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8/3/2019 TSL042 [Grammar 2]
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CONFIDENTIAL ED/APR 2008/TSL042
UNIVERSITI TEKNOLOGI MARA
FINAL EXAMINATION
COURSE
COURSE CODE
EXAMINATION
TIME
: GRAMMAR II
: TSL042
: APRIL 2008
: 3 HOURS
INSTRUCTIONS TO CANDIDATES
1. This question paper consists of five (5) parts: PART A
PARTB
PARTC
PARTD
PARTE
(Text 1 - 1 0 Questions)(Text 2 - 1 0 Questions)(Text 3 - 1 0 Questions)(Text 1 - 1 0 Questions)(Text 2 - 1 5 Questions)(Text 3 - 1 5 Questions)
(Text 1-10 Questions)(Text 2 - 2 0 Questions)(Text 3 - 2 0 Questions)(2 Texts - 1 Question)(10 Questions)
2. Answer ALL questions in the Answer Booklet. Start each part on a new page.
3. Do not bring any material into the examination room unless permission is given by theinvigilator.
4. Please check to make sure that this examination pack consists of:i) the Question Paper
ii) an Answer Booklet - provided by the Faculty
DO N OT TURN THIS PAGE UNTIL YOU A RE TOLD TO DO SO
This examination paper consists of 19 printed pagesHak Cipta Universiti Teknologi MARA CONFIDENTIAL
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PART A (30 MARKS)
INSTRUCTIONS: Read texts 1 to 3 carefully. Write the correct pronoun in each of the blanksprovided. Write all your answers in the answer booklet.
TEXT1
Long ago, it was said that a stiff rivalry took place between two leaders called Datuk Banda
and Datuk Kelana, in Kampung Pelegong. According to Pakcik Haji Abu Hassan
(1) was our foster father for the stay, this territorial dispute went on for a long
time. Wanting to end the quarrel, Datuk Banda, being a modest man, said (2)would leave with his supporters.
Kampung Pelegong is located in the Labu district of Negeri Sembilan and can be reached by
car or train. (3) has about 36 families and due to its serenity and agricultural
activities, (4) was chosen as a suitable site for homestay programmes. Sugar
cane fields and fruit plantations provide revenue for its residents while providing useful
experiences for tourist.
The forested hills are home to many wild animals (5) frequently visit the
village. Lucky visitors will be delighted to see creatures seeking for food here. However, the
villagers will not share the same sentiments as the animals steal their fruits and crops.
(6) is where the Pelegong is still being used to frighten the creatures.
The village now has 30 families catering for tourists (7) wish to experience its
homestay programme. The programme helps supplement their earnings while their crops
provide (8) food as well fresh produce for visitors.
More than 15 types of fruits including rambutan, durian, and langsat make this a local fruit
haven during the fruiting season and (9) is the best time to visit and stay
here. Among the entertainment presented to (10) during our visit was a
traditional dance performance called Endang.
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TEXT 2
Then, just as the teacher was beginning a lesson, Totto-chan would suddenly go and sit bythe window. To Totto-chan's delight, there was a passing band of garishly dressed street
musicians. When Totto-chan called to (1) , the street musicians would come
right over to the window. Whereupon, said the teacher, Totto-chan would announce to the
whole room, "Here they are!" and all the children would crowd by the window and call out to
the musicians.
"Play (2) for us ," Totto-chan would say, and the little band, which usually
passed the school quietly, would put on a rousing performance for the pupils with
(3) clarinet, gongs, drums, and samisen, while the poor teacher could do little
but wait patiently for the din to stop. Finally, when the music finished, the musicians would
leave and the students would go back to (4) seats. All except Totto-chan.
When the teacher asked, "Why are you still at the window?" Totto-chan replied, quite
seriously, "Another band might come by. And, anyway, (5) would be such a shame
if the others came back and we missed (6) ."
