Which of the following is true about the beginning of sandra s career ответы егэ

Задание №9265.
Аудирование. ЕГЭ по английскому

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 TRUE about the beginning of Sandra’s career?
1) She started with several sitcoms.
2) She thinks her roles were very good.
3) Her first film was a major success.

Решение:
Which of the following is TRUE about the beginning of Sandra’s career? She started with several sitcoms.
Что из следующего ИСТИННО о начале карьеры Сандры? Она начала с нескольких ситкомов.

«I got noticed after spending 3 seasons in a sitcom playing a disobedient daughter.»

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Демонстрационный вариант ЕГЭ 2017 г. АНГЛИЙСКИЙ ЯЗЫК, 11 класс.

© 2017 Федеральная служба по надзору в сфере образования и науки Российской Федерации 

На этой странице Вы можете проверить свои ответы к заданиям по аудированию из Демонстрационного варианта ЕГЭ 2017, размещенного на сайте ФИПИ. Также Вы можете ознакомиться с текстами аудиозаписей к Разделу 1 ЕГЭ по английскому языку.

Для чего нужно работать с текстами

Я считаю, что работа с текстами по аудированию является очень важным элементом подготовки к успешной сдаче экзамена, так как Вы существенно повышаете свой лексический запас, изучая новые слова, разговорные клише и фразовые глаголы из этих текстов. Обязательно проговаривайте за диктором те места, которые вызвали у Вас наибольшие затруднения во время первых прослушиваний. Такая регулярная работа обязательно повысит Ваши шансы на успех на экзамене!

Пошаговая инструкция

— прослушайте аудиофайл, как  положено на экзамене 2 раза и отметьте предполагаемые ответы

— сравните свои ответы с предложенными вариантами в КИМах (и не расстраивайтесь, если у Вас не все получилось!)

— прослушайте аудиофайл с опорой на текст, подчеркивая в тексте те словосочетания, в  которых есть информация, помогающая выбрать правильный ответ

— обратите внимание на синонимичные пары слов и выражений, встречающиеся в аудиозаписи и в задании

— из каждого задания выучите максимально возможное (необходимое) количество слов (произношение + правописание)

Тексты для аудирования

Задание 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. У Вас есть 20 секунд, чтобы ознакомиться с заданием.

Now we are ready to start.

Speaker A

I am not much of a cinema goer but I do enjoy a good film. I usually buy a film online and watch it at home. I’ve got a wide screen TV and a projector. Sometimes, if I am in the mood, I use it. You feel as if you were in the cinema but I find it a bit cozier on my sofa. It’s also a lot cheaper to watch films at home. If I invite some friends, they bring popcorn and drinks and then you really can’t tell the difference.

Speaker B

The cinema is my life. Ever since I was a little girl, I’ve wanted to become an actress. I would watch all the new musicals and children’s films and dream of playing the leading parts. When I was in my last year at school, I took acting classes to prepare for the New York Theater and Cinema Academy. After graduating, I auditioned at the Academy and got in! It was the happiest moment of my life, even more so than getting an Oscar two weeks ago!

Speaker C

Books are much more fun than films. I know most film directors want to make a film out of some classical book but so often the film versions don’t turn out well. At least to my taste. When you watch a film you are forced to believe what you see and when you read a book, you can imagine the characters and have your own personal experience with the plot. Watching a film just doesn’t trigger your imagination the way reading does.

Speaker D

I can’t remember the last time I was at the movies. I think it was the day I broke my arm. Crazy as it may be, I broke my arm going to see a new film. My girlfriend had asked me to go to the cinema with her, so I bought the tickets for Friday night. We were meeting inside the Star Cinema. It’d been raining hard and the pavement was very wet. I was five minutes late for my date, so I hurried up the stairs and slipped. The last thing I remembered was the terrible pain in my arm.

Speaker E

I never miss a new film. I have a notification sent from the local cinema to inform me about any change in their shows. They change the schedule once every two weeks, so I go to the cinema every other week. Our local cinema is rather small, so they show two or three films at a time. Sometimes I watch a film every day for three days in a row to see all that’s new in the market. It does get expensive sometimes, but it’s worth it, the way I see it.

Speaker F

The theatre has more of an appeal to me than the cinema. I would go to see a play more often if they had more theatres around where I live. Local theatre companies have only two shows a year and that doesn’t satisfy my appetite, so I travel to London to see different shows may be once a month or so. Seeing real three-dimensional people on stage is a lot more interesting than watching them on the screen. I love watching actors’ facial expressions and the interaction between them.

You have 15 seconds to complete the task. (Pause 15 seconds.)

Now you will hear the texts again. (Repeat.)

This is the end of the task. You now have 15 seconds to check your answers.

Vocabulary:

I am not much of a cinema goer. – Я не большой любитель ходить в кино.

to be in the mood – быть в  настроении.

to tell the difference – отличать (чувствовать разницу)

a leading part – главная роль

audition  /ɔːˈdɪʃən/ —  прослушивание

to turn out – оказываться

at least – по крайней мере

to trigger /ˈtrɪɡə/ — вызывать, давать начало

plot – сюжет

to slip – поскользнуться

schedule   /ˈʃedjuːl/ или /ˈskedʒuːl/   –   расписание, график

every other week – через неделю

in a row – подряд

Задание 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. У Вас есть 20 секунд, чтобы ознакомиться с заданием.

Now we are ready to start.

Alice: Hey, Tom! Long time no see, how are you?

Tom: Alice, what a pleasant surprise! I am doing great, what about yourself?

Alice: I’m well, too. What have you been doing all this time?

Tom: Well, I’ve been studying at a boarding school in Oxford.

Alice: Wow, it’s not the famous one for boys, is it?

Tom: Yes, that’s the one.

Alice: How do you like it? How is it different from our old school?

Tom: I like it ok. The studies are very rigorous (/ˈrɪɡərəs/ тщательный, строгий, скрупулезный). We have five classes a day before lunch and four after we eat. Of course, one of the classes each day is a sport but it’s still a rather hard day.

Alice: Sounds intense, if you ask me. Do they give you homework, too?

Tom: Well, some. We usually have reading for our lit classes and homework in foreign languages – some vocabulary learning and grammar exercises.

Alice: How many foreign languages are you studying?

Tom: Two modern languages and Latin. You have a choice of foreign languages: French, Spanish, Arabic and Chinese. Latin is compulsory.

Alice: Which ones are you taking right now? I think I’d go for Arabic and Chinese since those are really popular these days.

Tom: I am studying Chinese and French. You see, my Dad has a business in France, so if I ever decide to follow in his steps, I’ll definitely need French. And Arabic, as you say, is very popular nowadays.

Alice: With all that studying do you ever have fun? Have you made any good friends?

Tom: Of course, I have! I’ve got a small circle of close friends, three boys we hang out with. At weekends we have some free time to play games, go for walks or into town.

Alice: That’s good. What do you do when you go into town? I’ve been to Oxford and there isn’t much to do there it seems.

