Đề thi thử vào lớp 10 môn Tiếng Anh (chuyên) trường THPT Chuyên Nguyễn Huệ lần 3 năm học 2016 - 2017

Đề thi vào lớp 10 môn Tiếng Anh trường chuyên

Mời các bạn học sinh thử sức với Đề thi thử vào lớp 10 môn Tiếng Anh (chuyên) trường THPT Chuyên Nguyễn Huệ lần 3 năm học 2016 - 2017 sau đây để kiểm tra xem khả năng của mình đang ở mức độ nào và đã sẵn sàng cho kỳ thi sắp tới đạt được kết quả tốt nhất chưa.

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  • PRONUNCIATION, VOCABULARY & GRAMMAR
  • Choose the word (A, B, C or D) whose underlined part is pronounced differently from that of the others.
  • 1.
  • 2.
  • 3.
  • Choose the word (A, B, C or D) that differs from the others in the position of the primary stress.
  • 4.
  • 5.
  • Choose the best option (A, B, C or D) to complete each of the following sentences.
  • 6. I’d like to make _______ for crashing your car. Let me pay for the repairs.
  • 7. Thanks for lending me your umbrella; it really came in _______.
  • 8. James never shows his emotions; no matter what happens, he always keeps a stiff upper _______.
  • 9. I got a new baseball _______ yesterday.
  • 10. Eat your vegetables. They’ll _______ you good.
  • 11. Don’t drop your sweet wrapper on the floor, _______?
  • 12. She may have missed the train, _______ she won’t arrive for another hour.
  • 13. I should like to rent a house, modern, comfortable, and _______ in a quiet position.
  • 14. I was disappointed that the restaurant had _______ flowers on the table.
  • 15. _______ write with your left hand when you broke your arm?
  • Complete the sentences with the appropriate phrasal verbs from the box in their correct form. There are two extra ones that you do not need to use.
    put through                 come by                  die down              take over                  bear up             get into           look on                  join in                     give away               call for                carry out              drop off
  • 16. I didn’t think he would _______ so well in that situation.
    bear up
  • 17. Come and help me to carry the boxes! Don’t just stand there _______!
    looking on
  • 18. I watched a horror film on TV last night, but I can’t remember how it ended. I must have _______ before the end.
    dropped off
  • 19. Tomorrow, we will be _______ an experiment to test this theory.
    carrying out
  • 20. Just ask them if you can play and I’m sure they’ll let you _______.
    join in
  • 21. Do you think the wind has _______ enough for us to go sailing without any danger?
    died down
  • 22. Environmentalists are _______ stricter controls on the use of leaded petrol.
    calling for
  • 23. The robber couldn’t explain how he _______ such a large amount of money when the police caught him.
    came by had come by
  • 24. Did you hear about the millionaire who _______ his entire fortune to charity?
    gave away
  • 25. Who is going to _______ the family business when Arstha’s father retires?
    take over
  • Complete the following passage by writing the correct form of the words given in brackets.
    RAIN MAKING

    When it rains, it does not always pour. During a typical storm, a (26. COMPARE) _______ small amount of the lock-up moisture in each cloud reaches the ground as rain. So the idea that human intervention - a rain dance, perhaps - might encourage the sky to give up a little (27. ADD) _______ water has been around since prehistoric times. More recently, would-be rain makers have used a more direct procedure - that of throwing (28. VARY) _______ chemicals out of aero-planes in an effort to wring more rain from the clouds, a practice known as “cloud seeding”. Yet such techniques, which were first developed in the 1940s, are (29. NOTORIETY) _______ difficult to evaluate. It is hard to (30. CERTAIN) _______, for example, how much rain would have fallen anyway. So, despite much anecdotal evidence of the advantages of cloud seeding, which has led to its adoption in more than 40 countries around the world, as far as scientists are concerned, results are still (31. CONCLUSIVE) _______. That could be about to change. For the past three years (32. RESEARCH) _______ have been carrying out the most extensive and (33. RIGOUR) _______ evaluation to date of a revolutionary new technique that will substantially boost the volume of (34. RAIN) _______. The preliminary (35. FIND) _______ of their experiments indicate that solid evidence of the technique’s effectiveness is now within the scientists’ grasp.
  • 26.
    comparatively
  • 27.
    additional
  • 28.
    various
  • 29.
    notoriously
  • 30.
    ascertain
  • 31.
    inconclusive
  • 32.
    researchers
  • 33.
    rigorous
  • 34.
    rainfall
  • 35.
    finding
  • READING COMPREHENSION
  • You are going to read a magazine article on space travel. Five paragraphs have been removed from the article. Choose from the paragraphs A-G the one which fits each gap (51- 55). There is one extra paragraph which you do not need to use. There is an example at the beginning (0).
    CHEAP ACCESS TO SPACE

