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Tiêu đề Bộ 5 đề thi chọn học sinh giỏi môn tiếng anh 12 có đáp án năm 2021
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Chuyên ngành Tiếng Anh
Thể loại Đề thi
Năm xuất bản 2021
Thành phố Hà Nội
Định dạng
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Nội dung

The rules of etiquette in American restaurants depend upon a number of factors: the physical location of the restaurant, e.g., rural or urban; the type of restaurant, e.g., informal or [r]

Trang 1

BỘ 5 ĐỀ THI CHỌN HỌC SINH GIỎI MÔN TIẾNG ANH 12

NĂM 2021 CÓ ĐÁP ÁN TRƯỜNG THPT LÝ THÁI TỔ

1 Last year how many people were undernourished?

C thirty percent of the people D thirteen hundred people

2 In Nairobi, Kenya, Ms Nierenberg found women famers growing vegetables ………

3 How many countries did Danielle Nierenberg from the Worldwatch Institute in

Washington spend a year visiting?

A twenty B twelve C twenty – five D twenty - four

4 What did the women use to fill with soil?

5 The reason why food get wasted is………

A Farmers lacked good seeds and fertilizer

B It rained heavily everyday

C No one wanted to consume their products

D Their products are not good enough

6 In Uganda, what was taught in school?

C how to grow local crop D how to earn money

7 What are the advantages of the breeding of local kinds of livestock in South Africa and Kenya?

A These animals can survive cold conditions

B These animals may produce less milk or meat than other breeds, but they can survive heat and drought conditions

C These animals can produce more meat than other breeds

D These animals produce more milk than other breeds

8 There are a lot of lessons that people in the Western world or developing countries

can learn from Africa

9 Sub – Saharan Africa had the world’s highest hunger rate

Trang 2

A True B False C No information

10 People in Kenya didn’t try to find ways to make their live better

B VOCABULARY (4p)

Choose the best word from A, B, C, and D that fits each blank

1 The prospects of picking up any survivors are now………

2 Sheila couldn’t attend the meeting as the date…… with her holidays

3 The general is always …………about his past campaigns

A boasting B praising C complimenting D congratulating

4 You had agreed to take part in our anti-war march, why did you cop out?

5 His success……….his mother’s heart

6 A newspaper’s opinions are given in its………

A cartoon B editorial C reports D titles

7 Mr Brown is not a serious investor, but he likes to…….in the stock market

8 ………are the formal rules of correct or polite behavior among people using the Internet

A Traffic rules B Family rules C Codes of etiquettes D Codes of netiquettes

9 I can’t possibly lend you any more money, it is quite out of the……

10 The dish was so tasty that I asked for a second………

C PHONETICS (2p)

Question I Choose one word whose underlined part is pronounced differently from the

others by circling A, B, C or D (1)

1 A etiquette B conqueror C statuesque D bequest

2 A measure B dreadful C treasure D breathe

3 A confusedly B wickedly C allegedly D supposedly

4 A ugali B umpire C ulcer D umber

5 A paths B wither C marathon D although

Question II Choose one word whose stress pattern is different from the others by

circling A, B, C or D (1)

1 A compromise B picturesque C European D guarantee

2 A appliance B romantic C dynamic D homecoming

3 A internal B interval C external D interpret

Trang 3

4 A viticulture B concertina C preferential D misbegotten

5 A minority B handicap C destiny D voluntary

D STRUCTURE AND GRAMMAR (2p)

1 I use weed-killer to……….the weeds in the garden

A get rid of B get out of C get away with D get in the way with

2 After the funeral, the residents of the apartment building……

A sent to the cemetery each week flowers faithfully

B sent faithfully flowers all week to the cemetery

C sent flowers faithfully to the cemetery each week

D sent each week faithfully to the cemetery flowers

3 The incidence of anorexia nervosa,………., is growing in industrially advanced societies

A is an eating disorder B an eating disorder which

C for which an eating disorder D an eating disorder

4 The saying that “Misfortunes never ………” means that many problems can happen at the

same time

5 ………is lubricated can affect the longevity of the moving parts that rub together

A How often a machine B A machine often

C Often a machine D How often machines

6 …… , an author probably most famous for his tales of terror, also dabbled in some science

fiction

A To Edgar Allen Poe B For Edgar Allen Poe to be

C Edgar Allen Poe was D Edgar Allen Poe

7 Superconductivity will revolutionize the way that energy is used for the next millennium,

and…….the first truly superconductive substance will be remembered as a technological hero

A what the discovery of B the discovery of

C whoever discovers D whose discovery of

8 In Michigan,………over 600 feet deep

A salt deposits B where salt deposits are

C having salt deposits D there are salt deposits

9 ……… invisible to the unaided eye, ultraviolet light can be detected in a number of ways

A Although is B Although C Despite D Even though it

10 Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, ……of you is first in line?

E PREPOSITIONS AND PHRASAL VERBS (4p)

1 He’s not exactly rich but he certainly earns enough money to……

Trang 4

A get through B get by C get over D get up

2 I had to …… 90$ for a parking fine

3 The word “chaos” has……… a special scientific meaning

A included in B held of C taken on D gasped up

4 He wasn’t sure if he’d be any good at tennis, but actually he took…… it immediately

5 The teacher at school went………with flu one after the other

6 This hotel is so awesome, man I could just…….on this view for the whole weekend

A bliss out B bliss into C bliss down D bliss across

7 The effects of the anesthetic wore………after a couple of hours

8 Owing to circumstances …… our control, the flight to Rome has been cancelled

9 If you think I’m wrong, check in the encyclopedia I’m sure it will bear me……

10 This is a very important decision All our lives are…… stake

personality in the earliest stages of human development

Some (4) …… of character may to some extent be hereditary simulating the (5) … that identify our parents Others may (6) …… from the conditions experienced during pregnancy

and infancy in this way reflecting the parents' approach towards rearing their offspring

Consequently, the environmental factor plays a (7) ……… role in strengthening or

eliminating certain behavioral systems making an individual more prone to comfort to the

patterns that deserve a prize

Undoubtedly, human personality (8) …… the most profound and irreversible formation

during the first period of its development, yet, certain characteristics may still be

(9) to considerable changes made by (10) … … circumstances and situations

2 A behaviors B circumstances C hobbies D character

Trang 5

5 A issues B circumstances C foundations D attributes

Question II: Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to each of the questions (4p)

Passage 1 (2p):

The rules of etiquette in American restaurants depend upon a number of factors: the physical

location of the restaurant, e.g., rural or urban; the type of restaurant, e.g., informal or formal;

and certain standards that are more universal In other words, some standards of etiquette vary significantly while other standards apply almost anywhere Learning the proper etiquette in a

particular type of restaurant in a particular area may sometimes require instruction, but more

commonly it simply requires sensitivity and experience For example, while it is acceptable to

read a magazine in a coffee shop, it is inappropriate to do the same in a more luxurious

setting And, if you are eating in a very rustic setting it may be fine to tuck your napkin into your shirt, but if you are in a sophisticated urban restaurant this behavior would demonstrate a lack

of manners It is safe to say, however, that in virtually every restaurant it is unacceptable to

indiscriminately throw your food on the floor The conclusion we can most likely draw from the above is that while the types and locations of restaurants determine etiquette appropriate to

them, some rules apply to all restaurants

1 With what topic is this passage primarily concerned?

A Rules of etiquette B Instruction in proper etiquette

C The importance of good manners D Variable and universal standards of etiquette

2 According to the passage, which of the following is a universal rule of etiquette?

A tucking a napkin in your shirt B not throwing food on the floor

C reading a magazine at a coffee shop D eating in rustic settings

3 According to the passage, requires sensitivity and experience

A learning the proper etiquette B asking for instructions

C knowing the type of restaurant D knowing about an area

4 The word "sophisticated" in the passage could best be replaced by

A expensive B cultured C famous D exclusive

5 The author uses the phrase "safe to say" in order to demonstrate that the idea is

A somewhat innocent B quite certain C very clever D commonly reported

6 The word "indiscriminately" could best be replaced by

A randomly B angrily C noisily D destructively

7 What is the author's main purpose in this passage?

A to assist people in learning sophisticated manners

B to describe variations in restaurant manners

C to simplify rules of restaurant etiquette

D to compare sophisticated and rustic restaurants

8 What does the word “it” in the passage refer to?

A Learning the proper etiquette B Clear instruction

C Knowing the type of restaurant D Sensitivity

9 Which of the following could best replace the word “luxurious” in the passage?

Trang 6

A lurid B austere C elegant D romantic

10 Which of the following words is most similar to the meaning of “rustic” in the

a real heroine, summed up the national mood there with the headline "Well done, Michel, bravo Ellen"

As with many spectacular achievers, the signs were there from an early age, even in the unpromising nautical terrain of landlocked Derbyshire Her great-grandparents were sailing people and a great-uncle was a merchant seaman, but any real link with the sea is tenuous There was, however, an Auntie Thea who lived on the east coast of England and had a 26-foot sailing boat called Cabaret It took just one trip on the open sea with her aunt to spark off Ellen's lifelong passion She was eight years old After that she began saving her pocket money and spent all her spare time reading sailing books in the library, absorbing information like a sponge With her savings and the help of her grandmother she bought an 8-foot fiberglass dinghy, and from that moment on there was no keeping her away from the water

