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QUẢNG NAM
ĐỀ CHÍNH THỨC
(Đề thi có 10 trang)
KỲ THI OLYMPIC 24/3
TỈNH QUẢNG NAM NĂM 2021
Môn thi : TIẾNG ANH LỚP 11
Thời gian: 150 phút (không kể thời gian giao đề)
SECTION I: LISTENING. (4.0 pts)
Part 1: Complete the form below.
Write NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS AND/OR A NUMBER for each answer.
STUDENT UNION REGISTRATION FORM
Example: Name: Stefan Unger
Your answers
Degree programme: 1.________________________
Department: 2. _______________________
Leisure activities: 3. ________________________
Type of accommodation: 4. ________________________
Contact number: 5. ________________________
Part 2: You will hear a psychologist being interviewed about friendship. Choose the answer (A, B, C or D) which fits best according to what you hear.
A. are happy to play alone B. prefer to be with their family
C. have rather selfish relationship D. have little idea of ownership
A. change their friends more often B. decide who they want to friends with
C. admire people who don’t keep to rules D. learn to be tolerant of their friends
_
A. tend to focus on their children B. often lose touch with their friends
C. make close friends less easily D. need fewer friends than single people
_
A. to stay in touch with old friends B. to see younger friends more often
C. to have friends who live nearby D. to spend more time with their friends
SECTION II: LEXICAL AND GRAMMAR. (6.0 pts)
Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to each of the following questions.
A. would have had B. would have C. will have D. will have had
A. everything B. all C. only D. just
A. up B. down C. forward D. out
A. keeps B. carries C. takes D. holds
A. penalty B. punishment C. discipline D. condemnation
A. body B. form C. hulk D. soul
A. not anything B. nothing at all C. nothing whatever D. none whatsoever
A. Think of going to Africa B. Imagine to go to Africa
C. If you should go to Africa D. Supposing you went to Africa
A. I could recognize how bad the situation was B. could I recognize how bad was the situation
C. how bad the situation was I recognized D. did I recognize how bad the situation was
A. trained B. appointed C. sponsored D. played
A. being taught B. to be taught C. teaching D. to teach
A. a gorilla B. a horse C. an elephant D. a mountain
A. didn’t B. hadn’t C. mustn’t D. shouldn’t
A. gap B. new C. busy D. graduation
A. graduation B. graduate C. graduating D. graduates
A. grants B. fees C. fares D. scholarships
A. go through the roof B. hit the roof C. raise the roof D. are under one roof
A. cap B. coat C. tongue D. hat
29. Next month when there _______ a full moon, the ocean tides are getting higher.
A. will be B. will have been C. is going to be D. is
A. Founded B. Found C. Finding D. Having found
A. embarrassed B. embarrassing C. embarrassment D. embarrass
A. But for your support B. If you didn’t support me
C. Because of your support D. Had you supported me
A. is known B. known as C. is known as D. it is known as
A. treated B. treating C. who treated D. having treated
A. because of B. although C. because D. in spite of
A. volume B. verse C. chapter D. page
Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the word OPPOSITE in meaning to the underlined word(s) in each of the following questions.
A. proficient B. inconvenient C. ambitious D. unqualified
A. remake B. empty C. refill D. repeat
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Mark the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the word(s) CLOSEST in meaning to the underlined word(s) in each of the following questions.
A. rewards B. opportunities C. motives D. encouragements
A. keep B. destroy C. decrease D. upgrade
SECTION III: READING. (6.0pts)
PART 1: Read the text below and decide which option (A, B, C, or D) best fits each of the numbered gaps. Write your answers on the Answer Sheet. (2.0 pts)
Why people laugh
Sunday May 4th will be World Laughter Day. Dr Madan Kataria, who introduced this annual event, says we need more laughter in our lives to (41) ______ the global rise of stress and loneliness. But
surely that strange sound that we make periodically can’t be the (42) ______ to such problems.
If an alien were to land on our planet and (43) ______ a stroll among a crowd of earthlings, it would
hear a lot of ‘ha-ha’ noises. It might wonder what (44) _______ this strange habit served. If we ask
ourselves what (45) ______ a good laugh, the obvious answer is that it is a response to something
funny. (46) ______ one scientist, Robert Provine, says humour has surprisingly little to (47) ______
with that. Instead, it lies at the (48) ______ of such issues as the perception of self and the evolution
of language and social behaviour.
