İNGİLİZCE DENEME SINAVI, PRACTİCE EXAM 8
Bu testimizde ingilizce sınavı, ingilizce seviye tespit sınavı ve cevapları, ingilizce sınav soruları, ingilizce seviye tespit sınavı çöz, english practice exam, ingilizce genel test indir, ingilizce test çöz, kpds ingilizce deneme sınavı, yds ingilizce deneme sınavı çöz gibi konuları ele alacağız.
Complete the dialogue
88-Roger: There is a new play on that's supposed to be really good. Would you
like to see it?
Anne : ………………
Roger: I guess our tastes are really different. Maybe we’d better just forget
it. Maybe that would be best.
A)You know I hate football. I don't know why you bother to ask.
B)I've been looking forward to seeing it since I read about it. I thought you'd
never ask.
C)Not this weekend. I've got exams all next week. Maybe after that.
D)I don't much like live theatre. I'd prefer a disco or even an amusement
arcade.
E)I've read the book and seen the film. They were really good.
89-Dawn: Why don’t you come sailing with us next weekend?
Elaine: I've never been sailing before. Isn't there a lot you have to know?
Dawn: …………………..
Elaine: Maybe I will try it then. It's something I've always wanted to do.
A)That's right. It can be really dangerous for beginners.
B)It's not so dangerous if you start on small waves and learn to stand up on the
surf board gradually.
C)I'm sorry. I thought you had done lots of sailing. Maybe you shouldn't come
after all.
D)It is more interesting if you can identify the different kinds of coral and
fish.
E)Not if the others are experienced. We can give you something easy to do, then
teach you bit by bit.
90-Bobby: Dad, can I have an ice-cream?
Frank: Not now. you'll spoil your appetite for dinner.
Bobby: …………………………
Frank: Ask me again then and we'll see.
A)You're so mean! You never let me have what I want.
B)That's what you always say.
C)But I promise I'll eat properly even if I do have an ice-cream.
D)That's OK. I didn't really want an ice-cream anyway.
E)How about after dinner?
91- Kevin: Hi Mick. If you need work, we've got a roofing job coming up next
week.
Mick : In the middle of winter? Are you crazy?
Kevin:…………… .
Mick: Okay then. I’ll accept it. When shall I start?
A)Yes, you may be right as it's been below freeing this week.
B)In fact, it is a silly time .I think I'll refuse the job.
C)Work is scarce right now. Take it or leave it.
D)I'll take that as a refusal ? Am I right?
E)Well. then I'll call you when I've heard from the owner next week.
92
Jeremy: Hello Phil. How are your wife and children?
Phil:
……………………..
Jeremy: Oh, it's like an epidemic these days. If there's anything we
can do to help, just let us know.
A)My wife went to visit her parents last week and took the kids with her.
B)They've all been down with the flu, so it's been really difficult to cope.
C)My wife's brother died
last week, so she's gone home for the funeral.
D)They're fine, but my wife's new job keeps her so busy that I have to do most
of the housework.
E)My son has just been expelled from school, but my daughter's at the top of her
class.
93-Sheila: I’ve got next week off, and I don't know what to do.
Patricia: The weather is so nice this time of year. Why don't you go to the
seaside?
Sheila: ……………….
Patricia: Don't be silly. Just go. I’m sure you can find somewhere to stay.
A)We've thought of that, but it might be crowded, and we haven't made any
reservations.
B)But it is so far. We'd have to spend half the week driving back and forth.
C)I don't know. I'm not that fond of camping isolated from people.
D)Oh, I can't swim, and James just gets bored lying in the sun.
E)The last time we went to the seaside, we camped out and had a lovely time.
94-Peter: We'll never get this work finished unless we hurry.
Paul: And if we don't finish, the boss will go mad.
Peter
: ………………………
Paul: Yes, we shouldn't miss a minute.
A)I think it's time we had a cup of tea, then.
B)Well, is there a good mental hospital in town if he goes mad?
C)Why don't we move on to something else that is more important?
D)Let's go home and worry about it tomorrow.
E)Then we'd better stop talking and start working.
Find the odd sentence
95-(I)The
man credited with developing the first vaccine to fight against the crippling
disease polio is the American doctor Jonas Salk. (II) He and his co-workers
first tested a polio vaccine against an inactive polio virus in 1952. (III) In
1954, field tests were conducted on a large scale. (IV) Consequently, a number
of once deadly diseases have been conquered since the introduction of
vaccination. (V) In the end, Salk's vaccine proved the best, and was used
without further problems.
A)I B)II C)III D)IV E)V
96-(I)A
frog which lives deep in the Amazon rain forest secretes a mucus used by
Indians, who believe that it makes them better hunters. (II) Early findings
illustrate that hunting is one of the oldest and most traditional activities
known to man. (III) When a hunter wishes to use this "frog magic", another man
burns the hunter's skin with a hot twig, mixes saliva with the mucus, and
applies it to the burn. (IV) After this, the hunter becomes violently ill, then
falls into an agitated sleep, only to wake up the next day eager to hunt. (V)
Scientists are interested in this ancient custom as they believe that the mucus
may contain a substance able to help treat some brain diseases.
A)I B)II C)III D)IV E)V
97-(I)Walia
Ibex roam the steep slopes of Ethiopia's rugged mountains. (II) Legends trace
their ancestry to the Near East, the species having migrated to the African
continent thousands of years ago. (III) Therefore, most of the people of
Ethiopia migrated to Africa from Southern Arabia over a thousand years ago. (IV)
Today, a small population survives perilously on a mountain range surrounded by
villages. (V) Despite protection within this area, which is a national park,
agricultural intrusion and illegal hunting continue to threaten the Walia Ibex:
A)I B)II C)III D)IV E)V
98-(I)
Deep in rural Dorset, on the edge of the Blackmoor Vale, stands Bulbarrow Hill.
(II) Under its old name of Wessex, Dorset forms the setting of most writings of
Thomas Hardy, a great Victorian era novelist. (III) It is a long walk to the
top, but worth it, particularly on a
sunny May morning when the English countryside takes on the sumptuous colours
and vivid clarity of spring. (IV) From the summit, the whole of Britain seems to
unfold before you as nothing but soft hills and small fields stretch away to a
distant horizon, (V) It is a scene of rare beauty, and it is getting rarer.
A)I B)II C)III D)IV E)V
99-(I)Offshore
areas considered part of South America include Easter Island, the Falkland
Islands, the Galapagos Islands, and Tierra del Fuego. (II) In 1965, the English
scientist Sir Edward Bullard used a computer to test the fit of Africa to South
America. (III) He found that at a depth of 2000 metres, the fit was very close
indeed. (IV) This is not the only evidence to suggest that Africa was once
joined to South America. (V) For example, there is also a belt of ancient rocks
along the coast of Brazil, which corresponds with the rocks across the South
Atlantic in West Africa.
A)I B)II C)III D)IV E)V
100-(I)No
one really knows how many stars there are in the universe, but astronomers
calculate that there must be about 100,000 million of them in our own galaxy.
(II) In the universe as a whole, there may be as many as 10,000 million
galaxies. (III) On this gigantic scale, the Earth is about as significant as a
single grain of sand. (IV) Of course, no one really knows how many grains of
sand there may be on a single beach. (V) This illustrates just how immense is
the task of exploring even the merest fraction of outer space.
A)I B)II C)III D)IV E)V
Cevap Anahtarı:
88.D 89.E 90.E
91.C 92.B 93.A 94.E 95.D 96.B 97.C
98.B 99.A 100.D
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