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Q1 - LESSON 4 Student’s name:......................................Class: 9A................

Corrector’s name:......................................

LISTENING
Questions 21-23. Complete the sentences below.
Write NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS for each answer.
21. The new teacher who is very popular among students wrote a book titled ‘…………………………….
……………………………………..’
22. It covers techniques including doing research as part of a ……………………………………..
23. The objective is for the students to present ……………………………………..in a collaborative manner.

Questions 24 – 30. Complete the table below.


Write NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS for each answer.
Observational method:

Observation checklist Conduct


Students: examine the (24) …………………………..
………………………………. of peer pupils Keep a (25) ……………………………………..

Carry out (26) …………………………………….. In-class (27) ……………………………………..

Non - observational method:

Non - observation checklist Conduct

Statistics Evaluate (28) ……………………………………..


With the help of (29) ……………………………………..
to identify respondents
Questionnaires
Choose own respondents to do (30)
…………………... ……………………………………..

A. GRAMMAR
I. Complete the sentences with an appropriate form of the verb given. Use the past simple, present
perfect, past perfect and past perfect continuous tenses. Use each tense at least once in each group of
four sentences, but give alternatives where possible.
1. play
a. We …..have played ….. 35 matches so far this season, so we’re all feeling pretty tired.
b. After the match, she admitted that she ………………had played………………………… badly.
c. ………Did……….. you …………played……………………………… rugby or football at the school you
went to?
d. We ……………hadn’t been playing…………………………… really well all year, so it came as a big
surprise when we were beaten by Wales last December.
2. make
a. We ……………made…………………………… the right decision in emigrating to Canada in the mid-
1990s.
b. Henson never thought about retirement. In fact, he ………………had been
making……………………… a documentary film about the indigenous people of Chile when he died.

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c. A: When did you realise that you ………………had made………………………… a mistake in joining the
army?
B: When I was posted to Afghanistan.
d. Korean scientists believe that they ………………have made………………………… a breakthrough in the
fight against cancer by developing a technique for containing the disease. They reported their findings at
the AAL conference in New York this week.
3. eat
a. The couple described how they …………had been eating…………… in the dining room when the
explosion destroyed the hotel.
b. My mother was a vegetarian, and as children we rarely …………ate……………………………… meat.
c. I …………had eaten……………………………… prawns a few times before last week without any ill
effects, but the ones I had at the restaurant made me very sick indeed.
d. A: Would you like some of these cherries?
B: Yes, please. I ………hadn’t been eating………………………………… any fresh fruit for days.
4. run
a. Over the last year I ………… have been running……………………………… workshops on creative
writing in twelve colleges and universities.
b. She was breathing hard as if she ………………had running…………………………
c. She ………………had run………………………… only two marathons before breaking the world record in
the Pan-African Games.
d. I was late for work so I ……………have been running…………………………… most of the way.

II. Complete this text with these verbs.


was (x2) explained didn’t eat have gone had cooked hadn’t eaten
were went didn’t lock have heard had reached hadn’t locked

One of the four-year-olds in the reading group suddenly said, “This is the silliest story I (5) …………
have…………….. ever…………heard……………..!” I (6) ……………………was…………..……….. in the middle
of reading Goldilocks and the Three Bears to the group. We (7) …………had…………….. just …………
reached…………….. the part in the story where Goldilocks goes into the bears’ house and eats some of the
food from bowls on the table.
“Where (8) ……………………were…………..……….. the bears?” he asked.
“Maybe outside or playing in the woods,” I suggested.
“And their house was wide open? They (9) ……………hadn’t………….. even ……………locked…………..
the door before going out?’
“Well, in the old days, people (10) ……………………didn’t lock…………..……….. their doors.”
“And their food was on the table, but they (11) …………………hadn’t eaten……………..……….. it before
they (12) ………………went………………..……….. outside?”
“Maybe they (13) …………………didn’t eat………..…….. it because it (14) …………………was………..
……….. too hot.”
“If you (15) ………………had cooked…………..……….. that meal, you wouldn’t (16) ………have
gone……….…….. out and left it, would you?”
“Probably not, but it’s just a story,” I (17) ……………explained…………………..……….. rather weakly.

III. Write the verb in brackets in the correct form, present perfect simple or present perfect continuous.
Use contractions where possible.
18. …………I’ve sent off………………………………… (I/ send off) over 18 press releases this morning so
far.
19. Is it the first time …………you’ve ever eaten………………………………… (you / ever / eat) squid?
20. ……We have been waiting……………………………………… (we/ wait) for you for the past two hours.
Where’ve ………… ……you been………………………….. (you / be)?
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21. ……Have you just received……………………………………… (you/ just / receive) an e-mail from
Ruth?
22. I’m afraid …we haven’t got……………………………………… (we/ get) any milk …We’ve been
expecting…………………………………… (we / expect) a delivery for the past four hours but ………they
haven’t shown…………………………………… (they / show up) yet.

