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ĐỀ THI CCQG C


1. This is the oldest building the village.


a) of
b) by
c) in
d) to


2. These figures show a in the number of unemployed people in
England and Wales.

a) loss
b) lessening
c) reduction
d) lowering


3. When you him, give him my best wishes.


a) will visit
b) would visit
c) visit
d) have visited


4. My parents that they will move to the seaside when my father retires


next year.

a) think
b) thingking
c) will think
d) thought











5. The doctor gave the patient examination to discover the cause of his
collapse.

a) a thorough
b) a universal
c) an exact
d) a whole


6. scientists have observed increased pollution in the water supply.


a) Late

b) Later
c) Latter
d) Lately


7. The best rooms in that hotel the bay.


a) view
b) regard
c) overlook
d) examine


8. There was a sudden loud which made everyone jump.


a) bang
b) strike
c) split
d) stroke


9. She never says a word : she's as as a mouse.


a) quiet
b) small
c) slight
d) noiseless






10. After he had broken his leg, Henry could only go up and down stairs


a) hardly
b) in difficulties
c) with difficulty
d) hard


11. You will have to your holiday if you are too ill to travel.


a) call off
b) cut down
c) back out
d) put aside


12. The guide walked so that most of the party could not keep up with
him.

a) fast
b) quick
c) rapid
d) lively



13. I tried the bus, but I missed it.


a) catching
b) catch
c) to catch
d) catch up


14. Surely David's not going to drive, he ?


a) does
b) is
c) isn't
d) will





15. I couldn't resist having another slice of cake even I was supposed to
be losing weight.

a) although
b) however
c) otherwise
d) though



16. She him of wanting to marry her for her money.


a) cursed
b) accused
c) blamed
d) warned


17. Leave it in the oven until it brown.


a) turns
b) colours
c) changes
d) cooks


18. At four o'clock Mr Hutchinson still had some to do in the garden.


a) work
b) job
c) effort
d) task


19. People demand higher wages because prices are all the time.



a) rising
b) progressing
c) growing
d) exceeding






20. This wet weather has lasted for three weeks now; rained every
single day.

a) there has
b) there was
c) it has
d) it was


21. This cloth very thin.


a) feels
b) touches
c) holds
d) handles



22. I am sorry I opened your handbag but I it for mine.


a) mistook
b) confused
c) recognized
d) imagined


23. The firemen brought several long to try to reach those trapped on
the roof.

a) ladders
b) steps
c) stairs
d) staircases


24. amount of money can buy true friendship.


a) No
b) Never
c) None
d) Not only




25. It sounds the situation is unlikely to improve.



a) as if
b) how
c) as
d) so that


26. He often about his expensive car.


a) praises
b) shows
c) boasts
d) prides


27. Would you be to hold the door open?


a) too kind
b) kind enough
c) as kind
d) so kind


28. You may borrow as many books as you like, provided you show them
to is at the desk.

a) whoever

b) who
c) whom
d) which


29. You must be careful when you wash this silk blouse.


a) weak
b) sensitive
c) delicate
d) feeble





30. Mr and Mrs Hudson are always with each other about money.


a) annoying
b) arguing
c) discussing
d) shouting


31. After the funeral, the residents of the apartment building


a) sent faithfully flowers all weeks to the cemetery.

b) sent to the cemetery each week flowers faithfully.
c) sent flowers faithfully to the cemetery each week.
d) sent each week faithfully to the cemetery flowers.


32. Because the first pair of pants did not fit properly, he asked for


a) another pants
b) others pants
c) the others ones
d) another pair


33. The committee has met and

a) they have reached a decision.
b) it has formulated themselves some opinions.

c) its decision was reached at.
d) it has reached a decision.