Sailing around Britain single-handed at the age of 18 was just the start; Ellen had long since set her sights on the Vendee But finding the money to undertake round-the-world voyages is no easy feat She wrote 2,000 letters requesting sponsorship and received just two replies, one, happily, from the Kingfisher company who were looking to expand into France And in terms of race preparation, if thoroughness was the key of success, Ellen could certainly be considered one of the favourites In the eight months leading up to the start of the race, she sailed no fewer than 60,000 miles at the helm of her 60-foot Kingfisher, far more than the rest of the fleet put together in the same period

During her three months at sea MacArthur negotiated deadly icebergs, gigantic waves and force winds She endured the freezing cold of the Arctic and suffered the blistering heat of the windless doldrums Racing conditions meant sleeping in 10-minute bursts, a survival suit that stayed on for weeks at a time and hands and wrists covered in sores and cuts Food was dried

gale-or frozen Water came from desalinatgale-or, which passes sea water through a membrane "You don't really wash in the icy waters of the southern ocean", she laughs "Anyway, there's no one to tell you that you smell."

As Kingfisher crossed the fishing line Ellen was surrounded by hundreds of spectator boats and

a cheering crowd of 200,000 lined the shore Stepping off her yacht she looked remarkably composed and seemed to take the change from solitude to public adulation very much in her stride Her thoughts, she later confessed, were on the realization that she had fulfilled the ambition that had dominated her life for the previous four or five years "Throughout that time my sole focus had been crossing the finished line, and in the fastest possible time." Now she could

Trang 7

savour that moment But despite MacArthur's belief that everyone who finishes the Vendee is a winner, she still feels

a sense of disappointment that, having taken the lead from the eventual winner Michel Desjoyaux

10 days from the finish, she did not quite have the energy or good fortune to turn her advantage into victory "You have to believe you can win from the start." she asserts "Deep down you're a competitor, you don't climb the mast and come back black and blue just for a cruise You do it

The public will now be hoping to see a suitable encore, some new feat of endurance to justify her celebrity status For Ellen can no longer claim, as she did in her post-race press conference, to

be the simple Derbyshare girl with "no mobile, no credit cards, no money, no nothing"; she is a heroine and an inspiration to others of her generation As if to reinforce this, and despite her reluctance to take on this role, she later commented: "If there's one thing I've learned in this past year, it's that deep down in your heart, if you have a dream, then you can and must make it happen."

Dinghy: /ˈdɪŋi/a small open boat that you sail or row

Gale-force winds: extremely strong winds

Blistering: extremely hot in a way that is uncomfortable

Doldrums: a lack of activity or improvement

Encore: an extra short performance given at the end of a concert or other performance; a

request for this made by an audience calling out

Bursts: a short period of intense activity or strong emotion that often starts suddenly

Questions

1 Ellen MacArthur was the winner in the Vendee Globe event?

2 At the time of her achievement we learn that Ellen ………

A Enjoyed only short-lived success

B Was more famous in France than anywhere else

C Attracted more attention than Michael Desjoyaux

D Became popular because of her size

3 Where did Ellen's initial interest in sailing come from?

A She came from a family of sailing enthusiasts

B She went to see one of her relatives

C She read widely on the subject

D She lived near the sea

4 The writer suggests that one cause of discomfort for Ellen at sea was ………

A The shortage of water

B Her failure to sleep

C Extremes of temperature

D A lack of cooking facilities

5 According to the writer, when Ellen finished the race, she was …………

A Overwhelmed by her new-found fame

B Surprised by the number of people who came to greet her

C Able to reflect on her achievement

D Delighted to be amongst people again

6 According to the writer, Ellen ………

A Thinks she deserved to win the race

Trang 8

B Has mixed feelings about the outcome of the race

C Knew she would win the race

D Thinks Michel Desjoyaux was lucky to beat her

7 Which of the following views does the writer express in the last paragraph?

A She has the power to motivate

B She has no right to fame yet

C Her comments lack depth

D She needs to change her lifestyle

8 The word “single-handed” in the fourth paragraph means……

A without any help from anyone else

B using only one of one’s hands to row

C on a boat with only one paddle

D on a boat with only one sail

9 Ellen MacArthur wrote 2000 letters requesting sponsorship and only Kingfisher

Company replied

10 Ellen MacArthur was a good-looking, caring and intelligent girl when she was small

ĐÁP ÁN

A Listening (2p)

You will hear Alex Villarreal with an Agriculture Report For each question, choose the

correct answer

1 Last year how many people were undernourished?

C thirty percent of the people D thirteen hundred people

2 In Nairobi, Kenya, Ms Nierenberg found women famers growing vegetables ………

3 How many countries did Danielle Nierenberg from the Worldwatch Institute in

Washington spend a year visiting?

A twenty B twelve C twenty – five D twenty - four

4 What did the women use to fill with soil?

5 The reason why food get wasted is………

A Farmers lacked good seeds and fertilizer

B It rained heavily everyday

C No one wanted to consume their products

D Their products are not good enough

6 In Uganda, what was taught in school?

Trang 9

C how to grow local crop D how to earn money

7 What are the advantages of the breeding of local kinds of livestock in South Africa and Kenya?

A These animals can survive cold conditions

B These animals may produce less milk or meat than other breeds, but they can survive heat and drought conditions

C These animals can produce more meat than other breeds

D These animals produce more milk than other breeds

8 There are a lot of lessons that people in the Western world or developing countries

can learn from Africa

9 Sub – Saharan Africa had the world’s highest hunger rate

10 People in Kenya didn’t try to find ways to make their live better

Script:

I’m Alex Villarreal with the VOA Special English Agriculture Report Sub- Saharan Africa has the world’s highest hunger rate The United Nations says thirty percent of the people were undernourished last year But a new report says African farmers also have ideas that could help the world fight hunger and poverty Danielle Nierenberg from the Worldwatch Institute in Washington spent a year visiting twenty-five countries south of the Sahara In Nairobi, Kenya, for example, Ms, Nierenberg found women farmers growing vegetables just outside their doorsteps in the Kibera settlement She says the area is crowded, dirty and noisy But the people are finding ways to make their lives better The women use old sacks filled with soil They cut holes in the sides of the tall bags so air gets to the seeds The women feed the vegetables to their families and sell their surplus

They use the money to send their children to school Last year, an estimated nine hundred twenty-five million people worldwide did not get enough to eat

Half of all people in the world now live in and around cities Researchers like Ms Nierenberg are looking increasingly at creative ideas to feed those who are malnourished

She said there are a lot of lessons that people in the Western world can learn from Africa And what they are doing can be done in other developing countries Farmers in the developing world lose between twenty and forty percent of their harvest before it ever reaches market

Asma Lateef from the group Bread for the World says there are many reasons why food gets wasted

Farmers are without electricity and cold storage They lack good seeds and fertilizer They lack good roads

Ms Lateef says conditions like these keep small farmers in poverty Danielle Nierenberg says more attention needs to be paid to protecting harvests

In Nigeria, village processing centers are helping farmers reduce their losses and earn more money

Trang 10

The centers process cassava, a root vegetable, into basic food products In Uganda, the Worldwatch report says some schools are teaching children how to grow local crops

And in South Africa and Kenya the report praises the breeding of local kinds of livestock These animals may produce less milk or meat than other breeds, but they can survive heat and drought conditions

The report is called "State of the World 2011: Innovations That Nourish the Planet

For VOA Special English I'm Alex Villarreal

B VOCABULARY (4p)

Choose the best word from A, B, C, and D that fits each blank

1 The prospects of picking up any survivors are now………

2 Sheila couldn’t attend the meeting as the date…… with her holidays

3 The general is always …………about his past campaigns

A boasting B praising C complimenting D congratulating

4 You had agreed to take part in our anti-war march, why did you cop out?

5 His success……….his mother’s heart

6 A newspaper’s opinions are given in its………

A cartoon B editorial C reports D titles

7 Mr Brown is not a serious investor, but he likes to…….in the stock market

8 ………are the formal rules of correct or polite behavior among people using the Internet

A Traffic rules B Family rules C Codes of etiquettes D Codes of netiquettes

9 I can’t possibly lend you any more money, it is quite out of the……

10 The dish was so tasty that I asked for a second………

C PHONETICS (2p)

Question I Choose one word whose underlined part is pronounced differently from the

others by circling A, B, C or D (1)

6 A etiquette B conqueror C statuesque D bequest

7 A measure B dreadful C treasure D breathe

8 A confusedly B wickedly C allegedly D supposedly

9 A ugali B umpire C ulcer D umber

Trang 11

Question II Choose one word whose stress pattern is different from the others by

circling A, B, C or D (1)

