Đề thi giữa HK1 môn Tiếng Anh 11 năm 2020

Số lượt xem:

Báo đề lỗi

Câu 1: Choose the word which is stressed differently from the rest.

Đáp án C nhấn âm 2.

Các đáp án còn lại nhấn âm 3.

Câu 2: Choose the word which is stressed differently from the rest.

Đáp án D nhấn âm 1.

Các đáp án còn lại nhấn âm 2.

Câu 3: Choose the word which is stressed differently from the rest.

Đáp án D nhấn âm 2.

Các đáp án còn lại nhấn âm 1.

Câu 4: Choose the word whose underlined part is pronounced differently from the rest.

Phần gạch chân đáp án B phát âm là / ə /

Phần gạch chân đáp án còn lại phát âm là / æ /  

Câu 5: Choose the word whose underlined part is pronounced differently from the rest.

Phần gạch chân đáp án C phát âm là / ɪ /

Phần gạch chân đáp án còn lại phát âm là / aɪ /

Câu 6: Choose the word whose underlined part is pronounced differently from the rest.

Phần gạch chân đáp án B phát âm là / ʃ /

Phần gạch chân đáp án còn lại phát âm là / t /

Câu 7: Choose the best answer to complete each unfinished sentence, substitutes the underlined part, or has a close meaning to the original one.

The sky grew _____ as the storm approached.

Tạm dịch: Bầu trời tối sầm lại khi cơn bão đến gần.

Câu 8: Choose the best answer to complete each unfinished sentence, substitutes the underlined part, or has a close meaning to the original one.

People with _____ should be given the same opportunities as non-disabled people.

Chỗ trống cần điền là một danh từ

disabilities: khuyết tật

Câu 9: Choose the best answer to complete each unfinished sentence, substitutes the underlined part, or has a close meaning to the original one.

We should get _____ in charity work to help people in need.

Get involved in: dồn hết tâm trí tham gia vào việc gì đó

Câu 10: Choose the best answer to complete each unfinished sentence, substitutes the underlined part, or has a close meaning to the original one.

It's time for you to stop relying _______ your parents.

rely on: phụ thuộc, lệ thuộc

Câu 11: Choose the best answer to complete each unfinished sentence, substitutes the underlined part, or has a close meaning to the original one.

He can be trusted to do the job well. He’s very _______person.

reliable: đáng tin cậy; trust: tin tưởng

Câu 12: Choose the best answer to complete each unfinished sentence, substitutes the underlined part, or has a close meaning to the original one.

Some parents care a lot about the appropriate behavior when having a meal with other people. That is why they want to teach their children good _______ from a very early age.

Good table manners: cách cư xử trên bàn

Dẫn chứng ở cây trước "the appropriate behavior when having a meal" đang đề cập đến thói quen, cách cư xử trên bàn.

Câu 13: Choose the best answer to complete each unfinished sentence, substitutes the underlined part, or has a close meaning to the original one.

You should take initiative and engage your classmates in friendly conversation. The underlined word has the OPPOSITE meaning to____________.

"take initiative": mang nghĩa chủ động >< act after other people: mang nghĩa chủ động >< hành động sau người khác

Câu 14: Choose the best answer to complete each unfinished sentence, substitutes the underlined part, or has a close meaning to the original one.

I have a 9 p.m. _____. I would be punished if I returned home after that time.

"curfew": giờ giới nghiêm

Câu 15: Choose the best answer to complete each unfinished sentence, substitutes the underlined part, or has a close meaning to the original one.

When you are______, look for something to do. It’ll help you _____your trouble.

"You" chủ ngữ chỉ người nên ta phải dùng "ed" thích hợp, loại A, B

Cấu trúc: help SO to V

Câu 16: Choose the best answer to complete each unfinished sentence, substitutes the underlined part, or has a close meaning to the original one.

Students decided to get involved in a _______ event to provide practical help for those in need.

