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TRƯỜNG THPT CHUYÊN HUỲNH MẪN ĐẠT
ĐỀ THI ĐỀ XUẤT DUYÊN HẢI VÀ ĐỒNG BẰNG BẮC BỘ LẦN THỨ XV
MÔN: TIẾNG ANH 10
(Đề thi gồm 18 trang)
SECTION I. LISTENING (50 points)
Part 1. Complete the notes below. Write NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS AND/ OR
A NUMBER for each answer. (10 points)
ENQUIRY ABOUT BOOKCASES
Number of bookcases available: two
Both bookcases
Width: (1) _______________________________
Made of: (2) _____________________________
First bookcase
Cost: (3) ________________________________
Color: (4) ______________________________
Number of shelves: six (four are (5) _______________________________)
Your answers:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Part 2. Listen to the extract of a television travel program, and then decide whether each
of the following statements is true or false. (10 points)
Statements
T
F
6. A British passport holder has to pay $10 for a visa at the border of
Guatemala.
7. A new limit of seven days will be imposed on tourist visas to visit Burma.
8. Tourists arriving in Burma will not be allowed to visit the capital,
Rangoon.
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9. At the moment, the only place you can obtain a visa to visit Burma is in
Bangkok.
10. Not all resorts on the Costa del Sol will be offering reductions for
children next year.
Your answers:
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
Part 3. You will hear two psychologists talking about modern childhood. For each of the
following questions, choose the option which fits best to what you hear. (10 points)
11. What does Daniel imply about past images of childhood?
A. They are entirely fictional.
B. They are diverse.
C. They represent the innocence of childhood.
D. They all show the misfotunes of childhood.
12. When mentioning the children throwing bags on the bus-stop, Louise is _______.
A. critical
B. angry
C. sarcastic
D. amused
13. According to Daniel, _______.
A. children are failing to learn adequate social skills
B. children do not eat a balanced diet
C. children are far more sociable than they used to be
D. children are becoming involved in political scandals
14. What does Louise say about the media?
A. Manipulative actors have a negative effect on children.
B. Adverts are aimed more at young people than adults.
C. It glorifies unrealistic ideals.
D. It encourages celebrities to inspire young children
15. Daniel implies that _______.
A. children would be happier if their parents taught them at home
B. machines are more of a menace to children than people are
C. teachers aren’t helping children to be competitive enough
D. most teenage problems stem from an unbalanced diet.
Your answers:
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
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Part 4. You will hear part of a radio talk for young people about animals communicating
with each other. For questions 16-25, complete the notes below. Write NO MORE THAN
THREE WORDS AND/OR A NUMBER for each answer in the corresponding numbered
boxes. (20 points)
Bees do a (16) _______ to communicate where to find food.
Although parrots seem to speak, they are only (17) _______ the human sounds.
Primates can communicate a few (18) _______ using simple sounds.
Monkeys have not been observered to use any kind of (19) _______.
Although dolphins can make vowel sounds, they cannot accurately imitate our (20)
_______.
Amazingly, dolphins demonstrate an (21) _______ of when to use phrases.
The sounds made by whales contain (22) _______ than human speech.
The songs of the bottle-nosed whale have many of the (23) _______ of human speech.
The unique grammatical nature of human language arose due to life in (24) _______.
Indeed, a young child needs enough (25) _______ with other people to develop speech.
Your answers:
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
SECTION II. LEXICO AND GRAMMAR (40 POINTS)
Part 1. Choose one of the words marked A, B, C, or D which best completes each of the
following sentences. Write your answers in the corresponding numbered boxes. (30
points)
1. Would passengers please _______ from using any electronic equipment until the plane
is airborne?
A. refer
B. resist
C. restrain
D. refrain
2. I'm afraid we got our _______ crossed — I thought my husband would be picking up the
children and he thought I was doing it.
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A. minds
B. purposes
C. wires
D. fingers
3. Nam, remember, although money is important, never do anything that is not _______.
A. above board
B. under the sky
C. within the square
D. in the cards
4. The child sat in the middle of the floor and _______ refused to move.
A. distinctively
B. decisively
C. flatly
D. totally
5. Working night shifts at the weekend is _______ of any job in hospitality.
A. cut and thrust
B. ebb and flow
C. nuts and bolts
D. part and parcel
6. The manager hesitated to assign the job to the newcomer as he was _______.
A. wet behind the ears
B. feeling your ears burning
C. ringing in your ears
D. keeping your ears open
7. There has been a lot of _______ surrounding the government’s proposed scheme.
A. controversy
B. consent C. conformity
D. consequence
8. If she wins the prize again this year, it'll be a real _______ in her cap.
A. nutshell
B. gemstone
C. feather
D. landmark
9 Going to the unemployment office and having to wait there for hours is a _______
experience.
