This is a written expression and reading practice.
Question 1
For
the little boy, a lolly was tangible,
whereas a promise
was not.
The word tangible in this sentence means:

Question 2
Please read the following sentence.
Once
Jane lifted her pen and made a start, writing the essay became easy.
If we change the start of the sentence to:
Writing the essay became easy........
What will be the ending?
A: after starting.
A: after starting.
B: after lifting
her pen.

Question 3
The boy’s incorrigible behaviour
puzzled his sister.
The word incorrigible
in this sentence means:


Genealogy is fun. Just as a piece of furniture
or a picture takes on much more interest
if you know its history, so does an individual become more real once the ancestral elements that shaped him are known. An in-depth family history is a tapestry of all those to whom we owe our existence.
Which
statement best conveys the theme of this paragraph?
A: Finding
out about our ancestors is more interesting
than researching the history of
objects.
B: Genealogy is a study of people and their belongings in the past.
C: Genealogy is a study of family
history.
D: Genealogical research
can bring meaning
and life to a family’s
history.

Question 5
Choose the option which will best replace
the underlined words in the sentence to make it correct.
She done it to quick,
so it came out looking rough.

Read the following
paragraph to answer the next two questions (Questions 6&7).
Tailgating another vehicle is unsafe and illegal. Many rear-end collisions are caused by drivers following too close to the vehicle in front of them.
The rules state that a driver must keep sufficient
distance from the vehicle
in front in order to stop safely and avoid a collision. Drivers should allow a minimum two seconds’ gap between their vehicle
and the one ahead. At sixty kilometres an hour, this equates to thirty-three metres;
at a hundred it equates to fifty-five metres.
More distance is needed to safely
stop in rain or poor visibility.
Question 6
Tailgating another vehicle is unsafe because:
A: all rear end collisions are caused by drivers following too close to the vehicle in front.
Tailgating another vehicle is unsafe because:
A: all rear end collisions are caused by drivers following too close to the vehicle in front.
B: it may not allow
sufficient time and space to stop and
avoid a collision.
C: it is against
the road rules.
D: it is a reckless
practice.
E: None of these.



Question 7
‘More distance is needed to safely stop in rain or poor visibility.’ We can infer from this that: A: people drive faster in rain and poor visibility.
‘More distance is needed to safely stop in rain or poor visibility.’ We can infer from this that: A: people drive faster in rain and poor visibility.
B: the writer is
merely calculating on the safe side.
C: braking
is more hazardous in rain and poor visibility.
D: the road rules
state that this must be so.
E: All of these.
Read
the following paragraphs to answer the
next two questions (Questions
8&9). There is a place forty kilometres north-east of Portland, Victoria, which
makes for an unusual visit. It is Lake Condah. Here are to be found remains of aboriginal
settlements: the circular stone
bases of several
hundred huts, rock-lined water channels, and stone tools chipped
from rock not normally found in the area. One of the attractions of Lake
Condah long ago was its fish and the most startling evidence
of aboriginal technology and engineering to be found there are the systems built to trap fish.
Water courses
had been constructed by redirecting
streams, building
stone sides and even scraping out new channels. At strategic
spots, they piled rocks across the
water courses to create weirs and build funnels to channel eels and fish
into conical baskets. This is an eel-fishing technique which has hardly changed
to the present day. Beside some
of the larger traps, there are the outlines
of rectangular, stone-lined ponds, probably to hold fish and keep them fresh.
On the bluffs overlooking
the lake, stone circles are all that remain of ancient
dwellings. Not all of the stones were quarried locally. The huts vary in size, but all have gaps for doorways located on the lee side, away from the prevailing wind. One theory is that the stone walls were only waist
to shoulder high,
with the top
roofed by branches
and possibly packed with mud.
The
site presents a picture
of a semi-settled
people quite different
from the stereotype
of nomadic hunter-gatherers of the desert.
Question 8
The word 'Stereotype', as used in the above passage means:
A: distant culture.
B: opposite picture.
C: electronic
print version.
D: standard view.
E: None of these.
Question 9
Lake Condah is seen as usual, mainly because:
A: it is so close to a main town.
B: there are remains of buildings still to be seen.
C: it reveals a society that was at least partly
settled and had building and engineering skills.
D: there is evidence that some of the building stone was imported.
E: it shows the lake dwellers were totally reliant on fish for a food source.
Question 10
The sentence below does not have any punctuation. Choose the option with the correct punctuation.
one of these days said mary youll get into trouble
A: One of these days, said Mary, you’ll get into trouble.
B: “One of these days,” said Mary “you’ll get into trouble”
C: “One of these days,” said Mary. “You’ll get into trouble.”
B: “One of these days,” said Mary “you’ll get into trouble”
C: “One of these days,” said Mary. “You’ll get into trouble.”
D: “One of these days,” said Mary, “you’ll get into trouble.”
E: “One
of these days,” said Mary, “youll get into trouble.”