    Charles Conrad went to the moon with Apollo 12 and circled the Earth in Skylab. But from now on, he is going to aim high for himself. His company, Universal Space Lines, hopes to produce a more economic rocket that will be able to go in space again and again. (0) _____ G _____

    NASA, the U.S, government-owned space program, plans to develop such a rocket. However, the immediate priority is missions to Mars, which will require different technology. So it is more likely that people outside the NASA program will develop re-useable rocket design. Rick Tumlinson runs an independent organization called the Space Frontier Foundation and firmly believes that it is time for business to get involved.

    (36) __________
    So Tumlinson is also in business to prove a point. Space is our destiny, he says, so why not get on with it a bit more eagerly? To this end, the SFF is holding a conference in Los Angeles shortly, to be called Space: Open for Business.

    (37) __________
    Another company, Kistler Aerospace, has similar plans; “Our goal is to become a delivery service to low Earth orbit that will radically re-align the economics of doing business in space. Satellites will be our parcels: our vehicles will be operated in repeated flights with air freights efficiency.”

    (38) __________
    Their own view is that it is impossible for NASA, which is government-owned, to offer an “open frontier”. This is not a matter of budgets or schedules, but of fundamental purpose and design. NASA is “elitist and exclusive”, whereas the SFF believes in opportinities for everyone “a future of endlessly expanding new choices”.

    (39) __________
    Of course, the ex-astronaut and businessman Charles Conrad agrees. “I’m trying to get affordable space transportation up and operative so that everybody can enjoy space. And by the way, the Japanese are hard at work building a space hotel.”

    (40) __________
    If he is right, mass space travel will have arrived by 2050 and space tourism will have become a viable industry. More importantly, the human race will have made serious progress in crossing that final frontier.

    A. Companies will always be looking for profit. For this reason, the SFF is not in favor of American missions to Mars, claiming that there’s nothing in it for investors. At the same time, they do accept that these missions could bring scientific benefits.

    B. He sees the NASA program as a bit of a dinosaur. “25 years after the Wright Brothers, people could buy a commercial plane ticket ... but many years after landing on the moon, we sat around watching old astronauts on TV talking about the good old days.”

    C. In 1997, the SFF ran a survey on the Internet, called “Cheap Access to Space”, where it asked American taxpayers for their views on the U.S space program and on what American’s future priorities should be in space transportation.

    D. U.S government officials don’t see the future for space tourism. Here again, private companies may well prove them wrong. David Ashford, director of Bristol Spaceplanes Limited, once said that space tourism would begin ten years after people stopped laughing at the concept. Recently, he added this striking comment: “people have stopped laughing.”

    E. Charles Conrad is due to speak there. But his company is in fact only one of several that already have blueprints for getting into space and back cheaply. Rotary is working on something that would be launched like a rocket but return like a helicopter. Pioneer Rocket plane believes there could be a million dollar market in delivering packages from one side of the planet to the other in an hour.

    F. They would like to see “irreversible human settlement” in space as soon as possible and maintain that this will only happen through free enterprise. “Building buildings and driving trucks is not what astronauts should be doing; that’s what the private sector does.”

