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tập hợp đề thi học sinh giỏi cấp Tỉnh các môn năm học 20102021 Đăk Lăk

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Tập hợp đề thi học sinh giỏi cấp Tỉnh các môn năm học 20102021 Đăk Lăk; Tập hợp đề thi học sinh giỏi cấp Tỉnh các môn năm học 20102021 Đăk Lăk; Tập hợp đề thi học sinh giỏi cấp Tỉnh các môn năm học 20102021 Đăk Lăk; Tập hợp đề thi học sinh giỏi cấp Tỉnh các môn năm học 20102021 Đăk Lăk; Tập hợp đề thi học sinh giỏi cấp Tỉnh các môn năm học 20102021 Đăk Lăk; Tập hợp đề thi học sinh giỏi cấp Tỉnh các môn năm học 20102021 Đăk Lăk; Tập hợp đề thi học sinh giỏi cấp Tỉnh các môn năm học 20102021 Đăk Lăk; Tập hợp đề thi học sinh giỏi cấp Tỉnh các môn năm học 20102021 Đăk Lăk; Tập hợp đề thi học sinh giỏi cấp Tỉnh các môn năm học 20102021 Đăk Lăk; Tập hợp đề thi học sinh giỏi cấp Tỉnh các môn năm học 20102021 Đăk Lăk; Tập hợp đề thi học sinh giỏi cấp Tỉnh các môn năm học 20102021 Đăk Lăk;

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What women spend most on? 10 Which group spends most on eating in restaurants? Page l of 10 Part 2: For questions 11-15, you will hear a man called Simon Webster talking about being a racing driver Circle the correct answer A, B or C 11 Simon asks other drivers for advice when he _ A has made a mistake on a racing track B is unsure which racing track to use C uses a racing track for the first time 12 When races take place? A During part of the year B On most days during the week C Mainly on Fridays 13 What problem does Simon have? A He can't stop training before arace B He can't improve any more C He doesn't ever have holidays 14 How did he become interested in cars? A His friends were keen on motor-racing B He enjoyed watching motor-racing on TV C His father took him to races 15 What advice does he give to young racing drivers? A They should other sports too B They should study hard C They should get very fit Part 3: For questions 16-20, you will hear a woman called Anne and a man called Peter talking about a college party Decide if each sentence is coruect or incorrect If it is correct, put a tick ( /) in the box under Afor YES If it is not correct, put a tick ( /) in the box under B for NO A B NO Statements Peter wants to take his sister to the party 16 17 Anne hopes the party will be bigger than the one last year Peter thinks the new college hall is big enough for the party 18 19 Peter thinks DJs play a good range of music Peter is confident the party will end after midnight 20 II PHONETICS (1 point) Part For questions 21-25, choose the word with the underlined part pronounced dffirentlyfrom that of the others in each group Write your answers in the coruesponding numbered boxes provided B messase D cabbage 21 A massage C cottaee 22 A butter B cgshion D push C.pUt 23 A mqqd B look D.gqd C took D wickg! 24 A dogged B belovg! C borrowq[ 25 A examine B executive C excitement D exhibition Your answers: 21 22 24 23 25 Part 2: For questions 26-30, choose the word with the main stress different from that of the others in the same group Write yoar answers in the corresponding numbered boxes provided 26 A compulsory B diversity C vulnerable D incredible 27 A museum B industry D dynamite C pesticide 28 A discipline B determine C cultural D cognitive 29 A historical B embroidery C authority D architecture 30 A pollute B severe D humane C tragic Your answers: 27 28 29 30 26 Page of 10 III LEXICO AND GRAMMAR (4 points) Part 1: For questions 31-50, choose the correct answer A, B, C or D to each of thefollowing questions and write your ansu,ers in the conesponding numbered boxes provided 31 Tom went to the dentist to have his decayed tooth as he couldn't stand the toothache A relieved B ruined C destroyed D extracted 32 The first week of classes at university was a little because so many students get lost, change classes or go to the wrong place A disarranged B chaotic C uncontrolled D famous 33 The leaves of the white mulberry provide food for silkworms, silk fabrics are woven A from cocoons B whose cocoons c from whose D whose cocoons are from 34 British and Australian people share the same language, but in other respects they are as different as cocoons cheese B salt and pepper C here and there D cats and dogs felt extremely proud of herself A On choosing B Having been chosen C Be chosen D Having chosen 36 It is important that she to take her medicine twice aday A remember B to remember C remembering D remembers 37 A: "Would you like to have dinner with me tomorrow?" - B: ,o ,, A I hope that tomorrow is glad C Hope to see a lot of fun tomorrow B All right, you are so generous D I am sorry I have an extra class tomorrow 38 It's a shame that these two plans are exclusive Implementing one will automatically rule out A chalk and 35.