Which of the following is not true about alice s novel stars егэ ответы

1) Вы услышите 6 высказываний. Установите соответствие между высказываниями каждого говорящего A—F и утверждениями, данными в списке 1—7. Используйте каждое утверждение, обозначенное соответствующей цифрой, только один раз. В задании есть одно лишнее утверждение. Прослушайте запись дважды.

1. Your health may stop you from taking baths.
2. Taking baths is not environmentally friendly.
3. Technical innovations make a shower a great experience.
4. Taking a bath isn’t as wasteful as you may think.
5. Taking showers helps me to stay healthy.
6. Taking a bath is a perfect way to relax.
7. There are both pluses and minuses about baths and showers.

Говорящий A B C D E F
Утверждение            

2) Вы услышите диалог. Определите, какие из приведённых утверждений А—G соответствуют содержанию текста (1 — True), какие не соответствуют (2 — False) и о чём в тексте не сказано, то есть на основании текста нельзя дать ни положительного, ни отрицательного ответа (3 — Not stated). Прослушайте запись дважды.

A. George and Amanda are now in the UK.
B. Amanda has travelled to Morocco twice.
C. Amanda’s aunt prefers active rest.
D. Amanda didn’t like Marrakech very much.
E. Markets in Marrakech work from morning till night.
F. Amanda didn’t buy any souvenirs in Morocco.
G. George will look at Amanda’s pictures tonight.

Утверждение A B C D E F G
Соответствие диалогу              

3) Вы услышите интервью. Запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2 или 3, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа. Прослушайте запись дважды.

Which of the following is NOT true about Alice’s novel Stars?
1) It’s her debut book.
2) It’s quite popular with readers.
3) It’s published all over the world.


4) Вы услышите интервью. Запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2 или 3, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа. Прослушайте запись дважды.

What do we learn about Alice at the beginning of the interview?
1) She won numerous prizes for her writing.
2) She became famous when still at college.
3) Writing is not her only occupation.


5) Вы услышите интервью. Запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2 или 3, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа. Прослушайте запись дважды.

What’s the name of the main character of the novel Stars?
1) Jessica.
2) Liam.
3) Arthur.


6) Вы услышите интервью. Запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2 или 3, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа. Прослушайте запись дважды.

Alice’s novel starts with a
1) police investigation.
2) marriage.
3) a catastrophe.


7) Вы услышите интервью. Запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2 или 3, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа. Прослушайте запись дважды.

What is unusual about the format of Alice’s novel?
1) It’s narrated by the voice in character’s head.
2) It’s a number of e-mail messages.
3) It’s an exchange of private letters.


8) Вы услышите интервью. Запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2 или 3, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа. Прослушайте запись дважды.

According to Alice, what was the biggest difficulty in writing her novel?
1) Explaining to the reader every event.
2) Leaving the reader enough indications on what’s happening.
3) Keeping the novel not too long.


9) Вы услышите интервью. Запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2 или 3, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа. Прослушайте запись дважды.

When does Alice do most of her writing?
1) At working hours.
2) Returning home from work.
3) At the weekends.


Аудирование


ЕГЭ по английскому языку начинается с девяти заданий на аудирование. В сумме за них можно получить 20 баллов, а это достаточно много. Поэтому к выполнению подобных заданий нужно хорошо подготовиться – сложно получить высокие баллы, не имея привычки именно к формату ЕГЭ. Даже те люди, которые владеют английским языком на уровне B2-C1, но не готовились к этим заданиям с учетом их структуры, могут набрать неожиданно мало баллов – умение бегло воспринимать английскую речь на слух очень важно, но его может быть недостаточно.

Нужно хорошо укладываться в строго ограниченное время, быстро читать текст задания и знать его формат. Начинать подготовку к аудированию нужно заблаговременно, чтобы привыкнуть к такому формату заданий – в Интернете можно найти множество вариантов. А для дополнительной тренировки навыка понимания речи на слух хорошо подходят различные подкасты для всех уровней сложности, которых сейчас тоже немало.


Первое задание

Первое задание может принести сразу 6 баллов. В задании приводится 7 утверждений, отражающих основную мысль текстов. Как правило, они все связаны общей темой –  например, это могут быть тексты об окружающей среде, об одежде, о личных страхах или о еде. Нужно прочитать и осмыслить их за 20 секунд, после чего на магнитофоне включаются идущие подряд 6 записей небольших высказываний. Их нужно соотнести с приведенными в задании утверждении, одно из которых окажется лишним. Запись повторится дважды. Давайте рассмотрим пример задания с приведенными скриптами аудиозаписи.

Вы услы­ши­те 6 высказываний. Уста­но­ви­те со­от­вет­ствие между вы­ска­зы­ва­ни­я­ми каж­до­го го­во­ря­ще­го A–F и утверждениями, дан­ны­ми в спис­ке 1–7. Ис­поль­зуй­те каж­дое утверждение, обо­зна­чен­ное со­от­вет­ству­ю­щей цифрой, толь­ко один раз. В за­да­нии есть одно лиш­нее утверждение. Вы услыши­те за­пись дважды.

  1. A uniform makes the school a better organized place.
  2. Uniforms help improve the discipline at schools.
  3. Uniforms can help prevent crimes at school.
  4. Uniforms will not make life at school better.
  5. Uniforms can teach students how to behave professionally.
  6. Getting used to uniforms is good for a future career.
  7. Uniforms make students focus more on their learning.

SpeakerA

I honestly support school uniforms and let me explain why. I think one of the problems our current generation is facing is that they are all influenced by gang culture. It is the root cause of numerous evils at schools, and many people from my school are members in the so-called school gangs. With uniforms, I believe, there are not so many chances for conflicts and violence. Besides, it creates a healthy team culture and harmony on campus.

SpeakerB

I think when a person hears the word ‘school’, the first two things that come to mind are discipline and rules. Everybody knows that we kids love to break rules and it is hard to make us obey. Almost daily at schools, it is common to spend some time making us obey certain rules and disciplining us. Making us wear a uniform is a part  of it but I don’t think there’s any point in trying to do so because kids will be kids. They never obey.

SpeakerC

My school has a dress code which is not exactly a uniform and some students treatthis too creatively. Every morning our teachers start to check our clothes and so on. This happens during the first class so I think a lot of valuable lesson time could be saved if we had a strict uniform policy at school. People in charge would not have
to worry about checking what each and every student is wearing and whether it’s acceptable or not.

SpeakerD

My school doesn’t have a uniform and I don’t like it. You may be surprised but look – the best schools in the country do have uniforms and nobody there minds that! I think a uniform creates a sense of belonging and a feeling of pride amongst students towards their institution. I think students wearing a school uniform are more likely to develop a sense of community spirit which can be later quite useful at work with teambuilding and things like that.

SpeakerE

I think school isn’t about studies now. It’s more about hanging out at the canteen, and playing music but you rarely hear anyone having a good conversation about a lecture. I wish we had a uniform to help us concentrate more on our studies. When all students are wearing a similar outfit, they are less concerned about what other
people are wearing. They tend to bond nicely with peers and can create an environment where they can learn in a group.

SpeakerF

I support uniforms because I think they are useful for my future career. Dress codes and uniforms are a part of practically every job now. Professionalism is very important as we grow up and especially when we enter a corporate setup. Of course, I understand that there are no uniforms in some offices but I believe professionalism is what uniform-friendly children are better at than casually dressed kids. So I don’t mind wearing a uniform to school.

Как мы видим, тема данного задания – школьная форма. Значит, во время второго прослушивания высказываний нужно фиксировать внимание на тех предложениях, где упоминается это слово. В первом высказывании человек сразу говорит, что поддерживает школьную форму, приводя аргумент ближе к концу монолога – With uniforms, I believe, there are not so many chances for conflicts and violence. Это лучше всего соотносится с третьей фразой – Uniforms can help prevent crimes at school. Во втором высказывании человек говорит, что попытки заставить детей соблюдать дисциплину в школе безрезультатны – следовательно, форма ничего здесь не изменит. Это соответствует четвертому утверждению.  Автор третьего высказывания говорит, что из-за отсутствия формы большая часть первых уроков тратится зря и считает, что форма помогает лучше организовать школьную деятельность и сохранить время – здесь подходит первое высказывание.