2 A compromise B picturesque C European D guarantee

2 A appliance B romantic C dynamic D homecoming

3 A internal B interval C external D interpret

4 A viticulture B concertina C preferential D misbegotten

5 A minority B handicap C destiny D voluntary

D STRUCTURE AND GRAMMAR (2p)

1 I use weed-killer to……….the weeds in the garden

A get rid of B get out of C get away with D get in the way with

2 After the funeral, the residents of the apartment building……

A sent to the cemetery each week flowers faithfully

B sent faithfully flowers all week to the cemetery

C sent flowers faithfully to the cemetery each week

D sent each week faithfully to the cemetery flowers

3 The incidence of anorexia nervosa,………., is growing in industrially advanced societies

A is an eating disorder B an eating disorder which

C for which an eating disorder D an eating disorder

4 The saying that “Misfortunes never ………” means that many problems can happen at the

same time

5 ………is lubricated can affect the longevity of the moving parts that rub together

A How often a machine B A machine often

C Often a machine D How often machines

6 …… , an author probably most famous for his tales of terror, also dabbled in some science

fiction

A To Edgar Allen Poe B For Edgar Allen Poe to be

C Edgar Allen Poe was D Edgar Allen Poe

7 Superconductivity will revolutionize the way that energy is used for the next millennium,

and…….the first truly superconductive substance will be remembered as a technological hero

A what the discovery of B the discovery of

C whoever discovers D whose discovery of

8 In Michigan,………over 600 feet deep

A salt deposits B where salt deposits are

C having salt deposits D there are salt deposits

9 ……… invisible to the unaided eye, ultraviolet light can be detected in a number of ways

A Although is B Although C Despite D Even though it

Trang 12

10 Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, ……of you is first in line?

E PREPOSITIONS AND PHRASAL VERBS (4p)

1 He’s not exactly rich but he certainly earns enough money to……

2 I had to …… 90$ for a parking fine

3 The word “chaos” has……… a special scientific meaning

A included in B held of C taken on D gasped up

4 He wasn’t sure if he’d be any good at tennis, but actually he took…… it immediately

5 The teacher at school went………with flu one after the other

6 This hotel is so awesome, man I could just…….on this view for the whole weekend

A bliss out B bliss into C bliss down D bliss across

7 The effects of the anesthetic wore………after a couple of hours

8 Owing to circumstances …… our control, the flight to Rome has been cancelled

9 If you think I’m wrong, check in the encyclopedia I’m sure it will bear me……

10 This is a very important decision All our lives are…… stake

BEHAVIOURS……… , our reactions and temperaments are unparalleled on (3) ACCOUNT…

of the diversified processes that mold our personality in the earliest stages of human

Consequently, the environmental factor plays a (7) CRUCIAL role in strengthening or

eliminating certain behavioral systems making an individual more prone to comfort to the

patterns that deserve a prize

Undoubtedly, human personality (8) UNDERGOES…… the most profound and

irreversible formation during the first period of its development, yet, certain characteristics may

Trang 13

still be (9) SUBJECT to considerable changes made by (10) DIFFERENT …

circumstances and situations

2 A behaviors B circumstances C hobbies D character

5 A issues B circumstances C foundations D attributes

Question II: Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to each of the questions (4p)

Passage 1 (2p):

The rules of etiquette in American restaurants depend upon a number of factors: the physical location of the restaurant, e.g., rural or urban; the type of restaurant, e.g., informal or formal; and certain standards that are more universal In other words, some standards of etiquette vary significantly while other standards apply almost anywhere Learning the proper etiquette in a particular type of restaurant in a particular area may sometimes require instruction, but more commonly it simply requires sensitivity and experience For example, while it is acceptable to read a magazine in a coffee shop, it is inappropriate to do the same in a more luxurious setting And, if you are eating in a very rustic setting it may be fine to tuck your napkin into your shirt, but

if you are in a sophisticated urban restaurant this behavior would demonstrate a lack of manners It is safe to say, however, that in virtually every restaurant it is unacceptable to indiscriminately throw your food on the floor The conclusion we can most likely draw from the above is that while the types and locations of restaurants determine etiquette appropriate to them, some rules apply to all restaurants

1 With what topic is this passage primarily concerned?

A Rules of etiquette B Instruction in proper etiquette

C The importance of good manners D Variable and universal standards of

etiquette

2 According to the passage, which of the following is a universal rule of etiquette?

A tucking a napkin in your shirt B not throwing food on the floor

C reading a magazine at a coffee shop D eating in rustic settings

3 According to the passage, requires sensitivity and experience

A learning the proper etiquette B asking for instructions

C knowing the type of restaurant D knowing about an area

4 The word "sophisticated" in the passage could best be replaced by

A expensive B cultured C famous D exclusive

5 The author uses the phrase "safe to say" in order to demonstrate that the idea is

Trang 14

A somewhat innocent B quite certain C very clever D commonly reported

6 The word "indiscriminately" could best be replaced by

A randomly B angrily C noisily D destructively

7 What is the author's main purpose in this passage?

A to assist people in learning sophisticated manners

B to describe variations in restaurant manners

C to simplify rules of restaurant etiquette

D to compare sophisticated and rustic restaurants

8 What does the word “it” in the passage refer to?

A Learning the proper etiquette B Clear instruction

C Knowing the type of restaurant D Sensitivity

9 Which of the following could best replace the word “luxurious” in the passage?

10 Which of the following words is most similar to the meaning of “rustic” in the

passage?

Passage 2 (2p):

In February 2001, at the age of 24, Ellen MacArthur became the youngest and fastest ever

woman to sail round the world After 94 days alone on board yacht Kingfisher, she finished

second to Michel Desjoyaux of France in the single-handed Vendee Globe event

In sport, like life, the winner is usually fetched, and runners-up quickly forgotten This time the

roles were reversed and it was Ellen, weighing just 50 kilos and barely 1m 60 tall, that really

captured people's imaginations and emotions One newspaper in France, where she was and is

a real heroine, summed up the national mood there with the headline "Well done, Michel, bravo Ellen"

As with many spectacular achievers, the signs were there from an early age, even in the

unpromising nautical terrain of landlocked Derbyshire Her great-grandparents were sailing

people and a great-uncle was a merchant seaman, but any real link with the sea is tenuous

There was, however, an Auntie Thea who lived on the east coast of England and had a 26-foot sailing boat called Cabaret It took just one trip on the open sea with her aunt to spark off Ellen's lifelong passion She was eight years old After that she began saving her pocket money and

spent all her spare time reading sailing books in the library, absorbing information like a

sponge With her savings and the help of her grandmother she bought an 8-foot fiberglass

dinghy, and from that moment on there was no keeping her away from the water

Sailing around Britain single-handed at the age of 18 was just the start; Ellen had long since

set her sights on the Vendee But finding the money to undertake round-the-world voyages is

no easy feat She wrote 2,000 letters requesting sponsorship and received just two replies, one, happily, from the Kingfisher company who were looking to expand into France And in terms of race preparation, if thoroughness was the key of success, Ellen could certainly be considered

one of the favourites In the eight months leading up to the start of the race, she sailed no fewer than 60,000 miles at the helm of her 60-foot Kingfisher, far more than the rest of the fleet put

together in the same period

During her three months at sea MacArthur negotiated deadly icebergs, gigantic waves and

Trang 15

gale-force winds She endured the freezing cold of the Arctic and suffered the blistering heat of the windless doldrums Racing conditions meant sleeping in 10-minute bursts, a survival suit

that stayed on for weeks at a time and hands and wrists covered in sores and cuts Food was

dried or frozen Water came from desalinator, which passes sea water through a membrane

"You don't really wash in the icy waters of the southern ocean", she laughs "Anyway, there's no one to tell you that you smell."

As Kingfisher crossed the fishing line Ellen was surrounded by hundreds of spectator boats and

a cheering crowd of 200,000 lined the shore Stepping off her yacht she looked remarkably

composed and seemed to take the change from solitude to public adulation very much in her

stride Her thoughts, she later confessed, were on the realization that she had fulfilled the

ambition that had dominated her life for the previous four or five years "Throughout that time

my sole focus had been crossing the finished line, and in the fastest possible time." Now she

could savour that moment

But despite MacArthur's belief that everyone who finishes the Vendee is a winner, she still feels

a sense of disappointment that, having taken the lead from the eventual winner Michel

Desjoyaux 10 days from the finish, she did not quite have the energy or good fortune to turn her advantage into victory "You have to believe you can win from the start." she asserts "Deep

down you're a competitor, you don't climb the mast and come back black and blue just for a

cruise You do it because it's a race."

The public will now be hoping to see a suitable encore, some new feat of endurance to justify

her celebrity status For Ellen can no longer claim, as she did in her post-race press

conference, to be the simple Derbyshare girl with "no mobile, no credit cards, no money, no

nothing"; she is a heroine and an inspiration to others of her generation As if to reinforce this,

and despite her reluctance to take on this role, she later commented: "If there's one thing I've

learned in this past year, it's that deep down in your heart, if you have a dream, then you can

and must make it happen."

