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1tmnn1 2 UU1fl1J 2562 !10114.30- 16.30 'U.
Part 1: Language Use (Items 1- 35)
1. Dialog Completion (Items 1- 10)
Directions: Read the dialogs and choose the expression that BEST
completes each missing part.
Dialog 1
Situation: At the international night party for exchange students
Kim: Hi, I'm Park Jun Hye from Korea.
Sandra: _1_ My name's Sandra Smith. I come from
Australia. 2
- -
Kim: Well, yes. Twice. I have a cousin who lives in
Brisbane. I like it a lot. 3
Sandra: Sydney in New South Wales.
Kim: I see. You know, I plan to visit Sydney this December.
4
Sandra: Sure. You should visit the Harbor Bridge, the
Opera House, the sandy beaches, and the vineyards.
Kim: 5
1. 1. Long time no see.
2. Glad to meet you.
3. Very well, thank you.
4. Haven't seen you in ages.
5. Nice that you are all right.
•
<tiih 3
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.., .! ., .,
1Ultll'l'YI 2 'lJUlfUJ 2562 l1~114.30- 16.30 u.
2. 1. Do you like Australia?
2. Will you visit Australia?
3. Have you ever been to Australia?
4. Do you know anyone in Brisbane?
5. Does your cousin live in Brisbane?
3. 1. Where is Sydney?
2. Were you born in Sydney?
3. Is Sydney in New South Wales?
4. Do you know where Sydney is?
5. Where in Australia are you from?
4. 1. What's the weather like in Sydney?
2. Is it difficult to travel around in Sydney?
3. What are the tourist attractions in Sydney?
4. Do you mind giving me your address in Sydney?
5. Could you recommend some places for sightseeing?
5. 1. Have you ever seen that before?
2. Oh, that's very reasonable.
3. Are they far from here?
4. Thank you for the information.
5. I'm very happy to hear from you.
•
11~1 4
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11.mn'i'YI 2 tlt!lfltl 2562 11t1114.30- 16.30 t!.
Dialog 2
Situation: At a restaurant
Waiter: Good evening. 6
Diner: Yes, a table for five under the name Jane.
Waiter: Fine. _7_ Here's your table for five in the garden.
Diner: Wow, lovely. _8_
Waiter: Our restaurant is famous for seafood. 9
Diner: Yes, please. Two grilled lobsters and three grilled
salmon steaks.
Waiter: Two grilled lobsters and three grilled salmon steaks.
10
- -
Diner: Just water with ice.
6. 1. Can you sit, please?
2. What is your seat number?
3. Do you have a reservation?
4. Why don't you reserve a table?
5. Would you please send me your order?
7. 1. You're welcome.
2. I will talk to the chef.
3. You look very hungry.
4. Come this way, please.
5. Let me bring you the menu.
•
l1£ll 14.30- 16.30 'W.
8. 1. What is today's appetizer?
2. Do you have a smoking area?
3. Is there a band in the garden?
4. What is the restaurant's specialty?
5. Is this the most popular restaurant in town?
9. 1. What did you order?
2. When will you order?
3. Do you want me to order?
4. Are you ready to start now?
5. Would you like to order now?
10. 1. Do you drink water?
2. What would you like to drink?
3. Can you sit down and wait?
4. Which do you prefer?
5. Is that all you eat?
•
t
.... <I ct ct
1'.!t~T:i'YI 2 lJ'.!1fUJ 2562 n~114.30- 16.30 '.!.
2. Situational Dialogs (Items 11 - 15)
Directions: Read each situation and choose the BEST alternative.
11. Situation: Kirk wants Mary to play tennis with him this evening.
He says:_
1. Do you want to go to the gym?
2. Why don't you go to the stadium?
3. How about a game of tennis before dinner?
4. You are very fond ofplaying sports, aren't you?
5. Mary, are you interested in watching tennis matches?
12. Situation: Dorothy is at the Tourist Information Center. She wants
to get directions to the train station. She says: _
1. How can I get to the train station?
2. Do you mind taking me to the train station?
3. Excuse me, have you been to the train station?
4. I'm a stranger around here. What can you do for me?
5. Can you show me the train station, please?
•
'
run 14.30- 16.30 u.
v '""' ""'
1'Uit'l'l'lfl 2 JJ'Ulfltl 2562
13. Situation: Linda is answering the phone. Mr. Hughes, Marketing
Director ofthe ABC Company, would like to talk to
Mr. Jenkins, Head ofthe Personnel Department. She
says:_
1. Mr. Hughes? Yes, Mr. Jenkins is expecting your
call.
2. Oh, hi! The meeting's just started. Don't call again.
3. I'm Linda, Mr. Jenkins' secretary. I don't know you.
4. Good afternoon, Mr. Hughes. Would you come
back later?
5. Are you Mr. Hughes? I can see you in a minute in
your office.
14. Situation: Mark has not had enough sleep. When he meets John,
John notices it and says: _
1. I can't believe it, Mark. You haven't changed at all.
2. Hi, Mark. Will you come to my birthday party next
Sunday?
3. You look so tired today! Why don't you get some
coffee?
4. What's up? You never answer my calls.
5. I heard that you went to Spain last year. Did you have
a good time there?
•
11ih 8
.
0.1 .! e:t e:t
1'1-!!~l'i'YI 2 lJl!lfUJ 2562 ntn 14.30-16.30 l!.
15. Situation: Laura is unhappy with her roommate, Lucy. She says
to Rose, "_ "
1. Lucy's just moved in and she is very well-organized.
I must annoy her.
2. You know what? Lucy bought me a box of chocolate
for my birthday.
3. Do you know Lucy? She had a fight with her
ex-boyfriend.
4. I hate to say this, but I can't stand Lucy any longer.
I want to move out.
5. Everyone in this apartment knows Lucy. She has a
reputation as a good negotiator.
•
11ih 9
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..... .!-=~. .,
1Uitll'l'n 2 t!Ulfltl 2562 rnn 14.30- 16.30 u.
3. Sentence Completion (Items 16 - 25)
Directions: Read each sentence and choose the alternative that
BEST completes it.
16. Feeling_ the two talkative students, Mrs. Potter stopped lecturing
and looked straight at them.
1. annoying at
2. annoyed with
3. annoyed from
4. annoyingly by
5. annoyingly about
17. _ ,I think that Mr. James' grading was unfai.r.
1. Among you and us
2. Among we and you
3. Between you and I
4. -Between you and me
5. Between we and you
18. Before this course _, Dr. Mason _ to give us a special lecture.
1. ends I will be invited
2. is ending I is being invited
3. will end I is invited
4. will end I will be invited
5. ends I has invited
•
rnn 14.30- 16.30 t!.
19. IfCindy gets a job as a TV announcer, she will need _.
1. many more new dresses
2. many new dresses more
3. dresses many new more
4. many dresses more new
5. new dresses many more
20. Ever since Thai music at BB restaurant, it crowded
every day.