"You can see how disruptive this is, can't you?" said the teacher emotionally. Mother was
beginning to sympathize with (7) when she began again in an even shriller voice,
"And then, besides..." "What else does she do?" asked Mother, with a sinking feeling. "What
else?" exclaimed the teacher. "If I could even count the things she does I wouldn't be asking
you to take (8) away." The teacher composed (9) a little, and
looked straight at Mother. "Yesterday, Totto-chan was standing at the window as usual, and
I went on with the lesson thinking she was just waiting for the street musicians, when she
suddenly called out to (10) , 'What are you doing?' From where I was I
couldn't see who she was talking to, and I wondered what was going on. Then she called out
again, "What are you doing?'
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TEXT 3
Psychologists have long known that people can solve (1) problems at work and
home by "sleeping on it." Deirdre Barrett, PhD, an assistant psychology professor at Harvard
Medical School and editor of the journal Dreaming, advises individuals to ponder questions
just before falling asleep (Should I take this job? Should I marry that guy?) and then let the
subconscious provide the answers. "I've known artists looking for inspiration
(2) simply dream up a future show of their art and wake up with plenty of new
painting ideas," says Barrett. "More and more people are learning these techniques to
control (3) dreams."
Some researchers believe that (4) can guide your dreams while
(5) are sleeping. In recent years, Stephen LaBerge, PhD, has pioneered a
way of directing the sleeping mind through "lucid dreaming," in which a sleeping person
realizes he or she is dreaming while it is happening. Lucid dreamers can experience fantasy
adventures like flying to the moon, traveling through time or driving in a car while being
fully aware that (6) are dreaming. "It's like a poor man's Tahiti," says LaBerge, a
psycho-physiologist who directs the Lucidity Institute in Palo Alto, California. "Just being in a
lucid dream is a turn-on for people."
According to LaBerge, lucid dreamers can use the experience for a variety of purposes:
problem solving, developing creative ideas and healing. Patricia Keelin, a 55-year-old
graphic cartographer from northern California, has used lucid dreaming
(7) for everything from talking to her long-dead father to gorging on
sweets. "Chocolate always tastes better in a lucid dream because (8) don't have
to worry about the calories," she says. A weak swimmer in her waking life, she often likes to
go skin diving when she realizes she's having a lucid dream, diving to the bottom of the
dream ocean without worrying about breathing (or her swimming skills). "It's exhilarating,"
she says. "Lucid dreaming is great because (9) is free and available to
(10) "
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PART B (40 MARKS)
INSTRUCTIONS: Read texts 1 to 3 carefully. Fill in the blanks with the correct form of thewords in brackets. If an equative, comparative or superlative form isrequired, provide any necessary additional words. Answer all questions inthe answer booklet.
TEXT1
Local natives once found this mountain an eerie place. It was believed that the spirits of the
Kadazandusun ancestors dwell on this mountain, repelling anyone from exploring it
hundreds of years back. The belief still stands today for 'Akinabalu', is the revered place of
the dead. This is an (1) (impress) mountain of magnificent characters,
enchanting its (2) (success) conquerors with its massive granite excursion
which is still rising about 5mm every year. Being the (3) (young) non-
volcanic mountain between mainland South East Asia and New Guinea, Mount Kinabalu in
Sabah stands proud to proclaim the highest peak of South East Asia at 4,095.2 meters.
Sir Hugh Low, a British colonial officer in 1851 made the first attempt to scale the peak after
a compromise with the locals with the (4) (oblige) ceremony of
sacrificing 7 white chickens and offerings of eggs prayers to appease the spirits prior to the
climb attempt. Today, it is declared as one of the world's (5) (prestige)
heritage. People from around the world flock to Sabah to see the wonder of its remnant
peaks and pinnacles carved by ice escape grinding 9 million years ago. The evidence of
glaciations such as striation, crescent gorge and (6) (shatter) marks was
grandeur enough to ooze me out from Kuala Lumpur city to see it with my own eyes and to
feel the pride and joy of standing at the top of South East Asia.
