Đề thi thử THPT Quốc Gia 2023 môn Anh số 15
Đề thi thử tiếng Anh THPT Quốc gia 2023 có đáp án
Đề thi thử THPT Quốc gia 2023 môn tiếng Anh phát triển từ đề minh họa có đáp án bao gồm nhiều dạng bài tập tiếng Anh lớp 12 khác nhau giúp các em ôn tập những kỹ năng làm bài thi hiệu quả.
Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the word whose underlined part differs from the other three in pronunciation in each of the following questions.
Question 1. A. mouth B. route C. house D. south
Question 2. A. mother B. thunder C. within D. wither
Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the word that differs from the other three in the position of the primary stress in each of the following questions.
Question 3. A. derive B. provide C. depend D. master
Question 4. A. medicine B. addition C. survival D. semester
Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to each of the following questions.
Question 5. The _______ of many species is leading to their extinction.
A. exploit
B. exploiting
C. exploitation
D. exploitative
Question 6. Students often use their calculators to solve tricky questions, _______ ?
A. don’t they
B. do they
C. do we
D. don’t we
Question 7. Although she knows only a mere _______ of Spanish, she still manages to communicate her ideas well.
A. command
B. level
C. smattering
D. knack
Question 8. The Christmas pudding _______ during winner; and its price was once outrageously expensive.
A. served
B. has served
C. was served
D. had served
Question 9. I think that married couples should be financially independent _______ their parents.
A. on
B. of
C. with
D. to
Question 10. We need to buy a bigger table but it has to be _______ than the one we saw yesterday.
A. the cheapest
B. cheap
C. cheaper
D. more cheaper
Question 11. Online _______ hate speech results from conflicts among individuals in society.
A. critical
B. inflammatory
C. pent-up
D. hefty
Question 12. Airplanes________ in the twentieth century is one of the sources of pollution.
A. invented
B. to invent
C. inventing
D. to inventing
Question 13. After all the guests had left, she returned to her room, turned on the light and _______ on the bed.
A. was lying
B. had lain
C. lay
D. lies
Question 14. Three hours is a long time in the cinema, longer than most audiences are prepared to _______.
A. take over
B. put up with
C. cut back on
D. turn out
Question 15. Bill will not be allowed to go to the zoo _______.
A. once he had stopped crying
B. as soon as he stopped crying
C. by the time he stops crying
D. until he stops crying
Question 16. They know that she has been suffering from mental health problems, but it’s high time to tell her a few _______ truths.
A. office
B. school
C. government
D. home
Question 17. Mary had a _______ of pride on her face, when she won the award for her project and beat all her classmates.
A. glow
B. beam
C. ray
D. shine
Question 18. He denied _______ the window of the classroom.
A. to break
B. break
C. to breaking
D. breaking
Question 19. All work had to be done by _____ hand when there were no modern machines.
A. Ø
B. an
C. a
D. the
Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the word(s) CLOSEST in meaning to the underlined bold word(s) in each of the following questions.
Question 20. One of my distant relatives is wavering between buying a house in the inner city or moving away.
A. weakening
B. hesitating
C. growing
D. approving
Question 21. Many of her friends admitted that this song was in vogue at that time.
A. clear
B. poor
C. popular
D. infamous
Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the word(s) OPPOSITE in meaning to the underlined word(s) in each of the following questions.
Question 22. My teacher tried to bolster my confidence by saying that I had an aptitude for English.
A. reinforce
B. discourage
C. clarify
D. represent
Question 23. Although he had prepared carefully for the IELTS speaking test, he got cold feet when asked an array of questions with abstract concepts.
A. had a fever
B. stayed confident
C. got nervous
D. became aggressive
Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the most suitable response to complete each of the following exchanges.
Question 24. Jane is talking to Mike, her husband.
Jane: “ _______ ”
Mike: “Don’t worry. I will hold another job.”
A. It’s freezing cold outside.
B. Our son is mischievous.
C. This month’s electricity bill is too high.
D. I was unfairly treated at work.
Question 25. Two students are talking about space exploration.
Ted: “I believe that one day people will be able to live on another planet.”
Kate: “ _______. Scientists have found some places outside the Earth which are habitable.”
A. Positively.
B. I can agree with you anymore.
C. I doubt it.
D. With uncertainty.
Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to choose the word or phrase that best fits each of the numbered blanks from 26 to 30.
THE FUTURE OF WORK
According to a leading business consultancy, 3–14% of the global workforce will need to switch to a different occupation within the next 10-15 years, and all workers will need to adapt as their occupations (26) _______ alongside increasingly capable machines. Dr Stella Pachidi from Cambridge Judge Business School believes that some of the most fundamental changes are happening as a result of the 'algorithmication' of jobs (27) _______ are dependent on data rather than on production - the so-called knowledge economy. Algorithms are capable of learning from data to (28) _______ tasks that previously needed human judgement, such as reading legal contracts, analysing medical scans and gathering market intelligence. 'In (29) _______ cases, they can outperform humans,' says Pachidi.