A. soul-destroying
B. heart-stopping
C. power-sharing
D. thought-provoking
10. When times are good, people can spend freely, but during bad times we have to _______
our spending.
A. multiple
B. disperse
C. curtail
D. obstinate
11. She walked indolently along, with a mind at rest, its peace _______ in her innocent face.
A. reflected
B. reflecting
C. being reflected
D. having reflected
12. _______, the strollers can take another road.
A. If need be
B. When it must
C. We might as well
D. Come what may
13. The winning team were roundly criticized by the local media for the way in which
they had _______ over the losing team. It was considered very unsporting.
A. gloated
B. relished
C. showed up
D. dominated
14. My arguments with the boss got worse and worse, and it all _______ in my deciding to
change jobs.
A. elaborated
B. superseded
C. regenerated
D. culminated
15. I know you didn’t want to upset me but I’d sooner you _______ me the whole truth
yesterday.
A. could have told
B. told
C. have told
D. had told
16. _______ with many personal responsibilities can help students to establish their
independence will make them more flexible in working environment.
A. That living alone
B. Living alone
C. What living alone D. To live alone
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17. Mr Smith was talking to his friends and _______.
A. on a perch beside him sat a blue parrot
B. on a perch beside him did a blue parrot sit
C. did a blue parrot sit on a perch beside him
D. a blue parrot did on a perch beside him sit
18. We all decreed that _______.
A. there be an end to their quarrel
B. their quarrel should put an end to
C. they ended their quarrel then
D. their quarrel be coming to an end.
19. I _______ him that he wasn’t telling the truth but he insisted he was.
A. brought it up
B. laid it off
C. set it on
D. put it to
20. A communications satellite orbits the earth at the same rate that the earth revolves
_______ over a fixed point on the surface.
A. so it can remain
B. so that it can remain
D. provided that it can remain
D. so long as it can remain
21. Facebook's shares are _______ after the company launched a new Instagram feature that
will compete with TikTok in the US.
A. holding her thumb
B. on high skies
C. coming up roses
D. on a tear
22. I never cease to admire the _______ endurance of my grandfather when captured by the
Nazi during World War Two.
A. placid
B. stoical
C. immutable
D. obstinate
23. If there happened to be both rich and poor people, as there happen to be both black and
white ones, then the advantages of the _______ might well spread in time to the hard-up.
A. well-heeled
B. big-hearted
C. open-handed
D. tight-fisted
24. An unusual noise from the back of the class during the exam _______ the teacher’s
attention.
A. held
B. sustained
C. arrested
D. upheld
25. Entering the National Competition for the gifted _______ tremendous concentration and
effort.
A. stipulates
B. extracts
C. exacts
D. inquires
26. It is often hard for parents to take the opinions of their children on _______ due to the
generation gap.
A. board
B. mind
C. check
D. self
27. _______ talking of running for election again, after such a crushing defeat, is surely
proof of his resilience.
A. Should he be
B. That he is
C. Had he been
D. That he were
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28. Activists are those in an environmental movement who insist on taking active steps
towards their objectives _______ merely putting forward an action program.
A. in order to
B. rather than
C. as far as
D. so long as
29. Not only _______ the accident, he later denied that he had been driving the car.
A. he failed in reporting
B. did he fail to report
C. was he failing in reporting
D. he was failing to report
30. I got very nervous about the exam, but in the event, I _______; it was easy.
A. didn’t need to worry
B. needn’t have worried
C. needn’t worry
D. don’t need to worry
Your answers:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
29.
30.
Part 2. Give the correct form of the words in brackets. Write your answers in the
corresponding numbered boxes. (10 points)
1. It’s important that the criminals who assaulted the mayor’s wife should be brought to
_______ in the shortest possible time. (JUST)
2. Don’t be _______ by this failure as you still have one more chance. (HEART)
3. The latter is then reinvested in the underlying _______, and a second-round option
written on its price. (PERPETUAL)
4.
It's
sad,
yet
hardly
a
surprise,
that
such
behavior
could
be
taken
as
_______
(SUPERCILIOUS)
5. The image of peace and prosperity appearing on TV is rather _______ and does not reflect
the actual situation of the city. (FACT)
6. Death, from this perspective, seems unproblematically universal, a simple, irreducible
fact of our nature, _______ the same across all societies and throughout time. (YIELD)
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7. I think I must have known _______ that something was going on between them.