    G “Cheap” is an important word in space technology nowadays and re-useable rockets will be a key way of controlling costs. They will deliver things to orbits, bring stuff back to Earth and then go up again, perhaps with machinery for a space factory, or even carrying tourists.
  • 36.
    B
  • 37.
    E
  • 38.
    C
  • 39.
    F
  • 40.
    D
  • Questions 56-65: Read the following passage and decide which answer A, B, C or D best fits each numbered blank.
    CRITICISM

    It can take a long time to become successful in your chosen field, however (56) _______ you are. One thing you have to be (57) _______ of is that you will face criticism along the way. The world is (58) _______ of people who would rather say something negative than positive. If you’ve made up your (59) _______ to achieve a certain goal, such as writing a novel, don’t let the negative criticism of others (60) _______ you from reaching your target, and let constructive criticism have a positive effect on your work. If someone says you’re totally (61) _______ talent, ignore them. That’s negative criticism. If, however, someone advises you to revise your work and gives you good reasons for doing so, you should (62) _______ their suggestions carefully. There are many film stars who were once out of work. There are many famous novelists who made a complete (63) _______ of their first novel – or who didn’t, but had to (64) _______ approaching hundreds of publishers before they could get it published. Being successful does (65) _______ on luck, to a certain extent. But things are more likely to turn out well if you preserve and stay positive.
  • 41.
  • 42.
  • 43.
  • 44.
  • 45.
  • 46.
  • 47.
  • 48.
  • 49.
  • 50.
  • Read the passage carefully, then fill in each blank with ONE suitable word.
    Maybe you recycle cans, glass, and paper. Do you know that nature recycles, too? One of the things nature (51) _______ is water. Water goes from oceans, lakes, and rivers into the air. Water falls from the air as (52) _______ or snow. Rain and snow eventually find their way back to the oceans. Nature’s recycling program for water is (53) _______ the water cycle.
    The water cycle has four stages: storage, evaporation, precipitation, and runoff. Water on Earth gets stored in oceans, lakes, rivers, ice, and even underground. Water goes from storage into the atmosphere by a (54) _______ called evaporation. When water evaporates, it changes from a liquid (55) _______ a gas, called water vapor. Water vapor goes up into (56) _______ atmosphere. Water returns to the Earth as precipitation in rain or snow by changing into drops of water when the air (57) _______ cold enough. Clouds are collections of water droplets. Most precipitation (58) _______ into the oceans and goes right back into storage.
    Water that falls on land always flows from (59) _______ places to lower ones. This flow is called runoff. Water from land flows into streams. Streams join (60) _______ to make rivers and eventually the water flows into storage in the oceans. Then the water cycle starts all over again.
  • 51.
    recycles
  • 52.
    rain
  • 53.
    called
  • 54.
    process
  • 55.
    into
  • 56.
    the
  • 57.
    gets is
  • 58.
    falls
  • 59.
    high
  • 60.
    together
  • WRITING
  • Finish each of the following sentences in such a way that it means the same as the sentence printed before it.
  • 61. The teachers agreed to introduce the new methods.
    There was_________________________________________________________________________.
    an agreement among the teachers to introduce the new methods
  • 62. There was no need for you to have gone to all that trouble.
    You _____________________________________________________________________________.
    needn't have gone to all that trouble didn't need to go to all that trouble
  • 63. It’s sad, but unemployment is unlikely to go down this year.
    Sad ___________________________________________________________________________.
    as it is, unemployment is unlikely to go down this year
  • 64. You must never mention this secret to him.
    Under ______________________________________.
    no circumstance must you mention this secret to him
  • 65. If you were in the situation I’m in, you’d feel the same.
    If you put ___________________________________________________.
    yourself in my situation, you would feel the same
  • Complete the second sentence so that it has a similar meaning to the first sentence, using the word given. Do not change the word given. You must use between two and five words, including the word given.
  • 66. I was about to leave when she turned up. (POINT)
    I was ____________________________________ when she turned up.
    on the point of leaving
  • 67. I wasn't expecting my colleagues to organise a farewell party on my last day at the company. (TAKEN)
    I ____________________________________ when my colleagues organised a farewell party on my last day at the company.
    was taken by surprise
  • 68. Considering that Luke is so young, you must admit he’s making excellent progress as a musician. (ACOOUNT)
    If you ____________________________________ young Luke is, you must admit he’s making excellent progress as a musician.
    take into account how
  • 69. Peter was in trouble with his boss because he didn’t finish an important project by the deadline. (HOT)
    Peter was ____________________________________ because he didn’t finish an important project by the deadline.
    in hot water
  • 70. You should punish him severely so that others will be afraid to behave as he did. (EXAMPLE)
    You should ____________________________________ so that others will be afraid to behave as he did.
    make an example of him
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