Tom: Are you kidding? There is a nice cinema complex there and a shopping centre. There are also some nice coffee shops and cheap restaurants. There is one coffee place that has a poetry contest every Saturday night where anyone can have stage time to recite their poetry. So, we do that with friends.

Alice: Are you serious? You recite poetry for fun? You even write your own poetry? That’s pretty amazing. You were always into books, so I guess this school is a good match for you.

Tom: It really is. I’m rather happy here. The only drawback is that I don’t see my parents during the term, only on holidays and sometimes they come up to see me at weekends.

You have 15 seconds to complete the task. (Pause 15 seconds.)

Now you’ll hear the text again. (Repeat.)

This is the end of the task. You now have 15 seconds to check your answers.

(Pause 15 seconds.)

Vocabulary:

Long time no see! – Сколько лет, сколько зим! (Давно не виделись!)

Are you kidding? – Шутишь?

rigorous /ˈrɪɡərəs/ —  тщательный, строгий, скрупулезный

lit classes = literature lessons

compulsory /kəmˈpʌlsəri/   – обязательный

to follow in somebody’s (foot)steps – идти по чьим –либо стопам

to recite poetry – цитировать стихи (читать наизусть)

drawback – недостаток

at weekends ИЛИ at the weekend 

Задания 3–9

Вы услышите интервью. В заданиях 3–9 запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2 или 3, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа. Вы услышите запись дважды. У Вас есть 50 секунд, чтобы ознакомиться с заданиями.

Now we are ready to start.

Presenter: Good evening everyone. We are happy to welcome you to our weekly program “Animal world”. Today is a very special day as we have a great opportunity to hear from an amazing woman who knows a lot about wild life and wild animals. Sarah Thomas, it is very good to see you today. Thank you so much for coming.

Sarah: Hello, it is good to be here, thank you for inviting me.

Presenter: So, before we start talking about your experiences with the animals, let me ask you how it all started. Where were you born and were you interested in animals from childhood? How did it all start?

Sarah: Well, I was born in London and my fascination with animal behavior began in early childhood when we moved to York. We lived in a cozy thatched cottage in the most picturesque part of the city and in my leisure time, I observed native birds and animals, making lots of notes and sketches, and I also read a lot in the area of zoology. From an early age, I dreamed of traveling to Africa: I was eager to observe exotic animals in their natural habitats.

Presenter: We know that your dream came true and that you spent quite a bit of time in Africa.

Sarah: Yes, when I was 18 I left school and got a job as a secretary at Oxford University. In my spare time, I worked at a London-based documentary film company because I wanted to make some money for my trip to Africa. One day, completely out of the blue, my childhood friend invited me to visit Kenya, and so I did. There I met an anthropologist Thomas Wild who wanted to perform a study about chimpanzees to see if it would throw more light on evolution. You know, some of my friends and relatives thought that was a crazy idea because I had no college education to do these studies but Thomas believed I had the right kind of character to be able to live in the wild for a long time. Since it was actually my childhood dream, I agreed. That was my very first attempt to study the monkeys. Unfortunately, it wasn’t successful.

Presenter: Did you try again, then? I know you have written several books and filmed a few documentary films about your experience with the chimpanzees.

Sarah: That’s true. I started all over. In 1960 I went to Africa again together with my mum and an African cook. We established a camp on a lake shore. Can you imagine: crystal clear water, sand banks … Anyway, it took me two long years to get close to the monkeys, to the point when they allowed me to be a part of their group.

Presenter: Two years! You’ve got more patience than I have! How did you make them like you in the end?

Sarah: Bananas! For two years I offered them bananas until they actually began to accept me as their own. I came to the same spot every day at the same time and fed them bananas. After one year they stopped running away, after the second year they allowed me to climb trees with them and eat their food.

Presenter: What? Are you serious? You climbed trees with the chimps? That was probably lots of fun!

Sarah: You bet! (Еще бы!) I had to learn to use my arms and legs like never before. It only looks easy when you observe the animals. We as people are very limited in our abilities to use our limbs: our legs and arms aren’t designed to hang onto tree branches and plant leaves. The monkeys, on the other hand, don’t even have to think about what they are doing when they move. So, there was a lot I had to learn not to fall off those tall trees. That was a real challenge!

Presenter: Was it all worth it, though?

Sarah: Definitely, I still think of that time as one of the best periods of my life. I got so close to these animals that I was able to understand them. I was able to experience what it is like to be inside an animal world.

You have 15 seconds to complete the task. (Pause 15 seconds.)

Now you will hear the text again. (Repeat.)

This is the end of the task. You now have 15 seconds to check your answers.

(Pause 15 seconds.)

This is the end of the Listening test.

Время, отведённое на выполнение заданий, истекло. 

Vocabulary:

to be interested IN smth = to be fond OF smth = to be keen On smth – интересоваться (увлекаться ) чем-то

fascination  /ˌfæsɪˈneɪʃən/ = interest  – увлечение, интерес

picturesque /ˌpɪktʃərˈesk/ – живописный

thatched  /θætʃt/ cottage – покрытый соломенной крышей дом

leisure time = spare time = free time – свободное время

to observe /əbˈzɜːv/ = to watch – наблюдать

to make notes and sketches – делать записи и зарисовки (наброски)

to dream OF doING something – мечтать о чем-то e.g. I dreamed of travelling to Africa.

to be eager to do smth = to want to do or have something very much –  страстно хотеть чего-либо

to come true – сбываться e.g. We know that your dream came true.

out of the blue – внезапно, неожиданно

throw/cast/shed light on smth – проливать свет

habitat  /ˈhæbɪtæt/  – cреда обитания

attempt – попытка

to start over = to go/be back to square one – начинать сначала

chimpanzees = chimps

You bet! – Еще бы!’

to fall off  /fɔːl/ – падать, уменьшаться

challenge /ˈtʃælɪndʒ/ – вызов, трудная задача

to be worth it /wɜːθ/ –  стоить того

DON’T MIX UP!

IN the end = eventually /ɪˈventʃuəli/ – в конце концов e.g. We hope the agreement will be reached in the end / eventually.

AT the end – в конце e.g. They live at the other end of the street.

stop doing smth – закончить какое-либо действие (навсегда) e.g. After one year they stopped running away. – Спустя один год они перестали убегать.

stop to do smth. – остановиться, чтобы выполнить какое-либо действие e.g. She stopped to feed them bananas. – Она остановилась, чтобы покормить их бананами.

limb /lɪm/ – конечность (рука / нога); ветка, сук (a tree branch)

to climb /klaɪm/ –  взбираться, карабкаться

Демонстрационный вариант ЕГЭ 2017 г. АНГЛИЙСКИЙ ЯЗЫК, 11 класс.

