Complete the sentences by finding one word which fits in all three spaces to make meaningful sentences. Write your answers in the box below
A. I’m starting to             _ to the conclusion that you don’t want to go on holiday with me. B. How did you               to lose your passport? C. I know it’s going to    as a bit of a shock to you, but I’ve decided to walk round the world
A.
B.
C.
D.

Các câu hỏi liên quan

 Read and circle the best option (A, B, C or D) for each space to complete the passage. Write your answers in the box below.  (10 pts)
 
The combination of music and study has long has long been a source of disagreement between adults and children. Parents and teachers alike maintain that silence is important when learning, (1)                                 youngsters insist that their favourite sounds help them concentrate.
 
Now a study shows that the grown-ups have    been (2)                all along. Psychologists in  Florida tested how fast students wrote essays with and without music in the background. They found that the sounds (3)
               progress down by about sixty words per hour. “This demonstrates clearly that it is difficult to   (4)
               with listening and writing at the same time,” said Dr Sarah Randall. She   also (5)                 to the conclusion that it is a myth that instrumental music is less distracting than vocals. “All types of music (6)
               the same effect,” she said in her report. “One’s ability to pay attention and write fluently is likely to be (7)                     by both vocal and instrumental music,” she added.
 
Dr Randall  claimed  the research (8)                 that the idea that music could improve     performance was wrong.  “Writing  an  essay is complex (9)                 . You are recalling information and putting it in (10)
              . An  additional stimulus  in  the form  of music is  bound  to  distract.  But  music is  not    the only distractor. What is particularly worrying is that more and more teenagers are studying in front of the television.”
(4) _____________
A.manage             
B.support       
C.cope            
D.stand

 Read and circle the best option (A, B, C or D) for each space to complete the passage. Write your answers in the box below.  (10 pts)
 
The combination of music and study has long has long been a source of disagreement between adults and children. Parents and teachers alike maintain that silence is important when learning, (1)                                 youngsters insist that their favourite sounds help them concentrate.
 
Now a study shows that the grown-ups have    been (2)                all along. Psychologists in  Florida tested how fast students wrote essays with and without music in the background. They found that the sounds (3)
               progress down by about sixty words per hour. “This demonstrates clearly that it is difficult to   (4)
               with listening and writing at the same time,” said Dr Sarah Randall. She   also (5)                 to the conclusion that it is a myth that instrumental music is less distracting than vocals. “All types of music (6)
               the same effect,” she said in her report. “One’s ability to pay attention and write fluently is likely to be (7)                     by both vocal and instrumental music,” she added.
 
Dr Randall  claimed  the research (8)                 that the idea that music could improve     performance was wrong.  “Writing  an  essay is complex (9)                 . You are recalling information and putting it in (10)
              . An  additional stimulus  in  the form  of music is  bound  to  distract.  But  music is  not    the only distractor. What is particularly worrying is that more and more teenagers are studying in front of the television.”
(5) _____________v
A.reached         
B.drew           
C.arrived        
D.came

a.   You are going to read an article written by someone who lives in a house in a valley. Seven sentences have been removed from the article. Choose from the sentences A – H the one which fits each gap . There is one extra sentence which you do not need to use. Write your answers in the box below.  (7 pts)
LIVING IN THE VALLEY
We had been living in our valley for sixteen months when we first realized the dangers that could exist in the surrounding hills and threaten our very survival.
 
(1)                Until that time, we had felt safe and sheltered in our valley below the protecting hills.
 
Soon   snow   began   to   fall.   Within   a   day   it   lay   some   15   centimeters    deep.   (2)                          But on the neighbouring heights the snow was much deeper and stayed for longer. Up there the wind blasted fiercely. Deep in our valley we felt only sudden gusts of wind; trees swayed but the branches held firm.
 
And yet we knew that there was reason for us to worry. The snow and wind were certainly inconvenient but they  did  not  really  trouble  us  greatly.  (3)  _             It  reminded  us  of  what  could  have  occurred  if circumstances had been different, if the flow of water from the hills had not, many years before, been controlled, held back by a series of dams.
 
In a short time the snow started to melt. Day after day, we watched furious clouds pile up high over the hills to the west. Sinister grey clouds extended over the   valleys. (4)                    We had seen enough of  the sky; now we began to watch the river, which every day was becoming fuller and wilder.
 