В четвертом высказывании говорится, что если в школе введена форма, у учеников развивается чувство сплоченности и умения работать в команде – с первого взгляда трудно понять, какое же утверждение тут подходит. Но, посмотрев на варианты, можно увидеть, что больше всего подходит шестое – ведь умение работать в команде и ощущение себя как части дружного коллектива станет отличным подспорьем во время работы. Автор пятого высказывания полагает, что форма помогает лучше сконцентрироваться на учебе, не отвлекаясь на одежду – I wish we had a uniform to help us concentrate more on our studies. Это отражено в седьмом утверждении. В последнем же высказывании человек, с одной стороны, говорит о карьере, что вроде бы вписывается в шестое утверждение, но больший упор он делает на слово professionalism: Professionalism is very important as we grow up. Professionalism is something uniform friendly children are better at than casually dressed kids. Это хорошо отражает суть пятого высказывания. Очень важно слушать задание внимательно и, даже услышав одно слово, подходящее под какой-то вариант, не расслабляться, а слушать дальше, чтобы не совершить ошибку.

Ответ:

Говорящий A B C D E F
Утверждение 3 4 1 6 7 5

Второе задание

За верно выполненное второе задание можно получить 7 баллов. В нем нужно прослушать диалог и для семи приведенных утверждений написать, какое верно, какое неверно и о чем в тексте не упоминается.

Вы услы­ши­те диалог. Определите, какие из приведённых утвер­жде­ний А–G со­от­вет­ству­ют со­дер­жанию тек­ста (1 – True), какие не со­от­вет­ству­ют (2 – False) и о чём в тексте не сказано, то есть на ос­но­ва­нии текста нельзя дать ни положительного, ни от­ри­ца­тель­но­го от­ве­та (3 – Not stated). За­не­сите номер вы­бран­но­го Вами ва­ри­ан­та от­ве­та в таблицу. Вы услы­ши­те за­пись дважды.

A. Jake succeeded in his school-leaving exams.

B. Jake has an elder brother.

C. Jake wants to teach the subject Miss Clark teaches.

D. Miss Clark is surprised with Jake’s career choice.

E. Jake doesn’t believe in the abilities of every student.

F. Miss Clark thinks Jake’s made the right choice.

G. Miss Clark isn’t happy to hear Jake’s words.

Teacher: Hello, Jake. You look great today.

Jake: Good evening, Miss Clark. Thank you for the compliment.

Teacher: I hope you’ll enjoy the party. After all, your classmates and you have certainly deserved it. You worked so hard during the academic year, and you passed your exams with flying colours. My colleagues and I are so proud of you all.

Jake: Oh, Miss Clark, of course we did a good job, but we are very grateful to our teachers. If not for you, our results wouldn’t be so good.

Teacher: It’s good to know that. Thank you. So, Jake, what are you going to do after the prom? Are you going to have a gap year?

Jake: Most of my classmates are going to travel somewhere, but I won’t be able to join them. I’m going straight to college.

Teacher: Why? Don’t you like to travel?

Jake: Of course, I do. Everybody likes to travel, don’t they? It’s just that this summer isn’t a good time to do it because I’ll have to help my brother. He’s just had surgery, you know.

Teacher: I hope your brother is doing fine. How did the operation go? Jake: It all went fine, thank you. The full recovery will take some time, but he’ll be absolutely fine in a couple of months.

Teacher: Oh, that’s excellent news. So, what college did you choose?

Jake: I’m going to Birmingham University. I want to be a teacher, like you.

Teacher: Really? I would never have thought you had chosen this career.

Jake: Well, I think it’s the most rewarding job in the world, so …

Teacher: It is, but mind you, not every student will succeed in your class. Sometimes, when one of your students fails, you blame yourself for it.

Jake: I think that’s true about many jobs, like doctors, for instance. I believe that every student has the potential for success and it’ll be so exciting because each new academic year will present new challenges and new potential successes.

Teacher: Well, Jake, if you are able to look at it that way, teaching is definitely your cup of tea.

Jake: Thank you, Miss Clark. It’s you and your colleagues who have inspired me.

Teacher: Thank you. Now it’s high time for you to join your friends, and it’s time for me to wipe away the tears – your words are so touching.

Jake: Sorry if I’ve upset you.

Teacher: No, that’s fine. It’s always good to hear such things, you know. See you later, Jake.

Jake: See you.

Про экзамены говорится во второй реплике учителя: you passed your exams with flying colours. Это – фразеологизм, который означает «прекрасно». Но даже если вы не знаете значения этой устойчивой фразы и не поняли, как именно сданы экзамены, не стоит переживать – сразу после этого учитель говорит «My colleagues and I are so proud of you all». Из этого следует, что мальчик сдал экзамены хорошо, ведь иначе им бы не стал гордиться весь преподавательский состав.

Про брата говорится чуть позднее – I’ll have to help my brother. He’s just had surgery, you know. Но о возрасте брата ничего не сказано – он может быть и младшим, и старшим, поэтому для второго высказывания выбираем цифру 3. Потом Джейк говорит, что хочет стать учителем, но не упоминает, какой именно предмет он хочет вести – ставим ту же цифру и для третьего утверждения. Мисс Кларк очень удивилась его выбору – Really? I would never have thought you had chosen this career, значит, четвертое высказывание верно. Далее они обсуждают эту профессию и учеников, и Джейк говорит – I believe that every student has the potential for success – он верит в то, что у каждого ученика есть способности, значит, утверждение Е неверно.

Мисс Кларк считает, что Джейку подходит эта профессия , употребляя в речи популярный фразеологизм – if you are able to look at it that way, teaching is definitely your cup of tea. И, конечно, ей было приятно слышать слова ученика о том, что она и ее коллеги вдохновили его на выбор профессии – она говорит, что добрые слова ее тронули:  its time for me to wipe away the tearsyour words are so touching…. Its always good to hear such things. Главное – вслушиваться в детали и обладать неплохим словарным запасом – иначе можно просто не понять, о чем идет речь.

Ответ:

A B C D E F G
1 3 3 1 2 1 2

Задания с третьего по девятое

Последняя часть аудирования ЕГЭ по английскому – прослушивание интервью и выполнение 7 заданий, связанных с ним. Все задания идут по порядку, в соответствии с упоминанием их аспектов в записи.

Presenter: Today in our studio we have a Brazilian-born actress Alice Jones, who made her film debut at the age of 18 in the Oscar-nominated «City of God». Good afternoon, Alice!

Alice Jones: Good afternoon. It’s a pleasure to be here. Thank you for inviting me.

Presenter: Your biggest achievements are connected with Hollywood and even your surname now is English. Do you still have any connections in Brazil?

Alice Jones: Well, my roots certainly remain firmly in Brazil. I own a production company in São Paolo, the city in which I was raised. Many of my family members are in the film and television industry, and my aunt and mother are both actresses there and my sister is a producer.

Presenter: What inspired you to become an actress?

Alice Jones: I can’t say I’ve always been interested in stardom. Once as a teenager I saw a performance at a theatre, and I loved the play. For me, it changed my perspective on acting and theater. I was 14, and I was enchanted; I completely fell in love. Then I finished school in São Paolo and started attending a university for the performing arts. When I got the invitation to come to an audition, I remember exactly when they told me who was going to be in the film. These were the same actors as in that play. I thought it was written in the stars.

Presenter: Are you currently into any project?

Alice Jones: I am. It is based on a novel by a wonderful Spanish writer. I read the book eight years ago. A really good friend of mine gave me the book, and she said, “You need to read this book because it’s a beautiful, strong story about this woman. Maybe she’s a nice character for you to play, so just read it”. Years went by, and now they want to make a version of it in Spanish, and I was happy when they called me because I always thought it was such a beautiful character for a woman to play. When they called me, I couldn’t believe that eight years after I read the book and fell in love with the character, they came to me. It was very special.

Presenter: As far as I remember, it’s not the first time you’ve worked on a book you love.

Alice Jones: So true! One of my films, «Blindness», is also based on one of my favourite books, so when they invited me, I had the same feeling. For «Queen of the South», again, my main reason to sign up for it was the character and the book, because that was a role I really wanted to play. So right after I got cast, I went straight to the book and made notes, getting all the little details about what people say about her, who she is, what type of woman she is in the world that she’s born into, how she manages to survive – all that. I was just trying to honor the book and
have a better understanding of it.

Presenter: How do you prepare for your roles?

Alice Jones: I have an acting coach that helps me. He works with me on preparing – running lines and having ideas and developing different ways of approaching characters. When it’s a story, based on a book, I basically work off the book. The book is my main source of material.

Presenter: I think now you’ve worked more in English than in Portuguese. Is it still difficult for you to work in another language that’s not Portuguese?