(CONSCIENCE)
8 The differences were _______ to all but the most trained eye. (PERCEIVE)
9. He threatened to _______ his eldest son if he chooses to give up the family business.
(HEIR)
10. The first _______ is that legal study at university is exclusively for students who intend
becoming solicitors or advocates. (CONCEIVE)
Your answers:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
SECTION III. READING (60 POINTS)
Part 1. For questions 1-10, read the following passages and decide which answer (A, B,
C, or D) best fits each gap. Write your answer in the numbered boxes. (15 points)
THE CHANGING FACE OF BRITAIN
It seemed to the generation of Britons alive before the Second World War that their
way of life would (1) _______ for many years to come. However, the war caused a (2)
_______ in British life that completely changed the (3) _______. What had been a fairly (4)
_______ society up to that point, with many people sharing many basic beliefs and values,
underwent (5) _______ changes after the war. The (6) _______ was away from fixed social
roles and towards a more (7) _______ society. Britain began to (8) _______ into its present
form and many ideas that are accepted today, such as a large amount of freedom for
teenager, were at the time (9) _______ and exciting. New and (10) _______ music and
fashion had a great influence on young people and the whole of Britain became less
conservative.
1.
A. sustain B. maintain
C. last
D. be
2.
A. revolution B. revision
C. rotation
D. rejection
3.
A. social status B. status quo
C. status symbol
D. high status
4.
A. uniform B. same
C. similar
D. identical
5.
A. refined B. potential
C. alternative
D. radical
6.
A. reform B. trend
C. fashion
D. decay
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7.
A. revised B. amended
C. dynamic
D. different
8.
A. refine B. progress
C. substitute
D. evolve
9.
A. novel B. mature
C. alternate
D. steady
10.
A. internal B. incoherent
C. innate
D. innovative
Your answers
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
Part 2. For questions 1-10, read the text below and think of the word which best fits each
space. Use only ONE word in each space. Write your answers in the corresponding
numbered boxes. (15 points)
MONEY MANAGEMENT- AN INTRODUCTION
Different bank accounts pay different amount of (1) _______. It makes sense to shop
around before you open an account.
If your salary doesn't always get you to the end of the month, you'll have to arrange
a/an (2) _______ with your bank, so it's worth being on good terms with your bank manager.
If you're planning to buy a house, you'll probably need to get a/an (3) _______. One
again, shop around to get the best deal.
If you're thinking about talking out life (4) _______, make sure you talk to an
independent financial advisor. They 'll give you unbiased advice.
Make sure you know what (5) _______ you're entitled to. If you're on a low income
and have a family, you may be surprised how much you'll receive from the state each month.
Even if you're only in your early twenties, it pays to plan for the future. If you can,
start paying into a/an (6) _______ scheme now to ensure you have a comfortable retirement.
It goes without saying that you should try to avoid getting into too much (7) _______.
Only buy things on credit if you're sure you can afford to pay the monthly installments.
If you do manage to start saving a little each month, you might want to think about
buying some (8) _______. Their value can go down of course, but they can be a good (9)
_______ particularly in the mid- to long-term. Many companies pay an annual (10) _______
to shareholders - this can be a welcome source of extra income if the company's doing well.
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Your answers
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
Part 3. For questions 1-10, read the passage and choose the best option A, B, C, or D to
answer the questions. Write your answers in the corresponding numbered boxes. (15
points)
Vincent Van Gogh was born in Groot Zundert, in The Netherlands on March 30th
1853, to parents Theodorus Van Gogh, a preacher, and Ana Cornelia Carbentus. In 1869 at
the age of 16, Van Gogh began a career, not as a painter, but as an art dealer with the firm
Goupil & Cie. He spent 7 years at Goupil & Cie where daily contacts with works of art
kindled his appreciation of paintings and drawings. Gradually Vincent lost interest in his
work and decided to try his hand teaching at a Catholic School for boys. His growing interest
religion and his desire to help the poor eventually drove him to become a clergyman. In
1878, he became a lay preacher in one of the most impoverished regions in Western Europe:
the coal-mining district of the Borinage in Belgium. Vincent sympathized with the poverty-
stricken miners and gave away most of his food and clothing to ease their burdened lives.
His extreme commitment to the miners drew disfavor from the church, which dismissed
him of his post. Vincent, however, decided to remain with the miners and began to paint
them and their families, chronicling their harsh conditions.