© 2017 Федеральная служба по надзору в сфере образования и науки Российской Федерации

Key answers:

Задание 1            274516

Задание 2            1213123

Задания

3           3

4           2

5           3

6           1

7           2

8           1

9           1

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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. I wish I had more to remember about school.
  2. I was able to learn a lot while studying at school.
  3. Now I regret not doing well enough at school.
  4. School has much to offer besides lessons.
  5. There are pluses and minuses about any school.
  6. You can be the school’s pride without high grades.
  7. School can’t offer anything to remember it by.

№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.

  1. Jim has a regular job with Greenpeace.
  2. Jim says that people made the shore dirty while having fun.
  3. There were boys only in Jim’s team.
  4. Lisa doesn’t know how to become a volunteer.
  5. Jim joined Greenpeace because of his interests.
  6. You have to be older than 14 to become a volunteer.
  7. Lisa will wait till she’s 15 to contact a volunteer organization.

№3

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

Which of the following is TRUE about the beginning of Sandra’s career?

  1. Her first film was a major success.
  2. She started with several sitcoms.
  3. She thinks her roles were very good.

№4

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

What does Sandra say about her role in the film ‘Winter’?

  1. She was nominated for Oscar for it.
  2. She had to play a complicated personage.
  3. She had to accept a lot of criticism for it.

№5

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

What does Sandra do when she wants a part in a certain film?

  1. She simply waits for the invitation.
  2. She writes letters to the film director.
  3. She tries to make the director aware of her desire.

№6

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

According to Sandra, a film director should not refuse a willing actor because this person may …

  1. suit the part perfectly.
  2. be highly motivated.
  3. feel offended.

№7

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

What does Sandra say about going from movie to movie?

  1. She chooses to stick to her plan.
  2. She goes from what is available.
  3. She always considers the next film budget.

№8

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

Which of the following is NOT a characteristic of Sandra’s roles?

  1. They are somehow gloomy.
  2. They are of some artistic quality.
  3. They are equally important to her.

№9

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

What does Sandra enjoy most about the film ‘Winter’?

  1. It has a narrative plot.
  2. The way she reveals her character.
  3. The camerawork.

№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. Pluses and minuses 5. Fresh start
2. Strategy for success 6. Useful signs
3. Choosing one’s lifestyle 7. Why they win
4. Genre differences 8. Difficult to prove

A. When you are running a marathon, it is very important to drink a lot so that your body does not dehydrate. You should run at a steady pace. Don’t start too fast or you will become tired very quickly and won’t be able to continue. This is called “hitting the wall”. In most cases runners then give up completely. On the other hand, you shouldn’t start too slowly or else you won’t reach the time limit you want to achieve. After a marathon most runners feel pain in their muscles. This is normal and it may take a few days before your body becomes normal again.

B. It is not clear who was the first to reach the North Pole. A US explorer called Frederick Cook insisted on having walked there in 1908, but nobody could support his claim. Another American called Robert Peary announced that he had reached the Pole in 1909, but because his men were not trained navigators, none of them could be sure. Because the Arctic is made of ice that floats on the sea, rather than snow and ice on rock like the Antarctic, any evidence of visiting the North Pole will quickly be swallowed up by water.

C. In ancient times, people could only use the power of observation to tell what the weather would bring. They could observe the changing patterns of the seasons. This taught them when to plant and when the crops would grow. People also observed animals and the growing cycles of plants to predict changes in the weather. They could tell when a rainy season was coming and when it would get cold. People used their senses to see and smell changes in the weather. The migration of animals was also a good indication of change.

D. In the past decades African runners have dominated marathons all over the world. The Ethiopian Abebe Bikila ran barefoot to his first gold medal in the 1960 Olympic Games. He repeated his victory four years later. Experts think that African runners are better because they train in higher places in their home countries. Their legs may also be stronger than ours and they may have the ability to collect and store more oxygen. All of these help them become very good runners.

E. Watching TV shows is a great way to learn spoken English, slang words, understand culture reference and humour. However, people on TV shows sometimes speak with grammar mistakes, which is often a part of character development. Characters talk with an accent, using non-standard English and pronouncing words in a way that is difficult to understand. While it is a great way to practice listening and talking in everyday life, it is probably not a good source for “proper English”.

F. What sets a musical and an opera apart is that in opera, music is the driving force; in musical theatre, words come first. While listening to an opera, it usually doesn’t matter what language it’s sung in if you know the basic plot – but in musical theatre, the details come from the lyrics. This explanation clarifies why opera stars often sing in a different style than Broadway performers do, why operas and musicals are typically about different subjects, and why musical composition and orchestration vary between the two disciplines.

G. When the Internet was invented, nobody really thought about security. The main aim was to connect computer networks over great distances. Although a lot of money have been spent on making the Internet safer, security has actually become worse. Experts say that the whole net has become so unsafe that it would be best to start all over again. Nobody knows what a new Internet would look like, but users would have to give up their anonymity for a bit more safety. Today’s Internet might end up as a bad neighbourhood you just wouldn’t pass through.

№11

Прочитайте текст и заполните пропуски A–F частями предложений 1–7. Одна из частей в списке 1–7 лишняя. Занесите цифры, обозначающие соответствующие части предложений, в таблицу.

Anger is normal. Or is it?

Anger is normal. It exists everywhere and is in all of us, A. __________ it difficult to accept anger as normal and inevitable. The real issue for the teacher and parent becomes the question of B. __________. The pressures on us to control or hide our anger are very powerful. Teachers ask, “Will that be held against me as a sign of incompetence or immaturity?” Other concerns are: “What will the kids tell their parents?” and “Will that get back to the principal?” Teachers, in addition, C. ___________: “Will a child become frightened?” Will it damage him in some way?” or even more upsetting, “Will the child get angry at me, become rebellious, and no longer like me as a teacher?”

These concerns are so real that most teachers try to hide their anger. The results of this are quite predictable: at best the teacher D. ___________ in anger is tense, irritable, and impatient; at worst the anger slips out in sarcasm or explodes in a rage of accumulated fury.

How do children react to anger? All of us, E. ___________ experiences in school, can remember instances of teachers expressing anger in the classroom. Though children frequently face anger from adults, they do not always adjust to it in ways that F. ___________ and learning better, which is the ultimate aim of the teacher. Teachers report that children often react with confusion: they are bothered, or their faces appear troubled. Some children are hurt at the teacher’s anger, and a few children are even frightened.

  1. who is straining to keep
  2. or sarcasm that makes
  3. have real concern for their children
  4. but most teachers and parents find
  5. make their own growth
  6. as we recall our own childhood
  7. how to deal with anger in oneself

№12

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

For almost 125 years, the secrecy surrounding the recipe for Coca-Cola has been one of the world’s great marketing tricks. As the story goes, the fizzy drink’s famous ‘7X’ formula has remained unchanged since it was developed in 1886. Today, the recipe is entrusted only to two Coke executives, neither of whom can travel on the same plane for fear the secret would go down with them.

Now, one of America’s most celebrated radio broadcasters claims to have discovered the Coke secret. Ira Glass, presenter of the public radio institution This American Life, says he has tracked down a copy of the recipe, the original of which is still supposedly held in a burglar-proof vault at the Sun Trust Bank in Atlanta, Georgia.

