Đề thi thử vào Lớp 10 THPT môn Tiếng Anh (Chuyên) (Có đáp án)

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  1. TEST PART A: PHONETICS I. Choose the word whose underlined part is pronounced differently from that of the others in each group. (5 pts.) 1. A facsimile B transfer C spacious D fax 2. A swallow B switch C sweet D sword 3. A scenic B extinct C decrease D coexist 4. A agreed B boxed C based D listened 5. A off B of C if D fly II. Choose the word whose main stressed syllable is placed differently from that of the others in each group. (5 pts.) 1. A appreciate B experience C embarrassing D situation 2. A excited B interested C confident D memorable 3. A floppy B embrace C cotton D idol 4. A complain B destroy C terrify D imagine 5. A carefully B correctly C seriously D personally PART B: LEXICO AND GRAMMAR I.Choose the best answer to complete each of the following sentences. Write your answer (A, B, C or D) in the box provided. (20 pts.) 1. The weather is going to change soon; I feel it in my ___. A. body B. legs C. skin D. bones 2. Before the invention of the Internet, people couldn’t ___ of such universal access to information. A. reminisce B. conceive C. contemplate D. access 3. ___, Americans eat a light breakfast. They don’t eat a lot of food in the morning. A. By and large B. Fair and square C. Ins and outs D. Odds and ends 4. There has been a recommendation that Peter ___ the president of the country. A. will be elected B. be elected C. is elected D. was elected 5. For a whole month, Muslims ___eating and drinking during daylight hours. A. abstain from B. keep from C. stay from D. stand from 6. TV advertising in the late afternoon tends to ___ young children. A. target B. point C. focus D. aim 7. He traveled ___ for 20 years and then he decided to return home. A. farther away B. far from it C. far and wide D. farthest of all 8. No matter how angry he was, he would never ___ to violence. A. refuse B. resort C. resist D. resolve 9. Simon in me on the understanding that I wouldn't tell anyone else. A. confided B. intimated C. confessed D. disclosed 10. If you want to be a rock star, talent helps, but what it really down to is luck. A. boils B. revolves C. centers D. refines 11. That argument is no good: it won’t A. hold water B. blossom C. make water D. pass water 12. If you get measles, you will .in spots. A. break out B. break up C. break D. break down 13. Insults roll off him like water A. down a drain B. on a tin roof C. into the river D. off a duck’s back 14. Go to the Chinese and bring back a grilled pork chop. A. carry-away B. carry-on C. take-away D. fast-courses
  2. 15. As a result of government , more jobs were lost. A. cut-aways B. cut-backs C. cuttings D. drop-backs 16. No one knows precisely how much he earns a month, but $ 5.000 can’t be of the target. A.far B. broad C. wide D. distant 17. She insisted that the reporter ___ her as his source of information. A. not mention B. doesn’t mention C. hadn’t mentioned D. didn’t mention 18. Look, will you stop ___ in and let me finish my sentence! A. plugging B. pushing C. butting D. moving 19. We put his rude manner ___ ignorance of our British customs. A. up to B. down to C. off at D. up with 20. I would rather you ___ the office phone for personal purpose. A. shouldn’t have used B. shouldn’t use C. not to use D. didn’t use II. Give the correct form of the word in brackets to complete the following passage. Write your answer in the box provided. (5 pts.) Mount Mulanje in Malawi is the highest mountain in (1. CENTRE) ___ Africa, part of a range which comprises no fewer than twenty peaks over 2,500 meters. The range is readily (2. ACCESS) ___ by road and a day’s drive allow a (3. LEISURE) circumnavigation. More energetic visitors, particularly walkers and climbers, are rewarded with an experience that is (4.FORGET) ___. Mulanje is a (5. BREATH) ___ sight, visible for miles around. The giant slab of rock appears to protrude almost vertically from the plain. This impression is borne out by the existence of the longest sheer rock- face in Africa, demanding for even the most skilled (6. MOUNTAIN) ___. The explanation for this dramatic geography lies in the rock: hard granite, very (7. RESIST) ___ to erosion, which contrasts with the softer rocks of the plains. Most visitors remain on the lower, gentler slopes, making use of forest huts for overnight accommodation. The trek up the foothills, along clearly defined paths, is not overly (8. CHALLENGE) ___ but may take up to a week. As the climate cools gradually, almost (9. PERCEPTIBLE) ___, with every few meters of altitude gained, so the full diversity of fauna and flora is revealed in all its (10. SPLENDID) ___. III. Fill in each blank with a suitable preposition or particle. (5 pts.) 1. We’re all very obliged ___you 2. He escaped by passing himself ___ as a guard. 3. He’s quite careless ___ danger. 4. When she sets ___ ___ an examination, she always tries to avoid crossing the part of a woman. 5. I’ve been so anxious ___ you. 6. She refused to be a party ___ any violence. 7. Embarrassment rooted her ___ the spot. 8. This service is free ___ charge. 9.___ the devil and the deep blue sea. 10. We cannot afford to take risks when people’s lives are ___ stake.
