de Thi Hoc Sinh Gioi 2013
de Thi Hoc Sinh Gioi 2013
de Thi Hoc Sinh Gioi 2013
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Frankie: “_________”
A. There’s no doubt about it. B. You shouldn’t have said that.
C. What an opinion! D. Yes. Congratulations!
17. At the 22nd SEA Games, athletes from 11 participating countries competed ______
32 sports.
A. up B. in C. into D. on
18. The survey was to find out the young people’s attitudes ______ love.
A. towards B. above C. beneath D. with
19. My brother didn’t feel well. ______, he didn’t go to work yesterday.
A. However B. Therefore C. Though D. So
20. Should you study hard, you _______ the exam into university.
A. pass B. will pass C. would pass D. would have
II. The following passage contains 10 errors. Find and correct them (10pts)
Most of the joggers who are overweigh are reasonable for talking 21
about, worrying with, and being obsessed with their weight. Since 22
many people start jogging to lose weight, it is not surprised that body
size is important. More and more people are on the diet. 50% of the 23
women and approximetely 25% of the men in the US are watching 24
what they eat. Body weight is the second most talk between joggers- 25
heart disease and high bleeding pressure are the first! There are many 26
factors that effect your weight. They include: body type, diet, exercise
level, sex and age. What may be an “ideal” weight for you in the age 27
of 27 may not be ideal while you’re 54. And your ideal weight will 28
probably be different during racing season when you were in a specific 29
training phase. 30
III. Put each verb in brackets into an appropriate form. ( 10pts )
31. I shared a flat with him when we were students. He always ____ (complain) about
my untidiness
32. By the time we get there, I’m afraid the meeting ____(end)
33. Hello! You (be)________ Helen. I’m Peter’s brother, George.
34. We (help)__________ but you didn’t tell us that you were in trouble.
35. Only yesterday I (realise) what was going on.
36. _________I (come) here before 5 a.m, I would have met the doctor.
37. As soon as the teacher _________ (come), the students stopped talking.
38. It is advisable that Mary _________ (go) to the gym everyday to get over her
depression
39. We couldn’t risk _________ (leave) him alone.
40. From the clink of dishes, one can tell that supper _________ (prepare).
IV. Put each word in brackets into an appropriate form. ( 10pts )
41. Friend’s family has suffered from his ______. EXPEND
42. The water from the stream should be ______ before you drink it. PURE
43. John told everyone that he worked for a large company, but the
company is ________. EXIST
44. Jim is very disorganized and not very_______. BUSINESS
45. The principal said some_______ words to the pupils before the exam. COURAGE
46. Although we were in danger, Ann seemed quite________ . CONCERN
47. Some parents feel dismayed because of their children’s_________ BEHAVE
48. My sister has good _________ skills. She can relate to teenagers very well.
PERSON
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49. These young people are ________supporters of the new plan of our city.
ENTHUSIASM
50.My uncle is in his forties. He is a well-built ________man AGE
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animals, many plants could not (67)______reproduce. For example, many plants with
flowers depend on bees and other insects to (68)_____ their pollen from plant to plant.
Many oak trees grow from acorns that squirrels burry and then forget, or from acorns
that deer step on an push deep into the soil. Birds often fly from one place to (69) _____
with seeds clinging to their feet. The seeds may sprout a great (70)_____ from the
parent plant.
III. Read the following passage, and then choose the best answer from A, B, C or D.
(10pts)
1 In the 20th century, magazines have been a major growth area of popular
publishing. Specialist magazines cater for every imaginable field and activity. In
the United Kingdom, over 12,000 periodicals, magazines, bulletins, annuals, trade
journals, and academic journals are published on a regular basis. There are some
5 40 women’s magazines and over 60 dealing with particular sports, games,
hobbies, and pastimes. Although some US magazines, such as The Saturday
Evening Post, has succumbed to the competition of television, many continue to
have enormous international circulations, The Reader’s Digest over 16 million,
The National Geographic over 10 million. For many people, magazines have been
10 the most available and widely used form of continuing education, providing
information about history, geography, literature, science, and the arts, financial
management, psychology, even marriage and family life.
Until the rise of television, magazines were the most available form of cheap,
convenient entertainment in the English-speaking world. Radio served a similar
15 function, but it was more limited in what it could do. Magazines and television,
however, both address the more powerful visual sense. During the third quarter of
the 20th century, coincident with a dramatic rise in the popularity of television,
many general-interest, especially illustrated magazines went out of business. The
shift in attention of a mass audience from reading such magazines to watching
20 television has been a major factor in this decline, but it is an implicit tribute from
television to the older genre that its programs are generally organized in a single
format and content.
71. According to the passage, which of the following magazines is no longer printed?
A. The Saturday Evening Post B. The Reader’s Digest
C. The Nation D. The National Geographic
72. In the line 2, the phrase “every imaginable field” is closest in meaning to
A. all imaginary fields in stories and poems
B. all images in a camera’s field of vision
C. all professions that one can think of
D. all trade journals about farming and psychology
73. In line 7 the word “succumbed” means
A. set up for B. brought up to C. taken up by D. given in to
74. In the line 8 the word “circulations” is closest in meaning to
A. the number of blood banks selling magazines
B. the number of readers of a magazine
C. the number of international magazines
D. the number of sold copies of a magazine
75. which of the following does the author describe as limited in what it could do?
A. radio B. magazines C. movies D. television
76. The passage implies that magazines
A. are less visual than radio B. put television out of business
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C. influence television programs D. have a limited range of subjects
77. The word “it” in line 15 refers to
A. television B. publishing C. entertainment D. radio
78. The passage mainly discusses
A. the rise and fall of the radio business
B. the growth and decline of magazines in the 20th century
C. magazines and continuing education
D. the decline of international circulation
79. What does the author say about mass audiences?
A. They have little influence on communications in the 20th century
B. They have gone out of business
C. They get information about gardening and psychology from radio
D. They have shifted their attention from magazines to television.
80.. From the passage it can be inferred that
A. movies have replaced magazines
B. the author is fond of magazines
C. almost all magazines are printed in English
D. home decorating magazines are dramatic
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