1. has started to be performing I is
2. has started performing I was
3. has started to perform I has been
4. started to be performed I has been
5. started to perform I is being
21. The supervisor ofthe shop has warned every operator _ the
machine while it is spinning.
1. does not touch
2. not touching
3. not to touch
4. is not touching
5. must not be touching
•
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cv """ "" ni:n 14.30- 16.30 -u.
1'UUT1'i't1 2 ti'Ulfltl 2562
22. Twenty-seven dollars _ not too expensive for _ trousers.
1. are I these pairs of
2. is I these
3. are I this pair of
4. is I this
5. are I these
23. The old gentleman is bringing up the orphan _.
1. as ifshe is like his own daughter
2. as if she was the daughter ofhis own
3. as ifshe were his own daughter
4. like she is his own daughter
5. like the daughter ofhis own
24. At this time next Monday, Mr. Walters _ with his wife
to Brazil.
1. flies
2. would be flying
3. will have been flying
4. would have flown
5. will be flying
25. Mr. Miller and Mr. Hill, the_, have cancelled their next classes.
1. physic teachers
2. teachers ofphysic
3. teachers' physics
4. physics teachers
5. physical teachers
•
!11;1114.30- 16.30 'U.
4. Error Correction (Items 26 - 35)
Directions: In the passage below, TEN mistakes are underlined.
Following the passage, you will find the correction of
each underlined mistake. Choose the BEST correction.
Jack Knight was an airplane pioneer. He was one of first man who
26
had the courage to carry mail by airplane from the end in the country to the
27
other. It took lots of courageous in those days when airplanes had only
28
one motor, one propeller, and no instruments to check that you were going
29
or whether you were near a mountain you will crash into. For instance, if
30
you are flying at night, farmers had to build bonfires on the ground to show
31
where will you land your plane. If the bonfires were not there, you were in
32
trouble. As though you can imagine, Jack Knight had to overcome many
33
difficulties. He and their buddies risk their lives to make air mail possible.
34 35
•
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1UUT11'n 2 liUltUJ 2562 •
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NIETS
llll'lliunoaoumomsiintt..iOlllii (oonmsU11111U)
......hiUIW oiE~T~s.t'liet (NIIc~)
26. 1. oneofafir~man
2. one ofthe first men
3. first one ofthe men
4. the first man was the one
5. the first one man
27. 1. the one end of
2. the end of
3. an end in
4. one end of
5. one ofthe ends in
28. 1. a lot of courage
2. lots of courages
3. many courages
4. much of courage
5. many ofcourages
29. 1. which
2. when
3. where
4. what
5. why
•
,.,.u, 13
ntn 14.30- 16.30 u.
'
IV t!et et
1'Uiffl'ft1 2 ti'Ulfltl 2562 !1i;11 14.30 - 16.30 'U.
30. 1. can
2. may
3. should
4. might
5. must
31. 1. have flown
2. have been flying
3. were flying
4. were flown
5. have been flown
32. 1. where your plane is landing
2. where your plane had landed
3. you where your plane landed
4. where you are landing your plane
5. you where your plane should land
33. 1. As
2. Like
3. Alike
4. Even though
5. Even if
•
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11-!l~l'itl 2 lll!lfl1.J 2562
34. 1. her
2. his
3. my
4. our
5. your
35. 1. risking
2. to risk
3. risked
4. have risked
NIETS
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5. have been risking
•
..,,~h 15
n~n 14.30- 16.30 u.
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1'U!tll~'YI 2 lJ'UltU.I 2562 n~n 14.30- 16.30 cu.
Part II: Writing Ability (Items 36- 45)
Directions: Choose the word, phrase or clause that BEST completes each
blank in the passage below.
Some people, especially those who are doctors, lawyers, politicians or
businessmen, are usually very busy. ___lQ__ people who have a lot of free time
and become bored. Ifyou are one of these people, _]]_ with a hobby?
A hobby can be any common activity that gives you pleasure and a
feeling of relaxation 38 . It is not a task that 39 your career or in your
academic study program. It is something you choose to do 40 or you may
have the talent to do it. Hobbies 41 enhance your knowledge and broaden
your experience and 42 benefit your career.
43 of hobbies which suit each person's character. Those people
who are active and adventurous _11_ activities such as mountaineering,
cycling and wind-surfing, ~ less active are likely to prefer indoor activities
such as coloring, collecting stamps, singing or playing a musical instrument.
36. 1. Therefore, the number is great for
2. However, there are a great number of
3. Yet, they are great in the number of
4. Moreover, it is a great number for
5. Hence, there is a great number of
37. 1. why not occupy yourself
2. when do you not occupy
3. why you do not occupy
4. how not to occupy you
5. how do you not occupy yourself
•
·wih 17
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v c!.q, ""'
11,!ta'l'l'n 2 tl'l,llflll 2562 ntn 14.30- t6.30 1,1,
38. 1. as you will perform one
2. as having to perform one
3. when having to perform it
4. while you are performing it
5. when you have to perform them
39. 1. is assigned for you to be performed by
2. is assigning for you to perform by
3. you are assigned to perform in
4. has assigned for you to perform in
5. you have been performing as assigning by
40. 1. because you are interested in it
2. although it interests you
3. so as it is your interest
4. as if it is ofyour interest
5. in spite ofyour interest in it
41. 1. not give only you pleasure but also peace of mind
2. not give only you pleasure and peace of mind, however, it
3. do not give only you pleasure and peace of mind but as well
4. give you not pleasure and peace of mind only, but they also
5. do not only give you pleasure and peace ofmind but also
•
·wlh 18
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..., .! e:t e:t
1'U!Ill'i'YI 2 ti'Ulfltl 2562 nm 14.30- 16.30 -u.
42. 1. may later on
2. must later on
3. which may later
4. that must later on
5. later which they
43. 1. They are a variety
2. There are various kinds
3. These are various kinds
4. They are various kinds
5. It is the variety
44. 1. have to have engagement with outdoor
2. have to get engaged with the outdoors
3. may have an engagement for outdoors
4. have to engage them for outdoors
5. may get engaged in outdoor
45. 1. which means people are
2. so the people who are
3. while people who are
4. for the time being people are
5. at that time people who are being
•
~ih 19
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cv t!-=t q
11-.lltYl'fYI 2 lJ1-.IUUJ 2562 !1tl114.30- 16.30 1-.1.
Part III: Reading Ability (Items 46 - 80)
I. Vocabulary (Items 46- 50)
Directions: Choose the BEST alternatives to complete the passage.
"Circus clown" is a profession. The job has its _!Q_ in the courts of
the Middle Ages. There, jesters 47 the nobility with all kinds of humor.
Clowns provided most ofthe _1L for thousands of circus-goers, and
children especially would be disappointed without them. Years ago, clowns
were singing and talking comedians. Now they are pantomimists. Even
without _12__, clowns have the power to make an audience _2Q_ laughing.
