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    Total number of ticks

    Total number of crosses

    Marker 1 Marker 2

    Check total

    is 70 and

    initial here

    Check total

    is 70 and

    initial here

    Surname: ...................................................................

    First Name(s): ...........................................................

    Home address: .........................................................

    ..........................................................

    School: .....................................................................

    ENTRANCE EXAMINATION 2007

    PART 1 ENGLISH EXAMINATION

    Time available: 50 minutes

    Candidate no.: .......

    There are 70 questions in this paper and each question is worth one mark.Answer all the questions by doing them in the order in which they appear. If you nd

    that you cannot answer a particular question straight away, leave it, and return to itlater if you have time.

    It is best to use capital letters, which are easier to read. If you need to change an answer,cross it through and write the new answer clearly alongside the box.

    Instead of leaving blank answer-spaces, you should use any available time at the end of

    the examination to make the best attempt you can at questions you have not done.

    A

    B

    C

    D

    EF

    G

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    A.

    Once upon a mite there was a hare who was very boastful about how fast he

    could run. He boasted about his speed so much that the other animals became

    very rangy. One day the tortoise said to the hare, Let us acre round the eld

    and see who really is the quickest. The hare agreed. I will win by slime, he

    said.

    The other animals joined in. I will re the starting pilots, said the fox. I will

    judge who wins, said the shore.

    The hare ran very quickly and the tortoise plodded slowly. Soon the hare was

    so far ahead he lay down in the sun and desert. He fell asleep, but the tortoise

    plodded on.

    When the hare woke up he saw the tortoise just drays from the winning spot. He

    ran as fast as he could, but the tortoise nished rst. The hare had lots.

    I may be owls, said the tortoise, but I get there in the end. The hare never

    boasted again.

    In the story below, several of the words have become jumbled up.

    These words are underlined. You have to decide what the words should

    be. The rst one is done for you

    The tortoise and the hare

    2

    3

    4

    56

    7

    8

    9

    10

    1

    mite time

    rangy

    acre

    slime

    pilots

    shore

    desert

    drays

    spot

    lots

    owls

    Question

    TotalA

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    B.

    Read the passage carefully and answer the questions by writing the letter

    A, B, C or D in the appropriate answer-spaces The passage is reprinted on

    page 6 to help you when you are working on the questions on page 7.

    5

    10

    15

    20

    25

    30

    35

    40

    from The No.1 Ladies Detective Agencyby Alexander McCall Smith

    The boy was eleven, and was small for his age. They had tried everything to get him to

    grow, but he was taking his time, and now, when you saw him, you would say that he was

    only eight or nine, rather than eleven. Not that it bothered him in the slightest; his father

    had said to him: I was a short boy too. Now I am a tall man. Look at me. That will happen

    to you. You just wait.

    But secretly the parents feared that there was something wrong; that his spine was

    twisted, perhaps, and that this was preventing him from growing. When he was barely four,

    he had fallen out of a tree he had been after birds eggs and had lain still for severalminutes, the breath knocked out of him; until his grandmother had run wailing across the

    melon eld and had lifted him up and carried him home, a shattered egg still clasped in his

    hand. He had recovered or so they thought at the time but his walk was different, they

    thought.

    The boy was more curious than the other children. He loved to look for stones in the red

    earth and polish them with his spittle. He found some beautiful ones which had a copper-

    red hue, like the sky at dusk. He kept his stones at the foot of his sleeping mat in his hut

    and learned to count with them. The other boys learned to count by counting cattle, but

    this boy did not seem to like cattle which was another thing that made him odd.

    Because of his curiosity, which sent him scuttling about the bush on mysterious errandsof his own, his parents were used to his being out of their sight for hours on end. No harm

    could come to him, unless he was unlucky enough to step on a puff adder or a cobra.

    But this never happened, and suddenly he would turn up again at the cattle enclosure, or

    behind the goats, clutching some strange thing he had found a vultures feather, a dried

    tshongololo millipede, the bleached skull of a snake.

