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Tải Đề thi thử THPT Quốc Gia lần 2 năm 2019 môn Tiếng Anh trường THPT Cao Nguyên - Đề thi THPT Quốc Gia môn Anh 2019 có đáp án

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<b>ĐỀ THI THỬ THPT QUỐC GIA MÔN TIẾNG ANH </b>

<b> NĂM 2019</b>



<b>MƠN TIẾNG ANH CĨ ĐÁP ÁN</b>



<i><b>Mark the letter A, B,C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the underlined part that</b></i>
<i><b>needs correction in each of the following questions from 1 to 3.</b></i>


<i><b>Câu 1: In many countries, the domestic automobile industries are so strongly protected that</b></i>


foreign cars are seen rarely there.


<b>A. automobile industries</b> <b>B. strongly protected</b>


<b>C. seen rarely</b> <b>D. countries</b>


<i><b>Câu 2: The suits were hanged in the closet when they were returned from the cleaners.</b></i>


<b>A. hanged</b> <b>B. were returned</b> <b>C. when</b> <b>D. The</b>


<i><b>Câu 3: Psychological experiments are indicated that people remember more math problems</b></i>


that they can’t solve than those they are able to solve.


<b>A. more</b> <b>B. those</b> <b>C. are indicated</b> <b>D. to solve</b>


<i><b>Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the most suitable response</b></i>
<i><b>to complete each of the following exchanges from 4 to 5.</b></i>


<i><b>Câu 4: Lan: I think it is a good idea to have three or four generations living under one roof.</b></i>


Minh: _________ Family members can help each other a lot.



<b>A. It's not true.</b> <b>B. I don't agree.</b>


<b>C. That's wrong.</b> <b>D. I couldn't agree any more.</b>


<i><b>Câu 5: David is talking about Mr. West’s early retirement.</b></i>


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<b>A. Oh, I have no idea.</b> <b>B. Right, you’d probably be the next.</b>


<b>C. Congratulations!</b> <b>D. You don’t say!</b>


<i><b>Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to each</b></i>
<i><b>of the following questions from 6 to 19.</b></i>


<b>Câu 6: My friend bought ___________ from a shop on Tran Phu street.</b>


<b>A. a leather brown nice belt</b> <b>B. a brown nice leather belt</b>


<b>C. a nice brown leather belt</b> <b>D. a nice leather brown belt</b>


<i><b>Câu 7: It is essential that Alice __________ about his responsibilities in the meeting</b></i>


tomorrow.


<b>A. must remind</b> <b>B. will remind</b> <b>C. be reminded</b> <b>D. will be reminded</b>


<i><b>Câu 8: A teacher’s ________ to education is worth great respect of the whole society</b></i>


because it brings benefits to the development of society.



<b>A. principle</b> <b>B. devotion</b> <b>C. guidance</b> <b>D. identity</b>


<i><b>Câu 9: _____ that Marie was able to retire at the age of 50.</b></i>


<b>A. So was her successful business,</b> <b>B. So successful was her business</b>


<b>C. Her business was successful</b> <b>D. So successful her business was,</b>


<i><b>Câu 10: We regret to tell you that the materials you ordered are______.</b></i>


<b>A. out of practice</b> <b>B. out of stock</b> <b>C. out of reach</b> <b>D. out of work</b>


<i><b>Câu 11: The idea of aliens may seem absurd, but times change, as does science, and this</b></i>


makes the idea far ______ than it once appeared.


<b>A. much plausible</b> <b>B. more plausible</b> <b>C. least plausible</b> <b>D. most plausible</b>


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<b>A. arrived</b> <b>B. hasn’t arrived</b> <b>C. haven’t arrived</b> <b>D. not arriving</b>


<b>Câu 13: Ann’s birthday was on the 5</b>th<sub>, and now it’s already the 8</sub>th<sub>. Her birthday card</sub>


___________a week ago.


<b>A. should have sent</b> <b>B. can be sent</b>


<b>C. will be sent</b> <b>D. should have been sent</b>


<i><b>Câu 14: I don’t believe Mary can do it, ___________?</b></i>



<b>A. don’t I</b> <b>B. do I</b> <b>C. can she</b> <b>D. can’t she</b>


<i><b>Câu 15: Nowadays, most students use _______ calculators in their studies and</b></i>


examinations.