46. 1. base
2. source
3. ground
4. cause
5. origin
47. 1. enlightened
2. exhibited
3. tricked
4. amused
5. distracted
48. 1. entertainment
2. demonstration
3. presentation
4. persuasion
5. amazement
•
49. 1. speech
2. action
3. · imitation
4. performance
5. compliment
50. 1. bring up
2. break into
3. explode into
4. blow out
5. burst out
rnn 14.30- 16.30 u.
••
ttih 21
run 14.30- 16.30 u.
I
cv Jq, ""'
1'UUJ1'H1 2 ti'UlfUJ 2562
2. Reading Comprehension (Items 51 - 80)
Directions: Read the extracts and choose the BEST alternative to
complete the statements that follow each extract.
Extract 1
Howca~·a magazine be strong
regionally ifit is not strong locally?
COUNTRY R!AD!R'8 nME NEWSWEEK ASIAWEEK FEER
DIGEST
SINGAPORE 59,316 2s.m 21.226 10,407 1,605
MALAYSIA 50,343 19,724 14,249 20,097 10,790
HONOKONG 16,405 21,346 17,622 18,106 9,628
THAILAND 4,031 10.148 7,396 8,223 4.618
PHIUPPINES 90,000 25,436 27,438 24,500 6,311
TAIWAN 7.200 16,295 10,475 5,410 2,331
BRUNEI 620 797 529 402
INDONESIA 10.642 11,760 9.098 2,343 3,739
TOTAL 237,937 132,106 108,301 89,615 39,424
s.,.,. BPA & ABC Audot Stat_,._ J""" 1993
51. The top three magazines in Asia are _ respectively.
I. Asia Magazine, Reader's Digest and Time
2. Asia Magazine, Time and Newsweek
3. Asia Magazine, Reader's Digest and Asiaweek
4. Asia Magazine, Newsweek and Time
5. Asia Magazine, Newsweek and Reader's Digest
•
QJ ,..,; cl
11-AUYl'i'YI 2 lJ'UlfllJ 2562 !1"114.30- 16.30 'U.
52. The strongest market for Asia Magazine is _ .
1. Taiwan
2. Malaysia
3. Singapore
4. Hong Kong
5. Thailand
53. The difference between the number of copies ofNewsweek and Asia
Magazine sold in the Philippines is _ .
1. 1,559
2. 3,094
3. 7,000
4. 12,438
5. 19,673
54. The country where Newsweek is the most popular is _.
1. Brunei
2. Singapore
3. Indonesia
4. Thailand
5. the Philippines
•
... ol .... .,.
1UUT11fl 2 lJUltUJ 2562 rnn 14.30- 16.30 u.
55. The magazine that people in Brunei do not read is ·.
1. Reader's Digest
2. Asia Magazine
3. Newsweek
4. Asiaweek
5. Time
Extract.2
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IT '::HJI":J l f>...C.CICWIMLY 1-rD
f"JT ~ M.'( 1-l..f.e>ND~ ~'S
t~SUN>OF /1'(
o,,.u~! ~~~ ·nt-.
I>-LW61-?
1-E.LLD7
I
.w........!~L_~~-----
56. Mrs. Thomapple is calling ACME TV Repair to _.
1. inform them that she has got a new TV
2. tell the repair service not to come
3. say that her TV has been repaired
4. cancel her visit to the shop
5. come and check her TV
•
'
v '""" """ rnn 14.30 - 16.30 cu.
1!&ffl'j'YI 2 ti'Ulfltl 2562
57. When Mrs. Thornapple says, "That's right.", she means _ .
1. her TV does not have a picture
2. she really wants her TV repaired
3. her TV actually had a blurred picture
4. her TV does not have any problem
5. she never had any problem seeing the TV picture
58. When Mrs. Thornapple says, "Isn't that a laugh?'', she means _ .
1. she thinks her mistake is funny
2. she wants to laugh at herself for cancelling her appointment
3. the repairman can laugh at her for not wearing glasses
4. her husband laughs at her for wearing his glasses to watch TV
5. wearing her husband's glasses made her look funny
59. When Mrs. Thornapple says, "Hello?" at the end of the conversation, it
means
1. the telephone line is busy
2. she has finished her conversation
3. the person on the other end has hung up
4. she is greeting the person on the other end
5. the person on the other end could not hear her
•
't1~1 25
!1tlll4.30- 16.30 u.
I
<V r!e:t e:t
1Ulffl'fYI 2 1-JUlfUJ 2562
60. It can be inferred that Mrs. Thornapple first called the TV repairman
because
I. her TV was not working
2. she could not see the TV screen clearly
3. she wanted to play a trick on the repairman
4. she had an accident while turning on the TV
5. her husband could not turn on the TV
Extract 3
The earliest known birds learned to fly by running fast and flapping their
wings, not by leaping from tall trees, researchers said last week. Exactly how
birds began to fly has been hotly debated by scientists since the 1800s. Most
agree that birds evolved from dinosaurs, but how they took to the skies has
5 been a mystery. Critics ofthe running theory argued that early birds could not
have gained enough speed to build up the velocity to become airborne by
flapping their wings. But paleontologists at the Natural History Museum
of Los Angeles County used aerodynamic calculations and fossil records to
show that the oldest known bird, the 150-million-year-old Archaeopteryx,
10 was quick enough to get a running start.
"We went back and analyzed previous ideas about how Archaeopteryx
could have flown," Dr. Luis Chiappe said in a statement. "We discovered
that some important aerodynamic issues had been overlooked and that when
these were considered, Archaeopteryx could indeed run fast enough to
15 achieve the necessary speed to take offfrom the ground."
•
I
v l!ct <d.
11-Utll'l'YI 2 'IJ'Ulfi'IJ 2562 n~n 14.30- 16.30 cu.
Dr. Chiappe and his colleague Dr. Phillip Burgers showed that
Archaeopteryx reached its minimum flying speed by means of the thrust
and residual lift produced by flapping its wings.
"We regard thrust, and not lift, as the primordial force ultimately respons-
20 ible for sustained flight," the researchers said in the Nature paper. As a flier,
Archaeopteryx probably represents a late stage in the evolution ofbird flight.
61. The extract is about
1. a theory on how early birds were able to fly
2. a study on how birds were related to dinosaurs
3. a solution on the flying ability of the dinosaurs
4. evidence on how winged dinosaurs evaded enemies
5. the way aerodynamic calculations were applied to flying
62. It has been recently discovered that the early birds _ .
1. jumped from tall trees and flapped their wings to fly
2. flapped their wings to lift off and moved forward
3. ran fast, flapped their wings and took off
4. lifted off, pushed themselves forward and flew
5. ran faster than winged dinosaurs to get enough speed to fly
•
'
cv ·~ ~
1UHT1'n1 2 t~Ulflll 2562 11~114.30- 16.30 u.