  3. IV. Underline and correct ten mistakes in the following passage. Write the corrections in the column on the right. (10 pts.) Research has found that children took on a supermarket trip make a purchase L1 request every two minutes. More than $200 million a year is now spent on advertising L2 directly to children, most of them on television. That figure is likely to increase and it L3 is in the supermarket aisles that the investment is most likely to be successful. For L4 children, the reasons behind their parents’ decisions about that they can and cannot L5 afford are often unclear and arguments about how bad sugar is for your teeth are L6 inconvincing when compared with the attractively and emotionally persuasive L7 advertising campaigns. L8 According to Susan Dibb of the National Food Alliance, ‘Most parents concerned L9 about what they give their children to eat and have ideas about what food is healthy – L10 although those ideas are not always accurate. Obviously, such a dialogue among L11 parents and children is a good thing, because if the only information children are L12 getting about productivity is from TV advertising, they are getting a very one-side L13 view. Parents resent the fact that they are competing with the advertising industry and L14 . are forced into the position of repeated disappointing their children.’ The Independent L15 . Television Commission, which regulates TV advertising, prohibits advertisers from L16 telling children to ask their parents to buy products. L17 PART C: READING I.Read the following passage and answer the questions by choosing the options A, B, C or D. Write your answer (A, B, C or D) in the box provided. (10 pts.) EXOTIC AND ENDANGERED SPECIES When you hear someone bubbling enthusiastically about an exotic species, you can safely bet the speaker isn’t an ecologist. This is a name for a resident of an established community that was deliberately or accidentally moved from its home range and became established elsewhere. Unlike most imports, which can’t take hold outside their home range, an exotic species permanently insinuates itself into a new community. Sometimes the additions are harmless and even have beneficial effects. More often, they make native species endangered species, which by definition are extremely vulnerable to extinction. Of all species on the rare or endangered lists or that recently became extinct, close to 70 percent owe their precarious existence or demise to displacement by exotic species. Two examples are included here to illustrate the problem. During the 1800s, British settlers in Australia just couldn’t bond with the koalas and kangaroos, so they started to import familiar animals from their homeland. In 1859, in what would be the start of a wholesale disaster, a northern Australian landowner imported and then released two dozen wild European rabbits (Oryctolagus cuniculus). Good food and good sport hunting – that was the idea. An ideal rabbit habitat with no natural predators was the reality. Six years later, the landowner had killed 20,000 rabbits and was besieged by 20,000 more. The rabbits displaced livestock, even kangaroos. Now Australia has 200 to 300 million hippityhopping through the southern half of the country. They overgraze perennial grasses in good times and strip bark from shrubs and trees during droughts. You know where they’ve been; they transform grasslands and shrub lands into eroded deserts. They have been shot and poisoned. Their warrens have been plowed under, fumigated, and dynamited. Even when all-out assaults reduced
  4. their population size by 70 percent, the rapidly reproducing imports made a comeback in less than a year. Did the construction of a 2,000-mile-long fence protect Western Australia? No. Rabbits made it to the other side before workers finished the fence. In 1951, government works introduced a myxoma virus by way of mildly infected South American rabbits, its normal hosts. This virus causes myxomatosis. The disease has mild effects on South American rabbits that coevolved with the virus but nearly always had lethal effects on O. cuniculus. Biting insects, mainly mosquitoes and flenses against the novel virus, the European rabbits dies in droves. But, as you might expect, natural selection has since favored rapid growth of populations of O. cuniculus resistant to the virus. In 1991, on an uninhabited island in Spencer Gulf, Australian researchers released a population of rabbits that they had injected with a calcivirus. The rabbits died quickly and relatively painlessly from blood clots in their lungs, hearts, and kidneys. In 1995, the test virus escaped from the island, possibly on insect vectors. It has been killing 80 to 95 percent of the adult rabbits in Australian regions. At this writing, researches are now questioning whether the calcivirus should be used on a widespread scale, whether it can jump boundaries and infect animals other than rabbits (such as humans), and what the long – term consequences will be. A vine called kudzu (Puerarialobata) was deliberately imported from Japan to the United States, where it faces no serious threats from herbivores, pathogens, or competitor plants. In temperate parts of Asia, it is a well – behaved legume with a well – developed root system. It seemed like a good idea to use it to control erosion on hills and highway embankments in the southeastern United States. (A) With nothing to stop it, though, kudzu’s shoots grew a third of a meter per day. Vines now blanket stream banks, trees, telephone poles, houses, and almost everything else in their path. Attempts to dig up or burn kudzu are futile. Grazing goats and herbicides help, but goats eat other plants, to, and herbicides contaminate water supplies. (B) Kudzu could reach the Great Lakes by the year 2040. On the bright side, a Japanese firm is constructing a kudzu farm and processing plant in Alabama. The idea is to export the starch to Asia, where the demand currently exceeds the supply. (C) Also, kudzu may eventually help reduce logging operations. (D) At the Georgia Institute of Technology, researchers report that kudzu might become an alternative source for paper. 