Đề thi môn Tiếng Anh Lớp 11 năm 2016 - Trường THPT chuyên Đại học Sư phạm

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Đề thi môn Tiếng Anh Lớp 11 năm 2016 - Trường THPT chuyên Đại học Sư phạm
 HỘI CÁC TRƯỜNG CHUYÊN 	ĐỀ THI MÔN: TIẾNG ANH
VÙNG DUYÊN HẢI VÀ ĐỒNG BẰNG BẮC BỘ 	 KHỐI 11 - NĂM 2016	 
TRƯỜNG THPT CHUYÊN - ĐHSPHN 
	 	Thời gian làm bài: 180’
I. LISTENING 
Part 1: You will hear a conversation between two senior students who have to organize a competition for the university’s Open Day. First you have some time to look at questions 1 – 5 and choose the answer that best fits according to what you hear. 
1. Clare and Grant must arrange a competition which will especially interest 
	A.	school students.
	B.	Open Day committee members.
	C.	Open Day visitors.
2. What will the prize be?
	A.	an iPod
	B.	an iPad
	C.	an iPhone
3. Who will be responsible for buying the prize?
	A. 	a university department
	B.	Clare and Grant
	C. 	Rick Smith
4. What is the most important aspect for entrants in the competition?
	A. 	fun
	B. 	guesswork 
	C. 	ability
5. In the science fiction series on television, what is on the other side of the gateway? 
	A. 	a portal
	B.	a new world of education
	C. 	a different time period
Part 2. You will hear part of an interview with Stan Levin, a dance critic, about a modern ballet production involving animals. For questions 6 – 10, decide whether the following statements are true (T) or false (F). You now have some time to look at part 2. 
6. The ballet being discussed here is believed to have caused considerable controversy. 
7. It appears that the function of the dogs in the ballet is to act as a contrast to the human characters. 
8. Stan believes that the increasing use of technology in dance is creating a new art form. 
9. The aspect of the ballet which is of greatest interest to audiences is the way the dogs copy the actions of one character. 
10. The audience’s unwillingness to accept the dogs caused the lapse in mood during the performance Stan saw. 
Part 3: You will hear an interview with a Marketing Director. First you have some time to look at questions 11 – 20 then fill in the blanks with missing information. Write NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS and/or A NUMBER for each answer. 
Lecture on (11.) ________________
Example: tourism and (12.) ________________
Common misconception is that marketing points to (13.) ________________ in what is being provided. 
Marketing is actually essential in maintaining (14.) ________________
Selling a product is easier because it is (15.) ________________ and customers don’t have such different (16.) ________________. 
Aim: offer service beyond hopes of (17.) ________________
Important to 
a. keep informed 
b. (18.) ________________
One way to achieve this: (19.) ________________
(20.) ________________ must always be available for any queries or problems. 
II. LEXICO-GRAMMAR
Part 1. Choose the word or phrases that best completes each sentence.
