Pupe Ornek Sinav Yeni Format Key
Pupe Ornek Sinav Yeni Format Key
Pupe Ornek Sinav Yeni Format Key
LECTURE 1:
You are going to listen to a television news report
about STRESS twice. Answer the following questions
while youre listening to the lecture, Now you have 2
minutes to look at the statements. (5x10= 50 pts)
7. Almost 50 per cent of the French think they have lost control over their lives.
8. The Germans
b. The US
44 people lost their lives because of the SARS disease in Canada in the
year
2003.
PUPE / MAPRE 4
NAME: __________________________________
DEPARTMENT: ___________________________
NUMBER: _________________
(3 pts each)
PUPE / MAPRE 4
But despite these advantages, Egypt has its own conservation problems. The
tomb sites are well-preserved, but the towns and cities that supplied them are not,
and much less is known about them. The reason for this is simple: Ancient Egyptians
had to live near their water supplies. They had to water their crops, get rid of their
rubbish and they travelled on the water so towns were usually built along the Nile.
3
Buildings were made from Nile mud. This made them easy and cheap to build,
and they could easily be pulled down and replaced. Added to this the Nile floods
regularly, so buildings were sometimes washed away. All this means that very little is
known about these sites. Also, it has been traditional to build new towns on top of the
ancient ones, thus burying valuable information. This problem is particularly bad in
the Nile delta so it was very tempting to use old buildings to create new ones. This
problem did not exist, however, in southern Egypt where there was plenty of stone.
This meant that new buildings could be built without having to destroy older buildings.
Because it is so fertile, the delta has always been home to the majority of Egyptians
and today the demand for building and farming land is beginning to threaten
archaeological sites.
4
the destruction of ancient historical sites, it is too late to save some of them. Formerly
important sites such as the cities of Sais and Bubastis have been completely
destroyed. Threats to ancient sites have included the building of the Aswan Dam and
extensive flooding in the 1960s, but these were overcome by an international rescue
project. Since 1992, however, the building of the el-Salaam Canal has presented a
new threat to these ancient sites and this has resulted in the organisation of another
rescue project.
PUPE / MAPRE 4
PREVENTION / PRECAUTION
SOLVE
11. Find a word or phrase in the text that means the same as the following:
a
BARE
FERTILE
BRING IN / BROUGHT IN
PUPE / MAPRE 4
TEXT 1
_________ / 45 pts
TEXT 2
Some sentences have been removed from the following text. The missing sentences
are stated at the bottom of the page. Decide which numbered gap each one should
go. There is one extra sentence which you do not need to use. Write your answers in
the space provided. (5x7=35 pts)
MUSCLE POWERED FLIGHT
People have probably dreamed of flying through the air
like birds since the beginning of time. (1) __C__
As an aircraft flies, the drag, or air resistance, grows
bigger as the speed increases. After the speed passes a
certain point, the drag is so great that no human could
possibly make the machine fly. Making the plane fly softly
was the first priority. The low speed dictates the width and size of the wings. (2)
__D__Every component has to be as light as possible but also strong enough to withstand
the forces of flight. In 1959, a British industrialist named Kremer announced a prize of about
$ 10,000 for the first aircraft to fly around a 1-mile, figure-eight course using muscle power
alone. (3) __F__ When this plane won the Kremer prize in August, 1977, after a flight of just
over a mile, it weighed a mere 207 pounds, including the 137-pound pilot! Incredibly, this
70-pound plane had a wing that was as long as a jet-liners. (4) __B__ The journey was
over 22 miles in two hours and forty-nine minutes.
A world champion cyclist can produce a steady 450 watts of power for at least an
hour. (5) __H__ Over five minutes, most of us could not even produce 250 watts, which is
not enough to keep Gossamer Albatross, the plane crossing the English Channel, flying.
In 1988, scientists from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) built and
flew a muscle-powered plane from Crete to the island of Santorini. (6) __A__
Perhaps, in the future, muscle-powered flight will become available to those who are
reasonably fit. (7) __G__ Ultra-lightweight planes, powered by a battery and electric motor,
could act as high-altitude reconnaissance platforms and carry out research into the upper
atmosphere.
A. That was a distance of 74 miles at an average speed of 19 miles per hour.
B. Two years later, an even lighter plane became the first muscle-powered aircraft to cross
the English Channel.
C. But strangely enough, it was only after the invention of the jet engine and rocketship to
the moon that sustained flight powered by human muscles became possible.
D. The weight of the aircraft is also important.
E. The crash of a muscle-powered plane was in 1964.
F. Almost twenty years later, Paul McCready and Peter Lissaman received the reward in
their lightweight plane, Gossamer Condor .
G. Pedal-driven planes may become more popular than hang-gliders or microlights.
H. A healthy strong person can, in comparison, achieve a much higher point by pedalling
hard but only for a few seconds.
TEXT 3
PUPE / MAPRE 4
TEXT 2
_________ / 35 pts
For questions 1- 9, read the following passage and circle the correct answer.
(4 pts each)
John James Audubon, nineteenth-century artist and
naturalist, is known as one of the foremost authorities on North
American birds. Born in Les Cayes, Haiti, in 1785, Audubon was
raised in France and studied art under French artist Jacques-Louis
David. After settling on his fathers Pennsylvania estate at the age of
eighteen, he first began to study and paint birds.
