CSP 15

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Đề ôn luyện thi vào lớp 10 Chuyên Sư phạm số 15

Quiz ID: 6488

Question 1 (Question ID: 13-256380)


Choose the word which has the underlined part pronounced differently from the others.
A. delete
B. defame
C. deplete
D. denim
Question 2 (Question ID: 13-256381)
Choose the word which has the underlined part pronounced differently from the others.
A. paragraph
B. infographic
C. telegraphy
D. metaphor
Question 3 (Question ID: 13-688459)
Choose the word that differs from the rest in the position of the main stress.
A. reinvasion
B. television
C. redivision
D. imprecision
Question 4 (Question ID: 13-256383)
Choose the word that differs from the rest in the position of the main stress.
A. allegedly
B. supposedly
C. purportedly
D. flusteredly
Question 5 (Question ID: 13-688461)
Choose the word that differs from the rest in the position of the main stress.
A. bullet
B. coupon
C. choir
D. facade

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Question 6 (Question ID: 13-202211)
He _____ the illusion that he will live to be a hundred.
A. grows
B. relishes
C. develops
D. cherishes
Question 7 (Question ID: 13-202435)
_____ native to Europe, the daisy has now spread throughout most of North America.
A. Although
B. If it were
C. In spite of
D. That it is
Question 8 (Question ID: 13-202436)
I need to _____ your offer very carefully before I make a decision.
A. look over
B. see out
C. figure out
D. mull over
Question 9 (Question ID: 13-202448)
It took Dane a long time to understand what was going on. He's usually _____ than that, isn't
it?
A. round the bend
B. harder and faster
C. easier on the ear
D. quicker on the uptake
Question 10 (Question ID: 13-200376)
Why are you so mad? ~ You _____ me you weren't coming to dinner. I waited for you for two
hours.
A. should tell
B. ought to tell
C. should have told
D. should be told
Question 11 (Question ID: 13-204358)
Although she would have preferred to carry on working, my mum _____ her career in order to
have children.
A. devoted
B. repealed
C. sacrificed
D. abolished

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Question 12 (Question ID: 13-204359)
I find the offer quite ______ but I think I'd rather study at Oxford.
A. tempting
B. desirous
C. inclined
D. envious
Question 13 (Question ID: 13-204360)
I don't normally like noisy clubs, but I had a sudden _____ to see what the Blue Parrot was
like.
A. force
B. motive
C. pressure
D. impulse
Question 14 (Question ID: 13-204367)
I wish you would stop wasting so much on your computer games and do something like a little
more _____.
A. welcome
B. enviable
C. feasible
D. worthwhile
Question 15 (Question ID: 13-204372)
He _____ us on the last day of the congress so his presence at the opening ceremony was
something of a surprise.
A. must have joined
B. was to join
C. had to join
D. should join

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Question 16 (Question ID: 13-256503)
Complete the sentence by changing the form of the word in capitals.
Alicia Rhett was an actress who rose to international (STAR) Q16.1.................... in the 1939 film
Gone With the Wind. In the film, which enjoyed (PHENOMENON) Q16.2.................... success
and is among the most popular ever made, she played the part of India Wilkes, the serious young
woman whose love for the dull and timid (CENTRE) Q16.3.................... character, Charles
Hamilton, is spurned in favour of Scarlett O’Hara. Despite the film’s (LAST)
Q16.4.................... acclaim, however, it was to be her only screen role.
While Alicia later insisted that she ‘enjoyed the experience (IMMENSE) Q16.5....................’, she
was unsuited to the life of a Hollywood star. An intensely private individual, she lacked the drive
and ambition of (CONTEMPORARY) Q16.6.................... like Joan Crawford or Bette Davis, and
went on to reject all subsequent roles from agents and (PRODUCE) Q16.7..................... Though
fans continued to hound her with requests for (SIGN) Q16.8.................... photographs seven
decades later, letters went (ANSWER) Q16.9.................... and requests for interviews were seldom
granted.
Instead, Alicia concentrated her energies on a long-standing talent for painting and soon acquired a
(CONSIDER) Q16.10.................... reputation with her portraits of debutantes, society presidents
and other members of Charleston's aristocracy.

