Đề thi thử Anh Chuyên vào 10 CNN năm 2023 (có giải thích đáp án chi tiết cho tài khoản FREE)

3/11/2023 6:00:00 AM

Đề thi thử môn tiếng Anh vào lớp 10 theo cấu trúc của trường THPT Chuyên Ngoại Ngữ nhằm giúp thí sinh tự đánh giá năng lực của bản thân và chuẩn bị tốt kiến thức cho kì thi tuyển sinh ngày 3/6/2023.

Choose the word which has the underlined part pronounced differently from the others.

  • irony

  • abolish

  • morality

  • violate

Choose the word which has the underlined part pronounced differently from the others.
  • parachute 

  • chaperone

  • niche

  • franchise 

Choose the word which has the underlined part pronounced differently from the others.
  • audit
  • raucous
  • draught
  • manslaughter

Choose the word which has the underlined part pronounced differently from the others.

  • subtitle

  • subtle

  • superb

  • cerebral 

Choose the word that differs from the rest in the position of the main stress.

  • catastrophic
  • paparazzi
  • ballerina
  • testimony

Choose the word that differs from the rest in the position of the main stress.

  • magnetic
  • dilemma
  • polyester
  • endeavour

Choose the word that differs from the rest in the position of the main stress.

  • aroma
  • majesty
  • precariat
  • flamingo

Choose the word that differs from the rest in the position of the main stress.

  • cultivate
  • gullible
  • reminisce
  • turbulent

Choose the word(s) OPPOSITE in meaning to the underlined word(s).

The nurse gave me some medicine which totally knocked me out.

  • brought me round
  • backed me up
  • checked me out
  • put me down

Choose the word(s) OPPOSITE in meaning to the underlined word(s).

Parents and teachers need to be cognizant of the nature of the child's dysfunction.

  • judicious
  • ignorant
  • appreciative
  • attentive

Choose the word(s) OPPOSITE in meaning to the underlined word(s).

The student's prevarication, when asked about their sources for the research paper, raised suspicions of plagiarism.

  • conjecture
  • sangfroid
  • affability
  • veracity

Choose the word(s) CLOSEST in meaning to the underlined word(s).

The lawyer fastidiously prepared for the trial, spending countless hours reviewing evidence and witness statements.

  • desperately
  • meticulously
  • extensively
  • disgustingly

Choose the word(s) CLOSEST in meaning to the underlined word(s).

My fiancé and I are between the devil and the deep blue sea because both our parents want us to spend Thanksgiving with them but they live on opposite sides of the country.

  • between the sun and the moon
  • between a rock and a hard place
  • between the left and the right
  • between a lime and a pepper

Choose the word(s) CLOSEST in meaning to the underlined word(s).

The president would require tobacco companies to pay for a $150 million advertising crusade to stop young people from smoking.

  • party
  • campaign
  • service
  • organization

The snake slithered out from the bushes, _____ the rabbit that had been peacefully grazing nearby.

  • staggering
  • shattering
  • distressing
  • startling

The high-pressure environment of the hospital emergency room made even Tom, one of the most experienced doctors, feel like a _____.

  • lost cause
  • false dawn
  • dark horse
  • basket case

If the railway system _____, the government should invest substantial amounts of money now.

  • is improved
  • improves
  • is to improve
  • is to be improved

It was found that some aromas made people feel drowsy while others made them feel _____ or even euphoric.

  • uptight
  • uplifted
  • upstanding
  • upfront

The rescue team's success was _____ as they attempted to save the hikers stranded on the mountain.

  • the icing on the cake
  • a kick in the teeth
  • on the razor edge
  • in the heat of the moment

Read the text and choose the best answer to fill in the blanks.

There’s extensive historical evidence that our ancestors may have witnessed a massive invasion of Unidentified Flying Objects on their territories. These extraterrestrials are to have come into touch with the ancient earthly populations and helped them erect numerous magnificent structures or even establish glamorous empires.