Question 11
What does this sentence suggest?
A bird in the hand is
worth two in the bush.
A: Your own possessions are always worth more to you.
B: Birds are hard to catch, so hang on to one if you catch it.
C: To have something
is better than having nothing at all.
D: A trained bird is twice the value of an untrained one.
E: There is no point in being envious.
Read the following paragraphs to answer
the next four questions (Questions 12 - 15). Between us there was, as I have already said somewhere, the bond of the sea. Besides holding our hearts together through long periods of separation, it had the effect of making us tolerant of each other's yarns-and even convictions.
The
Lawyer-the
best
of
old
fellows-had, because of his many years and many virtues, the only cushion on deck, and was lying on the only rug. The Accountant had brought out already a box of dominoes,
and was toying architecturally with the bones. Marlow sat cross-legged right aft, leaning against the mizzen-mast. He had sunken cheeks, a yellow complexion, a straight back,
an ascetic aspect, and, with his arms dropped, the palms of hands outwards, resembled
an idol. The Director, satisfied
the anchor had good hold, made his way aft and sat down
amongst us. We exchanged
a few words lazily.
Afterwards
there was silence on board the yacht. For some
reason or other we did not begin
that game of dominoes. We felt meditative,
and fit for nothing but placid staring. The day was ending in
a serenity of still and
exquisite brilliance. The
water shone pacifically; the sky,
without a speck, was a benign immensity of unstained light; the very mist on the Essex marshes was like a gauzy and radiant fabric, hung from
the wooded rises inland, and draping the low shores in diaphanous folds. Only the gloom to the west, brooding over the upper
reaches, became more sombre every minute, as if angered
by the approach of the sun.
And at last, in its curved and imperceptible fall, the sun sank low, and from glowing white changed to a dull red without rays and without
heat, as if about
to go out suddenly,
stricken to death by the touch of that gloom brooding
over a crowd of men.
From ‘The Heart of Darkness’, by Joseph Conrad.
Question 12
The narrator of this passage is telling his story from:
A. a wharf
B. the deck of a yacht
C. a high vantage point
D. the edge of Essex marshes
E. None of the aboveQuestion 13
the mood of the men in this passage is best described as:
A: surly B: resigned C: contemplative D: restless E: ecstatic
Question 14
From the passage, it is clear that the men:
A: do not get along.
B: show a quiet understanding.
C: cannot be bothered
with one another.
D: have just had a quarrel.
E: are worn out.
Question 15
The word ‘diaphanous’, used to describe the mist, means:
The word ‘diaphanous’, used to describe the mist, means:
A: almost transparent
B:
fragile C: suffocating
D: silent E: none of the
above