34. Alfred Adams has not

a) lived lonelynessly in times previous
b) never before lived sole
c) ever lived alone before
d) before lived without the company of his friends









35. John's score on the test is the highest in the class;


a) he should study last night.
b) he should have studied last night
c) he must have studied last night
d) he must had to study last night


36. Henry will not be able to attend the meeting tonight because


a) he must to teach a class
b) he will be teaching a class
c) of he will teach a class
d) he will have teaching a class


37. Having been served lunch,

a) the problem was discussed by the members of the committee
b) the committee members discussed the problem
c) it was discussed by the committee members the problem

d) a discussion of the problem was made by the members of the
committee


38. Florida has not yet ratified the Equal Rights Amendment, and


a) several other states hasn't either.
b) neither has some of the others states
c) some other states also have not either
d) neither have several other states


39. The chairman requested that

a) the members studied more carefully the problem.
b) the problem was more carefulnessly studied
c) with more carefulness the problem could be studied

d) the members study the problem more carefully





40. California relies heavily on income from fruit crops, and


a) Florida also
b) Florida too

c) Florida is as well
d) So does Florida


41. The professor said that

a) the students can turn over their reports on the Monday
b) the reports on Monday could be received from the students by him

c) the students could hand in their reports on Monday
d) the students will on Monday the reports turn in


42. This year will be difficult for this organization because

a) they have less money and volunteers than they had last year
b) it has less money and fewer volunteers than it had last year
c) the last year it did not have as few and little volunteers and money

d) there are fewer money and volunteers that in the last year there
were


43. The teachers have had some problems deciding

a) when to the students they shall return the final papers
b) when are they going to return to the students the final papers
c) when they should return the final papers to the students
d) the time when the final papers they should return for the students




44. She wanted to serve some coffee to her guests; however,


a) she hadn't many sugar
b) there was not a great amount of the sugar
c) she did not have much sugar
d) she was lacking in amount of the sugar





45. There has not been a great response to the sale, ?


a) does there
b) hasn't there
c) hasn't it
d) has there


46. It's not easy for a casual observer to distinguish genuine paintings
and copies.

a) between
b) therefore
c) for
d) to



47. , all matter is formed of molecules.


a) It doesn't matter if the complex
b) No matter how complex
c) How complex is not a matter
d) It's not a complex matter


48. After World War I, automobiles, buses, and trucks became the most
common

a) of transportation
b) transport form
c) forms of transportation
d) transportation of form


49. Tears anger and tension naturally.


a) are relieved
b) relieving
c) relieve
d) what they relieve





50. In a single day are as many as thousands of people involved in
business deals in one area.

a) yet
b) they
c) ever
d) there


51. Paper from cellulose fibers.


a) is produced
b) producing
c) produced
d) which is produced


52. an insurance agent it is necessary to pass the state examination.


a) Become
b) To become
c) Having become
d) One becomes


53. There are art galleries in the city of Carmel.



a) a great deal
b) many
c) much
d) lots


54. One difficulty at night is limited vision.


a) to drive
b) with drive
c) with driving
d) be driven





55. the Pulitzer Prize in 1924.


a) Edna Ferber won
b) When Edna Ferber won
c) With Edna Ferber winning

d) Edna Ferber's winning


56. All of the world carry on breeding experiments to increase yield or

to improve disease resistance.

a) countries that grow wheat
b) growth of wheat countries
c) wheat-producing countries
d) countries where wheat is grown


57. Throughout the United States fast food restaurants where
hamburgers are served.

a) there are
b) there is
c) located
d) are there


58. The human body contains water , bones, and muscles.


a) is blood
b) in its blood
c) is in its blood
d) it is in its blood


59. covered by the sea, which occupies 71 percent of the earth.


a) A huge unknown world is

b) An huge unknown world
c) How huge the unknown world
d) So huge is the unknown world




