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Anh 10 ĐỀ CHÍNH THỨC

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SỞ GIÁO DỤC & ĐÀO TẠO
TP. HỒ CHÍ MINH
TRƯỜNG THPT CHUYÊN
LÊ HỒNG PHONG
ĐỀ CHÍNH THỨC
KỲ THI OLYMPIC TRUYỀN THỐNG 30/4
LẦN THỨ XXV – NĂM 2019
Môn thi: Anh văn - Khối: 10
Ngày thi: 06/04/2019
Thời gian làm bài: 180 phút
Đề này có 08 trang.
 Thí sinh làm phần trắc nghiệm (MULTIPLE CHOICE) trên phiếu trả lời trắc nghiệm và
phần tự luận (WRITTEN TEST) trên phiếu trả lời tự luận.
 Trên phiếu trả lời trắc nghiệm, thí sinh tô thêm 2 số 00 vào trước số báo danh
(bằng bút chì).
Phần mã đề thi trên phiếu trắc nghiệm, thí sinh tô vào ô 001.
A. MULTIPLE CHOICE (40 PTS)
I. GRAMMAR AND STRUCTURES (5PTS): Choose the best options to complete the following
sentences.
1. ______ happy in the new school, he missed his old friends.
A. Usually
B. Although
C. Being
D. Even
2. ______ we leave at 3:00, we should get there by 5:30.
A. Assuming
B. Having assumed
C. To assume
D. Assumed
3. I am sorry to keep you waiting. I hope you ______ long.
A. are not waiting
B. don’t wait
C. haven’t waited
D.
haven’t
been
waiting
4. It's about time you ______ the balcony. It's covered in leaves and dust.
A. cleaned
B. had cleaned
C. to be cleaned
D. to have cleaned
5. Don't be silly! That ______ possibly be David Beckham!
A. mustn't
B. shouldn't
C. won't
D. can't
6. –“I locked myself out of my apartment. I didn't know what to do.”
–“You ______ your roommate.”
A. could have called
B. may have called
C. would have called
D. must have called
7. –“Did the principal of the school answer you yet?”
–“No, but ______ I hear from him by 5pm, I’ll let you know.”
A. might
B. could
C. would
D. should
8. ______ help me make this decision. I’m just so unsure of which direction to take for my future.
A. I’d sooner you will
B. I wish you will
C. If only you could
D. I’d rather you
9. ______ we have enough money, where would you like to travel this summer?
A. So that
B. Provided that
C. Despite the fact that D. Unless
10. Twenty people were arrested during the demonstration, of ______ four were charged with obstruction.
A. who
B. whom
C. which
D. them
II. PHRASAL VERBS AND PREPOSITIONS (5 PTS) Choose the best options to complete the
following sentences.