Now research suggests that, far from being the Ferrari of dinosaurs, Tyrannosaurus Rex, whose ferocious reputation
has fascinated generations of schoolchildren, was in fact a cumbersome
creature with a usual running speed of twenty-five kilometres an hour. This
is a
mere snail's pace compared with modern animals such as the cheetah.
Unlike some of the
predators of today's African
savannah, which can change direction almost immediately, the dinosaur would
have had to turn slowly or risk tumbling over. And while a human
can spin forty-five degrees in a twentieth of a second, a Tyrannosaurus
would have taken as much as two seconds,
as it would have been hampered by its long
tail. Thankfully, however, all its
prey, such as triceratops, would have been afflicted
with the same lack of speed and agility.
The findings were
reached after researchers used
computer modelling and biomechanical calculations to work out the dinosaur's speed, agility and weight. They based their calculations on measurements taken from a fossil dinosaur representative of an average Tyrannosaurus and concluded the
creatures probably weighed between six and eight tonnes.
Calculations of the
leg muscles suggest that the animal would have had a top speed of forty kilometres
an hour, which is
nothing compared
to a cheetah’s
one hundred kilometres an hour.
It is sobering to reflect, though,
that an Olympic sprinter runs at about thirty-five kilometres
an hour, not sufficient to outrun a
Tyrannosaurus, should Man have been around at that time!
Question 16
Being known as the ‘Ferrari of dinosaurs’ means Tyrannosaurus Rex: A: wore shoes.
Being known as the ‘Ferrari of dinosaurs’ means Tyrannosaurus Rex: A: wore shoes.
B: was a quick and agile creature.
C: was a hunting
machine.
D: was the most
ferocious of dinosaurs.
E: None of these.
Question 17
In turning, a Tyrannosaurus would have been hampered by: A: its weight.
In turning, a Tyrannosaurus would have been hampered by: A: its weight.
B: its bulky leg muscles.
C: its overall size.
D: its tail length.
E: All of the above.
Question 18
In calculating the size, speed and agility of Tyrannosaurus Rex, scientists used: A: examination of fossils.
In calculating the size, speed and agility of Tyrannosaurus Rex, scientists used: A: examination of fossils.
B: biomechanical calculations
and computer models.
C: comparisons with modern animals.
D: A and B together.
E: B and C together.
Question 19
The overall theme of the passage is:
A: Because
it was cumbersome, Tyrannosaurus Rex was lucky to survive.
B: Tyrannosaurus Rex’s speed and agility
were still superior to those of other dinosaurs.
C: Tyrannosaurus Rex’s fierce reputation is now laid to rest.
D: Compared to modern predatory animals,
Tyrannosaurus Rex was slow and cumbersome.
E: None of these.
Read the following
paragraph to answer the next four questions (Questions 20 - 23). "Anne," cried Mary, still at her window, "there is Mrs Clay, I am sure, standing under the colonnade, and a gentleman with her. I saw them turn the corner from Bath Street just now. They seemed deep in talk. Who is it? Come, and tell me. Good heavens! I recollect. It is Mr Elliot himself."
"No," cried
Anne, quickly, "it
cannot be Mr Elliot, I assure
you. He was to leave
Bath at nine this morning, and does not come back till to-morrow."
As she spoke, she
felt that Captain Wentworth was looking at her, the consciousness of
which vexed and embarrassed her, and
made her regret that she had said so
much, simple as it was.
Mary, resenting that she should
be supposed not to know her own cousin, began talking very warmly about the family features,
and protesting still more positively
that it was Mr Elliot, calling again upon Anne to come and look for
herself, but Anne did not mean to stir, and tried to be cool and unconcerned. Her distress returned,
however, on perceiving smiles and intelligent
glances pass between two or three of
the lady visitors, as if they believed
themselves quite in the secret. It was
evident that the report concerning
her had spread, and a short pause succeeded, which seemed to ensure
that it would now spread farther.
"Do come,
Anne" cried Mary, "come and
look yourself. You will be too late if you do not make haste. They are parting; they are shaking
hands. He is turning away. Not know Mr Elliot,
indeed! You seem to have forgotten all about Lyme."
To pacify
Mary, and perhaps
screen her own embarrassment, Anne did move quietly to the window. She was just in time to
ascertain that it really was Mr Elliot, which she had never believed,
before he disappeared on one side, as
Mrs Clay walked quickly off on the other; and checking
the surprise which she could not but feel at such
an appearance of friendly conference between
two persons of totally opposite
interest, she calmly said,
"Yes, it is Mr Elliot, certainly.
He has changed his hour of
going, I suppose, that is all,
or I may be mistaken, I might not attend;" and walked back to her chair, recomposed, and with the comfortable
hope of having acquitted
herself well.
From ‘Persuasion’, by Jane Austen.
Question 20
Anne does not believe it is Mr Elliot whom Mary sees from the window because: A: Mary does not know what Mr Elliot looks like.
B: Mr Elliot was
to have left Bath earlier that day.
C: it was highly unlikely that Mr Elliot would be a friend of Mrs Clay.
D: A and B together.
E: B and C together.
Question 21
Anne obviously knows Mr Elliot quite well for all the following reasons EXCEPT: A: she has knowledge of his travel plans.
B: she shows discomfort at Mary spotting him.
C: she is sensitive
to what the other ladies might know.
D: she had been speaking about Mr Elliot to others in the room.
E: Mary refers to Anne meeting
Mr Elliot in Lyme.
Question 22
Anne finally goes to the window because:
A: she knows in her heart that it really is Mr
Elliot.
B: she wishes to prove Mary wrong.
C: she wishes to calm Mary and cover up her own
lack of composure.
D: Mary frets that Mr Elliot will disappear from view.
E: Mary is creating a
fuss in front of the others in the room.
Question 23
From what occurs it can be inferred that Anne: A: couldn’t care less about Mr Elliot.
B: had not known Mr Elliot long enough to recognise him.
C: is attracted to Mr Elliot.
D: is uncomfortable at Mr Elliot’s behaviour.