The snow was gradually washed away as more and more rain streamed from the clouds, but high up in the hills the reservoir was filling and was fast approaching danger level. And then it happened – for the first  time in years the reservoir overflowed. (5)                            
 
The river seemed maddened as the waters poured almost horizontally down to its lower stretches. Just a couple of metres from our cottage, the stream seemed wild beneath the  bridge. (76)                            For three days we prayed that it would stay below its wall. Fortunately, our prayers were answered as the dam held and the waters began to subside.
 
On many occasions through the centuries before the dam was built, the river had flooded the nearby villages in just such a range. Now, though, the dam restricts the flow of the river and usually all is well; the great mass of water from the hills, the product of snow and torrential rain, remains behind its barrier with just the occasional overflow. (7)                                   Thanks to this protection we can feel our home in the valley is still secure and safe.
 
A. It was the river, the Ryburn, which normally flowed so gently, that threatened us most.
B. And yet the immense power of all this water above us prevents us from ever believing ourselves to be completely safe in our home.
C. They twisted and turned, rising eastwards and upwards warning of what was to come.
D. It was far deeper than we’d ever seen it so near our home, lunging furiously at its banks.
E. We can thus enjoy, rather than fear, the huge clouds that hang over the valley, and can be thrilled by the tremendous power which we know the river possesses.
F. It almost completely blocked our lane and made the streamside path slippery and dangerous.
G. There in the heights it was like the Niagara Falls, as the water surged over the edge of the dam and poured into the stream below.
H. It was the year when the storms came early, before the calendar even hinted at winter, even before November was out.
(4) ____________________
A.
B.
C.
D.

a.   You are going to read an article written by someone who lives in a house in a valley. Seven sentences have been removed from the article. Choose from the sentences A – H the one which fits each gap . There is one extra sentence which you do not need to use. Write your answers in the box below.  (7 pts)
LIVING IN THE VALLEY
We had been living in our valley for sixteen months when we first realized the dangers that could exist in the surrounding hills and threaten our very survival.
 
(1)                Until that time, we had felt safe and sheltered in our valley below the protecting hills.
 
Soon   snow   began   to   fall.   Within   a   day   it   lay   some   15   centimeters    deep.   (2)                          But on the neighbouring heights the snow was much deeper and stayed for longer. Up there the wind blasted fiercely. Deep in our valley we felt only sudden gusts of wind; trees swayed but the branches held firm.
 
And yet we knew that there was reason for us to worry. The snow and wind were certainly inconvenient but they  did  not  really  trouble  us  greatly.  (3)  _             It  reminded  us  of  what  could  have  occurred  if circumstances had been different, if the flow of water from the hills had not, many years before, been controlled, held back by a series of dams.
 
In a short time the snow started to melt. Day after day, we watched furious clouds pile up high over the hills to the west. Sinister grey clouds extended over the   valleys. (4)                    We had seen enough of  the sky; now we began to watch the river, which every day was becoming fuller and wilder.
 
The snow was gradually washed away as more and more rain streamed from the clouds, but high up in the hills the reservoir was filling and was fast approaching danger level. And then it happened – for the first  time in years the reservoir overflowed. (5)                            
 
The river seemed maddened as the waters poured almost horizontally down to its lower stretches. Just a couple of metres from our cottage, the stream seemed wild beneath the  bridge. (76)                            For three days we prayed that it would stay below its wall. Fortunately, our prayers were answered as the dam held and the waters began to subside.
 
On many occasions through the centuries before the dam was built, the river had flooded the nearby villages in just such a range. Now, though, the dam restricts the flow of the river and usually all is well; the great mass of water from the hills, the product of snow and torrential rain, remains behind its barrier with just the occasional overflow. (7)                                   Thanks to this protection we can feel our home in the valley is still secure and safe.
 
A. It was the river, the Ryburn, which normally flowed so gently, that threatened us most.
B. And yet the immense power of all this water above us prevents us from ever believing ourselves to be completely safe in our home.
C. They twisted and turned, rising eastwards and upwards warning of what was to come.
D. It was far deeper than we’d ever seen it so near our home, lunging furiously at its banks.
E. We can thus enjoy, rather than fear, the huge clouds that hang over the valley, and can be thrilled by the tremendous power which we know the river possesses.
F. It almost completely blocked our lane and made the streamside path slippery and dangerous.
G. There in the heights it was like the Niagara Falls, as the water surged over the edge of the dam and poured into the stream below.
H. It was the year when the storms came early, before the calendar even hinted at winter, even before November was out.
(3) ____________________
A.
B.
C.
D.

a.   You are going to read an article written by someone who lives in a house in a valley. Seven sentences have been removed from the article. Choose from the sentences A – H the one which fits each gap . There is one extra sentence which you do not need to use. Write your answers in the box below.  (7 pts)
LIVING IN THE VALLEY
We had been living in our valley for sixteen months when we first realized the dangers that could exist in the surrounding hills and threaten our very survival.
 