Charity event: sự kiện đặc biệt

Câu 17: Choose the best answer to complete each unfinished sentence, substitutes the underlined part, or has a close meaning to the original one.

I feel really excited because I _____ with Vicky tomorrow.

"have got a date": đi hẹn hò

Câu 18: Choose the best answer to complete each unfinished sentence, substitutes the underlined part, or has a close meaning to the original one.

You should appear _______during the negotiation with your partners.

Appear có thể được dùng như 1 động từ liên kết với nghĩa "trông như, có vẻ như, dường như". Nó được sử dụng tương tự như động từ seem, nhưng ít dùng hơn, đặc biệt trong giao tiếp thân mật.
Khi được dùng với nghĩa này, sau appear thường là tính từ, chứ không phải trạng từ.

Câu 19: Choose the best answer to complete each unfinished sentence, substitutes the underlined part, or has a close meaning to the original one.

I _____ for her two hours, but she _____ yet.

"have been waiting": thì hiện tại hoàn thành tiếp diễ, diễn tả hành động xuyên suốt kéo dài đến hiện tại

Câu 20: Choose the best answer to complete each unfinished sentence, substitutes the underlined part, or has a close meaning to the original one.

The last time I went to the museum was a year ago.

Chuyển từ quá khứ đơn sang hiện tại hoàn thành

Câu 21: Error Identification

My mother makes (A) me doing (B) my homeworks so (C) I can't go out (D).

Make O V nguyên mẫu

Sửa doing thành do

Câu 22: Error Identification

The (A) noise on the roof of (B) the trailer woke (C) Bill and Fred up very quick (D).

Bổ nghĩa cho động từ cần một trạng từ, ta phải dùng quickly thay cho quick

Câu 23: Error Identification

Around (A) the age of (B) sixteen you must (C) make one of the biggest decision (D) of your life.

decision ⇒ decisions

Câu 24: Error Identification

She finds (A) housework bored (B) and doesn't (C) like to stay (D) at home all day.

Bored thành boring: find something Adj 

Câu 25: Error Identification

Each (A) nation has (B) many people who (C) voluntary (D) take care of others.

Sai từ loại

Sau "who" là một động từ chứ không phải là một tính từ

Câu 26: Read the article and answer the questions that follow

Is There Really a Generation Gap?

According to the results of a survey in USA WEEKEND Magazine, there isn’t really a generation gap. The magazine’s “Teens & Parents” survey shows that today’s generation of young people generally get along well with their parents and appreciate the way they’re being raised. Most feel that their parents understand them, and they believe their parents consider family as the No. 1 priority in their lives. Although more than a third of teens have something in their rooms they would like to keep secret from their parents, it is usually nothing more harmful than a diary or a CD.

Such results may seem surprising in the context of the violent events that people hear about in the media. Maybe because of the things they hear, parents worry that their own kids might get out of control once they reach the teenage years. However, the facts in the survey should make us feel better. The survey shows us that today’s teens are loving and sensible. They are certainly happier than the angry people in the teenage stereotypes we all know about. True, some teenagers are very angry, and we need to recognize their needs, but the great majority of teens are not like that at all.

In contrast to some stereotypes, most teens believe they must be understanding about differences among individuals. Many of them volunteer for community service with disadvantaged people. When they talk about themselves, their friends and their families, they sound positive and proud. Generally, these are very nice kids.

Is this spirit of harmony a change from the past? Only a generation ago, parent-child relations were described as the “generation gap”. Yet even then, things were not so bad. Most kids in the 1960s and 1970s shared their parents’ basic values.

Perhaps, however, it is true that American families are growing closer at the beginning of this new millennium. Perhaps there is less to fight about, and the dangers of drug abuse and other unacceptable behavior are now well known. Perhaps, compared to the impersonal world outside the home, a young person’s family is like a friendly shelter, not a prison. And perhaps parents are acting more like parents than they did 20 or 30 years ago.