Read the following
paragraph to answer the next two questions (Questions 24 & 25). A hare was very popular
with the other beasts
who all claimed to be her friend, but one
day she heard the hounds approaching
and hoped to escape them with the help of her many friends. “What are friends for,”
she asked herself,
“if not to help out in time of need?” Furthermore, most of her friends
were big and brave, so at least one should be able
to help. First she went to the horse, and asked him to carry her away from the hounds on his back. But he declined,
stating that he had important work to do for his master.
” I feel sure,” he said, “that
all your other
friends will come to your assistance.”
She then applied to the bull, and hoped that he would repel the hounds with his horns.
The bull replied: “I am very sorry, but I have
an appointment with a lady.
However, I feel sure that our friend the goat will do what you want.” The goat, however,
feared that his back
might be harmed if he took her upon it. The ram, he felt sure, was the proper friend to
apply to. So she went to the ram
and told him the case. The ram
replied: “Another time, my dear
friend. I do not like to interfere on the present occasion, as hounds have been
known to eat sheep as well as hares.”
The hare then applied, as a last hope,
to the calf, who regretted that he was unable to help her. He did not like to take the responsibility
upon himself, as so many older persons
had declined the task. By this time
the hounds were quite near, so the hare had to take to
her heels. Luckily, she escaped.
Question 24
The hare was confident she would find a friend to help for all the following reasons except:
A: she knew she was popular.
B: she assumed friends
were there to help.
C: most of her friends were big and strong.
D: her friends had promised
help whenever she needed it.
E: .she had a wide range of friends.
Question 25
Suitable moral for this story would be:
A: a friend in need is a friend indeed.
B: never rely on your friends
in a time of crisis.
C: popularity
does not mean friendship.
D: friendship
does not exist among animals.