Robert Provine realised that you cannot capture (49) _______ laughter in the lab because as soon as you (50) ______ it under scrutiny, it vanishes. So, instead, he gathered data by hanging around groups of people, noting when they laughed.
41. A. struggle B. combat C. threaten D. contest
42. A. way B. answer C. end D. response
43. A. make B. get C. walk D. take
44. A. reason B. purpose C. idea D. meaning
45. A. results B. leads C. prompts D. concludes
46. A. However B. Therefore C. As D. But
47. A. go B. bring C. do D. set
48. A. root B. stem C. head D. back
49. A. complete B. authentic C. contemporary D. current
50. A. place B. lay C. stand D. keep
PART 2. Read the text below and decide which option (A, B, C, or D) best fits each of the numbered gaps. Write your answers on the Answer Sheet. (2.0 pts)
Most of us know a little about how babies learn to talk. From the time infants are born, they hear language because their parents talk to them all the time. Between the ages of seven and ten months, most infants begin to make sounds. They repeat the same sounds over and over again. This is called babbling. When babies babble, they are practicing their language.
What happens, though, to children who cannot hear? How do deaf children learn to communicate? Recently, doctors have learned that deaf babies babble with their hands. Laura Ann Petitto, a psychologist, observed three hearing infants with English-speaking parents and two deaf infants with deaf parents using American Sign Language (ASL) to communicate. Dr. Petitto studied the babies three times: at 10, 12, and 14 months. During this time, children really begin to develop their language skills.
After watching and videotaping the children for several hundred hours, the psychologist and her assistants made many important observations. For example, they saw that the hearing children made varied motions with their hands. However, there appeared to be no pattern to these motions. The deaf babies also made different movements with their hands, but these movements were more consistent and deliberate. The deaf babies seemed to make the same hand movements over and over again. During the four-month period, the deaf babies’ hand motions started to resemble some basic hand-shapes used in ASL. The children also seemed to prefer certain hand-shapes.
Hearing infants start first with simple syllable babbling, then put more syllables together to sound like real sentences and questions. Apparently, deaf babies follow this same pattern, too. First, they repeat simple handshapes. Next, they form some simple hand signs and use these movements together to resemble ASL sentences.
Linguists believe that our ability for language is innate. In other words, humans are born with the capacity for language: It does not matter if we are physically able to speak or not. Language can be expressed in different ways for instance, by speech or by sign. Dr. Petitto believes this theory and wants to prove it. She plans to study hearing children who have one deaf parent and one hearing parent. She wants to see what happens when babies have the opportunity to learn both sign language and speech. Does the human brain prefer speech? Some of these studies of hearing babies who have one deaf parent and one hearing parent show that the babies babble equally with their hands and their voices. They also produce their first words, both spoken and signed, at about the same time. More studies in the future may prove that the sign system of the deaf is the physical equivalent of speech.
(Adapted from “Issues for Today” by Lorraine C. Smith and Nancy Nici Mare)