1. Based on the information in paragraph 1, which of the following best explains the term “exotic species”? A. Animals or plants on the rare species list B. A permanent resident in an established community C. A species that has been moved to a different community D. An import that fails to thrive outside of its home range 2. The world itself in the passage refers to A. most imports B. new community C. home range D. exotic species 3. The word bond in the passage is closest in meaning to A. move B. connect C. live D. fight 4. According to the author, why did the plan to introduce rabbits in Australia fail? A. The rabbits were infected with a contagious virus. B. Most Australians did not like the rabbits. C. No natural predators controlled the rabbit population. D. Hunters killed the rabbits for sport and for food. 5. All of the following methods were used to control the rabbit population in Australia EXCEPT A. They were poisoned. C. They were moved to deserts. B. Their habitats were buried. D. They were surrounded by fences 6. Why does the author mention mosquitoes and fleas in paragraph 5? A. Because they are the origin of the myxoma virus B. Because they carry the myxoma virus to other animals C. Because they die when they are infected by myxoma D. Because they have an immunity to the myxoma virus 7. According to paragraph 6, the Spencer Gulf experiment was dangerous because A. insect populations were exposed to a virus B. rabbits on the island died from a virus C. the virus may be a threat to humans D. some animals are immune to the virus
  5. 8. Why does the author give details about the kudzu farm and processing plant in paragraph 8? A. To explain why kudzu was imported from abroad B. To argue that the decision to plant kudzu was a good one C. To give a reason for kudzu to be planted in Asia D. To offer partial solutions to the kudzu problem 9. Which of the following statements most accurately reflects the author’s opinion about exotic species? A. Exotic species should be protected by ecologists. B. Importing an exotic species can solve many problems. C. Ecologists should make the decision to import an exotic species. D. Exotic species are often disruptive to the ecology. 10. Look at (A), (B), (C), (D) in the last two paragraphs. Where the following sentence could be best inserted in the passage (A), (B), (C), or (D)? Asians use a starch extract from kudzu in drinks, herbal medicines, and candy. II. Read the text below and write one word in each space to complete it. Write your answer in the box provided. (10 pts.) Society has changed in many ways since the introduction of computers, and people's lives at home and at the office have been (1) ___ . Most people are working for fewer hours per week than they (2) ___ to, and manufacturers and advertising agencies are becoming much more interested in (3) ___ people spend this extra leisure time. One recent report stated that (4) ___ the number of hobbies had not increased; each hobby had become more specialized. A second (5) ___ is that nowadays, many managers would rather spend time with their families than stay (6) ___ in the office every day. Home life seems to be just as important as working. Some companies now make managers (7) ___ their annual holidays even if they don't want to, because this leads to such an (8) ___ in their performance if they have some rest. In spite of these changes, some people are working harder than ever before. The standard of exams is getting higher, and increased competition is (9) ___ it harder to get into university than it was 20 years ago. School children and students are now having to work so hard that in many cases they work (10) ___ hours than their parents. PART D: WRITING I. Rewrite each of the following sentences using the word(s) given so that its meaning stays the same. (10 pts.) 1. I have frequently made stupid mistakes like that. => Many's 2. I rarely sleep in the afternoon. => I’m not in 3. You think that fat people are always jolly, but you are wrong. => Contrary 4. It was not until five years had elapsed that the whole truth about the murder came out. => Not for 5. Erika said I had caused the accident. => Erika blamed
  6. 6.My grandfather had completely forgotten that he phoned me last night. (RECOLLECTION) => My grandfather didn’t have 7. Many customs restrictions within the EC have been abolished. (AWAY) => Many customs 8. At the moment I can’t afford to buy a new car. (QUESTION) => At the moment 9. Students at the school are not allowed to go into the Rainbow Disco. (BOUNDS) => The Rainbow Disco 10.When they broke the news, she stayed perfectly calm and controlled. (HAIR) => When they broke the news II. Write a composition about the following topic: Food-safety violations, including using improved fertilizers and toxic chemicals to produce foods, are increasing at an alarming rate. What suggestions would you give to solve these problems? You should write about 250 words. (20 pts.)