Question 26
The sentence below does not have any punctuation. Choose the option with the correct punctuation.
dont you understand what im saying shouted his father get down at once
A: Don’t you understand what Im saying,
shouted his father. Get down
at once.
B:
“Don’t you understand what I’m saying”, shouted
his father, “Get down at once.” C:
“Don’t you understand what Im saying”, shouted
his father. “Get down at once” D: “Dont you understand what I’m saying.”
shouted his father. “Get down
at once” E: “Don’t you understand what I’m saying?”
shouted his father. “Get down at once.”
Question 27
Choose the option which will best replace the underlined word in the sentence to make it correct.
Choose the option which will best replace the underlined word in the sentence to make it correct.
The hotel accomodation
was luxurious. A: acommodation
B: accommodation
C: accomadation
D: accommerdation

Read the following
paragraphs to answer the next five questions (Questions 28 - 32).
When I returned to
the common the sun was setting. The
crowd about the pit had increased, and stood out black against the
lemon yellow of the sky-a couple of
hundred people, perhaps. There were
raised voices, and some sort of struggle appeared to be going on about the pit.
Strange imaginings passed through my mind. As
I drew nearer I heard Stent's voice:
"Keep back! Keep back!" A boy came running
towards me. "It's movin',"
he said to me as he passed; "it’s screwin'
and screwin' out. I don't like it. I'm goin' home, I am."
I went on to the crowd. There were really,
I should think,
two or three hundred people
elbowing and jostling
one another, the one or two ladies there being by no means the least active. "He's fallen in the pit!" cried some one. "Keep back!" said several. The crowd swayed a
little, and I elbowed my way through. Everyone seemed greatly excited. I heard a peculiar humming sound from
the pit. "I say!" said Ogilvy. "Help keep these idiots back. We don't
know what's in the confounded thing, you know!"
I saw a young man, a shop assistant in Woking
I believe he was, standing on the cylinder and trying to scramble out of the hole again. The crowd had pushed him in.
The end of the cylinder was being screwed out from within. Nearly two feet of shining screw
projected. Somebody blundered
against me, and I narrowly missed
being pitched onto the top of the screw. I turned, and as I did so the screw must have come out, for the lid of the cylinder fell upon the gravel with a ringing concussion.
I stuck my elbow into the person behind me, and turned my head towards the Thing again. For a moment that circular cavity seemed perfectly black. I had the sunset in my eyes.
I think everyone
expected to see a man emerge-possibly something a little unlike us terrestrial men,
but in all essentials a man. I know I did. But, looking, I presently saw something stirring within the shadow: greyish billowy movements, one above another, and then two luminous
disks-like eyes. Then something
resembling a little grey snake, about
the thickness of a walking
stick, coiled up out
of the writhing middle, and wriggled
in the air towards me-and then another.
A sudden chill came over me. There was a loud shriek from a woman behind. I half turned, keeping my
eyes fixed upon the cylinder
still, from which other tentacles
were now projecting, and began
pushing my way back from the edge of the pit. I saw astonishment giving place to horror on the faces
of the people about me. I heard inarticulate exclamations on all sides. There was a general
movement backwards. I saw the shopman struggling still on the edge of the pit. I found myself alone, and saw the people on the
other side of the pit running off, Stent among them. I looked again at the cylinder
and ungovernable terror gripped me. I stood petrified
and staring.
A big greyish rounded
bulk, the size, perhaps, of a
bear, was rising slowly and painfully out of the cylinder. As it bulged up and caught the light, it glistened like wet leather.
Two large
dark-coloured eyes were regarding me
steadfastly. The mass that framed them, the head of the thing, was rounded, and had, one might say, a face. There was a mouth under the eyes, the lipless brim of which quivered and
panted, and dropped saliva. The whole creature heaved and pulsated convulsively. A lank tentacular appendage gripped
the edge of the cylinder, another swayed in the air.
Those who have never
seen a living Martian can scarcely
imagine the strange horror of its appearance. The peculiar V-shaped mouth with its pointed
upper lip, the absence of brow ridges,
the absence of a chin beneath the
wedgelike lower lip, the incessant
quivering of this mouth, the Gorgon
groups of tentacles, the tumultuous
breathing of the lungs in a strange
atmosphere, the evident heaviness and painfulness of movement due to
the greater gravitational energy of the earth- above
all, the extraordinary intensity of the immense eyes-were at once vital, intense, inhuman,

