The scientists concluded that green icebergs form when a two-layer block of shelf ice breaks away and capsizes (turns upside down), exposing the bubble-free shelf ice that was formed fro[r]
(1)NGUYEN THIEN THANH HIGH SCHOOL ENGLISH TEST OF THE BEGINNING FOR THE GIFTED SCHOOL YEAR: 2015-2016, CLASS 11D
ALLOTTED TIME 60 MINUTES
(There are pages)
Full name: , Class: 11D CODE Students write answers on the test
I Supply each blank with the correct tense / form of the verb (1 M)
A You (1) (be) _ sure the answer (2) (be) _ what it (3) (be) ? In my opinion, it isn’t right Surely you (4) (forget) _ (5) (include) _ something essential?
B While I _ (6) (wait) at the bus stop, I _ (7) (see) my teacher go past in a car
C Every summer we _ (8) (stay) at an apartment that _ (9) (belong) to my uncle D My brother told me that our goldfish (10) (die)
II Supply the correct form of the words in brackets: (1 M)
1 People think I am when in fact I have trouble communicating in English (social) A few of the students displayed an _ attitude toward the cheating student (differ) Whenever he lost for his current job, he'd nose around within the company for something new (enthuse)
4 " I can't wait to see her on the first day," he went on (cheer)
5 Being recognized in the street is part and parcel of being a (celebrate) III Choose the best answer: (3 Ms)
1 This sort of thing doesn’t happen in Nigeria, _ ?
A isn’t it B does it C doesn’t it D can’t it Einstein gradually became _ in the discussion
A absorbent B absorbing C to absorb D absorbed Whenever we meet, we stop
A talking B for talking C to talk D to talking Our teacher didn’t _ the joke I told so I had to explain it to her
A find B take C have D get
5 Are your plans for this weekend still
A the same B identical C same D like
6 He _ for the national team in 65 matches so far
A is playing B has been playing C played D has played There is one television programme which is above all in popularity
A others B other C the other D another
8 These are my three children
A Tim’s brother- B brother Tim C brother Tim’s D brother is Tim The room was _ small to accommodate the Council
A as B too C much D as much
10 We some research into the state of the Swedish car industry
A did B conducted C undertook D All are correct
11 I don’t think it’s nice to make fun _ kids who are younger than you
A of B to C at D with
12 Even if the railways had no competition, Parliament would see that their charges were fair and
A reason B reasonably C reasonable D reasonless 13 American children learn Lincoln’s Gettysburg speech
A by heart B in heart C with heart D to heart 14 I never feel sure what by the word ‘democratic’
A means B is meant C is the meaning D to mean
(2)15 “Do you think we’re all created equal?” — “No, not all.”
A in B over C to D at
16 My _ house is not very far away
A father-in law’s B father-in-law C fathers’-in-laws’ D fathers’-in-law 17 People who make pigs of _ by overeating should be made to go on a diet
A himself B them C themselves D ourselves
18 I’m going to try to get _ shape before the summer holidays
A off B in C over D on
19 The building _ the earthquake but then _ by a fire
A was survived — destroyed B was survived — was destroyed C survived — destroyed D survived — was destroyed 20 We shall have to stop soon because the car is almost _ petrol
A out off B not having C out of D lacking
21 At one o’clock Mr Taylor will close his shop and go out to have _
A lunch B the lunch C a lunch D lunches
22 Now the shares Mr Brown bought in 1967 have gone up _ value
A by B on C at D in
23 The reason why we didn’t see her at the railway station was that she took a plane _
A besides B instead C sometimes D soon
24 There is nothing very _ to in that small town
A enjoy B enjoyed C enjoyable D enjoying
25 The doctor gave me a _ for some medicine for my throat
A prescription B diagnosis C recipe D cure 26 I’m really disappointed I _ for the team again
A didn’t pick B wasn’t picked C didn’t get to be picked D wasn’t got picked 27 I can’t find my purse anywhere; I _ it at the cinema
A must have been B must leave C must be leaving D must have left 28 My sister’s tooth still gives her some pain She _ gone to the dentist yesterday
A should have B would have C must have D could be
29 My friend was going to call me as soon as he arrived this morning but he didn’t call He _ the train
A had to miss B should have missed C must have missed D would have missed 30 Flight nineteen from New York and Washington is now arriving at _
A gate two B the gate two C the two gate D second gate IV Reading:
A Read the following passage and decide which answer (A, B, C, or D) best fits each gap (1 M) A lot of people like to play their records as loudly as possible The (1) _ is that the rest of the family and the neighbours often complain (2) _ they don’t like the music One (3) _ to this problem is to wear headphones, but headphones are usually uncomfortable.’ An armchair which has a record-player system built into it has just been (4) _ by a British engineer, Stephen Court
