Bài thi thử kỳ thi tốt nghiệp Trung học Phổ thông môn Tiếng Anh - Năm học 2018-2019 - Mã đề 478

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Bài thi thử kỳ thi tốt nghiệp Trung học Phổ thông môn Tiếng Anh - Năm học 2018-2019 - Mã đề 478
SỞ GIÁO DỤC ĐÀO TẠO BÀI THI THỬ KỲ THI TỐT NGHIỆP TRUNG HỌC PHỔ THÔNG 
 ĐỀ CHÍNH THỨC NĂM HỌC 2018- 2019
 (Đề gồm có 05 trang) MÔN TIẾNG ANH ~ MÃ ĐỀ 478
 [15] Thời gian: 60 phút - không tính thời gian giao đề
Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the sentence that best combines each pair of sentences in the following questions.
Question 1: So few people are interested in this camping holiday. I just can't understand it.
A. I find it surprising that there aren’t fewer people interested in such a camping holiday.
B. Hardly anyone wants to go on this camping holiday, which I find strange.
C. To my surprise almost no one was interested in such a camping holiday.	 
D. It’s hardly surprising that aofew people are interested in this camping holiday.
Question 2: Dad won a lottery of $ 200,000. Mum lost most of it in gambling.
A. Most of the lottery of $200,000 Dad won Mum lost it in gambling.
B. Dad won a lottery of $200,000, most of which Mum lost in gambling.
C. Dad won a lottery of $200, 000 of which most Mum lost in gambling.
D. Dad won a lottery of $200,000, Mum lost most of that in gambling.
Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the word(s) OPPOSITE in meaning to the underlined word(s) in each of the following questions.
Question 3: We dropped anchor at Cat Lai harbour at 9 p.m.
A. lifted	B. hoisted	C. pulled	D. weighed
Question 4: He became a national hero for his part in the revolution.
A. antihero	B. character	C. coward	D. prodigy
Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the underlined part that needs correction in each of the following questions.
Question 5: Many fruits contain large amounts of vitamin C, as well as sugar, which provide energy. 
A. provide	B. amounts	C. Many	D. as well as
Question 6: Natural gas was probably formed from plants and animals that decayed million of years ago.
A. from	B. that	C. million	D. probably
Question 7: The most desert animals avoid the extreme midday heat by feeding at night.
A. The most	B. avoid	C. heat	D. feeding
Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct word or phrase that best fits each of the numbered blanks.
 In the late 1500s, brave men and women and their children sailed from Europe across the Atlantic Ocean to America, looking for a better way of life. These people wanted better jobs than they had in their homelands, and many wanted the freedom to choose their own religion. Still others wanted the opportunity to be able to buy land.
 This period of time in America is ...(8)... as the colonial period. It lasted about 170 years. During this time, many colonists worked very hard ...(9)... a new nation. The first colony, Jamestown, was established in 1607. Between 1607 and 1733, 13 permanent colonies were established on the east coast of America. These colonies started to grow and ...(10)... as more and more people from other countries began to immigrate. As the population of the colonies grew, trade and manufacturing developed quickly, especially in towns that had good harbours.
 Despite the growth and the many successes of the colonies, the colonists also ...(11)... their fair share of problems. One very big problem was the friction between the colonies and Britain. The colonists wanted very much to control themselves and have more say in making decisions that affected them. However, the British Parliament would not allow it.
 This angered the colonists, so they often ignored British laws. As Britain ...(12)... more and more taxes on the colonists, the colonists grew angrier and angrier. Acts passed by Parliament, such as the Sugar Act and the Stamp Act, forced the colonists to take action against Britain.
 In 1774, delegates from all the colonies except Georgia met to decide how to gain some independence from Britain. Their attempts failed. They met again in 1775. The delegates helped organize an army and a navy tofight the British soldiers. The colonists wanted freedom from Britain. They outlined this freedom on July 4, 1776, in the Declaration of Independence.
 Question 8:A. claimed	B. regarded	C. considered	D. known
 Question 9:A. paving	B. establishing	C. creating	D. building
 Question 10:A. develop	B. prosper	C. enrich	D. enlarge
 Question 11:A. sought	B. found	C. faced	D. gave
 Question 12:A. put	B. imposed 	C. engaged	D. deposited
Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the word that differs from the other three in the position of primary stress in each of the following questions.