60. In his painting, "The Three Musicians" Picasso reached a climax in
his use geometric forms.

a) to
b) of
c) on
d) with


61. Questions 61 - 65
East Somalia's prolonged shortage of rain, which has already caused
food supplies to fail and brought unemployment in farming areas, could
also affect the production of electricity, and thus reduce the output from
the nation's mines. The mining industry, and especially copper mining,
uses a huge amount of electricity and is almost completely dependent on
the government Electricity Supply commission. But the Commission has
recently asked the mines what would happen if electricity supplies were
reduced by ten, twenty or thirty per cent.
The Commission's power stations, which produce the electricity using
coal as fuel, are mostly situated near the large coalfields of Eastern
Province. But this area has little water so the cooling towers at the power
stations have to be supplied with water from elsewhere. The problem
now is that water levels in all rivers and lakes have fallen dangerously

low and, in some cases, are well below the intake pipes which feed into
the pipelines which supply the cooling towers.
In a desperate attempt to solve the problem, engineers are spending some
forty million dollars on building a series of small dams across the Haro
river. It is hoped that these dams will make the water level at the
Malawa Dam rise so that water can then be pumped through a new
pipeline to the power stations.
This will take time and it is now the dry season. Very little rain falls
before October or November, and, after a shortage which has lasted for
four years and is believed to be the worst in two centuries, nobody can
say whether the rains will be sufficient.
The amount of electricity and water used by the mines has tended to
increase in recent years. The mines, which produce about half the
country's export earnings, need electricity in order to pump fresh air
through their workings and to drive machines which crush vast
quantities of rock. Each mine also has to provide accommodation for as
many as three thousand workers.

How might East Somalia's lack of rain affect electricity supplies and
mining?

a) Copper mines are having to use less electricity
b) Coal supplies are failing to reach power stations
c) Electricity supplies to mines may be cut by up to thirty per cent
d) Copper mines may be unable to pump water by October.


62. Where does the Electricity Supply Commission produce most of its
electricity?


a) Along the Haro River
b) Near the copper mines
c) At the Malawa Dam
d) ln Eastern Province


63. The action that the engineers are taking

a) may not help if there is insufficient rain
b) will become effective towards the end of the year

c) should get enough water to the mines
d) will use up a lot of electricity


64. The engineers aim to

a) change the direction of the Haro river

b) keep more water at the Malawa Dam

c) get more water into the Haro river.
d) dig out artificial lakes near the dam


65. Why are the copper mines important to East Somalia?

a) They train many skilled mechanics
b) Each mine employs approximately 3,000 people
c) Their costs and production are rising

d) They bring in fifty per cent of what the country earns.



66. Questions 66- 70
Bulbs are ideal for new gardeners, including children, because they are
easy to plant and they always flower well in their first season. They need
comparatively little attention, provided that the soil has been properly
prepared, and the place where they are planted is chosen with care. They
will last for many years and give you an annual show of flowers that are
often so richly coloured or beautifully formed as to be in a class apart
from other garden flowers.
However, it is a mistake to buy bulbs without any plan of what effect you
really want from them. I have written this book to help in selecting the
most suitable bulbs for the typical, small, modern garden of the non-
specialist gardener, and have made some suggestions to help readers who
may not have had a garden before.
Too many books for beginners tell new gardeners
to grow a few 'sensible'
kinds of plants and leave the more interesting kinds to adventurous
experts. For the first few years of one's gardening life one should, it
seems, concentrate on learning simple techniques while admiring the
gardens of more experienced neighbours.
In fact, as a learner-gardener you need not fear that your efforts will
necessarily show your inexperience, because (and here I give away a
most closely-guarded secret), provided the bulbs come from a really
reliable source, it is possible to produce as good results in your first year
of gardening as in your eightieth. There are some difficult bulbs that will
disappoint you, notably some lilies and a few miniature daffodils, but
these are often no more attractive than the really easy ones. Therefore,

be bold with bulbs; they are a sound investment for any garden.
Never be content to plant the bulbs by themselves. The majority look
best when planted among other kinds of plants, because they have
unattractive leaves which are thus hidden. Ther
e are a few bulbs, such as
standard daffidils, which are, however, at their best grown in short
grass.

Why should new gardeners try growing bulbs?

a) They are cheap, so a great many can be grown
b) Once planted, little after-care is needed
c) They will grow anywhere in the garden
d) Their flowers get better and better each year.