Soon after, thanks to his brother’s financial help, Vincent decided to go to Brussels
in 1880 to begin studies in art. During the next 10 years, Vincent painted around 872
painting. In 1882, Vincent began living with Clasina Maria Hoornik, also known as Sien,
and her children, in the Hague. Their volatile personalities and the strain of living in
complete poverty created stormy relationship. Vincent was devoted to Sien and her children,
but art always came first. As his drawing and painting skills advanced, his relationship with
Sien deteriorated and they parted ways in September 1883.
In 1886, Vincent moved in with his brother-Theo in Paris where he met Paul Gauguin
and various other artists, who had a tremendous impact on his ongoing evolution as an artist.
Never truly happy in large cities, Vincent decided to move to Aries Province in the south of
France, where he rented a studio and invited Paul Gauguin to live with him. In December
1888, Vincent experienced a psychotic episode in which he cut off a piece of his left ear.
After his episode, he was in and out of asylums for the next year. It was thought that Van
Gogh was actually epileptic and that is why people thought he had fits of insanity throughout
his life. He painted one of his best-known painting, Starry Night, during one of his stays in
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the asylum. In mid-1890, Vincent left the asylum and spent the last few months of his life
in Auvers, France. On July 27th 1890, Vincent Van Gogh shot himself in the chest. Two
days later he died with his younger brother-Theo by his side. He left behind a wonderful
array of paintings that make him one of the most influential painters of our time.
1. The word "chronicling" in paragraph 1 is closest meaning to “_______".
A. recording
B. classifying
C. suffering
D. colouring
2. Van Gogh decided to become a clergyman due to _______.
A. his love of art
B. his teachings at the Catholic School for
boys
C. the Goupil & Cie art dealer firm
D. his developing enthusiasm in Christianity
3. Vincent's extreme commitment to the miners resulted in _______.
A. his painting the miners and their families B. his sympathizing with the miners
C. the church discharging him of his duty
D. the church giving food and clothing to the
miners
4: The word "deteriorated" in paragraph 2 is closest meaning to " _______ ".
A. detested
B. became worse and worse C. developed
D. turned down
5: Vincent and Clasina's relationship was stormy because of _______.
A. his devotion to art
B. the stress of living in poor conditions
C. her children
D. their tame personalities
6: Vincent first went into an asylum because _______.
A. he painted Starry Night
B. he was epileptic
C. he cut off part of his ear
D. he was insane throughout his life
7: Vincent went to Aries because _______.
A. he did not get along with his brother, Theo
B. he wanted to live in Gauguin's house
in Aries
C. he wanted to live in a bigger city
D. he disliked big cities
8: Vincent moved to Paris _______.
A. in order to evolve as an artist
B. to live with his brother
C. to meet other artists
D. to live with Paul Gauguin
9: Van Gogh was believed to be _______.
A. insane
B. a loner
C. epileptic D. an inadequate
painter
10: The word "episode" in paragraph 3 refers to " _______".
A. important event in his life
B. unbelievable fact
C. unfortunate time
D. one of several parts of a story on television
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Your answers
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
Part 4. For questions 1-10, read the following passage and do the tasks that follow. (15
points)
HOW SHOULD READING BE TAUGHT?
By Keith Rayncr a Barbara R Foorman
A. Learning to speak is automatic for almost all children, but learning to read requires
elaborate instruction and conscious effort. Well aware of the difficulties, educators have
given a great deal of thought to how they can best help children learn to read. No single
method has triumphed. Indeed, heated arguments about the most appropriate form of
reading instruction continue to polarize the teaching community.
B. Three general approaches have been tried. In one, called whole-word instruction,
children learn by rote how to recognize at a glance a vocabulary of 50 to 100 words. Then
they gradually acquire other words, often through seeing them used over and over again in
the context of a story. Speakers of most languages learn the relationship between letters and
the sounds associated with them (phonemes). That is, children are taught how to use their
knowledge of the alphabet to sound out words. This procedure constitutes a second
approach to teaching reading – phonics. Many schools have adopted a different approach:
the whole-language method. The strategy here relies on the child’s experience with the
language. For example, students are offered engaging books and are encouraged to guess
the words that they do not know by considering the context of the sentence or by looking
for clues in the storyline and illustrations, rather than trying to sound them out. Many
teachers adopted the whole-language approach because of its intuitive appeal. Making
reading fun promises to keep children motivated, and learning to read depends more on
what the student does than on what the teacher does. The presumed benefits of whole-
language instruction – and the contrast to the perceived dullness of phonics – led to its
growing acceptance across American during the 1990s and a movement away from phonics.
