Đề kiểm tra chất lượng ôn thi THPT Quốc gia môn Tiếng Anh Lớp 12 - Năm học 2017-2018 - Đề số 205

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Đề kiểm tra chất lượng ôn thi THPT Quốc gia môn Tiếng Anh Lớp 12 - Năm học 2017-2018 - Đề số 205
 SỞ GD&ĐT VĨNH PHÚC
TRƯỜNG THPT LIỄN SƠN
(Đề thi gồm: 04 trang)
ĐỀ KTCL ÔN THI THPT QUỐC GIA NĂM 2017-2018
Môn: TIẾNG ANH – ĐỀ SỐ 205
Thời gian làm bài: 60 phút, không kể thời gian phát đề
Họ và tên thí sinh:. SBD:
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 01: A. miracle	B. company	C. employment	D. atmosphere
Question 02: A. aspiration	B. approximate	C. invaluable	D. accommodate
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 03: We were so stupefied by the news that we all sat in silence for a long time.
A. over-anxious	B. indifferent	C. exhausted	D. surprised
Question 04: It happens like this once in a blue moon.
A. often	B. rarely	C. frequently	D. now and again
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 from 05 to 11.
 	Man has long wanted to fly. He saw birds, envied them and tried to imitate them. Over the ages countless attempts were made: men constructed wings, fastened them to their arms and legs and jumped off towers and hill tops. These "bird-men" flapped their wings for a short space of time and then fell to the ground. What was not realised in those early years was that birds have muscles very much stronger, in proportion to their size, than men. Human limbs cannot provide sufficient strength to lift the body off the ground. The secret of flight did not lie in the making of wings, but in discovering the right kind of power, and how to use it. 
 	In the 18th century, the invention of the hot-air balloon by the Montgolfier brothers of France was seen as a great step forward. In 1783, in the presence of the King and Queen, it took three passengers safely up into the air and down again. They were sheep, a cock and a duck. Soon ballooning became a fashionable pastime. But balloons and the cigar-shaped airship, which was invented slightly later, did not solve the problem of flying because they had no means of power or control: their designers could not find an engine strong enough yet light enough to drive the aircraft. The airship went where the wind blew it, could lose height and could easily catch fire. As a means of passenger transport, it turned out to be neither practical nor safe. So the difficulty remained: a true flying machine which was heavier than air and capable of carrying people was still to be invented. Experiments were carried out in many countries, sometimes with models driven by steam engine, but these were too heavy to be used in an aeroplane with a pilot. 
 	The answer finally came at the beginning of this century with the invention of the internal combustion engine - the kind used in motor cars. Here at last was a powerful, yet comparatively light engine driven by petrol and capable of being fitted into an aeroplane. 
 	In 1903, two Americans, the brothers Wilbur and Orville Wright, flew a powered aeroplane for the first time. Their success encouraged designers everywhere. Although there were now newer, different problems, mainly to do with safety and the training of pilots, progress was rapid. These were exciting days and interest was intense. At Reims, 1909, a crowd of a quarter of a million gathered at the first Air Display, and saw thirty-eight different aircraft take part. The age of the aeroplane had arrived.
Question 05: The passage mainly reports________.
A. human dream of flying	B. the progress of manufacturing areoplanes.
C. famous pilots in the world	D. the develpoments in flying
Question 06: The word “intense” is closest in meaning to________.
A. superficial	B. over-whelming	C. lateral	D. strong and deep
Question 07: The "bird-men" failed to fly because________.
A. their limbs were not strong enough 	B. they were overweight
C. they did not attach their wings correctly	D. their arms and legs were too short
Question 08: The word “it” refers to________.
A. the engine	B. the air-ship	C. the wind	D. the design
Question 09: The hot-air balloon’s first passengers were________.
A. sheep, a cock and a duck	B. the King and Queen
C. the “bird-men” and a pilot	D. the Montgolfier brothers 	
Question 10: The best engine that can be fitted into an areoplane is________.
A. the internal combustion	B. the cigar-shaped airship
C. the motor car	D. the flying machine
Question 11: Which phrase can substitute for the word “envied” in the second sentence?