The armchair looks like an ordinary armchair with a high back However, each of the two sides of the chair has three loudspeakers inside to reproduce middle and high sounds Low sounds are reproduced by a pair of loudspeakers in a hollow (5) _ under the seat Anyone who sits in the chair hears sounds coming from all around his/her head
Because we cannot tell the exact (6) from which low sounds come, it doesn’t (7) _ that they come from underneath or behind It is the higher sounds coming from the sides of the chair that create a stereo effect
These sounds travel only a few inches to reach the listener’s ears (8) _, it takes only a little power to make the music sound very loud Only a small amount of sound leaks out from behind the chair into the room to (9) _ others Most of the sound is (10) _ by the listener
1 A conclusion B impact C sequence D result
2 A if B for C lest D since
(3)4 A drawn B discovered C imagined D designed
5 A hole B set C location D space
6 A destination B reason C source D departure
7 A matter B care C make sense D mean
8 A Surprisingly B Strangely C Consequently D Eventually
9 A disappoint B dismiss C deter D disturb
10 A integrated B absorbed C admitted D accommodated B Read the passage and choose the best answer (A, B, C or D) to the questions (1 M)
The ecosystems of the Earth provide an array of free public services that are essential for the support of civilizations They maintain the quality of the atmosphere, provide food from the sea, manufacture and replenish soils, recycle wastes and nutrients, control the overwhelming majority of crop pests and disease vectors, and so on People have no idea how to take over these activities satisfactorily They know, however, that the theory once advanced in the 19th century - that the productivity of the land can be infinitely increased by the application of capital, labour, and science - is wrong History has shown that once the natural life - support systems of a civilization have been sufficiently damaged, they cannot usually be replaced The ancient deforestation and overgrazing of the Mediterranean region is a famous example And today, a global civilization is ruining the global environment
1 What is the main topic of this passage?
A Free public services B Support needed for civilizations C The value of ecosystems D The vastness of the Earth The word they refers to _
A ecosystems B civilizations
C sea D people
3 The author mentions the Mediterranean region as an example of _ A the ability of nature to remedy human destruction
B the ability of people to make use of natural-resources C the manner in which people replenish the environment D the effects of human abuse of natural resources
4 The author suggests that civilizations can survive only if they _ A greatly expand scientific research
B not destroy the balance of natural processes C replant the forests in the Mediterranean region
D invent new procedures to replace obsolete ecosystems
5 The author suggests that the difference between the ancient and the modern situation is that today the problem is _
A worldwide B better understood
C more manageable D economic
C Read the passage and choose the best answers (A, B, C or D) to the questions (1 M) GREEN ICEBERGS
Icebergs are massive blocks of ice, irregular in shape; they float with only about 12 percent of their mass above the sea surface They are formed by glaciers - large rivers of ice that begin inland in the snows of Greenland, Antarctica, and Alaska - and move slowly toward the sea The forward movement, the melting at the base of the glacier where it meets the ocean, and waves and tidal action cause blocks of ice to break off and float out to sea
Icebergs are ordinarily blue to white, although they sometimes appear dark or opaque because they carry gravel and bits of rock They may change color with changing light conditions and cloud cover, glowing pink or gold in the morning or evening light, but this color change is generally related to the low angle of the Sun above the horizon However, travelers to Antarctica have repeatedly reported seeing green icebergs in the Weddell Sea and, more commonly, close to the Amery Ice Shelf in East Antarctica
(4)optical illusion when blue ice is illuminated by a near-horizon red Sun, but green icebergs stand out among white and blue icebergs under a great variety of light conditions Another suggestion is that the color might be related to ice with high levels of metallic compounds, including copper and iron Recent expeditions have taken ice samples from green icebergs and ice cores - vertical, cylindrical ice samples reaching down to great depths - from the glacial ice shelves along the Antarctic continent Analyses of these cores and samples provide a different solution to the problem
The ice shelf cores, with a total length of 215 meters (705 feet), were long enough to penetrate through glacial ice - which is formed from the compaction of snow and contains air bubbles - and to continue into the clear, bubble-free ice formed from seawater that freezes onto the bottom of the glacial ice The properties of this clear sea ice were very similar to the ice from the green iceberg The scientists concluded that green icebergs form when a two-layer block of shelf ice breaks away and capsizes (turns upside down), exposing the bubble-free shelf ice that was formed from seawater