Alice Jones: Even now, it’s still a challenge. Because I’m so close to my family and friends and I always speak Portuguese, my heart and mind go to Portuguese. Once I’m on the set, after three or four months doing the series working hard every day and only speaking English, it becomes easier. Your mindset is there and you’re dreaming in English. But it is hard; in a way you keep translating from one language to another.

Presenter: Thank you, Alice.


What do we learn about Alice at the beginning of the interview?

  1. She has an Academy award already.
  2. She’s 18 years old.
  3. She was born in Brazil.

В самом начале интервьюер говорит, что актриса была рождена в Бразилии – ее дебют в роли актрисы был в 18 лет, но не говорит, что ей все еще 18. В случае с цифрами на экзамене нужно быть особенно внимательными.

Ответ: 3.


Which of the following is TRUE about Alice’s family?

  1. She takes part in a business with her family.
  2. All of her relatives live in São Paolo.
  3. Many of her relatives work in show business.

Актриса говорит, что выросла в Сан-Паулу, но не упоминает, что ее родственники живут там. Зато она рассказывает, что они работают в кино- и телеиндустрии – Many of my family members are in the film and television industry, and my aunt and mother are both actresses there and my sister is a producer.

Ответ: 3.


What made Alice want to become an actress?

  1. A theatre play she once saw.
  2. Her school in São Paolo.
  3. Glossy magazines about stars.

Сразу после ведущий спрашивает, почему девушка решила стать актрисой, и она говорит, что в 14 лет увидела одну театральную постановку, которая глубоко ее впечатлила – I saw a performance at a theatre, and I loved the play. For me, it changed my perspective on acting and theater. I was 14, and I was enchanted; I completely fell in love.

Ответ: 1.


Which is TRUE about Alice’s current project?

  1. Her character is very beautiful.
  2. Her part isn’t in English.
  3. Her friend offered her the role.

Далее они разговаривают о текущем проекте, в котором участвует Алиса. Она говорит про друга, но он предложил ей не роль, а книгу. Также она упоминает, что режиссеры планируют создать испаноязычную постановку, но конкретно об ее роли не говорится ничего – этот вариант выбирать нельзя. Потом девушка говорит: I always thought it was such a beautiful character for a woman to play.

Верный вариант: 1.


Why did Alice sign up for Queen of the South?

  1. Because of the film director.
  2. Because of the role she had to play.
  3. Because she had written the book.

Следующее задание легкое. Алиса прямо говорит: For «Queen othe South», again, my main reason to sign up for it was the character and the book, because that was a role I really wanted to play.

Ответ: 2.


What does Alice’s acting coach help her with?

  1. Getting to know the character.
  2. Memorizing the lines.
  3. Suggesting ideas about costumes.

Алиса говорит: I have an acting coach that helps me. He works with me on preparing – running lines and having ideas and developing different ways of approaching characters. Учитель актерского мастерства не помогает ей запоминать роли и не предлагает идеи костюмов – он помогает разрабатывать идеи и лучше узнавать персонажа.

Ответ: 1.


What does Alice say about having to act in English?

  1. It’s easier when she spends a long time working on it.
  2. It’s no problem for her anymore.
  3. It makes her translate all the time.

Алиса говорит, что португальский язык ей намного ближе, но после нескольких месяцев частого использования английского использовать его в постановках становится легче – Once I’m on the set, after three or four months doing the series working hard everyday and only speaking English, it becomes easier. Your mindset is there and you’re dreaming in English. Она не говорит, что это удается ей совсем без проблем, но и переводить постоянно не приходится – хотя она и говорит «in a way you keep translating from one language to another», нужно помнить, что in a way значит «в некоторой степени», а не «все время», как в задании.

Хорошо сдать аудирование не так сложно, если заранее начать готовиться к этому виду заданий, приучать себя выполнять его в отведенное время и уделять большое внимание всем деталям, упоминаемым в высказываниях.

Даниил Романович | Просмотров: 4.9k

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1. Which of the following is TRUE about the US Institute of International Education?
1) Jane Brown is its president.
2) It works for the State Department.
3) It’s not a commercial organization.

2. Which of the following is NOT TRUE about the recent statistics of international education in the USA?
1) There were 23% more international students this academic year.
2) The 2011-2012 year had the highest amount of international students.
3) The number of international students has grown substantially.

3. What does Jane Brown say about Americans who study abroad?
1) Only a few of them do so.
2) Their percentage went up slightly.
3) They prefer to study in China.

4. Why, according to Jane Brown, do young Chinese people go to study abroad?
1) They want to travel around the world.
2) Chinese education is of low quality.
3) Their families can afford it.

5. From which country do most international students come to America?
1) China.
2) India.
3) Korea.

6. Why, according to Jane Brown, do many international students choose to come to America?
1) Universities in America are large.
2) They have a wide choice of colleges.
3) American universities prefer them to American students.

7. How many international students are there in America in comparison with domestic students?
1) A small amount.
2) A big percentage.
3) An equal proportion.

1 – 3
2 – 1
3 – 2
4 – 3
5 – 1
6 – 2
7 – 1

Reporter: Hello, everybody, here we are with our weekly program about education in America. Today we’re looking at international students attending colleges and universities in the USA. Here’s our expert, Jane Brown — an aide to the president of the Institute of International Education.
Jane Brown: Good afternoon.
Reporter: So, Jane, how many international students are coming to the States to study?
Jane Brown: A new report says there are more and more of them. In particular, it notes a large increase in the number of international students from China. These findings are from the latest edition of the Open Doors Report, which is a joint project of the State Department and the Institute of International Education, a non-profit educational and training organization. It documents the record number of international students in the United States during the 2011-2012 school year. It says that more than 750,000 international students were attending American colleges and universities during that period. That represents an increase of almost 6%, compared to one year earlier.
Reporter: What about Americans? Are they also studying abroad in bigger numbers?
Jane Brown: Well, by comparison, the number of Americans studying overseas increased by just 1%.
Reporter: You say many international students in America come from China.
Jane Brown: The report says about 200,000 students at American colleges and universities were from China. That is an increase of more than 23% over the year before. That was the highest level ever, and it really showed in the figures. It also means that international undergraduate enrollment was higher than graduate enrollment.
Reporter: Do you have any explanation for this trend?
Jane Brown: Many Chinese families can pay for the highest quality education for their children. We know many of them have enough income to afford to send their children anywhere in the world. And, for the most part, with all the options they have, Chinese students still choose the United States as their destination of choice.
Reporter: Good for us! Any other interesting facts about the statistics of international education in America?
Jane Brown: Chinese students are not the only ones attending American colleges and universities in large numbers. After China, India sends the second largest number of students to the United States for higher education, and South Korea is the third with about 80,000 students.
Reporter: So why do so many foreign students want to study in the United States?
Jane Brown: I believe the advantage America has is that we have a very diverse system. At the same time, there are over 4,000 universities and colleges in the United States, and what that tells us is that there is a lot of room to host international students. The numbers I’ve just provided you with may seem huge, but actually foreign students represent less than 4% of the total student population in American higher education.
Reporter: Does this mean there is still a lot of room for international students to come to us?
Jane Brown: Exactly.
Reporter: Thank you, Jane.

Упр. 23 | 24 | 25

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  • Вариант 10

Назад

Время

3:0:00

№1

Вы услышите 6 высказываний. Установите соответствие между высказываниями каждого говорящего A–F и утверждениями, данными в списке 1–7. Используйте каждое утверждение, обозначенное соответствующей цифрой, только один раз. В задании есть одно лишнее утверждение. Вы услышите запись дважды. Занесите свои ответы в таблицу.

1. Some countries offer good career opportunities for beginning teachers.

2. Don’t hesitate to write to the employer if you need the job.

3. Teaching as a way to change your life.

4. Relatives are happy when you decide not to teach abroad.

5. Teaching abroad doesn’t seem nice to some people.

6. My relative is a role model for me in terms of working abroad.

7. I’m going to spend my gap year teaching English abroad.

№2

Вы услышите диалог. Определите, какие из приведённых утверждений А–G соответствуют содержанию текста (1 – True), какие не соответствуют (2 – False) и о чём в тексте не сказано, то есть на основании текста нельзя дать ни положительного, ни отрицательного ответа (3 – Not stated). Занесите номер выбранного Вами варианта ответа в таблицу. Вы услышите запись дважды.

