BD HS GIOI-TNGDPT

Chia sẻ bởi Nguyễn Hữu Quốc | Ngày 20/10/2018 | 25

Chia sẻ tài liệu: BD HS GIOI-TNGDPT thuộc Tiếng Anh 9

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PRETEST 5

I. Use the verbs in parentheses in their correct tense forms:
1. We have an old musical instrument. It (1.call)………….a clavichord. It (2.make)……… in Germany in 1681. Our clavichord (3.keep)……….in the living-room. It (4.belong)….. ………to our family for a long time. The instrument (5.buy)………..by my grandfather many years ago. Recently, it (6.damage)………….by a visitor. She (7.try)……….to play jazz on it! She (8.strike)………..the keys too hard and two of the strings were broken. My father was shocked. Now we (9. not allow)……….to touch it. It (10.repaire)………. by a friend of my father’s.
2. a.Yesterday, I (1. go) to my daughter`s dance recital. I (2. be/never) to a dance recital before. I (3. not/take) dancing lessons when I was a child.
b. In the evenings I (4, often/play) chess with my next door neighbour. I (5. play) chess with him ever since I (6. come) to live here ten years ago. He (7 .be) here all his life. He (8. inherit) the house from his father, another famous chess player.
II. Read the passage and choose the best answer:
You are going to read a newspaper article about ancient rock art. For questions 1-8 choose the answer (A, B, C or D) which you think fits best according to the text.
Tens of thousands of ancient pictures carved into the rocks at one of France`s most important tourist sites are being gradually destroyed. Scientists and researchers fear that the 36,000 drawings on rocks in Mont Bego in the French Alps are being damaged so 6 rapidly that they will not survive for future generations.
The mountain, believed to have once been a site for prayer and worship, is scattered with 4,000-year-old drawings cut into bare rock. They include pictures of cows with horns, cultivated fields and various gods and goddesses. But as the popularity of the site increases, the pictures are being ruined by thoughtless graffiti.
jean Clottes is the chairman of the International Committee on Rock Art. He says, `People think that because the pictures have been there so long they will always continue to be there. But if the damage continues at this rate there will be nothing left in 50 years!
He describes seeing tourists stamping on the drawings, wearing away the rock and definition of the artwork as they do so. Some visitors, he says, even chop off parts to take home as souvenirs.
`When people think they can`t take a good enough photograph, they rub the drawings to get a clearer picture: he said. `The drawings are polished by the weather, and if the sun is shining and the visitors can`t see them properly they simply rub and scrape them to make them look fresher.`
Other researchers describe how people arrive carrying long sticks with sharp ends to scratch their own drawings, or even their names, in the rocks.
But experts are divided over the best way to preserve the drawings. Henry de Lumley, director of the Museum of Natural History in Paris, believes that the only way to save the site is to turn the whole mountain into a -`no-go` area, preventing the public from going there except on guided tours. Otherwise, he says, not only will the site be completely destroyed but important research work will be reduced.
Clottes disagrees. `The measure proposed by Henry de Lumley is the most severe, and while it is the most effective, it is also certain to bring about protests from people who live there: he said. `The site was classified as a historic monument years ago by the Ministry of Culture, and we must do as much as possible to save what is there!
David Lavergne, the regional architect, also wants to avoid closing the site. `Henry de Lumley`s idea isn`t ideal,` he said. `Our department feels that the best solution is to let people look at the site, but because the area is very big it is difficult to prevent visitors from damaging it. I would prefer that everyone was able to look at it, but the main problem is financial. We do not have the funds to employ the necessary number of guards. We may have to consider charging a fee. There seems to be no prospect of government funding`
In Nice, Annie Echassoux, who also worked on researching the site, is alarmed that as the mountain becomes easier to reach – tourists can now avoid the three-and-a-half-hour walk by hiring vehicles – the damage will increase rapidly. She thinks that the only solution is to rope off the area and provide guides. `You can`t say the plan can`t go ahead because there is no
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