A green iceberg that stranded just west of the Amery Ice Shelf showed two distinct layers: bubbly blue-white ice and bubble-free green ice separated by a one-meter-long ice layer containing sediments The green ice portion was textured by seawater erosion Where cracks were present, the color was light green because of light scattering; where no cracks were present, the color was dark green No air bubbles were present in the green ice, suggesting that the ice was not formed from the compression of snow but instead from the freezing of seawater Large concentrations of single-celled organisms with green pigments (coloring substances) occur along the edges of the ice shelves in this region, and the seawater is rich in their decomposing organic material The green iceberg did not contain large amounts of particles from these organisms, but the ice had accumulated dissolved organic matter from the seawater It appears that unlike salt, dissolved organic substances are not excluded from the ice in the freezing process Analysis shows that the dissolved organic material absorbs enough blue wavelengths from solar light to make the ice appear green
Chemical evidence shows that platelets (minute flat portions) of ice form in the water and then accrete and stick to the bottom of the ice shelf to form a slush (partially melted snow) The slush is compacted by an unknown mechanism, and solid, bubble free ice is formed from water high in soluble organic substances When an iceberg separates from the ice shelf and capsizes, the green ice is exposed
The Amery Ice Shelf appears to be uniquely suited to the production of green icebergs Once detached from the ice shelf, these bergs drift in the currents and wind systems surrounding Antarctica and can be found scattered among Antarctica’s less colorful icebergs
1 According to paragraph 1, all of the following are true of icebergs EXCEPT: A They not have a regular shape
B They are formed where glaciers meet the ocean C Most of their mass is above the sea surface D Waves and tides cause them to break off glaciers
2 According to paragraph 2, what causes icebergs to sometimes appear dark or opaque? A A heavy cloud cover
B The presence of gravel or bits of rock C The low angle of the Sun above the horizon D The presence of large cracks in their surface
3 The word penetrate in the passage is closest in meaning to
A collect B pierce C melt D endure
4 According to paragraph 4, how is glacial ice formed? A By the compaction of snow
B By the freezing of seawater on the bottom of ice shelves C By breaking away from the ice shelf
D By the capsizing of a two-layer block of shelf ice
5 According to paragraph 4, ice shelf cores helped scientists explain the formation of green icebergs by showing that
(5)C glacial ice is lighter and floats better than sea ice
D the clear sea ice at the bottom of the ice shelf is similar to ice from a green iceberg ‘
6 Why does the author mention that “The green ice portion was textured by seawater erosion’’? A To explain why cracks in the iceberg appeared light green instead of dark green
B To suggest that green ice is more easily eroded by seawater than white ice is C To support the idea that the green ice had been the bottom layer before capsizing D To explain how the air bubbles had been removed from the green ice
7 The word accumulated in the passage is closest in meaning to
A collected B frozen C released D covered
8 The word accrete in the passage is closest in meaning to
A advance B transfer C flatten out D come together
9 Which of the following is NOT explained in the passage? A Why blocks of ice break off where glaciers meet the ocean B Why blocks of shelf ice sometimes capsize after breaking off
C Why green icebergs are commonly produced in some parts of Antarctica D Why green icebergs contain large amounts of dissolved organic pigments
10 The passage supports which of the following statements about the Amery Ice Shelf? A The Amery Ice Shelf produces only green icebergs
B The Amery Ice Shelf produces green icebergs because its ice contains high levels of metallic compounds such as copper and iron
C The Amery Ice Shelf produces green icebergs because the seawater is rich in a particular kind of soluble organic material
D No green icebergs are found far from the Amery Ice Shelf V Rewrite the following sentences as directed: (2 Ms)
1 You had better get down to your studies now
→ It’s high time _ Your school results depend on how hard you work
→ The harder _ They delay the trip because of a storm
→ But Be more active or you will get ill and bored
→ Unless The form teacher got angry when his students made noise ROOF
→ The form teacher
(6)NGUYEN THIEN THANH HIGH SCHOOL ENGLISH TEST OF THE BEGINNING FOR THE GIFTED SCHOOL YEAR: 2015-2016, CLASS 11D
ALLOTTED TIME 60 MINUTES
(There are pages)
Full name: , Class: 11D CODE Students write answers on the test
I Supply each blank with the correct tense / form of the verb (1 M)
A You (1) (be) _ sure the answer (2) (be) _ what it (3) (be) _? In my opinion, it isn’t right Surely you (4) (forget) _ (5) (include) _ something essential?
