De de Xuat - Lao Cai - Tieng Anh Khoi 11
De de Xuat - Lao Cai - Tieng Anh Khoi 11
De de Xuat - Lao Cai - Tieng Anh Khoi 11
Trang 2/10
32. They sold 1 million cards in the first year of business – ________feat, given the problems many
businesses are facing.
A. no dice B. no mean C. no end D. no biggie
33. ________the rest of the family, she now saw where he got his temper from.
A. To have been met B. Having met C. To have met D. Having been met
34. It is a transitory work which lays the________for themes and styles found in the theater sixty years later.
A. initiative B. ideology C. groundwork D. breakthrough
35. Many of the company’s workers went on strike yesterday, leaving thousands of customers ________.
A. in the rough B. in the bag C. in the dock D. in the lurch
36. There________to have been thousands of new companies founded last year.
A. are reported B. have reported C. is reported D. has reported
37. There are already plans to make the £26,000 ________ into a hit single and show the ad in cinemas.
A. jingle B. twister C. jargon D. cliché
38. He wrote volumes of poetry which he illustrated himself under a(n)________name.
A. presumed B. subsumed C. assumed D. consumed
39. These days, radical change often comes ________ of the judiciary.
A. through the motions B. through the agency C. through the courts D. through the floor
40. Three auditors were accused of__________the men charged with fraud.
A. coming and going B. cutting and running C. huffing and buffing D. aiding
and abetting
41. In ________, the top 30 listed companies tend to get more money back from the government than they
pay in tax.
A. faceplate B. associate C. aggregate D. copperplate
42. Even in normal traffic, 20 minutes to get to the airport is________.
A. cutting it fine B. cutting to the chase C. cutting your losses D. cutting no ice
43. Sometimes she would give him money________ and he would help her with chores.
A. on the bias B. on the sly C. on the cusp D. on the cheap
44. The famous movie star has to have several people________ the whole time.
A. dancing attendance on her B. leading her a merry old dance
C. darkening her door D. landing on her feet
45. I really need a job and I was hoping you might ________for me with your boss.
A. put on the long finger B. put in a good word C. put out feelers D. put out to pasture
Your answers:
26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35.
36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44. 45.
Part 2: Give the correct form of each given word to complete the following sentences. Write your
answers in the numbered boxes. (10 points)
46. It is difficult to draft a law that makes sense today and ensure that it is not __________by technology
tomorrow. DISTANCE
47. Spirit points are added after the conclusion of the winter season and points are deducted for ejections and
other__________conducts. SPORTS
48. It is easy enough to say that the papers are vastly__________, that people have to be dropped or there
has to be voluntary retirement. MAN
49. His mother rehearsed his lines with him and by the time the play opened he was __________. WORD
50. The emergency government brought in a special law to prevent hoarding and __________. PROFIT
51. Even if sections of the public would look __________, we must be able to guide the social habits of the
country. ASK
52. __________ is the power of mind over matter - if you convince yourself that you are cured, you will be.
SUGGEST
53. This was not only__________security, it was a chance to play with the big numbers and see what
happened. COPPER
54. I never negotiated a corporate prenuptial agreement and never received a golden__________. HAND
Trang 3/10
55. At the start of every new collection my imagination goes into__________. DRIVE
Your answers:
46. 51.
47. 52.
48. 53.
49. 54.
50. 55.
III. READING (60 POINTS)
Part 1: Read the text below and think of the word which best fits each space. Use only ONE word in
each space. Write your answers in the space provided. (15 points)
The real value of pets
Now the growing body of research into the medical and social advantages of pet owneship has
confirmed what pet owners have always instituitively known: that pets are not just loving companions but
actually 56._________us good. Researchers have established the value of pets in soothing and reassuring
humans, particularly when ill, lonely or in distress. Perhaps the unquestioning love and approval pets give us
is 57._________that we don’t always get from our human nearest and dearest.
Our makeshift understanding of psychology 58._________many of us to view very close
repationships with pets with suspicion. Children couples in particular give 59._________to speculation, but
a consultant in animal behavior says, “There is no evidence that a pet is a direct substitute 6 0._________ a
child.” And while many adults feel foolish if 61._________ talking to their pets, they have no need to. The
expert say you cannot have a close relationship with a pet without 62._________ it as a person and that
talking to a pet is not unhealthy simply a way of establishing rapport.
The wobbling helplessness of a young puppy or a fluffy kitten stirs protective instincts deep within
us and prompts many parents to buy pets for their children in the 63._________of instilling a sense of
responsibility and caring and acceptance of the facts of life and 64._________. But animals don’t have to be
soft and cuddly to 65._________out the best in us. A social worker encouraged aggressive boys to handle
ferrets – “If handled correctly, they respond with friendship; if incorrectly, they bite.