Dinghy: /ˈdɪŋi/a small open boat that you sail or row

Gale-force winds: extremely strong winds

Blistering: extremely hot in a way that is uncomfortable

Doldrums: a lack of activity or improvement

Encore: an extra short performance given at the end of a concert or other performance; a

request for this made by an audience calling out

Bursts: a short period of intense activity or strong emotion that often starts suddenly

Questions

1 Ellen MacArthur was the winner in the Vendee Globe event?

2 At the time of her achievement we learn that Ellen ………

A Enjoyed only short-lived success

B Was more famous in France than anywhere else

C Attracted more attention than Michael Desjoyaux

D Became popular because of her size

3 Where did Ellen's initial interest in sailing come from?

Trang 16

A She came from a family of sailing enthusiasts

B She went to see one of her relatives

C She read widely on the subject

D She lived near the sea

4 The writer suggests that one cause of discomfort for Ellen at sea was ………

A The shortage of water

B Her failure to sleep

C Extremes of temperature

D A lack of cooking facilities

5 According to the writer, when Ellen finished the race, she was …………

A Overwhelmed by her new-found fame

B Surprised by the number of people who came to greet her

C Able to reflect on her achievement

D Delighted to be amongst people again

6 According to the writer, Ellen ………

A Thinks she deserved to win the race

B Has mixed feelings about the outcome of the race

C Knew she would win the race

D Thinks Michel Desjoyaux was lucky to beat her

7 Which of the following views does the writer express in the last paragraph?

A She has the power to motivate

B She has no right to fame yet

C Her comments lack depth

D She needs to change her lifestyle

8 The word “single-handed” in the fourth paragraph means……

A without any help from anyone else

B using only one of one’s hands to row

C on a boat with only one paddle

D on a boat with only one sail

9 Ellen MacArthur wrote 2000 letters requesting sponsorship and only Kingfisher

Company replied

10 Ellen MacArthur was a good-looking, caring and intelligent girl when she was small

1 Last year how many people were undernourished?

A thirteen percent of the people B thirteen hundred people

2 In Nairobi, Kenya, Ms Nierenberg found women famers growing vegetables ………

Trang 17

C outside their doorsteps D in the field

3 How many countries did Danielle Nierenberg from the Worldwatch Institute in

Washington spend a year visiting?

A twenty – five B twenty C twelve D twenty - four

4 What did the women use to fill with soil?

5 The reason why food get wasted is………

A It rained heavily everyday

B No one wanted to consume their products

C Farmers lacked good seeds and fertilizer

D Their products are not good enough

6 In Uganda, what was taught in school?

C how to grow local crop D how to earn money

7 What are the advantages of the breeding of local kinds of livestock in South Africa and Kenya?

A These animals may produce less milk or meat than other breeds, but they can survive heat and drought conditions

B These animals produce more milk than other breeds

C These animals can survive cold conditions

D These animals can produce more meat than other breeds

8 There are a lot of lessons that people in the Western world or developing countries

can learn from Africa

9 Sub – Saharan Africa had the world’s highest hunger rate

10 People in Kenya didn’t try to find ways to make their live better

B STRUCTURE AND GRAMMAR (2p)

1 I use weed-killer to……….the weeds in the garden

A get rid of B get out of C get away with D get in the way with

2 After the funeral, the residents of the apartment building……

A sent to the cemetery each week flowers faithfully

B sent faithfully flowers all week to the cemetery

C sent flowers faithfully to the cemetery each week

D sent each week faithfully to the cemetery flowers

3 The incidence of anorexia nervosa,………., is growing in industrially advanced societies

Trang 18

A is an eating disorder B an eating disorder which

C for which an eating disorder D an eating disorder

4 The saying that “Misfortunes never ………” means that many problems can happen at the

same time

5 ………is lubricated can affect the longevity of the moving parts that rub together

A How often a machine B A machine often

C Often a machine D How often machines

6 …… , an author probably most famous for his tales of terror, also dabbled in some science

fiction

A To Edgar Allen Poe B For Edgar Allen Poe to be

C Edgar Allen Poe was D Edgar Allen Poe

7 Superconductivity will revolutionize the way that energy is used for the next millennium,

and…….the first truly superconductive substance will be remembered as a technological hero

A what the discovery of B the discovery of

C whoever discovers D whose discovery of

8 In Michigan,………over 600 feet deep

A salt deposits B where salt deposits are

C having salt deposits D there are salt deposits

9 ……… invisible to the unaided eye, ultraviolet light can be detected in a number of ways

A Although is B Although C Despite D Even though it

10 Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, ……of you is first in line?

C PHONETICS (2p)

Question I Choose one word whose underlined part is pronounced differently from the

others by circling A, B, C or D (1p)

1 A ugali B umpire C ulcer D umber

2 A etiquette B conqueror C statuesque D bequest

3 A measure B dreadful C treasure D breathe

4 A confusedly B wickedly C allegedly D supposedly

5 A paths B wither C marathon D although

Question II Choose one word whose stress pattern is different from the others by

circling A, B, C or D (1p)

1 A viticulture B concertina C preferential D misbegotten

2 A compromise B picturesque C European D guarantee

3 A appliance B romantic C dynamic D homecoming

4 A internal B interval C external D interpret

5 A minority B handicap C destiny D voluntary

Trang 19

D PREPOSITIONS AND PHRASAL VERBS (4p)

1 He’s not exactly rich but he certainly earns enough money to……

A get through B get by C get over D get up

2 I had to …… 90$ for a parking fine

3 The word “chaos” has……… a special scientific meaning

4 He wasn’t sure if he’d be any good at tennis, but actually he took…… it immediately

5 The teacher at school went………with flu one after the other

6 This hotel is so awesome, man I could just…….on this view for the whole weekend

A bliss out B bliss into C bliss down D bliss across

7 The effects of the anesthetic wore………after a couple of hours

8 Owing to circumstances …… our control, the flight to Rome has been cancelled

9 If you think I’m wrong, check in the encyclopedia I’m sure it will bear me……

10 This is a very important decision All our lives are…… stake

Some (4) ….…… of character may to some extent be hereditary simulating the (5) …… that identify our parents Others may (6) ….…… from the conditions experienced during pregnancy and infancy in this way reflecting the parents' approach towards rearing their offspring Consequently, the environmental factor plays a (7) ………… role in strengthening or eliminating certain behavioral systems making an individual more prone to comfort to the patterns that deserve a prize

Undoubtedly, human personality (8) ……… the most profound and irreversible formation during the first period of its development, yet, certain characteristics may still be (9)

to considerable changes made by (10) ……… … circumstances and situations

Trang 20

2 A behaviors B circumstances C hobbies D character

5 A issues B circumstances C foundations D attributes

Question II: Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to each of the questions (4p)

a real heroine, summed up the national mood there with the headline "Well done, Michel, bravo Ellen"

As with many spectacular achievers, the signs were there from an early age, even in the unpromising nautical terrain of landlocked Derbyshire Her great-grandparents were sailing people and a great-uncle was a merchant seaman, but any real link with the sea is tenuous There was, however, an Auntie Thea who lived on the east coast of England and had a 26-foot sailing boat called Cabaret It took just one trip on the open sea with her aunt to spark off Ellen's lifelong passion She was eight years old After that she began saving her pocket money and spent all her spare time reading sailing books in the library, absorbing information like a sponge With her savings and the help of her grandmother she bought an 8-foot fiberglass dinghy, and from that moment on there was no keeping her away from the water

Sailing around Britain single-handed at the age of 18 was just the start; Ellen had long since set her sights on the Vendee But finding the money to undertake round-the-world voyages is no easy feat She wrote 2,000 letters requesting sponsorship and received just two replies, one, happily, from the Kingfisher company who were looking to expand into France And in terms of race preparation, if thoroughness was the key of success, Ellen could certainly be considered one of the favourites In the eight months leading up to the start of the race, she sailed no fewer than 60,000 miles at the helm of her 60-foot Kingfisher, far more than the rest of the fleet put together in the same period

During her three months at sea MacArthur negotiated deadly icebergs, gigantic waves and force winds She endured the freezing cold of the Arctic and suffered the blistering heat of the windless doldrums Racing conditions meant sleeping in 10-minute bursts, a survival suit that stayed on for weeks at a time and hands and wrists covered in sores and cuts Food was dried

gale-or frozen Water came from desalinatgale-or, which passes sea water through a membrane "You don't

Trang 21

really wash in the icy waters of the southern ocean", she laughs "Anyway, there's no one to tell you that you smell."

As Kingfisher crossed the fishing line Ellen was surrounded by hundreds of spectator boats and

a cheering crowd of 200,000 lined the shore Stepping off her yacht she looked remarkably composed and seemed to take the change from solitude to public adulation very much in her stride Her thoughts, she later confessed, were on the realization that she had fulfilled the ambition that had dominated her life for the previous four or five years "Throughout that time my sole focus had been crossing the finished line, and in the fastest possible time." Now she could

But despite MacArthur's belief that everyone who finishes the Vendee is a winner, she still feels

a sense of disappointment that, having taken the lead from the eventual winner Michel Desjoyaux

10 days from the finish, she did not quite have the energy or good fortune to turn her advantage into victory "You have to believe you can win from the start." she asserts "Deep down you're a competitor, you don't climb the mast and come back black and blue just for a cruise You do it because it's a race."