 Question 13:A. prosperous	B. enormous	C. victorious	D. mysterious
 Question 14:A. accurate	B. fortunate	C. abolish	D. genuine
Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the option that best completes each of the following exchanges.
Question 15: ~ A: "Hey, Lucy. I’m trying to study. You’re making an awful noise." ~ B: "............."
A. But Dad’s sleeping.	B. It isn’t a noise. It’s Beethoven.
C. What? My cat’s caught a rat?	D. Yes, I’m just finishing an email.
Question 16: ~ A: "............." ~ B: "Oh dear! Never mind."
A. There’s a fly in your coffee, Bob.	B. The fish is burning, Mum.
C. You haven’t given my pocket money, Dad.	D. I didn’t pass my maths exam.
Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the word(s) CLOSEST in meaning to the underlined word(s) in each of the following questions.
Question 17: I'm not going to serve that good coffee to Chris and Melanie - it would be wasted on them.
A. tasteless to	B. too expensive for	C. not enjoyed by	D. not appreciated by
Question 18: It's a programme designed to appeal mainly to 16 to 25-year-olds.
A. call	B. sponsor	C. admire	D. attract
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 following questions.
MODEL CITIZEN
An interview with the supermodel Erin O'Connor
 Erin O ’Connor is curled up in a chair in an office at ICM Models, the agency that represents her. You hear a lot about Erin being ‘a freak of nature’, and she can look so extraordinary on the catwalk - all jutting hips, jagged nose and towering height. But here she is in person - the muse to Jean-Paul Gaultier, to Valentino, to Lagerfeld - a delicate, pretty young woman, not that tall after all, but effortlessly stylish in wide-legged jeans and a stripey top, her cropped hair pulled back, in an orange scarf. At first, when you arrive in the room, you could be forgiven for taking her for an assistant if a second look didn’t reveal her prettiness: ‘Gosh, aren’t you beautiful,’ I say, sort of to apologise, and, blow me, if the woman who’s launched a thousand shows doesn’t blush.
 In her eleven years on the catwalk and on magazine covers, Erin has accrued extraordinary personal wealth, but despite having been, amongst others, the face of Chanel, Givenchy and Gucci, she’s managed to keep her profile relatively low. Even more admirably, in an industry renowned for its bitchiness (‘you have to take it head on,’ she confides), she has kept a reputation as ‘the nice face of fashion’. She was one of the girls followed in the TV documentary “This Model Life’, and was breathtakingly level-headed and amusing in it.
 As a friend to the model Karen Elson, who has admitted to anorexia, as well as in her new role as vice chairman of the British Fashion Council (BFC), Erin has talked cogently about the responsibility the industry has towards both models and the girls who try to emulate them. She is keen tofoster a better relationship with the press (‘at the moment they want to vilify or victimise us’), she gives talks to each year’s new faces and, through the BFC, helps allocate sponsorship to new designers. And - the reason she has agreed to a rare interview - she is appearing in, and helping plan, ‘A Night in Fashion’, the opening of a music festival in London and a star-studded catwalk show that will benefit two leading charities.
 Erin O ’Connor grew up in Walsall, the middle of three girls. She was training to be a nursery nurse and ‘struggling through her final year at school’ when she was spotted at a ‘Clothes Show’ live event. She has talked a lot about how uncomfortable she was with her body when she was growing up. ‘I outgrew my dad when I was 17- I outgrew everyone: aunties, sisters, mother, boyfriends.’ Success wasn’t immediate, but years of ballet classes meant she was a natural on the catwalk. ‘Walking in heels felt like a holiday after pointes.’
 Her big breakthrough didn’t come until 1999 when, on a shoot in Brazil for Harpers & Queen, she chopped off her long hair. ‘I found my femininity for the first time, my version of it.’ She taps her fingers to her heart, a gesture she makes often. ‘Then it all went crazy.’