Your answers:
56. 57. 58. 59. 60.
61. 62. 63. 64. 65.
Part 2: Read the article below and choose the answer (A, B, C or D) which you think fits best
according to the text. (10 points)
Four stages of planetary development
The planet Earth has passed through four-stages of planetary development. All terrestrial planets
pass through these same stages to some degree, but some planets evolved further or were affected in
different ways.
The Four Stages
The first stage of planetary evolution is differentiation, the separation of material according to
density. Earth now has a dense core and a lower-density crust, and that structure must have originated very
early in its history. Differentiation would have occurred easily if Earth were molten when it was young. Two
sources of energy could have heated Earth. First, heat of formation was released by in-falling material. A
meteorite hitting Earth at high velocity converts most of its energy of motion into heat, and the impacts of a
large number of meteorites would have released tremendous heat. If Earth formed rapidly, this heat
would have accumulated much more rapidly than it could leak away, and Earth was probably molten
when it formed. A second source of heat requires more time to develop. The decay of radioactive elements
trapped in the Earth releases heat gradually; but, as soon as Earth formed, that heat began to accumulate and
helped melt Earth. That would have helped the planet differentiate.
While Earth was still in a molten state, meteorites could leave no trace, but in the second stage in
planetary evolution, cratering, the young Earth was battered by meteorites that pulverized the newly
forming crust. The largest meteorites blasted out crater basins hundreds of kilometers in diameter. As the
solar nebula cleared, the amount of debris decreased, and after the late heavy bombardment, the level of
cratering fell to its present low level. Although meteorites still occasionally strike Earth and dig craters,
Trang 4/10
cratering is no longer the dominant influence on Earth's geology. As you compare other worlds with Earth,
you will discover traces of this intense period of cratering, on every old surface in the solar system.
The third stage, flooding, no doubt began while cratering was still intense. The fracturing of the crust
and the heating produced by radioactive decay allowed molten rock just below the crust to well up through
fissures and flood the deeper basins. You will find such flooded basins with solidified lava flows on other
worlds, such as the moon, but all traces of this early lava flooding have been destroyed by later geological
activity in Earth's crust. On Earth, flooding continued as the atmosphere cooled and water fell as rain, filling
the deepest basins to produce the first oceans. [A] Notice that on Earth flooding involves both lava and
water, a circumstance that we will not find on most worlds. [B]
The fourth stage, slow surface evolution, has continued for the last 3.5 billion years or more. [C]
Earth’s surface is constantly changing as sections of crust slide over each other, push up mountains, and
shift continents. [D] Almost all traces of the first billion years of Earth’s geology have been destroyed by the
active crust and erosion.
Earth as a Planet
All terrestrial planets pass through these four stages, but some have emphasized one stage over
another, and some planets have failed to progress fully through the four stages. Earth is a good standard for
comparative planetology because every major process on any rocky world in our solar system is represented
in some form on Earth.
Nevertheless, Earth is peculiar in two ways. First, it has large amounts of liquid water on its surface.
Fully 75 percent of its surface is covered by this liquid; no other planet in our solar system is known to have
such extensive liquid water on its surface. Water not only fills the oceans but also evaporates into the
atmosphere, forms clouds, and then falls as rain. Water falling on the continents flows downhill to form
rivers that flow back to the sea, and in so doing, the water produces intense erosion. You will not see such
intense erosion on most worlds. Liquid water is, in fact, a rare material on most planets. Your home planet is
special in a second way. Some of the matter on the surface of this world is alive, and a small part of that
living matter is aware. No one is sure how the presence of living matter has affected the evolution of Earth,
but this process seems to be totally missing from other worlds in our solar system. Furthermore, the thinking
part of life on Earth, humankind, is actively altering our planet.
66. Why does the author mention the ‘Earth’ in paragraph 1?
A. To explain the stages in planetary development for the Earth in detail
B. To contrast the evolution of the Earth with that of other planets
C. To demonstrate that the Earth passed through similar stages to those of most planets
D. To give an example of exploration of the terrestrial planets
67. Which of the sentences below best expresses the information in the highlighted statement in the passage?
A. The Earth may have been liquid because the heat collected faster than it dissipated if the formation took
place quickly.
B. Because of-the rapid formation of the Earth, the crust took a long time to cool before it became a solid.
C. The liquid core of the Earth was created when the planet first formed because the heat was so high and
there was little cooling.
D. The cooling caused the Earth to form much more quickly as it met with the intense heat of the new
planet.