63. Critics of the running theory rejected the idea that the early birds _ .
1. could have run fast enough to lift off and fly
2. were related to winged dinosaurs
3. were able to flap their wings
4. would remain in the air only with strong wings
5. started their flight by jumping from trees and lifting off
64. The word these (line 14) refers to .
1. researchers
2. paleontologists
3. fossil records
4. ISSUeS
5. birds
65. The phrase sustained flight (line 20) means _ .
1. residual lift
2. flying speed
3. staying airborne
4. primordial force
5. aerodynamic calculation
•
11ih 28
run 14.30- 16.30 u.
66. The best title for this extract is "
,
1. Ilow early birds achieved lift-off
2. Winged dinosaurs, plant-eating creatures
3. Why only winged dinosaurs became extinct
4. Important evidence shown by critics
5. How dinosaurs flew before Archaeopteryx
Extract 4
SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA: An office worker cleaning a refrigerator full of
rotten food created a smell so noxious that it sent seven co-workers to the
hospital and made many others ill. Firefighters had to evacuate the building
in Central San Jose after the fumes led someone to call emergency services.
5 What crews found was an unplugged refrigerator crammed with moldy
food. Authorities say an enterprising office worker had decided to clean it
out, placing the food in a conference room while using two cleaning
chemicals to scrub down the mess. The mixture of old lunches and
disinfectant caused 28 people to need treatment for vomiting and nausea.
67. According to the news report, firefighters were called to _.
1. extinguish a fire in the building
2. clean the rotten food in an office
3. take people in the office to hospital
4. remove the refrigerator from the building
5. help deal with the odor in the building
•
~ih 29
'
0.1 t! >d. >d.
1.Ufll'H1 2 lJUltUJ 2562 n~n 14.30- 16.30 u.
68. According to the news report, the smell was caused by the _.
1. mess in a refrigerator
2. spoiled lunches in the conference room
3. rotten food and the cleaning chemicals
4. chemicals used in cleaning the refrigerator
5. spoiled food in an unplugged refrigerator
69. The word noxious (line 2) could best be replaced by _ .
1. rotten
2. messy
3. fragrant
4. harmful
5. urgent
70. The pronoun it (line 2) refers to the _ .
1. food
2. smell
3. hospital
4. building
5. refrigerator
•
11.Ul 30
'
<V t!d. d.
1'UHHl't1 2 lJ'UlfllJ 2562 nt"n 14.30 - 16.30 -u.
71. From the news report, it can be inferred that the _ .
1. refrigerator must have been used recently
2. firefighters took 28 people out ofthe building
3. office workers cleaned the food in the conference room
4. worker who cleaned the refrigerator was not ill
5. refrigerator must have broken
72. The best headline for this news report is"_"·.
1. Stink sends workers to hospital
2. Leftovers in fridge causing illness
3. Rotten food creates noxious smell
4. Rotten food causing stink in fridge
5. Workers cleaning fridge get ill
Extract 5
East Anglia's water supply has the highest nitrate concentration in the
country. Anglian Water, the authority which covers an area stretching from
Essex to Lincolnshire, has 35 water sources which exceed the European
Commission's nitrate limit of50 milligrams a liter.
5 In some areas, consumers, alarmed by health warnings about the effects
of nitrates, regularly filter their household supplies, despite protestations from
the authority that the water 'is perfectly safe to drink. However, routinely over
the region, nitrates are in excess ofsafety levels. Nitrates are a bigger problem
for Anglian Water than any ofthe other 10 water authorities.
•
't1ih 31
'
.., f!q ""'
1'UUYl'i'tl 2 lJ'UltUJ 2562 run 14.30- 16.30 -u.
1o It is claimed that there are three factors that have contributed to East
Anglia's unwanted nitrate problem. Firstly, a large quantity ofwater comes
from underground sources and the water table is heavily loaded with
nitrates created by years ofintensive agriculture, encouraged by Common
Market farm policies. Secondly, fertilizers running offthe land have added
15 to the problem, with some 50 per cent poorly applied by farmers. High
nitrate levels are also caused every winter by the natural breakdown ofroots
and vegetation in the soil, but the process causes more problems in East
Anglia because of the intensive use of the land.
73. In the extract, the word authority (line 2) means _.
1. power to give orders to people
2. the power to influence people
3. official permission to run a public service
4. the power or right to administer an organization
5. organization responsible for a particular public service
74. According to the European Commission, _ .
1. nitrates in water supplies must not be higher than 50 milligrams
per liter
2. nitrates must be reduced in 50 water sources all over the country
3. more than 50 milligrams ofnitrates in one liter ofwater is safe for
consumption
4. consumers should filter their household supplies before drinking
the water
5. despite high levels ofnitrates in water supplies, the water is still
safe enough for drinking
•
~ih 32
.
Q.l t! "" ""
11~114.30- 16.30 cu.
1'U~tfl'Hl 2 li'Ulflll 2562
75. According to the extract, the water table is heavily loaded with
nitrates (lines 12- 13) means_.
1. nitrates in underground water are heavy
2. underground water has a lot ofnitrates
3. underground water is heavy because ofnitrates
4. heavy nitrates are loaded into underground water
5. nitrates are removed from underground water sources
76. According to the extract, one cause of East Anglia's nitrate problem
is the
1. use of underground water for too many agricultural products
2. large quantity of underground water used for agriculture
3. incorrect use ofchemical fertilizers for intensive agriculture
4. Common Market limiting the use offertilizers for agriculture
5. poor quality offertilizers used in agriculture
77. The word process (line 17) refers to _ .
1. regularly filtering household supplies
2. water coming from underground sources
3. fertilizers running offthe land to water sources
4. health warnings about the effects of nitrates
5. natural breakdown of roots and vegetation in the soil
•
'
~ NIETS
..., """' ""'
11-!&nl'Hl 2 liUUUJ 2562 •
§JVIP1
anlUi.rloaaunlllmsiioolllicwnli (aoMlSUI111U)
..._.....,..olfGatlariii!T-*CS.WC. (NIIt~) n~n 14.30- 16.30 1-!.