A. The tourist has visited England before.

B. There is a number of sightseeing attractions in Windsor besides Windsor Castle.

C. The tourist hopes to see the Queen in Windsor.

D. The Household Cavalry Museum occupies a part of Windsor Castle.

E. The tourist wants to see Windsor Great Park on a separate day.

F. The receptionist claims that most tourists need more than one day to spend in Windsor.

G. The tourist wants to buy postcards with the town views.

№3

Вы услышите интервью. В задании запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2 или 3, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа. Вы услышите запись дважды.

3

The presenter introduces Stan Sheff as a…

1) theatre designer.

2) sound artist.

3) talented musician.

№4

Вы услышите интервью. В задании запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2 или 3, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа. Вы услышите запись дважды.

4

Which of the following is TRUE about Stan’s latest performance?

1) It is based on a long term project.

2) It is both challenging and exciting.

3) The room was decorated in dark colours.

№5

Вы услышите интервью. В задании запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2 или 3, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа. Вы услышите запись дважды.

5

What did Stan and his partner try to achieve with their experiments?

1) The creation of new types of speakers.

2) The proper application of old-fashioned objects.

3) The effect of producing sound images.

№6

Вы услышите интервью. В задании запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2 или 3, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа. Вы услышите запись дважды.

6

Which of the following is NOT mentioned by Stan as an outcome of the experiments?

1) New methods of music recording.

2) New design of concert halls.

3) New types of DVDs.

№7

Вы услышите интервью. В задании запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2 или 3, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа. Вы услышите запись дважды.

7

The building housing the Audium once housed?

1) a coffee shop.

2) a bakery.

3) an office for National Endowment for the Arts.

№8

Вы услышите интервью. В задании запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2 или 3, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа. Вы услышите запись дважды.

8

What does Stan say about the Audium’s program?

1) It’s almost ten years old.

2) It’s a completely live performance.

3) It needs a change.

№9

Вы услышите интервью. В задании запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2 или 3, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа. Вы услышите запись дважды.

9

Stan says that while performing he…

1) misses his mother-in-law.

2) wishes to be dispassionate.

3) pays attention to who is in audience.

№10

Установите соответствие заголовков 1–8 абзацам текста А–G. Занесите свои ответы в таблицу. Используйте каждую цифру только один раз. В задании одна тема лишняя.

1. Another Side of a Versatile Author  5. Puzzle Solved
2. The Plot  6. Doubts of Originality
3. Possible Discoveries to Come  7. Experiment’s Success
4. Journalist’s Investigation 8. Lost and Found

A. A “rollicking” anti-lawyer revenge fantasy by Walt Whitman, which challenges previously held ideas about the American poet’s transition from prose to poetry, has been found in the archives of a Victorian New York Sunday newspaper. Though published anonymously, the book matches a detailed synopsis in the poet’s notebook for a project academics had thought abandoned. Entitled The Life and Adventures of Jack Engle, the book has just been published free online by the Walt Whitman Quarterly Review.

B. Zachary Turpin of the University of Houston discovered the novel in Manhattan-based newspaper the Sunday Dispatch. Set in New York, it was serialised in 1852 and written at the same time as the poet began work on his landmark epic poem Leaves of Grass, published three years later. Described by Turpin as “a fun, rollicking, creative, twisty, bizarre little book”, Jack Engle is a classic rags-to-riches orphan’s story about a corrupt lawyer, Mr Covert, who tries to trick his ward Martha out of her inheritance. Jack, who works for Covert, sets out to save his fellow orphan and in the process discovers his fate is tied up with hers. In true Dickensian style, Whitman appears to settle old scores in the book: the writer’s father was also swindled by a New York lawyer.

C. Turpin found the 36,000-word novel as he ploughed through the prolific author’s “odds and ends” in the Integrated Catalog of Walt Whitman’s Literary Manuscripts, a comprehensive list of the poet’s surviving papers, jottings, manuscript drafts, scraps and notebooks. Among the scraps, a series of character names appeared: Covert, Jack Engle, Wigglesworth and Smytthe. Painstaking detective work led him to a tiny notice from 1852 in the New York Daily Times (now the New York Times) advertising the serialisation in the Sunday Dispatch of an autobiography, The Life and Adventures of Jack Engle.

D. “Something about it just seemed right,” the academic said. “The name Jack Engle. The year. The newspaper (to which we know Whitman had contributed before).” The clincher came when he matched the character names from Whitman’s notebook with those in the published story. “I couldn’t believe that, for a few minutes, I was the only person on Earth who knew about this book.”

E. The discovery is significant not only for its rarity. The extent of Whitman’s prose fiction was previously unknown. The book reveals he grappled with a desire to find the right form in which to express his ideas. “The Whitman we see in Jack Engle is not yet the confident, committed poet we now take him to have always been,” Turpin explained. “It is during this vital time that he’s experimenting, trying on different genres and modes of writing, looking for one that’s ample and expansive enough to express what Emerson would call ‘the infinitude of the private man’.”

F. Folsom agreed the novel revealed Whitman’s struggle with form and that it gives a precise time for his move into poetry. In chapter 19, the plot comes to an abrupt end as Jack wanders through a graveyard and the plots of the buried merge into endless lost life stories. As he contemplates these lost plots, Jack feel the grass covering his own face. Folsom said: “I sense at this moment Whitman is discovering why conventional plots will no longer serve for the kind of writing he feels he has to accomplish, and this novel thus lets us experience the moment in the process of Whitman’s development when he realises fiction simply will not serve the kind of creative work he will devote the rest of his life to.”

G. A revival in Whitman’s work may be due. “The Whitman of the early 1850s is absolutely ablaze,” said Turpin, who has form in finding unusual lost works by Whitman. Last year, he discovered a book-length guide to “manly health” by the poet, which tackled everything from virility to foot care and exercise. Hinting that more may be mined from the archives, Turpin added: “This new novel may also indicate that he didn’t give up prose. God knows – he could have, and probably did, write several more novels, if not many more than that. For all we know, they could be hiding in plain sight. Exciting, isn’t it?”

№11

Прочитайте текст и заполните пропуски A-F частями предложений, обозначенными цифрами 1-7. Одна из частей в списке 1-7 лишняя. Занесите цифру, обозначающую соответствующую часть предложения, в таблицу

You’re out to lunch with someone you’ve known for a few years. Together you’ve held parties, celebrated birthdays, A ________________________. You’ve even been on holiday together. In all, they’ve spent quite a lot of money on you – roughly £63,224. The thing is: you can’t remember any of it.

From the most dramatic moment in life – the day of your birth – to first steps, first words, first food, right up to nursery school, B _____________________. Even after our precious first memory, the recollections tend to be few and far between until well into our childhood. How come?

Probing that mental blank throws up some intriguing questions. Did your earliest memories actually happen, C ________________? Can we remember events without the words to describe them? And might it one day be possible to claim your missing memories back?

Part of the puzzle comes from the fact that babies are, in other ways, sponges for new information, D _____________________________to make the most accomplished polyglot green with envy. The latest research suggests E ____________________before they’ve even left the womb.

But even as adults, information is lost over time if there’s no attempt to retain it. So one explanation is F _____________________________we experience throughout our lives.

1. or are they simply made up

2. visited parks and bonded over your mutual love of ice cream

3. they begin training their minds

4. and we have no idea of how to recollect it

5. most of us can’t remember anything of our first few years

6. forming 700 new neural connections every second and wielding language-learning skills

7. that infant amnesia is simply a result of the natural process of forgetting the things

№12

Прочитайте текст и выполните заданиt. Запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2, 3 или 4, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа.

The pressure to be positive has never been greater. Cultural forces have whipped up a frenzied pursuit of happiness, spawning billion-dollar book sales, a cottage industry in self-help and plastering inspirational quotes all over the internet. Now you can hire a happiness expert, undertake training in ‘mindfulness’ meanwhile the ‘happiness index’ has become an indicator of national wellbeing to rival GDP.

The truth is, pondering the worst has some clear advantages. Cranks may be superior negotiators, more discerning decision-makers and cut their risk of having a heart attack. Cynics can expect more stable marriages, higher earnings and longer lives – though, of course, they’ll anticipate the opposite. Good moods on the other hand come with substantial risks – sapping your drive, dimming attention to detail and making you simultaneously gullible and selfish

At the centre of it all is the notion our feelings are adaptive: anger, sadness and pessimism aren’t divine cruelty or sheer random bad luck – they evolved to serve useful functions and help us thrive.