A. wish for the same ability B. raised and tamed	C. captured and used	D. kept as pets
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 12: Our new office is packed with cumbersome equipment.
A. too big and heavy	B. dilapidated	C. modern	D. too expensive
Question 13: These days, mum has been off her food.
A. away to buy food	B. out on her food business	C. vomiting	D. too ill to eat
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 14:A. season	B. creature	C. reason	D. pleasant
Question 15:A. veneer	B. pioneer	C. sightseer	D. engineer
Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the sentence that best completes each of the following exchanges.
Question 16: ~ Albert: “____________” 	~ Brian: “Great! When is that possible?”
A. People say things are in the sale at Charlotte Tilbury’s? Shall we go?
B. People says the price of imported cars is increasing.
C. A new US satellite will enable us to surf the Internet at high speed.
D. Mum’s giving welcome-home party for Dad tomorrow.
Question 17: ~ Anna: “____________” 	~ Bobby: “Yes, almost every moment I was there.”
A. Did you enjoy your stay there?	B. How long were you there?
C. When did you spend your honeymoon?	D. Did you take a trip to the Valley of Nevada?
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 from 18 to 22.
ELEKTRON TO ELECTRICITY
 	The first discovery of electricity is over 2,600 years old. Does that surprise you? Of course, there were no lights, telephones, refrigerators, radios, motion pictures, or television sets that long ago. (18)_______, all of these modern conveniences are (19)_______ such recent development that you might well wonder how; electricity could be any older than Thomas Edison's development of the first practical electric light bulb in 1879.
 	The word electricity comes from the Greek word meaning amber, (20)_______ is elektron. The fossilized sap of a pine tree, amber looks much like a hard lump of honey. In 600 B.C., a Greek philosopher named Thales rubbed a piece of amber against his sleeve to shine it. (21)_______ his interest, he found that the rubbed amber attracted small bits of lint, feathers, and dried leaves. This property of attraction was a strange characteristic which he thought only amber had. Today, our word electricity still goes back to Thales' early discovery about amber.
 	More than two thousand years after Thales, an English physician discovered that other substances also had this characteristic of electricity. Frorn then on, (22)_______ men added to the knowledge of electricity. They set off the many developments and discoveries which have brought about our electrical era of today.
Question 18: A. On the contrary 	B. In fact	C. However	D. Moreover
Question 19: A. of	B. from	C. to	D. with
Question 20: A. and	B. which	C. this	D. that
Question 21: A. Despite	B. Much to	C. In addition to	D. Opposed to
Question 22: A. more and more 	B. time in time out	C. over and over	D. again and again
Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to each of the following questions.
Question 23: The World Health Organisation has stated that smallpox has been almost completely_______.
A. eradicated	B. obliterated	C. uprooted	D. extinguished
Question 24: As a result of_______, the price of new cars has risen dramatically over the last few months. A. inflation	B. escalation	C. distension	D. extension
Question 25: After ten unhappy years, Janice finally quit her job. She_______ alone with her boss for a long time before she finally decided to look for a new position.
A. isn't getting	B. didn't get	C. hadn't been getting D. hasn't been getting
Question 26: There is a steady_______ of young people from villages to the cities.
A. motion	B. stampede	C. current	D. drift
Question 27: News of the celebrity's arrival_______ through the small town like wildfire.
A. spread	B. moved	C. grew	D. flared
Question 28: As he was caught in_______ of an offensive weapon, he was immediately a suspect.
A. control	B. ownership	C. handling	D. possession
Question 29: Jack_______ the map for several minutes, unable to believe his eyes.
A. watched	B. glimpsed	C. glanced	D. stared at
Question 30: After Mervyn's accident and his subsequent appearance in court, he was_______ from driving for a year.
A. disqualified	B. dispossessed	C. forfeited	D. invalidated
Question 31: It's very cold in here. Do you mind if I_______ the heating?
A. put on	B. put down	C. put	D. put up with
Question 32: The Shorter Cambridge Dictionary consists of two_______, A-L and M-Z.
