1. You are waiting for your flight to New York. Where should you go to?
Gate 20
San Francisco
The main exit
Hospitality Suite B
2. You have left your car in the car park for 40 minutes. How much will you pay?
50p
£1
£2
Nothing
3. You want to buy a pair of shoes. Where should you go to?
The third floor
The fourth floor
The ground floor
The second floor
Mục khác:
4. You hear an announcement on an aircraft. What is it informing passengers about?
A new film
A holdup
Latest news around the world
An accident
5. You hear a woman explaining how to make tea. What does she suggest?
Warm the inside of the tea pot
Do not add milk or sugar
Brew for a minute
Use fresh kettle
6. You bought a CD player for your car but it didn’t work. You telephone the dealer and hear a
message. What should you do?
Order a new one
Leave a message
Wait to speak to someone
Call a new number
7. You hear an announcement at a train station. How can passengers get to Swansea Airport?
Take a buffet car from Cardiff
Take the shuttle bus from Newport station
Travel in the three front carriages only
Take a free train from Newcastle
8. You want to order a CD from a shop. You telephone the shop and hear a recorded message.
What should you do next?
Wait
Leave a message
Call the manager
Call another number
PART 2: Questions 9-20 Directions: In this part, you will hear THREE conversations. The
conversations will not be repeated. There are four questions for each conversation. For each
question, choose the correct answer
Questions 9 to 12. Listen to a woman talk to a friend about her vacation.
9. Which of the following did the woman do on vacation?
She went directly to Yellowstone.
She stopped at the Devil’s Tower National Monument.
She made a few stops before going on to Yellowstone.
She spent a few weeks in Laramie.
10. How did the woman probably travel on vacation?
By train
By plane
By bicycle
By car
11. What does the woman say about Yellowstone?
It has got spectacular mountains.
It’s magnificent.
It’s the oldest and largest national park in the US
It’s really hot in the spring.
12. Which of the following is a well-known sight in Yellowstone?
Old Faithful
Wyoming
Devil’s Tower National Monument
Laramie
Questions 13 to 16. Listen to the conversation between two friends.
13. Where did the woman learn about dolphins?
During a trip that she took
From a television program
In a book
From a lecture
14. Why do dolphins use clicks?
To recognize objects in the water
To communicate with other dolphins
To learn human language
To express fear
15. Approximately how many human commands have some dolphins learned?
Five hundred
Five
Fifteen
Fifty
16. What does the man say about dolphin intelligence?
We are beginning to learn how much they have.
It is limited
It is greater than human intelligence.
It is less than previously thought.
Questions 17 to 20. Listen to the conversation between two friends who are making plans.
17. What is the woman planning to do this Saturday?
Eat in the cafeteria and study
Go to see a play
Attend a football game alone
Go to a sporting event
18. Why does the man want to go to the football game?
It’s the final game of the season.
It’s better than the drama department’s play.
It’s close to the cafeteria.
It’s a very important game.
19. What happens at the same time with the music department’s concert?
A play by the drama department
Dinner in the cafeteria
A game with a group of people
A study group meeting
20. When does the man plan to study?
Saturday night
C. Sunday afternoon
D. Maybe next weekend
B. After dinner
PART 3: Questions 21-35 Directions: In this part, you will hear THREE talks or lectures. The
talks or lectures will not be repeated. There are five questions for each talk or lecture. For each
question, choose the right answer.
Questions 21 to 25.
21. When did the plague happen in Europe?
In the 13th century
In the 17th century
In the 15th century
In the 14th century
22. What directly caused the plague in humans?
Rats
A virus
Bacteria
Fleas
23. How many Europeans were killed?
20 million people
25 million people
29 million people
35 million people
24. According to the scientists, what may be responsible for the ending of plague?
Good medical services in Europe
The effect of rat killing campaign
A special gene mutation
Some luck
25. What is the lecture mainly about?
The consequences of plague in England
Plague outbreaks throughout the ages
The true origin of the plague
How people survived the plague
Questions 26 to 30.
26. What is the lecture mainly about?
The first human settlements in America
Why humans migrated to North America
What happened during the world’s last ice age
How the first people came to the Americas
27. Why is Bering Strait land bridge no longer around?
It was covered with ice.
It was flooded by water.
It collapsed in an earthquake.
It eventually fell apart.
28. What is the main topic of the lecture?
Support for an alternative theory
The process of a great human migration
The complete refutation of a theory
The role of the Bering Strait land bridge
29. According to the professor, how did the first people come to the Americas?
Across the Bering Strait land bridge
By boat from Europe
Across the ice glaciers
By boat from Asia
30. What does the professor say about the Bering Strait land bridge?
The earliest Americans crossed it.
The theory is entirely inaccurate.
It only existed for a short time.
People probably went across it.
Questions 31 to 35.
31. What is the main idea of the lecture?
Experts are rarely more accurate than crowds
The Wisdom of Crowds is a questionable
Crowds are wiser than most people think.
Gameshow contestants should trust the audience
32. What does the professor imply about guessing the average IQ of a university student?
Most individuals wouldn’t know the answer.
A group wouldn’t be able to guess correctly.
Crowds are guaranteed to get the right answer.
People are likely to give similar guesses.
33. According to the theory, how will an above average individual perform against the crowd
over time?
He might beat the crowd most times.
He will match the crowd’s answer.
He will not do better than the crowd.
He will usually do better than the crowd.
34. What does the game show example illustrate?
Crowds guess less accurately than individuals.
Experts give good advice.
Contestants should choose the expert.
Contestants shouldn’t rely on expert advice.
35. What is the professor’s view toward the accuracy of this theory?
He is amazed by it
He is satisfied with it.
He is doubtful about it.
He is concerned about it.