According the first paragraph, what did the survey find out about teenagers?

The magazine’s “Teens & Parents” survey shows that today’s generation of young people generally get along well with their parents and appreciate the way they’re being raised.

Câu 27: Read the article and answer the questions that follow

Is There Really a Generation Gap?

According to the results of a survey in USA WEEKEND Magazine, there isn’t really a generation gap. The magazine’s “Teens & Parents” survey shows that today’s generation of young people generally get along well with their parents and appreciate the way they’re being raised. Most feel that their parents understand them, and they believe their parents consider family as the No. 1 priority in their lives. Although more than a third of teens have something in their rooms they would like to keep secret from their parents, it is usually nothing more harmful than a diary or a CD.

Such results may seem surprising in the context of the violent events that people hear about in the media. Maybe because of the things they hear, parents worry that their own kids might get out of control once they reach the teenage years. However, the facts in the survey should make us feel better. The survey shows us that today’s teens are loving and sensible. They are certainly happier than the angry people in the teenage stereotypes we all know about. True, some teenagers are very angry, and we need to recognize their needs, but the great majority of teens are not like that at all.

In contrast to some stereotypes, most teens believe they must be understanding about differences among individuals. Many of them volunteer for community service with disadvantaged people. When they talk about themselves, their friends and their families, they sound positive and proud. Generally, these are very nice kids.

Is this spirit of harmony a change from the past? Only a generation ago, parent-child relations were described as the “generation gap”. Yet even then, things were not so bad. Most kids in the 1960s and 1970s shared their parents’ basic values.

Perhaps, however, it is true that American families are growing closer at the beginning of this new millennium. Perhaps there is less to fight about, and the dangers of drug abuse and other unacceptable behavior are now well known. Perhaps, compared to the impersonal world outside the home, a young person’s family is like a friendly shelter, not a prison. And perhaps parents are acting more like parents than they did 20 or 30 years ago.

According to paragraph two, parents hear things that make them worry about their own kids. What kind of things do they hear?

Such results may seem surprising in the context of the violent events that people hear about in the media. 

Câu 28: Read the article and answer the questions that follow

Is There Really a Generation Gap?

According to the results of a survey in USA WEEKEND Magazine, there isn’t really a generation gap. The magazine’s “Teens & Parents” survey shows that today’s generation of young people generally get along well with their parents and appreciate the way they’re being raised. Most feel that their parents understand them, and they believe their parents consider family as the No. 1 priority in their lives. Although more than a third of teens have something in their rooms they would like to keep secret from their parents, it is usually nothing more harmful than a diary or a CD.

Such results may seem surprising in the context of the violent events that people hear about in the media. Maybe because of the things they hear, parents worry that their own kids might get out of control once they reach the teenage years. However, the facts in the survey should make us feel better. The survey shows us that today’s teens are loving and sensible. They are certainly happier than the angry people in the teenage stereotypes we all know about. True, some teenagers are very angry, and we need to recognize their needs, but the great majority of teens are not like that at all.

In contrast to some stereotypes, most teens believe they must be understanding about differences among individuals. Many of them volunteer for community service with disadvantaged people. When they talk about themselves, their friends and their families, they sound positive and proud. Generally, these are very nice kids.

Is this spirit of harmony a change from the past? Only a generation ago, parent-child relations were described as the “generation gap”. Yet even then, things were not so bad. Most kids in the 1960s and 1970s shared their parents’ basic values.

Perhaps, however, it is true that American families are growing closer at the beginning of this new millennium. Perhaps there is less to fight about, and the dangers of drug abuse and other unacceptable behavior are now well known. Perhaps, compared to the impersonal world outside the home, a young person’s family is like a friendly shelter, not a prison. And perhaps parents are acting more like parents than they did 20 or 30 years ago.

What is the stereotype referred to in paragraph 2?

The survey shows us that today’s teens are loving and sensible. They are certainly happier than the angry people in the teenage stereotypes we all know about.