A. editions	B. volumes	C. issues	D. tomes
Question 33: Tourism provides people with jobs - albeit often rather_______ ones!
A. trivial	B. remedial	C. menial	D. superficial
Question 34: My country_______ the pursuit of world peace.
A. is dedicated by	B. is dedicating by	C. is dedicated to	D. is dedicating to
Question 35: This is the hotel___________ rooms have a view of the sea. 
A. where 	B. which 	C. whose 	D. from where 
Question 36: Jane’s brother doesn’t work as a worker and she doesn’t___________. 
A. neither 	B. so 	C. too 	D. either 
Question 37: As for me, I consider reading ____________ important part of ____________ life.
A. an/ Ø 	B. the/ a 	C. Ø/ the 	D. an/ a
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 from 38 to 42.
Blue Moon
“Blue Moon” is a term that is used to describe the phenomenon of a second full moon occurring in one month. How could two full moons possibly occur in a single month? It is not nature’s fault; the natural phrases of the moon do not perfectly match up with the Roman calendar. 
Although still used today, this calendar was devised by Julius Caesar and Augustus Caesar over 2000 years ago. While the calendar works well, the method that they used does not match the lunar cycle exactly. Thus, occasionally the moon will go through its “full” phrase twice before the month changes. 
A “blue moon” is an uncommon event. And it rare occurrence of an eventually led to the usage of the phrase “once in a blue moon”. This phrase was commonly used to indicate an event that could never happen. Over time, the meaning of the phrase changed from something that seldom happens. Today, this phrase is used to indicate extremely rare events, the absurd, or things that never happen. 
Question 38: What is the main purpose of this passage? 
A. To explain the definition and the usage of “blue moon” 
B. To inform readers of the difference between the Roman calendar and the lunar calendar 
C. To support the importance of the lunar calendar 
D. None of the above 
Question 39: According to the passage, to what does the term “blue moon” refer? 
A. A moon with the color blue 	B. Cold nights causing the moon to appear blue 
C. The second full moon in one month 	D. Events that could never happen 
Question 40: Why doesn’t our calendar match the lunar cycle exactly? 
A. It has more days than it sound 	B. The lunar cycle is wrong 
C. Our calendar was not designed by humans 	D. Our calendar was designed by humans 
Question 41: The word “devised” in the passage is closet in meaning to___________. 
A. imagined 	B. invented 	C. discovered 	D. used 
Question 42: The word “absurd” in the passage is closet in meaning to___________. 
A. normal 	B. ridiculous 	C. interesting 	D. frequent 
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 43: Hardly he had entered the office when he realized that he had forgotten his wallet.
A. the office	B. Hardly he had	C. forgotten his	D. that he had
Question 44: Suzy had better to change her study habits if she hopes to be admitted to a good university. A. had	B. to change	C. to a good university	D. hopes to be
Question 45: Until his last class at the university in 1978, Bob always turns in all of his assignments on time. A. Until	B. turns	C. of	D. on
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: We really must leave the pary now if we are to catch the bus.
A. Unless we catch the bus, we really must leave the party now.
B. It’s time we left the party now if we are to catch the bus.
C. Without leaving the party now, we mustn’t catch the bus.
D. We cannot catch the bus on the condition that we really must leave now.
Question 47: They didn’t want to be late for the meeting so they left in plenty of time.
A. They left for the meeting because they had plenty of time not to be late.
B. They had plenty of time to be late for the meeting, so they left.
C. So as not to belate for the meeting they left in plenty of time.
D. They didn’t have plenty of time for the meeting, so they left.
Question 48: I cannot understand what he says.
A. What he says cannot be understood by anyone.
B. It is difficult for me to understand easily what he says.
C. I misunderstand what he says.	D. I find he is unable to understand when saying.
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 49: Another candidate with more qualifications applies in the next forty-eight hours. You should get the position without any difficulties.
A. Get the position without any difficulties or another candidate with more qualifications applies in the next forty-eight hours.
B. Within forty-eight hours, you would get the position without any difficulties, if someone applies for it.
C. If another candidate with more qualifications applies in the next forty-eight hours, you would get the position without any difficulties.