 Jean-Paul Gaultier has said that Erin is ‘an interpreter; not just a model’. Erin talks about it as a job. ‘It doesn’t make you vain, because it’s not really about your looks. You get into character, you fulfil a role. You’re not just a woman wearing a beautiful outfit. For me, my job is to wear clothes and make shapes with them - very simply in order to make them desirable enough for people to want to buy them. But it’s not about my body. It’s about how I use my body to interpret what I’m wearing.’
 We’re having a suitably adult conversation about all this when Erin’s agent, Tori Edwards, comes in with tea. Tori, now one of the directors at ICM, has been by Erin’s side since they both started out as models. ‘I’m not allowed to go to “A Night in Fashion”,’ Tori says. ‘I’m never allowed to watch. If she’s having her photo taken, I have to turn round and not look at her, because I make her laugh.’ Erin says: ‘We’re too close. I can’t have my family there, either, nor my boyfriend. I don’t think he’s ever met my alter ego. I wipe the facade off quite literally when I come home. I collapse on the sofa and get the Wet Wipes out.’ When Tori has left the room again, she adds, ‘I couldn’t be in this industry without her. Trying tofind a balance of normality - that’s what I personally need. Tori has taught me everything. She always says that to be humble is to be sane.
 Note: ICM Models: a company in UK, which produces models and kits in plastics.
Question 19: According to the writer, at first glance the real Erin O’Connor appears......
A. extremely attractive.	B. incredibly tall.	C. surprisingly ordinary.	D. strikingly unusual.
Question 20: The word accrued is closest in meaning to......
A. amassed	B. closed up	C. used up	D. piled up
Question 21: In the final paragraph, we learn that Erin......
A. feels like a different person when she's working.
B. finds her work increasingly demanding.
C. gets nervous if her agent watches her at work.
D. finds it impossible to keep her work and private life separate.
Question 22: In the third paragraph, we learn that Erin......
A. is involved in providing talented people with funds.
B. gives regular interviews to the press.
C. helps girls tofind work as models.
D. organises support for models with personal problems.
Question 23: How did Erin react to the writer's first comment?
A. She showed her amusement.	B. She revealed her embarrassment.
C. She kept her feelings to herself.	D. She accepted the compliment.
Question 24: What did the writer realise about Erin from the documentary ‘This Model Life’
A. how sensible she is	B. how shy she really is
C. how easily hurt she is	D. how uncompetitive she is
Question 25: As a schoolgirl, Erin......
A. was not studying with a view tofollowing any particular career.
B. did some training that was later to prove useful.
C. overcame feelings of self-consciousness about her height.
D. decided to change her appearance in order to get herself noticed.
Question 26: How does Erin feel when she’s on the catwalk?
A. proud of her physical appearance	B. aware that she’s giving a performance
C. able to express her own feelings about the clothes	D. unconcerned about what people think of her
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 following questions.
WHAT PRICE PRIVACY?
 Don’t blame technology for threatening our privacy: it’s the way the institutions choose to use it. The most depressing moment of my day is first thing in the morning, when I download my overnight batch of emails. Without fail, it will contain dozens of messages from people who, knowing my interest in the subject, write to me describing violations of their personal privacy.
 Throughout the day, the stream continues, each message in my inbox warning of yet another nail in the coffin of personal privacy. In other centuries, such invasions of liberty' would have arisen from religious persecution or the activities of tax collectors. Nowadays, the invasions take place through the use of information technology.
 So, when those of us who value personal privacy are asked for their view, we will invariably speak in disparaging terms about such technologies. In an effort to stem the speed and force of the invasion, we will sometimes argue that the technologies themselves should simply be banned. ‘Just stop using the cursed technology,’ we cry, ‘then there won’t be any privacy issue.’ Of course, things are not so simple. Even the strongest advocate of privacy recognises that technology can offer enormous benefits to individuals and to society.
 To prohibit a technology on the grounds that it is being used to invade privacy would also be to deny society the benefits of that innovation.
 The sensible perspective is that technology does not necessarily have to invade privacy. The reality is that it invariably does. Companies maywell argue that customers are prepared to ‘trade off a little privacy in return for better service ora cooler and more sophisticated product.
 They say that this is a matter of free choice. I doubt that there is any genuine free choice in the matter. Whether I go with Orange or Vodaphone is indeed a free choice. But I have no choice over whether my communications data will or will not be stored by my communications provider. They know the location of my mobile and the numbers from which I received calls, and the emails I send are routinely stored by all providers, whether I like it or not.