B While I _ (6) (wait) at the bus stop, I _ (7) (see) my teacher go past in a car
C Every summer we _ (8) (stay) at an apartment that _ (9) (belong) to my uncle D My brother told me that our goldfish (10) (die)
Key:
1 Are you is should be Have you forgotten to include was waiting saw stayed belonged 10 had died
II Supply the correct form of the words in brackets: (1 M)
1 People think I am when in fact I have trouble communicating in English (social) A few of the students displayed an _ attitude toward the cheating student (differ) Whenever he lost for his current job, he'd nose around within the company for something new (enthuse)
4 " I can't wait to see her on the first day," he went on (cheer)
5 Being recognized in the street is part and parcel of being a (celebrate) Key:
1 unsociable indifferent enthusiasm cheerfully celebrity III Choose the best answer: (3 Ms)
1 This sort of thing doesn’t happen in Nigeria, _ ?
A isn’t it B does it C doesn’t it D can’t it Einstein gradually became _ in the discussion
A absorbent B absorbing C to absorb D absorbed Whenever we meet, we stop
A talking B for talking C to talk D to talking Our teacher didn’t _ the joke I told so I had to explain it to her
A find B take C have D get
5 Are your plans for this weekend still
A the same B identical C same D like
6 He _ for the national team in 65 matches so far
A is playing B has been playing C played D has played There is one television programme which is above all in popularity
A others B other C the other D another
8 These are my three children
A Tim’s brother- B brother Tim C brother Tim’s D brother is Tim The room was _ small to accommodate the Council
A as B too C much D as much
10 We some research into the state of the Swedish car industry
A did B conducted C undertook D All are correct
11 I don’t think it’s nice to make fun _ kids who are younger than you
A of B to C at D with
12 Even if the railways had no competition, Parliament would see that their charges were fair and
(7)A reason B reasonably C reasonable D reasonless 13 American children learn Lincoln’s Gettysburg speech
A by heart B in heart C with heart D to heart 14 I never feel sure what by the word ‘democratic’
A means B is meant C is the meaning D to mean 15 “Do you think we’re all created equal?” — “No, not all.”
A in B over C to D at
16 My _ house is not very far away
A father-in law’s B father-in-law C fathers’-in-laws’ D fathers’-in-law 17 People who make pigs of _ by overeating should be made to go on a diet
A himself B them C themselves D ourselves
18 I’m going to try to get _ shape before the summer holidays
A off B in C over D on
19 The building _ the earthquake but then _ by a fire
A was survived — destroyed B was survived — was destroyed C survived — destroyed D survived — was destroyed 20 We shall have to stop soon because the car is almost _ petrol
A out off B not having C out of D lacking
21 At one o’clock Mr Taylor will close his shop and go out to have _
A lunch B the lunch C a lunch D lunches
22 Now the shares Mr Brown bought in 1967 have gone up _ value
A by B on C at D in
23 The reason why we didn’t see her at the railway station was that she took a plane _
A besides B instead C sometimes D soon
24 There is nothing very _ to in that small town
A enjoy B enjoyed C enjoyable D enjoying
25 The doctor gave me a _ for some medicine for my throat
A prescription B diagnosis C recipe D cure 26 I’m really disappointed I _ for the team again
A didn’t pick B wasn’t picked C didn’t get to be picked D wasn’t got picked 27 I can’t find my purse anywhere; I _ it at the cinema
A must have been left B must leave C must be leaving D must have left 28 My sister’s tooth still gives her some pain She _ gone to the dentist yesterday
A should have B would have C must have D could be
29 My friend was going to call me as soon as he arrived this morning but he didn’t call He _ the train
A had to miss B should have missed C must have missed D would have missed 30 Flight nineteen from New York and Washington is now arriving at _
A gate two B the gate two C the two gate D second gate IV Reading:
A Read the following passage and decide which answer (A, B, C, or D) best fits each gap (1 M) A lot of people like to play their records as loudly as possible The (1) _ is that the rest of the family and the neighbours often complain (2) _ they don’t like the music One (3) _ to this problem is to wear headphones, but headphones are usually uncomfortable.’ An armchair which has a record-player system built into it has just been (4) _ by a British engineer, Stephen Court
The armchair looks like an ordinary armchair with a high back However, each of the two sides of the chair has three loudspeakers inside to reproduce middle and high sounds Low sounds are reproduced by a pair of loudspeakers in a hollow (5) _ under the seat Anyone who sits in the chair hears sounds coming from all around his/her head
