Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Duyen Hai 10 Lan VII de Xuat 12
Duyen Hai 10 Lan VII de Xuat 12
3. The speaker suggests that after their walk people might want to _____.
________________________________________________________________
2. What is the main focus of the Center now?
________________________________________________________________
3. How was Snapshot research carried out?
________________________________________________________________
4. How much higher are local business rents compared to those nationally?
________________________________________________________________
5. How many local business close a year after they have started working with
the Centre?
________________________________________________________________
Questions 6-10: Complete the table below. Write NO MORE THAN
THREE WORDS for each answer. (5pts)
II. Choose the word whose stress pattern is different from that of the other
three (2.5 pts)
2. It took Anna a long time to get the _____ of the new computer programme.
12. I was disappointed that the restaurant had _____ flowers on the table.
13. As she is so heavily overlooked, there is a _____ possibility that she will
have a nervous breakdown.
14. _____ to the invention of the steam engine, most forms of transport were
horse-drawn.
17. Fearing for his life, he _____ the mugger for mercy.
18. I am not convinced that financial advisers always act in their clients’ best
_____.
19. The case against the bank robbers was _____ for lack of evidence.
20. Five readers _____ the correct solution to our recent competition.
II. The passage below contains 10 mistakes. Underline the mistakes and
write their correct forms in the space provided. (5 pts)
1. I wonder what everybody finds _____ (1) him. What is there so remarkable
_____ (2) him that people will hang _____ (3) his every word.
2. He was last _____ (4) a long line, and _____ (5) the look _____ (6) it, he was
unlikely to get a good seat _____ (7) the show.
3. The poverty _____ (8) her childhood stands _____ (9) total contrast _____
(10) her life _____ (11) Hollywood.
4. Did you plan to share an apartment with an American student, or did you
come _____ (12) by accident?
6. The professor offered to make me her lab assistant, and I jumped _____ (14)
the opportunities.
7. During the prison riots, four prisoners succeeded in getting _____ (15).
8. I can’t spend everything I earn. I must put money _____ (16) my trip home.
9. Before you say no, please calm _____ (17) and listen.
10. I don’t mind lending you $10 until Saturday if you’ll give it _____ (18).
11. Please be ready to hand your term paper _____ (19) by the end next week.
IV. Put the verbs in the brackets into their appropriate tenses and forms (5
pts)
1. The little boy had a lot of trouble _____ (1. convince) everyone that he _____
(2. see) a mermaid.
2. I was terribly disappointed _____ (3. discover) that he _____ (4. lie) to me.
5. The girl got into a lot of trouble. She _____ (8. not, tell) a lie.
7. It was our fault to keep Jane _____ (10. wait) so long. We _____ (11.
inform) her in advance.
8. The airplane in which the football team _____ (12. travel) crashed soon after
taking off.
9. You don’t remember _____ (13. tell) him how to get here. If you _____ (14.
have) we _____ (15. not miss) the train.
10. For some years now, Samantha _____ (16. believe) strongly in reincarnation
and _____ (17. try) to persuade her friends to come round to her way of
thinking but they _____ (18.still/not/convince).
11. We _____ (19. tell) that the workers were repairing an old bridge at the time.
12. Why didn’t you tell me you could you lend me the money? I _____ (20. not
borrow) it from the bank.
WOMEN ONLY
Increasingly, women are taking their holidays without men. For _____ (1.
SAFE) reasons, camaraderie or just plain fun, a growing number of female
tourists are singing up for women-only trips. Twenty years ago only a _____ (2.
HAND) of companies offered such holidays; now there are several hundred.
Travel _____ (3. CONSULT) Andre Littlewood says that the combination of
higher incomes with delayed marriage, divorce, retirement and widowhood has
_____ (4. ABLE) more women to travel, often on their own. They are attracted
by the sense of _____ (5. FREE) that a holiday without men affords them.
“Women in a group tend to feel _____ (6. INHIBIT) and speak more openly
than when men are around”, she adds. “Even on energy-sapping adventure
holidays the atmosphere is relaxed and _____ (7. CO-OPERATE). It’s also a
great deal more fun. Women laugh more _____ (8. READY) than men,
probably because they don’t mind laughing at themselves.” Since her divorce
Janice Cummings has been a regular traveler with Everywoman Tours, and
Oxford-based Company whose very name is a _____ (9. DETER) to men. “And
a good thing too,” she says. “Men simply cannot resist the _____ (10. TEMPT)
to try and take control, no matter where they are. And that includes on holiday.
Thankfully, there is none of that with Everywoman.”