However, the present-day fascination with UFO was only instigated by the first widely American sighting in Idaho in 1947. Since that time, countless other close encounters have been reported both by highly credible witnesses such as top-class pilots and less credible ones such as ordinary civilians. Thousands of people around the world maintain having come close to the visitors from outer space or have been for a scientific study inside their flying saucers.

Although most of these accounts have been dismissed as fantasy or , there’s mounting criticism from the public and media for ignoring the subject for too long. To many people, rejecting even the most inexplicable sightings or UFO encounters as luminous artificial objects, natural phenomena like auroras, or even as meteorological balloons and satellites seems to be an irresponsible approach. Most of us would prefer to believe that these extraterrestrial guests are arriving from some remote galaxies to establish a peaceful relationship and possibly give us a fair  against the consequences of our wasteful lifestyles. Yet, there’s another theory implying that the visitors’ attitude towards mankind isn’t so and that their sole aim might be the unscrupulous annihilation of the terrestrial populations. Doubtless, flying saucers still continue to be observed in many places of the world sparking the imagination of UFO-maniacs. But, a large percentage of such sightings will remain  explanation until more convincing evidence is supplied by the true experts. 

Read the passage below and answer the following questions.

A Good Night's Sleep

Air pollution might be linked to poor sleep, say researchers looking into the impact of toxic air on our slumbers. The study explored the proportion of time participants spent asleep in bed at night compared with being awake - a measure known as sleep efficiency. The results reveal that greater exposure to nitrogen dioxide and small particulates known as PM 2.5s are linked with a greater chance of having low sleep efficiency. That, researchers say, could be down to the impact of air pollution on the body.

'Your nose, your sinuses and the back of your throat can all be irritated by those pollutants so that can cause some sleep disruption,' said Martha Billings, assistant professor of medicine at the University of Washington and co-author of the research. The study drew on air pollution data captured for nitrogen dioxide and PM2.5 levels over a five-year period in six US cities, including data captured near the homes of the 1,863 participants. The data was then used to provide estimates of pollution levels in the home.

From the results, the team grouped the participants according to their sleep efficiency, finding that the top quarter of the participants had a sleep efficiency of about 93% or higher, while the bottom quarter had a sleep efficiency of 88% or less. The team then took all of the participants and split them into four groups based on their exposure to air pollution. After taking into account a host of factors including age, smoking status and conditions such as obstructive sleep apnea, the team found that those who were exposed to the highest levels of air pollution over five years were more likely to be in the bottom group for sleep efficiency than those exposed to the lowest levels.

More specifically, high levels of nitrogen dioxide increased the odds of having low sleep efficiency by almost 60%, while high levels of PM2.5s increased the odds by almost 50%. Higher levels of pollution were also linked to greater periods of time spent awake after going to sleep. However, it is not clear whether the pollution itself was affecting the participants' sleep or whether the poorer sleep quality might be down to other factors linked to pollution, such as the noise generated by traffic. In addition, data from one week's sleep might not reflect an individual's typical sleep pattern.

Scott Weichenthal, an epidemiologist from McGill University in Canada, who was not involved in the study, said the research did not prove that air pollution caused poor sleep, but he added that 'There is certainly increasing evidence that air pollution affects our body in ways that we didn't appreciate before.' Roy Harrison, professor of environmental health at the University of Birmingham, said a link between pollution and sleep was not unexpected. 'Previous research has shown associations between nitrogen dioxide exposures and effects upon various physiological and biochemical functions in the body, as well as hospital admissions and mortality,' he said. 'It should therefore come as no surprise that such exposures also affect sleep patterns.'

(The Tribune)

The writer defines sleep efficiency in the first paragraph as _____.

  • the amount of time spent sleeping in bed to all the time during the day and night spent awake
  • the ratio of the time spent sleeping in bed to all the time during the day and night spent awake
  • the hours spent trying to sleep including naps to all the time spent not sleeping
  • the ratio of all time spent trying to sleep to time spent actually sleeping

The word "that" in paragraph 1 refers to _____.

  • the hypothesis about air pollutants reduce sleep duration
  • the nonconnection between toxic gases and sleep patterns
  • the association between air pollutants and sleep quality
  • the fact that toxic pollutants impact sleep efficiency

What reference information does the writer tell us the researchers used as a basis for their study, in the second paragraph?