11. She was very appreciative ______ all the support she got from her friends.
A. of
B. for
C. on
12. Her latest novel is coming ______ in paperback soon.
A. across
B. off
C. out
13. As you’ve arrived late, you’ll have to ______ the time you have lost.
A. make up to
B. do up to
C. do up for
14. Mary is jealous ______ her sister because she is much more popular.
A. on
B. of
C. for
15. Your skirt needs taking ______; it's too large.
A. up
B. on
C. over
16. Can you make ______ the meaning of this passage?
A. out
B. for
C. up
17. He’s such a hard man to ______ as he’s always flitting from one site to another.
A. pin in
B. lock in
C. narrow down
18. Don't be put ______ by his manner. He always acts that way.
D. with
D. about
D. make up for
D. with
D. in
D. into
D. nail down
A. on
B. away
C. off
19. His proposal met ______ total opposition from the committee.
A. about
B. by
C. for
20. You ought to stand ______ your little brother when the others tease him.
A. over with
B. by for
C. about with
D. down
D. with
D. up for
III. VOCABULARY (10 PTS): Choose the best options to complete the following sentences.
21. It is possible to ______ out of the pension scheme if you do not wish to participate.
A. back
B. charge
C. opt
D. break
22. She always gets what she wants because she knows how to ______ the rules.
A. circumvent
B. desert
C. slack
D. elicit
23. Anthropologists have spent years studying the social system of this ______.
A. breed
B. caste
C. tribe
D. sect
24. I tried to catch the mouse, but it was too ______.
A. intentional
B. obsolete
C. uncommon
D. elusive
25. I have no appetite and I am lethargic. I've been feeling under ______ for ages.
A. pair
B. stress
C. par
D. threat
26. Peter does everything himself because he doesn’t like to ______ control.
A. extinguish
B. relinquish
C. vanish
D. elicit
27. I don't know how I can ______ up the courage to tell him the awful news.
A. pick
B. pluck
C. store
D. set
28. I need to study more for the test. I don’t have a very good ______ of the material.
A. abstract
B. grasp
C. hint
D. gist
29. The weekend is over, so tomorrow morning it's back to the ______.
A. grind
B. labour
C. drudgery
D. toil
30. We could hear the monkey ______ long before we reached their cage.
A. chatting
B. chattering
C. prattling
D. babbling
31. Bob is so short-tempered; he should try to ______ his anger.
A. monitor
B curb
C temper
D stunt
32. The police ______ the woods looking for the lost child.
A. scoured
B. integrated
C. traced
D. encountered
33. Don't mention work to Ray, as it's a sore ______ with him at the moment.
A. finger
B. point
C. place
D. nail
34. The couple ______ under the umbrella to keep dry.
A. enclosed
B. muffled
C. huddled
D. augmented
35. A long, green snake ______ through the grass and disappeared.
A. strutted
B. slunk
C. slithered
D. scampered
36. This schedule isn’t final. It’s only ______.
A. tentative
B. sporadic
C. contemporary
D. subsequent
37. My new pullover______ to half its previous size when I washed it.
A. shrank
B. reduced
C. diminished
D. dwindled
38. The new accounting system ______ all my work useless.
A. transformed
B. rendered
C. transposed
D. converted
39. Martin just loves to ______ his teeth into a really challenging crossword.
A. grind
B. get
C. put
D. sink
40. The doctor said that sweets should be eaten in ______.
A. compulsion
B. restriction
C. moderation
D. qualification
IV. GUIDED CLOZE (10 PTS): Read the texts below and decide which answer best fits each
space.
Passage A:
The case of food storage in tin cans illustrates how an invention can be successful even when it (41) ______
a new problem for the one it solves. In 1810, Peter Durand (42) ______ tremendous progress in food
preservation with his invention of the tin can. The cans were ideal for transporting food and for (43) ______
spoilage for extended periods. But consumers of canned food had to (44) ______ their own ingenuity to
open the solidly constructed cans, which sometimes outweighed the foodstuffs inside. Durand’s solution had
created a new problem, (45) ______ opening the cans. In the early days, the (46) ______ most favored was
the brute force of a hammer and chisel. In 1858, Ezra Warner designed a crude and somewhat (47) ______
can opener. Finally (48) ______ 1930, the safe design that underlies today’s common kitchen utensils had
been invented. From the (49) ______ of their introduction, however, the problem of opening the cans
(50)______ not detract from their wide acceptance as a solution to the problem of food preservation.
41. A. substitutes
B. becomes
C. causes
D. is
42. A. provided
B. invented
C. made
D. discovered
43. A. storing
B. preserving
C. keeping
D. preventing
44. A. create
B. know
C. use
D. make
45. A. easily
B. especially
C. hardly
D. namely
46. A. consumer’s
B. method
C. can
D. food
47. A. called
B. dangerous
C. safer
D. sophisticated
48. A. in
B. beyond
C. prior
D. by
49. A. latest
B. way
C. time
D. first
50. A. did
B. does
C. could
D. will
Passage B:
Two eyes help us to see in three dimensions; and two ears allow us to hear in stereo. If recent research
findings are (51) ______, two nostrils function in (52) ______ the same way. In the olfactory system, each
nostril conveys to the brain a slightly different olfactory (53) ______ upon smelling an odor. What is
perceived in combination is (54) ______ used by the brain to get a precise (55) ______ of what the odor is.
The slight difference (56) ______ the olfactory images seems to occur (57) ______ the air flows at a
different rate through each nostril, one of (58) ______ has a low flow-rate and the other a high one. Odors
that dissolve slowly have their maximum effect in the (59) ______ that has a slow movement of air.
Conversely, those that dissolve quickly have their (60) ______ effect when the air stream is moving rapidly.
Thus, air drawn into the nose will give different responses in each nostril. Not yet well understood is how
the brain processes the disparate olfactory images as a single recognizable aroma. Future studies will be
needed to completely explain this phenomenon.