(1)                Until that time, we had felt safe and sheltered in our valley below the protecting hills.
 
Soon   snow   began   to   fall.   Within   a   day   it   lay   some   15   centimeters    deep.   (2)                          But on the neighbouring heights the snow was much deeper and stayed for longer. Up there the wind blasted fiercely. Deep in our valley we felt only sudden gusts of wind; trees swayed but the branches held firm.
 
And yet we knew that there was reason for us to worry. The snow and wind were certainly inconvenient but they  did  not  really  trouble  us  greatly.  (3)  _             It  reminded  us  of  what  could  have  occurred  if circumstances had been different, if the flow of water from the hills had not, many years before, been controlled, held back by a series of dams.
 
In a short time the snow started to melt. Day after day, we watched furious clouds pile up high over the hills to the west. Sinister grey clouds extended over the   valleys. (4)                    We had seen enough of  the sky; now we began to watch the river, which every day was becoming fuller and wilder.
 
The snow was gradually washed away as more and more rain streamed from the clouds, but high up in the hills the reservoir was filling and was fast approaching danger level. And then it happened – for the first  time in years the reservoir overflowed. (5)                            
 
The river seemed maddened as the waters poured almost horizontally down to its lower stretches. Just a couple of metres from our cottage, the stream seemed wild beneath the  bridge. (76)                            For three days we prayed that it would stay below its wall. Fortunately, our prayers were answered as the dam held and the waters began to subside.
 
On many occasions through the centuries before the dam was built, the river had flooded the nearby villages in just such a range. Now, though, the dam restricts the flow of the river and usually all is well; the great mass of water from the hills, the product of snow and torrential rain, remains behind its barrier with just the occasional overflow. (7)                                   Thanks to this protection we can feel our home in the valley is still secure and safe.
 
A. It was the river, the Ryburn, which normally flowed so gently, that threatened us most.
B. And yet the immense power of all this water above us prevents us from ever believing ourselves to be completely safe in our home.
C. They twisted and turned, rising eastwards and upwards warning of what was to come.
D. It was far deeper than we’d ever seen it so near our home, lunging furiously at its banks.
E. We can thus enjoy, rather than fear, the huge clouds that hang over the valley, and can be thrilled by the tremendous power which we know the river possesses.
F. It almost completely blocked our lane and made the streamside path slippery and dangerous.
G. There in the heights it was like the Niagara Falls, as the water surged over the edge of the dam and poured into the stream below.
H. It was the year when the storms came early, before the calendar even hinted at winter, even before November was out.
(2) ____________________
A.
B.
C.
D.

a.   You are going to read an article written by someone who lives in a house in a valley. Seven sentences have been removed from the article. Choose from the sentences A – H the one which fits each gap . There is one extra sentence which you do not need to use. Write your answers in the box below.  (7 pts)
LIVING IN THE VALLEY
We had been living in our valley for sixteen months when we first realized the dangers that could exist in the surrounding hills and threaten our very survival.
 
(1)                Until that time, we had felt safe and sheltered in our valley below the protecting hills.
 
Soon   snow   began   to   fall.   Within   a   day   it   lay   some   15   centimeters    deep.   (2)                          But on the neighbouring heights the snow was much deeper and stayed for longer. Up there the wind blasted fiercely. Deep in our valley we felt only sudden gusts of wind; trees swayed but the branches held firm.
 
And yet we knew that there was reason for us to worry. The snow and wind were certainly inconvenient but they  did  not  really  trouble  us  greatly.  (3)  _             It  reminded  us  of  what  could  have  occurred  if circumstances had been different, if the flow of water from the hills had not, many years before, been controlled, held back by a series of dams.
 