The formula was created by John Pemberton, an Atlanta chemist and former Confederate army officer who crafted cough medicines in his spare time. In 1887, he sold the recipe to a businessman, Asa Griggs, who immediately placed it for safekeeping in the Georgia Trust Bank.

Glass came across a recipe that he believes is the secret formula in a back issue of Pemberton’s local paper, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, while he was researching an entirely different story. Tucked away on an inside page of the 8 February 1979 edition, he stumbled on an article that claimed to have uncovered the closely guarded 7X formula.

The column was based on information found in an old leather-bound notebook that belonged to Pemberton’s best friend and fellow Atlanta chemist, RR Evans. Glass was intrigued and, after some digging, found that the notebook had been handed down over generations until it reached a chemist in Georgia called Everett Beal, whose widow still possesses it.

The rediscovered recipe includes extract of coca leaves, caffeine, plenty of sugar (it specifies 30 unidentified units thought to be pounds), lime juice, vanilla and caramel. Into that syrup, the all-important 7X ingredients are added: alcohol and six oils – orange, lemon, nutmeg, coriander, neroli and cinnamon. The formula is very similar to the recipe worked out by Mark Pendergrast who wrote a history of the drink in 1993 called For God, Country & Coca-Cola.

Coke’s secret recipe is, in fact, partly a myth. The soda has changed substantially over time. Cocaine, a legal stimulant in Pemberton’s day, was removed from the drink in 1904 after mounting public unease about the drug. Extract of coca leaves is still used but only after the cocaine has been removed. In 1980, the company replaced sugar, squeezed from beet and cane, with the cheaper corn sweetener that is often found in American food and drink. Coke fans were not impressed.

Despite such occasional controversies, one element has remained constant: Coke’s commitment to keeping its own secret. Speculation about the recipe has been a popular talking point for more than a century, proving good for business. The company has reacted to the This American Life story in a way that has been typical of its commercial strategy since the 19th century. “Many third parties have tried to crack our secret formula. Try as they might, they’ve been unsuccessful,” Coca-Cola’s Kerry Tressler said.

Who is supposed to know the Coke secret recipe nowadays?

  1. Certain Coca-Cola executives.
  2. The director of Atlanta Sun Trust Bank.
  3. A broadcaster.
  4. Atlanta chemists.

№13

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

For almost 125 years, the secrecy surrounding the recipe for Coca-Cola has been one of the world’s great marketing tricks. As the story goes, the fizzy drink’s famous ‘7X’ formula has remained unchanged since it was developed in 1886. Today, the recipe is entrusted only to two Coke executives, neither of whom can travel on the same plane for fear the secret would go down with them.

Now, one of America’s most celebrated radio broadcasters claims to have discovered the Coke secret. Ira Glass, presenter of the public radio institution This American Life, says he has tracked down a copy of the recipe, the original of which is still supposedly held in a burglar-proof vault at the Sun Trust Bank in Atlanta, Georgia.

The formula was created by John Pemberton, an Atlanta chemist and former Confederate army officer who crafted cough medicines in his spare time. In 1887, he sold the recipe to a businessman, Asa Griggs, who immediately placed it for safekeeping in the Georgia Trust Bank.

Glass came across a recipe that he believes is the secret formula in a back issue of Pemberton’s local paper, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, while he was researching an entirely different story. Tucked away on an inside page of the 8 February 1979 edition, he stumbled on an article that claimed to have uncovered the closely guarded 7X formula.

The column was based on information found in an old leather-bound notebook that belonged to Pemberton’s best friend and fellow Atlanta chemist, RR Evans. Glass was intrigued and, after some digging, found that the notebook had been handed down over generations until it reached a chemist in Georgia called Everett Beal, whose widow still possesses it.

The rediscovered recipe includes extract of coca leaves, caffeine, plenty of sugar (it specifies 30 unidentified units thought to be pounds), lime juice, vanilla and caramel. Into that syrup, the all-important 7X ingredients are added: alcohol and six oils – orange, lemon, nutmeg, coriander, neroli and cinnamon. The formula is very similar to the recipe worked out by Mark Pendergrast who wrote a history of the drink in 1993 called For God, Country & Coca-Cola.

Coke’s secret recipe is, in fact, partly a myth. The soda has changed substantially over time. Cocaine, a legal stimulant in Pemberton’s day, was removed from the drink in 1904 after mounting public unease about the drug. Extract of coca leaves is still used but only after the cocaine has been removed. In 1980, the company replaced sugar, squeezed from beet and cane, with the cheaper corn sweetener that is often found in American food and drink. Coke fans were not impressed.

Despite such occasional controversies, one element has remained constant: Coke’s commitment to keeping its own secret. Speculation about the recipe has been a popular talking point for more than a century, proving good for business. The company has reacted to the This American Life story in a way that has been typical of its commercial strategy since the 19th century. “Many third parties have tried to crack our secret formula. Try as they might, they’ve been unsuccessful,” Coca-Cola’s Kerry Tressler said.

How did Ira Glass learn about the recipe?

  1. Accidentally reading an article in an old Atlanta paper.
  2. Studying an old notebook that belonged to Pemberton.
  3. Talking to a relative of John Pemberton.
  4. Working in Atlanta archives.

№14

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

For almost 125 years, the secrecy surrounding the recipe for Coca-Cola has been one of the world’s great marketing tricks. As the story goes, the fizzy drink’s famous ‘7X’ formula has remained unchanged since it was developed in 1886. Today, the recipe is entrusted only to two Coke executives, neither of whom can travel on the same plane for fear the secret would go down with them.

Now, one of America’s most celebrated radio broadcasters claims to have discovered the Coke secret. Ira Glass, presenter of the public radio institution This American Life, says he has tracked down a copy of the recipe, the original of which is still supposedly held in a burglar-proof vault at the Sun Trust Bank in Atlanta, Georgia.

The formula was created by John Pemberton, an Atlanta chemist and former Confederate army officer who crafted cough medicines in his spare time. In 1887, he sold the recipe to a businessman, Asa Griggs, who immediately placed it for safekeeping in the Georgia Trust Bank.

Glass came across a recipe that he believes is the secret formula in a back issue of Pemberton’s local paper, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, while he was researching an entirely different story. Tucked away on an inside page of the 8 February 1979 edition, he stumbled on an article that claimed to have uncovered the closely guarded 7X formula.

The column was based on information found in an old leather-bound notebook that belonged to Pemberton’s best friend and fellow Atlanta chemist, RR Evans. Glass was intrigued and, after some digging, found that the notebook had been handed down over generations until it reached a chemist in Georgia called Everett Beal, whose widow still possesses it.

The rediscovered recipe includes extract of coca leaves, caffeine, plenty of sugar (it specifies 30 unidentified units thought to be pounds), lime juice, vanilla and caramel. Into that syrup, the all-important 7X ingredients are added: alcohol and six oils – orange, lemon, nutmeg, coriander, neroli and cinnamon. The formula is very similar to the recipe worked out by Mark Pendergrast who wrote a history of the drink in 1993 called For God, Country & Coca-Cola.

