ĐỀ CƯƠNG ÔN TẬP HỌC KỲ I
MÔN: TIẾNG ANH LỚP 10 CƠ BẢN
I TOPICS:
1. School
2. Daily activities
3. Famous People
4. Information Technology
5. Excursion
6. The Mass Media
7. Life in the Village
II PRONUNCIATION:
1. / i / - / i: /
2. / ʌ / - / a: /
3. / e / - / æ /
4. / ɒ / - / ɔ: /
III GRAMMAR:
The present simple
Adverbs of frequency
The past simple
Whquestions
Gerund and to + infinitive
The past perfect
The past perfect vs. the past simple
The + adjective
Used to + infinitive
5. / Ʊ / - / u: /
6. / ə / - / з: /
7. / ei / - / ai / - / ɔi /
Words that goes together
Associated words together
III GRAMMAR:
Gerund – toinfinitive
Whquestions
Tenses
Used + to infinitive
Reported speech
Will vs. be going to
IV WRITING
Narrative
Summary
Letters: complaint, confirmation
Registration form
Instructions
Advantages and disadvantages of the mass media.
Bài tập tham khảo
PHONETICS
1. Circle the letter a, b, c, or d to choose the word that has the underlined (letters) pronounced
differently from the others.
1. a. received
b. worked
c. obtained
d. harbored
2. a. hard
b. start
c. party
…………………………
5. As a brilliant and mature student, Marie ………………………… the dream of a scientific career.
GRAMMAR AND STRUCTURE:
Circle the letter a, b, c, or d to choose one word or phrase that best completes the sentence.
1. I didn't like it in the city at first. But now …… here.
a. I got used to living
b. I used to living
c. I'm used to live
d. I used to live
2. In spite of ……, we decided to go out.
a. we felt very tired
b. feeling tired
c. all of us felt tired
d. tired
3. I remember An …… rode the bus to school with.
a. I
b. who I
c. which I
d. that I
4. Rick left the party early because he …… a headache
a. had
b. has
c. used to have
d. was having
5. Nobody ventured outdoors …… the hurricane warnings.
a. despite
b. although
c. because of
d. because
6. We've given up …… to persuade them ……
d. to go
12. This is the first time we …… to Scotland so it's all new to us.
a. are going
b. we’re
c. have been
d. will go
13. I'll give you a map ……
a. in order for you find the way all right.
b. so that you will find the way all right.
c. in order that you can find the way all right.
d. b and c are correct
14. Goodnight. I …… you in the morning.
a. see
b. am seeing
c. am going to see
d. will see
15. I …… at six o'clock, but …… to be up by five.
a. normally get up/ I have sometimes
b. normally get up/ sometimes I have
c. get normally up/ sometimes I have
d. get normally up/ I sometimes have
WRITING. Complete the second sentence so that it has a similar meaning to the first.
1. The flat's very noisy but we enjoy living there.
Even ……………………………………………………………………………………………………
2. In spite of all our warnings, he left camp without taking his rifle.
Although ……………………………………………………………………………………………
3. Noone has challenged his authority before.
This is the first time ……………………………………………………………………………………
4. John and Mary moved to Edinburgh twenty years ago.
It is……………………………………………………………………………………………………
He can see a war being fought and watch statesmen try to 4. …………………… peace. 5.
…………………… television, home viewers can see and learn about people, places, and things in
faraway lands. TV even takes its viewers out of this world. It brings them 6. …………………… of
America's astronauts as the astronauts explore outer space.
7. …………………… all these things, television brings its views a steady stream of programs
that are 8. …………………… to entertain. In fact, TV provides many more 9. ……………………
programs than any other kind. The programs include actionpacked dramas, light comedies, sporting 10.
…………………… and motion pictures.
3. Read the passage then mark the statements T (TRUE), F (FALSE) or NG (NOT GIVEN).
On April 14, 1868, two ships were scheduled to leave the busy port of New York, bound for
Europe. The night before, their captains met and had dinner together. The dinner was very ordinary and
certainly neither man knew he would soon have a role in one of the world's greatest mysteries.
The two ships left the next morning. Their names: the Dei Gratia and the Marie Celeste. After
several days at sea, Morchouse, the captain of the Dei Gratia, sighted the Marie Celeste, and he
immediately recognised that something was wrong. It was not moving and there was no sign of life on
deck. Morehouse and a few of his men took a small boat to the Marie Celeste to investigate. They
searched every part of the ship and found nothing not a man, dead or alive, no sign of illness or combat,
no disruption. In fact, everything was in good order, as if the crew had left ten minutes before. There was
a tenpound note on a table, with an unfinished letter home near it, a freshly washed stack of clothes in
the laundry, and plenty of food and water. These signs of normal, everyday life on an empty ship were
the strangest feature of the mystery. What had happened to the captain and crew? If they had been
attacked, why was everything still in its place and why were there no signs of a struggle? If they had died
suddenly from a disease, where were their bodies?
Investigators searched for the answers to these questions for years and years, but they came up
with nothing. The fate of the men of the Marie Celeste remains as one of the unanswered questions of our
time.
…… 1. The captains of the Dei Gratia and the Marie Celeste planned their meeting at sea on the day
before their departure.
…… 2. They had a big meeting and finished very late that night.
…… 3. The two ships set sail for Europe on the same day.