'(30) _______ these enhancements are not without consequences,' says Pachidi. 'If routine cognitive tasks are taken over by AI, how do professions develop their future experts?' she asks. 'One way of learning about a job is “legitimate peripheral participation” - a novice stands next to experts and learns by observation. If this isn't happening, then you need to find new ways to learn.'
(Adapted from Cambridge IELTS Academic 16 by Cambridge University Press)
Question 26. A. unfold B. evolve C. enlarge D. advance
Question 27. A. who B. where C. whom D. that
Question 28. A. conform B. undertake C. deal D. adhere
Question 29. A. many B. every C. all of D. much
Question 30. A. And B. So C. Nor D. But
Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to each of the questions from 31 to 35.
Maria Alcalá of Madrid speaks for many Mediterranean people when she says that “a meal without olive oil would be a bore.” No one knows when the Mediterranean civilizations initially fell in love with olives. That occurred before recorded history. However, there is evidence that the cultivation of olive trees began in countries around the Mediterranean Sea in approximately 4000 B.C., and 2,000 years after that people in the eastern Mediterranean region began to produce oil from olives. The Mediterranean still accounts for 99 percent of all world olive oil production.
From ancient times until today, the basic process of producing the oil is the same. First, whole olives are crushed. Then, the liquid is separated from the solids. After that, the valuable oil is separated from the water. Many olive growers maintain their ancient traditions and still harvest the olives by hand. “We harvest in the traditional way,” says Don Celso, an olive farmer from Tuscany, Italy. "It would be less expensive to do it with machines, but it's more a social thing. Twenty people come to help with the harvest, and we pay them in oil."
Olive oil has had a variety of uses through its long history. In ancient times, olive oil was used as money and as medicine. It was even used during war-heated up and dropped down on attackers. It is still used in religious ceremonies. It is great for protecting the freshness of fish and cheese. There are even olive oil lamps and olive oil soaps. Olive oil enhances the lives of people everywhere. Its benefits, recently confirmed by science, were already understood in ancient times. Mediterranean people are happy to share their secret with the world.
(Adapted from Reading Explorer 2 by Paul Maclntyre)
Question 31. Which could be the best title for the passage?
A. An oil for all.
B. Olive oil: A cure for every disease.
C. How to produce oil from indigenous trees?
D. The best kept secret.
Question 32. The word ‘civilisations’ in paragraph 1 is closest in meaning to _______.
A. empires
B. societies
C. subcultures
D. species
Question 33. According to the passage, which of the following has olive oil NOT been used for?
A. currency
B. cosmetics
C. weapons
D. pharmaceuticals
Question 34. The word ‘it’ in paragraph 2 refers to _______.
A. olive
B. way
C. machine
D. harvest
Question 35. Which of the following is true, according to the passage?
A. There is strong evidence suggesting that the first olive trees were planted exactly 4,000 years BC.
B. The Mediterranean accounts for all of the worlds’ olive oil consumption even to this day.
C. The exact time that olives became popular among Mediterranean cultures remains unclear.
D. The way the oil is produced today is quite different from that in the past.
Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to each of the questions from 36 to 42.
I grew up with precious little choice about anything. You ate what you were given, went to school where you were told, wore your sister's hand-me-downs. And twice a year - birthday, Christmas - you got a present. We weren't poor at all but that was entirely normal and I don't remember feeling remotely deprived. Today, as we can see all around us, children seem to have everything - designer clothes, computer games, fussy eating habits and the attention span of itchy gnats. A report yesterday from the Children's Society found that one in ten kids now has mental illness diagnosed and it concluded that materialistic consumer pressure may be partly to blame, with children from poor backgrounds the main victims.
Where is it coming from, this consumer pressure? First, from television, and the false dreams on offer there. Children from poor backgrounds, as well as having less money to buy the latest clothes or electronic games, are more likely to have parents without time to spend with them, and homes without access to outside space, so are far more likely to end up spending hours in front of the telly soaking up adverts alongside the easy gratification offered by cartoon; fantasy or drama. You cannot just blame the parents for this; many will be working hard, with no choice, just to put food on the table; after all, how many can afford a house with a garden in a city or suburb these days?
Of course parents can correct bouts of consumerism in their children by teaching them what is and is not affordable, but why subject them to the clever traps of marketing people in the first place? Pressure is bad enough as it is, from schoolfriends and celebrity excess, without allowing some of the cleverest adult minds in the sharpest advertising agencies in the world to manipulate them as well.