- as the representative at the conference, she the other imperceptibly mutually _ respectively A B C D exhaustively 39 The director criticized the secretary failing to prepare carefully for the annual report A with B to C from D for 40 The workers hope there will be a peaceful to the new system A transmission B transformation C transition D transaction 41 As he enjoyed doing research, he could never imagine himself pursuing other careers A thoroughly B totally C utterly D extremely 42 A: 'oYou know, Susie's father is very rich." B: She wouldn't accept his help even if it were offered." A What for? B So what? C No wonder D No doubt 43 no one was absent from the farewell party last night A As it rained heavily B Heavily as it rained C Though it rains heavily D In spite of heavily rain 44.I carft give you the answer on the I'll have to think about it for a few days A B C D scene 45 He looks for any excuse he can to blow off to housework A commitment B obligation C assignment D responsibility 46 You shouldn't work all the time It you good to go out and enjoy yourself sometimes A does B gives C helps D brings 47 the fact that many companies are going bankrupt, ours has made a good profit A Although B Even though C Despite D Because of 48 She is wearing a/an ring A expensive nice gold B nice gold expensive gold C nice expensive D nice expensive gold 49 All the boys are good at cooking, but is as good as the girls A either B none C neither D every 50 Everybody has known the day I return, A don't I B won't I C have they D haven't they "_ _, _; place minute his spot _ _ _? Page of 10 Your answers: 31 36 41 46 32 37 42 47 34 39 44 49 33 38 43 48 35 40 45 50 Pa( 2: The passage below contains 10 emors For questions 51-60, UNDERLINE the errors and WRITE THE CORRECTIONS in the coruesponding numbered boxes provided (0) has been done as an example Line BILL GATES, THE CO-FOUNDER OF MICROSOFT I J l0 l1 t2 l3 Bill Gates is the co-found of Microsoft, the world's large PC software company He is among the rich people in the world Bill Gates' interest in computers started when he was a teenager After high school, he was accepted on several top colleges in the USA: Harvard, Yale, and Princeton He chose going to Harvard to study law At Harvard, he focused much on his interest in computer than on coursework He often relaxed by playing video games in Harvard's computer lab He left Harvard before graduating though he wanted to open a software company with his friend, Paul Allen However, he later told, "I don't think dropping out is a good idea." In 2007, he received an honorary degree from Harvard He began his speed by saying this to his father in the audience "I've been waiting more than 30 years to say this: Dad, I always told you I had come back and get my certificate." Bill Gates is no longer working full time for Microsoft He is now, with his wife, running The Bill Melinda Gates Foundation, whose aims to improve healthcare, reduce poverty, and promote education around the world & Your answers: line 1: co-found 51 53 55 57 59 + co-founder 52 54 56 58 60 Part 3: For questions 61-70, read the passage below Write the correct form of each bracketed word in the numbered soace orovided in the column on the risht has been done as an Your answers: AN UNUSUAL PARK (0 Parks in large cities are USUAL) _ thought of as refuges, as usually islands of green in the middle of a concrete desert But High Line Park in the (61 NEIGHBOUR) of Chelsea in New York looks on first 61 (62 SEE) like something that city parks were created to get 62 away from It's an (63 ATTRACT) _ steel structure supporting 63 an(64 ELEVATE) _ rail line that once brought freight cars into 64 the city's factories Now the structure has been turned into an (65 INNOVATE) and inviting public park Walking on the High Line is (66 LIKE) any other experience in New York You can sit surrounded from by (67 tended plants taking (68 ENJOY) the views, or you can walk the line as it crosses between old buildings new ones I have walked the High Line and past (69 STRIKE) many times and the (70 REMARK) thing is that every time you walk vou exnerience new and different thinss CARE) _ _ _ Page of l0 65 66 67 68 69 70 IV READING COMPREHENSION (5 points) Port l: For questions 71-80, choose the word that bestftts each of the blanks in thefollowing passage Write your answers in the corresponding numbered boxes provided An American professor who studied the Mayas has come up with a new theory about the sudden end of their empire According to Professor Richard Hansen, an