From ‘The
War of the Worlds’, by
H G Wells
Question 28
This is part of a science fiction story. The most important clue to this would be:
A: the cylinder in a hole on the common.
B: something unscrewing the cylinder from within.
C: the sense of terror
and apprehension in the crowd.
D: the emergence of a Martian.
E: the author’s feelings
of disgust and dread.
Question 29
The people in the crowd were first ‘elbowing and jostling’ one another because:
A: they were retreating in fear from the pit.
B: some were trying to push others into the pit.
C: they were excited
and curious to see what was in the pit.
D: a few had lost their tempers.
E: there were no police present to control them.
Question 30
The author hints that the women in the crowd were:
A: just as aggressive as the men.
The author hints that the women in the crowd were:
A: just as aggressive as the men.
B: more aggressive than the men.
C: reluctant to push
forward.
D: merely passive onlookers.
E: None of these.
D: merely passive onlookers.
E: None of these.
Question 31
The mood of the crowd altered suddenly when:
A: the cylinder opened.
B: a bear emerged from the cylinder.
C: a pair of eyes was detected peering
at them from the cylinder.
D: tentacles appeared out of the top of the cylinder.
E: the creature opened its mouth.
Question 32
Of the Martian’s features, the one most causing the writer’s disgust and dread was:
A. the slobbering mouth.
B. the huge, intensely staring eyes.
C. the oily, fungoid skin.
D. the Gorgon-like tentacles.
E. the heaving pulsating body
Question 33
Please read the following sentences.
Please read the following sentences.
We all love to win. However, we also have to know how to accept defeat.
If we change the
above into a single sentence and
begin:
We have to know how to accept defeat........
What will
the best ending be?
A: however,
we all love to win.
B: but winning
is better.
C: so we can also love to win.
D: even though we all love to win.
E: None of these.
Question 34
He was a morose man, so people tended to avoid him.
He was a morose man, so people tended to avoid him.

A: large B: cheerful C: idiotic D: sullen E: none of these
Read the following
paragraphs to answer the next two questions (Questions 35 & 36).
The debate on whether
Australia will have a nation-wide carbon trading scheme ended last week with the government committed to a national emissions scheme from 2012. However, the decision-
making as to how we power the economy in a carbon constrained world is only just beginning.
Fossil fuels like coal and oil have
underpinned our economic
growth and standard of living for
decades. The current resources boom
is there because other countries want our
fossil fuels, and for all these reasons it is profitable to keep mining them. Ironically, the income
may
help develop the technologies to replace them, but it is a matter of which and when.
Almost certainly, in
the race to reduce emissions, new
technologies such as solar, wind and
geothermal (heat from rocks)
power will compete against gas,
clean coal and perhaps nuclear energy to win the hearts and minds of the business world. In the end, business will favour whatever is a cheap, abundant and reliable solution.
You can imagine the lobbying that will ensue from the
different interest groups, to attract business
capital and government support
so that their technology wins out.
There may be many collapsed ventures and lost fortunes
along the way.
Question 35
Fossil fuels will be in demand for some time yet because: A: we have no other options.
Fossil fuels will be in demand for some time yet because: A: we have no other options.
B: they are plentiful
and cheap in Australia.
C: our wealth and lifestyle
are at present dependent
on them.
D: A and B together.
E: B and C together.
Question 36
In the writer’s view ‘there may be many collapsed ventures’ along the way because: A: cheaper fossil fuels will continue to be used for a long time.
B: business will favour existing sources, rather than undergoing expensive change.
C: carbon emission
rules will cripple new energy sources.
D: not all the options
will be adopted, so the cheaper and more efficient will survive.
E: None of these.
Read the following
paragraphs to answer the next five questions (Questions 37 - 41).
One of the modern world’s intriguing sources of mystery has been aeroplanes vanishing in mid-flight. One of the more famous of these was the disappearance in 1937 of a pioneer woman aviator, Amelia Earhart. On the second last stage of
an attempted round the world flight, she had radioed her position as she and her navigator searched
desperately for their
destination, a tiny island in the Pacific.
The plane never arrived
at Howland Island. Did it crash and sink after running
out of fuel? It had been
a long haul from New Guinea, a twenty
hour flight covering some four
thousand kilometres. Did Earhart have
enough fuel to set down on some other island on her radioed course? Or did she end up somewhere else altogether? One fanciful
theory had her being captured by the Japanese
in the Marshall Islands and
later executed as an American spy;
another had her living out her days
under an assumed name as a housewife in New Jersey.