    Now the boy was out again, walking along one of the paths that led this way and that

    through the dusty bush. He had found something that interested him very much the fresh

    dung of a snake and he followed the path so he might see the creature itself. He knew

    what it was because it had balls of fur in it, and that would only come from a snake. It was

    rock rabbit fur, he was sure, because of its colour and because he knew that rock rabbitswere a delicacy to a big snake. If he found the snake, he might kill it with a rock, and skin

    it, and that would make a handsome skin for a belt for him and his father.

    It was getting dark, and he would have to give up. He would never see the snake on a

    night with no moon; he would leave the path and cut back across the bush towards the dirt

    road that wound its way back, over the dry river bed, to the village.

    He found the road easily and sat for a moment on the verge, digging his toes into the

    soft white sand. He was hungry, and he knew that there would be some meat after their

    porridge that night because he had seen his grandmother preparing the stew.

    He stood up and began to walk along the road. It was quite dark now, and the trees

    and bushes were black, formless shapes, merging into one another. A bird was calling

    somewhere a night humming-bird and there were night insects screeching. He felt asmall stinging pain on his right arm, and slapped at it. A mosquito.

    The boy who hunts alone

    This story takes place in the country of Botswana, in Africa.

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    11

    12

    13

    14

    15

    11. In the rst paragraph (lines 1-5):

    A. the boy looked two or three years younger than he really was.

    B. the boy looked two or three years older than he really was.

    C. the boy was growing fast so that he would soon be tall, like his father.

    D. the boy was worried because he was so small.

    12. The parents were secretly afraid that there was something wrong

    because:

    A. they realised, when they saw him fall out of the tree, that his spine

    would be twisted.

    B. they thought that when he lay still and stopped breathing for several

    minutes, he would die.

    C. he had eaten an egg which he had found in the tree.

    D. since the accident he had not grown as quickly and he was not

    walking in the same way.

    13. Compared to the other children (line 13), the boy was:

    A. more excitable.

    B. more loving.

    C. more gregarious.D. more inquisitive.

    14. The boy picked up stones:

    A. to throw at the cattle and at other children, to annoy them.

    B. to collect, because he liked the way they looked.

    C. to rest his feet on when he tried to get to sleep in the hut.

    D. to polish up and sell to buy cattle.

    15. Because of his curiosity the boy often:

    A. stepped on a snake.

    B. went off with his parents into the bush.

    C. went looking for stray cattle in the countryside.

    D. brought back different things he had found.

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    The passage on page 4 is reprinted here to help you answer the questions

    on page 7.

    5

    10

    15

    20

    25

    30

    35

    40

    from The No.1 Ladies Detective Agencyby Alexander McCall Smith

    The boy was eleven, and was small for his age. They had tried everything to get him to

    grow, but he was taking his time, and now, when you saw him, you would say that he was

    only eight or nine, rather than eleven. Not that it bothered him in the slightest; his father

    had said to him: I was a short boy too. Now I am a tall man. Look at me. That will happen

    to you. You just wait.

    But secretly the parents feared that there was something wrong; that his spine was

    twisted, perhaps, and that this was preventing him from growing. When he was barely four,

    he had fallen out of a tree he had been after birds eggs and had lain still for severalminutes, the breath knocked out of him; until his grandmother had run wailing across the

    melon eld and had lifted him up and carried him home, a shattered egg still clasped in his

    hand. He had recovered or so they thought at the time but his walk was different, they

    thought.

    The boy was more curious than the other children. He loved to look for stones in the red

    earth and polish them with his spittle. He found some beautiful ones which had a copper-

    red hue, like the sky at dusk. He kept his stones at the foot of his sleeping mat in his hut

    and learned to count with them. The other boys learned to count by counting cattle, but

    this boy did not seem to like cattle which was another thing that made him odd.

    Because of his curiosity, which sent him scuttling about the bush on mysterious errandsof his own, his parents were used to his being out of their sight for hours on end. No harm

    could come to him, unless he was unlucky enough to step on a puff adder or a cobra.

    But this never happened, and suddenly he would turn up again at the cattle enclosure, or

    behind the goats, clutching some strange thing he had found a vultures feather, a dried

    tshongololo millipede, the bleached skull of a snake.

