Đề thi môn Tiếng Anh - Kỳ thi tuyển sinh lớp 10 THPT Chuyên Long An năm học 2015-2016 - Sở GD & ĐT Long An

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Đề thi môn Tiếng Anh - Kỳ thi tuyển sinh lớp 10 THPT Chuyên Long An năm học 2015-2016 - Sở GD & ĐT Long An
SỞ GD&ĐT LONG AN
----------------
ĐỀ CHÍNH THỨC
(Đề thi cú 8 trang)
KỲ THI TUYỂN SINH LỚP 10 THPT CHUYấN LONG AN
NĂM HỌC 2015-2016
Mụn thi: TIẾNG ANH (CHUYấN)
Thời gian làm bài: 120 phỳt (khụng kể thời gian phỏt đề)
Thớ sinh làm bài trờn phiếu trả lời (Answer sheet), khụng làm bài trờn đề thi này.
I. LISTENING: (2 points)
PART 1: There are 5 questions in this part. For each question there are three pictures and a short recording. Listen to each recording twice. Choose the correct picture (A, B or C) and write it in the numbered box on your answer sheet. (1 point)
PART 2: You will hear a conversation between a man, Marco, and his wife, Sarah, about a film they have just seen at the cinema. Decide if each sentence is correct or incorrect. If it is correct, write the letter (A) for YES, if it is not correct, write the letter (B) for NO in the numbered box on your answer sheet. (1 point)
	 	A	B
	 	 YES NO
1. 	Sarah was expecting to enjoy the film.	1	1
2. 	Marco and Sarah agree that the city in the film was London.	1	1
3. 	Marco feels that the length of the film made it rather boring.	1	1
4. 	Sarah was upset about how some of the audience behaved	1	1
 	during the film.
5. 	Sarah was disappointed with the way the main actor performed.	1	1	
II. READING: (2 points)	
PART 1: Read the following passage, then choose the answer (A, B, C or D) which you think fits best according to the text. Write your answer in the numbered box on your answer sheet. (1 point)
Whole families of musicians are not exactly rare. However, it is unusual to come across one that includes not only writers and performers of music, but also an instrument maker.
When South Wales schoolteachers John and Hetty Watkins needed to get their ten-year-old son, Paul, a cello to suit his blossoming talents, they baulked at the costs involved. “We had a look at various dealers and it was obvious it was going to be very expensive,” John says. “So I wondered if I could actually make one. I discovered that the Welsh School of Instrument Making was not far from where I lived, and I went along for evening classes once a week for about three years.”
“After probably three or four goes with violins and violas, he had a crack at his first cello,” Paul, now 28, adds. “It turned out really well. He made me another one a bit later, when he’d got the hang of it. And that’s the one I used right up until a few months ago.” John has since retired as a teacher to work as a full-time craftsman, and makes up to a dozen violins a year – selling one to the esteemed American player Jaime Laredo was “the icing on the cake”.
Both Paul and his younger brother, Huw, were encouraged to play music from an early age. The piano came first: “As soon as I was big enough to climb up and bang the keys, that’s what I did,” Paul remembers. But it wasn’t long before the cello beckoned. “My folks were really quite keen for me to take up the violin, because Dad, who played the viola, used to play chamber music with his mates and they needed another violin to make up a string trio. I learned it for about six weeks but didn’t take to it. But I really took to the character who played the cello in Dad’s group. I thought he was a very cool guy when I was six or seven. So he said he’d give me some lessons, and that really started it all off. Later, they suggested that my brother play the violin too, but he would have none of it.”
“My parents were both supportive and relaxed,” Huw says. “I don’t think I would have responded very well to being pushed. And, rather than feeling threatened by Paul’s success, I found that I had something to aspire to.” Now 22, he is beginning to make his own mark as a pianist and composer.
Meanwhile, John Watkins’ cello has done his elder son proud. With it, Paul won the string final of the BBC Young Musician of the Year competition. Then, at the remarkably youthful age of 20, he was appointed principal cellist of the BBC Symphony Orchestra, a position he held, still playing his father’s instrument, until last year. Now, however, he has acquired a Francesco Rugeri cello, on loan from the Royal Academy of Music. “Dad’s not said anything about me moving on, though recently he had the chance to run a bow across the strings of each in turn and had to admit that my new one is quite nice! I think the only thing Dad doesn’t have – and may acquire after about 50 – 100 years – is the power to project right to the back of large concert halls. It will get richer with age, like my Rugeri, which is already 304 years old.”