51. A. incorrect
B. reported
C. accurate
D. similar
52. A. so
B. as
C. much
D. such
53. A. process
B. image
C. where
D. once
54. A. which
B. earlier
C. strongly
D. then
55. A. meaning
B. measurement
C. location
D. sense
56. A. in
B. about
C. to
D. when
57. A. before
B. then
C. however
D. because
58. A. those
B. which
C. each
D. such
59. A. nostril
B. chemical
C. flow
D. other
60. A. personal
B. strongest
C. negative
D. slowest
V. READING COMPREHENSION (10 PTS): Read the texts below and choose the best answer
to each question.
Passage A
Recently, researchers conducted a survey to investigate what motivates young adults to exercise. The study
might shed light on why so few college students exercise and why many stop their exercise workouts after
they graduate. Researchers analyzed responses from 937 randomly selected college students at a leading
U.S. university. What the research team found was that 39% of the male students and 26% of the female
students exercised at least three days a week for 20 minutes at a time. These exercise patterns were fairly
similar to those in surveys at other universities. The survey also revealed some critical factors which
motivate college students to exercise.
Men who exercised regularly reported that their friends provided considerable support for them to do so.
Those who exercised only occasionally had moderate support from their friends, while those who did not
exercise at all had little or no support from friends. For women, however, the crucial motivating factor
seemed to come from family members rather than from friends. Women who exercised regularly had a great
deal of positive support to do so from their families. However, women who exercised only occasionally
received moderate levels of encouragement from their families, while those who did not work out at all
received little or no support from their families. Since college students often live far from home, women
students are likely to have a weaker support system than do their male counterparts.
A medical professor, upon seeing the results of the study, remarked that generally there is not so much
emphasis on body performance among girls and young women. “It’s a macho thing to be able to run faster
or lift weights,” he said. “However,” he continued, “for the younger generation, this gender gap appears to
be getting smaller.”
61. What is the main purpose of the study presented in this passage?
A. to investigate college students’ attitudes towards good health and exercise
B. to find out why young women don’t like to exercise
62.
63.
64.
65.
C. to learn what makes college students exercise
D. to find the best type of exercise workout for college students
What research method was used in this study?
A. College students reported on their friends’ exercise workouts.
B. College students reported on their families’ exercise patterns.
C. College professors answered questions about their students.
D. College students answered questions about themselves.
What similarity between men and women did the study find?
A. The more friends they have, the more they exercise.
B. The more support they have to exercise, the more they exercise.
C. The closer they live to their families, the more they exercise.
D. The more health-conscious they are, the more they exercise.
In comparison to the general college population, students at this university exercise ______.
A. less often than average
B. about the same amount as average
C. more often than average
D. for longer at a time than average
Why does the passage mention that some college students live far from home?
A. to emphasize that they do not see their families every day
B. to criticize their life styles
C. to show how independent they are
D. to explain why they depend on their friends so much
Passage B
It has long been known that underweight, premature babies develop into children who perform worse at
school than children who had normal birth weight and were full-term. A recent study examining the effects
of birth weight on intelligence suggests that even among full-term babies the heavier ones have an
advantage. The study has been following 3,900 British men and women since their birth in 1946. Birth
weight was correlated with scores on tests of reading and arithmetic skills, non-verbal reasoning, memory,
speed, and concentration. These tests were conducted when the participants were 8, 11, 15, 26, and 43
years old. Generally speaking, the heavier children performed better on the tests. The relationship was
strongest at age 8 and then weakened over time. By age 43, the relationship was negligible. The results
were not affected by birth order, gender, father’s social class, or mother’s education and age.
These findings must be interpreted with caution. First, the results were based on averages. Second, birth
weight is only one of numerous factors influencing cognitive function. Parental interest in education - such
as volunteering at school or helping with homework - may offset the effect of birth weight. Furthermore,
poor environmental conditions, such as living in an overcrowded home, breathing polluted air, or being
caught in a bitter divorce can diminish the early advantages enjoyed by heavier babies.
Although no one knows exactly what makes a newborn baby heavy, it is known that healthy, well-nourished
mothers tend to have heavier babies, while those who eat poorly, smoke, and are heavy drinkers tend to
produce smaller ones. There are probably several other variables that affect birth weight, but if and how
those are connected to intelligence is not known.