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Question 17 (Question ID: 13-256547)
Complete the passage with the words given.
Legal fight hits music pirates
The global recording industry has launched its largest wave of legal Q17.1.................... against
people suspected of Q17.2.................... music files on the internet. The latest move by the
International Federation of the Phonographic Industry (IFPI) Q17.3.................... 2,100 alleged
uploaders using peer-to-peer (P2P) networks in 16 nations Q17.4.................... the UK, France,
Germany and Italy. Thousands of people have agreed to pay compensation since the campaign
began. In the US, civil lawsuits have been Q17.5.................... against more than 15,597 people since
September 2003 and there have been 3,590 settlements. 'This is a significant Q17.6.................... of
our enforcement actions against people who are uploading and distributing Q17.7....................
music on p2p networks,' said IFPI chief John Kennedy. 'Thousands of people - mostly internet-
savvy men in their 20s or 30s - have learned to their Q17.8.................... the legal and financial risks
involved in file-sharing copyrighted music in large quantities.' Individual cases are generally brought
by the national associations representing the recording industry, and in some cases by the labels,
Q17.9.................... civil complaints. The UK record industry has so far brought 97 cases, with a
Q17.10.................... 65 covered by the latest action. More than 140,000 in compensation has been
paid to the British Phonographic Industry by 71 individuals. Those who fail to resolve cases face
civil court action.

Q17.1. A. activity B. action C. acts D. acting

Q17.2. A. downloading B. using C. stealing D. sharing

Q17.3. A. targeted B. aimed C. directed D. pointed

Q17.4. A. including B. throughout C. with D. such

Q17.5. A. carried B. active C. brought D. instigated

Q17.6. A. increase B. result C. escalation D. feature

Q17.7. A. registered B. trademark C. illegal D. copyrighted

Q17.8. A. fortune B. charge C. benefit D. cost

Q17.9. A. for B. with C. as D. in

Q17.10. A. another B. additional C. newly D. further

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Question 18 (Question ID: 13-256583)
Read the text below and look carefully at each sentence. Find errors at each sentence and correct
them ( there may be MORE THAN ONE error or NO errors in each sentence ).

( 1 ) Retailers are bearing the brunt of the Brexit trade disruptions in the same time that the sector is
being hammered by Covid. ( 2 ) More than seven out of 10 retailers say they are experienced Brexit-
related supply-chain disruption, compared to 75pc of builders and 72pc of industrial businesses,
according to Bank of Ireland's 'Economic Pulse' report on the health of the economy. ( 3 ) On the
demand side, services whose range from banking to hotels say they have been worst hit. ( 4 )
Almost one-in-five service-sector businesses report reduced demand from UK customers as a result
of Brexit, compared with 15pc among retailers and 13pc in industry. ( 5 ) The Suez Canal blockage
places extra pressure on already strained supply chains right across Europe. ( 6 ) That's according to
a report from Moody's analysts over the weekend. ( 7 ) They see 'just-in-time manufacturers',
notably in the car industry, as most vulnerable, better than any of Ireland's main sectors. ( 8 )
Moody's analysts are optimism the effects of the Suez blockage would be short-lived. ( 9 ) However,
with about 8. 5bn of commodities, industrial inputs and consumer products trapped on ships, costs
are rising with each day the canal remains closed.

Line Từ lỗi Phương án sửa

Question 19 (Question ID: 13-49909)


Fill in each of the numbered blanks in the following passage with ONE suitable word.
People who are Q19.1.................... of sleep lose energy and become quick-tempered. After two days
without sleep, a person finds Q19.2.................... lengthy concentration becomes difficult. He can
force Q19.3.................... to perform tasks well for short periods, but he is easily Q19.4....................
from them. He makes many Q19.5...................., especially at routine tasks, and his attention slips at
Q19.6..................... Every “sleepless” person experiences periods in which he Q19.7.................... off
for a few seconds or more. He Q19.8.................... completely asleep unless he is kept active
continuously.
People who go on suffering Q19.9.................... sleep deprivation more than three days have great
trouble thinking, seeing and hearing clearly. They have periods of hallucination during which they
see things that do not really exist. They also confuse day-dreams with real life and
Q19.10.................... track of their thoughts in the middle of a sentence.

Reading the following passage and complete the tasks.