Take anger. From Newton’s obsessive grudges to Beethoven’s tantrums it seems as though visionary geniuses often come with extremely short tempers. There are plenty of examples to be found in Silicon Valley. Amazon founder Jeff Bezos is famed for his angry outbursts and insults yet they haven’t stopped him building a $300 billion company.

For years, the link remained a mystery. Then in 2009 Matthijs Baas from the University of Amsterdam decided to investigate. He recruited a group of willing students and set to work making them angry in the name of science. Half the students were asked to recall something which had irritated them and write a short essay about it. Next the two teams were pitched against each other in a game designed to test their creativity. They had 16 minutes to think of as many ways as possible to improve education at the psychology department. As Baas expected, the angry team produced more ideas – at least to begin with. Their contributions were also more original, repeated by less than 1% of the study’s participants.

Crucially, angry volunteers were better at moments of haphazard innovation, or so-called “unstructured” thinking. Let’s say you’re challenged to think about possible uses for a brick. While a systematic thinker might suggest ten different kinds of building, it takes a less structured approach to invent a new use altogether, such as turning it into a weapon.

In essence, creativity is down to how easily your mind is diverted from one thought path and onto another. In a situation requiring fight or flight, it’s easy to see how turning into a literal “mad genius” could be life-saving.“Anger really prepares the body to mobilise resources – it tells you that the situation you’re in is bad and gives you an energetic boost to get you out of it,” says Baas.

So the next time someone tells you to “cheer up” – why not tell them how you’re improving your sense of fairness, reducing unemployment and saving the world economy? You’ll be having the last laugh – even if it is a world-weary, cynical snort.

12

What is NOT mentioned in the text as the consequence of being positive pressure?

1) Self-help books

2) Appearance of happiness trainers

3) Inspirational quotes

4) TV programmes

№13

Прочитайте текст и выполните заданиt. Запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2, 3 или 4, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа.

The pressure to be positive has never been greater. Cultural forces have whipped up a frenzied pursuit of happiness, spawning billion-dollar book sales, a cottage industry in self-help and plastering inspirational quotes all over the internet. Now you can hire a happiness expert, undertake training in ‘mindfulness’ meanwhile the ‘happiness index’ has become an indicator of national wellbeing to rival GDP.

The truth is, pondering the worst has some clear advantages. Cranks may be superior negotiators, more discerning decision-makers and cut their risk of having a heart attack. Cynics can expect more stable marriages, higher earnings and longer lives – though, of course, they’ll anticipate the opposite. Good moods on the other hand come with substantial risks – sapping your drive, dimming attention to detail and making you simultaneously gullible and selfish

At the centre of it all is the notion our feelings are adaptive: anger, sadness and pessimism aren’t divine cruelty or sheer random bad luck – they evolved to serve useful functions and help us thrive.

Take anger. From Newton’s obsessive grudges to Beethoven’s tantrums it seems as though visionary geniuses often come with extremely short tempers. There are plenty of examples to be found in Silicon Valley. Amazon founder Jeff Bezos is famed for his angry outbursts and insults yet they haven’t stopped him building a $300 billion company.

For years, the link remained a mystery. Then in 2009 Matthijs Baas from the University of Amsterdam decided to investigate. He recruited a group of willing students and set to work making them angry in the name of science. Half the students were asked to recall something which had irritated them and write a short essay about it. Next the two teams were pitched against each other in a game designed to test their creativity. They had 16 minutes to think of as many ways as possible to improve education at the psychology department. As Baas expected, the angry team produced more ideas – at least to begin with. Their contributions were also more original, repeated by less than 1% of the study’s participants.

Crucially, angry volunteers were better at moments of haphazard innovation, or so-called “unstructured” thinking. Let’s say you’re challenged to think about possible uses for a brick. While a systematic thinker might suggest ten different kinds of building, it takes a less structured approach to invent a new use altogether, such as turning it into a weapon.

In essence, creativity is down to how easily your mind is diverted from one thought path and onto another. In a situation requiring fight or flight, it’s easy to see how turning into a literal “mad genius” could be life-saving.“Anger really prepares the body to mobilise resources – it tells you that the situation you’re in is bad and gives you an energetic boost to get you out of it,” says Baas.

So the next time someone tells you to “cheer up” – why not tell them how you’re improving your sense of fairness, reducing unemployment and saving the world economy? You’ll be having the last laugh – even if it is a world-weary, cynical snort.

13

Which of the following is the cynics likely to anticipate?

1) Stable marriage

2) Heart problem

3) Higher income

4) Longer life

№14

Прочитайте текст и выполните заданиt. Запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2, 3 или 4, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа.

The pressure to be positive has never been greater. Cultural forces have whipped up a frenzied pursuit of happiness, spawning billion-dollar book sales, a cottage industry in self-help and plastering inspirational quotes all over the internet. Now you can hire a happiness expert, undertake training in ‘mindfulness’ meanwhile the ‘happiness index’ has become an indicator of national wellbeing to rival GDP.

The truth is, pondering the worst has some clear advantages. Cranks may be superior negotiators, more discerning decision-makers and cut their risk of having a heart attack. Cynics can expect more stable marriages, higher earnings and longer lives – though, of course, they’ll anticipate the opposite. Good moods on the other hand come with substantial risks – sapping your drive, dimming attention to detail and making you simultaneously gullible and selfish

At the centre of it all is the notion our feelings are adaptive: anger, sadness and pessimism aren’t divine cruelty or sheer random bad luck – they evolved to serve useful functions and help us thrive.

Take anger. From Newton’s obsessive grudges to Beethoven’s tantrums it seems as though visionary geniuses often come with extremely short tempers. There are plenty of examples to be found in Silicon Valley. Amazon founder Jeff Bezos is famed for his angry outbursts and insults yet they haven’t stopped him building a $300 billion company.

For years, the link remained a mystery. Then in 2009 Matthijs Baas from the University of Amsterdam decided to investigate. He recruited a group of willing students and set to work making them angry in the name of science. Half the students were asked to recall something which had irritated them and write a short essay about it. Next the two teams were pitched against each other in a game designed to test their creativity. They had 16 minutes to think of as many ways as possible to improve education at the psychology department. As Baas expected, the angry team produced more ideas – at least to begin with. Their contributions were also more original, repeated by less than 1% of the study’s participants.

Crucially, angry volunteers were better at moments of haphazard innovation, or so-called “unstructured” thinking. Let’s say you’re challenged to think about possible uses for a brick. While a systematic thinker might suggest ten different kinds of building, it takes a less structured approach to invent a new use altogether, such as turning it into a weapon.

In essence, creativity is down to how easily your mind is diverted from one thought path and onto another. In a situation requiring fight or flight, it’s easy to see how turning into a literal “mad genius” could be life-saving.“Anger really prepares the body to mobilise resources – it tells you that the situation you’re in is bad and gives you an energetic boost to get you out of it,” says Baas.

So the next time someone tells you to “cheer up” – why not tell them how you’re improving your sense of fairness, reducing unemployment and saving the world economy? You’ll be having the last laugh – even if it is a world-weary, cynical snort.

14

What is TRUE about anger:

1) It can help you to get rich

2) It serves a useful function

3) It is a sign of a genius

4) It can bring problems with law

№15

Прочитайте текст и выполните заданиt. Запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2, 3 или 4, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа.

The pressure to be positive has never been greater. Cultural forces have whipped up a frenzied pursuit of happiness, spawning billion-dollar book sales, a cottage industry in self-help and plastering inspirational quotes all over the internet. Now you can hire a happiness expert, undertake training in ‘mindfulness’ meanwhile the ‘happiness index’ has become an indicator of national wellbeing to rival GDP.

The truth is, pondering the worst has some clear advantages. Cranks may be superior negotiators, more discerning decision-makers and cut their risk of having a heart attack. Cynics can expect more stable marriages, higher earnings and longer lives – though, of course, they’ll anticipate the opposite. Good moods on the other hand come with substantial risks – sapping your drive, dimming attention to detail and making you simultaneously gullible and selfish

At the centre of it all is the notion our feelings are adaptive: anger, sadness and pessimism aren’t divine cruelty or sheer random bad luck – they evolved to serve useful functions and help us thrive.

Take anger. From Newton’s obsessive grudges to Beethoven’s tantrums it seems as though visionary geniuses often come with extremely short tempers. There are plenty of examples to be found in Silicon Valley. Amazon founder Jeff Bezos is famed for his angry outbursts and insults yet they haven’t stopped him building a $300 billion company.