VI. Choose the best linking word or phrase to complete the passage. (5 pts)
_____ (1), cigarettes are openly on sale in many public places and laws
governing the minimum age at which they can be bought often seem to be
ignored. _____ (2), cigarette advertising continues to figure largely in some
parts of the media, despite recent moves to outlaw this, and is, _____ (3), often
targeted at young people.
_____ (10), I would like to add that, of course, it is the duty of parents,
teachers and other responsible adults to set a good example; by not smoking!
I. Read the text and fill each gap with ONE suitable word. (7.5 pts)
SNORING
Sleep deprivation can make us very angry, which is why snoring – the
human equivalent of a car alarm _____ (1) set off at night – can be so irritating.
Most people snore occasionally, but in middle age about 40% of men and 20%
of women _____ (2) so regularly. Snoring can ruin relationships and be
intensely embarrassing. Snorers _____ (3) go into hospital, for example, may
worry that they’ll keep the whole ward awake. But snoring doesn’t _____ (4)
afflict the unafflicted, snorers may also disturb _____ (5) and feel sleepy during
the day.
Snoring can sometimes be a symptom of a more serious condition. Up
_____ (6) 6% of men and 2% of women suffer from sleep apnoea, a syndrome
in which breathing _____ (7) significantly disrupted during sleep. Some people
may start off _____ (8) uncomplicated snorers, but develop sleep apnoea as they
get older. The word apnoea is derived _____ (9) the Greek and means “no
breathing”. People _____ (10) sleep apnoea have airways that become
obstructed during sleep. Typically, they snore loudly, stop breathing, struggle
_____ (11) air, partly wake up (although often unaware of it), gulp a bit, and
then recommence snoring. The cycle may _____ (12) repeated over 100 times
an hour.
_____ (13) surprisingly, people with sleep apnoea feel unrefreshed in the
morning. They may have problems concentrating during the day, feel depressed
and fall asleep _____ (14) socially unacceptable times. At worst, they can fall
asleep _____ (15) driving or operating dangerous machinery.
II. Read the text below and decide which answer (A, B, C or D) best fits
each space. (7.5 pts)
People who want to lose weight are being _____ (1) a startling new way to
burn fat. Would-be slimmers are flocking to a spa in Hong Kong that _____ (2)
to reduce their waistlines by smearing them with Chinese herbs, dousing them
with alcohol and then _____ (3) light to them, all for £78 a session. The spa
claims that the _____ (4) heat of the fire penetrates deep tissue, increasing
circulation and helping the body to absorb the herbal concoction which works to
detoxify the body and _____ (5) down fat. It boasts that the results are _____
(6), with customers recording losses of up to 15 centimeters of fat after the first
_____ (7).
Karen Chu, owner of The Life of Life Healing Spa in Hong Kong’s busy
Causeway Bay district, says that about 100 customers have successfully _____
(8) the treatment, and there have been no _____ (9). “About half the customers
come here for the Aqua-Fire treatment,” she said. “It is _____ (10) safe. You are
_____ (11) from the flame by wet towels. We have never had any complaints or
problems. In Asia, people are more _____ (12) to the idea of fire being a healing
_____ (13). It is only the Westerners who are afraid of the fire. If a customer is
really afraid we don’t go _____ (14).” Ms. Chu claims the fire treatment also
boosts the immune system, relieves stress, cleanses the skin and _____ (15)
muscular pains and stomach problems.
III. Read the following passage and choose the best answer (A, B, C or D) to
each question. (5pts)
INTERNET JOBS
Contrary to popular belief, one does not have to be a trained programmer to
work online. Of course, there are plenty of jobs available for people with high-
tech computer skills, but the growth of new media has opened up a wide range
of Internet career opportunities requiring only a minimal level of technical
expertise. Probably one of the most well-known online job opportunities is the
job of webmaster. However, it is hard to define one basic job description for this
position. The qualifications and responsibilities depend on what tasks a
particular organization needs a webmaster to perform.
How much can a person make in these kinds of career? As with many
questions related to today’s evolving technology, there is no simple answer.
There are many companies willing to pay people with technical Internet skills
salaries well above $70,000 a year. Generally, webmasters start at about $30,000
per year, but salaries can vary greatly. Freelance writers working online have
been known to make between $40,000 and $70,000 per year. (431 words)
C. The duties they perform depend on the organization they work for.
5. According to the passage, all of the following are true EXCEPT _____.
A. There are online job available for workers with minimal computer skills.
Question 1-5: Choose the most suitable heading for each paragraph from
the List of headings below. One of the headings has been done as an
example.
List of headings
v. An important addition
TEA TIMES
The chances are that you have already drunk a cup or glass of tea today.
Perhaps, you are sipping one as you read this. Tea, now an everyday beverage in
many parts of the world, has over the centuries been an important part of rituals
of hospitality both in the home and in wider society.