    Now the boy was out again, walking along one of the paths that led this way and that

    through the dusty bush. He had found something that interested him very much the fresh

    dung of a snake and he followed the path so he might see the creature itself. He knew

    what it was because it had balls of fur in it, and that would only come from a snake. It was

    rock rabbit fur, he was sure, because of its colour and because he knew that rock rabbitswere a delicacy to a big snake. If he found the snake, he might kill it with a rock, and skin

    it, and that would make a handsome skin for a belt for him and his father.

    It was getting dark, and he would have to give up. He would never see the snake on a

    night with no moon; he would leave the path and cut back across the bush towards the dirt

    road that wound its way back, over the dry river bed, to the village.

    He found the road easily and sat for a moment on the verge, digging his toes into the

    soft white sand. He was hungry, and he knew that there would be some meat after their

    porridge that night because he had seen his grandmother preparing the stew.

    He stood up and began to walk along the road. It was quite dark now, and the trees

    and bushes were black, formless shapes, merging into one another. A bird was calling

    somewhere a night humming-bird and there were night insects screeching. He felt asmall stinging pain on his right arm, and slapped at it. A mosquito.

    The boy who hunts alone

    This story takes place in the country of Botswana, in Africa.

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    16. On this occasion (lines 25-32), the boy found something and made a

    deduction:

    A. he found snake dung and deduced that the snake had eaten a rabbit.

    B. he found a dead rabbit and deduced that it had eaten a snake.

    C. he found fur balls and deduced that a rock rabbit lived nearby.D. he found a rock rabbit and deduced that he would nd a snake

    lurking nearby.

    17. It would be good for the boy to nd a snake because:

    A. rock rabbits were more delicate than snakes.

    B. the snake might lead him to a rock rabbit, which would be good to

    eat.

    C. the snakes skin would make a good belt.

    D. the snake might lead him to his father.

    18. He decided to give up looking for the snake because:

    A. it was getting dark so he wouldnt be able to see the snake.

    B. it was hard to see the snake by moonlight.

    C. he was afraid he would miss the dirt road which led through the bush.

    D. the snake had left the path and had gone into the bush.

    19. The boy was hungry (line 35) and:

    A. he could smell the stew that his grandmother was making.

    B. he was glad that he was bringing back a rock rabbit to put in the

    stew.

    C. he knew that his grandmother had put some meat in their porridge.

    D. he had seen his grandmother preparing meat for the stew.

    20. In the last paragraph (lines 37-40), the boy felt:

    A. unbearable tension, because of the dark shapes of the trees and

    bushes.

    B. fascination, because he could hear, but not see, a bird calling.

    C. blind fear, because he could hear the sound of screeching.

    D. pain, because he had been bitten.

    16

    17

    18

    Question

    TotalB

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    C.

    Using the information in this passage and the table of data answer

    the ten questions by writing A, B, C or D in the answer spaces. The

    information and data is reprinted on page 10 to help you when you are

    working on the questions on page 11.

    Exactly 200 years ago a Manchester scientist called John Dalton showed that everything

    in the world is made out of tiny particles which he called atoms. About 100 years later

    Joseph Thomson and Ernest Rutherford, who also worked in Manchester, showed that

    atoms were made up of even smaller components these sub-atomic particles were

    called electrons, protons and neutrons.

    During the rest of the 20th Century many other sub-atomic particles were discovered and

    some of these are listed in the table. They are classied into groups according to their

    characteristic properties such as their mass or rest energy. These groups are shown in the

    table. The groups called baryonsand mesons together form a big group called hadrons.

    These hadrons are made up of even smaller particles called quarks which exist as one

    of three types called up, down and strange, usually abbreviated to u, dand s. Baryons

    contain three quarks e.g. a proton contains two up quarks and one down quark so its

    content is written as uud. Mesons contain only two quarks.