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LOOKING IN THE TELESCOPE
A story is told that around 400 years ago some children were fooling around in an eye glass shop.
They noticed that when they placed lenses one on top of the other, they were able to see a
considerable distance. They played around with the concept for a while, experimenting with what
happened when they varied the distance between the lenses. Hans Lippershey, the Dutch lens
maker who eventually applied for the first telescope patent, credits children as having been his
motivation for the invention of the first telescope.
The first telescopes built in the early 1600s were very primitive inventions allowing the user to see
around 3-times further than the naked eye. It was not too long however, until Italian astronomer
Galileo heard about the invention ‘that through use of correctly-positioned lenses, allowed people
to see things a long way away’. The tools used in the manufacturing of the first refracting telescope
was all Galileo needed to know and within 24 hours he had developed a better one. In fact, the
process of improvements Galileo made on Lippershey’s telescope were quite dramatic. Whereas the
original version had a magnification of 3, the new telescope had a magnification of around 30.
Galileo achieved these extraordinary results by figuring out the combination of the positions of the
lenses and also by making his own lenses which were of better quality. Although he originally
thought they were stars, the better quality lenses – and some scientific analysis – enabled him to
eventually use his telescopes to see the moons of Jupiter. Galileo’s refracting telescopes – so-called
due to the way they handled the light that passed through them – were the standard at that time.
Some 70 years later, British scientist Isaac Newton, explored the way a prism refracts1 white light
into an array of colors. He recognised that a lens was a circular prism and that the separation of
colors limited the effectiveness of the telescopes in use at the time. Newton created a Reflective
Telescope, one that used a dish-shaped or parabolic mirror to collect light and concentrate the image
before it was visible in the eyepiece. Thus, lenses used for magnification in telescopes were replaced
by mirrors. Mirrors have since been the standard for telescopes. In fact, according to telescope
researcher Dr. Carl Addams, the basic designs of telescopes have not changed much in the last 100
years. What has changed however, is the way technology has been used to improve them. For
example, the larger telescopes in the world today are around 10 metres in diameter and the mirrors
placed within them are so finely polished that even at the microscopic level there are no scratches or
bumps on them at all. To achieve such a flawless surface requires a very expensive process that
operates with the utmost precision.
The mid 1700s, saw the discovery and production of the Achromatic telescope. This type of
telescope differed from previous ones in the way it handled the different wavelengths of light. The
first person who succeeded in making achromatic refracting telescopes seems to have been the
Englishman, Chester Moore Hall. The telescope design used two pieces of special optical glass
known as crown and flint Each side of each piece was ground and polished and then the two pieces
were assembled together. Achromatic lenses bring two wavelengths – typically red and blue – into
focus in the same plane. Makers of achromatic telescopes had difficulty locating disks of flint glass
of suitable purity needed to construct them. In the late 1700s, prizes were offered by the French
Academy of Sciences for any chemist or glass-manufacturer that could create perfect discs of
optical flint glass however, no one was able to provide a large disk of suitable purity and clarity.

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Currently the largest telescopes are around eight to ten metres in size. These extremely expensive
and sophisticated pieces of equipment are located primarily throughout Europe and America. Dr
Addams believes that the telescopes of the future will be a gigantic improvement in what is
currently considered state-of-the-art. Telescopes that are 20 or 30 metres in diameter are currently
being planned, and there has been a suggestion put forward by a European firm that they would like
to build a 100-metre telescope. Says Addams, ‘The quality of the glass needed to build a 100 meter
telescope is like building a lens the size of a football field and having the largest bump in that
football field being a ten-thousandth of a human hair’. The engineering and technology required to
build such a flawless reflective surface is most impressive.
1: The separation or change of direction of a ray of light when passed through a glass of water.

Question 20 (Question ID: 13-698715)


According to the writer, the first telescope was _____
A. invented by children.
B. made by a lens maker.
C. a reflective telescope.
D. quite a complex piece of equipment.
Question 21 (Question ID: 13-698716)
The writer states that Galileo _____
A. improved on the design of the first telescope.
B. created the first reflective telescope.
C. took 24 hours to make a reflective telescope.
D. allowed people to see 3 times further than the first telescope.
Question 22 (Question ID: 13-698717)
The Galileo telescope was better than the first telescope because it _____
A. used mirrors rather than glass.
B. was longer than the first telescope.
C. used better lens positioning and quality.
D. used better quality lenses and glass.
Question 23 (Question ID: 13-698718)
The writer states that today large telescopes are _____
A. 20 or 30 metres in size.
B. as big as 100 metres.
C. very costly items.
D. as good as will ever be built.