Tea originated in China, and in Eastern Asia tea making and drinking
ceremonies have been popular for centuries. Tea was first shipped to North
Western Europe by English and Dutch maritime traders in the 16th century. At
about the same time, a land route from the Far East, via Moscow, to Europe was
opened up. Tea also figured in America’s bid for independence from British rule
– the Boston Tea Party.
2
As, over the last four hundred years, tea-leavers became available throughout
much of Asia and Europe, the ways in which tea was drunk changed. The
Chinese considered the quality of the leaves and the ways in which they were
cured all important. People in other cultures added new ingredients besides tea-
leaves and hot water. They drank tea with milk, sugar, spices like cinnamon and
cardamom, and herbs such as mint or sage. The variations are endless. For
example, in Western Sudan on the edge of the Sahara Desert, sesame oil is
added to milky tea on cold mornings. In England tea, unlike coffee, acquired a
reputation as a therapeutic drink that promoted health. Indeed, in European and
Arab countries as well as in Persia and Russia, tea was praised for its restorative
and health giving properties. One Dutch physician, Cornelius Blankaart, advised
that to maintain health a minimum of eight to ten cups a day should be drunk,
and that up to 50 to 100 daily cups could be consumed with safety.
While European coffee houses were frequently by men discussing politics and
closing business deals, respectable middle-class women stayed at home and held
tea parties. When the price of tea fell in the nineteenth century poor people took
up the drink with enthusiasm. Different grades and blends of tea were sold to
suit every pocket.
Throughout the world today, few religious groups object to tea drinking. In
Islamic cultures, where drinking of alcohol is forbidden, tea and coffee
consumption is an important part of social life. However, Seventh-Day
Adventists, recognizing the beverage as a drug containing the stimulant caffeine,
frown upon the drinking of tea.
5
In Britain, coffee drinking, particularly in the informal atmosphere of coffee
shops, is currently in vogue. Yet, the convention of afternoon tea lingers. At
conferences, it remains common practice to serve coffee in the morning and tea
in the afternoon. Contemporary China, too, remains true to its long tradition.
Delegates at conferences and seminars are served tea in cups with lids to keep
the infusion hot. The cups are topped up throughout the proceedings. There are
as yet not signs of coffee at such occasions. (491 words)
Originated in China and Eastern Asia, for century, both at home and in
society, tea has become an important role in ______________ (6). In the 19th
century, falling tea prices meant that people could choose the
_____________________ (7) of tea they could afford. Nowadays, throughout
the world, few religious groups raise _____________ (8) tea drinking. Because
it __________________ (9) Seventh-Day Adventists do not approve of the
drinking of tea. In Britain, while coffee is in fashion, afternoon tea is still a
_____________________ (10).
I. Rewrite the sentences with the given words or beginning in such a way
that their meanings remain unchanged. (5pts)
1. It was not until five years had elapsed that the whole truth about the murder
came out.
2. The only reason why she got promotion is that she’s very competent.
________________________________________________________________
7. Mr. Beaver claimed that hard work was the reason for his success.
(ATTRIBUTED)
________________________________________________________________
8. She and her husband disagree strongly about how their daughter should be
educated. (EYE)
________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________
II. Students should have freedom to choose their own subjects in the
graduation exam for Secondary education. Do you agree or disagree? Write
a paragraph (120 to 150 words) to support your answer. (15pts)
ĐÁP ÁN ĐỀ NGHỊ - THPT CHUYÊN BẮC NINH
PART A
I. 1. A 2. B 3. C 4. B 5. C
3. by telephone 4. 33
5. two 6. stock
PART B:
I. 1. B 2. A 3. C 4. A 5. D
6. A 7. D 8. B 9. D 10. C
II.
III.
1. in 2. about 3. on 4. in 5. from
6. of 7. for 8. of 9. in 10. to/with
11. in 12. about 13. across 14. at 15. away
16. aside 17. down 18. back 19. in 20. up
IV.
16. has believed 17. has been trying 18. are still not convinced
V.
1. safety 2. handful
3. consultant 4. enabled
5. freedom 6. uninhibited
7. co-operative 8. readily
VI. 1. B 2. B 3. A 4. D 5. B
6. C 7. A 8. C 9. C 10. D
PART D.
II. 1. A 2. B 3. C 4. B 5. D
6. A 7. C 8. A 9. B 10. D
11. C 12. A 13. D 14. B 15. C
III. 1. A 2. C 3. B 4. B 5. C
6. C 7. A 8. D 9. C 10. D
8. (some) objections to
9. contains caffeine
PART E: WRITING
I. 1. Not for another five years did the whole truth about the murder come
out.