67. What is this book on gardening about?

a) Planning an easily maintained garden

b) Up-to-date information on-new bulbs

c) General advice for beginner gardeners

d) The choice of bulbs for small gardens


68. Inexperienced gardeners are often told that they should



a) experiment with different plants
b) ask their experienced neighbours for advice
c) learn by visiting other gardens
d) plant only a few types of plats


69. Bulbs are described as an investment because


a) they go on flowering all summer
b) they flower year after year
c) the beginner can learn from them
d) they make other plants look good


70. Some lilies and miniature daffodils are different from other bulbs
because they are

a) particularly attractive in colour
b) difficult to grow successfully
c) disappointing when they flower
d) rare and very eye-catching.


71. Questions 71 - 80
Barbara Kasten is an artist who makes photographs of constructions
that she creates for the purpose of photographing them. In her studio she
arranges objects such as mirrors, solid forms, and flat surfaces into what
could be called large still life arrangement, big enough to walk into. She
lights the construction, then rearranges and rephotographs it until she

arrives at a final image. She also photographs away from her studio at
various architectural sites, bringing camera, lights, mirrors, and a crew
of assistants to transform the site into her own abstract image.
Kasten starts a studio construction with a simple problem, such as using
several circular and rectangular mirrors. She puts the first objects in
place, sets up a camera, then goes back ang forth arranging objects and
seeing how they appear in the camera. Eventually she makes instant
color prints to see what the image looks like. At first she works only with
objects, concentrating on their composition; then she lights them and
adds color from lights covered with colored filters.
Away from the studio, at architectural sites, the cost of the crew and the
equipment rental means she has to know in advance what she wants to
do. She visits each location several times to make sketches and test shots.
Until she brings in the lights, however, she cannot predict exactly what
they will do to the image, so there is some improvising on the spot.

What does the passage mainly discuss?

a) The techniques of a photographer
b) The advantages of studio photography
c) Industrial construction sites
d) An architect who appreciates fine art


72. Which of the following would be an example of one of the
'constructions' referred to in line 1-2?

a) A still life arrangement
b) Natural landscapes
c) An instant color print

d) A colored filter


73. In line 3, why does the author mention mirrors?


a) They are part of the camera
b) Kasten uses them as subjects
c) The crew needs them
d) Photography mirrors life


74. The word 'transform' in line 9 is closest in meaning to


a) move
b) extend
c) change
d) interpret


75. It can be inferred from the passage that Kasten makes instant prints
to

a) give away
b) sell as souvenirs
c) include as part of the construction
d) see what the construction looks like at the stage



76. The word ' them' in line 16 refers to


a) prints
b) lights
c) objects
d) filters




77. The word ' composition' in line 16 is closest in meaning to


a) arrangement
b) brightness
c) quality
d) size


78. The word 'shots' in line 21 is closest in meaning to


a) injections
b) photographs
c) loud noises
d) effective remarks


79. The word 'they' in line 22 refers to



a) architectural styles
b) sketches
c) colored filters
d) lights


80. Why does Kasten visit the location of outdoor word before the day of
the actual shooting?

a) To plan the photograph
b) To purchase film and equipment
c) To hire a crew
d) To test the lights


81. Questions 81 - 90
There is an ancient Chinese proverb which says 'Beware of a man whose
stomach does not move when he laughs'. We reveal a great deal of what
we are thinking and feeling by the movements which we make quite
unconsciously. When children are bored they start to fidget; tapping
with the foot or drumming the fingers are sure signs of impatience; a
man shows his nervousness by constantly adjusting his tie or patting his
hair, particularly if he is waiting for an interview, or is about to meet his
girlfriend. Sometimes you can work out what people are talking about, (
or at least what kind of mood they are in) - even if you cannot hear a
word they are saying - by the gestures they use. Occasionally it is even
possible to identify a person's nationality : nobody shrugs quite like a
Frenchman, or gesticulates quite like an Italian, or bows quite like a

Japanese. Some say you can tell an Englishman by the fact that he hardly
gestures at all !

