buy a bus ticket. The first, from the bus conductor means, I‘m here. The second accompanies the handing over of the money. The third, again from the conductor, (4)_______ Here is your ticket.‖, and then the passenger utters a final one as he accepts the tickets. Such transactions in most (5) _______ parts of the world are usually conducted in total silence. In sharp contrast to this excessive politeness with strangers, the British are strangely lacking (6)________ ritual phrases for social interaction. The exhortation ―Good appetite‖, uttered in so (7)_______ other languages to fellow-diners before a meal, does not exist in English. The nearest equivalent – Enjoy your dinner! – is said only by people who will not be partaking of the meal in question. What‘s more, the British (8) ____ happiness to their friends or acquaintances only at the start of a new year and at (9)_____ such as birthdays, (10) _____ the Greeks routinely wish all and sundry a good week or a good month. Your answers: 1._____________ 2._____________ 3._____________ 4._____________ 5.____________ 6._____________ 7._____________ 8._____________ 9._____________ 10.____________ III. Read the passage and choose the best option for each of the following blanks. (2.0 pts) Media and advertising After more than fifty years of television, it might seem only obvious to conclude that it is here to (1) ______. There have been many objections to it during this time, of course, and (2)______ a variety of grounds. Did it cause eye-strain? Was the (3) _____ bombarding us with radioactivity? Did the advertisements contain subliminal messages, persuading us to buy more? Did children turn to violence through watching it, either because so (4) ______ programmes taught them how to shoot, rob, and kill, or because they had to do something to counteract the hours they had spent glued to the tiny screen? Or did it simply create a vast passive (5) ______ drugged by glamorous serials and inane situation (6) ______ ? On the other hand did it increase anxiety by sensationalizing the news or the news which was (7) ______ by suitable pictures and filling our living rooms with war, famine and political unrest? (8) ______ in all, television proved to be the all-purpose scapegoat for the second half of the century, blamed for everything, but above all, eagerly watched. For no (9) ______ how much we despised it, feared it, were bored by it, or felt that it took us away from the old paradise of family conversation and hobbies such as collecting stamps, we never turned it off. We kept staring at the screen, aware that our own tiny (10)______ was in if we looked carefully. 1. A. be B. stay C. exist D. prolong 2. A. with B. over C. by D. on 3. A. screen B. danger C. machine D.reason 4. A. that B. far C. Many D. what 5. A. programme B. personality C. audience D.tense 6. A. comedies B. programmes C. perhaps D.consequently 7. A. taken B. presented C. capable D.accompanied 8. A. Taken B. All C. Somewhat D. Thus 9. A. one B. matter C. difference D.reason 10. A. fault B. reflection C. situation D.consciousness PART FOUR: WRITING (6.0 POINTS) I. Finish the second sentence in such a way that it means exactly the same as the sentence printed before it. (2.0 pts) 1. If the work is finished by lunchtime, you can go home. →Get________________________________________________________________________. 2. You haven‘t done your work, have you? →It’s about___________________________________________________________________. 3. The fourth time he asked her to marry him, she accepted. →Only on his_________________________________________________________________. 4. He said that he had won as a result of good luck. →He attributed________________________________________________________________. 5. That reminds me of the time I climbed to the top of Mount Fuji. →That takes me_______________________________________________________________. 6. People rumour that he is rich but stingy. →What_______________________________________________________________________. 7. Such a ridiculous proposal isn‘t worth serious consideration. →There is____________________________________________________________________. 8. Just thinking about his face at that moment makes me laugh. →The very___________________________________________________________________. 9.We cannot see animals in a vast area after the forest fire. →There is an_________________________________________________________________. 10.The staff hated Frank‘s new policies so intensely that they went on strike. →So intense__________________________________________________________________. II. Write a new sentence similar in meaning to the given one, using the word given in the brackets. Do not alter the word in any way. (2.0 pts) 1. I suddenly realized the meaning of a ―freebie‖. (dawned) →____________________________________________________________________________ 2. After the scandal, he was asked to resign. (hand) →____________________________________________________________________________ 3. Bruce said that the situation at work was like a family argument. (likened) →____________________________________________________________________________ 4. My father is not feeling well these days. (weather) →____________________________________________________________________________ 5. I don‘t think this record will ever be popular. (catch) →____________________________________________________________________________ 6. His arrival was completely unexpected. (took) →____________________________________________________________________________ 7. The success of our local theater has made our city famous. (map) →____________________________________________________________________________ 8. He is certainly not a reliable witness. (means) →____________________________________________________________________________ 9. Our company is the only company allowed to import these chemicals. (monopoly) →____________________________________________________________________________ 10. It‘s uncertain whether the band‘s tour will take place. (balance) →____________________________________________________________________________