The public will now be hoping to see a suitable encore, some new feat of endurance to justify her celebrity status For Ellen can no longer claim, as she did in her post-race press conference, to

be the simple Derbyshare girl with "no mobile, no credit cards, no money, no nothing"; she is a heroine and an inspiration to others of her generation As if to reinforce this, and despite her reluctance to take on this role, she later commented: "If there's one thing I've learned in this past year, it's that deep down in your heart, if you have a dream, then you can and must make it happen."

Dinghy: /ˈdɪŋi/a small open boat that you sail or row

Gale-force winds: extremely strong winds

Blistering: extremely hot in a way that is uncomfortable

Doldrums: a lack of activity or improvement

Encore: an extra short performance given at the end of a concert or other performance; a

request for this made by an audience calling out

Bursts: a short period of intense activity or strong emotion that often starts suddenly

Questions

1 Ellen MacArthur was the winner in the Vendee Globe event?

2 At the time of her achievement we learn that Ellen ………

A Enjoyed only short-lived success

B Was more famous in France than anywhere else

C Attracted more attention than Michael Desjoyaux

D Became popular because of her size

3 Where did Ellen's initial interest in sailing come from?

A She came from a family of sailing enthusiasts

B She went to see one of her relatives

C She read widely on the subject

Trang 22

D She lived near the sea

4 The writer suggests that one cause of discomfort for Ellen at sea was ………

A The shortage of water

B Her failure to sleep

C Extremes of temperature

D A lack of cooking facilities

5 According to the writer, when Ellen finished the race, she was …………

A Overwhelmed by her new-found fame

B Surprised by the number of people who came to greet her

C Able to reflect on her achievement

D Delighted to be amongst people again

6 According to the writer, Ellen ………

A Thinks she deserved to win the race

B Has mixed feelings about the outcome of the race

C Knew she would win the race

D Thinks Michel Desjoyaux was lucky to beat her

7 Which of the following views does the writer express in the last paragraph?

A She has the power to motivate

B She has no right to fame yet

C Her comments lack depth

D She needs to change her lifestyle

8 The word “single-handed” in the fourth paragraph means……

A without any help from anyone else

B using only one of one’s hands to row

C on a boat with only one paddle

D on a boat with only one sail

9 Ellen MacArthur wrote 2000 letters requesting sponsorship and only Kingfisher

Company replied

10 Ellen MacArthur was a good-looking, caring and intelligent girl when she was small

Passage 2 (2p):

The rules of etiquette in American restaurants depend upon a number of factors: the physical

location of the restaurant, e.g., rural or urban; the type of restaurant, e.g., informal or formal;

and certain standards that are more universal In other words, some standards of etiquette vary significantly while other standards apply almost anywhere Learning the proper etiquette in a

particular type of restaurant in a particular area may sometimes require instruction, but more

commonly it simply requires sensitivity and experience For example, while it is acceptable to

read a magazine in a coffee shop, it is inappropriate to do the same in a more luxurious

setting And, if you are eating in a very rustic setting it may be fine to tuck your napkin into your shirt, but if you are in a sophisticated urban restaurant this behavior would demonstrate a lack

of manners It is safe to say, however, that in virtually every restaurant it is unacceptable to

indiscriminately throw your food on the floor The conclusion we can most likely draw from the above is that while the types and locations of restaurants determine etiquette appropriate to

them, some rules apply to all restaurants

1 With what topic is this passage primarily concerned?

A Rules of etiquette B Instruction in proper etiquette

Trang 23

C The importance of good manners D Variable and universal standards of etiquette

2 According to the passage, which of the following is a universal rule of etiquette?

A tucking a napkin in your shirt B not throwing food on the floor

C reading a magazine at a coffee shop D eating in rustic settings

3 According to the passage, requires sensitivity and experience

A learning the proper etiquette B asking for instructions

C knowing the type of restaurant D knowing about an area

4 The word "sophisticated" in the passage could best be replaced by

A expensive B cultured C famous D exclusive

5 The author uses the phrase "safe to say" in order to demonstrate that the idea is

A somewhat innocent B quite certain C very clever D commonly reported

6 The word "indiscriminately" could best be replaced by

A randomly B angrily C noisily D destructively

7 What is the author's main purpose in this passage?

A to assist people in learning sophisticated manners

B to describe variations in restaurant manners

C to simplify rules of restaurant etiquette

D to compare sophisticated and rustic restaurants

8 What does the word “it” in the passage refer to?

A Learning the proper etiquette B Clear instruction

C Knowing the type of restaurant D Sensitivity

9 Which of the following could best replace the word “luxurious” in the passage?

10 Which of the following words is most similar to the meaning of “rustic” in the

passage?

A agricultural B ancient C unsophisticated D urban

F VOCABULARY (4p)

Choose the best word from A, B, C, and D that fits each blank

1 The general is always …………about his past campaigns

A boasting B praising C complimenting D congratulating

2 The prospects of picking up any survivors are now………

3 Sheila couldn’t attend the meeting as the date…… with her holidays

A clashed B struck C opposed D occurred

4 You had agreed to take part in our anti-war march, why did you cop out?

A die B retreat C act rashly D attend

5 His success……….his mother’s heart

6 A newspaper’s opinions are given in its………

A cartoon B editorial C reports D titles

7 Mr Brown is not a serious investor, but he likes to…….in the stock market

Trang 24

A splash B splatter C paddle D dabble

8 ………are the formal rules of correct or polite behavior among people using the Internet

A Traffic rules B Family rules C Codes of etiquettes D Codes of netiquettes

9 I can’t possibly lend you any more money, it is quite out of the……

10 The dish was so tasty that I asked for a second………

ĐÁP ÁN

A Listening (2p)

You will hear Alex Villarreal with an Agriculture Report For each question, choose the

correct answer

1 Last year how many people were undernourished?

A thirteen percent of the people B thirteen hundred people

2 In Nairobi, Kenya, Ms Nierenberg found women famers growing vegetables ………

3 How many countries did Danielle Nierenberg from the Worldwatch Institute in

Washington spend a year visiting?

A twenty – five B twenty C twelve D twenty - four

4 What did the women use to fill with soil?

5 The reason why food get wasted is………

A It rained heavily everyday

B No one wanted to consume their products

C Farmers lacked good seeds and fertilizer

D Their products are not good enough

6 In Uganda, what was taught in school?

7 What are the advantages of the breeding of local kinds of livestock in South Africa and Kenya?

A These animals may produce less milk or meat than other breeds, but they can survive heat and drought conditions

B These animals produce more milk than other breeds

C These animals can survive cold conditions

D These animals can produce more meat than other breeds

Trang 25

8 There are a lot of lessons that people in the Western world or developing countries

can learn from Africa

9 Sub – Saharan Africa had the world’s highest hunger rate

10 People in Kenya didn’t try to find ways to make their live better

Script:

I’m Alex Villarreal with the VOA Special English Agriculture Report Sub- Saharan Africa has the world’s highest hunger rate The United Nations says thirty percent of the people were undernourished last year But a new report says African farmers also have ideas that could help the world fight hunger and poverty Danielle Nierenberg from the Worldwatch Institute in Washington spent a year visiting twenty-five countries south of the Sahara In Nairobi, Kenya, for example, Ms, Nierenberg found women farmers growing vegetables just outside their doorsteps in the Kibera settlement She says the area is crowded, dirty and noisy But the people are finding ways to make their lives better The women use old sacks filled with soil They cut holes in the sides of the tall bags so air gets to the seeds The women feed the vegetables to their families and sell their surplus

They use the money to send their children to school Last year, an estimated nine hundred twenty-five million people worldwide did not get enough to eat

Half of all people in the world now live in and around cities Researchers like Ms Nierenberg are looking increasingly at creative ideas to feed those who are malnourished

She said there are a lot of lessons that people in the Western world can learn from Africa And what they are doing can be done in other developing countries Farmers in the developing world lose between twenty and forty percent of their harvest before it ever reaches market

Asma Lateef from the group Bread for the World says there are many reasons why food gets wasted

Farmers are without electricity and cold storage They lack good seeds and fertilizer They lack good roads

Ms Lateef says conditions like these keep small farmers in poverty Danielle Nierenberg says more attention needs to be paid to protecting harvests

In Nigeria, village processing centers are helping farmers reduce their losses and earn more money

The centers process cassava, a root vegetable, into basic food products In Uganda, the Worldwatch report says some schools are teaching children how to grow local crops

And in South Africa and Kenya the report praises the breeding of local kinds of livestock These animals may produce less milk or meat than other breeds, but they can survive heat and drought conditions

The report is called "State of the World 2011: Innovations That Nourish the Planet