archaeologist at the University of California, the (71) of the Mayan civilization in Central America was (72) about by the Mayas themselves Their object was to display their wealth and power by making their buildings and decoration as beautiful as possible This (73) large quantities of lime, which they put on the walls to make them smooth Unfortunately, the creation of lime is a process which requires intense heat, and they therefore (74) _ to cut down huge numbers of trees This affected the quality of the soil, and it -using Professor Hansen, who has (75) _ became almost impossible to farm returned from an excavation in the El Mirador region of northern Guatemala, told a meeting of archaeologists in Philadelphia that the Mayas, having (76) this mistake in the 3'o century, repeated it 600 years later, at which time it proved fatal Increasing food (77) among the Mayas created a Central American equivalent of the Peloponnesian War which ravaged ancient Greece However, (78) the Greek civil war, which only for 27 years, the Mayas wars went on for many centuries and left many of their great cities and temples in (80) _ (79) _ - 71 A collapse C turned C involved 74 A obliged B drop B came B needed B forced 75 A still B just C already 76 A done B B B B B had C taken shortages C droughts apart C without spent C lasted damages C spoils 72 A made 73 A depended 77 A.lack 78 A unlike 79 A stayed 80 A injuries Your answers: 71 76 72 77 C crash C must 73 74 79 78 D stop D brought D requested D had D yet' D made D failures D unless D longed D ruins 75 80 Part 2: For questions 81-90, read the passage carefully Then choose the item that best answers each of the questions below lYrite your ansh,ers in the corresponding numbered boxes provided In the 20'n century, magazines have been a major growth area of popular publishing Specialist magazines cater for every imaginable jield and activity In the United Kingdom, over 12,000 periodicals, magazines, bulletins, annuals, trade journals, and academic journals are published on a regular basis There are some 40 women's magazines and over 60 dealing with particular sports, games, hobbies, and pastimes Although some US magazines, such as The Saturday Evening Post, has succumbed to the competition of television, many continue to have enormous international circulations, The Reader's Digest over 16 million, The National Geographic over 10 million For many people, magazines have been the most available and widely used form of continuing education, providing information about history, geography, literature, science, and the arts, financial management, psychology, even marriage and family life Until the rise of television, magazines were the most available form of cheap, convenient entertainment in the English-speaking world Radio served a similar function, but it was more limited in what it could Magazines and television, however, both address the more powerful visual sense During the third quarter of the 20ft century, coincident with a dramatic rise in the popularity of television, many general-interest, especially illustrated magazines went out of business The shift in attention of a mass audience from reading such magazines to watching television has been a major factor in this Page ofI0 decline, but it is an implicit tribute from television to the older genre that its progftrms are generally organized in a single format and content 8I ' According to the passage, which of the following magazines is no longer printed? A The Saturday Evening B The Reader,s Digest C The D The National Geographic 82 In the first paragraph, the phrase "every imaginableJield" is closest in meaning to Nation Post A all imaginary fields in stories and poems B all images in a camera's field of vision C all professions that one can think of D all trade journals about farming and psychology 83 The word "succumbed" in the first poragraph meons A set up for B brought up to c taken up by D given in to 84 The word "circulations" in the first paragraph is closest in meaning to _ A the number of blood banks selling magazines B the number of readers of amagazine C the number of international magazines D the number of sold copies of a magazine 85 Which of the following does the author describe as limited in what it could do? A radio B magazines C movies D television 86 The passage implies that magozines _ A are less visual than radio B put television out of business C influence television programs D have a limited range of subjects 87 The word "it" in the second paragraph refers to _A television B publishing C entertainment D radio 88 The passage mainly discusses A the rise and fall of the radio business B the growth