  • The levels of nitrogen dioxide in the house over time.
  • The levels of PM2.5 in the house over time.
  • The levels of nitrogen dioxide and PM2.5 in the house over time.
  • The levels of nitrogen dioxide and PM2.5 and a host of other contaminants in the house over time.

Why did the researchers separate the participants into groups twice?

  • To make it easer to analyze the statistics
  • To illustrate how the research was more balanced
  • To compare the effects of different parameters
  • To inspect the exactitude of the first result

What does the writer imply about the study's conclusions?

  • Sleep patterns are more susceptible to disruption from noise than from air pollution.
  • The relationship between air pollution and sleep disturbance remains ambiguous.
  • The data collected over another 7 days of sleep is adequate to forecast sleeping patterns.
  • The quality of sleep may be exacerbated by up to 50% due to increased levels of air pollution.

In paragraph 4, what does the word "odds" mean?

  • probabilities
  • cases
  • levels
  • circumstances

According to Roy Harrison, what has previous research found regarding nitrogen dioxide?

  • Nitrogen dioxide expose can cause feelings of suffocation.
  • Nitrogen dioxide has been linked to poor sleep patterns.
  • Nitrogen dioxide contributes to mostly sleeping problems in the city.
  • Nitrogen dioxide inhalation can sometimes result in death in severe cases.

Which of the following best describes the tone of the passage?

  • sarcastic
  • objective
  • critical
  • speculative

Choose the best way to rearrange the following sentences in order to make a meaningful conversation.

a. I jumped into the water, swam out to the little boy, held him so his head stayed above the water, and brought him back to shore.

b. I stood up, looked out toward the ocean, and saw a little boy waving his arms in the air.

c. So what did you do?

d. Well, I was lying on the beach listening to the radio, when suddenly I heard someone shouting for help.

e. What did you do next?

f. What happened? 

  • f-d-c-b-e-a
  • a-b-e-c-d
  • b-e-d-a-c
  • f-d-c-e-a-b

Choose the best way to rearrange the following sentences in order to make a meaningful conversation.

a. I like this restaurant because they give you free bread.

b. It is delicious, especially with butter.

c. I think we should just leave after we fill up on the bread.

d. This hot bread is delicious.

e. No, there’s no charge for the bread in the bill.

f. Well, I think we are paying for it.

  • b-a-d-f-c-e
  • d-b-a-f-e-c
  • d-c-b-a-e-f
  • b-d-e-a-c-f

Choose the best way to rearrange the following sentences in order to make a meaningful conversation.

a. Let's keep our fingers crossed and hope for the best.

b. You know, I've been looking for a job for three months, and this is my first interview.

c. I hope so.

d. Everything will work out just fine.

  • a-c-b-d
  • b-a-c-d
  • a-d-b-c
  • b-d-c-a

Choose the best way to rearrange the following sentences in order to make a meaningful conversation.

a. Yeah, but did you forget that Linda doesn't eat chicken?

b. Linda? Oh, my God! It just slipped my mind.

c. We've got to plan the menu.

d. Oh, that's right. Do you have anything in mind?

e. Remember I asked the chef for the recipe?

f. Oh, we forgot to invite her! 

  • e-c-d-f-b-a
  • f-b-a-c-d-e
  • c-e-d-b-f-a
  • c-d-e-a-b-f

Choose the best way to rearrange the following sentences in order to make a meaningful conversation.

a. Hello. I'm Kenji. Nice to meet you.

b. History. 

c. I don't think we've met. My name is Carmen.

d. Nice meeting you, too. I major in Chemistry. How about you?

  • c-a-d-b
  • a-c-b-d
  • a-d-c-b
  • c-b-d-a

Two friends Nic and Matt are talking about a sports match.

- Nic: “G'day mate. Did you catch the game last night?”

- Matt: “_____”

  • I heard you do taekwondo.
  • Yes, you're getting a bit closer.
  • You must be right after all.
  • No, who played?

Dan: "Does the name Adam Hank ring a bell?"