1. It won’t ________ matter if you arrive a few minutes late. 
	A. greatly	B. largely	C. grandly	D. considerably
2. All three TV channels provide extensive ________ of sporting events. 
	A. vision	B. coverage	C. broadcast	D. network
3. Time was running out, so the committee had to make a ________ decision. 
	A. brief	B. snap	C. sharp	D. curt
4. Because of an unfortunate ________ your order was not despatched by the date requested. 
	A. hindrance	B. oversight	C. negligence	D. transgression
5. Tempers began to ________ as the lorries forced their way through the picket lines. 
	A. break	B. fray	C. grate	D. fire
6. The government has made no ________ in the flight against inflation; indeed, the situation has worsened recently. 
	A. headway	B. effect	C. avail	D. triumph
7. The completion of the new Town Hall has been ________ owing to a strike. 
	A. held off	B. held down	C. held up	D. held on
8. People under 21 years old are not ________ to join this club. 
	A. desirable	B. eligible	C. advisable	D. admissible
9. News of the attempted coup began to ________ through to the outside world. 
	A. pour	B. filter	C. broadcast	D. drip
10. My secretary was ________ to have typed those letters already. 
	A. asked	B. supposed	C. requested	D. ordered
11. To prevent flooding in winter the water flowing from the dam is constantly ________ by a computer. 
	A. managed	B. graded	C. monitored	D. conducted
12. The children’s bad behavior in class ________ their teacher beyond endurance. 
	A. disturbed	B. exasperated	C. distracted	D. aroused
13. He bought that house, ________ that he would inherit money under his uncle’s will. 
	A. considering	B. assuming	 C. estimating	D. accounting
14. The postal services were ________ for several weeks by the strike. 
	A. disrupted	B. perturbed	C. disarrayed	D. deranged
15. You may borrow my bicycle ________ you are careful with it. 
	A. even if	B. as long as	 C. as much as	 D. expecting
16. How many people do you think his car would ________?
	A. occupy	B. hold	C. fit	D. load
17. Financial worries gradually ________ his health and he was obliged to retire early.
	A. undermined	B. disabled	C. exhausted	D. invalidated
18. If you weren’t satisfied, you ________ have complained to the manager.
	A. can	B. could	C. need	D. will
19. I don’t feel like buying a ________ in a poke; we’d better check the content. 
	A. pig	B. cattle	C. buffalo	D. ox
20. If you want to have a good flat in London, you have to pay through the ______ for it. 
 A. mouth 	 B. eye 	 C. nose 	 D. head
Part 2: There is a mistake in the four underlined parts of each sentence. Find the mistakes (A, B, C or D) and correct them. 
1. Hyde Park, the family estate of Franklin D. Roosevelt, sets on top of a bluff 
	A	B
overlooking the Hudson River. 
	C	D
2. If it receives enough rain at the proper time, hay will grow quickly as grass.
	A	B	C	D
3. It is essential that the temperature is not elevated to a point where the substance 
	A	B
formed may become unstable and decompose into its constituent elements.
 	C	 D
4. Although no country has exactly the same folk music like that of any other, it is 
	A	B C
significant that similar songs exist among widely separated people.
	D
5. Whitman wrote Leaves of Grass as a tribute to the Civil War soldiers who 
had laid on the battlefields and whom he had seen while serving as an army nurse.
	A	 B	 C	 D
Part 3. Fill in each gap with one preposition or particle. 
Steve had been working for his company for five years when he put in for a promotion and he was delighted when he was offered a managerial post. But not long after he had taken up the job, the company changed (1)_____ to a new method of accounting. Steve began suffering from two classic symptoms of stress – headaches and insomnia. “I’d thought I would enjoy the increased responsibility, but I felt I was completely (2) snowed ________” he says. “I was toiling (3) __________ until eight o’clock every night just to keep on top of the paperwork.”
Steve’s experience is far from unique. Many situations at work can cause stress, ranging from taking on new duties or responsibility to poor working conditions, lack of training, fear of being laid (4) __________ and even harassment and bullying. In the current climate of rapid change, many organizations seek flexibility and so expect workers to be able to turn their hands to a variety of jobs and this too can be very stressful for employees. So what can you do about it if you think you’re suffering from workplace stress? The good news is that employers are legally obliged to ensure employees’ health, safety and welfare at work and this includes bringing (5) __________ measures to reduce stress. 
Part 4. Read the text below. Use the word given in CAPITALS to form a word that fits in the space. There is an example at the beginning (0). Write your answers on the separate answer sheet.
It is (0) commonly( COMMON) believed that a break from everyday routine can only do you good. Every summer, you can spot prospective (1)________ (HOLIDAY) at airports and waiting for car ferries. They are (2) ________(MISTAKE) - you can tell them a mile away by their sun hats and hopeful expressions.
For all their optimism, what often actually happens can be a rude (3) ________(WAKE) from the blissful holiday dreams of the rest of the year. Sunburn, mosquitoes and (4) ________( FORESEE) expenses can make you think twice about 	how (5) ________(BENEFIT) getting away from it all really is.
The fact is, the (6) ________(LIKELY) of something going wrong is maximised when 	you are abroad and, (7) ________(FORTUNE), your ability to deal with crisis and catastrophe is often minimised. This could be because of language problems, (8) ________( FAMILIAR) with the culture, or simply a different climate, all of which make everything seem different and unreal.
So, what is the answer? (9) ________(DOUBT), an annual escape from 	
normal working life is a very positive thing. However, the (10) ________(WISE) of seeking an exotic location is questionable when you think of al the things that can go wrong.
III. READING 
Part 1. Read the following passages and decide which answer best fits each gap. 
History Set in Stone
Many species of animals and plants have disappeared from the earth. They have died out, or become (0) _______. But sometimes animals or plant (1) _______ can be found buried in rocks. These are called fossils. Imprints in rocks (2) (_______ prints, for example) are also called fossils.