and decline of magazines in the 20th century C magazines and continuing education D the decline of international circulation 89 What does the author say about mass audiences? A They have little influence on communications in the 20th century B They have gone out ofbusiness C They get information about gardening and psychology from radio D They have shifted their attention from magazines to television 90 From the passage it can be inferred that A movies have replaced magazines C almost allmagazines are printed in English B the author is fond of magazines D home decorating magazines are dramatic Your answers: 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 Part 3: For questions 9l-100, read thefollowing passage andJill the blank with ONE suitable word Write your answers in the corresponding nambered boxes provided There are questions from a cross- cultural workshop which help business people to avoid misunderstandings when they deal with people who come from different cultures Ideas about people behavior vary from one culture to (91) and it is easy to cause offence or to be offended if you _ not know what other cultures (92) Some societies such as America and Australia, for example, are and very open People here change jobs and move house quite frequently As a result, they have a lot of (94) that last only a short time, and they need to get to know people (95) So, it's normal to have friendly conversations with people that they have just met, and you can talk about things that other (96) would regard as private (93) _ Page of I0 _ _ _ _ (97) the other extreme are more crowded and less mobile (98) where long-term relationships are more important A Malaysian or Mexican businessperson, for example, will want to get to know you very well he or she feels happy to start business with you But when you (100) get to know each other, the relationship becomes much deeper than it would in a mobile society (99) Your answers: 91 96 92 97 94 99 93 98 95 100 Pqrt 4: Read the passage and the tasks thatfollow PAPER OR COMPUTER? A Computer technology was supposed to replace paper But that hasn't happened Every country in the Western world uses mors paper today, on a per-capita basis, than it did ten years ago The consumption of uncoated free-sheet paper, for instance - the most common kind of office paper - rose almost fifteen per cent in the United States between 1995 and 2000 This is generally taken as evidence of how hard it is to eradicate old, wasteful habits and of how stubbornly resistant we are to the efficiencies offered by computerization A number of cognitive psychologists and ergonomics experts, however, don't agree Paper has persisted, they argue, for very good reasons: when it comes to performing certain kinds of cognitive tasks, the paper has many advantages over computers The dismay people feel at the sight of a messy desk - or the spectacle of air-traffic controllers tracking flights through irotes scribbled on paper strips - arises from a fundamental confusion about the role that paper plays in our lives B The case for paper is made most eloquently in "The Myth of the Paperless Office" by two social scientists, Abigail Sellen and Richard Harper They begin their book with an account of a study they conducted at the International Monetary Fund in Washington, D.C Economists at the I.M.F spend most of their time writing reports on complicated economic questions, work that would seem to be perfectly suited to sitting in front of a computer Nonetheless, the I.M.F is awash in paper, and Sellen and Harper wanted to find out why Their answer is that the business of writing reports - at least at the I.M.F - is an intensely collaborative process, involving the professional judgments and contributions of many people The economists bring drafts of reports to conference rooms, spread out the relevant pages, and negotiate changes with one other They go back to their offices and jot down comments in the margin, taking advantage of the freedom offered by the informality of the handwritten note Then they deliver the annotated draft to the author in person, taking him, page by page, through the suggested changes At the end of the process, the author spreads out all the pages with comments on his desk and starts to enter them on the computer - moving the pages around as he works, organizing and rgorganizing, saving and discarding C Without paper, this kind of collaborative and iterative work process would be much more difficult According to Sellen and Harper, the paper has a unique set of "affordances" - that is, qualities that permit specific kinds of uses Paper is tangible: we can pick up a document, flip through it, read