Coke’s secret recipe is, in fact, partly a myth. The soda has changed substantially over time. Cocaine, a legal stimulant in Pemberton’s day, was removed from the drink in 1904 after mounting public unease about the drug. Extract of coca leaves is still used but only after the cocaine has been removed. In 1980, the company replaced sugar, squeezed from beet and cane, with the cheaper corn sweetener that is often found in American food and drink. Coke fans were not impressed.

Despite such occasional controversies, one element has remained constant: Coke’s commitment to keeping its own secret. Speculation about the recipe has been a popular talking point for more than a century, proving good for business. The company has reacted to the This American Life story in a way that has been typical of its commercial strategy since the 19th century. “Many third parties have tried to crack our secret formula. Try as they might, they’ve been unsuccessful,” Coca-Cola’s Kerry Tressler said.

Which of the following does NOT belong to the famous 7X ingredients?

  1. Orange oil.
  2. Alcohol.
  3. Nutmeg oil.
  4. Caffeine.

№15

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

For almost 125 years, the secrecy surrounding the recipe for Coca-Cola has been one of the world’s great marketing tricks. As the story goes, the fizzy drink’s famous ‘7X’ formula has remained unchanged since it was developed in 1886. Today, the recipe is entrusted only to two Coke executives, neither of whom can travel on the same plane for fear the secret would go down with them.

Now, one of America’s most celebrated radio broadcasters claims to have discovered the Coke secret. Ira Glass, presenter of the public radio institution This American Life, says he has tracked down a copy of the recipe, the original of which is still supposedly held in a burglar-proof vault at the Sun Trust Bank in Atlanta, Georgia.

The formula was created by John Pemberton, an Atlanta chemist and former Confederate army officer who crafted cough medicines in his spare time. In 1887, he sold the recipe to a businessman, Asa Griggs, who immediately placed it for safekeeping in the Georgia Trust Bank.

Glass came across a recipe that he believes is the secret formula in a back issue of Pemberton’s local paper, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, while he was researching an entirely different story. Tucked away on an inside page of the 8 February 1979 edition, he stumbled on an article that claimed to have uncovered the closely guarded 7X formula.

The column was based on information found in an old leather-bound notebook that belonged to Pemberton’s best friend and fellow Atlanta chemist, RR Evans. Glass was intrigued and, after some digging, found that the notebook had been handed down over generations until it reached a chemist in Georgia called Everett Beal, whose widow still possesses it.

The rediscovered recipe includes extract of coca leaves, caffeine, plenty of sugar (it specifies 30 unidentified units thought to be pounds), lime juice, vanilla and caramel. Into that syrup, the all-important 7X ingredients are added: alcohol and six oils – orange, lemon, nutmeg, coriander, neroli and cinnamon. The formula is very similar to the recipe worked out by Mark Pendergrast who wrote a history of the drink in 1993 called For God, Country & Coca-Cola.

Coke’s secret recipe is, in fact, partly a myth. The soda has changed substantially over time. Cocaine, a legal stimulant in Pemberton’s day, was removed from the drink in 1904 after mounting public unease about the drug. Extract of coca leaves is still used but only after the cocaine has been removed. In 1980, the company replaced sugar, squeezed from beet and cane, with the cheaper corn sweetener that is often found in American food and drink. Coke fans were not impressed.

Despite such occasional controversies, one element has remained constant: Coke’s commitment to keeping its own secret. Speculation about the recipe has been a popular talking point for more than a century, proving good for business. The company has reacted to the This American Life story in a way that has been typical of its commercial strategy since the 19th century. “Many third parties have tried to crack our secret formula. Try as they might, they’ve been unsuccessful,” Coca-Cola’s Kerry Tressler said.

Why might the secret recipe be considered a myth?

  1. It has never been a secret.
  2. The recipe has never existed.
  3. The company has been regularly changing the ingredients.
  4. The quality of the ingredients has been changing.

№16

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

For almost 125 years, the secrecy surrounding the recipe for Coca-Cola has been one of the world’s great marketing tricks. As the story goes, the fizzy drink’s famous ‘7X’ formula has remained unchanged since it was developed in 1886. Today, the recipe is entrusted only to two Coke executives, neither of whom can travel on the same plane for fear the secret would go down with them.

Now, one of America’s most celebrated radio broadcasters claims to have discovered the Coke secret. Ira Glass, presenter of the public radio institution This American Life, says he has tracked down a copy of the recipe, the original of which is still supposedly held in a burglar-proof vault at the Sun Trust Bank in Atlanta, Georgia.

The formula was created by John Pemberton, an Atlanta chemist and former Confederate army officer who crafted cough medicines in his spare time. In 1887, he sold the recipe to a businessman, Asa Griggs, who immediately placed it for safekeeping in the Georgia Trust Bank.

Glass came across a recipe that he believes is the secret formula in a back issue of Pemberton’s local paper, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, while he was researching an entirely different story. Tucked away on an inside page of the 8 February 1979 edition, he stumbled on an article that claimed to have uncovered the closely guarded 7X formula.

The column was based on information found in an old leather-bound notebook that belonged to Pemberton’s best friend and fellow Atlanta chemist, RR Evans. Glass was intrigued and, after some digging, found that the notebook had been handed down over generations until it reached a chemist in Georgia called Everett Beal, whose widow still possesses it.

The rediscovered recipe includes extract of coca leaves, caffeine, plenty of sugar (it specifies 30 unidentified units thought to be pounds), lime juice, vanilla and caramel. Into that syrup, the all-important 7X ingredients are added: alcohol and six oils – orange, lemon, nutmeg, coriander, neroli and cinnamon. The formula is very similar to the recipe worked out by Mark Pendergrast who wrote a history of the drink in 1993 called For God, Country & Coca-Cola.

Coke’s secret recipe is, in fact, partly a myth. The soda has changed substantially over time. Cocaine, a legal stimulant in Pemberton’s day, was removed from the drink in 1904 after mounting public unease about the drug. Extract of coca leaves is still used but only after the cocaine has been removed. In 1980, the company replaced sugar, squeezed from beet and cane, with the cheaper corn sweetener that is often found in American food and drink. Coke fans were not impressed.

Despite such occasional controversies, one element has remained constant: Coke’s commitment to keeping its own secret. Speculation about the recipe has been a popular talking point for more than a century, proving good for business. The company has reacted to the This American Life story in a way that has been typical of its commercial strategy since the 19th century. “Many third parties have tried to crack our secret formula. Try as they might, they’ve been unsuccessful,” Coca-Cola’s Kerry Tressler said.

What disappointed Coca-Cola fans in 1980?

  1. The recipe of the drink was revealed.
  2. Beet and cane sugar was replaced with the corn one.
  3. Sugar was removed from the drink.
  4. The price of the drink went up with the price of sugar.