In a short time the snow started to melt. Day after day, we watched furious clouds pile up high over the hills to the west. Sinister grey clouds extended over the   valleys. (4)                    We had seen enough of  the sky; now we began to watch the river, which every day was becoming fuller and wilder.
 
The snow was gradually washed away as more and more rain streamed from the clouds, but high up in the hills the reservoir was filling and was fast approaching danger level. And then it happened – for the first  time in years the reservoir overflowed. (5)                            
 
The river seemed maddened as the waters poured almost horizontally down to its lower stretches. Just a couple of metres from our cottage, the stream seemed wild beneath the  bridge. (76)                            For three days we prayed that it would stay below its wall. Fortunately, our prayers were answered as the dam held and the waters began to subside.
 
On many occasions through the centuries before the dam was built, the river had flooded the nearby villages in just such a range. Now, though, the dam restricts the flow of the river and usually all is well; the great mass of water from the hills, the product of snow and torrential rain, remains behind its barrier with just the occasional overflow. (7)                                   Thanks to this protection we can feel our home in the valley is still secure and safe.
 
A. It was the river, the Ryburn, which normally flowed so gently, that threatened us most.
B. And yet the immense power of all this water above us prevents us from ever believing ourselves to be completely safe in our home.
C. They twisted and turned, rising eastwards and upwards warning of what was to come.
D. It was far deeper than we’d ever seen it so near our home, lunging furiously at its banks.
E. We can thus enjoy, rather than fear, the huge clouds that hang over the valley, and can be thrilled by the tremendous power which we know the river possesses.
F. It almost completely blocked our lane and made the streamside path slippery and dangerous.
G. There in the heights it was like the Niagara Falls, as the water surged over the edge of the dam and poured into the stream below.
H. It was the year when the storms came early, before the calendar even hinted at winter, even before November was out.
(1) ____________________
A.
B.
C.
D.

 Read and circle the best option (A, B, C or D) for each space to complete the passage. Write your answers in the box below.  (10 pts)
 
The combination of music and study has long has long been a source of disagreement between adults and children. Parents and teachers alike maintain that silence is important when learning, (1)                                 youngsters insist that their favourite sounds help them concentrate.
 
Now a study shows that the grown-ups have    been (2)                all along. Psychologists in  Florida tested how fast students wrote essays with and without music in the background. They found that the sounds (3)
               progress down by about sixty words per hour. “This demonstrates clearly that it is difficult to   (4)
               with listening and writing at the same time,” said Dr Sarah Randall. She   also (5)                 to the conclusion that it is a myth that instrumental music is less distracting than vocals. “All types of music (6)
               the same effect,” she said in her report. “One’s ability to pay attention and write fluently is likely to be (7)                     by both vocal and instrumental music,” she added.
 
Dr Randall  claimed  the research (8)                 that the idea that music could improve     performance was wrong.  “Writing  an  essay is complex (9)                 . You are recalling information and putting it in (10)
              . An  additional stimulus  in  the form  of music is  bound  to  distract.  But  music is  not    the only distractor. What is particularly worrying is that more and more teenagers are studying in front of the television.”
(10) _____________
A.order
B.arrangement
C.line
D.pattern

 Read and circle the best option (A, B, C or D) for each space to complete the passage. Write your answers in the box below.  (10 pts)
 
The combination of music and study has long has long been a source of disagreement between adults and children. Parents and teachers alike maintain that silence is important when learning, (1)                                 youngsters insist that their favourite sounds help them concentrate.
 
Now a study shows that the grown-ups have    been (2)                all along. Psychologists in  Florida tested how fast students wrote essays with and without music in the background. They found that the sounds (3)
               progress down by about sixty words per hour. “This demonstrates clearly that it is difficult to   (4)
               with listening and writing at the same time,” said Dr Sarah Randall. She   also (5)                 to the conclusion that it is a myth that instrumental music is less distracting than vocals. “All types of music (6)
               the same effect,” she said in her report. “One’s ability to pay attention and write fluently is likely to be (7)                     by both vocal and instrumental music,” she added.
 
Dr Randall  claimed  the research (8)                 that the idea that music could improve     performance was wrong.  “Writing  an  essay is complex (9)                 . You are recalling information and putting it in (10)
              . An  additional stimulus  in  the form  of music is  bound  to  distract.  But  music is  not    the only distractor. What is particularly worrying is that more and more teenagers are studying in front of the television.”
(9) _____________
A.project
B.concern
C.scheme
D.task