<b>A. electricity</b> <b>B. electrical</b> <b>C. electric</b> <b>D. electronic</b>


<i><b>Câu 16: She ran in a marathon last week but____________ after ten kilometers.</b></i>


<b>A. closed down</b> <b>B. made up</b> <b>C. dropped out</b> <b>D. broke up</b>


<i><b>Câu 17: This magazine is very good. If you like reading, you should _______to it.</b></i>


<b>A. buy</b> <b>B. subscribe</b> <b>C. enroll</b> <b>D. contribute</b>


<i><b>Câu 18: She must have been sleepless last night. Otherwise, her eyes _______ so bloody</b></i>


now.


<b>A. wouldn’t have looked</b> <b>B. looked</b>


<b>C. won’t look</b> <b>D. wouldn’t look</b>


<i><b>Câu 19: When finding a new house, parents should___________all the conditions for their</b></i>


children’s education and entertainment.


<b>A. take into account</b> <b>B. make all the conditions</b>



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<i><b>Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the word or phrase that is</b></i>
<i><b>CLOSEST in meaning to the underlined part in each of the following questions from 20</b></i>
<i><b>to 21.</b></i>


<i><b>Câu 20: In1952, Akihito was officially proclaimed heir to the Japanese throne.</b></i>


<b>A. declared</b> <b>B. installed</b> <b>C. advised</b> <b>D. denounced</b>


<i><b>Câu 21: Mountain people of adjoining nations have great deal in common because terrain</b></i>


and climate mould their lives similarly.


<b>A. friendly</b> <b>B. neighboring</b> <b>C. developing</b> <b>D. distant</b>


<b>Mark the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the sentence that best</b>
<i><b>combines each pair of sentences in the following questions from 22 to 23.</b></i>


<b>Câu 22: I didn’t get admitted to Harvard University. It would have been fantastic</b>


otherwise.


<b>A. That I got admitted to Harvard University was fantastic.</b>


<b>B. If only I gained admission to Harvard University.</b>


<b>C. I regretted having been admitted to Harvard University.</b>


<b>D. I wish I had gained admission to Harvard University.</b>


<b>Câu 23: John got a terminal illness. He couldn’t get out of the bed on his own.</b>



<b>A. Such was John’s illness that he could never get out of the bed on his own.</b>


<b>B. Were it not for his terminal illness, John would be able to get out of bed on his own.</b>


<b>C. No sooner had John’s illness got terminal than he could not get out of the bed on his </b>


own.


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<i><b>Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the word whose underlined</b></i>
<i><b>part differs from the other three in pronunciation in each of the following questions from</b></i>
<i><b>24 to 25.</b></i>


<b>Câu 24: A. wicked</b> <b>B. helped</b> <b>C. coughed</b> <b>D. knocked</b>


<b>Câu 25: A. catches</b> <b>B. buzzes</b> <b>C. kites</b> <b>D. oranges</b>


<b>Mark the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the sentence that is</b>
<i><b>closest in meaning to each of the following questions from 26 to 28.</b></i>


<i><b>Câu 26: He didn't realise his experiments would change the future of science.</b></i>


<b>A. The realisation of his experiments was not thought to change the future of science.</b>


<b>B. He thought his experiments would never change the future of science.</b>


<b>C. Little did he realise that his experiments would change the future of science.</b>


<b>D. His experiments would really never change the future of science.</b>



<i><b>Câu 27: Can you describe your son to the policeman, please?</b></i>


<b>A. Will you please tell the policeman your son’s description?</b>


<b>B. Can your description be made to the policeman?</b>


<b>C. Is it possible that the policeman describes your son?</b>


<b>D. Can you tell the policeman what your son looks like please?</b>


<i><b>Câu 28: No matter how hard he tries, he’ll never pass the exam.</b></i>


<b>A. There’s no point in trying because he’ll never pass the exam.</b>


<b>B. Although he tries hard, he will pass the exam.</b>


<b>C. Hard as he tries, he will ever pass the exam.</b>


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<i><b>Mark the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the word or phrase that is</b></i>
<i><b>OPPOSITE in meaning to the underlined part in each of the following questions from 29</b></i>
<i><b>to 30.</b></i>


<i><b>Câu 29: The accident illuminated existing problems in the country’s dairy industry and</b></i>


food safety system.


<b>A. concealed</b> <b>B. clarified</b> <b>C. damaged</b> <b>D. revealed</b>


<i><b>Câu 30: None of her novels lends itself to being made into a film; they just simply lack a</b></i>



coherent storyline.