For years, the link remained a mystery. Then in 2009 Matthijs Baas from the University of Amsterdam decided to investigate. He recruited a group of willing students and set to work making them angry in the name of science. Half the students were asked to recall something which had irritated them and write a short essay about it. Next the two teams were pitched against each other in a game designed to test their creativity. They had 16 minutes to think of as many ways as possible to improve education at the psychology department. As Baas expected, the angry team produced more ideas – at least to begin with. Their contributions were also more original, repeated by less than 1% of the study’s participants.

Crucially, angry volunteers were better at moments of haphazard innovation, or so-called “unstructured” thinking. Let’s say you’re challenged to think about possible uses for a brick. While a systematic thinker might suggest ten different kinds of building, it takes a less structured approach to invent a new use altogether, such as turning it into a weapon.

In essence, creativity is down to how easily your mind is diverted from one thought path and onto another. In a situation requiring fight or flight, it’s easy to see how turning into a literal “mad genius” could be life-saving.“Anger really prepares the body to mobilise resources – it tells you that the situation you’re in is bad and gives you an energetic boost to get you out of it,” says Baas.

So the next time someone tells you to “cheer up” – why not tell them how you’re improving your sense of fairness, reducing unemployment and saving the world economy? You’ll be having the last laugh – even if it is a world-weary, cynical snort.

15

What did Matthijs Baas’ study show?

1) The angry team was less productive

2) The angry team communicated better

3) The angry team was more creative

4) The angry team had quarreled more

№16

Прочитайте текст и выполните заданиt. Запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2, 3 или 4, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа.

The pressure to be positive has never been greater. Cultural forces have whipped up a frenzied pursuit of happiness, spawning billion-dollar book sales, a cottage industry in self-help and plastering inspirational quotes all over the internet. Now you can hire a happiness expert, undertake training in ‘mindfulness’ meanwhile the ‘happiness index’ has become an indicator of national wellbeing to rival GDP.

The truth is, pondering the worst has some clear advantages. Cranks may be superior negotiators, more discerning decision-makers and cut their risk of having a heart attack. Cynics can expect more stable marriages, higher earnings and longer lives – though, of course, they’ll anticipate the opposite. Good moods on the other hand come with substantial risks – sapping your drive, dimming attention to detail and making you simultaneously gullible and selfish

At the centre of it all is the notion our feelings are adaptive: anger, sadness and pessimism aren’t divine cruelty or sheer random bad luck – they evolved to serve useful functions and help us thrive.

Take anger. From Newton’s obsessive grudges to Beethoven’s tantrums it seems as though visionary geniuses often come with extremely short tempers. There are plenty of examples to be found in Silicon Valley. Amazon founder Jeff Bezos is famed for his angry outbursts and insults yet they haven’t stopped him building a $300 billion company.

For years, the link remained a mystery. Then in 2009 Matthijs Baas from the University of Amsterdam decided to investigate. He recruited a group of willing students and set to work making them angry in the name of science. Half the students were asked to recall something which had irritated them and write a short essay about it. Next the two teams were pitched against each other in a game designed to test their creativity. They had 16 minutes to think of as many ways as possible to improve education at the psychology department. As Baas expected, the angry team produced more ideas – at least to begin with. Their contributions were also more original, repeated by less than 1% of the study’s participants.

Crucially, angry volunteers were better at moments of haphazard innovation, or so-called “unstructured” thinking. Let’s say you’re challenged to think about possible uses for a brick. While a systematic thinker might suggest ten different kinds of building, it takes a less structured approach to invent a new use altogether, such as turning it into a weapon.

In essence, creativity is down to how easily your mind is diverted from one thought path and onto another. In a situation requiring fight or flight, it’s easy to see how turning into a literal “mad genius” could be life-saving.“Anger really prepares the body to mobilise resources – it tells you that the situation you’re in is bad and gives you an energetic boost to get you out of it,” says Baas.

So the next time someone tells you to “cheer up” – why not tell them how you’re improving your sense of fairness, reducing unemployment and saving the world economy? You’ll be having the last laugh – even if it is a world-weary, cynical snort.

16

What conclusion did Matthijs Baas make?

1) Anger helps you to find a weapon

2) Anger helps you out from a difficult situation

3) Anger and problem solving aren’t connected

4) Anger is the reason humanity survived

№17

Прочитайте текст и выполните заданиt. Запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2, 3 или 4, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа.

The pressure to be positive has never been greater. Cultural forces have whipped up a frenzied pursuit of happiness, spawning billion-dollar book sales, a cottage industry in self-help and plastering inspirational quotes all over the internet. Now you can hire a happiness expert, undertake training in ‘mindfulness’ meanwhile the ‘happiness index’ has become an indicator of national wellbeing to rival GDP.

The truth is, pondering the worst has some clear advantages. Cranks may be superior negotiators, more discerning decision-makers and cut their risk of having a heart attack. Cynics can expect more stable marriages, higher earnings and longer lives – though, of course, they’ll anticipate the opposite. Good moods on the other hand come with substantial risks – sapping your drive, dimming attention to detail and making you simultaneously gullible and selfish

At the centre of it all is the notion our feelings are adaptive: anger, sadness and pessimism aren’t divine cruelty or sheer random bad luck – they evolved to serve useful functions and help us thrive.

Take anger. From Newton’s obsessive grudges to Beethoven’s tantrums it seems as though visionary geniuses often come with extremely short tempers. There are plenty of examples to be found in Silicon Valley. Amazon founder Jeff Bezos is famed for his angry outbursts and insults yet they haven’t stopped him building a $300 billion company.

For years, the link remained a mystery. Then in 2009 Matthijs Baas from the University of Amsterdam decided to investigate. He recruited a group of willing students and set to work making them angry in the name of science. Half the students were asked to recall something which had irritated them and write a short essay about it. Next the two teams were pitched against each other in a game designed to test their creativity. They had 16 minutes to think of as many ways as possible to improve education at the psychology department. As Baas expected, the angry team produced more ideas – at least to begin with. Their contributions were also more original, repeated by less than 1% of the study’s participants.

Crucially, angry volunteers were better at moments of haphazard innovation, or so-called “unstructured” thinking. Let’s say you’re challenged to think about possible uses for a brick. While a systematic thinker might suggest ten different kinds of building, it takes a less structured approach to invent a new use altogether, such as turning it into a weapon.

In essence, creativity is down to how easily your mind is diverted from one thought path and onto another. In a situation requiring fight or flight, it’s easy to see how turning into a literal “mad genius” could be life-saving.“Anger really prepares the body to mobilise resources – it tells you that the situation you’re in is bad and gives you an energetic boost to get you out of it,” says Baas.

So the next time someone tells you to “cheer up” – why not tell them how you’re improving your sense of fairness, reducing unemployment and saving the world economy? You’ll be having the last laugh – even if it is a world-weary, cynical snort.

17

What does “snort” mean?

1) Cry

2) Laugh

3) Nod

4) Shout

№18

Прочитайте текст и выполните заданиt. Запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2, 3 или 4, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа.

The pressure to be positive has never been greater. Cultural forces have whipped up a frenzied pursuit of happiness, spawning billion-dollar book sales, a cottage industry in self-help and plastering inspirational quotes all over the internet. Now you can hire a happiness expert, undertake training in ‘mindfulness’ meanwhile the ‘happiness index’ has become an indicator of national wellbeing to rival GDP.

The truth is, pondering the worst has some clear advantages. Cranks may be superior negotiators, more discerning decision-makers and cut their risk of having a heart attack. Cynics can expect more stable marriages, higher earnings and longer lives – though, of course, they’ll anticipate the opposite. Good moods on the other hand come with substantial risks – sapping your drive, dimming attention to detail and making you simultaneously gullible and selfish

At the centre of it all is the notion our feelings are adaptive: anger, sadness and pessimism aren’t divine cruelty or sheer random bad luck – they evolved to serve useful functions and help us thrive.

Take anger. From Newton’s obsessive grudges to Beethoven’s tantrums it seems as though visionary geniuses often come with extremely short tempers. There are plenty of examples to be found in Silicon Valley. Amazon founder Jeff Bezos is famed for his angry outbursts and insults yet they haven’t stopped him building a $300 billion company.

For years, the link remained a mystery. Then in 2009 Matthijs Baas from the University of Amsterdam decided to investigate. He recruited a group of willing students and set to work making them angry in the name of science. Half the students were asked to recall something which had irritated them and write a short essay about it. Next the two teams were pitched against each other in a game designed to test their creativity. They had 16 minutes to think of as many ways as possible to improve education at the psychology department. As Baas expected, the angry team produced more ideas – at least to begin with. Their contributions were also more original, repeated by less than 1% of the study’s participants.

