БОУД.03. Иностранный язык. Контрольные задания для аттестации (2020 год)

 

  Главная      Тесты

 

     поиск по сайту           правообладателям           

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

БОУД.03. Иностранный язык. Контрольные задания для аттестации (2020 год)
 

 

СПЕЦИАЛЬНОСТЬ 38.02.01 «ЭКОНОМИКА И БУХГАЛТЕРСКИЙ УЧЕТ (ПО ОТРАСЛЯМ)»

среднее профессиональное образование

 

 

 

 

TEST

SIQUENCE OF TENSES

1. I knew that Mercury (be) the closest planet to the sun, but I didn’t feel like answering the question.

A was B is

C had been

2. Mike hoped that his friend (help) him with this car.

A would help B will help C helped

3. We didn’t know the score, but we were sure their team (lose) the game.

A has lost B had lost C lost

4. Yesterday Tom heard that his aunt (be ill) for five days.

A was ill B has been ill C had been ill

5. The children were afraid of making any noise - Mom (sleep).

A was sleeping B slept

C had been sleeping

6. He gave all his money to me because he (trust) me.

A would trust B trusted C had trusted

7. We were told that Andrew (go) to enter that college.

A is going B went C was going

8. The police found out that Bob Slant (live) in London’s suburbs at that time.

A had been living B lives C lived

9. My parents decided that we (celebrate) my birthday on Saturday.

A would celebrate B shall celebrate C celebrated

10. The pupil wasn’t able to do the translation because he (not/know) some special terms.

A hadn’t know B didn’t know C doesn’t know

11. Ann hasn’t been informed that the lecture (not / take place) on Friday.

A hasn’t taken place B wouldn’t take place C won’t take place

 

 

 

2 семестр

 

 

TEST Variant 1
1. Change from Active into Passive:

• They launch rockets from Cape Canaveral.

• Cosmonauts do many experiments.

• They recycle glass at this factory.

• They teach foreign languages at school.

2. Put the verb into the needed tense form:

• I (to see) her yesterday.

• She (not to hear) of it yet.

• They (to build) a new house now.

• Usually he (to live) in New York.

• There (to be) space cities in 2100.

3. Answer the question in the conditional (5 sentences):

What would you do if you met an alien?

Test Variant 2

1. Change from Active into Passive:

• They make shoes at this factory.

• The meteo stations watch hurricanes.

• They recycle old papers here.

• They learn poems by heart.

2. Put the verb into the needed tense form:

• He (to finish) his project already.

• We (to meet) last week.

• They (to launch) rockets to Mars in 2020.

• I (to watch) TV now.

• She (to speak) English very well.

3. Answer the question in the conditional (5 sentences):

Where would you go if you had a time machine?

Аналитическое задание (задачи, тесты, ситуационные задания, проблемные ситуации, творческое задание и т.д.):

1 семестр

Task 1

Read Jane’s story. For questions 1 -7 and choose the correct answer A, B, C or D./Прочитайте рассказ Джейн и выберите к вопросам 1-7 правильные варианты ответов.

During the baking hot months of the summer holidays my mother and I used to escape to one of the scattered lakes north of Prince Albert. In its magic surroundings we used to spend the long summer days in the open air, swimming and canoeing or just lying dreaming in the sun. In the evening the lake was always a bright, luminous grey after the unbelievable sunset colors had faded.

The last summer before we returned to England was particularly enchanted. For one thing, I was in love for the first time. No one will ever convince me that one cannot be in love at fifteen. I loved then as never since, with all my heart and without doubts or reservations or pretence.

My boyfriend Don worked in Saskatoon, but the lake was ''his place'' - the strange and beautiful wilderness drew him with an obsessive urgency, so I suspected it was not to see me that he got on his motorcycle as many Fridays as he possibly could, and drove three hundred-odd miles along the pitted prairie roads to spend the weekends at our place.

 

 

 

Sometimes he couldn't come, and the joy would go out of everything until Monday, when I could start looking forward to Friday again. He could never let us know in advance, as we were too far from civilization to have a phone or even a telegraph service. Three hundred miles in those conditions is quite a journey. Besides, Don was hard up, and sometimes worked overtime at weekends.

One Friday night a storm broke out. I lay in bed and listened to the thunder and the rain beating on the roof. Once I got up and stood looking out over the treetops, shivering. I tried not to expect Don that night hoping he would have enough sense to wait until the storm ended. Yet in my frightened thoughts I couldn't help imagining Don fighting the storm. His motorbike, which had always looked to me so heavy and solid, seemed in my thoughts frail enough to be blown onto its side by the first gust that struck it. I thought of Don pinned under it, his face pressed into the mud.

I crawled back into bed, trying to close my throat against the tears. But when my mother, prompted by the deep sympathy and understanding between us, came in to me, she kissed my cheek and found it wet.

"Don't get upset, Jane,'' she said softly. ''He may still come.''

