Английский язык
Тест.
We placed an ____________ in the newspaper.
a) exam
b) fridge
c) advert
d) etc.
Your ___________________ rather dirty. Wash it.
a) hair is
b) hair are
c) hairs is
d) hairs are
He left the room _____________________ goodbye.
a) without say
b) without saying
c) without to say
d) without to saying
The ________ story was very interesting.
a) hole
b) hall
c) whole
d) holl
You _____________ breathless if you _______ too fast.
a) become, will run
b) will become, will run
c) will become, run
d) will become, runs
When he ___________ his dog, he ___________his car.
a) feeds, will wash
b) will feed, will wash
c) will feed, wash
d) feeds, washes
They had a picnic in a big _____________.
a) wood
b) forest
c) timber
d) tree
Синонимом-прилагательным выделенного слова в предложении “She was really scared.” является:
a) upset
b) frightened
c) annoyed
d) tired
Why have you come? The concert has been put ____ till next week.
a) up
b) on
c) off
d) to
_____ will come to your party?
a) when
b) why
c) how
d) who
She feels miserable _______ it rains.
a) however
b) whenever
c) whoever
d) whatever
Her TV didn’t work so she tried _______ the aerial.
a) to move
b) moving
c) to moving
d) move
Never stop ____________ yourself.
a) to improve
b) improving
c) to improving
d) improve
When you meet her, remember ____________ her this letter.
a) to give
b) giving
c) to giving
d) give
Have we met? I’ve forgotten ___________ you.
a) to meet
b) meeting
c) to meeting
d) meet
We regret __________ our old car. It was really big.
a) to sell
b) selling
c) to selling
d) sell
I enjoy _____________ the shopping. It’s so cool.
a) to do
b) doing
c) to doing
d) do
He is so intelligent. He always speaks like a _____________.
a) sheep
b) mouth
c) laptop
d) book
She said they _____________ three texts by that time.
a) have translated
b) translated
c) had translated
d) would translate
They said you ____________ our machine the next Monday.
a) would repair
b) will repair
c) repaired
d) had repaired
My sister wondered what I was going to wear ________.
a) today
b) tonight
c) that day
d) now
We _______ them to show their results.
a) said
b) talked
c) told
d) spoke
Steven asked Bob ___________________ the letter.
a) has he sent
b) if has he sent
c) if he has sent
d) if he had sent
Mother asked me ________ at home.
a) will I stay
b) if I would stay
c) if I will stay
d) if would I stay
Jeremy asked his little son _______________.
a) what he had seen
b) what had he seen
c) what did he see
d) what has he seen
Her friends asked her ______________.
a) why was she crying
b) why is she crying
c) why she is crying
d) why she was crying
The man said to Helen _______of his dog.
a) not be afraid
b) not to be afraid
c) don’t be
d) wasn’t afraid
This food is _________. Don’t eat it.
a) roomless
b) hopeless
c) skinless
d) healthless
Does the dress _____ I bought yesterday suit me?
a) who
b) which
c) whose
d) whom
You should read the whole book to understand its ____.
a) plot
b) cover
c) biography
d) manual
If you need to move the mouse to point at different pictures at the top of the screen, you should _____________ on different icons.
a) print
b) cut
c) click
d) copy
To book tickets means to ______________ them in advance.
a) reserve
b) sell
c) spend
d) lose
Alan had not spent much of his life on a farm.
There had been short visits in the summers to his cousins' farm in Devon, but he had never actually done any labour.
He and his parents would stay for a couple of days, ride horses, have some nice meals and head back to London.
His aunt had always said kindly and generously, ‘Why don’t you stay with us for the whole summer?
We’ll teach you how to milk the cows.’
He would just chuckle and answer with a polite but mildly sarcastic response, ‘Oh, don’t tempt me, Aunt Jean.’
During his penultimate year at secondary school, he began to take more of an interest in nature.
He decided that the upcoming summer would be the perfect opportunity to spend more time on the farm.
He made the arrangements with his elated aunt and uncle, packed two months-worth of clothes and set off for the country.
Despite not having spent much time on a farm, Alan knew it would not be an easy experience.
As a child he had noticed his aunt and uncle’s weathered hands.
At the time he didn’t know why, but as he grew older he came to realise the reason.
‘That’s what farming does to you,’ his mum confirmed when he asked her about it.
Still, hard work aside, Alan was curious about all the various tasks a farm had to offer.
He resisted the urge to behave like a tourist, even though he knew that after the two months had finished, he’d return to his privileged life in the city, where the most difficult manual labour was carrying a rucksack over his shoulder.
But there were some things he wasn’t prepared for.
Farming can be remarkably dirty work.
His aunt and uncle’s farm had a variety of animals to tend to, as well as an extensive vegetable garden.
His aunt spent hours every day weeding the garden.
It was not something that could be done in one day, or even one week.
There was no end to the number of unwanted plants that grew alongside the wanted ones.
But Alan spent more time with his uncle and the animals.
The stables housed the horses, which, these days, were less like a second set of farm workers and more like pets, and there were fields of sheep, cattle and a chicken coop.
He, his uncle and his cousin Fred would ride in his uncle’s lorry and unload bales of hay in the fields for the cows.
They had to feed them, and the other animals, as often as they themselves needed to eat.
The feeding of animals, the collecting of chicken eggs from the coop, even the shearing of sheep was all child’s play, and was perhaps as deep into farm life as Alan wanted to venture.
The holding pens had to be cleaned, though, and even worse was the sad fact about animal farming, which was that some animals weren’t long for this world.
This particular aspect wasn’t something that Alan could muster the strength to endure.
When the time came, he bowed out, feeling in the end more cowardly than sorrowful.
His uncle understood.
Alan wasn’t from the farm, and he couldn’t expect him to accept every aspect of the life in just a few short weeks.
‘There are many things I would rather not do out here, but it’s part and parcel of the life,’ his uncle tried to explain.
‘People take these things for granted when somebody else does the work for them.’
While Alan respected his uncle’s words, he spent more and more time in the garden as the weeks went by.
How could Alan’s aunt’s invitation be characterised?
1) Sarcastic.
3) Demanding.
2) Desperate.
4) Sincere.
Alan asked his mum about his aunt and uncle’s hands ...
1) because he didn’t understand why they looked like that.
2) because he wanted to know more about farm life.
3) knowing what she’d say before she said it.
4) wondering if his own hands would eventually look that way.
How did Alan view farm life before he tried it?
1) It would be like a holiday.
2) It would be an interesting experience.
3) It would be easier than his city life.
4) It would be full of really dirty work.
Alan describes the horses as being ...
1) no longer working animals.
2) more useful than the other animals.
3) difficult to tend to.
4) essential to the farm.
‘Themselves’ in ‘as often as they themselves had to eat’ in the fifth paragraph refers to ...
1) the cattle.
3) the chickens.
2) Alan and his family.
4) the horses.
How did Alan feel concerning his refusal of a certain task?
1) He felt sad that this task had to be done.
2) He was ashamed that he wasn’t brave enough to do it.
3) He was happy to have spared the life of a farm animal.
4) He felt upset that his uncle did this kind of work.
The phrase ‘part and parcel’ in the last paragraph means ...
1) inseparable.
3) important.
2) optional.
4) disheartening.
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