 CCTV also gives me nofree choice. Its purpose may be to keep me secure, but I have no alternative but to accept it. Visual surveillance is becoming a fixed component in the design of modern urban centres, new housing areas, public buildings and even, in Britain at least, throughout the road system. Soon, people will expect spy cameras to be part of all forms of architecture and design. Of course, there is another side to the coin, many technologies have brought benefits to the consumer with little or no cost to privacy. Encryption is one that springs to mind. Many of the most valuable innovations in banking and communications could never have been deployed without this technique.
 The problem with privacy is not technology, but the institutions which make use of it. Governments are hungry for data, and will use their powers toforce companies to collect, retain and yield personal information on their customers. In recent years,
governments have managed to incorporate surveillance into almost every aspect of our finances, communication and lifestyle. While acknowledging the importance of privacy as a fundamental right, they argue that surveillance is needed to maintain law and order and create economic efficiency. The right to privacy, it is always claimed, should not be allowed to stand in the way of the wider public interest. This argument is sound in principle, but there seems little intellectual or analytical basis for its universal and unquestioned application.
 When the UK government introduced the RIP legislation in 2000, it originally intended to allow an unprecedented degree of communications interception on the grounds that the dangers of crime on the Internet warranted increased surveillance. At no time did anyone produce much evidence for this crime wave, however, nor did anyone in government seem to think any was required. It was left to an eleventh-hour campaign by civil rights activists to block the more offensive elements of the legislation from a personal privacy point of view. Such lack of prior justification is a common feature of privacy invasion for law enforcement and national security purposes.
 As I’ve said, technology does not have to be the enemy of privacy. But while governments insist on requiring surveillance, and while companies insist on amassing personal information about their customers, technology will continue to be seen as the enemy of privacy.
Question 27: In the fifth paragraph, the writer suggests that governments are......
A. unreasonable in their attitude towards civil rights campaigners.
B. justified in denying the right of privacy to criminals.
C. wrong to dismiss the individual’s right to privacy so lightly.
D. mistaken in their view that surveillance prevents crime.
Question 28: What view does the writer put forward in the second paragraph?
A. People shouldn't be allowed to use technologies that threaten privacy.
B. It is a mistake to criticise people for the way they use technology.
C. People should be willing to do without certain forms of technology.
D. It is unrealistic to deny people the benefits that technology can bring.
Question 29: The writer feels that some companies......
A. fail to recognise that their products may invade people's privacy.
B. do not really give customers a say in issues related to privacy.
C. underestimate the strength of their customers’ feelings about privacy.
D. refuse to make compromises with customers concerned about privacy.
Question 30: What point does the writer make about CCTV?
A. It would be difficult for society tofunction without it.
B. People no longer question how necessary it is.
C. People feel more secure the more widely it is used.
D. It ought to be a feature of all new building projects.
Question 31: The phrase nail in the coffin is closest in meaning to......
A. an event causing failure.	B. a bad result
C. a dead blow	D. a dilemma
Question 32: From the first paragraph, we understand that the writer......
A. is surprised that people should contact him about privacy.
B. resents receiving such distressing emails from people.
C. finds it hard to cope with the tone of the emails he receives.
D. is resigned to the fact that invasions of privacy are on the increase.
Question 33: What is the writer’s main criticism of the RIP legislation in the UK?
A. It contained elements that had to be removed.
B. There was no proof that it was really needed.
C. Civil rights groups were not consulted about it.
D. Changes were made to it at the last moment.
Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to each of the following questions.
Question 34: What a pity! I wish we......to leave. I've just started to enjoy myself.
A. don't have	B. didn't have	C. won't have	D. wouldn't have
Question 35: Since 1950......at football matches has fallen by nearly fifty per cent.
A. competition	B. attendance	C. discipline	D. entertainment
Question 36: ......., an organism must be able to adapt to changing factors in its environment. 
A. For surviving	B. It survives	C. If survival	D. To survive
Question 37: The higher one rises in the atmosphere, ...the temperature generally becomes.