Not every creature (3) _______ as a fossil. Many simply rot away completely and leave no (4) _______ of their existence. Because many creatures and plants have disappeared without leaving any fossils, we will never know anything about them.
The study of fossils, or palaeontology, to give it its scientific (5)	 _______, became established at the beginning of the nineteenth century. Before this research began, people did not believe that fossils had once been (6) _______. Large fossil teeth were seen as evidence of a race of giants in the past, while ammonites, a very (7) _______ type of fossil which you might easily find yourself on a beach or among rocks, were called snakestones because of their snake-like (8) _______. People believed that snakes had been (9) _______ to stone by a miracle.
The most famous fossils of all are the dinosaurs. There are, of course, no dinosaurs on (10) _______ in zoos. They were not (11) _______to extinction by humans as some animals have been, but became extinct millions of years before our own species developed. The reason why the dinosaurs became extinct is still a mystery. Many theories have (12) _______ the disappearance of dinosaurs with major (13) _______ change.
One possibility is that a gigantic meteorite crashed into the earth (14) _______so much dust into the atmosphere that the (15) _______ of sunlight was reduced. The temperature would have fallen and, as a consequence, many types of plants and animals would have become extinct.
0 	A extinct	B. extinguished	C. remote	D. obsolete
1	A. bones	B. evidence	C. parts	D. remains
2	A. toe	B. paw	C. palm	D. hand
3	A. lasts	B. survives	C. continues	D. develops
4	A. marks	B. proof	C. remnants	D. trace
5	A. name	B. term	C. description	D. status
6	A. alive	B. physical	C. living	D. flesh
7	A. common	B. usual	C. normal	D. frequent
8	A. type	B. manner	C. shape	D. figure
9	A. petrified	B. made	C. ossified	D. turned
10	A. exhibition	B. appearance	C. sight	D. display
11	A. hunted	B. brought	C. chased	D. driven
12	A. connected	B. joined	C. explained	D. initiated
13	A. climatic	B. temporal	C. weather	D. seasonal
14	A. disturbing	B. displacing	C. putting	D. pushing
15	A. heat	B. amount	C. degree	D. period
Part 2. Read the text below and think of the word which best fits each gap. Use only one word in each gap. 
CHEATING AT COMPUTER GAMES
It's something that gamer will tell you. Computer games shouldn't be so hard that they drive you mad, but nor should they be so easy that they (1) _________ to offer enough of a challenge. Inevitably, however, you get stuck sometimes. What do you do then? Ask the internet, of course. Many other gamers have figured (2) _________ what to do and posted the solution online. The answer is just a (3) _________ clicks away.
Purists say this is cheating. They argue that solving a puzzle yourself, (4) _________ gamers had to do in the old days, might have (5) _________ longer, but it was more satisfying. (6) _________ you know that detailed 'walkthroughs’ are available online,
free (7) _________ charge, for almost any game, the temptation is to ask for virtual help (8) _________ the first sign of trouble, (9) _________ robs players of a true sense of achievement.
I say this is rubbish. (10) _________ a search and downloading a solution has many merits.
It stops me throwing my controller at the screen, and makes me more likely to finish games rather than giving up when they start to get tricky. So all in all, I get better value for money. The search is also a reminder that I'm a member of a broader community, many of whom have been this way before.
Part 3. Read the following passage and choose the answer that best fits
The Change in Art after World War II
	In the 1930s, before the onset of war, rationing, and army drafts, art reflected the somewhat serene lives of the people. Mundane scenes such as factory workers or office settings were routinely painted to depict the era. They were reminiscent of the people living a routine life in middle-class, ordinary settings. Yet in 1939, fighting spread throughout the world. War and the subsequent struggles for power, existence, and peace brought great unrest for countries around the world following World War II. With the changes wrought by war, many countries felt the need to convey a new, postwar image. It was from this need that abstract expressionism evolved as a modem and recognized art form.
	Abstract artist Jackson Pollock gave a clear picture of the emergence of abstract art when he said, “The modern painter cannot express this age-the airplane, the atom bomb, the radio—in the old forms of the Renaissance or of any other past culture. Each finds its own technique." It was the art of this revolutionary painter that helped define the abstract movement. Postwar artists like Pollock developed free-form aesthetics by abandoning conventions of past styles while maintaining focused, self-reflexive qualities and the feelings of each individual artist. The method for creating abstract art involved paintings free of religious, political, and popular subjects. The paintings were instead comprised of bright colors and shapes, characterized by personal expression rather than the development of a predictable art style. Much personal empowerment grew out of this profound freedom of expression.