78. The phrase intensive use of land (line 18) means _ .
1. having a large farming area
2. repeatedly using too much fertilizer
3. planting various kinds of crops in one area
4. using too many farming techniques
5. growing as many crops as possible on the same land
79. It can be inferred from the extract that
1. Anglian Water urgently needs to reduce nitrates to acceptable
levels
2. water sources in East Anglia are safe for household uses
3. people in some areas are not afraid to drink water from
household supplies
4. Anglian Water is facing the biggest problem about the quality of
its agricultural products
5. over the region ofEast Anglia, the main problem is that there is
not enough water
80. The tone of this extract is
1. humorous
2. persuasive
3 positive
4. critical
5. instructive
•
11111111
11111
03
O-Net ภาษาอังกฤษ ม.6 2562

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  • 3. I .... '11:4 11:4 1tmnn1 2 UU1fl1J 2562 !10114.30- 16.30 'U. Part 1: Language Use (Items 1- 35) 1. Dialog Completion (Items 1- 10) Directions: Read the dialogs and choose the expression that BEST completes each missing part. Dialog 1 Situation: At the international night party for exchange students Kim: Hi, I'm Park Jun Hye from Korea. Sandra: _1_ My name's Sandra Smith. I come from Australia. 2 - - Kim: Well, yes. Twice. I have a cousin who lives in Brisbane. I like it a lot. 3 Sandra: Sydney in New South Wales. Kim: I see. You know, I plan to visit Sydney this December. 4 Sandra: Sure. You should visit the Harbor Bridge, the Opera House, the sandy beaches, and the vineyards. Kim: 5 1. 1. Long time no see. 2. Glad to meet you. 3. Very well, thank you. 4. Haven't seen you in ages. 5. Nice that you are all right. •
  • 4. <tiih 3 I .., .! ., ., 1Ultll'l'YI 2 'lJUlfUJ 2562 l1~114.30- 16.30 u. 2. 1. Do you like Australia? 2. Will you visit Australia? 3. Have you ever been to Australia? 4. Do you know anyone in Brisbane? 5. Does your cousin live in Brisbane? 3. 1. Where is Sydney? 2. Were you born in Sydney? 3. Is Sydney in New South Wales? 4. Do you know where Sydney is? 5. Where in Australia are you from? 4. 1. What's the weather like in Sydney? 2. Is it difficult to travel around in Sydney? 3. What are the tourist attractions in Sydney? 4. Do you mind giving me your address in Sydney? 5. Could you recommend some places for sightseeing? 5. 1. Have you ever seen that before? 2. Oh, that's very reasonable. 3. Are they far from here? 4. Thank you for the information. 5. I'm very happy to hear from you. •
  • 5. 11~1 4 I cv ce:t e:t 11.mn'i'YI 2 tlt!lfltl 2562 11t1114.30- 16.30 t!. Dialog 2 Situation: At a restaurant Waiter: Good evening. 6 Diner: Yes, a table for five under the name Jane. Waiter: Fine. _7_ Here's your table for five in the garden. Diner: Wow, lovely. _8_ Waiter: Our restaurant is famous for seafood. 9 Diner: Yes, please. Two grilled lobsters and three grilled salmon steaks. Waiter: Two grilled lobsters and three grilled salmon steaks. 10 - - Diner: Just water with ice. 6. 1. Can you sit, please? 2. What is your seat number? 3. Do you have a reservation? 4. Why don't you reserve a table? 5. Would you please send me your order? 7. 1. You're welcome. 2. I will talk to the chef. 3. You look very hungry. 4. Come this way, please. 5. Let me bring you the menu. •
  • 6. l1£ll 14.30- 16.30 'W. 8. 1. What is today's appetizer? 2. Do you have a smoking area? 3. Is there a band in the garden? 4. What is the restaurant's specialty? 5. Is this the most popular restaurant in town? 9. 1. What did you order? 2. When will you order? 3. Do you want me to order? 4. Are you ready to start now? 5. Would you like to order now? 10. 1. Do you drink water? 2. What would you like to drink? 3. Can you sit down and wait? 4. Which do you prefer? 5. Is that all you eat? •
  • 7. t .... <I ct ct 1'.!t~T:i'YI 2 lJ'.!1fUJ 2562 n~114.30- 16.30 '.!. 2. Situational Dialogs (Items 11 - 15) Directions: Read each situation and choose the BEST alternative. 11. Situation: Kirk wants Mary to play tennis with him this evening. He says:_ 1. Do you want to go to the gym? 2. Why don't you go to the stadium? 3. How about a game of tennis before dinner? 4. You are very fond ofplaying sports, aren't you? 5. Mary, are you interested in watching tennis matches? 12. Situation: Dorothy is at the Tourist Information Center. She wants to get directions to the train station. She says: _ 1. How can I get to the train station? 2. Do you mind taking me to the train station? 3. Excuse me, have you been to the train station? 4. I'm a stranger around here. What can you do for me? 5. Can you show me the train station, please? •
  • 8. ' run 14.30- 16.30 u. v '""' ""' 1'Uit'l'l'lfl 2 JJ'Ulfltl 2562 13. Situation: Linda is answering the phone. Mr. Hughes, Marketing Director ofthe ABC Company, would like to talk to Mr. Jenkins, Head ofthe Personnel Department. She says:_ 1. Mr. Hughes? Yes, Mr. Jenkins is expecting your call. 2. Oh, hi! The meeting's just started. Don't call again. 3. I'm Linda, Mr. Jenkins' secretary. I don't know you. 4. Good afternoon, Mr. Hughes. Would you come back later? 5. Are you Mr. Hughes? I can see you in a minute in your office. 14. Situation: Mark has not had enough sleep. When he meets John, John notices it and says: _ 1. I can't believe it, Mark. You haven't changed at all. 2. Hi, Mark. Will you come to my birthday party next Sunday? 3. You look so tired today! Why don't you get some coffee? 4. What's up? You never answer my calls. 5. I heard that you went to Spain last year. Did you have a good time there? •
  • 9. 11ih 8 . 0.1 .! e:t e:t 1'1-!!~l'i'YI 2 lJl!lfUJ 2562 ntn 14.30-16.30 l!. 15. Situation: Laura is unhappy with her roommate, Lucy. She says to Rose, "_ " 1. Lucy's just moved in and she is very well-organized. I must annoy her. 2. You know what? Lucy bought me a box of chocolate for my birthday. 3. Do you know Lucy? She had a fight with her ex-boyfriend. 4. I hate to say this, but I can't stand Lucy any longer. I want to move out. 5. Everyone in this apartment knows Lucy. She has a reputation as a good negotiator. •
  • 10. 11ih 9 ' ..... .!-=~. ., 1Uitll'l'n 2 t!Ulfltl 2562 rnn 14.30- 16.30 u. 3. Sentence Completion (Items 16 - 25) Directions: Read each sentence and choose the alternative that BEST completes it. 16. Feeling_ the two talkative students, Mrs. Potter stopped lecturing and looked straight at them. 1. annoying at 2. annoyed with 3. annoyed from 4. annoyingly by 5. annoyingly about 17. _ ,I think that Mr. James' grading was unfai.r. 1. Among you and us 2. Among we and you 3. Between you and I 4. -Between you and me 5. Between we and you 18. Before this course _, Dr. Mason _ to give us a special lecture. 1. ends I will be invited 2. is ending I is being invited 3. will end I is invited 4. will end I will be invited 5. ends I has invited •
