Practice Test 7 (Oct 29, 2021)
Practice Test 7 (Oct 29, 2021)
Practice Test 7 (Oct 29, 2021)
Part 1. For questions 1-5, listen to a talk about office life and decide whether these statements are
True (T), False (F) or Not Given (NG). Write your answers in the corresponding numbered boxes
provided.
1. Antony Slumbers believed that employee productivity was the reason for the establishment of the
office. T
2. Open-plan offices were characterized by constant distraction and work inefficiency. F
3. Unexpected meetings have yet to be proven to foster sudden inspiration or recognition.. F
4. Lack of monitoring from bosses is assumed to obstruct straightforward exchange. F
5. Some research has pointed out that firms opting out of rigidity tend to draw the best workforce. NG
Part 2: Write NO MORE THAN FOUR WORDS taken from the recording for each answer in the
corresponding numbered boxes provided.
6. Which form do the moles causing black fungal infection take?
…………………………BLACKISH MOLES …………………………………..
7. Among Covid 19 patients, who are most vulnerable to black fungal infection?
……………………IMMUNOCOMPROMISED PATIENTS………………………………………..
8. Which problem with the nose may a patient experience when he or she suffers from black fungal
infection?
……………………STUFFY AND BLEEDING………………………………………..
9. According to top Indian doctors, what is the culprit behind the rise of infections?
………………………STEROID…OVERUSE…………………………………..
10. Which treatment do patients receive when the infection is identified on time?
………………ANTI-FUNGAL INTRAVENOUS INJECTION…………………………………..
Part 3. For questions 11-15, listen to part of a radio interview with a member of a language revival
action group and choose the answer (A, B, C or D) which fits best according to what you hear . Write
your answers in the corresponding numbered boxes provided.
16. Bain & Company report has attributed the boom of unicorns in the region to the increase in private
equity investment and venture capitalist .
17. Hectocorn is the term used to describe a startup company valued at over $100
billion.
18. August 2020 marks the milestone of Grab in introducing financial services, such as loans, micro-
investment _, health insurance, and a pay-later program.
19. Besides being a service provider for mobile payments, logistics, and food delivery, Go Jek is a
ride-hailing platform .
20. Hyal Route owns the largest independent customer-neutral _ _ , shared fiber
network platform in Myanmar and Cambodia
21. Traveloka is an online-based company, mainly dealing with flight tickets,
Hotel bookings , and so on.
22. In the ecosystem of OVO, _ affiliated merchants , business partners and members
are able to conduct digital payment and smart financial services.
23. Store images have been convertible into shelf insights thanks to the combination of artificial
intelligence, machine learning engines and detailed _ from
Trax.
24. Revolution Precrafted allows customers to live in aesthetically adorned properties by creating a wide
range of customized, livable spaces.
25. Singapore and Indonesia will no longer be the exclusive nesting ground for
unicorns.
II. LEXICO: For questions 1-15, choose the correct answer A, B, C or D to each of the following
questions.
1. The boss made no to their gender, all the female workers were forced to do the heavy
work as their male counterparts.
A. concession B. compromise C. allowance D. regression
2. Without discipline, students may think that they have the to do whatever they want.
A. licence B. autocracy C. prerogative D. dispensation
3. It's a good film, but the near the ending scene is a bit complex and demands
watchers to be extremely analytic to understand.
A. flummery B. delineation C. aberration D. convolution
4. It was very childish of you to over your opponent’s failure immediately on the stage
when the result was announced.
A. jolly B. relish C. gloat D. brag
5. After 11 years in the , Johnson made an unexpected comeback in the movie Bear.
A. damp B. wilderness C. badlands D. wasteland
6. It is often hard for parents to take the opinions of their children on due to the
generation gap.
A. board B. mind C. check D. self
7. Luckily, our research is supported by a(n) from the National Science Foundation.
A. grant B. bursary C. aid D. endowment
8. Your father was only 17 when he at Harvard, now look at your school report.
A. matriculated B. registered C. postulated D. imparted
9. Elen has stayed in bed for a whole week, take him out for a walk, that will surely put the back into
his cheeks.
A. colours B. roses C. daisy D. pinky mallow
10. Before going back to school, you have to for at least a week after the operation.
rejuvenate B. recuperate C. overhaul D. reinvigorate
11. This naughty class always with their new teachers, which usually greatly
discourages them from teaching.
A. hits it out B. tries it on C. kicks it up D. rubs it in
12. He won't be able to stand the pressure here for long, I will him 5 months and
let's see if I am right.
A. put B. give C. tell D. save
13. The event was not really well-attended, there were about 50 people the outside.
A. on B. near C. round D. at
14 The paper was divided into three parts to on and analyse the diplomatic strategy of
Vietnam during the 1990-2000 period.
A. expunge B. expurgate C. expatiate D. expound
15. That team always sweeps the in the annual league, leaving very few medals for the
others.
A. top B. prizes C. table D. board
Part 2. For questions 1-5, write the correct form of each bracketed word in the numbered space provided.
1. Because the flight is expected to last longer than 12 hours, we will be provided a(n)
IN-FLIGHT meal. (FLY)
2. My father tried to make a clear DELINEATION _ between his work and his private time as a way
to treat his depression. (LINE)
3. The king was always afraid of making mistakes because he cared about how
would judge him. (POST)
4. In this poor region of the country, hospital beds were scarce and medicines were practically NON-
EXISTENT during the first month of the COVID-19 outbreak . (EXIST)
5. The role in The Duke of Mount Deer is regarded as Tony Leung’s CAREERIST role, bring him
fame and success. (CAREER)
III. READING
Part 1. For questions 1-13, read the following passage and do the tasks that follow.
