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1 UBND TỈNH BẮC NINH SỞ GIÁO DỤC VÀ ĐÀO TẠO ĐỀ THI CHÍNH THỨC (Đề thi có 13 trang) KỲ THI CHỌN HỌC SINH GIỎI THPT CẤP TỈNH NĂM HỌC 2023-2024 MÔN: TIẾNG ANH LỚP 12 Thời gian làm bài: 90 phút, không kể thời gian phát đề You will hear an interview in which two journalism students, called Matthew and Tracy, are talking about fact and opinion in the news. Choose the answer (A, B, C or D) which fits best according to what you hear. Question 1. Matthew believes it is difficult to differentiate fact from opinion because ___________. A. people may be unfamiliar with the background to a news story B. there is a wide range of sources for news C. the news is delivered in short segments D. people fail to give their full attention to the news Question 2. The use of various media means that ___________. A. news consumers’ perception of news is distorted B. the way people communicate through news has changed C. news consumers only can get access to news with electronic devices D. news consumers may have a balanced view Question 3. What did Tracy make use of when preparing their questionnaire? A. Open questions B. Brief answers C. Multiple-choice questions D. Long answers Question 4. What did Tracy and Matthew do to help people distinguish facts from opinions? A. They found out a good article of fact or opinion giving. B. They made a comparison with the sample on class sizes. C. They gave a dozen of samples to the surveyed people. D. They delivered an article with a mixture of fact and opinion. Question 5. Matthew checks everything carefully when writing factual articles ___________. A. because he has little experience of it B. because his first one was criticized by his classmates C. in case he misleads readers D. in case they include inaccuracies Question 6. What does Tracy point out about using photos or videos when reporting news? A. Images have a stronger impact than the written words. B. Photos make the news seem more factual. C. Photos and videos enjoy the same popularity.
2 D. Photos are not reliable for many people. Question 7. What is the decisive factor in the amount of visual support in the news? A. The extent to which it is factual B. The preference of readers C. The size of the population and news channel D. The types of media where news is spread Question 8. Matthew’s style of writing when expressing his opinion depends on ___________. A. the ability to make a conversation B. the materials utilised C. an author called Brenda Mcgovern D. the choice of subject You will hear a man, David, being interviewed about his life as a professional footballer. For questions 9- 16, mark the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to each of the following questions. Question 9. How many games has David played for the club? A. none B. three C. one D. two Question 10. How long has he been included in the club? A. seventeen years B. two years C. four years D. fifteen years Question 11. What does David do in a normal day? A. He does fitness training and discusses tactics. B. He does fitness only. C. He discusses tactics and plays a full game. D. He does fitness and plays a full match. Question 12. What do they always do at weekends? A. They talk about the game. B. They do a warm-up. C. They have a game. D. They watch a video. Question 13. What are the videos that the team watch about? A. Their own performance B. A lunch break C. A light warm-up D. A different atmosphere Question 14. What does David say about the diet of a footballer? A. Footballers drink alcohol regularly. B. It has lots of rice, meat and pasta. C. Footballers have to be careful about what they eat. D. It is often unpleasant and bad. Question 15. What is true about David’s down time? A. He spends most of his free time with his friends. B. He hardly has free time, except in the summer. C. He gets home on time. D. He does not usually manage to see his family. Question 16. What does David say about his future ambitions?