When she had tucked me in and gone, I lay thinking about Don, about the danger of the roads. You couldn't ride or walk along them safely after heavy rain; your feet would slip from under you. The roads in Northern Canada are not like the friendly well-populated English ones, where there are always farmhouses within walking distance and cars driving along them day and night.

It was hours later, that I suddenly realized the sound of the roaring engine were real. The storm was

dying.

1. Every summer Jane used to spend

1.

1. in the camp

2. by the sea side

3. near the lake

4. in the village

2. The last summer was particularly fascinating for Jane because she

1. spent it in the magic surroundings.

2. had a lot of fun in the open air.

3. enjoyed unbelievable sunsets by the lake.

4. fell in love for the first time.

3. Jane believes that love at fifteen is

1. a sincere deep feeling.

2. associated with doubts.

3. full of reservations.

4. connected with pretence.

4. Don traveled three hundred-odd miles every weekend because he was

A. desperate to see the author before she left.

B. fond of riding his motorcycle.

C. attracted by the beauty of the lake.

D. fond of spending weekends with his friends.

5. Sometimes Don didn't come to see Jane and her mother on Friday because he

A. thought they were too far from civilization.

B. had given up hope of seeing the author.

C. worked to make some extra money.

D. hated traveling in exhausting conditions.

6. Mother came into Jane's room during the storm because she

A. felt Jane was afraid of the thunder.

B. felt Jane was worried about Don.

C. heard Jane walking in the room.

D. heard Jane crying in her bed.

7. According to the author the roads in Northern Canada were

 

1. slippery.

2. muddy.

3. lonely.

D. busy.

Transfer all your answers to your answer sheet.



2 семестр

Task 1

Choose from the sentences A-H the one which fits each gap (8-14). There is one extra sentence which you do not need to use./Заполните пропуски 8-14, выбрав правильный ответ из предложений A-H, из которых одно лишнее.

I lived in Port Stewart, one of the small villages on the coast. I rented a small room at the top of an old damp two-storey Victorian terrace house. The house was the last one in the terrace and from its window I could look out on the grey, ever-restless ocean.

8_The weather in that part of the North of Ireland was never the kindest, though when the

summer came the landscape around us, the easy access to Donegal and to the remoter parts of the North gave the area its own particular delight.

An old retired couple who owned the house lived in two rooms on the ground floor. 9_His bent

figure would brave even Port Stewart’s weather as he walked along the sea front.

I never saw the old man at any other time apart from these walks. 10_His wife, his second,

would sit quietly in the kitchen beside the fire constantly knitting and offering us cups of tea as we came in from the pub or back from studying. She never bothered us much, was always friendly and enjoyed a cup of tea with those of us who would sit and chat with her.

I I_We were not surprised, aware even then that age can be cruel. But what moved me most

was his rapid worsening, the fact that I never again saw him walking bent double against the wind, and the sight of his walking stick always lying in the hall. It became a strange kind of symbol.

12_The fact that we were only aware of this old man's illness through his rasping cough and

his wife's nursing him gave the house an air of heavy sadness.

One evening, I came in from the cold and went I straight to the kitchen to heat myself at the fire. Mrs. Paul sat alone. There was a silence I couldn't understand. I recall now that her knitting needles were for once not in evidence. 13_Her face was very still.

It took her some time to acknowledge me coming into the room. 14_She looked up slowly

and I remember her old, lined but still quite beautiful face as she said calmly and without emotion: ‘My husband is dead’.

A Mr. Paul became ill very suddenly.

B ‘Would you like a cup of tea?’ I asked.

C Mr. Paul was in his eighties and I remember him going for his nightly walk accompanied by his walking stick and a small dog.

D Late into the night I could hear him coughing.

E However, I could not believe what had happened.

F I can still remember the view from the window and the constant changes in the sea.

G I heard him occasionally in his own room.

H Neither was there any steam coming out of the old kettle normally kept hot by the fire.



Task 2. Read the extract from the text and complete the sentences with the correct forms of the verbs in

brackets.!Прочитайте отрывок из текста и заполните пропуски глаголами из скобок в правильной форме.

When Mr. Hiram B. Otis, the American Minister, 1_(decide) to buy Canterville Chase,

everyone 2_(tell) him that it 3_(be) a foolish thing to do. There 4_(be) no

 

doubt that a ghost 5_(live) in the house. Indeed, Lord Canterville himself 6_(mention)

the feat to Mr. Otis when they 7_(discuss) the sale.

‘We 8_(not live) in the place ourselves, 9_(say) Lord Canterville, ‘since

the day when my grand-aunt 10_(frighten) by the ghost. It 11_(happen) many

years ago. My grand-aunt 12_(dress) for dinner when she suddenly 13_(feel) two

skeleton hands being placed on her shoulders. The fright 14_(make) her very ill and she never

really recovered.’

‘I 15_(not believe) in ghosts,’ 16_(say) Mr. Otis.

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

////////////////////////////