№17

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

For almost 125 years, the secrecy surrounding the recipe for Coca-Cola has been one of the world’s great marketing tricks. As the story goes, the fizzy drink’s famous ‘7X’ formula has remained unchanged since it was developed in 1886. Today, the recipe is entrusted only to two Coke executives, neither of whom can travel on the same plane for fear the secret would go down with them.

Now, one of America’s most celebrated radio broadcasters claims to have discovered the Coke secret. Ira Glass, presenter of the public radio institution This American Life, says he has tracked down a copy of the recipe, the original of which is still supposedly held in a burglar-proof vault at the Sun Trust Bank in Atlanta, Georgia.

The formula was created by John Pemberton, an Atlanta chemist and former Confederate army officer who crafted cough medicines in his spare time. In 1887, he sold the recipe to a businessman, Asa Griggs, who immediately placed it for safekeeping in the Georgia Trust Bank.

Glass came across a recipe that he believes is the secret formula in a back issue of Pemberton’s local paper, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, while he was researching an entirely different story. Tucked away on an inside page of the 8 February 1979 edition, he stumbled on an article that claimed to have uncovered the closely guarded 7X formula.

The column was based on information found in an old leather-bound notebook that belonged to Pemberton’s best friend and fellow Atlanta chemist, RR Evans. Glass was intrigued and, after some digging, found that the notebook had been handed down over generations until it reached a chemist in Georgia called Everett Beal, whose widow still possesses it.

The rediscovered recipe includes extract of coca leaves, caffeine, plenty of sugar (it specifies 30 unidentified units thought to be pounds), lime juice, vanilla and caramel. Into that syrup, the all-important 7X ingredients are added: alcohol and six oils – orange, lemon, nutmeg, coriander, neroli and cinnamon. The formula is very similar to the recipe worked out by Mark Pendergrast who wrote a history of the drink in 1993 called For God, Country & Coca-Cola.

Coke’s secret recipe is, in fact, partly a myth. The soda has changed substantially over time. Cocaine, a legal stimulant in Pemberton’s day, was removed from the drink in 1904 after mounting public unease about the drug. Extract of coca leaves is still used but only after the cocaine has been removed. In 1980, the company replaced sugar, squeezed from beet and cane, with the cheaper corn sweetener that is often found in American food and drink. Coke fans were not impressed.

Despite such occasional controversies, one element has remained constant: Coke’s commitment to keeping its own secret. Speculation about the recipe has been a popular talking point for more than a century, proving good for business. The company has reacted to the This American Life story in a way that has been typical of its commercial strategy since the 19th century. “Many third parties have tried to crack our secret formula. Try as they might, they’ve been unsuccessful,” Coca-Cola’s Kerry Tressler said.

The phrase “proving good for business” means that the rumors about the recipe …

  1. were supported by the company.
  2. helped the company’s sales.
  3. helped to keep the recipe in secret.
  4. provided unnecessary problems for the company.

№18

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

For almost 125 years, the secrecy surrounding the recipe for Coca-Cola has been one of the world’s great marketing tricks. As the story goes, the fizzy drink’s famous ‘7X’ formula has remained unchanged since it was developed in 1886. Today, the recipe is entrusted only to two Coke executives, neither of whom can travel on the same plane for fear the secret would go down with them.

Now, one of America’s most celebrated radio broadcasters claims to have discovered the Coke secret. Ira Glass, presenter of the public radio institution This American Life, says he has tracked down a copy of the recipe, the original of which is still supposedly held in a burglar-proof vault at the Sun Trust Bank in Atlanta, Georgia.

The formula was created by John Pemberton, an Atlanta chemist and former Confederate army officer who crafted cough medicines in his spare time. In 1887, he sold the recipe to a businessman, Asa Griggs, who immediately placed it for safekeeping in the Georgia Trust Bank.

Glass came across a recipe that he believes is the secret formula in a back issue of Pemberton’s local paper, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, while he was researching an entirely different story. Tucked away on an inside page of the 8 February 1979 edition, he stumbled on an article that claimed to have uncovered the closely guarded 7X formula.

The column was based on information found in an old leather-bound notebook that belonged to Pemberton’s best friend and fellow Atlanta chemist, RR Evans. Glass was intrigued and, after some digging, found that the notebook had been handed down over generations until it reached a chemist in Georgia called Everett Beal, whose widow still possesses it.

The rediscovered recipe includes extract of coca leaves, caffeine, plenty of sugar (it specifies 30 unidentified units thought to be pounds), lime juice, vanilla and caramel. Into that syrup, the all-important 7X ingredients are added: alcohol and six oils – orange, lemon, nutmeg, coriander, neroli and cinnamon. The formula is very similar to the recipe worked out by Mark Pendergrast who wrote a history of the drink in 1993 called For God, Country & Coca-Cola.

Coke’s secret recipe is, in fact, partly a myth. The soda has changed substantially over time. Cocaine, a legal stimulant in Pemberton’s day, was removed from the drink in 1904 after mounting public unease about the drug. Extract of coca leaves is still used but only after the cocaine has been removed. In 1980, the company replaced sugar, squeezed from beet and cane, with the cheaper corn sweetener that is often found in American food and drink. Coke fans were not impressed.

Despite such occasional controversies, one element has remained constant: Coke’s commitment to keeping its own secret. Speculation about the recipe has been a popular talking point for more than a century, proving good for business. The company has reacted to the This American Life story in a way that has been typical of its commercial strategy since the 19th century. “Many third parties have tried to crack our secret formula. Try as they might, they’ve been unsuccessful,” Coca-Cola’s Kerry Tressler said.

The best title reflecting the message of the story probably is …

  1. The History of Coca-Cola company.
  2. Tracking down the famous recipe.
  3. Coca-Cola secret recipe revealed?
  4. The secret recipe is a fraud.

№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.

The Solovetsky Archipelago includes six islands with a total area of 300 sq. km that __________________ in the White Sea, 250 km from Arkhangelsk

LOCATE

№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.

This area is rich in archaeological monuments, the __________________ of which date back to the 2nd and 3rd millennia BC.

OLD

№21

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One of the main sights here is the Solovetsky Monastery, which was established in the first half of the __________________ century.

TWELVE

№22

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In the early 20th century, this centuries-old citadel of Orthodoxy was converted into a camp for political __________________ that existed until 1939.

PRISONER

№23

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It was only in the nineties that monastic life __________________ there.

RESUME

№24

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The Solovetsky Archipelago, which is now a historical and cultural reserve, is fascinating not only because of its dramatic history, but also because of its unusual landscape, __________________ hills, lakes, and gullies.

INCLUDE

№25

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The Solovetsky Archipelago __________________ under UNESCO protection since 1992.

BE

№26

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Tourism is already Britain’s fifth most important industry and it is also the fifth largest tourist industry in the world. It’s growing __________________: the number of people employed in the industry increased by more than 50,000 a year.