A. the colder	B. the colder as	C. colder than	D. is colder
Question 38: .......on barren slopes can help prevent erosion.
A. Trees are planted	B. Planting trees
C. For trees to be planted	D. In order to plant trees
Question 39: Medical researchers are constantly looking for ways to control, ......and cure diseases.
A. prevent	B. preventing	C. prevention	D. to prevent
Question 40: A serious study of physics is impossible.......some knowledge of mathematics.
A. not having	B. no	C. without	D. not with
Question 41: Jupiter's moons can be seen through.......binoculars or a small telescope. 
A. if	B. whether	C. either	D. or
Question 42: The water of the Great Salt Lake is......seawater.
A. saltier than that of	B. so salty as	C. as salty as that of 	D. saltier than
Question 43: The larger a drop of water......freezing temperature. 
A. its higher 	B. the higher its	C. higher than its	D. higher of its
Question 44: ......single person can be said to have invented the automobile.
A. Not one of	B. No	C. There was not a	D. Nor a
Question 45: Nerve cells, or neuron, .......in the human body.
A. most complex the cells are	B. are the most complex cells
C. most are the complex cells	D. the most complex cells are
Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the sentence that is closest in meaning to each of the following questions.
Question 46: Dad was wounded in the last battle. He had fought in the anti-fascist war for five years.
A. Having fought in the anti-fascist war for five years, Dad was wounded in the last battle.
B. Dad was wounded in the last battle five years after the anti-fascist war.
C. Dad was wounded in the last battle while he had fought in the anti-fascist war for five years.
D. Dad was wounded in the last battle as long as his five-year fight in the anti-fascist war.
Question 47: He didn’t need to be reminded about it.
A. He wasn't necessary to be reminded about it.	B. There was no use to remind him about it.
C. It wasn’t necessary to remind him about it.	D. It was no point reminding him about it.
Question 48: The trophy arrived. The villagers rushed out to welcome them.
A. On the trophy's arrival, the villagers rushed out to welcome them.
B. Since their arrival, the trophy was rushed out to welcome.
C. On arriving, the villagers rushed out to welcome them.
D. Rushing out, the villager welcomed the trophy's arrival.
Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the word whose underlined part differs from the other three in pronunciation in each of the following questions.
 Question 49: A. convey	B. prey	C. turkey	D. grey
 Question 50: A. hurt	B. work	C. dirty	D. worry
The End
SỞ GIÁO DỤC ĐÀO TẠO BÀI THI THỬ KỲ THI TỐT NGHIỆP TRUNG HỌC PHỔ THÔNG 
 ĐỀ CHÍNH THỨC NĂM HỌC 2018- 2019
 (Đề gồm có 05 trang) MÔN TIẾNG ANH ~ MÃ ĐỀ 263
 Thời gian: 60 phút - không tính thời gian giao đề
Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the word that differs from the other three in the position of primary stress in each of the following questions.
 Question 1: A. mysterious	B. prosperous	C. enormous	D. victorious
 Question 2: A. genuine	B. fortunate	C. accurate	D. abolish
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 following questions.
WHAT PRICE PRIVACY?
 Don’t blame technology for threatening our privacy: it’s the way the institutions choose to use it. The most depressing moment of my day is first thing in the morning, when I download my overnight batch of emails. Without fail, it will contain dozens of messages from people who, knowing my interest in the subject, write to me describing violations of their personal privacy.
 Throughout the day, the stream continues, each message in my inbox warning of yet another nail in the coffin of personal privacy. In other centuries, such invasions of liberty' would have arisen from religious persecution or the activities of tax collectors. Nowadays, the invasions take place through the use of information technology.
 So, when those of us who value personal privacy are asked for their view, we will invariably speak in disparaging terms about such technologies. In an effort to stem the speed and force of the invasion, we will sometimes argue that the technologies themselves should simply be banned. ‘Just stop using the cursed technology,’ we cry, ‘then there won’t be any privacy issue.’ Of course, things are not so simple. Even the strongest advocate of privacy recognises that technology can offer enormous benefits to individuals and to society.
 To prohibit a technology on the grounds that it is being used to invade privacy would also be to deny society the benefits of that innovation.