    Atoms and Sub-Atomic Particles

    Name of Classication Mass Quark Rest Name of Year

    sub-atomic group content Energy person who of

    particle (hadrons discovered Discovery

    only) particle

    proton baryon 0.98 uud 938 Rutherford 1919

    neutron baryon 0.94 udd 940 Chadwick 1932

    pion meson 0.14 ud 135 Yukawa 1947

    kaon meson 0.49 us 495 Yukawa 1947

    electron lepton 0.0005 0.5 Thomson 1897

    muon lepton 0.11 106 1937

    neutrino lepton 0 0 1956

    photon gauge boson 0 0 1923

    gluon gauge boson 0 0 1979

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    21. Which lepton was the rst to be discovered?

    A. proton

    B electron

    C. muon

    D. neutrino

    22. Which sub-atomic particle has the greatest rest energy?

    A. baryon

    B. proton

    C. neutron

    D. kaon

    23. Who was the rst scientist to discover a sub-atomic particle?

    A. Dalton

    B. Thomson

    C. Rutherford

    D. Chadwick

    24. Which classication group contains sub-atomic particles of the

    greatest mass?

    A. protons

    B. baryons

    C. mesons

    D. leptons

    25. Which sub-atomic particle was discovered in the decade

    between the decades in which Rutherford and Chadwick made

    their discoveries?

    A. electron

    B. neutron

    C. proton

    D. photon

    24

    25

    21

    22

    23

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    The information on page 8 is reprinted here to help you answer the

    questions on page 11.

    Exactly 200 years ago a Manchester scientist called John Dalton showed that everything

    in the world is made out of tiny particles which he called atoms. About 100 years later

    Joseph Thomson and Ernest Rutherford, who also worked in Manchester, showed that

    atoms were made up of even smaller components these sub-atomic particles were

    called electrons, protons and neutrons.

    During the rest of the 20th Century many other sub-atomic particles were discovered and

    some of these are listed in the table. They are classied into groups according to theircharacteristic properties such as their mass or rest energy. These groups are shown in the

    table. The groups called baryonsand mesons together form a big group called hadrons.

    These hadrons are made up of even smaller particles called quarks which exist as one

    of three types called up, down and strange, usually abbreviated to u, dand s. Baryons

    contain three quarks e.g. a proton contains two up quarks and one down quark so its

    content is written as uud. Mesons contain only two quarks.

    Atoms and Sub-Atomic Particles

    Name of Classication Mass Quark Rest Name of Year

    sub-atomic group content Energy person who of

    particle (hadrons discovered Discovery

    only) particle

    proton baryon 0.98 uud 938 Rutherford 1919

    neutron baryon 0.94 udd 940 Chadwick 1932

    pion meson 0.14 ud 135 Yukawa 1947

    kaon meson 0.49 us 495 Yukawa 1947

    electron lepton 0.0005 0.5 Thomson 1897

    muon lepton 0.11 106 1937

    neutrino lepton 0 0 1956

    photon gauge boson 0 0 1923

    gluon gauge boson 0 0 1979

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    26. Which sub-atomic particle was discovered in the rst half of the 20th

    Century and is neither a hadron nor a gauge boson?

    A. photon

    B. gluon

    C. muonD. neutrino

    27. Of the four hadrons in the table, which one has neither the greatest mass

    nor the greatest rest energy nor the least of these quantities?

    A. proton

    B. neutron

    C. pion

    D. kaon

    28. Which one of these statements about the sub-atomic particles listed in

    the table is not true?

    A. The hadron with the lowest mass is the pion.

    B. The particle which was discovered most recently is the gluon.

    C. The rest energy of a kaon is less than that of a muon.

    D. All hadrons contain at least one up quark.

    29. A lithium atom contains 3 protons, 4 neutrons and 3 electrons. How

    many down quarks are present in this atom?

    A. 7

    B. 10

    C. 11

    D. 21

    30. Which one of these statements about the sub-atomic particles listed in

    the table is not true?