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Question 24 (Question ID: 13-698719)
Large, powerful telescopes are difficult to build because _____
A. designs have not changed in nearly 100 years.
B. it is difficult to locate the flint glass needed for them.
C. the area needed to house the telescope is simply too large.
D. the lenses must be extremely reflective.
Question 25 (Question ID: 13-698720)
Classify the following features as belonging to. You may use each option more than once.

A. the Achromatic telescope


B. the Reflective telescope
C. the Refracting telescope

The first telescopes made. Q25.1....................


Uses a series of lenses one on top of the other. Q25.2....................
Highly polished lenses. Q25.3....................
First use of mirrors to collect light. Q25.4....................
Two pieces of glass stuck together. Q25.5....................
Question 26 (Question ID: 13-698726)
Complete the summary below using words from the passage.
Choose NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS from the passage for each answer.
There have been a number of changes in telescopes since they were first invented. For example,
Galileo’s telescope increased magnification of the previously made telescope by a factor of 30. He
did this by altering the lenses Q26.1.................... and also constructing lenses Q26.2.....................
Other improvements followed but the most significant step forward, and still a major factor today in
telescope design, has been the inclusion of Q26.3.....................

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Read the following passage and choose which of the headings from A - N match the blanks.
There are two extra headings, which do not match any of the paragraphs.
List of headings
A. An unexpected preference for modern items
B. Two distinct reasons for selection in one type of museum
C. The growing cost of housing museum exhibits
D. The growing importance of collections for research purposes
E. The global size of the problem
F. Why some collections are unsafe
G. Why not all museums are the same
H. The need to show as much as possible to visitors
I. How unexpected items are dealt with
K. The decision-making difficulties of one curator
L. The two rules of museums
M. Who owns the museum exhibits?
N. A lengthy, but necessary task
Question 27 (Question ID: 13-257689)
Behind the scenes at the museum
With more and more of what museums own ending up behind locked doors, curators are hatching
plans to widen access to their collections
1. Q27.1....................
When, in 1983, the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History, in Washington, DC, decided
it had run out of space, it began transferring part of its collection from the cramped attic and
basement rooms where the specimens had been languishing to an out-of-town warehouse.
Restoring those specimens to pristine condition was a monumental task. One member of staff, for
example, spent six months doing nothing but gluing the legs back on to crane flies. But 30m items
—and seven years—later, the job was done.
2. Q27.2....................
At least for the moment. For the Smithsonian owns 130m plants, animals, rocks and fossils, and
that number is growing at 2-3% a year. On a global scale, however, such numbers are not
exceptional. The Natural History Museum in London has 80m specimens. And, in a slightly
different scientific context, the Science Museum next door to it has 300,000 objects recording the
history of science and technology. Deciding what to do with these huge accumulations of things is
becoming a pressing problem. They cannot be thrown away, but only a tiny fraction can be put on
display.
3. Q27.3....................
The huge, invisible collections behind the scenes at science and natural history museums are the
result of the dual roles of these institutions. On the one hand, they are places for the public to go
and gawp. On the other, they are places of research—and researchers are not interested merely in
the big, showy things that curators like to reveal to the public.
4. Q27.4....................