66. In this study, the researchers examined the relationship between _______.
A. maternal nutrition and birth weight
B. home environment and intelligence
C. age and intelligence
D. intelligence and birth weight
67. What did the researchers find out about the relationship they were studying?
A. It increased up to age 26, then decreased.
B. It remained steady until age 26, then decreased.
C. It decreased as the subjects grew older.
D. It remained steady throughout the study.
68. Which children have an advantage at school?
A. Those who were full-term, lighter weight babies.
B. Those who were premature but normal weight babies.
C. Those who were full-term, heavier babies.
D. Those who were premature babies who gained weight quickly.
69. According to the passage, what is one possible reason to question the conclusions of the study?
A. The study did not consider some environmental factors.
B. The study was done too long ago.
C. The study was done on premature babies, not full term ones.
D. The study tested different children at different ages.
70. What is the main idea of the passage?
A. Premature babies are disadvantaged throughout their lives.
B. Parents’ educational level affects intelligence.
C. No one knows the exact relationship between test scores and intelligence.
D. Bigger babies may be more intelligent than smaller ones.
Passage C
Diving deep into the ocean is difficult for humans, although whales do it easily. The deepest a human has
dived into the ocean without scuba gear is to 450 feet below the surface, which required him to hold his
breath for about two minutes. Humans are unable to go much deeper because at a certain point the
external pressure becomes so great it crushes the ribcage and lungs. Furthermore, lack of oxygen also
prevents humans from staying under water for long periods. It is amazing, then, that whales can dive to
depths of up to 10,000 feet and remain there for as long as two hours. Several adaptations enable the
whale to do this, among them the construction of its ribcage. Unlike humans, whales have fewer “true” ribs,
ribs joined directly to the breastbone, and more “floating” ribs, which are attached only to the preceding rib
by cartilage. This flexible design allows the whale’s ribcage to fold under pressure instead of breaking, and
for its lungs to collapse without rupturing capillaries. Also, during a dive, the whale’s heart slows to as low as
3 to 5 beats a minute. Arteries constrict, reducing blood flow to many of the whale’s less vital organs, thus
conserving oxygen and maintaining blood pressure in the brain and heart. Humans emerging too suddenly
from dives can suffer from “the bends,” when small bubbles of nitrogen gas form in body fluids and obstruct
blood flow, leading to death. Because whales collapse their lungs, air is pushed from the lungs into the
windpipe, which is lined with thick membranes, making it difficult for nitrogen bubbles to pass into the
bloodstream or other tissues. Together, these and other adaptations enable whales to dive to such depths.
71. What are “floating” ribs?
A. Ribs that are not attached to other ribs.
B. Ribs that are not attached to the breastbone.
C. Ribs that are made of cartilage.
D. Ribs that are not able to fold under pressure.
72. What is the main purpose of this passage?
A. to explain why whales can do something that humans cannot
B. to explain how humans and whales adapted
C. to explain what happens at great depths
D. to explain how the human respiratory system works
73. When a whale dives, what contributes to the conservation of oxygen?
A. Blood pressure increases.
B. Blood flow decreases.
C. The lungs collapse.
D. The ribcage folds.
74. Compared to whales, humans have ______.
A. weaker capillaries
B. thicker membranes in the windpipe
C. fewer floating ribs
D. slower heartbeats
75. How does the whale’s ribcage differ from that of a human?
A. The whale’s ribcage contains fewer vital organs.
B. The whale’s ribcage can bend without breaking.
C. Whales have fewer ribs than humans.
D. The whale’s ribs are not attached to the breastbone.
Passage D
Scientists have not been able to determine the exact age of the Earth directly from its rocks. Geologists have
yet to find any of Earth’s original rocks that have not been recycled and destroyed through the process of
plate tectonics. However, scientists have been able to determine the probable age of our solar system and
to calculate an age for the Earth by looking elsewhere - to outer space. In doing so, they had to assume
that the Earth and the rest of the solid bodies in our solar system formed at the same time and are the
same age.
Asteroids in outer space have not been subjected to the crushing forces of plate tectonics. Meteorites, which
are fragments of asteroids that fall to Earth, contain clues about planetary formation. Being primordial rocks
still in their original state, they can be dated fairly accurately by measuring the radioactive elements
remaining in them since the formation of the solar system. One group of scientists from Germany and
another from France analyzed meteorites and reached the same conclusion: The final phase of Earth’s
formation, the separation of its metallic core from its silicate-based mantle, occurred about 30 million years
earlier than previously thought.