RAPID

№27

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Britain has a rich and varied cultural heritage. __________________ royal ceremonies attract millions of visitors each year.

BEAUTY

№28

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London has an international reputation for its historic sites, museums and __________________ institutions. A city of infinite, London is both historic and unceasingly modern, at the forefront of fashion, music and art.

FAME

№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.

Historic cities such as Oxford, Cambridge and Bath are visited by large numbers of__________________.

FOREIGN

№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.

People who travel to Scotland, the Lake District and other areas of upland Britain find unique _________________ places and scenery which can vary over short distances.

EXCITE

№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.

Some of the most popular places outside London are the Jorvik Viking Centre in York, the Tudor ship in Portsmouth and _________________ museum of Photography in Bradford.

NATION

№32

… My best friend got back from her trip to Italy. She’s brought a lot of souvenirs to me. Why do people buy souvenirs? What makes a good souvenir? What do you do with souvenirs that you don’t like?

…Unfortunately, my mum has fallen ill…

Alexander

Sir Alexander Heathcote was an exact man. He was exactly six feet three-and-a-quarter inches tall, 32 ______ at seven o’clock every morning, joined his wife at breakfast to eat one boiled egg cooked for precisely four minutes, two pieces of toast with one spoonful of Cooper’s marmalade, and drink one cup of China tea. He used to take a carriage from his home in Cadogan Gardens at exactly 8:20 and 33 ______ at the Foreign Office at promptly 8:59, returning home again on the stroke of six o’clock.

Sir Alexander had been exact from an early age, as he was the only son of a general. But, 34 ______ his father, he chose to serve his queen in the diplomatic service, another exacting alling. He 35 ______ in progressing from a shared desk at the Foreign Office in Whitehall to third secretary in Calcutta to minister in Peking. He was delighted when Mr. Gladstone 36 ______ the opportunity to represent the government in China. For some time he had been 37 ______ in the art of the Ming dynasty. This appointment would present him a perfect chance of 38 ______ some of the great statues, paintings and drawings in their natural habitat.

32 1) raised 2) rose 3) got 4) stood

№33

… My best friend got back from her trip to Italy. She’s brought a lot of souvenirs to me. Why do people buy souvenirs? What makes a good souvenir? What do you do with souvenirs that you don’t like?

…Unfortunately, my mum has fallen ill…

Alexander

Sir Alexander Heathcote was an exact man. He was exactly six feet three-and-a-quarter inches tall, 32 ______ at seven o’clock every morning, joined his wife at breakfast to eat one boiled egg cooked for precisely four minutes, two pieces of toast with one spoonful of Cooper’s marmalade, and drink one cup of China tea. He used to take a carriage from his home in Cadogan Gardens at exactly 8:20 and 33 ______ at the Foreign Office at promptly 8:59, returning home again on the stroke of six o’clock.

Sir Alexander had been exact from an early age, as he was the only son of a general. But, 34 ______ his father, he chose to serve his queen in the diplomatic service, another exacting alling. He 35 ______ in progressing from a shared desk at the Foreign Office in Whitehall to third secretary in Calcutta to minister in Peking. He was delighted when Mr. Gladstone 36 ______ the opportunity to represent the government in China. For some time he had been 37 ______ in the art of the Ming dynasty. This appointment would present him a perfect chance of 38 ______ some of the great statues, paintings and drawings in their natural habitat.

33 1) reach 2) come 3) go 4) arrive

№34

… My best friend got back from her trip to Italy. She’s brought a lot of souvenirs to me. Why do people buy souvenirs? What makes a good souvenir? What do you do with souvenirs that you don’t like?

…Unfortunately, my mum has fallen ill…

Alexander

Sir Alexander Heathcote was an exact man. He was exactly six feet three-and-a-quarter inches tall, 32 ______ at seven o’clock every morning, joined his wife at breakfast to eat one boiled egg cooked for precisely four minutes, two pieces of toast with one spoonful of Cooper’s marmalade, and drink one cup of China tea. He used to take a carriage from his home in Cadogan Gardens at exactly 8:20 and 33 ______ at the Foreign Office at promptly 8:59, returning home again on the stroke of six o’clock.

Sir Alexander had been exact from an early age, as he was the only son of a general. But, 34 ______ his father, he chose to serve his queen in the diplomatic service, another exacting alling. He 35 ______ in progressing from a shared desk at the Foreign Office in Whitehall to third secretary in Calcutta to minister in Peking. He was delighted when Mr. Gladstone 36 ______ the opportunity to represent the government in China. For some time he had been 37 ______ in the art of the Ming dynasty. This appointment would present him a perfect chance of 38 ______ some of the great statues, paintings and drawings in their natural habitat.

34 1) unlike 2) contrast 3) apart 4) opposed

№35

… My best friend got back from her trip to Italy. She’s brought a lot of souvenirs to me. Why do people buy souvenirs? What makes a good souvenir? What do you do with souvenirs that you don’t like?

…Unfortunately, my mum has fallen ill…

Alexander

Sir Alexander Heathcote was an exact man. He was exactly six feet three-and-a-quarter inches tall, 32 ______ at seven o’clock every morning, joined his wife at breakfast to eat one boiled egg cooked for precisely four minutes, two pieces of toast with one spoonful of Cooper’s marmalade, and drink one cup of China tea. He used to take a carriage from his home in Cadogan Gardens at exactly 8:20 and 33 ______ at the Foreign Office at promptly 8:59, returning home again on the stroke of six o’clock.

Sir Alexander had been exact from an early age, as he was the only son of a general. But, 34 ______ his father, he chose to serve his queen in the diplomatic service, another exacting alling. He 35 ______ in progressing from a shared desk at the Foreign Office in Whitehall to third secretary in Calcutta to minister in Peking. He was delighted when Mr. Gladstone 36 ______ the opportunity to represent the government in China. For some time he had been 37 ______ in the art of the Ming dynasty. This appointment would present him a perfect chance of 38 ______ some of the great statues, paintings and drawings in their natural habitat.

35 1) fulfilled 2) succeeded 3) achieved 4) managed

№36

… My best friend got back from her trip to Italy. She’s brought a lot of souvenirs to me. Why do people buy souvenirs? What makes a good souvenir? What do you do with souvenirs that you don’t like?

…Unfortunately, my mum has fallen ill…

Alexander

Sir Alexander Heathcote was an exact man. He was exactly six feet three-and-a-quarter inches tall, 32 ______ at seven o’clock every morning, joined his wife at breakfast to eat one boiled egg cooked for precisely four minutes, two pieces of toast with one spoonful of Cooper’s marmalade, and drink one cup of China tea. He used to take a carriage from his home in Cadogan Gardens at exactly 8:20 and 33 ______ at the Foreign Office at promptly 8:59, returning home again on the stroke of six o’clock.