Together with my three colleagues, we were all set to take the challenge to conquer Mount
Kinabalu. The only fear lurking was the unkind weather that might withhold our climb to the
summit from Laban Rata.. We were greeted with (7) (drizzle) rain when
we arrived. The kind cab driver (8) (willing) drove us to the shopping mall to
buy ponchos before adjourning to the Kinabalu National Park. He too went shopping at the
fish market and so the journey to the park that took 2 hours drive was accompanied by an
unpalatable (9) (fish) smell. Bountiful pictures of flowing mountains adorned
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both sides of our view through the (10) (drip) wet window as we passed
Menggatal, Tepilok and Tuaran heading towards the Ranau town.
TEXT 2
The next morning, we took a ride through the village, eager to discover the village on our
own. We chose a nearby food stall for a breakfast of (1) (fresh) cooked nasi
lemak with (2) (fresh) baby squid sambal and rich, belanak fish in coconut
gravy. Then we ventured through the endless squares of paddy fields, driving
(3) (slow) over the narrow roads that separated them. Along the way we metwith a family, engrossed in playing kites just in front of their (4) (wood)
house. The father, a teacher, also made and sold his homemade kites from his home.
Indeed that was the (5) (good) place for flying kites, especially after the harvest
season. We spent much of the morning just enjoying the slow drive and taking in the
(6) (nostalgia) rural scenes.
At 10a.m., we met up with our (7) (adopt) father for a visit to a nearby
mango farm. We were greeted by Mizan Adnan, owner of the 2 1/2 acre orchard, and treated
to some (8) (fresh) cut mangoes, sweet and
(9) (refresh) mango juice. The recent mango harvest had been abundant,
with each tree producing about 70 kilos of fruit. The varieties of mangoes grown here include
the chokanan, manjangkau and harum manis, for which the area is famous.
"You don't see lots of mangoes on the trees right now because it's the end of its
(10) (fruit) season" explained Cikgu Mizan. We looked at him
(11) (quizzical) because the trees seemed heavy with fruits. Cultivation of
mangoes is fast becoming a popular (12) (agriculture) activity here, next to
paddy farming.
Later that afternoon, we were pleasantly surprised with a brief performance of kuda kepang,
which included more (13) (humour) version of the 'barongan', a
performance art that originated from Indonesia.
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That night, Haji Sihani took us out for dinner at a nearby restaurant on stilts, right on the
edge of the sea. Always with another story to share, he suddenly leaned closer and said in a
(14) (hush) voice, "Have you heard of the dekut-dekutbird? They're called
dekut-dekutbecause that's the sound they make. In the past, the locals used to snare them
for its meat. There's a scary story behind the snaring of these birds..." he said. "But you'll
have to come again next time to hear the rest of that story." He finally added with a smile,
leaving us to wonder about this (15) (mysterious-sound) fowl.
TEXT 3
My jaunt to Langkawi recently was indeed a rediscovery of the verdant beauty and wonder
that we have in our country. Our tour guide's relentless banter intermingled with
(1) (occasion) jokes and anecdotes has kept us
(2) (entertain) right through the entire bus ride. Our first stop was the
Langkawi Bird Paradise in Kampung Belanga Pecah. A beautiful blue parrot perched on top
of a makeshift platform greeted us at the entrance. I was half expecting the parrot to blurt a
few words of greeting but (3) (strange), it was rather quiet seemingly
(4) (unperturb) by our presence.
The 1st bird park to have a fully (5) (cover) walkway, it boasts 2,500 birds of
over 150 exotic species. The villagers have helped to capture some of the birds. To protect
the species, they need a permit to do so since some of these birds may have migrated from
other countries as far as Africa, Europe and such. I gaped at the beautiful and
(6) (intrigue) looking species of birds. Never considered bird watching
as my favourite pastime, but I somewhat understood why people could get addicted to the
hobby. It was (7) (enlighten) to note that the male birds are more
beautiful and (8) (multi-colour) compared to their female mates.