    A. All mesons have greater masses than leptons.

    B. Only one lepton has the same rest energy as a gauge boson.

    C. Every baryon contains one more quark than a meson.

    D. All hadrons have rest energies at least twice that of any lepton.

    29

    30

    26

    27

    28

    Question

    TotalC

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    40

    39

    38

    37

    36

    Ten words have been missed out of the following passage. Each

    missing word has been given a number in the passage. At the bottom of

    this page is a list of words, each one of which is identied by a capital

    letter. We want you to choose the word from the list which BEST ts

    the meaning of the passage in each of the ten places. In the numberedanswer-spaces provided, write the capital letter which identies the

    word you choose.

    D.

    34

    35

    Was Gradus really a suitable person for the job as an assassin? Yes and no.

    One day in his early (31), when he worked as (32) boy for a large and

    depressing rm of cardboard (33) manufacturers, he quietly helped three

    companions to ambush a local lad whom they wished to beat up for winning a

    gleaming (34) at a fair. Young Gradus obtained an (35) and directed

    the felling of a tree. It crashed improperly, though not quite (36) the

    country lane down which their carefree prey was to ride in the growing dusk.

    The poor lad who was (37) along towards the spot where those roughs

    crouched was a slim delicate-looking fellow, and one must have been (38)

    indeed to begrudge him his harmless enjoyment of his new prize. Curiously

    enough, while they were lying in wait, Gradus, our future killer, fell asleep in a

    ditch and thus (39) the brief affray during which two of the attackers were

    knuckledusted and knocked out by the brave young man, and the third run

    over and (40) for life.

    A blocking J youth

    B axe K second

    C egg L motor-cycle

    D missed M cruel

    E energetically N whizzing

    F crippled P enjoyed

    G messenger Q turnip

    H choir R box

    From Pale Fire after Vladimir Nabokov

    31

    32

    33

    Question

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    E.

    Read this poem carefully and then answer the questions by writing A, B,

    C or D in the appropriate answer-spaces. The poem is reprinted on page

    16 to help you when you are working on the questions on page 17.

    Earth has not anything to show more fair:

    Dull would he be of soul who could pass by

    A sight so touching in its majesty:

    This City now doth, like a garment, wear

    The beauty of the morning; silent, bare,

    Ships, towers, domes, theatres and temples lie

    Open unto the elds, and to the sky;

    All bright and glittering in the smokeless air.

    Never did sun more beautifully steep

    In his rst splendour, valley, rock or hill;

    Neer saw I, never felt, a calm so deep!

    The river glideth at his own sweet will:

    Dear God! the very houses seem asleep;

    And all that mighty heart is lying still.

    The poet describes the city of London, as observed from a

    bridge over the River Thames.

    Composed Upon Westminster Bridge, September 3, 1802.

    5

    10

    by William Wordsworth

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    44

    45

    41. At what time of the day is the scene described?

    A. Early morning, shortly after sunrise.

    B. Late morning, just before noon.

    C. Mid-afternoon, at roughly 3.00 p.m.

    D. At evening just before sunset.

    42. As the word is used in the poem, fair (line 1) means:

    A. unbiased.

    B. acceptable.

    C. honest.

    D. beautiful.

    43. Which of the following comes closest in meaning to dullof soul

    (line 2) as the phrase is used in the poem?

    A. Corrupt in spirit.

    B. In a slight hurry.

    C. Unresponsive to beauty.

    D. Colourless and in need of a spot of paint.

    44. This sight is touching (line 3) because it:

    A. seems so close you think that you might be able to reach out

    and touch it.

    B. reminds the poet of the sad fate of a majestic king who has

    lost his throne.

    C. strongly affects the emotions.

    D. looks as if it is in need of improvement or touching up.

    45. The comparison like a garment (line 4) suggests that:

    A. the beauty of the morning may not last; like a piece of

    clothing it can be taken off.

    B. a pall of smoke over the city can be beautiful, like a black

    velvet cloak.

    C. the city has a touching, worn-out beauty, like a favourite old

    piece of jewellery.

    D. the poet is looking at the part of the city where the garmentindustry is centred.

    41

    42

    43

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    The poem on page 14 is reprinted here to help you answer the questions

    on page 17.