68. The word ‘pulverized’ in the passage is closest in meaning to ________.
A. melted into liquid B. broken into small parts C. frozen very hard D. washed very clean
69. What can be inferred about radioactive matter?
A. It floods the planet’s crust. B. It generates intense heat.
C. It is an important stage. D. It is revealed by later activity.
70. According to paragraph 4, how were the oceans formed?
A. Ice gouged out depressions in the Earth. B. Rain filled the craters made by meteorites.
C. Earthquakes shifted the continents. D. Molten rock and lava flooded the basins.
71. According to the passage, which stage occurs after cratering?
A. Flooding B. Slow surface evolution C. Differentiation D. Erosion
72. What is the author’s opinion of life on other planets?
Trang 5/10
A. She does not know whether life is present on other planets.
B. She does not express an opinion about life on other planets.
C. She is certain that no life exists on any planet except Earth.
D. She thinks that there is probably life on other planets.
73. Look at the four squares that show where the following sentence could be inserted in the passage. ‘At
the same time, moving air and water erode the surface and wear away geological features.’
A. [A] B. [B] C. [C] D. [D]
74. The word ‘process’ in the passage is closest in meaning to________.
A. regulation B. improvement C. procedure D. definition
75. All of the following are reasons why the Earth is a good model of planetary development for purposes of
comparison with other planets EXCEPT_________.
A. The Earth has gone through all four stages of planetary evolution.
B. Life on Earth has affected the evolution in a number of important ways.
C. All of the fundamental processes on terrestrial planets have occurred on Earth.
D. There is evidence of extensive cratering both on Earth and on all other planets
Your answers:
66. 67. 68. 69. 70. 71. 72. 73. 74. 75.
Part 3: Read the passage and do the tasks that follow. (13 points)
The reading passage has seven paragraphs A-G. Choose the correct heading for each paragraph from
the list of headings below.
List of Headings
Trang 8/10
customers lined up for a spot on a yearlong waiting list, eager to shell out up to $1,700 for one of his
handmade creations.
C. The instrument’s melody is often compared to that of the humpback whale - so much so that
conservation groups have used the apparatus to summon cetaceans. The waterphone is classified as a
percussion instrument, but it has a greater range than any of its comrades in that category. There is no part of
the gadget that doesn't make music - one can strike the rods, hit or rub the underside of the base, or finger-
drum on the neck.
D. A few years later, Hubbert was playing a gig at a local yacht club, and Waters, not recognizing
him, came up to praise the show. Hubbert took off his sunglasses and reintroduced himself; they had a fond
reunion. Waters started attending Hubbert’s gigs, and Hubbert would stop by Waters’ home studio to chat
about the waterphone craft.
E. That idea might have pleased Waters, a trained painter, kinetic sculptor, bamboo enthusiast, and
lifelong creator who would often walk into a room and begin drumming on any interesting wood or brass
objects he saw, according to his daughter, Rayme Waters.
F. It might call to mind the soundtracks of 1980s-era horror and ghost movies, and with good reason.
The instrument's low, haunting moans and eerie, high-pitched squeals - like screeching brakes - have
become known as the sound of suspense in films like Poltergeist, The Matrix, Star Trek - The Motion
Picture, Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, and Let the Right One In.
G. Shortly after that, Hollywood came knocking. An acquaintance of Waters' who worked as a
sound-effects artist told him the waterphone had potential, and before long, composers began incorporating
the instrument into film and TV scores. Thrillers were a natural fit.
H. He drags a bow across a few of them, producing a piercing, metallic shriek. Satisfied with this, he
tilts the instrument to one side, and this is where the sound goes wonky as tones bend upward, dip down, and
shift sideways because the six ounces of water in the device’s base echo and resonate.
Your answers:
89. 90. 91. 92. 93. 94. 95.
Part 5: You are going to read a set of science book reviews. For questions 96–105, choose from the
reviews (A-D). The reviews may be chosen more than once. Write your answer in the numbered
boxes. (15 points)
In which review are the following mentioned?