Our next stop was at the Summer Palace, located at the foot of Gunung Mat Chincang and
Gunung Raya, the (9) (expensive) movie set in Langkawi. It
occupies an area of 675 sq. metres and is 16.6 metres high. The Summer Palace consists
of four sections; the structure of which resembles similar structures which can be found
commonly in Thailand; consisting of Jetty Pavilion, Main Building, Courtyard and Anna's
House.
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An (10) (impression) site, the whole building was constructed with 95%
of wood and is surrounded by lush tropical greenery. It was constructed by Hollywood's 20th
Century Fox production for the movie 'Anna and the King'.
(11) (Interesting), soon after the production, the filmmakers wanted
to burn down the structures. But the state government stepped in and prevented them from
doing so, and reconstructed to make it permanent to what it is today with additional facilities
such as restaurant, souvenir shop, ticket counter and a pavilion.
Just a short kilometre away from the Summer Palace, we proceeded to the Langkawi Cable
Car. It was one of the (12) (unforgettable) rides of my life. My fear
of flying was nothing compared to the ride on top Langkawi's second tallest mountain,
Gunung Mat Chincang. Truly an amazing feat! I could see the 360-degree superb view of the
whole of Langkawi!
Throughout the ride, I was wondering if it is possible for one to hold their breath, both due to
fascination as well as fright for heights. I just could not decide which was
(13) (overwhelming). There are two platforms where
passengers can walk on. It was indeed (14) (soothe) to be up on the
mountain as cold wind and fresh air swept my city troubles away. Timely enough my gondola
mates decided it was time to descend to the base station. We were exhausted! The next
day, we took off for Pulau Payar, an island slightly off the coast of Langkawi. The island is a
well-known haven for snorkellers, one can see hundreds of fishes, a myriad of colours and
sizes, underneath the jetty, it's as if a (15) (welcome) committee is
ready to greet visitors to the island.
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PART C (50 MARKS)
INSTRUCTIONS: Read texts 1 to 3 carefully. Fill in the blanks with the SIMPLE PRESENT,SIMPLE PAST, PRESENT PROGRESSIVE, PAST PROGRESSIVE,PRESENT PERFECT, PAST PERFECT, PRESENT PERFECTPROGRESSIVE OR PAST PERFECT PROGRESSIVE TENSE of theverbs in parentheses. Use the active or passive voice for each answer.Make sure the verb agrees with the subject of the sentence. Answer allquestions in the answer booklet.
TEXT1
Another seminar on jobless graduates (1) (see) another bout of fingerpointing and suggestions.
The pessimistic tone at the recent seminar on Higher Education and Graduate Employability
"New Directions, Trends and Challenges", organised by the Higher Education Ministry
(2) (suggest) that solutions may take a while. As Higher Education
Department director-general Datuk Professor Hassan Said puts it: "It is not a new issue".
"What is new and disturbing is the tenacious nature of the problem. In the past, the problem
was more cyclical and demand-related in nature, but with the growing job mismatch in
Malaysia, it (3) (appear) now that the problem of unemployment is more
structural." Hassan spoke on "An Overview of Higher Education Strategic Planning and
Graduate Employability" at the seminar.
Malaysian Employers' Federation (MEF) statistics reveal that there are currently 24,000
fresh graduates who are jobless. Yet the marketing and creative fields
(4) (look) for fresh brains and ideas.
However, these opportunities (5) (not, take) up because of graduates' poor
communication skills and lack of confidence, says Azizah Talib, an economist with the MEF.
She warns of greater unemployment if this ongoing problem is not addressed.
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Azizah was among four panellists who (6) (discuss) issues and strategies on
bridging the gap between university-industry linkages at the seminar.
The other panellists were Professor Emeritus Datuk Dr Zawawi Ismail and Malaysian
Development Institute director Datuk Professor Dr. Noor Azlan Ghazali. All panellists
(7) (agree) that there is a mismatch between industry requirements and
the quality of graduates churned out by Malaysian public and private tertiary institutions.
Equine Capital Berhad executive director Datuk Patrick Lim says a mismatch between
industry requirements and graduate quality does exist and he (8) (blame)
tertiary institutions in Malaysia for the current state of affairs.