 The sensible perspective is that technology does not necessarily have to invade privacy. The reality is that it invariably does. Companies maywell argue that customers are prepared to ‘trade off a little privacy in return for better service ora cooler and more sophisticated product.
 They say that this is a matter of free choice. I doubt that there is any genuine free choice in the matter. Whether I go with Orange or Vodaphone is indeed a free choice. But I have no choice over whether my communications data will or will not be stored by my communications provider. They know the location of my mobile and the numbers from which I received calls, and the emails I send are routinely stored by all providers, whether I like it or not.
 CCTV also gives me nofree choice. Its purpose may be to keep me secure, but I have no alternative but to accept it. Visual surveillance is becoming a fixed component in the design of modern urban centres, new housing areas, public buildings and even, in Britain at least, throughout the road system. Soon, people will expect spy cameras to be part of all forms of architecture and design. Of course, there is another side to the coin, many technologies have brought benefits to the consumer with little or no cost to privacy. Encryption is one that springs to mind. Many of the most valuable innovations in banking and communications could never have been deployed without this technique.
 The problem with privacy is not technology, but the institutions which make use of it. Governments are hungry for data, and will use their powers toforce companies to collect, retain and yield personal information on their customers. In recent years,
governments have managed to incorporate surveillance into almost every aspect of our finances, communication and lifestyle. While acknowledging the importance of privacy as a fundamental right, they argue that surveillance is needed to maintain law and order and create economic efficiency. The right to privacy, it is always claimed, should not be allowed to stand in the way of the wider public interest. This argument is sound in principle, but there seems little intellectual or analytical basis for its universal and unquestioned application.
 When the UK government introduced the RIP legislation in 2000, it originally intended to allow an unprecedented degree of communications interception on the grounds that the dangers of crime on the Internet warranted increased surveillance. At no time did anyone produce much evidence for this crime wave, however, nor did anyone in government seem to think any was required. It was left to an eleventh-hour campaign by civil rights activists to block the more offensive elements of the legislation from a personal privacy point of view. Such lack of prior justification is a common feature of privacy invasion for law enforcement and national security purposes.
 As I’ve said, technology does not have to be the enemy of privacy. But while governments insist on requiring surveillance, and while companies insist on amassing personal information about their customers, technology will continue to be seen as the enemy of privacy.
Question 3: From the first paragraph, we understand that the writer......
A. finds it hard to cope with the tone of the emails he receives.
B. resents receiving such distressing emails from people.
C. is surprised that people should contact him about privacy.
D. is resigned to the fact that invasions of privacy are on the increase.
Question 4: The writer feels that some companies......
A. underestimate the strength of their customers’ feelings about privacy.
B. do not really give customers a say in issues related to privacy.
C. fail to recognise that their products may invade people's privacy.
D. refuse to make compromises with customers concerned about privacy.
Question 5: In the fifth paragraph, the writer suggests that governments are......
A. wrong to dismiss the individual’s right to privacy so lightly.
B. justified in denying the right of privacy to criminals.
C. unreasonable in their attitude towards civil rights campaigners.
D. mistaken in their view that surveillance prevents crime.
Question 6: What is the writer’s main criticism of the RIP legislation in the UK?
A. It contained elements that had to be removed.
B. Civil rights groups were not consulted about it.
C. Changes were made to it at the last moment.
D. There was no proof that it was really needed.
Question 7: What point does the writer make about CCTV?
A. People no longer question how necessary it is.
B. People feel more secure the more widely it is used.
C. It ought to be a feature of all new building projects.
D. It would be difficult for society tofunction without it.
Question 8: The phrase nail in the coffin is closest in meaning to......
A. a dilemma 	B. a dead blow
C. an event causing failure.	D. a bad result	
Question 9: What view does the writer put forward in the second paragraph?
A. It is a mistake to criticise people for the way they use technology.
B. People shouldn't be allowed to use technologies that threaten privacy.
C. It is unrealistic to deny people the benefits that technology can bring.
D. People should be willing to do without certain forms of technology.
Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the underlined part that needs correction in each of the following questions.
Question 10: Many fruits contain large amounts of vitamin C, as well as sugar, which provide energy. 
A. provide	B. amounts	C. Many	D. as well as
Question 11: Natural ga

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