23. …I’ve drawn………………………………………… (I / draw up) a list of people to invite to the wedding
but ……………I’ve been getting……………………………… (I / get) very far so far. …Have
you………………………………………… (you / have) any thoughts about it?
24. Oh, Clair, my …………mum’s meant………………………………… (mum / mean) to ask you for a while.
Would you like to come with us to Wimbledon?

B. VOCABULARY
I. Complete using the correct form of the phrasal verbs in the box.
do up bring up turn into brush up fade away
cheer up back up dress up make up switch on
take up use up tidy up test out turn up

25. The image on the screen ………………faded away………………….…….. and I knew it was a computer
virus.
26. Let’s ……………test out…………………….…….. your new game and see if it works.
27. You’ll regret it if you don’t ……………back up…………………….…….. your important data.
28. Have you …………………used up……………….…….. the blank CDs I gave you, or have you got some
left?
29. We should ……………do up…………………….…….. Jake’s bedroom now he’s left home.
30. Could you send someone to have a look at my computer, because nothing happens when I …………
turn………………….. it …………up…………………..?
31. One of the miracles of nature is the way a caterpillar ……………turns into…………………….…….. a
butterfly.
32. Why don’t you ………………take up………………….…….. yoga?
33. I was depressed all day, but I started to ……………cheer up…………………….…….. when I saw Alec.
34. I’m going to ………………brush up………………….…….. my French before we go on holiday.
35. How could you …………………make up……………….…….. such a ridiculous excuse?
36. If you ……………tidy up…………………….…….. your room, then you’ll be able to find things more
easily.
37. Why did you have to …………bring up……………………….…….. the fact that Dennis has lost his job?
38. Let’s …………………dress up……………….…….. and go out to that new Italian restaurant tonight.
39. What time did Nigel finally ……………turn up…………………….…….. at the party, then?

II. Use the word given in capitals at the end of some lines to form a word that fits in the space in the
same line.
FREUD AND DREAM
Sigmund Freud is regarded as the (40) …………founder………………… of FOUND
psychoanalysis. His work has been (41) …………………………… in many areas but he INFLUENCE
is perhaps best known for having drawn our (42) …………attention………………… to ATTEND
dreams, which he believed were clues to inner conflicts. The fact that a dream is (44) ESSENTIAL
…………………………… a disguised expression of what is happening in the
unconscious mind means that it is difficult for the dreamer to understand its (44) SIGNIFY
…………………………… . Freud believed that the sleeping mind resorted to a whole
range of unconscious wishes in forms which would prevent the dreamer from having AWARE
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any (45) …………………………… of their true nature. In Freud’s view, interpreting the
meaning of the dream required a psychoanalyst with an expert (46) KNOW
…………………………… of how dreams disguise desires. The psychoanalyst’s lack of INVOLVE
personal (47) …………………………… in the dream would enable him to see the dream
objectively. MYSTERY
According to Freud, dreams use a (48) …………………………… symbolic
language quite different from that of waking life, but the fact is there is no hard (49) EVIDENT
…………………………… for believing that dreams really do reflect our unconscious DOUBT
wishes. Nevertheless, Freud (50) …………………………… made a major contribution to
twentieth-century thought and many useful insights into psychological processes have
been gained through his work.
C. WRITING
Complete the second sentence so that it has a similar meaning to the first sentence, using the word
given. DO NOT CHANGE THE WORD GIVEN. You must use between three and six words, including the
word given.
51. Mauro says he prefers to do his homework on his own. RATHER
Mauro says that ……………he would rather not…………………………….. do his homework with other
people.
52. Clara said that she had not seen the missing letter. HAVING
Clara ………………………denied having seen……………………………………………………….. the
missing letter.
53. I’ll be happy to show you round the sights of my city when you come to visit me. TAKE
It will be a …………pleasure to take you on a………………………………………….. sightseeing tour of
my city when you come to visit me.
54. Rousseau painted fabulous pictures of the rainforest although he had never travelled outside Europe.
SPITE
Rousseau painted fabulous pictures of the rainforest ……in spite of never having……………….. travelled
outside Europe.
55. It is thought that one in every five people cannot control how much they spend. UNABLE
One in every five people is thought …………to be unable to keep………………………….. their spending
under control.
56. My passport needs renewing because I’m going abroad this summer. GET
I need ………to get my passport renewed……………………………………………………………………..
because I’m going abroad this summer.
57. Thanks to the surgeon’s quick acts, his eyesight was saved. GOOD
If the surgeons hadn’t acted quickly, his eyesight would have gone for good.....................................
58. It seemed the young man was feeling bitter about his family background. SHOULDER
The young man appeared to be having a chip on his shoulder about................................................his
family background.
59. The public reaction to the design of the new theater turned out to be bitterly critical. TEETH
The way the public reacted to the design of the new theater turned out to be a kick in the teeth.......
60. It’s bad you didn’t try to do your share of the job. WEIGHT
You should have pulled your weight in the job...................................................................................

