IV. Choose the word or phrase - A, B, C or D - that needs correcting.Alaska, the largest (A) state of the United States in area (B), is (C) more than twice the size that (D) Texas.A.the largestB.in areaC.isD.that
IV. Choose the word or phrase - A, B, C or D - that needs correcting.The Tour de France, always held (A) each year during (B) the month of July, is one of the mostly (C) grueling cycling races held all year long (D).A.heldB.duringC.mostlyD.year long
II. Circle the word that has stress pattern different from that of the other words.A.abilityB.activityC.sophisticateD.entertainment
I. Circle the word whose underlined part is pronounced differently from that of the other words.A.rugbyB.musicC.undertakenD.dull
IX. Mark the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the sentence that best combines each pair of sentences in the following questions. He behaved in a very strange way. That surprised me a lot.A.He behaved very strangely, which surprised me very much.B.His behaviour was a very strange thing, that surprised me most.C.I was almost not surprised by his strange behaviour.D.What almost surprised me was the strange way he behaved.
VII. Mark the letter A, B, Cor Don your answer sheet to indicate the sentence that is CLOSEST in meaning to each of the following questions. I have never watched such a romantic film like this before.A.The film is so romantic that I have watched it many times.B.This is the most romantic film that I've ever watched.C.This film is not as romantic as those I had watched before.D.I have never watched many romantic films like this before.
VII. Mark the letter A, B, Cor Don your answer sheet to indicate the sentence that is CLOSEST in meaning to each of the following questions. I should have finished my work last night but I was exhausted.A.I finished my work last night though I was exhausted.B.Last night I was exhausted but I tried to finish my work.C.I was exhausted so I didn't finish my work yesterday as planned.D.My work was finished last night but I was exhausted.
VIII. Mark the letter A, B, Cor D on your answer sheet to indicate the word whose underlined part differs from the other three in pronunciation in each of the following questions. A.headB.deadC.breadD.clean
V. Read the following passage and blacken the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to each of the following questions.Most of the fastening devices used in clothing today, like the shoelace, the button, and the safely pin. have existed in some form in various cultures for thousands of years. But the zipper was the brainchild of one American inventor, namely Whitcomb Judson of Chicago. At the end of the 19th century. Judson was already a successful inventor, with a dozen patents to his credit for mechanical items such as improvements to motors and railroad braking system.He then turned his mind to create a replacement for the lengthy shoelaces which were then used in both men’s and women's boots. On August 29th 1893, he won another patent, for what he called the case “locker”. Though the model was somewhat clumsy, and frequently jammed, it did work: in fact, Judson and his business associate Lewis Walker had sewn the device into their own boots. Although Judson displayed his clasp-locker at the World's Fair held in Chicago in 1893, the public largely ignored it. The company founded by Judson and Walker, Universal Fastener, despite further refinements, never really succeeded in marketing the device.The earliest zip fasteners were being used in the clothing industry by 1905, but it was only in 1913, after a Swedish-American engineer, Gideon Sundbach, had remodeled Judson's fastener into a more streamlined and reliable form, that the zipper was a success. The US Army applied zippers to the clothing and equipment of the troops of World War I. By the late 1920s, zippers could be found in all kinds of clothing, footwear, and carrying cases; by the mid-1930s, zippers had even been embraced by the fashion industry.The term “zipper" was coined as onomatopoeia (resembling the sound it makes) by B.F. Goodrich whose company started marketing rubber shoes featuring the fastener in 1923. Regrettably. Whitcomb Judson died in 1909, and never heard the term, or saw the success by which his invention would become popular. (Adapted from https://lemelson.mit.edu) The word "refinements" in paragraph 2 is closest in meaning to ______ .A.promotionB.additionsC.improvementsD.changes
V. Read the following passage and blacken the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to each of the following questions.Most of the fastening devices used in clothing today, like the shoelace, the button, and the safely pin. have existed in some form in various cultures for thousands of years. But the zipper was the brainchild of one American inventor, namely Whitcomb Judson of Chicago. At the end of the 19th century. Judson was already a successful inventor, with a dozen patents to his credit for mechanical items such as improvements to motors and railroad braking system.He then turned his mind to create a replacement for the lengthy shoelaces which were then used in both men’s and women's boots. On August 29th 1893, he won another patent, for what he called the case “locker”. Though the model was somewhat clumsy, and frequently jammed, it did work: in fact, Judson and his business associate Lewis Walker had sewn the device into their own boots. Although Judson displayed his clasp-locker at the World's Fair held in Chicago in 1893, the public largely ignored it. The company founded by Judson and Walker, Universal Fastener, despite further refinements, never really succeeded in marketing the device.The earliest zip fasteners were being used in the clothing industry by 1905, but it was only in 1913, after a Swedish-American engineer, Gideon Sundbach, had remodeled Judson's fastener into a more streamlined and reliable form, that the zipper was a success. The US Army applied zippers to the clothing and equipment of the troops of World War I. By the late 1920s, zippers could be found in all kinds of clothing, footwear, and carrying cases; by the mid-1930s, zippers had even been embraced by the fashion industry.The term “zipper" was coined as onomatopoeia (resembling the sound it makes) by B.F. Goodrich whose company started marketing rubber shoes featuring the fastener in 1923. Regrettably. Whitcomb Judson died in 1909, and never heard the term, or saw the success by which his invention would become popular. (Adapted from https://lemelson.mit.edu) The word "it" in paragraph 2 refers to _______ .A.World's FairB.JudsonC.Clasp-lockerD.The public
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