Crucially, angry volunteers were better at moments of haphazard innovation, or so-called “unstructured” thinking. Let’s say you’re challenged to think about possible uses for a brick. While a systematic thinker might suggest ten different kinds of building, it takes a less structured approach to invent a new use altogether, such as turning it into a weapon.

In essence, creativity is down to how easily your mind is diverted from one thought path and onto another. In a situation requiring fight or flight, it’s easy to see how turning into a literal “mad genius” could be life-saving.“Anger really prepares the body to mobilise resources – it tells you that the situation you’re in is bad and gives you an energetic boost to get you out of it,” says Baas.

So the next time someone tells you to “cheer up” – why not tell them how you’re improving your sense of fairness, reducing unemployment and saving the world economy? You’ll be having the last laugh – even if it is a world-weary, cynical snort.

18

What’s the author’s tone in the text?

1) Depressive

2) Discouraged

3) Optimistic

4) Approving

№19

Прочитайте приведенные ниже текст. Преобразуйте, если необходимо, слово, напечатанное заглавными буквами после текста, так, чтобы оно грамматически соответствовало содержанию текста. Впишите маленькими буквами полученное слово в поле для ответа.

19

Some myths about the brain, such as the idea that only 10% of our grey matter ________, are notorious, especially among neuroscientists. These myths crop up every now and then but they are shot down by those in the know.

USE

№20

Прочитайте приведенные ниже текст. Преобразуйте, если необходимо, слово, напечатанное заглавными буквами после текста, так, чтобы оно грамматически соответствовало содержанию текста. Впишите маленькими буквами полученное слово в поле для ответа.

20

In contrast to these enduring stories, other misconceptions ____________________unrecognised.

BECOME

№21

Прочитайте приведенные ниже текст. Преобразуйте, если необходимо, слово, напечатанное заглавными буквами после текста, так, чтобы оно грамматически соответствовало содержанию текста. Впишите маленькими буквами полученное слово в поле для ответа.

21

One of these is the idea that the human brain is served by five senses. This belief is so ingrained that even if you ask the scientifically literate, he ____________ it as taken-for-granted common knowledge.

TREAT

№22

Прочитайте приведенные ниже текст. Преобразуйте, если необходимо, слово, напечатанное заглавными буквами после текста, так, чтобы оно грамматически соответствовало содержанию текста. Впишите маленькими буквами полученное слово в поле для ответа.

22

If only it_________ that simple

BE

№23

Прочитайте приведенные ниже текст. Преобразуйте, если необходимо, слово, напечатанное заглавными буквами после текста, так, чтобы оно грамматически соответствовало содержанию текста. Впишите маленькими буквами полученное слово в поле для ответа.

23

Simply ________________ what we mean by a “sense” leads you down a slippery slope into philosophy.

DEFINE

№24

Прочитайте приведенные ниже текст. Преобразуйте, если необходимо, слово, напечатанное заглавными буквами после текста, так, чтобы оно грамматически соответствовало содержанию текста. Впишите маленькими буквами полученное слово в поле для ответа.

24

But whichever way you look at it, five is a pretty arbitrary and meaningless number – a glaring “myth” of the brain that needs ______________ recognition.

FAR

№25

Прочитайте приведенные ниже текст. Преобразуйте, если необходимо, слово, напечатанное заглавными буквами после текста, так, чтобы оно грамматически соответствовало содержанию текста. Впишите маленькими буквами полученное слово в поле для ответа.

25

Indeed, once you start _________about all the different kinds of information  reaching the human brain, you might even find that you develop a brand new sense – a radar-like sensitivity to some of the other misconceptions regarding the way the brain experiences the world. You might have once called it a “sixth sense” – but you know better now, don’t you?

THINK

№26

Прочитайте приведенный ниже текст. Образуйте от слова, напечатанного заглавными буквами после текста, однокоренное слово так, чтобы оно грамматически и лексически соответствовало содержанию текста. Запишите маленькими буквами полученное слово в поле для ответа.

26

About one-fifth of all you eat is used to power the electrical chit-chat between your 100 billion little grey cells. If a big brain gives us such a ____________, it is an enormous waste.

ADVANTAGE

№27

Прочитайте приведенный ниже текст. Образуйте от слова, напечатанного заглавными буквами после текста, однокоренное слово так, чтобы оно грамматически и лексически соответствовало содержанию текста. Запишите маленькими буквами полученное слово в поле для ответа.

27

But there is something that is _________. If nothing else, it makes us more efficient at what we do. If honey bees are searching a scene, for instance, they will consider each object one by one, whereas larger animals have the extra brainpower to process it all at once. We can multi-task, in other words.

BENEFIT 

№28

Прочитайте приведенный ниже текст. Образуйте от слова, напечатанного заглавными буквами после текста, однокоренное слово так, чтобы оно грамматически и лексически соответствовало содержанию текста. Запишите маленькими буквами полученное слово в поле для ответа.

28

A bigger brain also boosts the amount we can remember: a honey bee can grasp just a handful of ________________ between signs signalling the presence of food, before it starts getting confused,

ASSOCIATE

№29

Прочитайте приведенный ниже текст. Образуйте от слова, напечатанного заглавными буквами после текста, однокоренное слово так, чтобы оно грамматически и лексически соответствовало содержанию текста. Запишите маленькими буквами полученное слово в поле для ответа.

29

whereas even a pigeon can learn to recognise more than 1,800 pictures, and that’s nothing compared to human ___________________.

KNOW

№30

Прочитайте приведенный ниже текст. Образуйте от слова, напечатанного заглавными буквами после текста, однокоренное слово так, чтобы оно грамматически и лексически соответствовало содержанию текста. Запишите маленькими буквами полученное слово в поле для ответа.

30

For a _______________, consider that a memory champions can remember 

COMPARE

№31

Прочитайте приведенный ниже текст. Образуйте от слова, напечатанного заглавными буквами после текста, однокоренное слово так, чтобы оно грамматически и лексически соответствовало содержанию текста. Запишите маленькими буквами полученное слово в поле для ответа.

31

the sequence of Pi to _____________ thousands of decimal places.

LITERAL

№32

Прочитайте текст с пропусками, обозначенными номерами. Эти номера соответствуют заданиям 32-38, в которых представлены возможные варианты ответов. Запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2, 3 или 4, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа.

32 _______________Greenland and Norway in the mid-Atlantic ocean, 7,546ft (2300m) below the surface, there is a black and smoky region where hot water spouts up from the sea bed. This strange place is called «Loki’s castle» 33 _______________ the shape-shifting Norse God Loki. Close to Loki’s castle, there lives a microbe like no 34 ______________ on Earth.

In 2015, a team of scientists 35 ____________ by microbiologist Thijs Ettema of Uppsala University in Sweden reported that they had 36 ____________ a new kind of micro-organism. They found genetic

37 _____________ of this single-celled microbe in sea-floor sediments 9 miles (15km) from Loki’s castle.

Writing in the journal Nature, the team called the new microbe «Lokiarchaeota». This quickly got shortened to «Loki».

This mysterious microbe turned 38 ________________to be the closest living relative of the eukaryotes, the group that includes all complex living organisms; from plants and fungi to insects and humans. That means Loki could help us understand how the eukaryotes first came into being. In other words, Loki may help explain why people – and all other complex life – exist.

32

1) between 2) among 3) amongst 4) next

№33

Прочитайте текст с пропусками, обозначенными номерами. Эти номера соответствуют заданиям 32-38, в которых представлены возможные варианты ответов. Запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2, 3 или 4, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа.

32 _______________Greenland and Norway in the mid-Atlantic ocean, 7,546ft (2300m) below the surface, there is a black and smoky region where hot water spouts up from the sea bed. This strange place is called «Loki’s castle» 33 _______________ the shape-shifting Norse God Loki. Close to Loki’s castle, there lives a microbe like no 34 ______________ on Earth.

In 2015, a team of scientists 35 ____________ by microbiologist Thijs Ettema of Uppsala University in Sweden reported that they had 36 ____________ a new kind of micro-organism. They found genetic

37 _____________ of this single-celled microbe in sea-floor sediments 9 miles (15km) from Loki’s castle.

Writing in the journal Nature, the team called the new microbe «Lokiarchaeota». This quickly got shortened to «Loki».

This mysterious microbe turned 38 ________________to be the closest living relative of the eukaryotes, the group that includes all complex living organisms; from plants and fungi to insects and humans. That means Loki could help us understand how the eukaryotes first came into being. In other words, Loki may help explain why people – and all other complex life – exist.