<b>A. inapplicable</b> <b>B. untamable</b> <b>C. inconceivable</b> <b>D. unsuitable</b>


<i><b>Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to</b></i>
<i><b>indicate the correct answer to each of the questions from 31 to 35.</b></i>


Genetic modification of foods is not a new practice. It has been practiced for thousands of
years under the name of "selective breeding". Animals and plants were chosen because they
had traits that humans found useful. Some animals were larger and stronger than others, or
they yielded more food, or they had some other trait that humans valued. Therefore, they
were bred because of those traits. Individuals with those traits were brought together and
allowed to breed in the hope that their offspring would have the same traits in greater
measure.


Much the same thing was done with plants. To produce bigger or sweeter fruit, or grow
more grain per unit of land, strains of plants were combined and recombined to produce
hybrids, or crossbreeds that had the desired traits in the right combinations. All the while,
however, biologists wondered: is there a more direct and versatile way to change the traits of
<b>plants and animals? Could we rewrite, so to speak, the heredity of organisms to make them</b>
serve our needs better?


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genes into plants, for example, in order to give the plants a certain trait they ordinarily would
lack, such as resistance to freezing. The result was a tremendous potential to change the very
nature of biology.


<b>Câu 31: What is the passage mainly about?</b>


<b>A. The arguments against genetic modification</b>



<b>B. The benefits brought about by genetic modification</b>


<b>C. The reasons behind selective breeding of plants</b>


<b>D. The development of genetic modification</b>


<b>Câu 32: The word "them" in paragraph 2 refers to ______.</b>


<b>A. organisms</b> <b>B. traits</b> <b>C. animals</b> <b>D. plants</b>


<b>Câu 33: The word "blend" in paragraph 3 mostly means ______.</b>


<b>A. combine</b> <b>B. collect</b> <b>C. gather</b> <b>D. carry</b>


<b>Câu 34: According to the passage, selective breeding ______.</b>


<b>A. is slower and uncertain than genetic modification</b>


<b>B. works much better on plants than on animals</b>


<b>C. helps change the traits of plants rather than animals</b>


<b>D. has a huge potential to change the nature of biology</b>


<b>Câu 35: Which of the following IS NOT achieved by genetic modification?</b>


<b>A. Giving plants necessary traits taken from animals’ genes</b>


<b>B. Producing hybrids or crossbreeds from many animals and plants</b>



<b>C. Encouraging people to give up selective breeding completely</b>


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<i><b>Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to</b></i>
<i><b>indicate the correct answer to each of the following questions from 36 to 43. </b></i>


The need for a surgical operation, especially an emergency operation, almost always
comes as a severe shock to the patient and his family. Despite modern advances, most
people still have an irrational fear of hospitals, and anaesthetics. Patients do not often
believe they really need surgery - cutting into a part of the body as opposed to
treatment with drugs.


In the early years of the 20th century there was little specialization in surgery. A good
surgeon was capable of performing almost every operation that had been advised up to
that time. Today the situation is different. Operations are now being carried out that
were not even dreamed of fifty years ago. The heart can be safely opened and its valves
<b>repaired. Clogged blood vessels can be cleaned out, and broken ones mended or</b>
replaced. A lung, the whole stomach, or even part of the brain can be removed and still
permit the patient to live comfortable and satisfactory life. However, not every surgeon
wants to, or is qualified to carry out every type of modern operation.


The scope of surgery has increased remarkably in the past decades. Its safety has
increased too. Deaths from most operations are about 20% of what they were in 1910 and
surgery has been extended in many directions, for example to certain types of birth
defects in new born babies, and, at the other end of the scale, to life saving operations
<b>for the octogenarian. The hospital stay after surgery has been shortened to as little as a</b>
week for most major operations. Most patients are out of bed on the day after an
operation and may be back at work in two or three weeks.


Many developments in modern surgery are almost incredible. They include replacement
of damaged blood vessels with simulated ones made of plastic: the replacement of heart


valves with plastic substitutes; the transplanting of tissues such as lens of the eye; the
invention of the artificial kidney to clean the blood of poisons at regular intervals and the
development of heart and lung machines to keep patients alive during very long
<b>operations. All these things open a hopeful vista for the future of surgery.</b>


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body the tissues of another person without reacting against them and eventually killing
them. Recently, however, it has been discovered that with the use of X-rays and special
drugs, it is possible to graft tissues from one person to another which will survive for periods
of a year or more. Kidneys have been successfully transplanted between non-identical twins.
Heart and lung transplants have also been reasonably successful.


"Spare parts" surgery, the simple routine replacement of all worn-out organs by new
ones, is


still a dream of the future but surgery is ready for such miracles. In the meantime, you can
be happy if your doctors say to you, "Yes, I think it is possible to operate on you for this
condition."