(8)These sounds travel only a few inches to reach the listener’s ears (8) _, it takes only a little power to make the music sound very loud Only a small amount of sound leaks out from behind the chair into the room to (9) _ others Most of the sound is (10) _ by the listener
1 A conclusion B impact C sequence D result
2 A if B for C lest D since
3 A way B answer C conclusion D settlement
4 A drawn B discovered C imagined D designed
5 A hole B set C location D space
6 A destination B reason C source D departure
7 A matter B care C make sense D mean
8 A Surprisingly B Strangely C Consequently D Eventually
9 A disappoint B dismiss C deter D disturb
10 A integrated B absorbed C admitted D accommodated
Key: 1D 2A 3B D D 6C 7A 8C 9D 10B
B Read the passage and choose the best answer (A, B, C or D) to the questions (1 M)
The ecosystems of the Earth provide an array of free public services that are essential for the support of civilizations They maintain the quality of the atmosphere, provide food from the sea, manufacture and replenish soils, recycle wastes and nutrients, control the overwhelming majority of crop pests and disease vectors, and so on People have no idea how to take over these activities satisfactorily They know, however, that the theory once advanced in the 19th century - that the productivity of the land can be infinitely increased by the application of capital, labour, and science - is wrong History has shown that once the natural life - support systems of a civilization have been sufficiently damaged, they cannot usually be replaced The ancient deforestation and overgrazing of the Mediterranean region is a famous example And today, a global civilization is ruining the global environment
1 What is the main topic of this passage?
A Free public services B Support needed for civilizations C The value of ecosystems D The vastness of the Earth The word they refers to _
A ecosystems B civilizations
C sea D people
3 The author mentions the Mediterranean region as an example of _ A the ability of nature to remedy human destruction
B the ability of people to make use of natural-resources C the manner in which people replenish the environment D the effects of human abuse of natural resources
4 The author suggests that civilizations can survive only if they _ A greatly expand scientific research
B not destroy the balance of natural processes C replant the forests in the Mediterranean region
D invent new procedures to replace obsolete ecosystems
5 The author suggests that the difference between the ancient and the modern situation is that today the problem is _
A worldwide B better understood
C more manageable D economic
Key: 1C 2A 3D 4B 5A
C Read the passage and choose the best answers (A, B, C or D) to the questions (1 M) GREEN ICEBERGS
(9)Icebergs are ordinarily blue to white, although they sometimes appear dark or opaque because they carry gravel and bits of rock They may change color with changing light conditions and cloud cover, glowing pink or gold in the morning or evening light, but this color change is generally related to the low angle of the Sun above the horizon However, travelers to Antarctica have repeatedly reported seeing green icebergs in the Weddell Sea and, more commonly, close to the Amery Ice Shelf in East Antarctica
Scientists have differed as to whether icebergs appear green as a result of light conditions or because of something in the ice itself One explanation for green icebergs attributes their color to an optical illusion when blue ice is illuminated by a near-horizon red Sun, but green icebergs stand out among white and blue icebergs under a great variety of light conditions Another suggestion is that the color might be related to ice with high levels of metallic compounds, including copper and iron Recent expeditions have taken ice samples from green icebergs and ice cores - vertical, cylindrical ice samples reaching down to great depths - from the glacial ice shelves along the Antarctic continent Analyses of these cores and samples provide a different solution to the problem
The ice shelf cores, with a total length of 215 meters (705 feet), were long enough to penetrate through glacial ice - which is formed from the compaction of snow and contains air bubbles - and to continue into the clear, bubble-free ice formed from seawater that freezes onto the bottom of the glacial ice The properties of this clear sea ice were very similar to the ice from the green iceberg The scientists concluded that green icebergs form when a two-layer block of shelf ice breaks away and capsizes (turns upside down), exposing the bubble-free shelf ice that was formed from seawater