For VOA Special English I'm Alex Villarreal

B STRUCTURE AND GRAMMAR (2p)

1 I use weed-killer to……….the weeds in the garden

Trang 26

A get rid of B get out of C get away with D get in the way with

2 After the funeral, the residents of the apartment building……

A sent to the cemetery each week flowers faithfully

B sent faithfully flowers all week to the cemetery

C sent flowers faithfully to the cemetery each week

D sent each week faithfully to the cemetery flowers

3 The incidence of anorexia nervosa,………., is growing in industrially advanced societies

A is an eating disorder B an eating disorder which

C for which an eating disorder D an eating disorder

4 The saying that “Misfortunes never ………” means that many problems can happen at the

same time

5 ………is lubricated can affect the longevity of the moving parts that rub together

A How often a machine B A machine often

C Often a machine D How often machines

6 …… , an author probably most famous for his tales of terror, also dabbled in some science

fiction

A To Edgar Allen Poe B For Edgar Allen Poe to be

C Edgar Allen Poe was D Edgar Allen Poe

7 Superconductivity will revolutionize the way that energy is used for the next millennium,

and…….the first truly superconductive substance will be remembered as a technological hero

A what the discovery of B the discovery of

C whoever discovers D whose discovery of

8 In Michigan,………over 600 feet deep

A salt deposits B where salt deposits are

C having salt deposits D there are salt deposits

9 ……… invisible to the unaided eye, ultraviolet light can be detected in a number of ways

A Although is B Although C Despite D Even though it

10 Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, ……of you is first in line?

C PHONETICS (2p)

Question I Choose one word whose underlined part is pronounced differently from the

others by circling A, B, C or D (1)

11 A ugali B umpire C ulcer D umber

12 A etiquette B conqueror C statuesque D bequest

13 A measure B dreadful C treasure D breathe

14 A confusedly B wickedly C allegedly D supposedly

Trang 27

Question II Choose one word whose stress pattern is different from the others by

circling A, B, C or D (1)

3 A viticulture B concertina C preferential D misbegotten

4 A compromise B picturesque C European D guarantee

3 A appliance B romantic C dynamic D homecoming

4 A internal B interval C external D interpret

5 A minority B handicap C destiny D voluntary

D PREPOSITIONS AND PHRASAL VERBS (4p)

1 He’s not exactly rich but he certainly earns enough money to……

2 I had to …… 90$ for a parking fine

3 The word “chaos” has……… a special scientific meaning

A included in B held of C taken on D gasped up

4 He wasn’t sure if he’d be any good at tennis, but actually he took…… it immediately

5 The teacher at school went………with flu one after the other

6 This hotel is so awesome, man I could just…….on this view for the whole weekend

A bliss out B bliss into C bliss down D bliss across

7 The effects of the anesthetic wore………after a couple of hours

8 Owing to circumstances …… our control, the flight to Rome has been cancelled

9 If you think I’m wrong, check in the encyclopedia I’m sure it will bear me……

10 This is a very important decision All our lives are…… stake

BEHAVIOURS……… , our reactions and temperaments are unparalleled on (3) ACCOUNT…

of the diversified processes that mold our personality in the earliest stages of human

development

Some (4) TRAITS…… of character may to some extent be hereditary simulating the (5) ATTRIBUTES … that identify our parents Others may (6) STEM…… from the conditions

Trang 28

experienced during pregnancy and infancy in this way reflecting the parents' approach towards rearing their offspring

Consequently, the environmental factor plays a (7) CRUCIAL role in strengthening or

eliminating certain behavioral systems making an individual more prone to comfort to the

patterns that deserve a prize

Undoubtedly, human personality (8) UNDERGOES…… the most profound and

irreversible formation during the first period of its development, yet, certain characteristics may still be (9) SUBJECT to considerable changes made by (10) DIFFERENT …

circumstances and situations

2 A behaviors B circumstances C hobbies D character

5 A issues B circumstances C foundations D attributes

Question II: Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to each of the questions (4p)

Passage 1 (2p):

In February 2001, at the age of 24, Ellen MacArthur became the youngest and fastest ever

woman to sail round the world After 94 days alone on board yacht Kingfisher, she finished

second to Michel Desjoyaux of France in the single-handed Vendee Globe event

In sport, like life, the winner is usually fetched, and runners-up quickly forgotten This time the

roles were reversed and it was Ellen, weighing just 50 kilos and barely 1m 60 tall, that really

captured people's imaginations and emotions One newspaper in France, where she was and is

a real heroine, summed up the national mood there with the headline "Well done, Michel, bravo Ellen"

As with many spectacular achievers, the signs were there from an early age, even in the

unpromising nautical terrain of landlocked Derbyshire Her great-grandparents were sailing

people and a great-uncle was a merchant seaman, but any real link with the sea is tenuous

There was, however, an Auntie Thea who lived on the east coast of England and had a 26-foot sailing boat called Cabaret It took just one trip on the open sea with her aunt to spark off Ellen's lifelong passion She was eight years old After that she began saving her pocket money and

spent all her spare time reading sailing books in the library, absorbing information like a

sponge With her savings and the help of her grandmother she bought an 8-foot fiberglass

dinghy, and from that moment on there was no keeping her away from the water

Sailing around Britain single-handed at the age of 18 was just the start; Ellen had long since

set her sights on the Vendee But finding the money to undertake round-the-world voyages is

no easy feat She wrote 2,000 letters requesting sponsorship and received just two replies, one,

Trang 29

happily, from the Kingfisher company who were looking to expand into France And in terms of race preparation, if thoroughness was the key of success, Ellen could certainly be considered

one of the favourites In the eight months leading up to the start of the race, she sailed no fewer than 60,000 miles at the helm of her 60-foot Kingfisher, far more than the rest of the fleet put

together in the same period

During her three months at sea MacArthur negotiated deadly icebergs, gigantic waves and

gale-force winds She endured the freezing cold of the Arctic and suffered the blistering heat of the windless doldrums Racing conditions meant sleeping in 10-minute bursts, a survival suit

that stayed on for weeks at a time and hands and wrists covered in sores and cuts Food was

dried or frozen Water came from desalinator, which passes sea water through a membrane

"You don't really wash in the icy waters of the southern ocean", she laughs "Anyway, there's no one to tell you that you smell."

As Kingfisher crossed the fishing line Ellen was surrounded by hundreds of spectator boats and

a cheering crowd of 200,000 lined the shore Stepping off her yacht she looked remarkably

composed and seemed to take the change from solitude to public adulation very much in her

stride Her thoughts, she later confessed, were on the realization that she had fulfilled the

ambition that had dominated her life for the previous four or five years "Throughout that time

my sole focus had been crossing the finished line, and in the fastest possible time." Now she

could savour that moment

But despite MacArthur's belief that everyone who finishes the Vendee is a winner, she still feels

a sense of disappointment that, having taken the lead from the eventual winner Michel

Desjoyaux 10 days from the finish, she did not quite have the energy or good fortune to turn her advantage into victory "You have to believe you can win from the start." she asserts "Deep

down you're a competitor, you don't climb the mast and come back black and blue just for a

cruise You do it because it's a race."

The public will now be hoping to see a suitable encore, some new feat of endurance to justify

her celebrity status For Ellen can no longer claim, as she did in her post-race press

conference, to be the simple Derbyshare girl with "no mobile, no credit cards, no money, no

nothing"; she is a heroine and an inspiration to others of her generation As if to reinforce this,

and despite her reluctance to take on this role, she later commented: "If there's one thing I've

learned in this past year, it's that deep down in your heart, if you have a dream, then you can

and must make it happen."

Dinghy: /ˈdɪŋi/a small open boat that you sail or row

Gale-force winds: extremely strong winds

Blistering: extremely hot in a way that is uncomfortable

Doldrums: a lack of activity or improvement

Encore: an extra short performance given at the end of a concert or other performance; a

request for this made by an audience calling out

Bursts: a short period of intense activity or strong emotion that often starts suddenly

Questions

1 Ellen MacArthur was the winner in the Vendee Globe event?

Trang 30

2 At the time of her achievement we learn that Ellen ………

A Enjoyed only short-lived success

B Was more famous in France than anywhere else

C Attracted more attention than Michael Desjoyaux

D Became popular because of her size

3 Where did Ellen's initial interest in sailing come from?

A She came from a family of sailing enthusiasts

B She went to see one of her relatives

C She read widely on the subject

D She lived near the sea

4 The writer suggests that one cause of discomfort for Ellen at sea was ………

A The shortage of water

B Her failure to sleep

C Extremes of temperature

D A lack of cooking facilities

5 According to the writer, when Ellen finished the race, she was …………

A Overwhelmed by her new-found fame

B Surprised by the number of people who came to greet her

C Able to reflect on her achievement

D Delighted to be amongst people again

6 According to the writer, Ellen ………

A Thinks she deserved to win the race

B Has mixed feelings about the outcome of the race

C Knew she would win the race

D Thinks Michel Desjoyaux was lucky to beat her

7 Which of the following views does the writer express in the last paragraph?

A She has the power to motivate

B She has no right to fame yet

C Her comments lack depth

D She needs to change her lifestyle

8 The word “single-handed” in the fourth paragraph means……

A without any help from anyone else

B using only one of one’s hands to row

C on a boat with only one paddle

D on a boat with only one sail

9 Ellen MacArthur wrote 2000 letters requesting sponsorship and only Kingfisher

Company replied

10 Ellen MacArthur was a good-looking, caring and intelligent girl when she was small

Passage 2 (2p):