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Blythe House in West London, the Science Museum's main storage facility, has, as might be
expected, cabinets full of early astronomical instruments such as astrolabes, celestial globes and
orreries. But it is also home to such curios as Canopic jars, which were used by the ancient
Egyptians to store embalmed viscera. And the museum is custodian to things that are dangerous. It
holds a lot of the equipment of Sir William Crookes, a 19th-century scientist who built the first
cathode-ray tubes, experimented with radium, and also discovered thallium—an extremely
poisonous element. He was a sloppy worker. All his equipment was contaminated with radioactive
materials, but he worked in an age when nobody knew about the malevolent effects of radioactivity.
5. Q27.5....................
Neil Brown is the senior curator for classical physics, time and microscopes at the Science Museum.
He spends his professional life looking for objects that illustrate some aspect of scientific and
technological development. And it is often small things he looks for—objects associated with a
particular place, researcher or event. Collections of computers, and domestic appliances such as
television sets and washing machines, are growing especially fast. But the rapid pace of
technological change, and the volume of new objects, makes it increasingly hard to identify what
future generations will regard as significant. There were originally, for example, three different
versions of the video-cassette recorder, and nobody knew at the time which was going to win. And
who, in the 1970s, would have realised the enormous effect the computer would have by the turn of
the century?
5. Q27.6....................
The public is often surprised at the Science Museum's interest in recent objects. Mr Brown says he
frequently turns down antique brass and mahogany electrical instruments. “I say, it's very nice but
no, I don't want it, because our stores are full of them. But when you are finished with that
aluminium and plastic digital thing we'd be interested in that. People double-take.” Sure enough, a
random scan of the museum's recent accessions reveals the following items: the Atomic domestic
coffee maker, a 114-piece DIY toolkit with canvas case, and a green beer bottle.
6. Q27.7....................
Natural history museums collect for a different reason. Their accumulations are part of attempts to
identify and understand the natural world. Some of the plants and animals they hold are “type
specimens”. In other words, they are the standard reference unit, like a reference weight or length,
for the species in question. Other specimens are valuable because of their age. One of the most
famous demonstrations of natural selection in action was made using museum specimens. A study
of moths collected over a long period of time showed that their wings became darker (which made
them less visible to insectivorous birds) as the industrial revolution made Britain more polluted.
7. Q27.8....................
Year after year, the value of such collections quietly and reliably increases, as researchers find uses
that would have been unimaginable to those who started them a century or two ago. Genetic
analysis, pharmaceutical development, biomimetics (engineering that mimics nature to produce new
designs) and biodiversity mapping are all developments that would have been unimaginable to the
museums' founders.
8. Q27.9....................
But as the collections grow older, they grow bigger. Insects may be small, but there are millions of
them, and entomologists would like to catalogue every one. And when the reference material is a

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pair of giraffes or a blue whale (each vertebra being almost the size of a chair and the jawbone
weighing at least half a tonne), space becomes a problem. That is why museums such as the
Smithsonian are increasingly forced to turn to out-of-town storage facilities. But museums that
show the public only a small fraction of their material risk losing the fickle goodwill of governments
and the public, which they need to keep running. Hence the determination of so many museums to
make their back-room collections more widely available.
Question 28 (Question ID: 13-211431)
Complete the second sentence using the word given so that it has the same meaning to the first.
The rocketing prices have proved too much for most salaried people. (cope)
=> ............

Question 29 (Question ID: 13-211428)


Complete the second sentence using the word given so that it has the same meaning to the first.
The young actress was very nervous before the audition. (butterflies)
=> ..........

Question 30 (Question ID: 13-220169)


Complete the second sentence using the word given so that it has the same meaning to the first.
He causes so much trouble that we can do nothing besides from leaving him to worry and
suffer the unpleasant effect of his own actions. (juice)
=> As .........

Question 31 (Question ID: 13-220168)


Complete the second sentence using the word given so that it has the same meaning to the first.
The boys fixed all their attention on what the teacher was saying in order not to miss any small
details. (zeroed)
=> ..........

Question 32 (Question ID: 13-220167)


Complete the second sentence using the word given so that it has the same meaning to the first.
The club has been very successful since the beginning of the season. (on)
=> ..........

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Question 33 (Question ID: 13-221844)
Complete the second sentence so that it has the same meaning to the first.
A new flu vaccine has been on trial since the beginning of the year.
=> They ..........

Question 34 (Question ID: 13-221843)


Complete the second sentence so that it has the same meaning to the first.
He declared his disapproval of the behavior of some of his supporters.
=> He let it ..........

Question 35 (Question ID: 13-688677)


Complete the second sentence so that it has a similar meaning to the first one.
They didn't ask me anything about my plans for the summer.
=> Not ............

Question 36 (Question ID: 13-257742)


Complete the second sentence so that it has a similar meaning to the first one.
Managing the company will probably be much more complicated than they say.
=> Managing the company should not be anything ..........