<b>Câu 36: Most people are afraid of being operated on __________.</b>


<b>A. in spite of improvements in modem surgery</b>


<b>B. because they think modem drugs are dangerous</b>


<b>C. because they do not believe they need anaesthetics</b>


<b>D. unless it is an emergency operation</b>


<b>Câu 37: Surgeons in the early 20th century, compared with modem ones _______.</b>



<b>A. had less to learn about surgery</b> <b>B. needed more knowledge</b>


<b>C. could perform every operation known today</b> <b>D. were more trusted by their </b>


patients


<b>Câu 38: A patient can still live a comfortable life even after the removal of _________.</b>


<b>A. his brain</b>


<b>B. his lungs</b>


<b>C. a major organ such as the stomach or one lung</b>


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<b>Câu 39: The word "clogged" in the second paragraph is most likely to correspond</b>


to __________.


<b>A. clean</b> <b>B. blocked</b> <b>C. covered</b> <b>D. unwashed</b>


<b>Câu 40: Today, compared with 1910 ________.</b>


<b>A. 20% fewer of all operation patients die</b>


<b>B. 20% of all operation patients recover</b>


<b>C. operation deaths have increased by 20%</b>


<b>D. five times fewer patients die after being operated on</b>



<b>Câu 41: Some of the more astonishing innovations in modern surgery include _________.</b>


<b>A. ear, nose and throat transplants</b> <b>B. valve less plastic hearts</b>


<b>C. leg transplants</b> <b>D. plastic heart valves</b>


<b>Câu 42: Which of the following has the same meaning as "vista" in the fourth</b>


paragraph?'


<b>A. support</b> <b>B. prospect</b> <b>C. history</b> <b>D. visit</b>


<b>Câu 43: You can be happy if your surgeon can operate because it means ________.</b>


<b>A. he thinks your condition may be incurable</b>


<b>B. he is a good doctor</b>


<b>C. he thinks you will survive</b>


<b>D. you are getting better already</b>


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<b>Câu 44: A. precision</b> <b>B. disaster</b> <b>C. tsunami</b> <b>D. epidemic</b>


<b>Câu 45: A. democracy</b> <b>B. committee</b> <b>C. proficiency</b> <b>D. television</b>


<i><b>Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to</b></i>
<i><b>indicate the correct word for each of the blanks from 46 to 50.</b></i>


<b>KEEPING FIT</b>



<b>Bodies are made to move! They are not ___ (46)___ for sitting around in front</b>
of the television or reading magazines. Keeping fit doesn't mean have to be a
<b>super-athlete, and even ___ (47)___ exercise can give you a lot of fun. When you are fit</b>
and healthy, you will find you look better and feel better. You will develop more
energy and self-confidence.


Every time you move, you are exercising. The human body is designed to bend,
<b>stretch, run, jump and climb. ___ (48)___ it does, the stronger and fitter it will</b>
become. Best of all, exercise is fun. It's what your body likes doing most-keeping on
the move.


Physical exercise is not only good for your body. People who take regular exercise are
usually happier, more relaxed and more alert than people who sit around all day. Try an
experiment-next time you are in a bad mood, go for a walk or play a ball game in the park.
See how much better you feel after an hour.


<b>A good ___ (49)___ of achievement is yet another benefit of exercise. People feel</b>
good about themselves when they know they have improved their fitness. People who
exercise regularly will tell you that they find they have more energy to enjoy life. So
<b>have ___ (50)___ you'll soon see and feel the benefits.</b>


<b>Câu 46: A. planned</b> <b>B. designed</b> <b>C. programmed</b> <b>D. caused</b>


<b>Câu 47: A. a few</b> <b>B. a little</b> <b>C. little</b> <b>D. few</b>


<b>Câu 48: A. more and more B. the more</b> <b>C. more</b> <b>D. moreover</b>


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<b>Câu 50: A. a run</b> <b>B. a trial</b> <b>C. a go</b> <b>D. a start</b>



<b>ĐÁP ÁN</b>


<b>1</b> <b>2</b> <b>3</b> <b>4</b> <b>5</b> <b>6</b> <b>7</b> <b>8</b> <b>9</b> <b>10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20</b>


<b>A</b>


<b>B</b>


<b>C</b>


<b>D</b>


<b>21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40</b>


<b>A</b>


<b>B</b>


<b>C</b>


<b>D</b>


<b>41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50</b>


<b>A</b>


<b>B</b>


<b>C</b>



<b>D</b>


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