A green iceberg that stranded just west of the Amery Ice Shelf showed two distinct layers: bubbly blue-white ice and bubble-free green ice separated by a one-meter-long ice layer containing sediments The green ice portion was textured by seawater erosion Where cracks were present, the color was light green because of light scattering; where no cracks were present, the color was dark green No air bubbles were present in the green ice, suggesting that the ice was not formed from the compression of snow but instead from the freezing of seawater Large concentrations of single-celled organisms with green pigments (coloring substances) occur along the edges of the ice shelves in this region, and the seawater is rich in their decomposing organic material The green iceberg did not contain large amounts of particles from these organisms, but the ice had accumulated dissolved organic matter from the seawater It appears that unlike salt, dissolved organic substances are not excluded from the ice in the freezing process Analysis shows that the dissolved organic material absorbs enough blue wavelengths from solar light to make the ice appear green
Chemical evidence shows that platelets (minute flat portions) of ice form in the water and then accrete and stick to the bottom of the ice shelf to form a slush (partially melted snow) The slush is compacted by an unknown mechanism, and solid, bubble free ice is formed from water high in soluble organic substances When an iceberg separates from the ice shelf and capsizes, the green ice is exposed
The Amery Ice Shelf appears to be uniquely suited to the production of green icebergs Once detached from the ice shelf, these bergs drift in the currents and wind systems surrounding Antarctica and can be found scattered among Antarctica’s less colorful icebergs
The Amery Ice Shelf appears to be uniquely suited to the production of green icebergs Once detached from the ice shelf, these bergs drift in the currents and wind systems surrounding Antarctica and can be found scattered among Antarctica’s less colorful icebergs
1 According to paragraph 1, all of the following are true of icebergs EXCEPT: A They not have a regular shape
B They are formed where glaciers meet the ocean C Most of their mass is above the sea surface D Waves and tides cause them to break off glaciers
2 According to paragraph 2, what causes icebergs to sometimes appear dark or opaque? A A heavy cloud cover
(10)3 The word penetrate in the passage is closest in meaning to
A collect B pierce C melt D endure
4 According to paragraph 4, how is glacial ice formed? A By the compaction of snow
B By the freezing of seawater on the bottom of ice shelves C By breaking away from the ice shelf
D By the capsizing of a two-layer block of shelf ice
5 According to paragraph 4, ice shelf cores helped scientists explain the formation of green icebergs by showing that
A the ice at the bottom of green icebergs is bubble-free ice formed from frozen seawater B bubble-free ice is found at the top of the ice shelf
C glacial ice is lighter and floats better than sea ice
D the clear sea ice at the bottom of the ice shelf is similar to ice from a green iceberg ‘
6 Why does the author mention that “The green ice portion was textured by seawater erosion’’? A To explain why cracks in the iceberg appeared light green instead of dark green
B To suggest that green ice is more easily eroded by seawater than white ice is C To support the idea that the green ice had been the bottom layer before capsizing D To explain how the air bubbles had been removed from the green ice
7 The word accumulated in the passage is closest in meaning to
A collected B frozen C released D covered
8 The word accrete in the passage is closest in meaning to
A advance B transfer C flatten out D come together
9 Which of the following is NOT explained in the passage? A Why blocks of ice break off where glaciers meet the ocean B Why blocks of shelf ice sometimes capsize after breaking off
C Why green icebergs are commonly produced in some parts of Antarctica D Why green icebergs contain large amounts of dissolved organic pigments
10 The passage supports which of the following statements about the Amery Ice Shelf? A The Amery Ice Shelf produces only green icebergs
B The Amery Ice Shelf produces green icebergs because its ice contains high levels of metallic compounds such as copper and iron
C The Amery Ice Shelf produces green icebergs because the seawater is rich in a particular kind of soluble organic material
D No green icebergs are found far from the Amery Ice Shelf
Key: 1C 2B 3B 4A 5D 6C 7A 8D 9B 10C
V Rewrite the following sentences as directed: (2 Ms) You had better get down to your studies now
→ It’s high time _ Your school results depend on how hard you work
→ The harder _ They delay the trip because of a storm
→ But Be more active or you will get ill and bored
→ Unless The form teacher got angry when his students made noise ROOF
→ The form teacher Key:
1 It’s high time you got down to your studies
2 The harder you work the better your school results become But for the storm, they wouldn’t delay the trip
4 Unless you are more active, you will get ill and bored The form teacher hit the roof when his students made noise