D. READING
You are going to read a magazine article about hippos. Six paragraphs have been removed from the
article. Choose from the paragraphs A-G the one which fits each gap (61 – 66). There is one extra
paragraph which you do not need to use.
WHEN THE HIPPOS ROAR, START PADDLING!
Richard Jackson and his wife spent their honeymoon going down the Zambezi river in a canoe.

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‘They say this is a good test of a relationship,’ said Tim as he handed me the paddle. I wasn’t sure that such a
tough challenge was what was needed on a honeymoon, but it was too late to go back. My wife, Leigh, and I
were standing with our guide, Tim Came, on the banks of the Zambezi near the Zambia/Botswana border. This
was to be the highlight of our honeymoon: a safari downriver, ending at the point where David Livingstone first
saw the Victoria Falls.
(61) A……………..
Neither of us had any canoeing experience. Tentatively we set off downstream, paddling with more enthusiasm
than expertise. Soon we heard the first distant rumblings of what seemed like thunder. ‘Is that Victoria Falls?’ we
inquired naively. ‘No,’ said Tim dismissively. ‘That’s our first rapid.’ Easy, we thought. Wrong!
(62) D……………..
The canoe plotted a crazed path as we careered from side to side, our best efforts seeming only to add to our
plight. This was the first of many rapids, all relatively minor, all enjoyably challenging for tourists like us.
(63) F……………..
The overnight stops would mean mooring at a deserted island in the middle of the river, where Tim’s willing
support team would be waiting, having erected a camp and got the water warm for our bucket showers. As the
ice slowly melted in the drinks, restaurant-quality food would appear from a cooker using hot coals. Then people
would begin to relax, and the day’s stories would take on epic proportions.
(64) E……………..
One morning, Tim decided to count the number of hippos we saw, in an attempt to gauge the population in this
part of the river. Most of the wildlife keeps a cautious distance, and we were assured that, safe in our canoe,
any potential threats would be more scared of us than we were of them - but we had been warned to give these
river giants a wide berth. They’d normally stay in mid-stream, watching us with some suspicion, and greeting our
departure with a cacophony of grunts.
(65) C……………..
Tim yelled ‘Paddle!’ and over the next 100 metres an Olympic runner would have struggled to keep up with us.
The hippo gave up the chase, and although Tim said he was just a youngster showing off, our opinion was that
he had honeymooners on the menu. That would certainly be the way we told the story by the time we got home.
(66) B……………..
At some times of the year, you can even enjoy a natural jacuzzi in one of the rock pools beside the falls. The
travel brochures say it’s the world’s most exclusive picnic spot. It’s certainly the ideal place to wind down after a
near miss with a hippo.

A. Luckily we could make our mistakes in privacy as, apart from Tim and another couple, for two days we
were alone. Our only other company was the array of bird and animal life. The paddling was fairly gentle,
and when we got tired, Tim would lead us to the shore and open a cool-box containing a picnic lunch.
B. If that was the scariest moment, the most romantic was undoubtedly our final night’s campsite.
Livingstone Island is perched literally on top of Victoria Falls. The safari company we were with have
exclusive access to it: it’s just you, a sheer drop of a few hundred metres and the continual roar as
millions of litres of water pour over the edge.
C. There was plenty of passing traffic to observe on land as well - giraffes, hippos, elephants and warthogs,
while eagles soared overhead. We even spotted two rare white rhinos. We paddled closer to get a better
look.
D. We had a four-metre aluminium canoe to ourselves. It was a small craft for such a mighty river, but quite
big enough to house the odd domestic dispute. Couples had, it seemed, ended similar trips arguing
rather than paddling. But it wasn’t just newly-weds at risk. Tim assured us that a group of comedians
from North America had failed to see the funny side too.
E. But number 150 had other ideas. As we hugged the bank he dropped under the water. We expected him
to re-surface in the same spot, as the others had done. Instead, there was a sudden roar and he
emerged lunging towards the canoe.

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F. Over the next hour or so the noise grew to terrifying dimensions. By the time we edged around the bend
to confront it, we were convinced we would be faced with mountains of white water. Instead, despite all
the sound and fury, the Zambezi seemed only slightly ruffled by a line of small rocks.
G. When we’d all heard enough, we slept under canvas, right next to the river bank. Fortunately, we picked
a time of year largely free of mosquitoes, so our nets and various lotions remained unused. The sounds
of unseen animals were our nightly lullaby.

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