Đáp án C => last year
last year: năm ngoái
Đáp án C => last year
last year: năm ngoái
Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to each of the following questions.
_________ my homework last week, I would have got a good mark.
A. If I did
B. I had done
C. Had I done
D. Only if I done
If the lecturer last night____________Dr. Mason, I would have listened carefully.
A. would be
B. was
C. had been
D. were
If you _____ ten minutes earlier, you would have got a seat.
A. arrived
B. had arrived
C. arrive
D. would arrive
We would have sent him a Christmas card if we____ his address last year.
A. know
B. have known
C. knew
D. had known
Choose the best answer to complete the blank in each of the following sentences.
If the lecturer last night____________Dr. Mason, I would have listened carefully.
A. would be
B. was
C. had been
D. were
If I could speak Spanish, I _____ next year somethingudying in Mexico.
A. will spend
B. had spent
C. would spend
D. would have spent
Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the sentence that is closest in meaning to each of the following questions.
The last time I talked to Rose was two years ago.
A. I haven’t talked to Rose for two years.
B. I haven’t talked to Rose two years ago.
C. I haven’t talked to Rose since two years.
D. I hadn’t talked to Rose for two years.
Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the most suitable response to complete each of the following exchanges.
Mary (on the phone) : “Could I speak to Susan?” - Susan : “ _________!”
A. Talking
B. Calling
C. Answering
D. Speaking
Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to each of the questions .
Computer programmer David Jones earns £35,000 a year designing new computer games, yet he cannot find a bank prepared to let him have a cheque card. Instead, he has been told to wait another two years, until he is 18.
The 16-year-old works for a small firm in Liverpool, where the problem of most young people of his age is finding a job. David's firm releases two new games for the expanding home computer market each month. But David's biggest headache is what to do with his money.
Despite his salary, earned by inventing new programs within tight schedules, with bonus payments and profit-sharing, he cannot drive a car, take out a mortgage, or obtain credit cards.
He lives with his parents in their council house in Liverpool, where his father is a bus driver. His company has to pay £150 a month in taxi fares to get him the five miles to work and back every day because David cannot drive.
David got his job with the Liverpool-based company four months ago, a year after leaving school with six O-levels and working for a time in a computer shop. "I got the job because the people who run the firm knew I had already written some programs," he said.
"I suppose £35,000 sounds a lot but actually that's being pessimistic. I hope it will come to more than that this year." He spends some of his money on records and clothes, and gives his mother £20 a week. But most his spare time is spent working.
“Unfortunately, computing was not part of our studies at school," he said. "But 1 had been studying it in books and 'magazines for four years in my spare time. 1 knew what 1 wanted to do and never considered staying on at school. Most people in this business are fairly young, anyway."
David added: "I would like to earn a million and 1 suppose early retirement is a possibility. You never know when the market might disappear."
Question 12. David's greatest problem is _______
A. learning to drive.
B. spending his salary.
C. inventing computer games.
D. making the banks treat him as an adult.