Continuous assessment 1 - Đề cương ôn tập | Đhọc Hoa Sen
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Ongoing Assessment 1
1. Complete the text. Write one word in each field. Are you keen 1
- you know, those sausages in a long bread roll? So, how 2 hot
dogs do you think you can eat for dinner? 3
is a restaurant in New York called Nathan’s, which is famous 4
its hot dog eating competition. It’s very popular 5 customers and about
twenty people take part every year. On 4 July, all of the competitors stand behind 6 long table. A lot of
other customers stand and watch. There 7
some big plates of hot dogs on the table. There are also 8
drinks, but not many. They haven’t got 9
time to eat the hot dogs because the clock
stops after ten minutes. A lot 10
the competitors stop eating before then, but most of them finish. An
American called Joey Chestnut holds the record with 69 hot dogs in ten minutes.
(wb – 52-Review Unit 4)
2. Read the text and complete it with the correct words. Use one word in each gap.
Welcome to Glastonbudget It 1
raining, but there are black clouds in the sky. There is music, just like Glastonbury, but
this isn’t Glastonbury. For one thing, it’s only May, and the Glastonbury Festival is 2 June. This
is Glastonbudget, a music festival similar 3
Glastonbury, but not quite the same. People 4
watching the Artic Monkeys on the main stage right now it’s the Antartic Monkeys. Lisa Gaga 5
singing on the second stage. These bands are tribute bands – they look and sound exactly like
the real thing. Glastonbudget is a three-day festival, and you 6 camp there, just like at
Glastonbury. There are cafes and restaurants where you can 7
breakfast, lunch and dinner too. So, 8
you fancy going to a music festival? The problem with Glastonbury is that it’s very 9
to buy tickets. Glastonbudget 10
cost as much and the music is just as good.
(wb – 42- Exam Skills Trainer 2) Ongoing Assessment 1
3. Choose the correct answers
Krakow’s Main Square is one of 1
largest squares in Europe. It is also one of the 2
beautiful. In the middle of the square, there’s a large building called the Cloth Hall. 3
the Cloth Hall, there are lot of shops for tourists. Thcere’s a museum under the building, and if you 4
the stairs to the floor, there’s an art gallery. Next 5 the Cloth Hall, there’s
a statue of Adam Mickiewicz, a famous Polish writer. Along the sides of the square are many other buildings, some of them older 6 the Cloth Hall and some are 7 modern. The square is quite 8
to the train station, so it’s easy to get to. But if you don’t want to go 9 foot, you can always a 10 a taxi. 1 a the b these c those 2 a more b most c very 3 a Indoors b Inside c Into 4 a go above b go over c go up 5 a from b of c to 6 a as b than c that 7 a more b most c the 8 a close b far c next 9 a at b in c on 10 a catch b go c take (wb-62-Review Unit 5)
4. Read the text and add one missing word in each gap. Kashgar Sunday Market Kashgar is 1
city in the west of China, near the border with Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan. It isn’t easy to get 2
Kashgar because there’s a desert to the south and mountain on the other three sides. You can go 3
bus from the nearest big city, Urumqi, but the journey take three days. 4
do people go there? Because of the market. Kashgar has probably the 5
incredible Sunday market. Farmers from all around bring their products to the market, so there is a 6
of different food. There are also people selling clothes – there are stalls full 7
hats! This is a typical street market, so there aren’t 8
fixed prices on the products - customers
have to argue with the sellers. The crowds start to arrive as soon as the market opens 9 Sunday morning. There are only 10
tourists because of the long and uncomfortable journey.
(wb-65-Exam Skills Trainer 3)
5. Complete the text. Write one word in each space.
26-year-old Chase Dellwo is in hospital. 1
week, a bear nearly killed him. Chase and his brother 2
in the country at the time, but they 3
together. Chase was at the bottom
of a hill, and his brother was at the top. They wanted to catch some animals. The animals were about 100 metres from Chase. He walked 4
them until there were only 30 metres away, and then he suddenly
stopped. There was a bear lying on the ground in front of him. It 5
see him because it was a sleep. Chase started to move 6
from the bear, but he wasn’t quick enough. The bear opened his eyes. Ongoing Assessment 1 Now it 7
see Chase, and it attacked him. Chase was very frightened. Then, he remembered a story
from a magazine. He put his arm in the back of the bear’s mouth. The bear 8 very surprised and it
stopped attacking him. It looked at Chase for a moment, then it turned around and walked 9 the
woods. Chase’s brother carries him 10
his car and took him to hospital. Chase is very lucky to be alive. (wb-74-Review Unit 6)
6. Choose the correct answers. 1
that the first mobile phone call happened more than forty years ago? When Martin Cooper 2
the call on 3 April 1973, his phone 3
like the mobile phones we use today. It 4
thin and stylish like a smartphone, and he 5
put it in his pocket because it was too
big. Instead, he had to carry the 1.1 kg phone in one hand and its enormous battery in the other. The phone had a keypad with numbers, not a 6
for making calls. Today’s mobile phones are more like computers
than telephones. Most homes have 7
, which make it easy to connect to the internet. This means that we can 8
all kinds of files. We can listen to music on our phones, or send the music to 9
for everyone to hear. The only problem with today’s smartphones is that we never seem to 10 them off. 1 a You know b Did you know c You knew 2 a made b make c makes 3 a doesn’t look b not look c didn’t look 4 a not be b wasn’t c didn’t be 5 a couldn’t b didn’t can c not could 6 a case b monitor c touch-screen 7 a chargers b printers c routers 8 a download b enter c install 9 a built-in 4G b motion sensors c wireless speakers 10 a break b turn c log (wb-84-Review Unit 7) Ongoing Assessment 1 Answer Sheet Passage 1 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Passage 2 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Passage 3 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Passage 4 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Passage 5 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Passage 6 1 2 3 4 5 Ongoing Assessment 1 6 7 8 9 10 Ongoing Assessment 1 Passage 1 wb – 52- 1 on Review Unit 4) 2 many 3 There 4 for 5 with 6 a 7 are 8 some 9 much 10 of Passage 2 wb – 42- 1 isn’t Exam Skills Trainer 2 2 in 3 to 4 aren’t 5 is 6 can 7 have 8 do 9 difficult/expensive 10 doesn’t Passage 3 wb-62- 1 a Review Unit 5 2 b 3 b 4 c 5 c 6 b 7 a 8 a 9 c 10 c Passage 4 wb-65- 1 a Exam Skills Trainer 3 2 to 3 by 4 Why 5 most 6 lot 7 of 8 any 9 on 10 few Passage 5 wb-74- 1 Last Review Unit 6 2 were 3 weren’t 4 towards 5 didn’t/couldn’t 6 away 7 could 8 was 9 into 10 to Passage 6 wb-84- 1 b Review Unit 7 2 a 3 c 4 b 5 a 6 c Ongoing Assessment 1 7 c 8 a 9 c 10 b