But why is it in a child's interests to be treated like a consumer? It has yet to be proven that giving even adults a wide range of choices improves their lives. In many instances, from too many yoghurts in the supermarket all the way up to a supposed choice of doctor or school, it is just confusing and stressful. I think the fewer, carefully selected, choices we can give young children, the more we help them. Watch the exhausted face of a six-year-old confronted by all this year's Christmas presents, without the time to play with any of them for more than a few minutes, and see what I mean.
We are spoilt, and we are spoiling our children. They need to be taught to look down as well as up; to choose to feel fortunate, and not envious -and to recognise that gratification isn't as easy as buying a new toy or switching on a dream. And, as my mother would have been delighted to hear, it will not cost a thing.
(Adapted from Traveller by H.Q. Mitchell)
Question 36. Which best serves as the title for the passage?
A. Poor children are falling victim.
B. I want less choice, not more.
C. The cons of consumerism.
D. A message to my mother.
Question 37. The word “deprived” in paragraph 1 is closest in meaning to _______.
A. negative
B. disappointed
C. disadvantaged
D. affluent
Question 38. According to paragraph 2, what is the major concern surrounding poor children being exposed to the television?
A. They are less likely to spend time in the garden.
B. They are less likely to buy clothes and electronic games.
C. They will become addicted to cartoons and fantasy stories.
D. They will see a lot of television commercials.
Question 39. The word ‘gratification’ in paragraph 2 mostly means _______.
A. satisfaction
B. boredom
C. interest
D. assumption
Question 40. The word ‘them’ in paragraph 3 refers to _______.
A. adverts
B. parents
C. children
D. bouts
Question 41. Which of the following is true, according to the passage?
A. The materialistic culture we live in is wholly responsible for the rise in mental illness among children.
B. Children from impoverished backgrounds are less likely to feel the negative effects of consumerism.
C. Television contributes more to creating consumer pressure than other media outlets.
D. Content on television portrays an unrealistic view of the world we live in.
Question 42. Which of the following can be inferred from the passage?
A. Having a great amount of choice is not always beneficial.
B. Buying children a new toy can free them from the pressure of consumerism.
C. Children are more spoilt today than they were ten years ago.
D. Most six year olds receive too many gifts during Christmas time.
Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the underlined part that needs correction in each of the following questions.
Question 43. Not Scotland again! It rains every day last time. I want to go somewhere sunny this summer.
A. Not
B. rains
C. somewhere
D. sunny
Question 44. As it does not have a blood supply, the cornea takes their oxygen directly from the air.
A. have
B. supply
C. their
D. directly
Question 45. This is an exhausting list of grammar rules you will need to know for the exam.
A. exhausting
B. rules
C. to know
D. the
Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the sentence that is closest in meaning to each of the following questions.
Question 46. It is a good idea for every employee to take part in the annual workshop.
A. Every employee must take part in the annual workshop.
B. Every employee can take part in the annual workshop.
C. Every employee should take part in the annual workshop.
D. Every employee may take part in the annual workshop.
Question 47. Mother asked me: “Did you play with your friends yesterday?”
A. Mother asked me if I had played with my friends the day before.
B. Mother asked me if I played with my friends the day before.
C. Mother asked me if I had played with your friends the day before.
D. Mother asked if you had played with my friends the day before.
Question 48. I haven’t been to this coffee shop for a long time.
A. I came to this coffee shop last time.
B. It has been a long time since I last came to this coffee shop.
C. I have been to this coffee shop since then.
D. I will never return to this coffee shop.
Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the sentence that best combines each pair of sentences in the following questions.
Question 49: He lacked commitment to the job. He wasn't considered for promotion.
A. But for his lack of commitment to the job, he would have been considered for promotion.
B. Suppose that he lacked commitment to the job, he wouldn't be considered for promotion.
C. If it had not been for his lack of commitment to the job, he would be considered for promotion.
D. Without his commitment to the job, he would be considered for promotion.
Question 50. The virus is infectious. Some young people still congregate in the main square in the evenings.
A. However infectious the virus is, some young people still congregate in the main square in the evenings.
B. If it weren’t for the infectious virus, some young people would congregate in the main square in the evenings.
C. Only when the virus is infectious do some young people congregate in the main square in the evenings.
D. So infectious is the virus that some young people congregate in the main square in the evenings.
ĐÁP ÁN
1. B | 2. A | 3. D | 4. A | 5. C | 6. A | 7. C | 8. C | 9. B | 10. C |
11. B | 12. A | 13. C | 14. B | 15. D | 16. D | 17. A | 18. D | 19. A | 20. B |
21. C | 22. B | 23. B | 24. C | 25. A | 26. B | 27. D | 28. B | 29. A | 30. D |
31. A | 32. B | 33. B | 34. D | 35. C | 36. B | 37. C | 38. D | 39. A | 40. C |
41. D | 42. A | 43. B | 44. C | 45. A | 46. C | 47. A | 48. B | 49. A | 50. A |
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