All these are obvious, stereotyped gestures, widely recognised and
understood. The only thing to watch out for is that a gesture which is
polite and reasonable in one country might turn out to be very offensive
in another. For example, an Englishman gives a 'thumbs up' sign to show
approval but in some countries the same gesture is obscene and offensive.
But we make, when we are talking, man much more subtle movements,
which betray our attitude, or define our relationship to others. Take, for
example, the way people sit : leaning back relaxed; sitting forward,
earnest and interested; legs crossed and arms folded, hostile or insecure.
There are many touching movements which, if you can read them, will
tell you what someone is thinking, quite independently of what he is
saying : stroking the chin, pulling the ear, scratching the head, tapping
the nose, and so on. then there are hand
movements which give you away
: hand-wringing, fistclenching, steepling with the fingers.
It is also very interesting to consider how much meaning we convey,
sometimes quite deliberately, with our eyes. I remember once being on a
bus and looking at a stranger. He suddenly looked back at me - i.e. our
eyes met. My instinctive reaction was to avert my gaze. It occurred to me
that if I had continued to maintain in a bus and refused to avert his gaze,
his intentions are quite clear : he wishes to let her know that he is
admiring her. The normal pattern of eye contact when two people are
engaged in conversation is that the speaker only looks at the listener
from time to time, in order to assure himself that the latter is listening
and grasping what is being said.
The listener, on the other hand, will look
more or less continuously at the speaker (except perhaps in such

unnatural situations as in a car) as a sign that he is paying attention.
If a person looks you in the eye continuously while he is speaking to you,
you are likely to be disconcerted. It is as if he were trying to dominate
you. A bad liar usually gives himself away by looking too long at his
victim, in the mistaken belief that to 'look a man straight in the eye' is a
sign of honest dealing. It may be that the opposite is true, however. In
fact, continuous eye contact is usually confined to lovers, who will gaze
into each other's eyes for an eternity, conveying meanings that words
cannot express, and baffling onlookers into the bargain.

There is even meaning to be found in how close people stand to each
other, and at what angle. We may stand side by side, or face to face,
Which is more intimate, or at some intermediate angle in between. An
interesting experiment is to stand back to back with someone and try to
have a conversation : it is quite disconcerting not to be able to see or to
establish contact with the other person, even though we have learnt to
have conversations with people we cannot see, as on the telephone.

Careful studies have been made of all these non-verbal forms of
communication, and there is no doubt that what we say with words is
only a part of the message we convey. It is important, however, to realise
that gestures, like words, tend to come in clusters, and are often capable
of more
than one interpretation. You must look at the whole combination
of words, facial expression, gesture and stance. If you learn to read the
signs, you can tell whether what a person says is what he really means;
or whether, like the man whose stomach does not move when he laughs,
he is trying to deceive you.

The Chinese proverb means that


a) such a man is only pretending to laugh
b) it is impossible to laugh without moving your stomach
c) such a man is deshonest
d) fat men who laugh in this way are dagerous.


82. If a man keeps patting his hair and adjusting his tie, he is probably


a) worried about his appearence
b) feeling tense
c) conscious that people are staring at him
d) feeling angry


83. You should be careful about using gestures because

a) their meaning can differ greatly from country to country

b) words are a much better way of conveying meaning
c) a lot of people dislike gestures
d) most foreigners do not understand them


84. When a person is feeling sure of himself he will probably


a) cross his legs and fold his arms
b) sit forward in his chair

c) look you straight in the eye
d) lean back in his chair


85. If you are looking at a stranger, and he notices, you should

a) smile politely
b) apologise for staring
c) look away at once.
d) continue to stare at him for a short time before looking away



86. If a man stares at a woman in a bus, it probably means that he


a) finds her attractive
b) intends to start a conversation with her
c) has seen her somewhere before
d) thinks she is interested in him


87. From time to time, the speaker looks at the listener to make sure that
the listener

a) can hear what he is saying
b) does not want to say anything at that moment
c) is paying attention to what he is saying
d) is in agreement with him



88. You usually know when a person is lying because he


a) refuses to look you in the eye
b) tries to keep looking you straight in the eye
c) averts his gaze
d) finds it difficult to keep his eyes still


89. Two people will stand facing each other in the following
circumstances

a) if they have just been formally introduced
b) if they are strangers who are very interested in each other
c) if they have only recently met
d) if they are on friendly terms.


