زیرساخت پایدار برگزاری آزمون آنلاین
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آزمون proficient 3 به صورت دیجی فرم

   Tick Tock Language Academy      Time needed :75 minutes   

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زمان تکمیل این آزمون 75 دقیقه میباشد



تایید و ادامه
نام و نام خانوادگی خود را وارد نمایید *



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کد ملی خود را وارد نمایید *



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PART A. VOCABULARY

1. These days my feelings of frustration often ________ me.  (1 نمره)



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2. You looked absolutely ________ when you heard the news. (1 نمره)



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3. It was ________ to have to admit that I didn’t know the answer. (1 نمره)



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4. Were you ________ when Jim said that he didn’t think he needed you to come? (1 نمره)



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5. I feel ________ after that lecture. I think I will write my essay this afternoon . (1 نمره)



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6. I think my mom’s ________ – she seems to know what I’m thinking sometimes. (1 نمره)



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7. I’d love to have a ________ to drive me everywhere. (1 نمره)



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8. Country and western isn’t my favourite musical ________. (1 نمره)



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9. The soloist was presented with a ________ of flowers. (1 نمره)



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10. You look very ________ in that skirt and those shoes. (1 نمره)



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11. My dad often has a ________ in the afternoon and is always wide awake after it. (1 نمره)



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12. Don’t forget to ________ your alarm clock – we’ve got an early start tomorrow. (1 نمره)



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13. The bed was so comfortable that I slept like a ________. (1 نمره)



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14. If I drink coffee too late I find it difficult to ________ asleep. (1 نمره)



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15. I like to sleep under a thick ________ in winter. (1 نمره)



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a. Check (ü) the correct word, A, B, or C.

16. sad because of not enough social contact (1 نمره)



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17. very surprised by some unexpected news (1 نمره)



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18. very angry (1 نمره)



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19. very surprised (1 نمره)



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20. very glad that a problem has been solved (1 نمره)



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PART B:GRAMMAR

Check (ü) A, B, or C to complete the sentences.

21. If I ________ you, I wouldn’t buy that house. (1 نمره)



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22. Bob’s very shy. If you didn’t know him, you ________ he was unfriendly. (1 نمره)



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23. I ________ Susan if I’d arrived ten minutes later. (1 نمره)



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24. We wouldn’t have missed the flight if we ________ on time. (1 نمره)



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25. If you hadn’t annoyed Liz so much, she ________ rude to you. (1 نمره)



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26. Zoe ________ be good at tennis, but now she plays really well. (1 نمره)



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27. My parents used ________ me do my homework before I could watch TV. (1 نمره)



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28. When I was young, I ________ have a lot of toys. (1 نمره)



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29. We can’t get used ________ in a bungalow. We keep wanting to go upstairs! (1 نمره)



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30. Erik promised ________ harder and to try to get into college. (1 نمره)



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PART C: PRONUNCIATION

 a. Which word has a different sound? Check (ü) A, B, or C. 

31. A. manageable       B. inspire               C . thrilled (1 نمره)



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32. A. psychic                       B. rhythm                      C. hypochondriac (1 نمره)



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b. Which is the correctly stressed syllable? Check (ü) A, B, or C.

 33. A. devastated              B. devastated                        C. devastated (1 نمره)



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34. A. philosophy            B. philosophy                           C. philosophy (1 نمره)



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35. A. orchestra               B. orchestra                       C. orchestra (1 نمره)



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READING



1   Read the article. For questions 1-5, choose the correct answer (A, B, C, or D).



Mudlarking in London



Few hobbies combine collecting Roman artifacts, medieval coins, and discovering bodies. But the very British hobby of mudlarking is making a comeback.



Mudlarking is a pastime that has become more popular in the last few years in London. It involves going to the River Thames at low tide and digging in the mud for valuable objects. A person who goes mudlarking is called a mudlark.



Mudlarking has its origins in 18th-century London. But in those days, it wasn’t a hobby at all. It was actually a way for many children – and those too old to be employed – to survive. This was at a time when there were hardly any bridges crossing the river, so most people caught boats across. Getting on and off the boats, people dropped things. These were then found by mudlarks, the poorest level of society, who sold them to earn money, which would hopefully be just enough for a meal.



Steve Brooker is a modern-day mudlark, and he’s had this unusual hobby for 30 years. He’s found everything from glass bottles and clay pots, to coins dating from Roman times right up to the present day. He says he has found many extraordinary things, but finding a human skeleton was particularly terrifying. He later found out the bones were 300 years old, but even so, it’s an experience he is happy he hasn’t repeated.



Steve often goes to the river near where he lives, but on the day I met him, he accompanied me in my boat to the east of the city. Steve was excited because he hadn’t had a boat for a few years, and this meant he could reach an area where he hadn’t been for some time.  “Getting caught out by the tide is a real danger,” Steve explains. He advises us, as he does with anyone he has guided on the river, to watch for the water level and always have an escape route. We appear to be ok and our boat is our way on and off the Blackwall foreshore.