4. Refusal to give a breath sample to the police could lead to your arrest.
5. Ever since (he had) his accident Phillip has been unable to make
decisions.
8. She and her husband don’t see eye to eye on their daughter’s education.
II.
1. Organization: (5 points)
+ Supporting sentences: support directly the main idea stated in the topic
sentence and provide logical, persuasive examples.
I.
Hi and welcome to the walking audio tour service, which offers guided audio
tours of over 30 walks around London. The full list of the walks is available on
our website. You have chosen the Hampstead Heath Tour Part 1, which was, in
fact, the first of the walking tours that were recorded. Your walk takes you
through part of the heath, a huge, wild, open parkland where Londoners and
visitors to the city can come and enjoy some leisurely and refreshing exercise.
The heath is one of the gems of north London. When you enter the parkland,
you will feel as if you are walking in the wild countryside, but you are actually
still in an urban area.
The walking tour begins here at the exit to Hampstead underground station,
which is the deepest station on the London Underground system. We hope that
you enjoy your experience, whether you are on your own or sharing your walk
with a companion. … So let’s begin your tour. We hope you enjoy it1
If you turn right as you exit Hampstead station, and stay on the right hand side
of the road, the main thorough-fare, Heath Street, will take you up the hill to the
heath itself. You are now walking away from the main shops and cafes in
Hampstead village, but you can return to visit these after your walking tour for
some window shopping. The village is busy during the daytime and the
evenings.
Now back to Heath Street. As the road winds northwards up Heath Street, you
will pass some shops and restaurants on your way to the heath. When you reach
the top, the first part of the heath that you will see on your right is the Vale of
the Heath, which has some spectacular houses, built on the Heath itself beside a
large pond. If you go along a little further you will come to a fork in the road –
North End Way – turns to the left and goes northwest away from the heath; and
on your right is Spaniards Road, which turns north-east, cutting through the
parkland. Walk along this latter road a little way and look for the first opening
on your right, where a path leads you down into the wild parkland.
As you descend along the pathway, you will find that the noise of the busy
road, that is just on your left, disappears completely. You might want to take off
your headphones to enjoy the delight of the sounds of the parkland. Don’t
imagine that there is only silence! There is the noise of the trees and the wildlife
that lives there. As you walk along the path, you will come across several paths
coming from the right to join the path that you are on, but keep going until you
come to the first fork in the path. Now take the path that goes to your left, which
will bring you shortly to the open spaces around Kenwood House.
II.
Question 1-5:
The subject of this evening’s talk at the North Bank Business Centre is local
business people in the area surrounding the university, and the benefit they bring
to the employment prospects of people in the local area, especially young people
at the beginning of their career.
Just after the Centre was set up, snapshot research conducted by the
department over the telephone gave some startling results. The information
about local business revealed that three out of every ten local business start-ups,
that we could collect information on, had failed within the first six months, and
another five had gone within the year, leaving only two. The most common
reasons given for the businesses closing were: first, high rents, which are 33%
higher than the national average due to the area being very central; second, lack
of knowledge about grants, basically because of ignorance about how to access
them; and thirdly a lack of business support, because they did not know where to
obtain advice from.
Since the Centre came into existence three years ago, we have helped to
change this climate of failure. The current statistics show a remarkable
turnaround in the fortunes of local business. And now, after a year, only two
business close out of every ten compared to eight before the Centre was set up.
Question 6-10:
Six local businesses are now taking part in a work-placement and monitoring
scheme, which is of mutual benefit to ourselves and the companies involved. O-
foods, a small start-up company with nine employees involved in organic food
and based at a local market, has one final year graduate doing a year-long study
on improving the stock turnaround. This was a particular problem because the
company found that they were losing sometimes up to 30 percent of their stock.
Another start-up is Innovations which deals with producing video games. This
company, which employs only five people all under the age of 25, is receiving
support in attracting business partners and achieving production targets.
The first of the two medium-sized companies that the scheme is monitoring is
Build Ltd, which employs 47 people. A comparison of their products and
services with other businesses in the area is being carried out by a researcher,
who is trying to support them in their efforts to extend the company’s product
range.
The last company, Jones Systems, is perhaps the most interesting, because it
has been the victim of considerable personnel problems, which have been
affecting the day-to-day operations of the company. And so we are looking at
conflict management and team building within the company.
To sum up, advisors help the companies look at different business options and
models, apply for grants, deal with employment issues, systems creation, and
also provide accommodation at the centre to help them start up. E-mentoring for
fledgling businesses is also in operation for those who find it difficult to attend
the centre personally. The programme is funded by grants from local authorities.