	After World War II and during the uncertainty of the Cold War, the world tottered back and forth between stability and instability. People felt great anxiety amidst their growing prosperity. They viewed the modem art of the time as bold, triumphant, and self-assured. Although the work seemed to exude postwar confidence, artists portrayed profound unease and viewed their work much differently. Their images were the expression of desperation in the midst of a tough reality inspired by unrest and contrasted with material growth. The psychology of the abstract art form emerged from this altered mindset that was at once strong and vulnerable, confident and subdued. Consequently, artists at the time had the need to feel their experiences in ways that were intense, immediate, direct, subtle, unified, and vivid. "Painting is a state of being  painting is self-discovery. Every good artist paints what he is," stated Pollock. Abstract expressionism, as the new art style became known, was a way to embody the artist's yearning for stability in an unstable world as well as a way to emphasize his own personal ideas and use those as expression.
	Pollock's chief ambition in his art was to incorporate opposition. He did this by pairing order with chaos, reason with passion, and modernism with primitivism. Similar to other abstract artists, he preferred to portray notions of the subconscious, giving free reign to forgotten personal memories and psychic impulses. George Tooker, another artist of the time, painted The Subway, which illustrated postwar expectations of individuality and conformity. The affluence of the nation's newfound economic success combined with anxiety over political instability to form a dual consciousness that is said to haunt America's identity still. Each had a set of signature styles that expressed personal and societal isolation of the artist in abstract ways.
	During this time, modem art became identified widely as "American" art, having its focal point primarily on the nation. The Museum of Modem Art in New York began to ship abstract expressionistic works to be displayed in places like Milan, Madrid, Berlin, Amsterdam, Paris, and London. ■ A) Some critics overseas were dismayed, stating that this type of abstract art was not new. ■ B) As this art was practiced elsewhere, they continued by saying it was not good quality painting and was not purely American. ■ C) One writer hailed typical American abstract art as “heir of the pioneer and immigrant." ■ D) Another saw the artists as heroic rebels, comparing them to movie stars of the same caliber as James Dean and Marlon Brando or teen idols such as Elvis Presley.
	As the US was celebrating a highly contradictory mix of freedom and individuality, abstract expressionism became a political pawn of sorts. The art reflected the ambiguity of the world at the time as war-ravaged countries worked to recover their economy and people worked to achieve a normal state of life. The artists of abstract expressionism effectively captured the emotion of the nation as it emerged from a time of stress and tried to form an updated image.
The author discusses art from the 1930s in order to
demonstrate the drastic change in art
explain the change in America's culture
describe the hardships of the people
list the events that transpired
The word “conventions” in the passage is closest in meaning to
 perceptions
 agreements
 situations
 traditions
3. Which of the following can be inferred from paragraph 2 about the change in art?
	A. Artists sought ways to distinguish their art from previous artists.
	B. The painters used traditional design elements in whole new ways.
	C. Consistency in art overpowered the need for originality.
	D. Artwork reflected the personal empowerment of the artist.
4. The word “exude” in the passage is closest in meaning to
	A. discourage
	B. portray
	C. replace
	D. instruct
5. Which of the sentences below best expresses the essential information in the highlighted sentence in the passage? Incorrect choices change the meaning in important ways or leave out essential information.
	A. Abstract expressionism represented both the artist’s desires for certainty and the artist’s own personal expressions.
	B. This new art form revealed the artist’s personal style and confidence of expression.
	C. The Abstract expressionist artist used bold strategies in his art to reveal inner feelings and personal expressions.
	D. This new style showed the artist’s determination in life along with his desire for personal freedom.
6. According to paragraph 3, although the work of abstract artists appeared confident, it was in fact
	A. identical to the nation’s certainty
	B. representative of the country’s wealth
	C. reflective of the anxiety of the era
	D. expressive of the artists’ low self-esteem
7. All of the following are mentioned paragraph 4 as Pollock’s techniques painting EXCEPT:
	A. Stark displays of contrasts and opposition 
	B. Feelings and impulses from within the mind
	C. Emotion mixed with ordinary scenes
	D. Intense emotions from personal experiences
8. The word “each” in the passage refers to 
	A. artist
	B. dual consciousness
	C. physic impulse
	D. notion of the unconscious
9. According to paragraph 5,

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