Universities are more knowledge-based whereas the job market is more productivity-based.
At the moment, employers (9) (look) for problem solvers and few local
fresh graduates have the necessary skills to provide solutions.
Lim says a greater level of convergence is needed between industry and academia.
"There must be a mechanism that (10) (enable) students to be placed in
industry longer than six months and a dialogue must be encouraged between industry and
academia to develop a more industry-friendly curriculum."
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TEXT 2
"I need a holiday badly," I mumbled while trying to manoeuvre my way through the dreadfulafternoon traffic. The unpredictable weather, endless workload at the office and erratic traffic
conditions (1) (begin) to take its toll.
Back at the office, and suitably weary, I (2) (pleasantly, surprise) as
there was, on my desk, an invitation for a full-sponsored trip around Selangor. Well, this
could be it - my long awaited and much deserved break. And the best part was, I didn't have
to spend a single cent!
What really (3) (attract) me to the invite was it included a stay at Kuala
Langat Homestay programme. A relatively new and unknown concept, the home stay
programme (4) (allow) guests the experience of staying at a real
kampong home.
Soon after I found myself safely moving into one of the homes in Kampung Kanchong Darat,
Kuala Langat. My 'father' is a Tok Imam, a religious figure in the kampung who usually
(5) (lead) congregational prayers at the mosque. Thus, I have to keep on
reminding myself to behave at all times. My 'parents' went great length to make me feel
really at home. They only have one son who is already married and
(6) (now, stay) with his own family.
The kampung as a whole is one of the most beautifully landscaped living settlement I
(7) (ever, see) and had the chance to stay in. Why, it
(8) (name) "Best Kampung" at the national level competition in 2000. Its
closest competitor is Kampung Endah, which won the accolade for two years; back in 1990
and 1994.
The success of these two kampungs in the competition (9) (elevate)
their status and portfolio. The authorities decided to nominate the kampung as one of the
destinations worthy for tourists thus to play host to the homestay programme.
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For a city slicker like me, to wake up amidst the melodious sound of cheery morning birds
and beautiful lush greenery was simply heaven on earth. "This is definitely the escape I
(10) (look) for a long time ", I sighed contentedly to myself.
A soft knock on the door (11) (jolt) me out of my reverie. My "ayah"
(12) (poke) his head in at the small opening and said with a smile "It's
time to get up, son, the sun is up and breakfast (13) (wait)". I
quickly scrambled out of bed and smiled sheepishly, feeling a little embarrassed for being
caught daydreaming in bed.
Later at night, after dinner, I had a small chat with my "ayah" over a cup of hot steaming
coffee and fried ubi keledek (yam) on the veranda. With only the sound of crickets and
melodious voice of a Quran reciter in the distance, we (14) (chat) the night
away.
The next day we visited a tapioca and banana chips factory, where the workers
(15) (see) engrossed in peeling and slicing fruits to be fried and sold
commercially. While there, we took the opportunity to savour freshly fried savoury chips thatwere still deliciously warm and crunchy. It's rather funny to note that something that
(16) (cook) so simply can make us salivate so shamelessly.
We also toured Kampung Kanchong Darat and stopped at the winner for the "Best House"
category where beautiful orchids and herbs plant adorned its garden. A fishpond built amidst
the foliage (17) (reflect) the owner's deep affection and serious
contemplation in creating his little green haven. The house graced local magazine covers
many times over. The interior (18) (tastefully, decorate) with cosytraditional Malay decor, combined with modern facilities of sorts. It was really cooling inside
the house, which sure was a welcome relief from the blistering sun outside.
By the end of the programme, I (19) (feel) actually fresh and
rejuvenated. The homestay programme is a worthwhile experience and I highly recommend
such outlet to anyone who (20) (die) to escape from it all and yearning for
a touch of that kampung life!