33

1) for 2) after 3) of 4) from

№34

Прочитайте текст с пропусками, обозначенными номерами. Эти номера соответствуют заданиям 32-38, в которых представлены возможные варианты ответов. Запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2, 3 или 4, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа.

32 _______________Greenland and Norway in the mid-Atlantic ocean, 7,546ft (2300m) below the surface, there is a black and smoky region where hot water spouts up from the sea bed. This strange place is called «Loki’s castle» 33 _______________ the shape-shifting Norse God Loki. Close to Loki’s castle, there lives a microbe like no 34 ______________ on Earth.

In 2015, a team of scientists 35 ____________ by microbiologist Thijs Ettema of Uppsala University in Sweden reported that they had 36 ____________ a new kind of micro-organism. They found genetic

37 _____________ of this single-celled microbe in sea-floor sediments 9 miles (15km) from Loki’s castle.

Writing in the journal Nature, the team called the new microbe «Lokiarchaeota». This quickly got shortened to «Loki».

This mysterious microbe turned 38 ________________to be the closest living relative of the eukaryotes, the group that includes all complex living organisms; from plants and fungi to insects and humans. That means Loki could help us understand how the eukaryotes first came into being. In other words, Loki may help explain why people – and all other complex life – exist.

34

1) other 2) others 3) another 4) one

№35

Прочитайте текст с пропусками, обозначенными номерами. Эти номера соответствуют заданиям 32-38, в которых представлены возможные варианты ответов. Запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2, 3 или 4, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа.

32 _______________Greenland and Norway in the mid-Atlantic ocean, 7,546ft (2300m) below the surface, there is a black and smoky region where hot water spouts up from the sea bed. This strange place is called «Loki’s castle» 33 _______________ the shape-shifting Norse God Loki. Close to Loki’s castle, there lives a microbe like no 34 ______________ on Earth.

In 2015, a team of scientists 35 ____________ by microbiologist Thijs Ettema of Uppsala University in Sweden reported that they had 36 ____________ a new kind of micro-organism. They found genetic

37 _____________ of this single-celled microbe in sea-floor sediments 9 miles (15km) from Loki’s castle.

Writing in the journal Nature, the team called the new microbe «Lokiarchaeota». This quickly got shortened to «Loki».

This mysterious microbe turned 38 ________________to be the closest living relative of the eukaryotes, the group that includes all complex living organisms; from plants and fungi to insects and humans. That means Loki could help us understand how the eukaryotes first came into being. In other words, Loki may help explain why people – and all other complex life – exist.

35

1) leadered 2) led 3) researched 4) ruled

№36

Прочитайте текст с пропусками, обозначенными номерами. Эти номера соответствуют заданиям 32-38, в которых представлены возможные варианты ответов. Запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2, 3 или 4, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа.

32 _______________Greenland and Norway in the mid-Atlantic ocean, 7,546ft (2300m) below the surface, there is a black and smoky region where hot water spouts up from the sea bed. This strange place is called «Loki’s castle» 33 _______________ the shape-shifting Norse God Loki. Close to Loki’s castle, there lives a microbe like no 34 ______________ on Earth.

In 2015, a team of scientists 35 ____________ by microbiologist Thijs Ettema of Uppsala University in Sweden reported that they had 36 ____________ a new kind of micro-organism. They found genetic

37 _____________ of this single-celled microbe in sea-floor sediments 9 miles (15km) from Loki’s castle.

Writing in the journal Nature, the team called the new microbe «Lokiarchaeota». This quickly got shortened to «Loki».

This mysterious microbe turned 38 ________________to be the closest living relative of the eukaryotes, the group that includes all complex living organisms; from plants and fungi to insects and humans. That means Loki could help us understand how the eukaryotes first came into being. In other words, Loki may help explain why people – and all other complex life – exist.

36

1) opened 2) revealed 3) discovered 4) researched

№37

Прочитайте текст с пропусками, обозначенными номерами. Эти номера соответствуют заданиям 32-38, в которых представлены возможные варианты ответов. Запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2, 3 или 4, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа.

32 _______________Greenland and Norway in the mid-Atlantic ocean, 7,546ft (2300m) below the surface, there is a black and smoky region where hot water spouts up from the sea bed. This strange place is called «Loki’s castle» 33 _______________ the shape-shifting Norse God Loki. Close to Loki’s castle, there lives a microbe like no 34 ______________ on Earth.

In 2015, a team of scientists 35 ____________ by microbiologist Thijs Ettema of Uppsala University in Sweden reported that they had 36 ____________ a new kind of micro-organism. They found genetic

37 _____________ of this single-celled microbe in sea-floor sediments 9 miles (15km) from Loki’s castle.

Writing in the journal Nature, the team called the new microbe «Lokiarchaeota». This quickly got shortened to «Loki».

This mysterious microbe turned 38 ________________to be the closest living relative of the eukaryotes, the group that includes all complex living organisms; from plants and fungi to insects and humans. That means Loki could help us understand how the eukaryotes first came into being. In other words, Loki may help explain why people – and all other complex life – exist.

37

1) tracks 2) roots 3) grounds 4) traces

№38

Прочитайте текст с пропусками, обозначенными номерами. Эти номера соответствуют заданиям 32-38, в которых представлены возможные варианты ответов. Запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2, 3 или 4, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа.

32 _______________Greenland and Norway in the mid-Atlantic ocean, 7,546ft (2300m) below the surface, there is a black and smoky region where hot water spouts up from the sea bed. This strange place is called «Loki’s castle» 33 _______________ the shape-shifting Norse God Loki. Close to Loki’s castle, there lives a microbe like no 34 ______________ on Earth.

In 2015, a team of scientists 35 ____________ by microbiologist Thijs Ettema of Uppsala University in Sweden reported that they had 36 ____________ a new kind of micro-organism. They found genetic

37 _____________ of this single-celled microbe in sea-floor sediments 9 miles (15km) from Loki’s castle.

Writing in the journal Nature, the team called the new microbe «Lokiarchaeota». This quickly got shortened to «Loki».

This mysterious microbe turned 38 ________________to be the closest living relative of the eukaryotes, the group that includes all complex living organisms; from plants and fungi to insects and humans. That means Loki could help us understand how the eukaryotes first came into being. In other words, Loki may help explain why people – and all other complex life – exist.

38

1) off 2) on 3) up 4) out

№39

You have received a letter from your English-speaking pen-friend Nicole who writes:

… I have some news to share with you! I’ve entered the University in London. It is so great!! But I’ve never lived in such a big city… To tell the truth, I’m a bit nervous. I know that you live in a big city, could you please help me to overcome my fears! Is it stressful to live in the city? If yes, how do you deal with it? Do people in the city friendly? What activities are popular today among city dwellers?

Thanks a lot!!

Lots of love, Nicole

Write a letter to Nicole.

In your letter

  • answer his questions,
  • ask 3 questions about about her habits in the countryside. Write 100—140 words.

Remember the rules of letter writing.

You have 20 minutes to do this task.

Comment on the following statement:

№40

1. It is the government’s responsibility to protect the environment.

2. Internet is the greatest time-waster.

What is your opinion?

Write 200–250 words.

Use the following plan:

− make an introduction (state the problem)

− express your personal opinion and give 2–3 reasons for your opinion

− express an opposing opinion and give 1–2 reasons for this opposing opinion

− explain why you don’t agree with the opposing opinion

− make a conclusion restating your position

Нажми, чтобы завершить тест и увидеть результаты

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Привет сейчас ты за 5 шагов узнаешь, как пользоваться платформой

Смотреть

Выбери тест

«Выбери тест, предмет и нажми кнопку «Начать решать»

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Вкладки

После выбора предмета необходимо выбрать на вкладке задания, варианты ЕГЭ, ОГЭ или другого теста, или теорию

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Задания

Решай задания и записывай ответы. После 1-ой попытки
ты сможешь посмотреть решение

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Статистика

Сбоку ты можешь посмотреть статистику и прогресс по предмету

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Решение

Нажми, чтобы начать решать вариант. Как только ты перейдешь
на страницу, запустится счетчик времени, поэтому подготовь заранее все, что может тебе понадобиться

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Отметки

Отмечай те статьи, что прочитал, чтобы было удобнее ориентироваться в оглавлении

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Молодец!

Ты прошел обучение! Теперь ты знаешь как пользоваться сайтом
и можешь переходить к решению заданий

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