disappearance has been the subject of at least fifty books, countless
magazine and newspaper articles, and TV documentaries. It is seen by journalists as the last great American
mystery.
There are currently two main theories about Amelia Earhart’s fate.
There were reports of distress calls from
the Phoenix Islands made on Earhart’s radio frequency for days after she vanished. Some say the plane could have broadcast only if it were on land, not in the water. The Coast Guard and
later the Navy, believing
the distress calls were real, adjusted their searches, and newspapers at the time
reported Earhart and her navigator were marooned on an island.
No-one was able to trace the calls at the time, so whether Earhart
was on land in the
Phoenix Islands or there was a hoaxer in the
Phoenix Islands using her radio remains a mystery.
Others dismiss the radio calls as bogus and insist
Earhart and her navigator ditched in the water. An
Earhart researcher, Elgen Long, claims that
Earhart’s airplane ran out of gas within fifty-two miles of the
island and is sitting somewhere in a 6,000-square-mile area, at a depth of 17,000 feet. At that depth, the fuselage would still be in shiny, pristine condition
if ever anyone were able to locate it. It would not even be covered in a layer of silt. Those who subscribe to this explanation claim that
fuel calculations, radio calls and other considerations all show that the plane plunged into the sea somewhere off Howland
Island.
Whatever the
explanation, the prospect of finding
the remains is unsettling to many. To recover skeletal remains or personal effects would be a grisly experience
and an intrusion. They
want to know where Amelia Earhart
is, but that’s as far as they would like to go. As one investigator has put
it, “I’m convinced that the mystery is part of what keeps us interested. In part, we remember her
because she’s our favourite
missing person.”
Question 37
Amelia Earhart’s nationality was:
A: English B: Australian C: Canadian D: American E:
South African
Question 38
All the following are theories about Amelia’s fate EXCEPT:
A: she crashed
on a remote island
somewhere near her destination.
B: her plane ran out of fuel and crashed into the sea.
C: she was captured by
the Japanese and executed as a spy. D: she
escaped incognito and lived under an
assumed name. E: she crashed
somewhere on Howland
Island.
Question 39
The most convincing evidence that Amelia crashed somewhere on land was: A: the finding of aircraft remains.
B: sightings by islanders.
C: radio contact with the coastguard from the Phoenix Islands.
D: distress signals from the Phoenix
Islands on her particular radio frequency.
E: All of these.
Question 40
If the aircraft were ever recovered from its probable sea grave: A: it would be hardly recognisable.
B: it would be in pristine condition and considered highly valuable.
C: it may reveal some grisly evidence.
D: A and C together.
E: B and C together.
Question 41
The fate of Amelia Earhart still fascinates investigators for all the following reasons EXCEPT: A: she was a famous female aviator and adventurer.
The fate of Amelia Earhart still fascinates investigators for all the following reasons EXCEPT: A: she was a famous female aviator and adventurer.
B: there are such conflicting theories about her
disappearance.
C: she was so close to the end of her journey.
D: she may have staged her own disappearance.
E: she presents one of
the twentieth century’s great unsolved mysteries.

Question 42
You cannot be a hero without being a coward
What does this sentence suggest?
A: Heroes are
transformed cowards.
B: To be truly heroic, you first have to know the meaning
of fear.
C: Heroes are cowards
in disguise.
D: You can never be one or the other; it is always a combination of both.