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TEXT 3
Even at age seven, Ripton Rosen was obsessed with baseball. So he was thrilled when agroup of 12-year-old boys in a Lower East Side Manhattan park
(1) (allow) him to play right field in their game one steamy summer
evening in 1998. His teammates, like most of the residents in the neighborhood at the time,
were black or Latino. Ripton's parents and five-year-old brother, Morgan, were white and
lived in the penthouse of a renovated upscale building across the street.
At game's end, flushed and exhilarated, Ripton (2) (shout) out, "Who wants
to come play Nintendo 64?" Michael Rosen, a Wall Street CEO at the time, and his wife,Leslie Gruss, a physician, were momentarily startled but then warmly welcomed the kids into
their 16th-floor penthouse. "We (3) (move) to the neighborhood for ethnic
and economic diversity," says Rosen, "and you don't say no when diversity
(4) (walk) in the front door."
Years later, Will Torres can recount his first moments in the penthouse in detail. "In we
come, and the first thing I see is Leslie standing in the kitchen like a mother on a television
show," he says. "She (5) (smile) and asking, "Do you guys want some
cookies?' And I (6) (not, even believe) it. I'm thinking, Wow,
these people are so whiter.
None of the young players, who had all grown up in cramped, overcrowded apartments,
(7) (see) anything like the Rosens' condo, with its sprawling floor plan
spanning five levels. Terraces (8) (offer) breathtaking views of the East
River and the Empire State Building, as well as a place to grow strawberries in the spring; at
night, the New York City skyline (9) (light) up the rooms. Inside were four
aquariums teeming with tropical fish, a huge refrigerator packed with gallons of milk and
juice, and kitchen shelves spilling over with jumbo boxes of Honey Smacks, Fruity Pebbles
and multiple snack choices.
As summer turned to fall, the baseball games (10) (continue), and several
of the boys (11) (become) frequent visitors to the Rosens' home. The
age difference presented no problem. "It happened gradually and normally," says Leslie,
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who without thinking about it (12) (began) purchasing larger containers of
Gatorade and chips. "When the boys walked into our lives, it was like a breath of fresh air."
The Rosens' soaring living room (13) (turn) into a play space where the
kids would stack cushions into soft mountains to leap onto from a balcony. For their informal
wrestling matches, Leslie purchased gaudy World Wrestling Federation belts; Michael
bought baseball gloves for those who (14) (not, have) their own. And on
weekend nights, when the group slept over, they turned out all the lights, picked teams, and
played a game with plastic pistols and flashlights. Leslie and Michael would sit in the dark,
monitoring the action. Without planning it, they (15) (become)
an extended family.
"We came to eat and have fun," says Carlos Suarez, who (16) (know)
little of the latter in his short life. He remembers seeing his father murdered right in front of
him when he was 11. "It was Good Friday," he begins, his voice rising, "and we
(17) Gust, buy) ice cream - vanilla with sprinkles. This guy
(18) (throw) a cup of alcohol into my father's face, then took out a
screwdriver and stabbed him in the heart four times." Most of the other boys were being
raised by single mothers struggling against daunting odds.
The Rosens came from a separate universe. Michael, the son of a CPA,
(19) (grow) up in Vermont, where he learned to ski at age seven. In 1975,
he enrolled in the University of Pennsylvania, where he soon met Leslie Gruss, the daughter
of an investment banker with a seat on the New York Stock Exchange. Raised on East 79th
Street in a spacious, art-filled apartment, she (20) (attend) private
schools and decided in the eighth grade to become a doctor. They decided to get marriedand later adopted Ripton and Morgan.
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PART D (30 MARKS)
QUESTION 1
INSTRUCTIONS: Read texts land 2 carefully. They contain 15 errors each, related to theuse of pronouns, adjectives, adverbs and tenses/verbs. Identify each errorby underlining it in the passage, and then write its correct form above it.Answer all questions in the answer booklet.