D. Unless another .candidate with more qualifications applies in the next forty-eight hours, you would get the position without any difficulties.
Question 50: The president failed to explain the cause of the crisis. He did not offer any solutions.
A. The president failed to explain the cause of the crisis, nor did he offer any solutions.
B. Without offering any solutions, the president didn’t explain the cause of the crisis.
C. The president didn’t explain the cause of the crisis because he did not offer any solutions.
D. In order not to offer any solutions, the president didn’t explain the cause of the crisis.
______THE END______
 SỞ GD&ĐT VĨNH PHÚC
TRƯỜNG THPT LIỄN SƠN
(Đề thi gồm: 04 trang)
ĐỀ KTCL ÔN THI THPT QUỐC GIA NĂM 2017-2018
Môn: TIẾNG ANH – ĐỀ SỐ 205
Thời gian làm bài: 60 phút, không kể thời gian phát đề
Họ và tên thí sinh:. SBD:
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 01: A. miracle	B. company	C. employment	D. atmosphere
Question 02: A. aspiration	B. approximate	C. invaluable	D. accommodate
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 03: We were so stupefied by the news that we all sat in silence for a long time.
A. over-anxious	B. indifferent	C. exhausted	D. surprised
Question 04: It happens like this once in a blue moon.
A. often	B. rarely	C. frequently	D. now and again
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 from 05 to 11.
 	Man has long wanted to fly. He saw birds, envied them and tried to imitate them. Over the ages countless attempts were made: men constructed wings, fastened them to their arms and legs and jumped off towers and hill tops. These "bird-men" flapped their wings for a short space of time and then fell to the ground. What was not realised in those early years was that birds have muscles very much stronger, in proportion to their size, than men. Human limbs cannot provide sufficient strength to lift the body off the ground. The secret of flight did not lie in the making of wings, but in discovering the right kind of power, and how to use it. 
 	In the 18th century, the invention of the hot-air balloon by the Montgolfier brothers of France was seen as a great step forward. In 1783, in the presence of the King and Queen, it took three passengers safely up into the air and down again. They were sheep, a cock and a duck. Soon ballooning became a fashionable pastime. But balloons and the cigar-shaped airship, which was invented slightly later, did not solve the problem of flying because they had no means of power or control: their designers could not find an engine strong enough yet light enough to drive the aircraft. The airship went where the wind blew it, could lose height and could easily catch fire. As a means of passenger transport, it turned out to be neither practical nor safe. So the difficulty remained: a true flying machine which was heavier than air and capable of carrying people was still to be invented. Experiments were carried out in many countries, sometimes with models driven by steam engine, but these were too heavy to be used in an aeroplane with a pilot. 
 	The answer finally came at the beginning of this century with the invention of the internal combustion engine - the kind used in motor cars. Here at last was a powerful, yet comparatively light engine driven by petrol and capable of being fitted into an aeroplane. 
 	In 1903, two Americans, the brothers Wilbur and Orville Wright, flew a powered aeroplane for the first time. Their success encouraged designers everywhere. Although there were now newer, different problems, mainly to do with safety and the training of pilots, progress was rapid. These were exciting days and interest was intense. At Reims, 1909, a crowd of a quarter of a million gathered at the first Air Display, and saw thirty-eight different aircraft take part. The age of the aeroplane had arrived.
Question 05: The passage mainly reports________.
A. human dream of flying	B. the progress of manufacturing areoplanes.
C. famous pilots in the world	D. the develpoments in flying
Question 06: The word “intense” is closest in meaning to________.
A. superficial	B. over-whelming	C. lateral	D. strong and deep
Question 07: The "bird-men" failed to fly because________.
A. their limbs were not strong enough 	B. they were overweight
C. they did not attach their wings correctly	D. their arms and legs were too short
Question 08: The word “it” refers to________.
A. the engine	B. the air-ship	C. the wind	D. the design
Question 09: The hot-air balloon’s first passengers were________.
A. sheep, a cock and a duck	B. the King and Queen
C. the “bird-men” and a pilot	D. the Montgolfier brothers 	
Question 10: The best engine that can be fitted into an areoplane is________.