96. ______The warning that the author does not always simplify the subject matter for the reader
97. ______An admission of past ignorance on the reviewer’s part
98. ______The subject matter being dealt with in an impressive amount of detail
99. ______The book having both a narrative and simple academic approach
100. ______The depressing revelations the book makes about certain areas of its subject matter
101. ______The book’s combination of established fact and doubt about the subject
102. ______The reviewer’s sense of satisfaction concerning a personal achievement
103. ______A comparison between two very different causes of anxiety
104. ______Praise for the author’s clarity of thinking and enthusiasm for the subject
105. ______A mild criticism about some mistakes which occur in the book
This month’s new science books
A. Maggie McDonald: Small Wonder by Barbara Kingsolver
White letters chalked on a blackboard in Sri Lanka are the first things I remember reading. The pleasure of
deciphering that first word (C-A-T, of course) remains with me to this day. By age 11, I read a book a day,
and at 14 I was being tested by an irritated teacher and school librarian who demanded proof that I was
actually reading my library books. But there are only so many authors even the most avid of readers can
digest, and some evaded me. Barbara Kingsolver was one. I had her filed in a ‘sentimental nature-lover:
must avoid ‘category. Friends kept recommending her and a few years ago, I read my first Kingsolver and
ditched my ill-founded prejudice. She’s a biologist by training and a wonderful writer. Possessed of an
analytical mind, she’s capable of putting it all down with real passion: a rare find. If you haven’t tried her
yet, do! Small Wonder is Kingsolver the essayist, elegant and insightful, and a great place to set out from
before you tackle her backlist. Here you’ll find the San Pedro river on the edge of survival, the energy bill
Trang 9/10
behind the production of a five-calorie strawberry, and scientist Charles Darwin in all his complexity
summed up in a mere four clear paragraphs.
B. Sue Bowler: Earthshaking Science by Susan Elizabeth Hough
Anyone who has ever driven an elderly, ailing car knows the feeling: it’s going to break down, but who
knows when, where and what part of the system will fail? Predicting earthquakes is much the same. Tidy
forecasts of what, when, where and how much it will cost are as rare for quakes as for car repairs, and about
as reliable. Have earthquakes seismologists failed, then? Susan Elizabeth Hough says not, and Earthshaking
Science sets out her case. This book gives us an excellent outline of how, why and where earthquakes
happen together with a clear-eyed look at the subject’s inherent uncertainties. This is not a book that
proposes simplistic answers. It presents a real picture of a lively research field in all its gritty glory, written
with a sharp eye for the absurdities of scientific life.
The focus on uncertainty has the paradoxical effect of highlighting the areas in which seismologists are
confident, which makes it easier to deal with the ambiguities. Hough includes a careful and informative
discussion of the earthquake risk across the US. Although her findings do not make easy reading, given the
unexpected changes of intraplate quakes, it is an excellent analysis of what to worry about and where.
Overall, this is an intelligent look at a broad field of science that affects many lives. Anyone heading for an
earthquake area should buy a copy.
C. Adrian Barnett: Zoo by Eric Baratay
What’s the attraction of gazing at captive animals? It’s a good question and others have often sketched out
an answer. But in Zoo, Eric Baratay gives us an unprecedented, in-depth answer. He explains why zoos
lodge in the human psyche, their place in society, and how they developed over time. Placing them in their
social and cultural context, Zoo traces the development of animal collections from medieval bear fights
through the menagerie of the French king Louis XIV to modern captive breeding centers. Combining
architectural analysis and political history, the author shows that the desire to display our domination over
nature has long been a hidden feature of zoos.
The text has been translated from the French and in places, not very successfully. A trained biologist on the
translation team might have weeded out appalling zoological errors such as describing the gannet as a ‘rare
and much sought after’ bird, which it is definitely not. But these are forgivable oversights in a wonderful
book that is acute at tracing themes of modern animal husbandry. While the book neither apologizes for nor
criticizes the modern zoo, the extensive appendices tell a grim story. They contain a wealth of statistics on
the death rate in collections, and the success rate of captive breeding. An absolute must for those interested
in zoo history –or anyone fascinated by homosapiens’ changing relationship with our fellow creatures.
D. Ben Longstaff: Journey from the Center of the Sun by Jack B. Zirker
Up, down, in or out. If that’s about as much attention as you pay the Sun, you’re ignoring something
incredible. Did you know that it loses a million tonnes every second in the form of light alone? That’s just
for starters. In Journey from the Center of the Sun, Jack Zirker goes on a breakneck trip from its hellish core
out into the realm of the planets, explaining as much as possible about our star on the way. His story-meets-
textbook approach mainly avoids confusing scientific equations, but enables him to delve into lots of physics
from massive sound waves to exploding pieces of sun the size of Asia.
Zirker’s explanations are clear and sharp, although don’t expect him to lead you by the hand. You do need to
find the patience for a few serious pages of physics and daunting diagrams, but that’s just great news if you
want plenty of fascinating details as well as the grand overview. His informal style keeps things moving
along swiftly, while balancing the lastest findings with background on the pioneers of the field. He shows
how solar research has progressed from inspired speculation into a flourishing science.
Your answers:
96. 97. 98. 99. 100. 101. 102. 103. 104. 105.
Cán bộ coi thi không giải thích gì thêm.
Trang 10/10