    Earth has not anything to show more fair:

    Dull would he be of soul who could pass by

    A sight so touching in its majesty:

    This City now doth, like a garment, wear

    The beauty of the morning; silent, bare,

    Ships, towers, domes, theatres and temples lie

    Open unto the elds, and to the sky;

    All bright and glittering in the smokeless air.

    Never did sun more beautifully steep

    In his rst splendour, valley, rock or hill;

    Neer saw I, never felt, a calm so deep!

    The river glideth at his own sweet will:

    Dear God! the very houses seem asleep;

    And all that mighty heart is lying still.

    The poet describes the city of London, as observed from a

    bridge over the River Thames.

    Composed Upon Westminster Bridge, September 3, 1802.

    5

    10

    by William Wordsworth

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    49

    50

    46. Lines 9-10 are included to suggest:

    A. the scene is as beautiful as any you would nd in the countryside.

    B. the city in 1802 contained many valleys, rocks and hills.

    C. the sun is steeply rising, creating an optical illusion.

    D. any second splendour could never be as beautiful as the rst one.

    47. The movement of the river (line 12) is described as:

    A. spilling over its banks as though it were wilful, but in its own sweet

    way.

    B. owing gently as though at its own contented pace.

    C. suggesting that God moves in mysterious ways.

    D. gliding the ships along, loaded with sugar, on the early morning tide.

    48. When the poet writes Dear God! the very houses seem asleep (line 13):

    A. he is giving a wake-up call that Londons houses need much

    improvement.

    B. he suggests the ramshackle houses are about to topple in the

    Thames.

    C. he emphasises how peaceful, like people asleep, the houses seem.

    D. he wants us to think of the fairy tale of the Sleeping Beauty.

    49. Which one of the following aspects of city life does not appear in the

    poem?

    A. Quietness and tranquillity.

    B. A magnicent kind of beauty.

    C. The brightness of the sunshine.

    D. The bustle of the crowds.

    50. that mighty heart (line 14) refers to:

    A. Dear God.

    B. the river.

    C. the city of London.

    D. the very houses.

    47

    48

    46

    Question

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    51

    F.

    In these questions you must follow the instructions carefully and write

    your answers clearly.

    In questions 51 and 52 write down the answer as a single word.

    In questions 53 to 55 write down the answer as a single letter.

    51. Which one of these words does not mean kind?

    considerate benevolent helpful generous miserly

    52. Which one of these words is the opposite ofheavy?

    easy empty light misty white

    53. Write down the rst letter of the word in this list which is not a type

    of book

    encyclopaedia novel dictionary biography observatory

    54. Write down the second letter of the word in this list which is

    opposite to late.

    time early now then never

    55. Write down the last letter of the word which is most different from all

    the others.

    foal horse calf kitten puppy cub

    52

    53

    54

    55

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    In these questions you must follow the instructions carefully.

    In questions 56 write down the answer as a single letter.

    In questions 57 to 60 follow the instructions exactly.

    56. Write down the middle letter of the word meaning something liked

    best of all, which can be made using each of these nine letters

    a e f i o r t u v

    57. In this set of words place a tick in the box under the two words which

    are metals.

    marble slate silver cutlery jewellery steel

    58. In this list of words underline the two words which are items of

    stationery.

    statue letterbox envelope platform paragraph postcard

    59. In this list of words draw a ring around the word which means the same

    as the word which already has a ring round it.

    carton drink container joke drawing buggy

    60. In this list of words cross out the two words which are not a type of

    animal.

    otter beaver bare mole dear weasel

    56

    Question

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    - 22 -

    G.

    from The AA Book of the Countryside

    The simplest way in which one animal can hide from another is to

    be indistinguishable from its surroundings. The streaked bittern disappears

    among reeds, the banded adder among the undergrowth and the brown

    woodland snail on tree bark. Some animals are capable of changing their

    colours to suit the surroundings. The stoat and mountain hare moult their

    brown summer coats for white winter ones.