Question 37 (Question ID: 13-173935)


Complete the second sentence so that it has a similar meaning to the first sentence.
Peter hadn't expected to see so many foreigners at the party.
=> It came as ..........

Question 38 (Question ID: 13-688683)


Write a paragraph of approximately 140 words to answer the following question.
Is it better to have a few close friends or a large group of friends?

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Đáp án (Answer Key)
Quiz ID: 6488

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Question 1. D Question 2. B
Question 3. B Question 4. D
Question 5. D Question 6. D
Question 7. A Question 8. D
Question 9. D Question 10. C
Question 11. C Question 12. A
Question 13. D Question 14. D
Question 15. B Question 16.
16.1 stardom
16.2 phenomenal
16.3 central
16.4 lasting
16.5 immensely
16.6 contemporaries
16.7 producers
16.8 signed
16.9 unanswered
16.10 considerable
Question 17. Question 18.
17.1 B 17.2 D 17.3 A 17.4 A Read the text below and look carefully at each
17.5 C 17.6 C 17.7 D 17.8 D sentence. Find errors at each sentence and
17.9 C 17.10 D correct them ( there may be MORE THAN
ONE error or NO errors in each sentence ).

( 1 ) Retailers are bearing the brunt of the


Brexit trade disruptions in (at) the same time
that the sector is being hammered by Covid. ( 2
) More than seven out of 10 retailers say they

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are experienced (experiencing) Brexit-related
supply-chain disruption, compared to 75pc of
builders and 72pc of industrial businesses,
according to Bank of Ireland's 'Economic Pulse'
report on the health of the economy. ( 3 ) On
the demand side, services whose (which/that)
range from banking to hotels say they have
been worst hit. ( 4 ) Almost one-in-five service-
sector businesses report reduced demand from
UK customers as a result of Brexit, compared
with (to) 15pc among retailers and 13pc in
industry. ( 5 ) The Suez Canal blockage places
extra pressure on already strained supply
chains right across Europe. ( 6 ) That's
according to a report from Moody's analysts
over the weekend. ( 7 ) They see 'just-in-time
manufacturers', notably in the car industry, as
most vulnerable, better (rather) than any of
Ireland's main sectors. ( 8 ) Moody's analysts
are optimism (optimistic) the effects of the
Suez blockage would (will) be short-lived. ( 9 )
However, with about 8. 5bn of commodities,
industrial inputs and consumer products
trapped on ships, costs are rising with each day
the canal remains closed.
Question 19. Question 20. B
19.1 deprived / short Question 21. A
19.2 that Question 22. C
19.3 himself Question 23. C
19.4 distracted Question 24. D
19.5 mistakes Question 25.
19.6 times 25.1 C
19.7 dozes / switches / drops 25.2 C
19.8 falls 25.3 A
19.9 from 25.4 B
19.10 lose 25.5 A
Question 26. Question 27.
26.1 positions 27.1 N
26.2 of better quality / with better quality 27.2 E
26.3 mirrors 27.3 L

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27.4 F
27.5 K
27.6 A
27.7 B
27.8 D
27.9 H
Question 28. Question 29.
Most salaried people haven't been able to The young actress had butterflies in her
cope with the rocketing prices. stomach before the audition.
Question 30. Question 31.
As he causes so much trouble, there's The boys zeroed in on what the teacher
nothing we can do now besides from was saying in order not to miss any small
letting him stew in his own juice. details.
As he causes so much trouble, we can do Question 32.
nothing besides from letting him stew in Since the beginning of the season, the club
his own juice. has been on the up and up.
Since the beginning of the season, the
club's been on the up and up.
Question 33. Question 34.
They have been testing a new flu vaccine He let it be known that he disapproved of
since the beginning of the year. the behavior of some of his supporters.
They've been testing a new flu vaccine Question 35.
since the beginning of the year. Not a single question did they ask me
about my plans for the summer.
Not any question did they ask me about
my plans for the summer.
Question 36. Question 37.
Managing the company should not be It came as a surprise to Peter to see so
anything as easy as they say. many foreigners at the party.
It came as a surprise when Peter saw so
many foreigners at the party.

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