Soon he will be seen on television playing the Rugeri as the soloist in Elgar’s Cello Concerto, which forms the heart of the second programme in the new series, Masterworks. “The well-known performance history doesn’t affect the way I play the work,” he says. “I’m always going to do it my way.” But Paul won’t be able to watch himself on television – the same night he is playing at the Cheltenham Festival. Nor will Huw, whose String Quartet is receiving its London premiere at the Wigmore Hall the same evening. John and Hetty will have to be diplomatic – and energetic – if they are to keep track of all their sons’ musical activities over the coming weeks.
1. Why did John Watkins decide to make a cello?
	A. He wanted to encourage his son Paul to take up the instrument.
	B. He was keen to do a course at the nearby school.
	C. He felt that dealers were giving him false information.
	D. He wanted to avoid having to pay for one.
2. What is meant by “crack” in paragraph 3?
	A. attempt
	B. plan
	C. shock
	D. period
3. What do we learn in the third paragraph about the instruments John has made?
	A. He considers the one used by Jaime Laredo to be the best.
	B. He is particularly pleased about what happened to one of them.
	C. His violins have turned out to be better than his cellos.
	D. It took him longer to learn how to make cellos than violins.
4. Paul first became interested in playing the cello because
	A. he admired someone his father played music with.
	B. he wanted to play in his father’s group.
	C. he was not very good at playing the piano.
	D. he did not want to do what his parents wanted.
5. What do we learn about Huw’s musical development?
	A. His parents’ attitude has played little part in it.
	B. It was slow because he lacked determination.
	C. His brother’s achievements gave him an aim.
	D. He wanted it to be different from his brother’s.
PART 2: You are going to read an article about an underwater museum. Five sentences have been removed from the text. Choose from the sentences A-F the one which fits each gap (1-4). There is one extra sentence which you do not need to use. There is an example at the beginning (0). Write your answer in the numbered box on your answer sheet. (1 point)
UNDERWATER WORLD
If you want to dive in clear blue waters, find rich marine life and swim over the remains thrown away by ancient sailors, the tiny island of Ustica is the place to go. This island, 60km from the Italian coast, is the site of Europe’s only underwater museum. (0) D .
The clear waters attract some of the world’s best underwater divers. The International Academy of Underwater Sciences, which was set up to encourage underwater exploration, is based in Ustica. (1)____.
Dr Honor Frost, a Bristish underwater archaeologist and Golden Triden winner, believes that Ustica shows that some underwater remains are best life in the surroundings where they have been preserved for centuries. (2) ____.
According to Frost, the establishment of the underwater museum has made an interesting area of sea floor, together with the objects which fell to it in antiquity, safe for future study. (3) ____
For example, it is puzzling that only iron anchors of quite a late date seem to have been lost there, despite local evidence of sea trade during a period nearly four thousand years ago, when stone anchors would have been in use. Among the anchors and other remains there are an extraordinary number of Roman millstones, which were widely traded throughout the ancient world. (4) _____.
A	Many questions remain to be answered about the museum site.
B	However, this section of the museum, although already accessible to diving visitors, still contains material of interest to researchers.
C	Made of volcanic rock, they were carried by corn ships heading from Rome to the ports of the north African coast.
D	Only here can divers explore labelled exhibits such as anchors, pots and millstones, which fell to the sea floor centuries ago.
E	This gives divers the experience of underwater archaeology without disturbing important sites.
F	This month it presented its Golden Trident awards, the underwater equivalent of the Nobel prizes, which have been awarded annually since 1960.
III. USE OF ENGLISH: (4 points)
PART 1: Choose the word or phrase that best completes each sentence. Write your answer A, B, C, or D in the numbered box on your answer sheet. (0.5 point)
1. No one has cleaned the street this week, .?
A. have they	B. haven’t they	C. has he	D. hasn’t he
2. Space travel seemed __________ but it has come true now.
A. unthinkable	B. unable	C. disbelievable	D. disagreeable
3. . giraffe is the tallest of all animals.
A. A/ ứ	B. ứ/ the	C. The/ ứ	D. A/ the
4.  he not lost all his money gambling, he would be very rich now.
	A. If	B. Because	C. Had	D. Unless
5. Total weight of the ants in the world is much greater than _____________.
A. that of all human beings	B. all human beings	
C. all human beings is that	D. is of all human beings
6. The teacher advised the children __________ and see the dentist regularly.
	A. went 	B. going 	C. go 	D. to go
7. We’d better phone __________ the restaurant to reserve a table.
A. at	B. ứ	C. to	D. for
8. The judge _______ the pedestrian for the accident.
	A. blamed	B. charged	C. accused	D. sued
9. Many people believe that the novel will be a best seller when it___________.
 	A. is published	 	B. will be published 
 	C. were published D. will publish
10. “He was right!” - “Oh, I know! I really wish I _______ his advice!”