Jill: "_____"

  • She does that often, to be honest.
  • I don't think there's anyone at the door.
  • It's none of my business.
  • He's the new neighbour, right?

David: We've been together for 10 years now. It feels like yesterday when we first met.

Anna: Time _____, but our love has only grown stronger.

  • squares up
  • bails out
  • marches on
  • runs out

A: I'm really worried about the presentation tomorrow. What if I mess up?

B: Don't _____. Let's focus on preparing well and worry about the rest later.

  • use the cart to feed the horse
  • put the cart before the horse
  • make the horse pull the cart
  • stick the cart on the horse's back

Mary and Jane are talking about John.

- Mary: “I was so disgusted by his accusations that I packed up my things and left right then and there.”

- Jane: “_____ No one can put up with his selfishness.”

  • Why?
  • I don’t blame you.
  • Are you serious?
  • I doubt that

Choose the sentence that is closest in meaning to the following question.

Passengers arriving in Paris by plane catch their first glimpse of the city as they are flying over the Eiffel Tower.

  • When people arrive in Paris by plane, they must first fly over the Eiffel Tower.
  • The Eiffel Tower provides people arriving in Paris on a plane with their first view of the city as they fly overhead.
  • The Eiffel Tower is the sight which first greets visitors to Paris, but only when they arrive by plane.
  • Passengers get a glimpse of The Eiffel Tower as they are flying over Paris on their way out of the airport.

Choose the sentence that is closest in meaning to the following question.

We were told that we should not travel to Iran, but I'm glad we didn't listen. 
  • We should have listened to the people who told us not to go to Iran.
  • We should not have minded the advice of those who told us not to travel to Iran.
  • We just ignored the people who advised us against travelling to Iran.
  • We are happy to have gone to Iran despite being advised against it.

Choose the sentence that is closest in meaning to the following question.

The fatigue we usually feel after a long journey becomes keener when we fly over different time zones. 

  • We normally experience fatigue on a long flight only when we cross time zones.
  • Generally people feel exhausted when crossing time zones, but it is not a serious ailment.
  • Flying over different time zones usually causes certain ailments which may take a long time to recover from.
  • Crossing time zones increases fatigue, which is a normal experience on a long flight.

Choose the sentence that is closest in meaning to the following question.

The committee rejected his application for a fund for his project on the grounds that his research wouldn't benefit people much. 

  • Stating that his research would be of little use to people, the committee refused to provide him with a fund.
  • The committee considered his project totally useless, particularly because the majority of people wouldn’t profit from his research.
  • As his research wouldn’t help people in a practical way, it was not surprising that the committee declined his application.
  • The committee was not very interested in his project because they believed his research had no scientific value.

Choose the sentence that is CLOSEST in meaning to the sentence given.

He had said he was only coming for a short visit, but by the time he left, he had been staying for six months.
  • In contrast to what he had told us initially, he has been staying with us for six months now.
  • Although he’d informed us that his visit would be short, he ended up staying for half a year.
  • He told us that he would not stay long, but now it appears that his visit might last as long as six months.
  • He’s always saying he’ll only stay a short time, but the last time he visited us, he stayed for half a year.

Choose the sentence that best combines this pair of sentences.

He must have been hungry. Did you see the way he wolfed his dinner down?

  • The way he bit off more than he could chew indicated his level of hunger.
  • His appetite for food at the time must have been insatiable due to his being starved.
  • Judging from the way he was eating a whale of food, I know that he had been starving.
  • The fact that he was eating like a horse showed how famished he must have been.

Choose the sentence that best combines this pair of sentences.

Spare us the details of your story, please. Most of us have lost the thread of it anyway.

  • What with our not taking notice your story, you should jog our memory for a short time.
  • We are bored to death with the plot of your story so please just focus on the gist.
  • Please go into details on the story you have just told us as we can’t make head or tail of it.
  • You can save yourself from elaborating on your story because we have lost track of it.

Choose the sentence that best combines this pair of sentences.

A lot of people believe that other life forms exist elsewhere in the universe. However, we'll probably have to wait for a long time until we know for sure. 

