I. Choose the correct answer
1. Most university students.......on campus in their first year.
A. lives B. live C. are living
2. They…..personal computers when my father was a student.
A. hadn’t B. didn’t have C. weren’t having
3. I…. want to be a practicing doctor but now I’m more interested in research.
A. was used to B. used to C. would
4. I finished my essay yesterday but ….it in to the tutor yet.
A. I’ve given B. I haven’t given C. I didn’t give
5. The government has released some…data showing how schools are not providing an adequate education to our children
A. shocking B. shock C. shocked
6. Doctors have.........us to cut down on salt in our diets if we want to reduce the risk of getting heart disease
A. insisted B. suggested C. advised
7. .................this newspaper report, more women smoke then men nowadays.
A. apparently B. according to C. supposedly
8. You really should go to Namibia. The scenery is... stunning and the people are very friendly.
a. very B. fairly C. absolutely
9. You really should go to Namibia. The scenery is... stunning and the people are very friendly.
A. put off B. put with C. put on
10. Stress is the physical and mental tension you feel when _____ with change.
A. faces B. facing C. faced
II. Choose the answer (a, b, c or d) that is nearest in meaning to the printed before it.
1. 'If I were you, I would take the job,' said my roommate.
A. My roommate was thinking about taking the job.
B. My roommate advised me to take the job.
C. My roommate introduced the idea of taking the job to me.
D. My roommate insisted on taking the job for me.
2. He last had his eyes tested ten months ago.
A. He had tested his eyes ten months before.
B. He had not tested his eyes for ten months then.
C. He hasn't had his eyes tested for ten months.
D. He didn't have any test on his eyes in ten months.
3. He is not flexible in his work; that is why he doesn't have many friends.
A. Having almost no friends makes him inflexible in his work.
B. Such is his inflexibility in his work that he doesn't have many friends.
C. Inflexibility in his work is not why he doesn't have many friends.
D. He is not popular with many people although he is flexible in his work.
Choose the best sentence (a, b, c, or d) made from the given cues.
4. provide/ your handwriting/ legible/ test scorer/ accept/ your answer//
A. Providing your handwriting is legible, the test scorer does not accept your answer.
B. Provided for your legible handwriting, the test scorer has to accept your answer.
C. Provided that your handwriting is legible, your answer will be accepted by any test scorer.
D. Providing with your legible handwriting, every test scorer must accept your answer.
5. I/ advise/ him/ ask/ bus conductor/ tell/ him/ where/ get off.
A. I advised him ask a bus conductor to tell him where he gets off.
B. I advised him to ask bus conductor to tell him where he gets off.
C. I advised him to ask the bus conductor telling him where to get off.
D. I advised him to ask the bus conductor to tell him where to get off.
III. Reading comprehension
Education was of primary importance to the English colonists and was conducted at home as well as in established schools. Regardless of geographic location or finances, most Americans learned to read and compute numbers. For many, the Bible and other religious tracts were their only books; however, the excellent language contained in such works usually made them good primers. Many families owned one or more of Shakespeare's works, a copy of John Bunyan's classic A Pilgrim's Progress, and sometimes collections of English literary essays, poems, or historical speeches.
In 1647 the Massachusetts School Law required every town of at least 50 households to maintain a grammar school. The law was the first to mandate public education in America. In the middle colonies at the time, schools were often dependent on religious societies, such as the Quakers and other private organizations. In the South, families employed private tutors or relied on the clergy to conduct education. At the outset, most elementary schools were for boys, but schools for girls were established in the eighteenth century in most cities and large towns. In spite of the informal atmosphere of most American schools, the literacy rate in the colonies of mid-eighteenth-century America was equal to or higher than in most European countries.
Before the American Revolution, nine colleges had been founded, including Harvard, William and Mary, Yale, the College of New Jersey (now Princeton), Brown, Rutgers, Dartmouth, and Kings College (later Columbia University). By 1720 the natural sciences and modern languages were being taught, as well as courses in practical subjects such as mechanics and agriculture. At the end of the eighteenth century, medical schools were established at the College of Philadelphia and at King's College.
1. According to the passage, most Americans learned how to
(A) write (B) read (C) farm (D) speak a foreign language
2. According to the passage, all of the following sometimes substituted for school books EXCEPT
(A) historical speeches (B) works of Shakespeare
(C) literary essays (D)biographies
3. According to the passage, the Massachusetts School Law applied to every town with how many households?
(A) Less than fifty (B) Exactly fifty (C) Fifty or more (D) Fifteen
4. According to the passage, the middle colonies often depended upon which group to provide education?
(A) Private organizations (B) Colleges
(C) Established primary schools (D) Businesses
5. According to the passage, who often conducted education in the South?
(A) Public school teachers (B) Doctors (C) Clergy (D) Politicians
6. How well educated were Americans in comparison to most European countries?
(A) Much worse (B) The same or better (C) Far better (D) Less or equal
7. According to the passage, all the following subjects are mentioned as being taught in colleges in the 1700s EXCEPT
(A) languages (B) science (C) medicine (D) economics