	A. took	B. had taken 	C. have taken 	D. would take
PART 2: Read the following passage and decide which answer (A, B, C, or D) best fits each gap. Write your answer in the numbered box on your answer sheet. (1 point)
FAMOUS EXPLORER
Captain James Cook is (0).. today for being one of Britain’s most famous explorers of the 18th century. Cook was (1) most other explorers of the same period as he did not come from a wealthy family and had to work hard to (2).. his position in life. He was lucky to be (3). by his father’s employer, who saw that he was a bright boy and paid for him to attend the village school. At sixteen, he started (4) in a shop in a fishing village, and this was a turning (5).. in his life. He developed an interest in the sea and eventually joined the Royal Navy in order to see more of the world.
Cook was (6). by sailing, astronomy and the production of maps, and quickly became an expert in these subjects. He was also one of the first people to (7). that scurvy, an illness often suffered by sailors, could be prevented by careful (8) to diet. It was during his voyage to the Pacific Ocean that Cook made his historic landing in Australia and the (9) .. discovery that New Zealand was two separate islands. He became a national hero and still (10). one today.
1. 	A. different	B. contrary	C. distinct	D. unlike
2.	A. manage	B. succeed	C. achieve	D. fulfil
3.	A. remarked	B. viewed	C. glanced	D. noticed
4. 	A. trade	B. work	C. career	D. job
5.	A. moment	B. instant	C. point	D. mark
6. 	A. keen	B. eager	C. fascinated	D. enthusiastic
7.	A. regard	B. estimate	C. catch	D. realise
8.	A. attention	B. organisation	C. observation	D. selection
9.	A. serious	B. superior	C. major	D. leading
10.	A. remains	B. stands	C. maintains	D. keeps
PART 3: Fill each blank with ONE suitable word. Write your answer in the numbered box on your answer sheet. (1 point)
COFFEE
Coffee is made from the beans that grow in the fruits of the coffee plant. There are usually two beans in each fruit and harvesting is done (1) hand.
The word “coffee” derives from the Arabic “qahwah”, a word (2)  was orginally used for wine, but which came to mean coffee. Coffee beans (3)  to be chewed before it was discovered that they (4)  be boiled with water (5)  make a drink.
Coffee drinking began in Arab countries in the 14th century and did not (6)  common in Europe (7)  the 17th century. At (8) , coffee was sold by chemists, but it (9)  little impact until the first coffee shop opened and instructions about (10)  to roast and grind the coffee were published.
PART 4: For questions 1-10, give the correct form of the words in brackets. Write your answer in the numbered box on your answer sheet. There is an example at the beginning (0). (1 point)
LIFE ON OTHER PLANETS
Humans have long been fascinated by (0. OUT) outer space, and have wondered if there are intelligent life-forms (1. ELSE) , which we might be able to contact. (2. NATURE) , we’ve all seen space creatures on our TV and cinema screens, but “aliens” like these owe more to the (3. CONVENIENT)  of using human (4. ACT)  to play the parts than to any real form of (5. SCIENCE)  investigation.
However, many serious space (6. RESEARCH)  are now beginning to turn their attention to the question of what alien life might (7. ACTUAL)  look like. One early result is Arnold the Alien, (8. DESIGN)  by biologist, Dougal Dixon. This strange being, (9. LIKE)  humans, has its eyes, ears and limbs in groups of three instead of pairs but, despite its odd (10. APPEAR) , its behaviour is not very different from our town.
PART 5: For questions 1-5, 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. Write your answer in the numbered box on your answer sheet. (0.5 point)
1. Jackie hasn’t been swimming for five years. (SWIMMING)
	à The last	was five years ago.
2. Please don’t go there now. (RATHER)
	à I 	go there now.
3. They left early because they didn’t want to get caught in the traffic. (AVOID)
	à They left early in order	in the traffic.
4. It would be difficult for me to finish the work by the weekend. (DIFFICULTY)
	à I	the work by the weekend.
5. I thought I might run out of cash, so I took my cheque-book with me. (CASE)
	à I took my cheque-book with me	out of cash.
For questions 6-10, finish each of the sentences in such a way that it means exactly the same as the sentence printed before it. Write your answer in the numbered box on your answer sheet.
6. I really think you ought to acquire a few manners.
	à It’s high time____________________________________________________________
7. The decorators have finished the whole of the first floor.
	à We have_______________________________________________________________
8. If you want my advice, I would forget about buying a new house.
à If I ___________________________________________________________________
9. People who haven’t been abroad shouldn’t criticise foreign customs. 
à Nobody who	___________________________________________________________
10. She did not thank us for our help when she left.
	à She left ________________________________________________________________
IV. WRITING: (2 points)
Describe one of your teachers who you admire most.
In your paper, you should write:
	- who he/she is.
	- how long you have known him/her.
	- what he/she looks like.
	- what qualities he/she has.
	- why you admire him/her most.
You should write at least 120 words.
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