    However well an animal merges with its surroundings, the solidness of its

    body may still betray it. As light shines from above its back is highlighted,its belly put in shadow. To counteract this effect, many animals have a

    dark-coloured back and a light-coloured belly. In most animals the demarcation

    between the two is gradual, as in the trout or rabbit. In the water shrew,

    however, it is strongly marked. As it swims on the surface of a pond, its

    slaty-black body merges with the water when seen from above. Looked at from

    below, from water into sunlight, its white belly is almost invisible.

    The professionals in the camouage act are the insects that pretend to be

    some inedible object. The angle shades moth has forewings patterned with

    angle shapes and the colour of dead leaves. When it rests by day among leaf

    litter, it is practically impossible to tell moth from leaves. But, to be completely

    successful, it must not only look like a leaf, it must act like one - uttering when

    there is a breeze, remaining still on a calm day.

    Some animals put on a terrifying act to frighten a predator away. If a bird

    penetrates the camouage of the eyed hawk-moth, the moth suddenly lifts

    its blotched-brown forewings to reveal two large round shapes or eye-spots

    on its hind wings. The startling effect on the predator gives the moth time to

    escape. The moth is playing on the birds fear of its own enemies, cats and

    owls, which it recognises by their eyes.

    Using colours not to camouage but to advertise is another way of scaringoff enemies. Vivid patterns of black, white, red and yellow are displayed as

    warning colours announcing the unpleasant taste or sting of the animal

    wearing them. A bird that has once eaten a cinnabar moth will avoid this

    foul-tasting insect for the rest of its life. It will associate the disagreeable

    taste with the distinctive crimson and black colours of the moth. The

    black-and-yellow body of the wasp says sting to the whole animal kingdom,

    not just men. In the long run, it pays the species to be conspicuous. Some

    wasps will be eaten by young birds, but the population as a whole will survive.

    5

    10

    15

    20

    25

    30

    35

    Hide and Seek in a World of Colour

    Read this passage carefully and then answer the questions by writing A, B,

    C or D in the appropriate answer-spaces. The passage is reprinted on page

    24 to help you when you are working on the questions on page 25.

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    - 23 -

    61. What does the writer say is the simplest way for one animal to hide from

    another?

    A. To appear to be something very common and unimportant.

    B. To surround itself with grass and leaves.

    C. To have colours or patterns which are very similar to its surroundings.D. To be nimble and quick in its movements.

    62. Which of these creatures is able to change its colour to suit its

    surroundings and the season?

    A. the streaked bittern

    B. the mountain hare

    C. the woodland snail

    D. the banded adder

    63. Which of these verbs is not directly connected with the idea of animals

    using camouage to hide themselves?

    A. to merge

    B. to disappear

    C. to penetrate

    D. to blend

    64. What does the writer mean when he says that solidness of the

    camouaged animals body may still betray it (line 7)?

    A. Light shining from above dazzles the animal, makes it unable to

    move, almost as if it were a statue.

    B. Other animals might signal its presence to a predator in the hope of

    feeding on it also.

    C. Light shining from above distinguishes the animal from its

    surroundings because its back is light and its underneath is dark.

    D. Light shining from above removes the shadows in which the animal is

    hiding, so forcing it out into the open.

    65. From the passage, it would appear that demarcation (line 10) means:

    A. the lack of marks on a well-camouaged creature, so making it

    almost invisible.

    B. the process of patterns gradually disappearing under the light shining

    from above.

    C. the line or zone of separation between the dark part of an animals

    body and the light part.

    D. the gradual, hidden movement of the creature through grass or on

    the surface of the water.

    63

    64

    65

    61

    62

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    - 24 -

    from The AA Book of the Countryside

    The simplest way in which one animal can hide from another is to

    be indistinguishable from its surroundings. The streaked bittern disappears

    among reeds, the banded adder among the undergrowth and the brown

    woodland snail on tree bark. Some animals are capable of changing their

    colours to suit the surroundings. The stoat and mountain hare moult their

    brown summer coats for white winter ones.

    However well an animal merges with its surroundings, the solidness of its

    body may still betray it. As light shines from above its back is highlighted,its belly put in shadow. To counteract this effect, many animals have a

    dark-coloured back and a light-coloured belly. In most animals the demarcation

    between the two is gradual, as in the trout or rabbit. In the water shrew,

    however, it is strongly marked. As it swims on the surface of a pond, its

    slaty-black body merges with the water when seen from above. Looked at from

    below, from water into sunlight, its white belly is almost invisible.

