De Thi Hoc Sinh Gioi Mon Tieng Anh
De Thi Hoc Sinh Gioi Mon Tieng Anh
De Thi Hoc Sinh Gioi Mon Tieng Anh
Part 1: Questions 1 – 10
Questions 5 – 10: Complete the form below. Write NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS
AND/OR A NUMBER for each answer.
REGISTRATION
Part 2: Questions 11 – 20
Page 1/7
Questions 13 – 20: Complete the table below.
Write NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS AND/OR A NUMBER for each answer.
II. LEXICO-GRAMMAR
Page 3/7
Exercise 3: There is one incorrect word in terms of spelling, grammar or usage in each
line of the following passage. Indicate and correct it.
III. READING
Exercise 1: Questions 1 – 13
China’s ‘violent philanthropist’ gives away fresh air.
Even through the thick Beijing smog, it is impossible to mistake the ebullient figure
shaking hands, signing autographs and barking at startled passersby: “Come on, two cans for
each one – free fresh air. Open it and drink it and breathe it! It keeps you fresh the whole day!”
It is the kind of offer that has made Chen Guangbiao a household name in China: giving away
thousands of tins of air to raise awareness of China‟s pollution. “If we don‟t act in the next 10
years, our descendants will have to carry oxygen tanks and wear masks all the time,” he said at
the publicity event in Beijing this month.
Chen, 44, is a multimillionaire entrepreneur who bills himself as the country‟s number
one philanthropist and environmentalist. In January, he lay under a sheet of wood and steel
while two cars drove over him, to demonstrate that the world would be better without cars. In
another comment on the drawbacks of motoring he smashed up a Mercedes Benz car. Recently
he put an advert in the New York Times proclaiming the disputed Diaoyu Islands – currently at
the heart of the territorial row with Japan – to be Chinese, and announced he was giving new
cars to drivers whose vehicles were destroyed in anti-Japanese protests – while simultaneously
promoting a cycling initiative. He also plans to give away $240,000 to young entrepreneurs in
the next weeks.
But he is best known for his personal deliveries to the victims of natural disasters. He arrived
in Sichuan with a fleet of heavy machinery after the earthquake in 2008. When the tsunami
struck Japan, he flew over with cash and goods. He has apparently an unsinkable self-belief. “I
want to record the name of Chen Guangbiao in Chinese history,” he said.
His party trick is to lift a bike using his teeth and spin it around in the air. It is, says
Chen, all down to kung fu training at the famous Shaolin temple. Chen grew up in the
Page 4/7
countryside near Nanjing, in such poverty that two of his siblings starved to death. He earned
his first cash – around 60 cents – carrying water from a well to villagers one summer, and
used some of the money to help pay for a neighbour‟s schooling. In recognition of his good
deed, a teacher pasted a red star on his face. “I ran around the classes … Every student wanted
to learn from me and do good things,” he explained.
He made his fortune recycling materials from demolished buildings and has vowed to
give it all away before his death. The Hurun rich list estimated his worth at $740m last year.
Already, he says, he has made donations worth $278m. Others rank far ahead of him in
independent lists of charitable donors and sceptics say it is hard to assess the real value of his
gifts since they are often in kind. He counters that other philanthropists give to charities in the
sectors they work in, with the hope of commercial returns.
Chen calls his high-profile tactics “violent philanthropy”. He says: “My individual
power is limited. I want to use my high-profile way to wake people up to take action together
to do good things. I can only awake them with my performance art and creativity.” Admirers
point out that most millionaires are doing little for their fellows. And Chen‟s stunts have, as he
predicted, got people talking about philanthropy and the environment. “We need these kinds of
people to tell us that if you want to help people you need to take responsibility,” says Wang
Lanjun, pausing to have her photo taken with him. “He‟s great!” enthused another passing
pedestrian. “He said I‟m great,” Chen points out. “You see? Ordinary people love me.”
Questions 1 – 5: Read the text and decide whether the statements are True (T) or False (F).