Câu 29: Read the article and answer the questions that follow

Is There Really a Generation Gap?

According to the results of a survey in USA WEEKEND Magazine, there isn’t really a generation gap. The magazine’s “Teens & Parents” survey shows that today’s generation of young people generally get along well with their parents and appreciate the way they’re being raised. Most feel that their parents understand them, and they believe their parents consider family as the No. 1 priority in their lives. Although more than a third of teens have something in their rooms they would like to keep secret from their parents, it is usually nothing more harmful than a diary or a CD.

Such results may seem surprising in the context of the violent events that people hear about in the media. Maybe because of the things they hear, parents worry that their own kids might get out of control once they reach the teenage years. However, the facts in the survey should make us feel better. The survey shows us that today’s teens are loving and sensible. They are certainly happier than the angry people in the teenage stereotypes we all know about. True, some teenagers are very angry, and we need to recognize their needs, but the great majority of teens are not like that at all.

In contrast to some stereotypes, most teens believe they must be understanding about differences among individuals. Many of them volunteer for community service with disadvantaged people. When they talk about themselves, their friends and their families, they sound positive and proud. Generally, these are very nice kids.

Is this spirit of harmony a change from the past? Only a generation ago, parent-child relations were described as the “generation gap”. Yet even then, things were not so bad. Most kids in the 1960s and 1970s shared their parents’ basic values.

Perhaps, however, it is true that American families are growing closer at the beginning of this new millennium. Perhaps there is less to fight about, and the dangers of drug abuse and other unacceptable behavior are now well known. Perhaps, compared to the impersonal world outside the home, a young person’s family is like a friendly shelter, not a prison. And perhaps parents are acting more like parents than they did 20 or 30 years ago.

What is the main subject of paragraph three?

they sound positive and proud. Generally, these are very nice kids.

Is this spirit of harmony a change from the past? Only a generation ago, parent-child relations were described as the “generation gap”. Yet even then, things were not so bad. Most kids in the 1960s and 1970s shared their parents’ basic values.

Câu 30: Read the article and answer the questions that follow

Is There Really a Generation Gap?

According to the results of a survey in USA WEEKEND Magazine, there isn’t really a generation gap. The magazine’s “Teens & Parents” survey shows that today’s generation of young people generally get along well with their parents and appreciate the way they’re being raised. Most feel that their parents understand them, and they believe their parents consider family as the No. 1 priority in their lives. Although more than a third of teens have something in their rooms they would like to keep secret from their parents, it is usually nothing more harmful than a diary or a CD.

Such results may seem surprising in the context of the violent events that people hear about in the media. Maybe because of the things they hear, parents worry that their own kids might get out of control once they reach the teenage years. However, the facts in the survey should make us feel better. The survey shows us that today’s teens are loving and sensible. They are certainly happier than the angry people in the teenage stereotypes we all know about. True, some teenagers are very angry, and we need to recognize their needs, but the great majority of teens are not like that at all.

In contrast to some stereotypes, most teens believe they must be understanding about differences among individuals. Many of them volunteer for community service with disadvantaged people. When they talk about themselves, their friends and their families, they sound positive and proud. Generally, these are very nice kids.

Is this spirit of harmony a change from the past? Only a generation ago, parent-child relations were described as the “generation gap”. Yet even then, things were not so bad. Most kids in the 1960s and 1970s shared their parents’ basic values.

Perhaps, however, it is true that American families are growing closer at the beginning of this new millennium. Perhaps there is less to fight about, and the dangers of drug abuse and other unacceptable behavior are now well known. Perhaps, compared to the impersonal world outside the home, a young person’s family is like a friendly shelter, not a prison. And perhaps parents are acting more like parents than they did 20 or 30 years ago.

In what way, according to the writer, are parents today different from they were a generation ago?

Perhaps there is less to fight about, and the dangers of drug abuse and other unacceptable behavior are now well known