3 A. He wants to play for a European team in the next two years. B. He firstly wants to win a secure place in the team. C. He never thinks about playing in the World Cup. D. He can play at the main stadium against all big teams. Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C, or D to indicate the correct answer to each of the questions. Harry Houdini, who died in 1927, was the entertainment phenomenon of the ragtime era. He could escape from chains and padlocks, from ropes and canvas sacks. They put him in a strait-jacket and hung him upside down from a skyscraper and he somehow untied himself. They tied him up in a locked packing case and sank him in Liverpool docks. Minutes later he surfaced smiling. They locked him in a zinc-lined Russian prison van and he emerged leaving the doors locked and the locks undamaged. They padlocked him in a milk chum full of water and he burst free. They put him in a coffin, screwed down the lid, and buried him and... well, no, he didn’t pop up like a mole, but when they dug him up more than half an hour later, he was still breathing. Houdini would usually allow his equipment to be examined by the audience. The chains, locks and packing cases all seemed perfectly genuine, so it was tempting to conclude that he possessed superhuman powers. Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes was the very paragon of analytical thinking but Conan Doyle believed that Houdini achieved his tricks through spiritualism. Indeed, he wrote to the escapologist imploring him to use his psychic powers more profitably for the common good instead of just prostituting his talent every night at the Alhambra. However, Houdini repeatedly denounced spiritualism and disclaimed any psychic element to his act. The alternative explanation for his feats of escapism was that Houdini could do unnatural things with his body. It is widely held that he could dislocate his shoulders to escape from strait-jackets, and that he could somehow contract his wrists in order to escape from handcuffs. His ability to spend long periods in confined spaces is cited as evidence that he could put his body into suspended animation, as Indian fakirs are supposed to do. This is all nonsense. If you ever find yourself in a strait-jacket, it’s difficult to imagine anything less helpful than a dislocated shoulder. Contracting your wrists is not only unhelpful but, frankly, impossible because the bones of your wrist are very tightly packed together and the whole structure is virtually incompressible. As for suspended animation, the trick of surviving burial and drowning relies on the fact that you can live for short periods on the air in a confined space. The air shifted by an average person in a day would occupy a cube just eight feet square. The build-up of carbon monoxide tends to pollute this supply, but, if you can relax, the air in a coffin should keep you going for half an hour or so. In other words, there was nothing physically remarkable about Houdini except for his bravery,
4 dexterity and fitness. His nerve was so cool that he could remain in a coffin six feet underground until they came to dig him up. His fingers were so strong that he could undo a buckle or manipulate keys through the canvas of a strait-jacket or a mail bag. He made a comprehensive study of locks and was able to conceal lock-picks about his person in a way which fooled even the doctors who examined him. When they locked him in the prison van he still had a hacksaw blade with which to saw through the joins in the metal lining and get access to the planks of the floor. As an entertainer he combined all this strength and ingenuity with a lot of trickery. His stage escapes took place behind a curtain with an orchestra playing to disguise the banging and sawing. The milk chum in which he was locked had a double lining so that, while the lid was locked onto the rim, the rim was not actually attached to the chum. Houdini merely had to stand up to get out. The mail sack he cut open at the seam and sewed up with similar thread. The bank safe from which he emerged had been secretly worked on by his mechanics for 24 hours before the performance. All Houdini’s feats are eminently explicable, although to explain them, even now, is a kind of heresy. Houdini belongs to that band of mythical supermen who, we like to believe, were capable of miracles and would still be alive today were it not for some piece of low trickery. It’s said of Houdini that a punch in his belly when he wasn’t prepared for it caused his burst appendix. Anatomically, it’s virtually impossible that a punch could puncture your gut, but the story endures. Somehow the myth of the superman has an even greater appeal than the edifice of twenty-first century logic. Question 17. The writer mentions Houdini’s burial alive to illustrate the fact that ___________. A. his tricks sometimes went disastrously wrong B. he was capable of extraordinary feats of survival C. he had overcome his fear of confined spaces D. he was not always able to do what he claimed he could Question 18. The word “imploring” in paragraph 2 is closest in meaning to ___________. A. beset B. beg C. recommend D. force Question 19. The word “pop up” in paragraph 1 is closest in meaning to ___________. A. burrow B. emerge C. jump up D. remove Question 20. How does the writer say people regard Houdini nowadays? A. They doubt the fact that he ever really existed. B. They refuse to believe the story of how he died. C. They want to hear the scientific explanations for his feats. D. They prefer to believe that he had extraordinary powers. Question 21. In the first paragraph, the writer say Houdini managed to ___________. A. fight his way out of an empty milk chum B. break the locks of a Russian prison van C. jump upside down from a skyscraper D. escape from a submerged box

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