1. Chen Guangbiao has given out free oxygen masks to passersby in Beijing.
2. He has destroyed a luxury car.
3. He has taken heavy equipment to an area affected by an earthquake.
4. He has helped pay for the education of some students at his village school.
5. He has made a promise to give away all his money before he dies.
Questions 6 – 13: Read the text and choose the most suitable word in the box to fill in each
blank in the summary. There are more words than needed.
Chen Guangbiao is an extraordinary figure who started life in extreme (6) ________
and then succeeded in making a huge (7) _______ through recycling building materials. He is
famous in China for both his large (8) ________ to people in need and his spectacular publicity
(9)________ which aim to raise (10) _______ about key environmental issues. One of his
latest (11) ________ has been to give away cans of fresh air to publicise the threat of air
pollution. In addition, he has also organised events to show the significant (12) ________ of
using motor vehicles. The hope is that his campaigns will encourage individuals and
companies to take (13)________ for their impact on the environment.
Page 5/7
Exercise 2: Choose the best option to complete the passage.
A love of travelling
For Nigel Portman, a love of travelling began with what‟s (14) _______ a „gap year‟.
In common with many other British teenagers, he chose to take a year out before (15) _______
to study for his degree. After doing various jobs to (16)_______ some money, he left home to
gain some experience of life in different cultures, visiting America and Asia. The more
adventurous the young person, the (17) ________ the challenge they are likely to set
themselves for the gap year, and for some, like Nigel, it can (18) _______ in a thirst for
adventure.
Now that his university course has (19) ________ to an end, Nigel is just about to leave
on a three-year trip that will take him right around the world. What‟s more, he plans to make
the whole journey using only means of transport which are (20) _______ by natural energy. In
other words, he‟ll be (21) ________ mostly on bicycles and his own legs; and when there‟s an
ocean to cross, he won‟t be taking a (22) _______ cut by climbing aboard a plane, he‟ll be
joining the crew of a sailing ship (23) ________ .
As well as doing some mountain climbing and other outdoor pursuits along the way,
Nigel hopes to pass on to the people he meets the environmental message that lies behind the
whole idea.
IV. WRITING
Exercise 1: Complete the following sentences using FROM FOUR TO SIX WORDS
(including the given words) so that their meanings are close to the originals.
Exercise 2: Write a description of the table below (at least 120 words).
The table below shows the proportion of different categories of families living in poverty in
Australia in 1999.
-------------Hết-----------
Part 1:
1. C 6. Argentine/ Argentinian
2. B 7. 20/ twenty
3. A 8. (a) student
4. C 9. 62 Canada Street
5. (Martina) ECHEVARRIA 10. 01817648943
Part 2:
11 – 12. C/E in any order 17. human journey
13. main bell 18. work of art
14. well(-)known 19. (the) Flower Clock
15. (the) Steam Clock 20. computer
16. 1977
II. LEXICO-GRAMMAR: Total: 3 points
Exercise 1: Total: 1 point (0.05 point/each correct answer)
1. A 2. B 3. B 4. A 5. A
6. B 7. C 8. C 9. C 10. B
11. B 12. C 13. D 14. A 15. C
16. B 17. D 18. A 19. A 20. C
Exercise 3: Total: 1 point (0.05 point/each correct finding + 0.05 point/each correction)
31. Line 1: home => house 36. Line 6: acommodation => accommodation
32. Line 2: little => few 37. Line 7: last => late
33. Line 3: them => those 38. Line 8: stresses => stressed
34. Line 4: unemploy => unemployed 39. Line 9: entitle => entitled
35. Line 5: availably => available 40. Line 10: arguing => argue
Page 8/7
Exercise 2:
14. A 15. A 16. B 17. C 18. A
19. A 20. D 21. C 22. B 23. C
Exercise 3:
24. have 25. are 26. between 27. close
28. Whaling 29. taken 30. researcher
Cách tính lỗi: - 01 lỗi ngữ pháp (cấu trúc, từ vựng…) trừ 0.05
- 01 lỗi chính tả trừ 0.01
- Viết ít hơn số từ qui định trừ 0. 1
- Viết nhiều hơn số từ qui định không trừ điểm
-------------Hết-----------
Page 9/7