90. In order to be able to interpret gestures properly, you must


a) learnt all the individual signs
b) listen to the words which accompany the gestures
c) take account of all the features of communication
d) watch people's faces, especially their eyes


91. Questions 91 - 100
Marianne Moore (1887-1972) once said that her writing could be called

poetry only because there was no other name for it. Indeed her poems
appear to be extremely compressed essays that happen to be printed in
jagged lines on the page. Her subjects were varied: animals, laborers,
artists, and the craft of poetry. From her general reading came
quotations that she found striking or insightful. She included these in her
poems, scrupulously enclosed in quotation marks, and sometimes
identified in footnotes. Of this practice, she wrote, "why the many
quotation marks?" I am asked When a thing has been said so well that
it could not be said better, why paraphrase it? Hence my writing is, if no
t
a cabinet of fossils, a kind of collection of flies in amber." Close
observation and concentration on detail are the methods of her poetry.
Marianne Moore grew up in Kirwood, Missouri, near St.Louis. After
graduation from Bryn Mawr College in 1909, she taught commercial
subjects at the Indian School in Carlisle, Pennsylvania. Later she became
a librarian in New York City. During the 1920's she was editor of The
Dial, an important literary magazine of the period. She lived quietly all
her life, mostly in Brooklyn, New York. She spent a lot of time at the
Bronx Zoo, fascinated by animals. Her admiration of the Brooklyn
Dodgers - before the team moved to Los Angeles - was widely known.
Her first book of poems was published in London in 1921 by a group of
friends associated with the Imagist movement. From that time on her
poetry has been read with interest by succeeding generations of poets
and readers. In 1952 she was awarded the Pultzer Prize for her Collected
Poems. She wrote that she did not write poetry "for money or fame. To
earn a living is needful, but it can be done in routine ways. One writes
because one has a burning desire to objectify what it is indispensable to
one's happiness to express "

What is the passage mainly about?


a) The influence of the Imagists on Marianne Moore
b) Essayists and poets of the 1920's
c) The use of quotations in poetry
d) Marianne Moore's life and work


92. Which of the following can be inferred about Moore's poems?


a) They are better known in Europe than the United States.
b) They do not use traditional verse forms
c) They were all published in the Dial
d) They tend to be abstract


93. According to the passage Moore wrote about all of the following
EXCEPT

a) artists
b) animals
c) fossils
d) workers


94. What does Moore refer to as "flies in amber" (line 12) ?


a) A common image in her poetry
b) Poetry in the twentieth-century

c) Concentration on detail
d) Quotations within her poetry


95. The author mentions all of the following as jobs help by Moore
EXCEPT

a) commercial artist
b) teacher
c) magazine editor
d) librarian


96. The word "period" in line 20 is closest in meaning to


a) movement
b) school
c) region
d) time


97. Where did Moore spend most of her adult life?


a) In Kirkwood
b) In Brooklyn
c) In Los Angeles
d) In Carlisle





98. The word "succeeding" in line 27 is closest in meaning to


a) inheriting
b) prospering
c) diverse
d) later


99. The word 'it' in line 30 refers to


a) writing poetry
b) becoming famous
c) earning a living
d) attracting readers


100. It can be inferred from the passage that Moore wrote because she


a) wanted to win awards
b) was dissatisfied with what others wrote
c) felt a need to express herself
d) wanted to raise money for the Bronx Zoo



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