C. However, many linguists and psychologists objected strongly to the abandonment of
phonics in American schools. Why was this so? In short, because research had clearly
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demonstrated that understanding how letters related to the component sounds in words is
critically important in reading. This conclusion rests, in part, on knowledge of how
experienced readers make sense of words on a page. Advocates of whole-language
instruction have argued forcefully that people often derive meanings directly from print
without ever determining the sound of the word. Some psychologists today accept this view,
but most believe that reading is typically a process of rapidly sounding out words mentally.
Compelling evidence for this comes from experiments which show that subjects often
confuse homophones (words that sound the same, such as rose and ‘rows). This supports
the idea that readers convert strings of letters to sounds.
D. In order to evaluate different approaches to teaching reading, a number of experiments
have been carried out, firstly with college students, then with school pupils. Investigators
trained English-speaking college students to read using unfamiliar symbols such as Arabic
letters (the phonics approach), while another group learned entire words associated with
certain strings of Arabic letters (whole-word). Then both groups were required to read a
new set of words constructed from the original characters. In general, readers who were
taught the rules of phonics could read many more new words than those trained with a
whole-word procedure. Classroom studies comparing phonics with either whole-word or
whole-language instruction are also quite illuminating. One particularly persuasive study
compared two programs used in 20 first-grade classrooms. Half the students were offered
traditional reading instruction, which included the use of phonics drills and applications.
The other half were taught using an individualized method that drew from their experiences
with languages; these children produce their own booklets of stories and developed sets of
words to be recognized (common components of the whole-language approach). This study
found that the first group scored higher at year’s end on tests of reading and comprehension.
E. If researchers are so convinced about the need for phonics instruction, why does the
debate continue? Because the controversy is enmeshed in the philosophical differences
between traditional and progressive (or new) approaches, differences that have divided
educators for years. The progressive challenge the results of laboratory tests and classroom
studies on the basis of a broad philosophical skepticism about the values of such research.
They champion student-centered learned and teacher empowerment. Sadly, they fail to
realize that these very admirable educational values are equally consistent with the teaching
of phonics.
F. If schools of education insisted that would-be reading teachers learned something about
the vast research in linguistics and psychology that bears on reading, their graduates would
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be more eager to use phonics and would be prepared to do so effectively. They could allow
their pupils to apply the principles of phonics while reading for pleasure. Using whole-
language activities to supplement phonics instruction certainly helps to make reading fun
and meaningful for children, so no one would want to see such tools discarded. Indeed,
recent work has indicated that the combination of literature-based instruction and phonics
is more powerful than either method used alone. Teachers need to strike a balance. But in
doing so, we urge them to remember that reading must be grounded in a firm understanding
of the connections between letters and sounds. Educators who deny this reality are
neglecting decades of research. They are also neglecting the needs of their students.
Questions 1- 5
Reading Passage 3 has six sections, A- F.
Choose the correct heading for sections B- F from the list of headings below.
Write the correct number, i- ix, in boxes 1- 5 on your answer sheet.
List of Headings
i Disagreement about the reading process
ii The roots of the debate
iii A combined approach
iv Methods of teaching reading
v A controversial approach
vi Inconclusive research
vii Research with learners
vii Allowing teachers more control
ix A debate amongst educators
Example
Section A ix
1. Section B
2. Section C
3. Section D
4. Section E
5. Section F
Your answers:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Questions 6- 10
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Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage 3?
In boxes 6- 10 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE if the statement agrees with the information
FALSE if the statement contradicts the information
NOT GIVEN if there is no information on this
6. The whole-language approach relates letters to sounds.
7. Many educators believe the whole-language approach to be the most interesting way to
teach children to read.
8. Research supports the theory that we read without linking words to sounds.
9. Research has shown that the whole-word approach is less effective than the whole-
language approach.
10. Research has shown that phonics is more successful than both the whole-word and
whole-language approaches.
Your answers:
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
SECTION IV: WRITING (50 POINTS)
Part 1. Graph writing (20 points)
The graph below gives information about the percentage of the population in four
Asian countries living in cities from 1970 to 2020, with predictions for 2030 and 2040.
Summaries the information by selecting and reporting the main features, and make
comparisons where relevant.
Write at least 150 words.
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Part 2. Essay writing (30 points)
Write an essay of 250 words about the following topic.
Some university students want to learn about other subjects in addition to their
main subjects. Others believe it is more important to give all their time and attention to
studying for a qualification.
Discuss both views and give your own opinion.
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THE END
GIÁO VIÊN RA ĐỀ
Phan Thị Phương Lan
Tel: 0945770929