The ages of more than seventy meteorites have been measured using radiometric dating techniques. The
results show that meteorites, and therefore presumably Earth, formed about 4.5 billion years ago. These
findings also push back the origin of Earth’s moon because most scientists believe that the Moon formed
from material ejected when a Mars-sized planet collided with Earth. The fact that these conclusions about
the age of the Earth were reached by two independent groups of scientists increases the weight of the
findings.
76. What strengthens the claim made in this passage about Earth’s age?
A. Earth and meteorites are the same age.
B. Two separate research studies had the same results.
C. Geologists have found Earth’s original rocks.
D. The moon is older than previously thought.
77. What conclusion did the French and German scientists reach?
A. Meteorites have radioactive elements.
B. Plate tectonics does not occur on asteroids.
C. The Earth is older than was believed in the past.
D. The Moon is older than the Earth.
78. According to the passage, what is involved in “radiometric dating techniques”?
A. using radioactivity to restore an object to its original state
B. measuring the radioactive elements in an object
C. calculating how many times Earth’s rocks were recycled
D. subjecting an object to crushing forces
79. How did scientists date the Earth?
A. directly, by analyzing plate tectonics
B. directly, by measuring Earth’s metallic core
C. indirectly, by dating the Earth’s Moon
D. indirectly, by dating meteorites
80. What indicated the last stage in the Earth’s formation?
A. a reduction in the crushing force of plate tectonics
B. the separation of Earth’s core from its mantle
C. a shower of seventy meteorites falling to Earth
D. the collision of a Mars-sized planet with Earth
B. WRITTEN TEST
I. CLOZE TEST (20 PTS): Read the texts below and complete each space with ONE
suitable word.
Passage A
Fallingwater is recognized as one of the most unique and innovative (1) ______ of American architecture of
the 20th century. Designed in 1935 by architect Frank Lloyd Wright, this beautiful house in western
Pennsylvania is actually built over a waterfall. Wright placed the house above the waterfall by anchoring it to
the (2) ______ next to the falls with concrete “trays,” (3) ______ mimic the natural shape of rock ledges. As
a(n) (4) ______, the house appears to be suspended above the waterfall, which cascades underneath it.
Wright took much care in (5) ______ Fallingwater as harmonious with nature as possible by linking the
house to its natural surroundings. He placed large windows on opposite sides of the main rooms so that the
breeze and (6) ______ of the water could flow through the house (7) ______ hindrance. Wright also
proposed covering the building in gold leaf in (8) ______ to imitate the color of dying plants, and thereby
connect the house to the (9) ______ of seasons and the passage of time. Furthermore, he added a
(10)______ of outdoor terraces where people could enjoy the cool air of the wooded valley.
Today, Fallingwater is open to the public with its original setting, furnishings, and artwork intact.
Passage B
Global warming may be threatening one of the world’s most important crops: rice. Increased nighttime
temperatures are associated with significant declines in crop (11) ______, according to a study conducted
by researchers at the International Rice Institute. The researchers analyzed twelve years of rice production
along with twenty-five years of temperature data. This study, a direct measurement of yields produced
under normal field conditions, using (12) ______ that good farmers normally employ, has confirmed
previous simulations and suggests that (13) ______ increases due to global warming will make it
increasingly difficult to feed the Earth’s growing population. Average (14) ______ temperatures, which
increased 0.35 degrees Celsius over the (15) ______ of the study, have little effect on rice production.
However, a strong correlation exists between warmer nighttime temperatures, which have risen an average
of 1.1 degrees, (16) ______ decreasing rice yields. Although the underlying (17) ______ of this relationship
is unknown, researchers speculate that plants work harder to maintain themselves in (18) ______ to the
warmer nights and consequently divert energy from growth. Thus, an average (19) ______ of just one
degree Celsius can (20) ______ in a ten percent reduction in yields. Similar findings have been reported for
corn and soybean yields in the United States.
II. WORD FORMATION: (20PTS)
PART 1: Complete each sentence, using the correct form of the word in parentheses.