  • Many people believe that it will take a long time for us to know for sure if other life forms exist somewhere else in the universe.
  • It is certain that other life forms exist somewhere in the universe, but it will be a long time before people can find and get into contact with them.
  • Many people have long believed that somewhere in the universe there certainly exist other life forms that are waiting for us to contact them.
  • It is most likely that it will be many years before humans know for certain if there are aliens somewhere in the universe, but many people already believe they do.

Choose the sentence that best combines this pair of sentences.

When I was a child, I usually went for family picnics. I would go off into the forest to escape my annoying relatives. 

  • My relatives would always annoy me during the family picnics we had when I was a child by taking me into the forest and leaving me there.
  • My annoying family members would have family picnics when I was young, and I got used to escaping from them into the forest.
  • My relatives used to get really annoyed when I went into the forest and hide during the family picnics we had during my childhood.
  • I used to enter the forest when there was a family picnic during my childhood, so that I could get away from my irritating family members.

Choose the sentence that best combines this pair of sentences.

While opening a door, Glenn's shoulder dislocated. He explained that it was due to his Ehlers-Danlos syndrome.

  • Glenn thinks that his shoulder’s disconnecting while he opened a door may have been caused by his Ehlers-Danlos syndrome.
  • Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, as it is explained by Glenn, often results in a shoulder’s becoming disconnected while one is opening a door.
  • That his shoulder’s becoming disconnected as he opened a door was brought about by his Ehlers-Danlos syndrome is what Glenn stated.
  • It seems that it was Glenn’s Eblers-Danlos syndrome that can explain how he dislocated his shoulder while he was opening a door.

Read the passage and choose the correct answer.

(1) _____. This cultural bias may therefore work against certain groups of people. (2) _____, researchers in cultural differences in intelligence face a major dilemma, namely: how can the need to compare people according to a standard measure be balanced with the need to assess them in the light of their own values and concepts? For example, Richard Nesbit of the University of Michigan concludes that (3) _____. People in Western cultures tend to view intelligence as a means for individuals to devise categories and engage in rational debate, (4) _____ Eastern cultures see it as a way for members of a community to recognise contradictions and complexity and to play their social roles successfully. (5) _____. Their research shows that Chinese conceptions of intelligence emphasize understanding and relating to others, and knowing when to show or not show one’s intelligence.

Choose the correct answer for (1):

  • Recent research studies have found that people in non-Western culture often have ideas about intelligence that are considerably different from those that have shaped Western intelligence tests
  • Recently, researchers have found that there is a small gap between what Western people and Eastern people understand what intelligence is.
  • So far, researchers have proved the significant differences in the intelligent tests conducted by people in non-Western culture and those from Western culture.
  • Recent research has analyzed the disparity of how intelligence is perceived in Western and Asian culture .

Choose the correct answer for (2):

  • However
  • Moreover
  • As a consequence
  • Apparently

Choose the correct answer for (3):

  • East Asian and Western cultures are cognitively different in the way, which then affects the formation of intelligence tests.
  • East Asian and Western cultures have developed cognitive styles that differ in fundamental ways, including how intelligence is understood.
  • East Asian and Western cultures do not share the same values and standards, which makes the neutral intelligence tests impossible to achieve.
  • East Asian and Wester cultures are seeking the common platform based on which culturally free intelligence tests can be devised.

Choose the correct answer for (4):

  • therefore
  • whereas
  • additionally
  • consequently

Choose the correct answer for (5):

  • The research by Sterberg and Shih-Ying, from the University of Taiwan, shows a contrary result
  • Sternberg and Shi-Ying, from the University of Taiwan, share mixed opinions toward the issue
  • This view is backed up by Sternberg and Shih-Ying, from the University of Taiwan
  • Sternberg and Shi-Ying, from the University of Taiwan, stress the significance of culture in intelligence test

Some people think that all teenagers should be required to do unpaid work in their free time to help the local community. They believe this would benefit both the individual teenager and society as a whole.

Do you agree or disagree?

Write a paragraph (about 250 words) to express your opinion.