The rules of etiquette in American restaurants depend upon a number of factors: the physical

location of the restaurant, e.g., rural or urban; the type of restaurant, e.g., informal or formal;

and certain standards that are more universal In other words, some standards of etiquette vary significantly while other standards apply almost anywhere Learning the proper etiquette in a

particular type of restaurant in a particular area may sometimes require instruction, but more

commonly it simply requires sensitivity and experience For example, while it is acceptable to

read a magazine in a coffee shop, it is inappropriate to do the same in a more luxurious

Trang 31

setting And, if you are eating in a very rustic setting it may be fine to tuck your napkin into your shirt, but if you are in a sophisticated urban restaurant this behavior would demonstrate a lack

of manners It is safe to say, however, that in virtually every restaurant it is unacceptable to

indiscriminately throw your food on the floor The conclusion we can most likely draw from the above is that while the types and locations of restaurants determine etiquette appropriate to

them, some rules apply to all restaurants

1 With what topic is this passage primarily concerned?

A Rules of etiquette B Instruction in proper etiquette

C The importance of good manners D Variable and universal standards of

etiquette

2 According to the passage, which of the following is a universal rule of etiquette?

A tucking a napkin in your shirt B not throwing food on the floor

C reading a magazine at a coffee shop D eating in rustic settings

3 According to the passage, requires sensitivity and experience

A learning the proper etiquette B asking for instructions

C knowing the type of restaurant D knowing about an area

4 The word "sophisticated" in the passage could best be replaced by

A expensive B cultured C famous D exclusive

5 The author uses the phrase "safe to say" in order to demonstrate that the idea is

A somewhat innocent B quite certain C very clever D commonly reported

6 The word "indiscriminately" could best be replaced by

A randomly B angrily C noisily D destructively

7 What is the author's main purpose in this passage?

A to assist people in learning sophisticated manners

B to describe variations in restaurant manners

C to simplify rules of restaurant etiquette

D to compare sophisticated and rustic restaurants

8 What does the word “it” in the passage refer to?

A Learning the proper etiquette B Clear instruction

C Knowing the type of restaurant D Sensitivity

9 Which of the following could best replace the word “luxurious” in the passage?

10 Which of the following words is most similar to the meaning of “rustic” in the

passage?

F VOCABULARY (4p)

Choose the best word from A, B, C, and D that fits each blank

1 The general is always …………about his past campaigns

A boasting B praising C complimenting D congratulating

2 The prospects of picking up any survivors are now………

3 Sheila couldn’t attend the meeting as the date…… with her holidays

A clashed B struck C opposed D occurred

4 You had agreed to take part in our anti-war march, why did you cop out?

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A die B retreat C act rashly D attend

5 His success……….his mother’s heart

6 A newspaper’s opinions are given in its………

A cartoon B editorial C reports D titles

7 Mr Brown is not a serious investor, but he likes to…….in the stock market

8 ………are the formal rules of correct or polite behavior among people using the Internet

A Traffic rules B Family rules C Codes of etiquettes D Codes of netiquettes

9 I can’t possibly lend you any more money, it is quite out of the……

10 The dish was so tasty that I asked for a second………

3 Đề số 3

MĐ: 564

A VOCABULARY (4p)

Choose the best word from A, B, C, and D that fits each blank

1 The general is always …………about his past campaigns

A boasting B praising C complimenting D congratulating

2 The prospects of picking up any survivors are now………

3 Sheila couldn’t attend the meeting as the date…… with her holidays

A clashed B struck C opposed D occurred

4 You had agreed to take part in our anti-war march, why did you cop out?

A die B retreat C act rashly D attend

5 His success……….his mother’s heart

6 A newspaper’s opinions are given in its………

A cartoon B editorial C reports D titles

7 Mr Brown is not a serious investor, but he likes to…….in the stock market

8 ………are the formal rules of correct or polite behavior among people using the Internet

A Traffic rules B Family rules C Codes of etiquettes D Codes of netiquettes

9 I can’t possibly lend you any more money, it is quite out of the……

10 The dish was so tasty that I asked for a second………

Trang 33

A portion B helping C ration D share

B STRUCTURE AND GRAMMAR (2p)

1 I use weed-killer to……….the weeds in the garden

A get rid of B get out of C get away with D get in the way with

2 After the funeral, the residents of the apartment building……

A sent to the cemetery each week flowers faithfully

B sent faithfully flowers all week to the cemetery

C sent flowers faithfully to the cemetery each week

D sent each week faithfully to the cemetery flowers

3 The incidence of anorexia nervosa,………., is growing in industrially advanced societies

A is an eating disorder B an eating disorder which

C for which an eating disorder D an eating disorder

4 The saying that “Misfortunes never ………” means that many problems can happen at the

same time

5 ………is lubricated can affect the longevity of the moving parts that rub together

A How often a machine B A machine often

C Often a machine D How often machines

6 …… , an author probably most famous for his tales of terror, also dabbled in some science

fiction

A To Edgar Allen Poe B For Edgar Allen Poe to be

C Edgar Allen Poe was D Edgar Allen Poe

7 Superconductivity will revolutionize the way that energy is used for the next millennium,

and…….the first truly superconductive substance will be remembered as a technological hero

A what the discovery of B the discovery of

C whoever discovers D whose discovery of

8 In Michigan,………over 600 feet deep

A salt deposits B where salt deposits are

C having salt deposits D there are salt deposits

9 ……… invisible to the unaided eye, ultraviolet light can be detected in a number of ways

A Although is B Although C Despite D Even though it

10 Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, ……of you is first in line?

C PREPOSITIONS AND PHRASAL VERBS (4p)

1 He’s not exactly rich but he certainly earns enough money to……

A get through B get by C get over D get up

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2 I had to …… 90$ for a parking fine

3 The word “chaos” has……… a special scientific meaning

4 He wasn’t sure if he’d be any good at tennis, but actually he took…… it immediately

5 The teacher at school went………with flu one after the other

6 This hotel is so awesome, man I could just…….on this view for the whole weekend

A bliss out B bliss into C bliss down D bliss across

7 The effects of the anesthetic wore………after a couple of hours

8 Owing to circumstances …… our control, the flight to Rome has been cancelled

9 If you think I’m wrong, check in the encyclopedia I’m sure it will bear me……

10 This is a very important decision All our lives are…… stake

Some (4) ….…… of character may to some extent be hereditary simulating the (5) …… that identify our parents Others may (6) ….…… from the conditions experienced during pregnancy and infancy in this way reflecting the parents' approach towards rearing their offspring Consequently, the environmental factor plays a (7) ………… role in strengthening or eliminating certain behavioral systems making an individual more prone to comfort to the patterns that deserve a prize

Undoubtedly, human personality (8) ……… the most profound and irreversible formation during the first period of its development, yet, certain characteristics may still be (9)

to considerable changes made by (10) ……… … circumstances and situations

2 A behaviors B circumstances C hobbies D character

5 A issues B circumstances C foundations D attributes

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6 A depart B change C rise D stem

Question II: Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to each of the questions (4p)

a real heroine, summed up the national mood there with the headline "Well done, Michel, bravo Ellen"

As with many spectacular achievers, the signs were there from an early age, even in the unpromising nautical terrain of landlocked Derbyshire Her great-grandparents were sailing people and a great-uncle was a merchant seaman, but any real link with the sea is tenuous There was, however, an Auntie Thea who lived on the east coast of England and had a 26-foot sailing boat called Cabaret It took just one trip on the open sea with her aunt to spark off Ellen's lifelong passion She was eight years old After that she began saving her pocket money and spent all her spare time reading sailing books in the library, absorbing information like a sponge With her savings and the help of her grandmother she bought an 8-foot fiberglass dinghy, and from that moment on there was no keeping her away from the water

Sailing around Britain single-handed at the age of 18 was just the start; Ellen had long since set her sights on the Vendee But finding the money to undertake round-the-world voyages is no easy feat She wrote 2,000 letters requesting sponsorship and received just two replies, one, happily, from the Kingfisher company who were looking to expand into France And in terms of race preparation, if thoroughness was the key of success, Ellen could certainly be considered one of the favourites In the eight months leading up to the start of the race, she sailed no fewer than 60,000 miles at the helm of her 60-foot Kingfisher, far more than the rest of the fleet put together in the same period

During her three months at sea MacArthur negotiated deadly icebergs, gigantic waves and force winds She endured the freezing cold of the Arctic and suffered the blistering heat of the windless doldrums Racing conditions meant sleeping in 10-minute bursts, a survival suit that stayed on for weeks at a time and hands and wrists covered in sores and cuts Food was dried

gale-or frozen Water came from desalinatgale-or, which passes sea water through a membrane "You don't really wash in the icy waters of the southern ocean", she laughs "Anyway, there's no one to tell you that you smell."