1. They were in search of ______ archaeological remains. (DATE)
2. He always gets ______ aggressive when he’s drunk. (RESTRAIN)
3. The drop in share prices in March was a ______ of the financial crash that followed in June. (RUN)
4. She sang the first three verses with a piano and the last verse ______. (COMPANY)
5. I really didn't mean to offend her - I just said it ______. (THINK)
6. They were accused of ______ in their treatment of the hostages. (HUMAN)
7. Alcohol is a ______ factor in 10% of all road accidents. (CONTRIBUTE)
8. He had to face up to his own ______ as a father. (ADEQUATE)
9. It was ______ a step in the right direction. (QUESTION)
10. Hospital beds were scarce and medicines were practically ______. (EXIST)
PART 2: Complete the passage with the appropriate forms from the words given in the box.
COMPLICATE
STAND
DINE
WELCOME
DEPEND
OCCUR
DEFEND
TERROR
DELICATE
EXPOSE
POISONOUS SEALIFE
One of the most lethal poisons on Earth, ten thousand times more deadly than cyanide, is tetrodotoxin,
more concisely known as TTX. Its potency is well known in East Asia, where it regularly kills (11)______
who have braved the capricious (12) ______ known as puffer fish. This toxin has a (13) ______ method of
operation: twenty-five minutes after (14) ______, it begins to paralyse its victims, leaving the victim fully
aware of what is happening. Death usually results, within hours, from suffocation or heart failure. There is
no known antidote. If lucky patients can (15) ______ the symptoms for twenty-four hours, they usually
recover without further (16)______. It is no ordinary poison. What is strange about its (17) ______ is that it
is found in such a wide range of creatures, from algae to angelfish spanning entire kingdoms of life. It is
rather unlikely that such an unusual toxin evolved (18) ______ in so many unrelated animals. Marine
biologists have discovered that the poison is produced by bacteria living in the gut of its host. The best
explanation is that a symbiotic relationship exists between host and the not (19) ______ guest, where
microbes exchange poison for nutrients, providing a valuable (20) ______ weapon for its host.
III. ERROR CORRECTION: (10PTS) The following passage contains 10 errors. Identify and
correct them.
BEWARE OF VITAMINS!
1
Vitamins are good for our health, aren't they? Perhaps not. New research suggests that rather
than ward off disease, high doses of certain vitamins may make more harm than good and
could even put you in an early grave. Some recent studies suggest that far from improving
health, these vitamins, when taken at very high doses, may actually increase the risks of
5
cancer and a range of debilitating diseases, a discovery that has sent the medicinal world into
a spin. Scientists are unsure as to when vitamins, so essential to health, can be toxic in high
doses. The most likely explanation is that the body is only equipped to deal with the levels
found naturally in the environment. If the intake is too far for the normal range, then the
body's internal chemistry must be shunted out of alignment. What this means is that the
10
commercially sold vitamins and those provided by nature is not always compatible. The
commercial forms may interfere with the body's internal chemistry by “crowding out” the
most natural and beneficial forms of the nutrients. The vitamins obtained in food are also
allied with a host of other substances which may moderate or augment its activity in the
body. The latest advice is to eat a balance diet to ensure you get all the nutrients you need,
15
and if you must take supplements make sure you take the lowest recommended dose and
follow the instructions on the bottle.
IV. SENTENCE TRANSFORMATION: (20 PTS) Rewrite the following sentences using the words
given.
1. People know more about my novels than the plays I write. (BETTER)
I'm ___________________________________________.
2. The staff hated his new policies intensely and so went on strike. (HATRED)
So intense ______________________________________________.
3. Your attitude to life would be greatly improved by regular exercise. (WONDERS)
Regular exercise would __________________________________.
4. There is someone in the office twenty-four hours a day. (STAFFED)
The office ____________________________________.
5. Do you think her grandmother was offended by what I said? (EXCEPTION)
Do you think ________________________________________?
6. His behavior at the conference gave him the bad reputation he now has. (CONDUCTED)
The way _________________________________________________.
7. Unless we can obtain more information, we can't process your claim. (FORTHCOMING)
Unless further ___________________________________________.
8. Our teacher thinks it would be better to get on as quickly as possible. (MUCH)
Our teacher would prefer us ________________________________.
9. I had to wait for the manager for almost an hour before he would see me. (BEST)
The manager kept ___________________________________________.
10. They remain close friends despite having had many arguments. (FALL)
Frequently as ________________________________________.
END OF TEST – BEST OF LUCK
Họ và tên thí sinh: ................................................................................................................................
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