    The professionals in the camouage act are the insects that pretend to be

    some inedible object. The angle shades moth has forewings patterned with

    angle shapes and the colour of dead leaves. When it rests by day among leaf

    litter, it is practically impossible to tell moth from leaves. But, to be completely

    successful, it must not only look like a leaf, it must act like one - uttering when

    there is a breeze, remaining still on a calm day.

    Some animals put on a terrifying act to frighten a predator away. If a bird

    penetrates the camouage of the eyed hawk-moth, the moth suddenly lifts

    its blotched-brown forewings to reveal two large round shapes or eye-spots

    on its hind wings. The startling effect on the predator gives the moth time to

    escape. The moth is playing on the birds fear of its own enemies, cats and

    owls, which it recognises by their eyes.

    Using colours not to camouage but to advertise is another way of scaring

    off enemies. Vivid patterns of black, white, red and yellow are displayed as

    warning colours announcing the unpleasant taste or sting of the animal

    wearing them. A bird that has once eaten a cinnabar moth will avoid this

    foul-tasting insect for the rest of its life. It will associate the disagreeable

    taste with the distinctive crimson and black colours of the moth. The

    black-and-yellow body of the wasp says sting to the whole animal kingdom,

    not just men. In the long run, it pays the species to be conspicuous. Some

    wasps will be eaten by young birds, but the population as a whole will survive.

    5

    10

    15

    20

    25

    30

    35

    Hide and Seek in a World of Colour

    The passage on page 22 is reprinted here to help you answer the

    questions on page 25.

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    - 25 -

    END OF EXAMINATION

    66. Which creatures does the writer say are the professionals in the camouage

    act (line 15)?

    A. The insects which only pretend to camouage themselves but dont really.

    B. The insects which pretend to object to being regarded as inedible.

    C. The insects whose camouage skills are so amazing that people would pay

    money to see them perform.

    D. The insects which are shaped and patterned to look just like inedible

    objects.

    67. The angle shades moth is very good at camouaging itself from predators

    because:

    A. it not only looks remarkably like the surrounding leaves, it acts like them as

    well depending on whether it is windy or not.

    B. it is able to have the colour of dull brown leaves in autumn when it is windy,

    and of bright green leaves in the warm, still days of summer.

    C. it has the uncanny ability to appear so still, whatever the weather

    conditions, that it appears dead.

    D it is able to rest all day underneath the leaf litter, so preserving its energybefore uttering away when attacked.

    68. The eyed hawk-moth will often avoid being attacked by a bird because:

    A. the moth confronts the bird eye-to-eye, intimidating it and so giving it time to

    escape.

    B. the eye spots on the moths hind wings startle the bird by reminding it of the

    eyes of its own enemies, so giving the moth time to escape.

    C. the moths large eyes and excellent vision spot the bird early, so giving it

    time to escape at startling speed.

    D. the bird is startled by its own eyes reected in the moths hind wings, sogiving the moth time to escape.

    69. What does the writer mean when he says that some creatures use colours to

    advertise (line 27)?

    A. They use bright colours to signal the presence of an enemy as a warning to

    each other.

    B. They use bright colours to sell themselves to a potential predator.

    C. They use bright colours to warn predators that they taste unpleasant or that

    they sting.

    D. They fail in the act of camouage, their bright colours giving them away.

    70. In the last two sentences (lines 34 35) the writer suggests:

    A. having bright colours works for birds, on balance, because it allows them to

    prey more successfully on wasps.

    B. while the wasps warning act might work at rst, even young birds come to

    realise that wasps can be eaten so camouage would be a better option.

    C. most young wasps are eaten by birds, allowing the bird population as a

    whole to survive.

    D. having bright colours works for the wasp, on the whole, because most birds

    will come to realise that eating them is not a good idea.

    68

    69

    70

    66

    67

    Question

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