A. the internal combustion	B. the cigar-shaped airship
C. the motor car	D. the flying machine
Question 11: Which phrase can substitute for the word “envied” in the second sentence?
A. wish for the same ability B. raised and tamed	C. captured and used	D. kept as pets
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 12: Our new office is packed with cumbersome equipment.
A. too big and heavy	B. dilapidated	C. modern	D. too expensive
Question 13: These days, mum has been off her food.
A. away to buy food	B. out on her food business	C. vomiting	D. too ill to eat
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 14:A. season	B. creature	C. reason	D. pleasant
Question 15:A. veneer	B. pioneer	C. sightseer	D. engineer
Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the sentence that best completes each of the following exchanges.
Question 16: ~ Albert: “____________” 	~ Brian: “Great! When is that possible?”
A. People say things are in the sale at Charlotte Tilbury’s? Shall we go?
B. People says the price of imported cars is increasing.
C. A new US satellite will enable us to surf the Internet at high speed.
D. Mum’s giving welcome-home party for Dad tomorrow.
Question 17: ~ Anna: “____________” 	~ Bobby: “Yes, almost every moment I was there.”
A. Did you enjoy your stay there?	B. How long were you there?
C. When did you spend your honeymoon?	D. Did you take a trip to the Valley of Nevada?
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 from 18 to 22.
ELEKTRON TO ELECTRICITY
 	The first discovery of electricity is over 2,600 years old. Does that surprise you? Of course, there were no lights, telephones, refrigerators, radios, motion pictures, or television sets that long ago. (18)_______, all of these modern conveniences are (19)_______ such recent development that you might well wonder how; electricity could be any older than Thomas Edison's development of the first practical electric light bulb in 1879.
 	The word electricity comes from the Greek word meaning amber, (20)_______ is elektron. The fossilized sap of a pine tree, amber looks much like a hard lump of honey. In 600 B.C., a Greek philosopher named Thales rubbed a piece of amber against his sleeve to shine it. (21)_______ his interest, he found that the rubbed amber attracted small bits of lint, feathers, and dried leaves. This property of attraction was a strange characteristic which he thought only amber had. Today, our word electricity still goes back to Thales' early discovery about amber.
 	More than two thousand years after Thales, an English physician discovered that other substances also had this characteristic of electricity. Frorn then on, (22)_______ men added to the knowledge of electricity. They set off the many developments and discoveries which have brought about our electrical era of today.
Question 18: A. On the contrary 	B. In fact	C. However	D. Moreover
Question 19: A. of	B. from	C. to	D. with
Question 20: A. and	B. which	C. this	D. that
Question 21: A. Despite	B. Much to	C. In addition to	D. Opposed to
Question 22: A. more and more 	B. time in time out	C. over and over	D. again and again
Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to each of the following questions.
Question 23: The World Health Organisation has stated that smallpox has been almost completely_______.
A. eradicated	B. obliterated	C. uprooted	D. extinguished
Question 24: As a result of_______, the price of new cars has risen dramatically over the last few months. A. inflation	B. escalation	C. distension	D. extension
Question 25: After ten unhappy years, Janice finally quit her job. She_______ alone with her boss for a long time before she finally decided to look for a new position.
A. isn't getting	B. didn't get	C. hadn't been getting D. hasn't been getting
Question 26: There is a steady_______ of young people from villages to the cities.
A. motion	B. stampede	C. current	D. drift
Question 27: News of the celebrity's arrival_______ through the small town like wildfire.
A. spread	B. moved	C. grew	D. flared
Question 28: As he was caught in_______ of an offensive weapon, he was immediately a suspect.
A. control	B. ownership	C. handling	D. possession
Question 29: Jack_______ the map for several minutes, unable to believe his eyes.
A. watched	B. glimpsed	C. glanced	D. stared at
Question 30: After Mervyn's accident and his subsequent appearance in court, he was_______ from driving for a year.
A. disqualified	B. dispossessed	C. forfeited	D. invalidated
Question 31: It's very cold in here. Do you mind if I_______ the heating?
