1. Choose the correct answer.
I’ll answer his letter at once if he . . . to me.
A) writes B) will write C) write
D) would write
2. Choose the correct answer.
- Janet’s bought this CD only because of the
cover picture.
- .... .
A) So did Mike B) Neither did Ben
C) So has Alan D) So was Nelly
3. Choose the correct answer.
Did you notice anyone .... outside when you left home?
A) to wait B) waiting C) to waiting
D) to have waited
4. Choose the correct answer.
The girls must hurry if they . . . the tickets yet.
A) haven’t booked B) didn’t book
C) hadn’t booked D) won’t book
5. Choose the correct answer.
The famous scientist says that the sea is . . .
unknown part of our planet.
A) the most large B) the larger
C) the largest D) the most largest
6. Choose the correct answer.
You still want to meet with him, . . . ?
A) do you B) don’t you C) will you
D) can’t you
7. Choose the correct answer.
- Is that table . . . ?
- No, it isn’t. It is light.
A) more heavy B) heavily C) most heavily
D) heavy
8. Choose the correct answer.
He said to me, “They will hurt you.”
A)He said to me that he would be hurt me.
B)He said to me that they would hurt to you.
C)He said to me that they would hurt me.
D)He said to me that they will hurt me.
9. Choose the correct answer.
They’re having a party in . . . garden.
A) you B) him C) hers D) their
10. Choose the correct answer.
Laurie .... worry about missing her favourite
TV show. I am recording it for her.
A) couldn’t B) needn’t C) must
D) had to
11. Choose the correct answer.
He is a man . . . a heavy responsibility falls.
A) on which B) who C) on whom
D) whose
12. Choose the correct answer.
- Are you going .... for the weekend?
- I don’t know. It depends … the weather.
A) away/on B) about/for C) into/at
D) -/to
13. Choose the correct answer.
When Sitora was in her …, she left her city.
A) the twentieth B) twenties C) a twenty
D) twentieth
14. Choose the correct answer.
Do we have … food for ten people? If we
don’t, let me know.
A) dependent B) efficient C) sufficient
D) conscious
15. Choose the correct answer.
She offered me an apple, but I wasn’t hungry as I … lunch.
A) had just eaten B) have just eaten
C) was just eating D) just ate
16. Choose the correct answer.
Who .... this building .... by?
A) was/built B) are/built C) did/build
D) have/been built
17. Choose the correct answer.
Aren’t you going to introduce me … your
friend?
A) at B) with C) to D) by
18. Choose the right expression of the underlined numeral.
Electrical energy costs $0.12 per kilowatt-hour.
A) twelve cents B) twelve dollars
C) nought one and two cents
D) nought point twelve dollar
Read the text and answer the questions according to it.
There is a phrase in English “They earn telephone numbers” which means someone gets a big salary. A man in New York is asking the city mayor for so much that it is almost impossible to think of a comparison. Andrew Panwool, a 50-year-old banker, is asking for two undecillion dollars. Over 99 percent of people wouldn’t hear of the word “undecillion”. One undecillion dollars is one followed by 36 zeros. The only people who mainly need this word are astrophysicists and astronomers. Two undecillion dollars is a lot more than all the money in the whole world. Even more than all the wealth created throughout entire history. The newspaper reports that Mr Panwool is asking the city mayor for personal injury. It’s because last month a dog bit his finger on a city bus.
19. How many zeros are there in one undecillion dollars?
A) 36 B) 62 C) 99 D) 72
20. According to the passage, who mostly uses the term "undecillion"?
A) mayors B) bankers C) astrophysicists
D) biologists
21. According to the passage, how big is two undecillion dollars compared to the world’s money?
A) much less B) a bit less C) much more
D) the same
22. According to the passage, what is the man asking money for?
A)for free riding on a city bus
B)for buying newspapers
C)for being bitten by a dog
D)for his astronomical research
Read the text and answer the questions according to it.
The bottom of the ocean is a cold and dark place. The Marianas Trench in the Pacific Ocean is the
deepest place in the world. It is almost 11 kilometres below sea-level. In 1960, Jacques Piccard and Dan
Walsh were the first people to go down to the bottom of the Marianas Trench. It is impossible for humans
to dive so deep under the sea because there is too much pressure. So Piccard and Walsh went to the
bottom in a special submarine. The third person to go down to the Marianas Trench was a film director
James Cameron in 2012. Nobody else has been there since then. In technical terms, the deep sea begins
from 200 metres below sea-level. The pressure is 20 times greater than the pressure on the surface. At
1000 metres below sea-level, it is completely dark. At ten kilometres below the surface, the pressure is
1000 times greater than the pressure on the surface. But somehow, sea creatures manage to live there.
Many of them survive by eating bits of food that fall from the surface.
23. What is the passage mainly about?
A)about the deepest part of the ocean
B)about technical tools used in the submarine
C)about three famous film directors
D)about the fish living in ocean water
24. According to the passage, how many people have visited the bottom of the Marianas Trench so far?
A) two B) one C) nobody D) three
25. According to the passage, where does the deep sea begin from?
A)from 200 metres below sea-level
B)from 11 kilometres below sea-level
C)from 1000 metres below sea-level
D)from 10 kilometres below sea-level
26. All of the following statements are TRUE,
EXCEPT …
A)There aren’t any fish at the bottom of the
deep ocean.
B)The deep sea begins from 200 metres below
sea-level.
C)There is more pressure below sea-level than
on the surface.
D)Before 1960, nobody had been to the bottom
of Marianas Trench
Read the text and answer the questions according to it.
Have you ever imagined what it would be like to do something amazing that no one else could do?
That’s what it must have been like for Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. He was born in 1756 in Salzburg,
Austria. Mozart showed his musical genius early. Encouraged by his father, Mozart began to play the
harpsichord at the age of three! At age four he could compose piano music and play the violin. He began
composing minuets at age five. He wrote symphonies at age nine.
Mozart could compose a long piece of music in his head. He imagined what he wanted it to sound
like and then played it perfectly. He often did this without writing it down. When he wrote it down, it
was flawless. When Mozart was 12, he and his father visited St. Peter’s Cathedral in Rome. There they
heard a famous piece of music called a Miserere. This music was beautiful. The church did not allow it
to be copied or performed elsewhere. But Mozart loved the piece. He wrote it down from memory so he
could play it himself.
During his life, Mozart produced more than 600 musical works. He is remembered as one of the most
brilliant composers who ever lived.
27. From the information given in the passage one can tell that a minuet is . . .
A)a piece of music
B)a letter of recommendation
C)a Miserere
D)a symphony
28. What happened first?
A)Mozart composed a symphony.
B)Mozart memorized a Miserere.
C)Mozart composed a minuet.
D)Mozart learned to play the violin.
29. A genius is a person who . . .
A)has an amazing natural talent.
B)learns how to play a harpsichord.
C)writes at least 600 musical works.
D)has the ability to memorize a piece of music.
30. What does the word “amazing” in the text
mean?
A) defective B) destructive C) incomplete
D) astonishing
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