Apart from a permit, the only tools required for mudlarking are a bucket and something to dig with. At 78°F, we are lucky with the weather, but even on rainy days, enthusiastic mudlarks can be found by the water’s edge. “Every day, as the water level rises and falls it moves objects in the mud,” explains Steve. “So it’s possible to find really good things any time of the year.” Steve quickly fills his bucket with coins, Victorian pipes, old keys, and even a jar that he says came from an old food factory that used to be nearby. He knows exactly where to look and hardly digs down at all. After an hour, his top object is a metal toy from the 1800s. Much of what he finds goes to local museums. “That’s what anyone who goes mudlarking usually does,” says Steve.




Steve explains why the river mud holds such treasure. “It is anaerobic, which means it doesn’t hold air. Therefore, anything in it stays in great condition,” he says. “Once they are opened up to the air, however, their condition starts to break down, so mudlarking is all about keeping things that would otherwise fall to pieces.”



36   In 18th-century London, mudlarking... (1 نمره)



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37. What does the author say about Steve Brooker? (1 نمره)



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38. What advice does Steve offer other mudlarks? (1 نمره)



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39. Steve says that for mudlarks, finding the best objects depends on ... (1 نمره)



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40. Most modern mudlarks ... (1 نمره)



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1 Read the article. For questions 1-5, choose the correct answer (A, B, C, or D).



Beach heroes



There is no more welcome sight on beaches all over the world than a lifeguard. You can spot the lifeguards a mile off – which is, of course, half the point. Not only do they wear highly conspicuous red uniforms, but somehow they manage to look better than the rest of us, too. “Last year, we only had to make five rescues,” says head lifeguard Rod Terry, 22. “Another year, we helped 29 people in the space of three hours. You never know what you’re going to be called upon to do, which is why you need lifeguards who can cope with any situation.” You’d think, of course, they’d all be excited to perform some public heroics, but Rod is quick to rebuff any such suggestions. “As far as we’re concerned, we’d far rather stop someone getting into trouble than have to get them out of it.” One of the lifeguards in Rod’s team is 24-year-old Rebecca Surridge. She says, “One minute you can find yourself dealing with minor cuts and scrapes, and the next with a situation where one group of people on the beach is annoying another group. You have to handle things sensitively, too.” Even if they do talk tough, the lifeguards have no legal authority with which to back up their words. “We can only advise,” adds Rod. “If someone wants to ignore a red flag, they’re free to do so.” A red flag is what the lifeguards put out when the sea’s too rough for swimming. Exactly when that moment is reached is something that Rod alone decides. A lifeguard since the age of 14, first as a volunteer, he’s now a paid member of the town council’s recreational services department. “You take into account a variety of things: you listen to the weather reports and forecasts, and you assess the strength of the wind.” Other factors to be considered, depending on location, of course, are the dangers that may be lurking in the water. The vast majority of swimmers take notice of a red flag, but there are always those who don’t, and long before they start really getting into trouble, lifeguards will be on their way out to them, dragging with them a “torpedo” buoy, which is a long sausage-shaped inflatable on the end of a rope. This can help them bring in swimmers suffering from cramps, brought on by swimming too soon after a meal, or fatigue caused by swimming out too far. “Then you get the silly ones who jump off the harbor wall,” sighs Rod. “Mostly, though, swimmers stick within our exclusion zone.” This is a 300 ft x 300 ft patch of sea. The prime rule of the exclusion zone is that boats are forbidden to enter it – and humans forbidden to leave it. Even a rubber ring is pursued and retrieved. If found floating out at sea, it could set off a coastal-wide emergency search. At any one time, there are eight lifeguards on duty, either scanning the waves or patrolling the beach (lifebelts need checking, telephones need to be kept working in case of emergency calls). The team works five days a week and constantly has to rotate tasks as this facilitates maximum degrees of attention. The other thing that keeps the lifeguards alert is the fact that they all get along well together. “It’s not as if we’re all sitting there in silence,” says Lisa. “We’re always talking to each other, either in person or down the two-way radio.” In fact, each summer season is something of an old friend’s reunion; this is the seventh year Pete has worked here, while it’s the fifth for Rebecca. Come wintertime, they go off around the world – Pete’s been surfing in Mexico and Rebecca’s just back from Bali, Hawaii, and New Zealand. It’s a case of not yet wanting to give up their seasonal, sunlit round of beaches. “There’s plenty of time for a proper job later,” says Rebecca.




41. According to Rod Terry, lifeguards need to be ... (1 نمره)



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42. Rebecca Surridge says that lifeguards ... (1 نمره)



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43. According to the text, which factor affects a lifeguard’s decision to put up a red flag? (1 نمره)



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44. In order to maintain their concentration levels, lifeguards ... (1 نمره)



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45. It’s common for a group of lifeguards ... (1 نمره)



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PART E: WRITING

 You recently attended a concert in your town. Write an email to your friend telling him / her about the concert.

 Write 140–180 words. Include the following information: 

• tell him / her what kind of music was played at the concert 

• explain why you like that kind of music 

• say whether the concert was as good as you had hoped it would be (10 نمره)



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