Sir Alexander had been exact from an early age, as he was the only son of a general. But, 34 ______ his father, he chose to serve his queen in the diplomatic service, another exacting alling. He 35 ______ in progressing from a shared desk at the Foreign Office in Whitehall to third secretary in Calcutta to minister in Peking. He was delighted when Mr. Gladstone 36 ______ the opportunity to represent the government in China. For some time he had been 37 ______ in the art of the Ming dynasty. This appointment would present him a perfect chance of 38 ______ some of the great statues, paintings and drawings in their natural habitat.

36 1) approached 2) suggested 3) proceeded 4) offered

№37

… My best friend got back from her trip to Italy. She’s brought a lot of souvenirs to me. Why do people buy souvenirs? What makes a good souvenir? What do you do with souvenirs that you don’t like?

…Unfortunately, my mum has fallen ill…

Alexander

Sir Alexander Heathcote was an exact man. He was exactly six feet three-and-a-quarter inches tall, 32 ______ at seven o’clock every morning, joined his wife at breakfast to eat one boiled egg cooked for precisely four minutes, two pieces of toast with one spoonful of Cooper’s marmalade, and drink one cup of China tea. He used to take a carriage from his home in Cadogan Gardens at exactly 8:20 and 33 ______ at the Foreign Office at promptly 8:59, returning home again on the stroke of six o’clock.

Sir Alexander had been exact from an early age, as he was the only son of a general. But, 34 ______ his father, he chose to serve his queen in the diplomatic service, another exacting alling. He 35 ______ in progressing from a shared desk at the Foreign Office in Whitehall to third secretary in Calcutta to minister in Peking. He was delighted when Mr. Gladstone 36 ______ the opportunity to represent the government in China. For some time he had been 37 ______ in the art of the Ming dynasty. This appointment would present him a perfect chance of 38 ______ some of the great statues, paintings and drawings in their natural habitat.

37 1) interested 2) fond 3) keen 4) involved

№38

… My best friend got back from her trip to Italy. She’s brought a lot of souvenirs to me. Why do people buy souvenirs? What makes a good souvenir? What do you do with souvenirs that you don’t like?

…Unfortunately, my mum has fallen ill…

Alexander

Sir Alexander Heathcote was an exact man. He was exactly six feet three-and-a-quarter inches tall, 32 ______ at seven o’clock every morning, joined his wife at breakfast to eat one boiled egg cooked for precisely four minutes, two pieces of toast with one spoonful of Cooper’s marmalade, and drink one cup of China tea. He used to take a carriage from his home in Cadogan Gardens at exactly 8:20 and 33 ______ at the Foreign Office at promptly 8:59, returning home again on the stroke of six o’clock.

Sir Alexander had been exact from an early age, as he was the only son of a general. But, 34 ______ his father, he chose to serve his queen in the diplomatic service, another exacting alling. He 35 ______ in progressing from a shared desk at the Foreign Office in Whitehall to third secretary in Calcutta to minister in Peking. He was delighted when Mr. Gladstone 36 ______ the opportunity to represent the government in China. For some time he had been 37 ______ in the art of the Ming dynasty. This appointment would present him a perfect chance of 38 ______ some of the great statues, paintings and drawings in their natural habitat.

38 1) looking 2) noticing 3) remarking 4) observing

№39

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

… My best friend got back from her trip to Italy. She’s brought a lot of souvenirs to me. Why do people buy souvenirs? What makes a good souvenir? What do you do with souvenirs that you don’t like?

…Unfortunately, my mum has fallen ill…

Write a letter to Kate.

In your letter:

  • answer his questions
  • ask 3 questions about her mother’s heаlth

Write 100 – 140 words.

Remember the rules of letter writing.

Comment on one of the following statements.

№40

1. Doing sports is essential to all young people.

2. Travelling in your own country is the best way to learn it.

What is your opinion? Do you agree with this statement?

Write 200 – 250 words.

Use the following plan:

− make an introduction (state the problem paraphrasing the given statement);

− 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 do not agree with the opposing opinion;

− make a conclusion restating your position.

Нажми, чтобы завершить тест и увидеть результаты

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Так твой прогресс будет сохраняться.

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Начало работы

Привет сейчас ты за 5 шагов узнаешь, как пользоваться платформой

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Выбери тест

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1 / 6

Вкладки

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

2 / 6

Задания

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

3 / 6

Статистика

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4 / 6

Решение

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на страницу, запустится счетчик времени, поэтому подготовь заранее все, что может тебе понадобиться

5 / 6

Отметки

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

6 / 6

Молодец!

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

Те, кто готовится сдавать ЕГЭ по английскому языку или просто хочет улучшить свои знания по предмету, стараются использовать любую возможность попрактиковаться в аудировании. Особенно полезно примерить на себя реальные варианты экзамена. На три текста раздела Listening отводится 30 минут.

Обратите внимание, в данных вариантах аудио текстов отсутствуют все вводные объяснения и паузы. Чтобы прослушать запись второй раз, просто включите её сначала. Так вы сэкономите время, так легче найти непонятные абзацы и т.д. Но всё же для начала попробуйте выполнить все задания подряд самостоятельно. Результат можно увидеть сразу, щелкнув по кнопке Check.
В левой колонке теста расположены все три задания, а в правой даны таблицы для заполнения.

№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. Time travel might be very risky.
2. Time travel is probably impossible.
3. Time travel may be a chance to live in another epoch.
4. Time travel has more pros than cons.
5. A time machine can help us learn about our past.
6. We need to wait to be able to travel through time.
7. A time machine is a chance to see the future.
——————————————————————-
№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. John and Sandra live in the UK.
B. John is pessimistic about the weather for the next week.
C. Sandra’s parents travel very often.
D. It’s Sandra’s first visit to Thailand.
E. The best time to visit the floating markets is the midday.
F. Sandra’s mother didn’t buy anything in Bangkok.
G. John thinks it’s not worth going to Bangkok’s markets.
——————————————————————-
№3. Вы услышите интервью. В заданиях 3–9 запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2 или 3, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа. Вы услышите запись дважды.
3. What do we learn about Peter Green at the beginning of the interview?
1) He has no experience of working in Hollywood.
2) His parents were quite rich people.
3) His childhood years weren’t easy.

4. How does Peter describe himself at the beginning of his TV career?
1) Uneducated.
2) Inexperienced.
3) Discouraged.

5. What helped Peter to get his first TV job?
1) Writing 25 scripts.
2) Meeting a TV boss.
3) Doing things his way.

6. What did Peter feel while working on his first project?
1) Confidence.
2) Enthusiasm.
3) Uncertainty.

7. How does Peter’s teaching experience help him be a producer?
1) He learnt teambuilding techniques at school.
2) He knows how to deal with different people.
3) He can be a strict mentor for his team now.

8. Which of the following is TRUE about Peter at work?
1) He is ready to build up his team.
2) He has a low opinion of TV in general.
3) He never invites any freelancers.

9. What does Peter dislike about his present job?
1) Having to travel to and from work.
2) Having too many colleagues.
3) Having to work very quickly.

Вы услышите интервью. В следующих заданиях выберите правильный ответ.

ЗаданиеОтвет

Play интервью


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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