Progress Test 26 (1-25)
1. There is a problem when you forget where dreams end and ... real world begins.
a) - c) the
b) a d) an
2. Do you often put ... until tomorrow what you could do today?
a) of c) down
b) on d) off
3. Is it important to you to succeed ... your career?
a) at c) for
b) in d) because of
4. My mother passed her driving test yesterday. She ... to drive for two years.
a) learn c) has been learning
b) was learning d) had been learning
5. Pubs are often ... places to eat well and cheaply in Britain, and they also try to serve tasty British food.
a) well c) the best
b) better d) most
6. ... we recommend you our favourite places to eat in Minsk? - It's very kind of you.
a) Must c) Ought
b) Can d) May
7. They say that ... British eat only traditional British food in their homes.
a) - c) the
b) a d) an
8. Surely food is as ... a part of our culture as our landscape, our language, and our literature.
a) many c) the most
b) more d) much
9. From the time of ... Roman invasion foreign trade was a major influence on British cooking.
a) - с) а
b)the d) an
10. English kitchens, like the English language, absorbed ... ingredients from all over the world - chickens, rabbits, apples, and tea.
a) the с) а
b) - d) an
11. The British always ... food from abroad.
a) import c) have imported
b) has imported d) imported
12. We live in a global village, but how ... do we know and understand each other?
a) good c) best
b) better d) well
13. In the Middle East you ... take care not to admire anything in your hosts' home. They will feel that they have to give it to you.
a) must c) should
b) can d)could
14. You should not expect the Japanese to shake ... . Bowing the head is a mark of respect in Japan.
a) hand c) a hand
b) hands d) the hands
15. In Japan the first bow of the day should be ... than when you meet thereafter.
a) low c) lowest
b) the lowest d) much lower
16. We ... for three hours when we saw the house in the distance.
a) drive c) drove
b) were driving d) had been driving
17. When they got outside, the rain ... already to snow.
a) turn c) has turned
b) had turned d) would turn
18. Agatha Christie ... at home. She didn't go to school.
a) has educated c) had educated
b) had been educated d) was educated
19. Agatha Christie is possibly the world's most famous ... writer.
a) historical c) detective story
b) short story d) criminal story
20. Pablo Picasso didn't like going to school unless he was allowed to take one of his ... pigeons with him.
a) father's c) fathers
b) fathers' d) father
21. What is the world's biggest office? - I think ... Pentagon is the largest office in the world.
a) - с) а
b) the d) an
22. They ... across a field when they were attacked by a bull.
a) walked c) had been walking
b) have been walking d) were walking
23. He ... for a job for months, but he could find nothing.
a) looked c) had been looking
b) was looking d) has been looking
24. John felt tired. He ... all day to prepare for the party.
a) worked c) was working
b) had been working d) has been working
25. ... of the guests have arrived yet.
a) None c) Either
b) Neither d) Somebody
26. ... people go to the cinema these days. They prefer to see films at home.
a) Fewer c) Little
b) Less d) The least
27. ... policeman in the country is looking for the killer.
a) Each . c) Everybody
b) Every d) All
28. What I like about London is the fact ... it never sleeps.
a) that c)then
b) than d)because
29. I found it difficult to get around London when I first came, but I ... to it now.
a) used c) use
b) am used d) have used
30. Born in Holland in 1853, Vincent Van Gogh is one of the world's most famous ... .
a) writers c) painters
b) poets d) musicians
31. There aren't many people at the stadium now, ... ?
a) are they c) are there
b) aren't there d) aren't they
32. She works harder than I ... to work at her age.
a) used c) was used
b) am used d) had used
33. ... , whose real name was William Sydney Porter, was an American short story writer.
a) J. London c) 0. Henry
b) E. Hemingway d) G. B. Shaw
34. The greatest English playwright and poet William Shakespeare was buried in ... .
a) Stratford-on-Avon c) Westminster Abbey
b) London d) Poet's Corner
35. If you ... in a warmer climate, you won't get so many
colds.
a) live c) have lived
b) will live d) will be living
36. He told her not to eat it, explaining that there ... a risk of food poisoning.
a) is c) will be
b) was d) has been
37. What is the antonym to the word "small"?
a) tiny c) large
b) poor d) little
38. She said to me, "I saw this film yesterday".
a) She said that I had seen that film the day before.
b) She said that she saw this film the day before.
c) She said that she had seen this film yesterday.
d) She told me she had seen the film the day before.
39. I'm sorry, I'm late.
a) Don't mention it. c) That's OK.
b) Not at all. d) Here it is.
40. Where have you been? Your clothes ... wet and dirty.
a) are c) has been
b) is d) will be
41. The first person who ... chocolate to Europe was Cortes, who was an explorer.
a) brings c) brought
b) has brought d) had brought
42. It isn't clear how far the ozone layer ... by aerosol sprays.
a) is damaged c) was damaged
b) has been damaged d) damaged
43. The rich should pay ... tax than the poor.
a) more c) least
b) less d) most
44. My brother ... interested in medicine since he was a child.
a) is c) has been
b) was d) had been
45. We arrived ... England at Gatwick Airport at 9 o'clock yesterday.
a) to c) at
b)in d)for
46. This cafe used to be much ... before they opened the new one next door.
a) popular c) most popular
b) more popular d) the most popular
47. Next May they ... with this team for ten years.
a) will play c) will be playing
b) will have played d) will have been playing
48. Don't start reading the other books until you ... this one.
a) have finished c) will finish
b) finishes d) will have finished
49. Belarus has always been rich in ... talented and gifted people.
a) the c) -
b) a d) an
50. A small sum of money ... from the cash today, and nobody knows who has done it.
a) steal c) was stolen
b) has stolen d) has been stolen
51. Read the text and do the exercises given below.
Science against Pain
Many doctors and scientists in various countries in the past tried to discover ways and means of killing pain. Anaesthesia, which is an ordinary thing now, is the result of the long and hard work of many. It is difficult to say now who was the first, but some of the names must not be forgotten. In 1776 Joseph Priestley, a prominent English chemist, found a gas which is now called "laughing-gas" because it makes people feel a little drunk after inhaling it. For about thirty years no one was seriously interested in it, but in 1800 Humphry Davy, the famous English chemist, noticed its effects. He also said that it would probably be useful in operations because it could take away pain.
About 1824 an English doctor called Hickman read Davy's books and tried laughing-gas on dogs and other animals. He got some good results, but still no interest was shown. Hickman died young, before he could make people believe in laughing-gas as an anaesthetic.
Laughing-gas became known in America, where young men and women went to parties to try it. Most of them spent their time laughing, but one man at a party, Horace Wells, who was a dentist, noticed that people did not seem to feel pain when they were under the effects of this gas. He decided to try an experiment on himself. He asked a friend to help him.
Wells inhaled some of the gas, and his friend pulled out one of Wells' teeth. Wells felt no pain at all. He had lost a perfectly good tooth, but he was delighted. Teeth could now be pulled out without pain.
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