  • 11. rnn 14.30- 16.30 t!. 19. IfCindy gets a job as a TV announcer, she will need _. 1. many more new dresses 2. many new dresses more 3. dresses many new more 4. many dresses more new 5. new dresses many more 20. Ever since Thai music at BB restaurant, it crowded every day. 1. has started to be performing I is 2. has started performing I was 3. has started to perform I has been 4. started to be performed I has been 5. started to perform I is being 21. The supervisor ofthe shop has warned every operator _ the machine while it is spinning. 1. does not touch 2. not touching 3. not to touch 4. is not touching 5. must not be touching •
  • 12. ' cv """ "" ni:n 14.30- 16.30 -u. 1'UUT1'i't1 2 ti'Ulfltl 2562 22. Twenty-seven dollars _ not too expensive for _ trousers. 1. are I these pairs of 2. is I these 3. are I this pair of 4. is I this 5. are I these 23. The old gentleman is bringing up the orphan _. 1. as ifshe is like his own daughter 2. as if she was the daughter ofhis own 3. as ifshe were his own daughter 4. like she is his own daughter 5. like the daughter ofhis own 24. At this time next Monday, Mr. Walters _ with his wife to Brazil. 1. flies 2. would be flying 3. will have been flying 4. would have flown 5. will be flying 25. Mr. Miller and Mr. Hill, the_, have cancelled their next classes. 1. physic teachers 2. teachers ofphysic 3. teachers' physics 4. physics teachers 5. physical teachers •
  • 13. !11;1114.30- 16.30 'U. 4. Error Correction (Items 26 - 35) Directions: In the passage below, TEN mistakes are underlined. Following the passage, you will find the correction of each underlined mistake. Choose the BEST correction. Jack Knight was an airplane pioneer. He was one of first man who 26 had the courage to carry mail by airplane from the end in the country to the 27 other. It took lots of courageous in those days when airplanes had only 28 one motor, one propeller, and no instruments to check that you were going 29 or whether you were near a mountain you will crash into. For instance, if 30 you are flying at night, farmers had to build bonfires on the ground to show 31 where will you land your plane. If the bonfires were not there, you were in 32 trouble. As though you can imagine, Jack Knight had to overcome many 33 difficulties. He and their buddies risk their lives to make air mail possible. 34 35 •
  • 14. ' v '"' 4 1UUT11'n 2 liUltUJ 2562 • §JVlfl NIETS llll'lliunoaoumomsiintt..iOlllii (oonmsU11111U) ......hiUIW oiE~T~s.t'liet (NIIc~) 26. 1. oneofafir~man 2. one ofthe first men 3. first one ofthe men 4. the first man was the one 5. the first one man 27. 1. the one end of 2. the end of 3. an end in 4. one end of 5. one ofthe ends in 28. 1. a lot of courage 2. lots of courages 3. many courages 4. much of courage 5. many ofcourages 29. 1. which 2. when 3. where 4. what 5. why • ,.,.u, 13 ntn 14.30- 16.30 u.
  • 15. ' IV t!et et 1'Uiffl'ft1 2 ti'Ulfltl 2562 !1i;11 14.30 - 16.30 'U. 30. 1. can 2. may 3. should 4. might 5. must 31. 1. have flown 2. have been flying 3. were flying 4. were flown 5. have been flown 32. 1. where your plane is landing 2. where your plane had landed 3. you where your plane landed 4. where you are landing your plane 5. you where your plane should land 33. 1. As 2. Like 3. Alike 4. Even though 5. Even if •
  • 16. ' .., t! .,. .,. 11-!l~l'itl 2 lll!lfl1.J 2562 34. 1. her 2. his 3. my 4. our 5. your 35. 1. risking 2. to risk 3. risked 4. have risked NIETS • §JVlfl amliunoaaunwms~mnuiom (aorimsunliiU) ....... Nlftutt ol EcM:etloRII Tntlnl s.W:t (N:Jic ~· ., 5. have been risking • ..,,~h 15 n~n 14.30- 16.30 u.
  • 17. ' .., .! e:t e:t 1'U!tll~'YI 2 lJ'UltU.I 2562 n~n 14.30- 16.30 cu. Part II: Writing Ability (Items 36- 45) Directions: Choose the word, phrase or clause that BEST completes each blank in the passage below. Some people, especially those who are doctors, lawyers, politicians or businessmen, are usually very busy. ___lQ__ people who have a lot of free time and become bored. Ifyou are one of these people, _]]_ with a hobby? A hobby can be any common activity that gives you pleasure and a feeling of relaxation 38 . It is not a task that 39 your career or in your academic study program. It is something you choose to do 40 or you may have the talent to do it. Hobbies 41 enhance your knowledge and broaden your experience and 42 benefit your career. 43 of hobbies which suit each person's character. Those people who are active and adventurous _11_ activities such as mountaineering, cycling and wind-surfing, ~ less active are likely to prefer indoor activities such as coloring, collecting stamps, singing or playing a musical instrument. 36. 1. Therefore, the number is great for 2. However, there are a great number of 3. Yet, they are great in the number of 4. Moreover, it is a great number for 5. Hence, there is a great number of 37. 1. why not occupy yourself 2. when do you not occupy 3. why you do not occupy 4. how not to occupy you 5. how do you not occupy yourself •
  • 18. ·wih 17 ' v c!.q, ""' 11,!ta'l'l'n 2 tl'l,llflll 2562 ntn 14.30- t6.30 1,1, 38. 1. as you will perform one 2. as having to perform one 3. when having to perform it 4. while you are performing it 5. when you have to perform them 39. 1. is assigned for you to be performed by 2. is assigning for you to perform by 3. you are assigned to perform in 4. has assigned for you to perform in 5. you have been performing as assigning by 40. 1. because you are interested in it 2. although it interests you 3. so as it is your interest 4. as if it is ofyour interest 5. in spite ofyour interest in it 41. 1. not give only you pleasure but also peace of mind 2. not give only you pleasure and peace of mind, however, it 3. do not give only you pleasure and peace of mind but as well 4. give you not pleasure and peace of mind only, but they also 5. do not only give you pleasure and peace ofmind but also •
  • 19. ·wlh 18 ' ..., .! e:t e:t 1'U!Ill'i'YI 2 ti'Ulfltl 2562 nm 14.30- 16.30 -u. 42. 1. may later on 2. must later on 3. which may later 4. that must later on 5. later which they 43. 1. They are a variety 2. There are various kinds 3. These are various kinds 4. They are various kinds 5. It is the variety 44. 1. have to have engagement with outdoor 2. have to get engaged with the outdoors 3. may have an engagement for outdoors 4. have to engage them for outdoors 5. may get engaged in outdoor 45. 1. which means people are 2. so the people who are 3. while people who are 4. for the time being people are 5. at that time people who are being •