little bits here and there, and quickly get a sense of it Paper is spatially flexible, meaning that we can spread it out and arrange it in the way that suits us best And it's tailorable: we can easily annotate it, and scribble on it as we read, without altering the original text Digital documents, of course, have their own affordances They can be easily searched, shared, stored, accessed remotely, and linked to other relevant material But they lack the affordances that really matter to a group of people working together on a report, Sellen and Harper write D Paper enables a certain kind of thinking Picture, for instance, the top of your desk Chances are that you have a keyboard and a computer screen offto one side, and a clear space roughly eighteen inches square in front of your chair What covers the rest of the desktop is probably piles - piles of papers, joumals, magazines, binders, postcards, videotapes, and all the other artefacts of the knowledge economy The piles look like a mess, but they aren't When a group at Apple Computer studied piling behavior several years ago, they found that even the most disorderly piles usually make perfect sense to the piler, and that Page of 10 office workers could hold forth in great detail about the precise history and meaning of their piles The pile closest to the cleared, eighteen-inch-square working area, for example, generally represents the most urgent business, and within that pile, the most important document of all is likely to be at the top Piles are living, breathing archives Over time, they get broken down and resorted, sometimes chronologically and sometimes thematically and sometimes chronologically and thematically; clues about certain documents may be physically embedded in the file by, say, stacking a certain piece of paper at an angle or inserting dividers into the stack E But why we pile documents instead of filing them? Because piles represent the process of active, ongoing thinking The psychologists Alison Kidd, whose research Sellen and Harper refer to extensively, argues that "knowledge workers" use the physical space of the desktop to hold "ideas which they cannot yet categorize or even decide how they might use." The messy desk is not necessarily a sign of disorganization It may be a sign of complexity: those who deal with many unresolved ideas simultaneously cannot sort and file the papers on their desks, because they haven't yet sorted and filed the ideas in their heads Kidd writes that many of the people she talked to use the papers on their desks as contextual cues to "recover a complex set of threads without difficulty and delay" when they come in on a Monday morning, or after their work has been intemrpted by a phone call What we see when we look at the piles on our desks is, in a sense, the contents of our brains F This idea that paper facilitates a highly specialized cognitive and social process is a far cry from the way we have historically thought about the stuff Paper first began to proliferate in the workplace in the late nineteenth century as part of the move toward "systematic management." To cope with the complexity of the industrial economy, managers were instituting company-wide policies and demanding monthly, weekly, or even daily updates from their subordinates Thus was born the monthly sales report, and the office manual and the internal company newsletter The typewriter took off in the eighteen-eighties, making it possible to create documents in a fraction of the time it had previously taken, and that was followed closely by the advent of carbon paper, which meant that a typist could.create ten copies of that document simultaneously Paper was important not to facilitate creative collaboration and thought but as an instrument of control For questions 101-106, choose the correct headingfor paragraphsA-Ffrom the lkt below llrite the correct number, i-x, in the corresponding numbered boxes provided i ii iii iv v vi vii viii ix x List of headings Paper continued as a sharing or managing must Piles can be more inspiring rather than disorganising Favorable situations that economists used paper pages Overview of an unexpected situation: paper survived Comparison between efficiencies for using paper and using computer IMF's paperless office seemed to be a waste of papers Example of failure for the avoidance of paper record There are advantages of usingapaper in offices Piles reflect certain characteristics in people's thought Joy of having the paper square in front of a computer Your answers: 101 Paragraph C l02.Paragraph B 103 Paragraph C 104 Paragraph D 105 Paragraph E 106 Paragraph F For questions 107-110, choose the correct letter, A, B, C or D Write your corresponding numbered boxes provided 107 What the economists from IMF say that their way of writing documents? A they note down their comments for freedom on the drafts B they finish all writing individually C they share ideas on before electronic version was made D they use electronic version fully Page I of 10 answers tn the 25 On est heureux que le printemps revienne 26.Le directeur espdre que les ventes s'amdlioreront nettement + 27.Le conservateur du musde croit que les objets vol6s seront restituds -.