FROM THE LINK BELOW WE SHOULD WORK EVERYTHING UNTIL THE ADVANCED LEVEL
https://www.englishmaven.org/Pages/Synonyms%20and%20Antonyms.htm
FRIENDLY LETTERS
https://targetstudy.com/letters/best-friend-letter.html
https://targetstudy.com/letters/friendly-letter-to-teacher.html
https://www.letterwritingguide.com/samplefriendlyletter.htm
POSTCARDS
https://learnenglishteens.britishcouncil.org/skills/writing/elementary-a2-writing/postcard-new-york
https://www.postcrossing.com/blog/2013/02/05/20-ideas-of-things-to-write-on-postcards
VARIANTA JUD 2019
I.1. Read the following text and fill in the blanks with the correct verb forms. 10 points
I 1) (be born) _____in Japan but when I was a toddler we moved to Romania. I 2) (go) _____ to school in Bucharest. While I 3) (study) _____ at University I 4) (have) _____ a serious accident. I 5) (never think) _____that I would ever end up in a hospital bed for a couple of months due to an unfortunate mistake. While I 6) (lie) ____ there I started using the computer to kill time. By the time I got out of the hospital I 7) (already become) _____ very good at offering advice for all my friends’ troubles and I realised I was able to cheer people up. So, I decided to go on-line and change that into a home-based business. I 8) (work)_____ like that since then. I like the job because it allows me to speak to a lot of people. That is why I am thinking about some ways of expanding my business: I 9) (take)_____a course in psychology if I 10) (know) _____ that in five years I would double my income.
I.2. Read the following text and decide which answer (A, B or C) best fits in each gap. 10 points
"No letter (1) …… come from you since you (2) …… the Philippines, but I'm sure you are all fine because no notice has come to me from the War Department as your next (3) …… kin. All I know is that your regiment is in Peking, and I hope and pray you are with it, all safe and (4) …… . Sister Mary and I are pretty busy, as there has been no one to help us (5) …… the place since your brother died last spring. I know your enlistment isn’t up for (6) …… year, and it's wicked to desert, and they would shoot you for it anyhow; but it does seem kind of (7) …… when we want you so much at home that you have to be fighting the poor Chinamen. (8) …… as long as we all have our health there aren't any real troubles I suppose.
I don't mean to (9) …… fault and you mustn't worry about us. I'm as active as a cricket and so is Mary. It's been a good long spell of dry weather, and that's good for my rheumatism, but it wasn't very encouraging for the crops. The (10) …… on the house and farm is due in six weeks, and I can't get a renewal, though it's only six hundred dollars, as you know. The bank people are that haughty about the thing that I don't exactly see how we can get around them.”
1. a. has
b. had
c. would
2. a. left from
b. left
c. left to
3. a. to
b. of
c. from
4. a. happy
b. sound
c. sane
5. a. at
b. for
c. with
6. a. lap
b. the past
c. another
7. a. hard
b. great
c. exciting
8. a. Although
b. But
c. Since
9. a. find
b. lie
c. blame
10. a. mortgage
b. auction
c. loan
I.3. Use the word given in brackets to form a word that fits in each sentence. 5 points
1. There are …… for the job in all local newspapers. ADVERTISE
2. I ……think she is the best for that job. HONESTY
3. This theory has not been …. proved yet. SCIENCE
4. Were you given …...when you were a child? ALLOW
5. Don’t ….. my message! This is not what I said! INTERPRETATION
SUBIECTUL al II-lea – READING COMPREHENSION (25 points) Read the text below and choose the correct answer (A, B, C or D).
The Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, usually known as Kew Gardens, in Richmond upon Thames is a major London tourist attraction and a UNESCO World Heritage site.
Founded in 1759, Kew began as a royal garden attached to the Royal Kew Palace, home to George III and his many children. The Palace is now open to visitors, but probably the buildings most visitors come to see are the incredible glasshouses. The Palmhouse is one of the largest surviving Victorian glasshouses in the world, with over 16,000 panes of glass. The Waterly House, which contains some of the world’s largest and smallest waterlilies, is also not to be missed.
However, Kew is more than just a garden and green space in the heart of Britain’s capital city. It is also the world’s leading horticultural centre for botanical research and plant science. The Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, covers approximately three hundred acres of land, and attracts around a million visitors every year. Its collections and laboratories illustrate the important part that plants play in our lives, and highlight the need to protect and conserve them for the benefit of generations to come.
Kew is a vital research and scientific base, with multiple research projects and partnerships stretching across the globe. A world leader in plant science, Kew employs around seven hundred people and is home to about nineteen thousand species of living plants. Its Millennium Seed Bank holds seeds from around ten percent of the world’s plant species for the benefit of humankind, curating around two billion seeds from 28,000 species of plants, sourced from approximately 130 countries.
Around eighty percent of our daily calorie intake comes from just twelve plant species. Kew’s Millennium Seed Bank’s Adapting Agriculture to Climate Change project recognizes the need for greater genetic diversity in our crops and seeks to preserve food security for future generations. The project collects seeds from the wild relatives of some of our most important food crop plants whose genetic make-up can be used to breed new and useful traits back into modern agricultural crops so that they can better adapt to future climates and other threats, such as pests and diseases.
1. According to the text, people’s most important reason for visiting Kew is that
A. they want to see the indoor plants.
B. it is attached to the Royal Kew Palace.
C. the descendants of George III used to play in this garden.
D. it is a source of oxygen.
2. The role of the horticultural centre is
A. to gather money from the numerous visitors.
B. to sell seeds.
C. to warn visitors to keep off the grass.
D. to protect the seeds for the benefit of future generations.
3. Among its many functions, Kew is NOT
A. a garden in the middle of London.
B. a research establishment.
C. home to the Queen of England.
D. an important touristic attraction.
4. Kew employees work
A. exclusively for their own benefit.
B. exclusively for the benefit of the British people.
C. for the benefit of humanity.
D. for the royal family.
5. Kew’s Adapting Agriculture to Climate Change project aims
A. to change the climate in order to harvest more.
B. to store more than nineteen thousand species.
C. to ensure food resources for the coming generations.
D. to make people addicted to genetically modified plants.
SUBIECTUL al III-lea –WRITING (50 points)
Write a narrative essay ending like this:
She resisted the urge to wave. To acknowledge them was to make them real.
Write your story in 150-180 words and give it an appropriate title. Pay attention to the following:
you don’t need to write long descriptions;
use dialogues only if they are relevant to your characters or events;
you should use this plan:
1. Introduction (paragraph 1 – set the scene)
2. Main Body (paragraph(s) 2/3 – develop the story)
3. Conclusion (paragraph 4 – end the story).
Don’t count the given ending.
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