C. at their first experience of language
D. when they first hear their parents talk to them
52. The phrase “the babies” in paragraph 2 refers to ______ in the study.
A. the deaf infants B. the hearing infants
C. the hearing and deaf infants D. the disabled infants
53. The writer mentions “American Sign Language (ASL)” in paragraph 2 as a language ______.
A. used by the deaf to communicate B. used among psychologists
C. especially formed by infants D. widely used by American children
54. The word “resemble” in paragraph 3 refers to ______.
A. studying funny movements B. producing similar movements
C. making initial movements D. creating strange movements
55. It is stated in paragraph 3 that both the deaf and the hearing children made movements with their hand, but ______.
A. only the hearing children made different movements
B. the hearing children only repeated the same hand motions
C. only the deaf children repeated the same hand motions
D. the deaf children made less consistent hand movements
56. According to paragraph 4, hearing infants learn to talk first by ______.
A. eye movements B. hand-shapes C. hand motions D. babbling
57. The word “real” in paragraph 4 mostly means ______.
A. original B. meaningful C. formal D. general
58. It is mentioned in the last paragraph that Dr. Petitto plans to study ______.
A. whether the sign system of the deaf is the physical equivalent of speech
B. whether all children speak and make motions with their hand at the same time
C. the assumption that the human brain prefers sign language to speech
D. what happens when babies have the opportunity to learn both speech and sign language
59. Which of the following statements is TRUE according to the last paragraph?
A. Language cannot be expressed in different ways.
B. The human brain prefers speech.
C. Babies produce spoken words before signed ones.
D. Humans are innately able for language.
60. Which of the following could best serve as the title of the passage?
A. American Sign Language B. Education for Deaf Children
C. How do Children Master Language? D. Language: Is it Always Spoken?
PART 3. Read the text below and decide which option (A, B, C, or D) best fits each of the numbered gaps. Write your answers on the Answer Sheet. (2.0 pts)
THE CREATORS OF GRAMMAR
No student of a foreign language needs to be told that grammar is complex. By changing word sequences and by adding a range of auxiliary verbs and suffixes, we are able to communicate tiny variations in meaning. We can turn a statement into a question, state whether an action has taken place or is soon to take place, and perform many other word tricks to convey subtle differences in meaning. Nor is this complexity inherent to the English language. All languages, even those of so-called 'primitive' tribes have clever grammatical components. The Cherokee pronoun system, for example, can distinguish between 'you and I', 'several other people and I' and 'you, another person and I'. In English, all these meanings are summed up in the one, crude pronoun 'we'. Grammar is universal and plays a part in every language, no matter how widespread it is. So the question which has baffled many linguists is - who created grammar?
At first, it would appear that this question is impossible to answer. To find out how grammar is created, someone needs to be present at the time of a language's creation, documenting its emergence. Many historical linguists are able to trace modern complex languages back to earlier languages, but in order to answer the question of how complex languages are actually formed, the researcher needs to observe how languages are started from scratch. Amazingly, however, this is possible.
Some of the most recent languages evolved due to the Atlantic slave trade. At that time, slaves from a number of different ethnicities were forced to work together under colonizer's rule. Since they had no opportunity to learn each other's languages, they developed a make-shift language called a pidgin. Pidgins are strings of words copied from the language of the landowner. They have little in the way of grammar, and in many cases it is difficult for a listener to deduce when an event happened, and who did what to whom.[A] Speakers need to use circumlocution in order to make their meaning understood.[B] Interestingly, however, all it takes for a pidgin to become a complex language is for a group of children to be exposed to it at the time when they learn their mother tongue.[C] Slave children did not simply copy the strings of words uttered by their elders; they adapted their words to create a new, expressive language.[D] Complex grammar systems which emerge from pidgins are termed creoles, and they are invented by children.
Further evidence of this can be seen in studying sign languages for the deaf. Sign languages are not simply a series of gestures; they utilize the same grammatical machinery that is found in spoken languages. Moreover, there are many different languages used worldwide. The creation of one such language was documented quite recently in Nicaragua. Previously, all deaf people were isolated from each other, but in 1979 a new government introduced schools for the deaf. Although children were taught speech and lip reading in the classroom, in the playgrounds they began to invent their own sign system, using the gestures that they used at home.
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It was basically a pidgin. Each child used the signs differently, and there was no consistent grammar. However, children who joined the school later, when this inventive sign system was already around, developed a quite different sign language. Although it was based on the signs of the older children, the younger children's language was more fluid and compact, and it utilized a large range of grammatical devices to clarify meaning. What is more, all the children used the signs in the same way. A new creole was born. Some linguists believe that many of the world's most established languages were creoles at first. The English past tense -ed ending may have evolved from the verb 'do'. 'It ended' may once have been 'It end-did'. Therefore, it would appear that even the most widespread languages were partly created by children. Children appear to have innate grammatical machinery in their brains, which springs to life when they are first trying to make sense of the world around them. Their minds can serve to create logical, complex structures, even when there is no grammar present for them to copy.
It included standardized word orders and grammatical markers that existed in neither the pidgin language, nor the language of the colonizers.
A. [A] B. [B] C. [C] D. [D]
A. from the very beginning B. in simple cultures
C. by copying something else D. by using written information
A. complicated and expressive B. simple and temporary
C. extensive and diverse D. private and personal
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Grammar is universal and plays a part in every language, no matter how widespread it is.
A. All languages, whether they are spoken by a few people or a lot of people, contain grammar.
B. Some languages include a lot of grammar, whereas other languages contain a little.
C. Languages which contain a lot of grammar are more common that languages that contain
A. natural B. predictable C. imaginable D. uniform
SECTION IV: WRITING. (4.0 pts)
PART 1: Questions 71- 80, complete the second sentence so that it has a similar meaning to the first sentence. Use the word given and other words to complete each sentence. You must use between TWO AND FIVE words. DO NOT CHANGE the word given.