A. put on	B. put down	C. put	D. put up with
Question 32: The Shorter Cambridge Dictionary consists of two_______, A-L and M-Z.
A. editions	B. volumes	C. issues	D. tomes
Question 33: Tourism provides people with jobs - albeit often rather_______ ones!
A. trivial	B. remedial	C. menial	D. superficial
Question 34: My country_______ the pursuit of world peace.
A. is dedicated by	B. is dedicating by	C. is dedicated to	D. is dedicating to
Question 35: This is the hotel___________ rooms have a view of the sea. 
A. where 	B. which 	C. whose 	D. from where 
Question 36: Jane’s brother doesn’t work as a worker and she doesn’t___________. 
A. neither 	B. so 	C. too 	D. either 
Question 37: As for me, I consider reading ____________ important part of ____________ life.
A. an/ Ø 	B. the/ a 	C. Ø/ the 	D. an/ a
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 from 38 to 42.
Blue Moon
“Blue Moon” is a term that is used to describe the phenomenon of a second full moon occurring in one month. How could two full moons possibly occur in a single month? It is not nature’s fault; the natural phrases of the moon do not perfectly match up with the Roman calendar. 
Although still used today, this calendar was devised by Julius Caesar and Augustus Caesar over 2000 years ago. While the calendar works well, the method that they used does not match the lunar cycle exactly. Thus, occasionally the moon will go through its “full” phrase twice before the month changes. 
A “blue moon” is an uncommon event. And it rare occurrence of an eventually led to the usage of the phrase “once in a blue moon”. This phrase was commonly used to indicate an event that could never happen. Over time, the meaning of the phrase changed from something that seldom happens. Today, this phrase is used to indicate extremely rare events, the absurd, or things that never happen. 
Question 38: What is the main purpose of this passage? 
A. To explain the definition and the usage of “blue moon” 
B. To inform readers of the difference between the Roman calendar and the lunar calendar 
C. To support the importance of the lunar calendar 
D. None of the above 
Question 39: According to the passage, to what does the term “blue moon” refer? 
A. A moon with the color blue 	B. Cold nights causing the moon to appear blue 
C. The second full moon in one month 	D. Events that could never happen 
Question 40: Why doesn’t our calendar match the lunar cycle exactly? 
A. It has more days than it sound 	B. The lunar cycle is wrong 
C. Our calendar was not designed by humans 	D. Our calendar was designed by humans 
Question 41: The word “devised” in the passage is closet in meaning to___________. 
A. imagined 	B. invented 	C. discovered 	D. used 
Question 42: The word “absurd” in the passage is closet in meaning to___________. 
A. normal 	B. ridiculous 	C. interesting 	D. frequent 
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 43: Hardly he had entered the office when he realized that he had forgotten his wallet.
A. the office	B. Hardly he had	C. forgotten his	D. that he had
Question 44: Suzy had better to change her study habits if she hopes to be admitted to a good university. A. had	B. to change	C. to a good university	D. hopes to be
Question 45: Until his last class at the university in 1978, Bob always turns in all of his assignments on time. A. Until	B. turns	C. of	D. on
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: We really must leave the pary now if we are to catch the bus.
A. Unless we catch the bus, we really must leave the party now.
B. It’s time we left the party now if we are to catch the bus.
C. Without leaving the party now, we mustn’t catch the bus.
D. We cannot catch the bus on the condition that we really must leave now.
Question 47: They didn’t want to be late for the meeting so they left in plenty of time.
A. They left for the meeting because they had plenty of time not to be late.
B. They had plenty of time to be late for the meeting, so they left.
C. So as not to belate for the meeting they left in plenty of time.
D. They didn’t have plenty of time for the meeting, so they left.
Question 48: I cannot understand what he says.
A. What he says cannot be understood by anyone.
B. It is difficult for me to understand easily what he says.
C. I misunderstand what he says.	D. I find he is unable to understand when saying.
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 49: Another candidate with more qualifications applies in the next forty-eight hours. You should get the position without any difficulties.
A. Get the position without any difficulties or a

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