In his young adulthood, Audubon undertook numerous
enterprises, generally without a tremendous amount of success; at
various times during his life he was involved in a mercantile
business, a lumber and grist mill, a taxidermy
business, and a
school. His general mode of operating a business was to leave it
either unattended or in the hands of a partner and take off on
excursions through the wilds to paint the natural life that he saw. His
business career came to end in 1819 when he was jailed for debt and
forced to file for bankruptcy.
It was at that time that Audubon began seriously to pursue the
dream of publishing a collection of his paintings of birds. For the next
six years he painted birds in their natural habitats while his wife
worked as a teacher to support the family. His birds of America, which
included engravings of 435 of his colourful and lifelike water colours,
was published in parts during the period from 1826 to 1838 in England. After the
success of the English editions, American editions of his work were published in
1839, and his fame and fortune were ensured.
1. This passage is mainly about
a) north American birds
b) Audubons route to success
as a painter of birds
c) the
works
that
Audubon
published
d) Audubons preference for travel
in natural habitats
2. In the second paragraph, the
author mainly discusses
a) how Audubon developed his
painting style
b) Audubons involvement in a
mercantile business
c) where Audubon went on his
excursions
d) Audubons
unsuccessful
business practices
3. Audubon decided not to
continue to pursue business
when
a) he was injured in an accident at
a grist mill.
b) he decided to study art in France.
c) he was put in prison because
of debts.
PUPE / MAPRE 4
1. a. in
2. a. to going
3. a. visit
4. a. raised
5. a. fares
6. a. ask for
7. a. get along with
8. a. Besides
9. a. single
10. a. to talking
11. a. offered
b. at
b. going
b. not visiting
b. arisen
b. fees
b. insist
b. get on with
b. Additional
b. alone
b. to talk
b. have offered
c. by
c. go
c. havent visited
c. risen
c. bills
c. ask
c. match
c. Beside
c. lonely
c. talk
c. had been offered
12. a. do
13. a. used to
14. a. what
15. a. of making
16. a. leave
17. a. in
b. make
b. are used to
b. best
b. to make
b. left
b. on
c. give
c. get used to
c. how
c. by making
c. will leave
c. of
d. of
d. to go
d. not visit
d. lifted
d. fines
d. demand
d. fit
d. Except
d. only
d. talking
d. have been
offered
d. put
d. got used to
d. which
d. make
d. will have left
d. at
12. No, its not rue. I didnt wear Sues skirt! said Peggy.
denied
Peggy DENIED WEARING / HAVING WORN Sues skirt.
13. The speech was so rude that we all felt insulted.
such
It was SUCH A RUDE REMARK THAT we all felt insulted.
14. He watched the film Arachnophobia although he was afraid of spiders.
despite
He watched the film Arachnophobia DESPITE HIS FEAR OF SPIDERS.
15. He has never disappointed his family.
down
He has never LET HIS FAMILY DOWN.
16. The film which won an award is being shown on TV tonight.
winning
An AWARD WINNING FILM IS BEING shown on TV tonight.
17. The owner established the company in 2001.
up
The company WAS ESTABLISHED BY the owner in 2001.
(2x16=32 pts)
Read the text below. Use the word given in capitals at the end of each line to form
a word that fits in the space in the same line. No points will be given for the
misspelled words.
Nowadays, there is a (1) _______ of career opportunities in the media.
Due to the (2) _______ in the media industry, the graduates have the
chance to find good jobs. There are (3) _______ good job opportunities
at TV or radio channels, advertising companies, newspapers or magazines.
However, the possibility of finding a good job (4) _______ on the
qualifications of the graduates. In order to work efficiently in such a
competitive market, one should be quite energetic, intelligent, punctual
and (5) _______. (No need to mention the post graduate degree, computer
and language skills that a candidate should have). All of these qualifications
might (6) _______ a new graduate to start a career in the field.
VARY
DEVELOP
INCREDIBLE
Although the low salaries, difficult working conditions and the (7) _______
in the market might (8) _______ them from staying in the sector at the
beginning of their career, in the long run, they might get (9) _______
salaries provided that they (10) _______ appropriately and work hard
without considering the (11) _______ of the work hours. Everyone in the
market is aware of the (12) _______ high salaries of the famous
anchormen and anchorwomen.
COMPETE
COURAGEOUS
SATISFY
BEHAVIOUR
LONG
EXCEPT
DEPENDENCE
On the other hand, (15) _______ not all graduates find work easily as there
is still a lot of (16) _______ in the media industry, but things are improving.
FORTUNATE
EMPLOYEEE
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
VARIETY
DEVELOPMENTS
INCREDIBLY
DEPENDS
(SELF)CONFIDENT
ENABLE
COMPETITION
DISCOURAGE
DEPENDENCE
CONFIDENCE
ABLE
INDIVIDUAL
SATISFACTORY /
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
SATISFYING
BEHAVE
LENGTH
EXCEPTIONALLY
INDEPENDENT
INDIVIDUALLY
UNFORTUNATELY
UNEMPLOYMENT