> 28 On demande que la qualitd des m6dicaments soit contr6l6e J VI Transformez en discours indirect 29.Elle me demande: "Pourrais-tu me pr6ter le tien?" + 30 Mon pdre moa interrogd: "Ot as - tu laiss6 mes c16s ?" 31 Paul a demandd d sa cousine: "Est-ce que tu viendras dimanche prochain?" J 32.Luc a avoud i sa mdre: i 33 Roland a admis ooC'est moi qui cass6 le vase, maman." Anne: "Ce n'6tait pas lui, j'ai dfi me tromper." VII Mettez les phrases suivantes i la formes passive ou active selon le cas 34 Depuis ces derniers mois une augmentation des vols a 6t6 constatee 35 Exportant la plupart de nos produits au Japon, nous devons rester affentifs d 1'6volution de la crise asiatique + 36 Cette maison ne doit pas avoir 6td habitde depuis des lustres ) 37.Ilfaudrait quoon ait termind les valises d'ici demain 38 Les dtudiants auront 6td convoquds pour les examens avant la fin des cours V[I Associez chaque expression de la liste A a une des significations de la liste B Liste B Liste A vie 39 avoir le cmur sur la main A risquer 40 courir un danger B se conduire de fagon ddsintdressd 41 faire grise mine C €tre gdn6reux 42 agfu pour l'honneur D €tre triste sa Trang ll0 4t 40 39 42 IX Mettez les verbes en parenthises aux modes et aux temps qui conviennent (0.6 pt) (43 6tre) hospitalis6s dans les Actuellement, 129 patients atteints du Covid-19 services de r6animation du d6partement Pourtant, m0me d I'h6pital, ces nouvelles mesures (44 recevoir) un accueil mitigd "Le pic, pour nous, de I'incidence, c'lce (46 voir) une baisse (45 Otre) il y a quatre semaines Depuis, on (47 se traduire) pas encore sur le plan de la pression r6gulidre de I'incidence qui ne (48 6tre) le cas assez rapidement hospitalidre, mais dont on espdre bien que c'lce maintenant Ce moment-ld est peut-Otre un peu tardif par rapport d notre situation", explique le professeur Michel Carles, chef du service infectiologie du CHU de Nice 44 43 45 48 47 46 X Reliez les deux parties de phrase qui correspondent 49 Aprds manger, il A les oreilles B les dents faut te laver 50 La lumidre est trop forte, je ferme 51 Je vais chez le coiffeur, il me coupe C les ldvres 52.I1aime croquer une pomme avec D les yeux 53 Elle se met du rouge sur E les cheveux 54 Je n'entends pas bien, j'ai un bruit dans F la t6te 55 La chaleur me donne mal d G les dents 49 50 51 52 53 XI Lisez ce texte, puis compl6tez-le ir l'aide de ces connecteurs: c'est pourquoi - en effet - pourtant - gdndralement semaine Il s'agit 54 55 - en oulre, (56), en hiver, on aime s'installer devant son tdleviseur plusieurs heures par (58), une 6tude a 6t6 men6e: ceux (57) d'Otre prudent qui regardent la t6l6vision plus de trois heures par jour doubleraient leur risque de devenir (59), on devient, par la mOme occasion, la cible de publicitds poussant d obsdses consomfiler D EXPRESSION (60) il faut dviter cette passivit6 face aux ecrans [4 points / 20] Sujet 1: Quel mdtier voudriez - vous faire plus tard? Pourquoi? Sujet 2: Les r6seaux sociaux font intdgralement partie de la vie des adolescents Qu'en pensezvous? En choisissant l'un des deux sujets ci-dessus, rddigez un texte d'environ 200 mots Votre rddaction devra avoir trois parties: introduction, ddveloppement et conclusion Trang / l0 DEVOIR Suiet choisi: Trang ll0 o FINGi6m thikhdng gi6i thich gi th6m Trang 10 / 10 so crAo DUC vA DAo oAx lAr rV rru cHeN Hec rAo cI6t cAP NAtvt Hec zo2o - 2ozt Mdn: TIN HQC - THCS or cHilrn rntlc sINH riNn Thdi gian ldm bdi; t 50 philt (khong ke giao Ngiy thi: 30/0312021 1Oi tni ndy g6m 02 trang) di) Luu y: Bdi tdm daqc cham biing phdn mim chdm thi Themis cua tac gid LA Minh Hodng - D6 Dirc Dong, vi vQy thi sinh phai tudn thu chinh xac yAu ciu dOc vd xudt dii li€u cila di bai Khong su' dqmg thu vi€n crt, kh6ng ghi cdc cdu ddn nhQp/xuat drt li€u ki€u nhu; 'Ban hay nhap so tu nhien N:', 'Ket qua la:', , Khi cham, cac b0 dfi ti€u nhdp vdo dam bdo dt)ng gioi hqn cila di, thi sinh kh6ng cdn vi€t doan chu'ong trinh ki€m tra lqi Bni I (5 diem): Laubdivoi /ezz BAIl.PAS MQt b6c n6ng ddn rnang a gd vd b vit chg b6n (a vd b ld s6 nguy0n duong, l

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