
PERIOD TEST 11-A
Authored by Maritza Ordoñez
English
11th Grade
Used 20+ times

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10 questions
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1.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 1 pt
Look at the expression in each question and choose the right answer.
"Please use the upstairs waiting room if you have an appointment with the nurse"
A. Wait upstairs to see the nurse.
B. Go upstairs to make an appointment with the nurse.
C. The nurse can only see patients with appointments.
D. The nurse will tell you when it is your turn.
2.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 1 pt
" DO NOT LEAVE YOUR BAGS IN THE CORRIDOR"
A. Bags will be collected from the corridor.
B. Do not forget to put your luggage outside your room.
C. . Keep the corridor clear of luggage.
D. Bags left in the corridor will be removed.
3.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 1 pt
"PICK YOUR OWN FRUIT AND PAY INSIDE SHOP"
A. Choose your fruit and then pay for it.
B. Do not touch the fruit before paying for it.
C. Self-service fruit is cheaper.
D. Damaged fruit must be paid for.
4.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 1 pt
"WE REGRET WE CANNOT ACCEPT PAYMENT BY CREDIT CARD FOR SALES UNDER £10"
A. If you spend less than £10, you cannot pay by credit card.
B. We prefer cash for large sales.
C. If you spend more than £10, you must pay by credit card.
D. We make a charge if you pay by credit card.
5.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 1 pt
"BRIGHTSON'S TRAVEL AGENCY
OUR NEW ENTRANCE IS BETWEEN THE BANKAND THE LIBRARY"
A. The travel agency is no longer open.
B. The library is now a travel agency.
C. The travel agency has moved its entrance.
D. . The entrance to the bank is through the library.
6.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
5 mins • 1 pt
Read the text and then answer rightly the questions.
The government published a report yesterday saying that we need to eat more healthily - more fruits and vegetables, less fat and sugar. So that means fewer burgers, chips and fried food as well as cutting down on sweet things. We went into central London yesterday at lunchtime and asked people what they thought about it. "It's got nothing to do with the government what I eat," says Paul Keel, a building worker, as he eats a beefburger and chips washed down with strawberry milkshake. "I think I have a healthy diet. You see, I don't normally eat a beefburger for lunch. Normally I just have chips." Any fish? "I like cod. But I've only ever had it once." Tim Kennor, a librarian, welcomes the government advice. But he also has his own rules. "I think," he explains, eating his fried chicken and chips, "it's important to eat a variety of food." We then asked Dorothy Matthews, aged 74. "I don't think it's the government's business to tell us what to eat." We went into Simpson's Restaurant and asked the manager if people changed what they were eating. "I don't think people believe all these reports anymore. What they say is good for you in June, they say is bad for you in July. People have stopped taking notice. We serve what we've always served. Almost all of it is fattening."
1. What is the writer trying to explain in the text?
A. what people think
B. his own opinion
C. the government report
D. the popularity of certain foods.
7.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 1 pt
2. What can the reader learn from the text?
A. what the government is going to do
B. which meals are the healthiest
C. whether the advice will be followed
D. A. what kind of people like beefburgers
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