As Kingfisher crossed the fishing line Ellen was surrounded by hundreds of spectator boats and

a cheering crowd of 200,000 lined the shore Stepping off her yacht she looked remarkably

Trang 36

composed and seemed to take the change from solitude to public adulation very much in her stride Her thoughts, she later confessed, were on the realization that she had fulfilled the ambition that had dominated her life for the previous four or five years "Throughout that time my sole focus had been crossing the finished line, and in the fastest possible time." Now she could

But despite MacArthur's belief that everyone who finishes the Vendee is a winner, she still feels

a sense of disappointment that, having taken the lead from the eventual winner Michel Desjoyaux

10 days from the finish, she did not quite have the energy or good fortune to turn her advantage into victory "You have to believe you can win from the start." she asserts "Deep down you're a competitor, you don't climb the mast and come back black and blue just for a cruise You do it because it's a race."

The public will now be hoping to see a suitable encore, some new feat of endurance to justify her celebrity status For Ellen can no longer claim, as she did in her post-race press conference, to

be the simple Derbyshare girl with "no mobile, no credit cards, no money, no nothing"; she is a heroine and an inspiration to others of her generation As if to reinforce this, and despite her reluctance to take on this role, she later commented: "If there's one thing I've learned in this past year, it's that deep down in your heart, if you have a dream, then you can and must make it happen."

Dinghy: /ˈdɪŋi/a small open boat that you sail or row

Gale-force winds: extremely strong winds

Blistering: extremely hot in a way that is uncomfortable

Doldrums: a lack of activity or improvement

Encore: an extra short performance given at the end of a concert or other performance; a

request for this made by an audience calling out

Bursts: a short period of intense activity or strong emotion that often starts suddenly

Questions

1 Ellen MacArthur was the winner in the Vendee Globe event?

2 At the time of her achievement we learn that Ellen ………

A Enjoyed only short-lived success

B Was more famous in France than anywhere else

C Attracted more attention than Michael Desjoyaux

D Became popular because of her size

3 Where did Ellen's initial interest in sailing come from?

A She came from a family of sailing enthusiasts

B She went to see one of her relatives

C She read widely on the subject

D She lived near the sea

4 The writer suggests that one cause of discomfort for Ellen at sea was ………

A The shortage of water

B Her failure to sleep

C Extremes of temperature

D A lack of cooking facilities

5 According to the writer, when Ellen finished the race, she was …………

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A Overwhelmed by her new-found fame

B Surprised by the number of people who came to greet her

C Able to reflect on her achievement

D Delighted to be amongst people again

6 According to the writer, Ellen ………

A Thinks she deserved to win the race

B Has mixed feelings about the outcome of the race

C Knew she would win the race

D Thinks Michel Desjoyaux was lucky to beat her

7 Which of the following views does the writer express in the last paragraph?

A She has the power to motivate

B She has no right to fame yet

C Her comments lack depth

D She needs to change her lifestyle

8 The word “single-handed” in the fourth paragraph means……

A without any help from anyone else

B using only one of one’s hands to row

C on a boat with only one paddle

D on a boat with only one sail

9 Ellen MacArthur wrote 2000 letters requesting sponsorship and only Kingfisher

Company replied

10 Ellen MacArthur was a good-looking, caring and intelligent girl when she was small

Passage 2 (2p):

The rules of etiquette in American restaurants depend upon a number of factors: the physical location of the restaurant, e.g., rural or urban; the type of restaurant, e.g., informal or formal; and certain standards that are more universal In other words, some standards of etiquette vary significantly while other standards apply almost anywhere Learning the proper etiquette in a particular type of restaurant in a particular area may sometimes require instruction, but more commonly it simply requires sensitivity and experience For example, while it is acceptable to read a magazine in a coffee shop, it is inappropriate to do the same in a more luxurious setting And, if you are eating in a very rustic setting it may be fine to tuck your napkin into your shirt, but

if you are in a sophisticated urban restaurant this behavior would demonstrate a lack of manners It is safe to say, however, that in virtually every restaurant it is unacceptable to indiscriminately throw your food on the floor The conclusion we can most likely draw from the above is that while the types and locations of restaurants determine etiquette appropriate to them, some rules apply to all restaurants

1 With what topic is this passage primarily concerned?

A Rules of etiquette B Instruction in proper etiquette

C The importance of good manners D Variable and universal standards of etiquette

2 According to the passage, which of the following is a universal rule of etiquette?

A tucking a napkin in your shirt B not throwing food on the floor

Trang 38

C reading a magazine at a coffee shop D eating in rustic settings

3 According to the passage, requires sensitivity and experience

A learning the proper etiquette B asking for instructions

C knowing the type of restaurant D knowing about an area

4 The word "sophisticated" in the passage could best be replaced by

A expensive B cultured C famous D exclusive

5 The author uses the phrase "safe to say" in order to demonstrate that the idea is

A somewhat innocent B quite certain C very clever D commonly reported

6 The word "indiscriminately" could best be replaced by

A randomly B angrily C noisily D destructively

7 What is the author's main purpose in this passage?

A to assist people in learning sophisticated manners

B to describe variations in restaurant manners

C to simplify rules of restaurant etiquette

D to compare sophisticated and rustic restaurants

8 What does the word “it” in the passage refer to?

A Learning the proper etiquette B Clear instruction

C Knowing the type of restaurant D Sensitivity

9 Which of the following could best replace the word “luxurious” in the passage?

10 Which of the following words is most similar to the meaning of “rustic” in the

6 A ugali B umpire C ulcer D umber

7 A etiquette B conqueror C statuesque D bequest

8 A measure B dreadful C treasure D breathe

9 A confusedly B wickedly C allegedly D supposedly

10 A paths B wither C marathon D although

Question II Choose one word whose stress pattern is different from the others by

circling A, B, C or D (1p)

2 A viticulture B concertina C preferential D misbegotten

2 A compromise B picturesque C European D guarantee

3 A appliance B romantic C dynamic D homecoming

4 A internal B interval C external D interpret

5 A minority B handicap C destiny D voluntary

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A thirty percent of the people B thirteen percent of the people

2 In Nairobi, Kenya, Ms Nierenberg found women famers growing vegetables ………

3 How many countries did Danielle Nierenberg from the Worldwatch Institute in

Washington spend a year visiting?

A twenty B twenty – five C twelve D twenty - four

4 What did the women use to fill with soil?

5 The reason why food get wasted is………

A It rained heavily everyday

B Farmers lacked good seeds and fertilizer

C No one wanted to consume their products

D Their products are not good enough

6 In Uganda, what was taught in school?

7 What are the advantages of the breeding of local kinds of livestock in South Africa and Kenya?

A These animals can survive cold conditions

B These animals may produce less milk or meat than other breeds, but they can survive heat and drought conditions

C These animals produce more milk than other breeds

D These animals can produce more meat than other breeds

8 Sub – Saharan Africa had the world’s highest hunger rate

9 People in Kenya didn’t try to find ways to make their live better

10 There are a lot of lessons that people in the Western world or developing countries

can learn from Africa

ĐÁP ÁN

A VOCABULARY (4p)

Choose the best word from A, B, C, and D that fits each blank

1 The general is always …………about his past campaigns

A boasting B praising C complimenting D congratulating

Trang 40

2 The prospects of picking up any survivors are now………

3 Sheila couldn’t attend the meeting as the date…… with her holidays

A clashed B struck C opposed D occurred

4 You had agreed to take part in our anti-war march, why did you cop out?

A die B retreat C act rashly D attend

5 His success……….his mother’s heart

6 A newspaper’s opinions are given in its………

A cartoon B editorial C reports D titles

7 Mr Brown is not a serious investor, but he likes to…….in the stock market

8 ………are the formal rules of correct or polite behavior among people using the Internet

A Traffic rules B Family rules C Codes of etiquettes D Codes of netiquettes

9 I can’t possibly lend you any more money, it is quite out of the……

10 The dish was so tasty that I asked for a second………

B STRUCTURE AND GRAMMAR (2p)

1 I use weed-killer to……….the weeds in the garden

A get rid of B get out of C get away with D get in the way with

2 After the funeral, the residents of the apartment building……

A sent to the cemetery each week flowers faithfully

B sent faithfully flowers all week to the cemetery

C sent flowers faithfully to the cemetery each week

D sent each week faithfully to the cemetery flowers

3 The incidence of anorexia nervosa,………., is growing in industrially advanced societies

A is an eating disorder B an eating disorder which

C for which an eating disorder D an eating disorder

4 The saying that “Misfortunes never ………” means that many problems can happen at the

same time

5 ………is lubricated can affect the longevity of the moving parts that rub together

A How often a machine B A machine often

C Often a machine D How often machines

6 …… , an author probably most famous for his tales of terror, also dabbled in some science

fiction

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