  7. KEY ĐỀ THI THỬ MÔN TIẾNG ANH (CHUYÊN) Total points: 100 PART A I. (5 pts. ) 1C 2D 3A 4B 5B II. (5 pts.) 1D 2A 3B 4C 5B PART B I. (20 pts.) 1D 2B 3A 4B 5A 6A 7C 8B 9A 10A 11A 12A 13D 14C 15B 16C 17A 18C 19B 20D II. (5 pts.) 1. central 2. accessible 3. leisurely 4. unforgettable 5. breath-taking 6. mountaineer(s) 7. resistant 8. challenging 9. imperceptibly 10. splendor / (our) III. (5 pts.) 1.to 2.off 3.about/ of 4. out, for 5.about/ for 6. to 7.to 8. of 9.between 10. at IV. (10 pts.) Research has found that children took on a supermarket trip make a purchase request every two minutes. More than $200 million a year is now spent on advertising directly to children, most of them on television. That figure is likely to increase and it is in the supermarket aisles that the investment is most likely to be successful. For children, the reasons behind their parents’ decisions about that they can and cannot afford are often unclear and arguments about how bad sugar is for your teeth are inconvincing when compared with the attractively and emotionally persuasive advertising campaigns. According to Susan Dibb of the National Food Alliance, ‘Most parents concerned about what they give their children to eat and have ideas about what food is healthy – although those ideas are not always accurate. Obviously, such a dialogue among parents and children is a good thing, because if the only information children are getting about productivity is from TV advertising , they are getting a very one-side view . Parents resent the fact that they are competing with the advertising industry and are forced into the position of repeated disappointing their children.’ The Independent Television Commission , which regulates TV advertising, prohibits advertisers from telling children to ask their parents to buy products. L1 taken L2 L3 it L4 L5 what L7.unconvincing L7 attractive L8 L9 L10 are concerned L11 L12 between L13 products / L13 one-sided L15 repeatedly L16 L17
  8. PART C I. (10 pts.) 1C 2D 3B 4C 5C 6B 7C 8D 9D 10.C 8 II. (10 pts.) 1. affected/ influenced 2.used 3.how 4.(al)though 5.finding/ change 6.late 7.take 8.improvement 9. making 10. longer PART D I. (10 pts.) 1. Many's the time that I have made stupid mistakes like that . 2. I’m not in a / the habit of sleeping in the afternoon. 3. Contrary to your thought/ belief/ opinion/what you think, fat people are not always jolly. 4. Not for another five years did the the whole truth about the murder come out. 5. Erika blamed me for causing/ having caused the accident. 6. My grandfather didn’t have any recollection of phoning me last night. 7. Many customs restrictions within the EC have been done away with. 8. At the moment me / my buying a new car is out of the question. 9. The Rainbow Disco is out of bounds to Ss at the school. 10. When they broke the news, she did not turn a hair. II. (20 pts.) 1. Content: 10 pts - a provision of all main ideas and details as appropriate. 2. Language: 5 pts – a variety of vocabulary and structures 3. Presentation: 5 pts – coherence, cohesion, and style THE END.