  • 20. ~ih 19 ' cv t!-=t q 11-.lltYl'fYI 2 lJ1-.IUUJ 2562 !1tl114.30- 16.30 1-.1. Part III: Reading Ability (Items 46 - 80) I. Vocabulary (Items 46- 50) Directions: Choose the BEST alternatives to complete the passage. "Circus clown" is a profession. The job has its _!Q_ in the courts of the Middle Ages. There, jesters 47 the nobility with all kinds of humor. Clowns provided most ofthe _1L for thousands of circus-goers, and children especially would be disappointed without them. Years ago, clowns were singing and talking comedians. Now they are pantomimists. Even without _12__, clowns have the power to make an audience _2Q_ laughing. 46. 1. base 2. source 3. ground 4. cause 5. origin 47. 1. enlightened 2. exhibited 3. tricked 4. amused 5. distracted 48. 1. entertainment 2. demonstration 3. presentation 4. persuasion 5. amazement •
  • 21. 49. 1. speech 2. action 3. · imitation 4. performance 5. compliment 50. 1. bring up 2. break into 3. explode into 4. blow out 5. burst out rnn 14.30- 16.30 u. ••
  • 22. ttih 21 run 14.30- 16.30 u. I cv Jq, ""' 1'UUJ1'H1 2 ti'UlfUJ 2562 2. Reading Comprehension (Items 51 - 80) Directions: Read the extracts and choose the BEST alternative to complete the statements that follow each extract. Extract 1 Howca~·a magazine be strong regionally ifit is not strong locally? COUNTRY R!AD!R'8 nME NEWSWEEK ASIAWEEK FEER DIGEST SINGAPORE 59,316 2s.m 21.226 10,407 1,605 MALAYSIA 50,343 19,724 14,249 20,097 10,790 HONOKONG 16,405 21,346 17,622 18,106 9,628 THAILAND 4,031 10.148 7,396 8,223 4.618 PHIUPPINES 90,000 25,436 27,438 24,500 6,311 TAIWAN 7.200 16,295 10,475 5,410 2,331 BRUNEI 620 797 529 402 INDONESIA 10.642 11,760 9.098 2,343 3,739 TOTAL 237,937 132,106 108,301 89,615 39,424 s.,.,. BPA & ABC Audot Stat_,._ J""" 1993 51. The top three magazines in Asia are _ respectively. I. Asia Magazine, Reader's Digest and Time 2. Asia Magazine, Time and Newsweek 3. Asia Magazine, Reader's Digest and Asiaweek 4. Asia Magazine, Newsweek and Time 5. Asia Magazine, Newsweek and Reader's Digest •
  • 23. QJ ,..,; cl 11-AUYl'i'YI 2 lJ'UlfllJ 2562 !1"114.30- 16.30 'U. 52. The strongest market for Asia Magazine is _ . 1. Taiwan 2. Malaysia 3. Singapore 4. Hong Kong 5. Thailand 53. The difference between the number of copies ofNewsweek and Asia Magazine sold in the Philippines is _ . 1. 1,559 2. 3,094 3. 7,000 4. 12,438 5. 19,673 54. The country where Newsweek is the most popular is _. 1. Brunei 2. Singapore 3. Indonesia 4. Thailand 5. the Philippines •
  • 24. ... ol .... .,. 1UUT11fl 2 lJUltUJ 2562 rnn 14.30- 16.30 u. 55. The magazine that people in Brunei do not read is ·. 1. Reader's Digest 2. Asia Magazine 3. Newsweek 4. Asiaweek 5. Time Extract.2 TJt E 8 O.R N L 0 S E R"· "" llfIS ~WT, /1'( t'J PlC.TtR£.l~FIN£ ~N...L' ~ ~ r IT '::HJI":J l f>...C.CICWIMLY 1-rD f"JT ~ M.'( 1-l..f.e>ND~ ~'S t~SUN>OF /1'( o,,.u~! ~~~ ·nt-. I>-LW61-? 1-E.LLD7 I .w........!~L_~~----- 56. Mrs. Thomapple is calling ACME TV Repair to _. 1. inform them that she has got a new TV 2. tell the repair service not to come 3. say that her TV has been repaired 4. cancel her visit to the shop 5. come and check her TV •
  • 25. ' v '""" """ rnn 14.30 - 16.30 cu. 1!&ffl'j'YI 2 ti'Ulfltl 2562 57. When Mrs. Thornapple says, "That's right.", she means _ . 1. her TV does not have a picture 2. she really wants her TV repaired 3. her TV actually had a blurred picture 4. her TV does not have any problem 5. she never had any problem seeing the TV picture 58. When Mrs. Thornapple says, "Isn't that a laugh?'', she means _ . 1. she thinks her mistake is funny 2. she wants to laugh at herself for cancelling her appointment 3. the repairman can laugh at her for not wearing glasses 4. her husband laughs at her for wearing his glasses to watch TV 5. wearing her husband's glasses made her look funny 59. When Mrs. Thornapple says, "Hello?" at the end of the conversation, it means 1. the telephone line is busy 2. she has finished her conversation 3. the person on the other end has hung up 4. she is greeting the person on the other end 5. the person on the other end could not hear her •
  • 26. 't1~1 25 !1tlll4.30- 16.30 u. I <V r!e:t e:t 1Ulffl'fYI 2 1-JUlfUJ 2562 60. It can be inferred that Mrs. Thornapple first called the TV repairman because I. her TV was not working 2. she could not see the TV screen clearly 3. she wanted to play a trick on the repairman 4. she had an accident while turning on the TV 5. her husband could not turn on the TV Extract 3 The earliest known birds learned to fly by running fast and flapping their wings, not by leaping from tall trees, researchers said last week. Exactly how birds began to fly has been hotly debated by scientists since the 1800s. Most agree that birds evolved from dinosaurs, but how they took to the skies has 5 been a mystery. Critics ofthe running theory argued that early birds could not have gained enough speed to build up the velocity to become airborne by flapping their wings. But paleontologists at the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County used aerodynamic calculations and fossil records to show that the oldest known bird, the 150-million-year-old Archaeopteryx, 10 was quick enough to get a running start. "We went back and analyzed previous ideas about how Archaeopteryx could have flown," Dr. Luis Chiappe said in a statement. "We discovered that some important aerodynamic issues had been overlooked and that when these were considered, Archaeopteryx could indeed run fast enough to 15 achieve the necessary speed to take offfrom the ground." •
  • 27. I v l!ct <d. 11-Utll'l'YI 2 'IJ'Ulfi'IJ 2562 n~n 14.30- 16.30 cu. Dr. Chiappe and his colleague Dr. Phillip Burgers showed that Archaeopteryx reached its minimum flying speed by means of the thrust and residual lift produced by flapping its wings. "We regard thrust, and not lift, as the primordial force ultimately respons- 20 ible for sustained flight," the researchers said in the Nature paper. As a flier, Archaeopteryx probably represents a late stage in the evolution ofbird flight. 61. The extract is about 1. a theory on how early birds were able to fly 2. a study on how birds were related to dinosaurs 3. a solution on the flying ability of the dinosaurs 4. evidence on how winged dinosaurs evaded enemies 5. the way aerodynamic calculations were applied to flying 62. It has been recently discovered that the early birds _ . 1. jumped from tall trees and flapped their wings to fly 2. flapped their wings to lift off and moved forward 3. ran fast, flapped their wings and took off 4. lifted off, pushed themselves forward and flew 5. ran faster than winged dinosaurs to get enough speed to fly •
  • 28. ' cv ·~ ~ 1UHT1'n1 2 t~Ulflll 2562 11~114.30- 16.30 u. 63. Critics of the running theory rejected the idea that the early birds _ . 1. could have run fast enough to lift off and fly 2. were related to winged dinosaurs 3. were able to flap their wings 4. would remain in the air only with strong wings 5. started their flight by jumping from trees and lifting off 64. The word these (line 14) refers to . 1. researchers 2. paleontologists 3. fossil records 4. ISSUeS 5. birds 65. The phrase sustained flight (line 20) means _ . 1. residual lift 2. flying speed 3. staying airborne 4. primordial force 5. aerodynamic calculation •