Company innovation
i The unpredictability of the public’s viewpoints about a certain topic in the future
ii A list of certain institutions that are having fewer business activities
iii A type of firms that are resorted to compulsive consumption for new ideas
iv The insatiable thirst for outstanding innovations being an impetus to big impacts on the market.
v Some moguls which expressed financial concerns when investing in the acquisition of smaller
companies.
vi The reason why American business trends are highlighting the importance of initiatives
vii A company that is able to going through economic falters itself.
viii Small firms that can make certain impacts on bigger ones when the former possesses more potential
ideas.
ix Example of three famous American companies’ innovation
x A type of firms that are regarded fly-by-night when investing in entrepreneurship.
1 Section A i
2. Section B ix
3. Section C iv
4. Section D iii
5. Section E vii
6. Section F v
Questions 7-13
B. But what if the universe we see were the only one possible, the product of a singular initial state
shaped by singular laws of nature? It is clear that the minutest variation in the value of a series of
fundamental properties of the universe would have resulted in no universe at all, or at least a very alien
universe. For instance, if the strong nuclear force had been slightly weaker, the universe would have been
composed of hydrogen only. An expansion more rapid by one part in a million would have excluded the
formation of stars and planets.
C. Trace that person back through his or her life, back beyond birth to the moment of fertilisation of a
single ovum by a single sperm. The individual becomes ever simpler, ultimately encapsulated as
information encoded in DNA. The development that gradually transforms a DNA code into a mature
individual is an unfolding, a complexification, as the information in the DNA is translated and manifested
through many stages of life. So, I believe, it is with the universe. We can see how very complex the
universe is now, and we are part of that complexity.
D. Others argue that fundamental particles are extraordinarily tiny strings that vibrate to produce their
properties. Either way, it is possible to envisage creation of the universe from almost nothing — not
nothing, but practically nothing. Almost creation ex nihilo, but not quite. That would be a great
intellectual achievement, but it may still leave us with a limit to how far scientific inquiry can go,
finishing with a description of the singularity, but not an explanation of it.
E. For many proponents of the steady state theory, one of its attractions was its provision that the
universe had no beginning and no end, and therefore required no explanation of what existed before time
= 0. It was known as the perfect cosmological principle.
F. There can be no answer to why such a state existed. Is this, then, where scientific explanation breaks
down and God takes over, the artificer of that singularity, that initial simplicity? The astrophysicist
Robert Jastrow described such a prospect as the scientist's nightmare: "He has scaled the mountains of
ignorance; he is about to conquer the highest peak; as he pulls himself over the final rock, he is greeted by
a band of theologians who have been sitting there for centuries."
G. Various COBE team members and other cosmologists were on TV, radio talk shows, and in
newspapers for several days. The publicity and tremendous public interest provided a unique opportunity
to discuss science with a very large audience and to promote the power of human endeavour in pursuing
the mysteries of nature.
H. Go back further and we reach a point when the universe was nearly an infinitely tiny, infinitely dense
concentration of energy. This increasing simplicity and symmetry of the universe as we near the point of
creation gives me hope that we can understand the universe using the powers of reason and philosophy.
The universe would then be comprehensible, as Einstein had yearned
Part 4. The passage below consists of four sections marked A, B, C and D. For questions 31-40, read
the passage and do the task that follows. Write your answers (A, B, C or D) in the corresponding
numbered boxes provided.
A. Hampstead Heath
Where better for a country walk in autumn than north London? Hampstead Heath is just a few kilometres
from the centre of town, but it is one of the capital's best-known beauty spots. And covering very nearly
325 hectares, certainly one of the largest. It is called a heath, although it is in fact a patchwork of not just
heath but also parkland and hedgerow, laid out paths, open hillside and overgrown thickets, lakes and
ponds - and plenty of woods and trees. The City of London Corporation is now responsible for its upkeep.
They fuss about the swimming, designate cycle paths, regulate the fishing, and put up notices about all
such dangerous activities. But despite their best efforts, the Heath still feels quite wild. From one popular
vantage point there is a panoramic view of central London, where visitors stop to admire the crowded
streets and skyscrapers they have come to the Heath to get away from. It's at its best later in the year.
When it's warm and sunny it can feel too crowded with casual visitors. But frosts and mist, rain and snow
deter the Heath's fair-weather friends.
B. Hainault Forest
This remnant of what was once the vast Forest of Essex is now an attractive stretch of woodland easily
reached by the London Underground. The woods around here were a royal forest, but an Act of
Parliament of 1851 authorised the cutting down and removal of its trees. And removed they were,
grubbed up by all too efficient men and machines - hectare upon hectare laid waste within weeks of the
passing of the Act. The devastation stirred the beginnings of the modern conservation movement - local
people led by a politician called Edward North Buxton saved and restored Hainault. It is now owned and
managed by the Woodland Trust. Hainault is a unique site, which features open heathland, some of which
has been recently planted up with native trees by the Woodland Trust, and the dense woodland of the
ancient forest.
C. Glen Finglas 37
Far away from London and the South East, the Trossachs is Scotland. Among the best of the Trossachs is
Glen Finglas, the Woodland Trust's 4,000-hectare estate, which can truly take the breath away,
particularly during the late autumn when the frosted peaks and still, cold lochs take on an ethereal
splendour. For the enthusiastic hill walker, there is a challenging 25-kilometre trail around the hill called
The Mell, which takes you on a meander through woodland, alongside a reservoir and into the upper part
of the glen, where the remnants of an ancient royal hunting forest give way to the open hillsides of Meall
Cala, reaching a height of 600m. It's certainly not a gentle stroll, but is worth the effort as the views are
spectacular. For those after a slightly less arduous journey there are many shorter routes around the site
too.