There is an example at the beginning (0). Write your answers in the Answer Sheet. (2.0 pts)
71. People claim that he was the best tennis player of his times. SAID
🡪 He __________________________________________________________.
72. They left early because they didn’t want to get caught in the traffic. AVOID
🡪They left early in _______________________________________________.
73. Why didn’t they tell me about these changes earlier? SHOULD
🡪 I ____________________________________________________________.
74. He had a very traditional upbringing, didn’t he? TRADITIONALLY
🡪 He ___________________________________________________________, wasn’t he?
75. I would like to express my thanks for everything you have done for me. THANKFUL
🡪 I’d like to say__________________________________________________.
76. I supposed you were very tired after your long walk. MUST
🡪 You__________________________________________________________.
77. Martin had difficulty in accepting the loss of his money. HARD
🡪 Martin________________________________________________________.
78. I don’t really like her, even though I admire her achievement. AS
🡪 Much ________________________________________________________.
🡪 Nam ____________________________________________________________.
80. I went to two telephone boxes, but they were both out of order. NEITHER
🡪 I ____________________________________________________________.
PART 2: Questions 81-90, finish each of the following sentences in such a way that it is as similar as possible in meaning to the sentence printed before it.
There is an example at the beginning (0). Write your answers in the Answer Sheet. (2.0 pts)
The film was so boring that I fell asleep.
🡪 The only thing _________________________________________________.
🡪 There has been _________________________________________________.
🡪 It was the pedestrian ____________________________________________.
🡪 He insisted ____________________________________________________.
_
🡪 Not until ______________________________________________________.
🡪 He was not_____________________________________________________.
__
🡪 Having _______________________________________________________.
🡪 Had it not been_________________________________________________.
89. Working for this travel agency will not be possible without a good command of English.
🡪 Unless you have ________________________________________________.
90. How well I sleep depends on how late I go to bed.
🡪 The later______________________________________________________.
***** END OF TEST – BEST OF LUCK *****
SCORING SUMMARY SHEET I. LISTENING: (4.0 pts) Part 1: Question 1 – 5 (2.0pt) | |||
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Part 2: Question 6 – 10. (2.0pt)
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II. LEXICAL AND GRAMMAR (6.0 pts)
Question 11-40 (30 câu x 0,2đ)
11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 |
A | B | D | D | A | A | D | D | D | C | B | B | A | A | A |
26 | 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 | 31 | 32 | 33 | 34 | 35 | 36 | 37 | 38 | 39 | 40 |
B | A | D | D | A | C | A | B | A | C | C | D | B | B | D |
III. READING (6.0 pts)
PART 1. (2.0 pt) Question 41 – 50
41 | 42 | 43 | 44 | 45 | 46 | 47 | 48 | 49 | 50 |
B | B | D | B | C | D | C | A | B | A |
PART 2. (2.0 pt) Question 51 – 60.
51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57 | 58 | 59 | 60 |
B | C | A | B | C | D | B | D | D | D |
PART 3. (2.0 pt) Question 61 – 70.
61 | 62 | 63 | 64 | 65 | 66 | 67 | 68 | 69 | 70 |
A | C | B | D | A | B | A | D | A | D |
IV. WRITING (4.0 pts)
PART 1. (2.0 pt) Question 71 – 80
71. He is said to have been the best tennis player of his time
72. They left early in order to avoid getting/being caught in the traffic
73. I should have been told about these changes earlier.
74. He was traditionally brought up/ was brought up traditionally, wasn’t he?
75. I’d like to say how thankful I was for everything you have done for me.
76. You must have been very tired after your long walk.
77. Martin found it hard to accept the loss of his money.
78. Much as I admire her achievement, I don’t really like her.
79. Nam was the only student to get 10 marks in English for the first semester exam.
80. I went to two telephone boxes, neither of which worked.
PART 2. (2.0 pt) Question 81 – 90.
81. The only thing I am interested in is why he did it.
82. There has been a dramatic rise (increase) in house prices this year.
83. It was the pedestrian who/that asked the policeman a lot of questions.
84. He insisted on seeing the manager.
85. Not until he came into light did I recognize him.
86. He was not able to open the door.
87. Having done all exercises, she went out for a party.
88. Had it not been for the heavy rain, they wouldn’t have cancelled the flight.
89. Unless you have a good command of English, you won't be able to work for this company.
90. The later I go to bed, the better I sleep.
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