TEST 11
11 B 12 B 13 B 14 A 15 C
Audioscript
Mark:
Hello, Jenny. What are you doing here?
Jenny:
Mark! Hello! This is my daughter, Sarah. It’s the school holidays so we’re
shopping now – we’re not sure what to do after that.
Mark:
Well, there’s a show for children this afternoon in the library where I work.
Jenny:
Oh? What time is the show?
Mark:
It starts at two and finishes at three thirty. It’s only quarter past one now.
What about that?
Jenny:
How much is a ticket?
Mark:
Well, it’s one pound fifty for adults and seventy-five pence for children.
Programmes are twenty-five pence.
Jenny:
And does your library do a reading course in the holidays?
Mark:
Yes, and if children under ten, like Sarah, read four books in six weeks, we
give them something to take home.
Jenny:
What, like, a book?
Mark:
Well, this year it’s a pen but sometimes it’s a book or a school bag. Meet me
after the show and I’ll tell you what to do.
Jenny:
Thanks. See you later then.
TEST 12
11 A 12 C 13 C 14 A 15 B
Audioscript
Man:
Can I help you?
Woman:
I’d like some information about the mountain park. I’ve got seven days’ holiday
next month.
Man:
Yes, certainly.
Woman:
First, I’d like to book somewhere to stay.
Man:
I’m afraid there’s nothing in the park, just a small café, that’s all. The
nearest guest-house is in a village a few kilometres away.
Woman:
Has the village got somewhere to swim or a cinema?
Man:
It’s very quiet. There’s just a small supermarket that sells food.
Woman:
I don’t mind that. Can I take my car to the park?
Man:
Yes. But you must leave it at the entrance with the other cars and buses.
Visitors must walk through the park.
Woman:
And how much does it cost to go in?
Man:
From Mondays to Fridays everyone pays twelve dollars, but at weekends it’s
thirteen dollars for children and sixteen dollars for adults.
Woman:
Right. Will I see any animals in the park next month?
Man:
I don’t think so. But it’s the best time to go! There won’t be any snow and the
flowers will be beautiful.
TEST 13
11 B 12 A 13 C 14 A 15 B
Audioscript
Sue:
Have you been to the new sports centre, Jim?
Jim:
Yes, Sue. It’s not cheap, but it’s big and light.
Sue:
Does bus eighteen go there?
Jim:
That’s right. It takes fifteen minutes. Don’t get bus twenty-five because you
have to walk a long way.
Sue:
I like doing sport early in the morning. Is it open at seven?
Jim:
Yes, you can go there from six, except on Sundays. Then it doesn’t open until
nine. The swimming pool has good hot showers; you have to bring your own towel
but you can get soap there. They don’t make you wear a swimming hat.
Sue:
Do they sell things to eat there?
Jim:
Only sandwiches; they don’t sell drinks. I usually take some fruit.
Sue:
I’d love to go with you next week. How about Wednesday?
Jim:
Well, I work until late on Wednesday. I’m free on Saturday but it’s too busy
then. It’ll have to be Thursday.
Sue:
OK. See you then.
TEST 14
11 A 12 B 13 B 14 C 15 C
Audioscript
Friend:
Anne, have you been to that new shopping centre?
Anne:
The Forest Centre?
Friend:
No. I mean Queen’s, the new one near the river.
Anne:
Oh. I’ve seen the advertisement. It’s got the largest café and bookshop in the
country.
Friend:
It will have. Only the clothes shops are open this month.
Anne:
Well, that’s OK. But it’s at least thirty kilometres away and I haven’t got a
car.
Friend:
Well, there is a coach once a week.
Anne:
Is there? I can get that if it’s not on Saturday. I have to work then.
Friend:
It goes on Tuesday. But it’s best to get your ticket on Monday.
Anne:
Is the ticket expensive?
Friend:
Ten pounds eighty for adults, two pounds fifty for children and only five
pounds sixty for students like you.
Anne:
Not bad. Does it go from the bus station?
Friend:
Yes, and it stops in Market Square and outside the museum in Broad Street.
Anne:
Oh, good. I’ll get it there. Broad Street is really near my house. Does it
leave early?
Friend:
Twenty past nine and you get to the shopping centre forty minutes later at ten
o’clock.
Anne:
Great!
0 Nhận xét