Question 43
The sentence below does not have any punctuation. Choose the option with the correct punctuation.
The sentence below does not have any punctuation. Choose the option with the correct punctuation.
whos going to fly qantas to sydney and use its special
return offer

Question 44
Choose the option which best corrects the errors in this sentence.
Choose the option which best corrects the errors in this sentence.
Passed expereince tells me sitting
in a draft you’ll catch a cold.
A: Passed expereince
tells me if I sat in a draught
you’ll catch a cold.
B: Passed experience tells
me sitting in a draught I’ll catch a
cold.
C: Past expereince tells me if I sit in a draft I’ll catch a
cold.
D: Passed experience
tells me if I sit in a draught you’ll catch a cold.

Question 45
Far from being upright and moral, his behaviour showed him to be fallible.
The word fallible in
this sentence means:
A: capable
of falling over
|
B: weak-kneed
|
C: capable
of error
|
D: immoral
|
E: None of these
|
Question 46
The sentence below does not have any punctuation. Choose the option with the correct punctuation.
we arent welcome here said Jenny so
we had better go dont you think
A: “We aren’t welcome here, said Jenny. We had better go don’t you think.”
B: “We aren’t welcome here,” said Jenny, “we had better go, don’t you think?” C: “We aren’t welcome here,” said Jenny.
“We had better go, don’t you think?” D: “We arent welcome
here,” said Jenny,
“we had better go, don’t you think.” E:
“We are’nt welcome
here,” said Jenny,
“we had better go, don’t you think?”
Read
the following paragraphs to answer the
next two questions (Questions 47 &
48).
Until widespread clearing
of land began
after 1861, the Tweed Valley,
from the beach
dunes to the mountains, was covered by
dense wetland forests and rainforest. The rainforest had
plenty of red
cedar, which grew along
the river banks and
over the floodplains and foothills. Some of these
trees were huge,
up to sixty metres tall and as much
as two thousand
years old. Cedar was highly valued for its light weight,
rich pink to red
colours and interesting grain patterns. The tall trees
provided magnificent lengths
for the mills. Much early Australian furniture
was made from cedar.
The timber
of the Tweed Valley was felled close
to the river banks and then was tied and floated downstream to the river mouth for shipping to the big cities. The river provided the
only means of removing the timber, because
the felled trees were so bulky.
By the 1870s, the
cedar industry was in decline. Land
cleared for farming was on the
increase and easily obtainable, and large cedar trees were becoming scarce. It was purely an extractive industry,
which put nothing back. Given that many original trees were thousands of years
old, it would have been hundreds of years before the plantings could have been harvested in any case.
Question 47
Tweed Valley cedar was valued in colonial Australia for all the following reasons EXCEPT: A: the trees were easy to fell and remove.
B: the timber was sought after
for furniture making.
C: the timber was light in weight.
D: the timber was prized for its colour and grain variations.
E: the tree trunks were long and straight.
Question 48
Which of the following can we say caused the decline of the cedar industry?
Which of the following can we say caused the decline of the cedar industry?
A: Suitable
trees closer to the
river grew scarce.
B: Clearing for
farming land was reducing the rainforest.
C: Felled trees were not replaced.
D: A and B together.

Question 49
A tour leader needs to be a gregarious person.
The word gregarious in the above sentence means:
A: well-travelled
B: retiring C: adaptable D: chatty E: companionable
Question 50
Please read the following sentence.
Please read the following sentence.
When she hit the
ball, she had no idea where it was
going….
If we change the start of the sentence to:
She had no idea where the ball was going........
What will the ending be?
A: after she hit the ball.
B: while hitting
it.
C: when she hit it.
D: when the ball was hit.

WELL DONE. THIS IS THE END OF THE ASSIGNMENT.
do you have the answer?
BalasHapusAnswers please send.
BalasHapusaNY ONE HAVE THE ANSWERS
BalasHapusMAYBE
Answers please
BalasHapusplease send
BalasHapusWhere is the answer
BalasHapusanswers
BalasHapus