  • 29. 11ih 28 run 14.30- 16.30 u. 66. The best title for this extract is " , 1. Ilow early birds achieved lift-off 2. Winged dinosaurs, plant-eating creatures 3. Why only winged dinosaurs became extinct 4. Important evidence shown by critics 5. How dinosaurs flew before Archaeopteryx Extract 4 SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA: An office worker cleaning a refrigerator full of rotten food created a smell so noxious that it sent seven co-workers to the hospital and made many others ill. Firefighters had to evacuate the building in Central San Jose after the fumes led someone to call emergency services. 5 What crews found was an unplugged refrigerator crammed with moldy food. Authorities say an enterprising office worker had decided to clean it out, placing the food in a conference room while using two cleaning chemicals to scrub down the mess. The mixture of old lunches and disinfectant caused 28 people to need treatment for vomiting and nausea. 67. According to the news report, firefighters were called to _. 1. extinguish a fire in the building 2. clean the rotten food in an office 3. take people in the office to hospital 4. remove the refrigerator from the building 5. help deal with the odor in the building •
  • 30. ~ih 29 ' 0.1 t! >d. >d. 1.Ufll'H1 2 lJUltUJ 2562 n~n 14.30- 16.30 u. 68. According to the news report, the smell was caused by the _. 1. mess in a refrigerator 2. spoiled lunches in the conference room 3. rotten food and the cleaning chemicals 4. chemicals used in cleaning the refrigerator 5. spoiled food in an unplugged refrigerator 69. The word noxious (line 2) could best be replaced by _ . 1. rotten 2. messy 3. fragrant 4. harmful 5. urgent 70. The pronoun it (line 2) refers to the _ . 1. food 2. smell 3. hospital 4. building 5. refrigerator •
  • 31. 11.Ul 30 ' <V t!d. d. 1'UHHl't1 2 lJ'UlfllJ 2562 nt"n 14.30 - 16.30 -u. 71. From the news report, it can be inferred that the _ . 1. refrigerator must have been used recently 2. firefighters took 28 people out ofthe building 3. office workers cleaned the food in the conference room 4. worker who cleaned the refrigerator was not ill 5. refrigerator must have broken 72. The best headline for this news report is"_"·. 1. Stink sends workers to hospital 2. Leftovers in fridge causing illness 3. Rotten food creates noxious smell 4. Rotten food causing stink in fridge 5. Workers cleaning fridge get ill Extract 5 East Anglia's water supply has the highest nitrate concentration in the country. Anglian Water, the authority which covers an area stretching from Essex to Lincolnshire, has 35 water sources which exceed the European Commission's nitrate limit of50 milligrams a liter. 5 In some areas, consumers, alarmed by health warnings about the effects of nitrates, regularly filter their household supplies, despite protestations from the authority that the water 'is perfectly safe to drink. However, routinely over the region, nitrates are in excess ofsafety levels. Nitrates are a bigger problem for Anglian Water than any ofthe other 10 water authorities. •
  • 32. 't1ih 31 ' .., f!q ""' 1'UUYl'i'tl 2 lJ'UltUJ 2562 run 14.30- 16.30 -u. 1o It is claimed that there are three factors that have contributed to East Anglia's unwanted nitrate problem. Firstly, a large quantity ofwater comes from underground sources and the water table is heavily loaded with nitrates created by years ofintensive agriculture, encouraged by Common Market farm policies. Secondly, fertilizers running offthe land have added 15 to the problem, with some 50 per cent poorly applied by farmers. High nitrate levels are also caused every winter by the natural breakdown ofroots and vegetation in the soil, but the process causes more problems in East Anglia because of the intensive use of the land. 73. In the extract, the word authority (line 2) means _. 1. power to give orders to people 2. the power to influence people 3. official permission to run a public service 4. the power or right to administer an organization 5. organization responsible for a particular public service 74. According to the European Commission, _ . 1. nitrates in water supplies must not be higher than 50 milligrams per liter 2. nitrates must be reduced in 50 water sources all over the country 3. more than 50 milligrams ofnitrates in one liter ofwater is safe for consumption 4. consumers should filter their household supplies before drinking the water 5. despite high levels ofnitrates in water supplies, the water is still safe enough for drinking •
  • 33. ~ih 32 . Q.l t! "" "" 11~114.30- 16.30 cu. 1'U~tfl'Hl 2 li'Ulflll 2562 75. According to the extract, the water table is heavily loaded with nitrates (lines 12- 13) means_. 1. nitrates in underground water are heavy 2. underground water has a lot ofnitrates 3. underground water is heavy because ofnitrates 4. heavy nitrates are loaded into underground water 5. nitrates are removed from underground water sources 76. According to the extract, one cause of East Anglia's nitrate problem is the 1. use of underground water for too many agricultural products 2. large quantity of underground water used for agriculture 3. incorrect use ofchemical fertilizers for intensive agriculture 4. Common Market limiting the use offertilizers for agriculture 5. poor quality offertilizers used in agriculture 77. The word process (line 17) refers to _ . 1. regularly filtering household supplies 2. water coming from underground sources 3. fertilizers running offthe land to water sources 4. health warnings about the effects of nitrates 5. natural breakdown of roots and vegetation in the soil •
  • 34. ' ~ NIETS ..., """' ""' 11-!&nl'Hl 2 liUUUJ 2562 • §JVIP1 anlUi.rloaaunlllmsiioolllicwnli (aoMlSUI111U) ..._.....,..olfGatlariii!T-*CS.WC. (NIIt~) n~n 14.30- 16.30 1-!. 78. The phrase intensive use of land (line 18) means _ . 1. having a large farming area 2. repeatedly using too much fertilizer 3. planting various kinds of crops in one area 4. using too many farming techniques 5. growing as many crops as possible on the same land 79. It can be inferred from the extract that 1. Anglian Water urgently needs to reduce nitrates to acceptable levels 2. water sources in East Anglia are safe for household uses 3. people in some areas are not afraid to drink water from household supplies 4. Anglian Water is facing the biggest problem about the quality of its agricultural products 5. over the region ofEast Anglia, the main problem is that there is not enough water 80. The tone of this extract is 1. humorous 2. persuasive 3 positive 4. critical 5. instructive •