TEXT1
The five boys which came to play video games reshuffled everything. "In the beginning, it
was just a lot of kids swarming all over the place," says Michael. Things then begin shifting
in small ways. When the Rosens realized Carlos were not attending school because he
didn't have suitable clothes, they bought him some. Then one night, they took the group to a
bookstore after a Chinese dinner and realized there were other needs. "The boys had no
interest in books at all," Michael says. Back at the penthouse, he insists they sit down to
read aloud. "Their vocabularies were limited," he says. "But my concept of what is smart and
what is not changed that night, because these kids were all smart but also uneducated".
The boys still typical slept at their homes, though they spent after-school hours, most
weekends and summer nights at the penthouse. There, a half-hour read period before video
games or television were instituted. One summer, Michael took all the boys to the library;
each got a card and picked a subject to study. Will, Michael remembers, choose
bodybuilding. The subject did not matter; reading did. A poet friend of the Rosens' suggested
buying copies of Moby Dickand reading it together around the dining-room table. "Well, it
was a nightmare," admits Michael. "That book is not written in a language these kids speak.
But we kept pushing and pushing."
Slowly the big boys became an integration part of the Rosen household. Chores were
assigned, including cleaning, loading the dishwasher and walking Mr. Jenkins, the family
dog. Arguments broke out when rules were ignored; it was never a scene from The Brady
Bunch. The boys' own families were puzzle by what was transpiring. "My mom didn't believe
me when I told her about the penthouse," says Kindu. "She thinks I was involved with
something bad." Juan Carlos's mother, Esther Ruiz, wondered, "Why would the Rosens be
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doing this?" But as time went on, she noticed changes in her son. "It wasn't just the streets
anymore. He was become more responsible. Michael and Leslie are the best."
"We had questions ourselves about what we were doing," confessed Leslie. "Were we
shortchanging our own children? We were definitely concern about the example the big boys
were showing, but in the end, I think the notion of actually helping people is of great value
than anything else."
TEXT 2
When Mr. Hiram B. Otis, the American Minister, bought Canterville Chase, every one told
him he is doing a very foolish thing, as there was no doubt at all that the place was
haunted. Indeed, Lord Canterville him, who was a man of the most punctilious honour,
had feeled it his duty to mention the fact to Mr. Otis when they came to discuss terms.
xWe have not care to live in the place ourselves,
1said Lord Canterville, 'since my grand-
aunt, the Dowager Duchess of Bolton, was frightened into a fit, from which she never
really recovered, by two skeleton hands being placed on her shoulders as she was
dressed for dinner, and I feel bound to tell you, Mr. Otis, that the ghost has been seen by
several live members of my family, as well as by the rector of the parish, the Rev.
Augustus Dampier. After the unfortunate accident to the Duchess, none of our younger
servants would stay with us, and Lady Canterville often got very little sleep at night, in
consequence of the mystery noises that came from the corridor and the library.1
'I fear that the ghost exists,1
said Lord Canterville, smiling. It has been well-knowed for
three centuries, since 1584 in fact, and always make its appearance before the death of
any member of our family.1
'Well, so does the family doctor for that matter, Lord Canterville. But there is no such
thing, sir, as a ghost, and I guess the laws of Nature is not going to be suspended for the
British aristocracy.'
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A few weeks after this, the purchase was concluded, and at the close of the season the
Minister and his family went down to Canterville Chase. Mrs. Otis, who, as Miss Lucretia
R. Tappen, of West 53rd Street, had been a celebrating New York belle, was now a very
handsome, middle-aged woman, with fine eyes, and a superb profile.
Many American ladies on leaving their native land adopt an appearance of chronic ill-
health, under the impression that it is a form of European refinement, but Mrs. Otis had
never fall into this error. Her eldest son, christened Washington by his parents in a
moment of patriotism, which he never ceased to regret, was a fair-haired, rather good-
looking young man, who has qualified himself for American diplomacy by leading the
German at the Newport Casino for three success seasons, and even in London was high
admired as an excellent dancer.
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PART E (10 MARKS)
INSTRUCTIONS: Construct a sentence using each of the following words. Do not make anychanges to the given words. Each sentence must consist of ten or morewords. Answer all questions in the answer booklet.
QUESTION 1
has been staying (verb)
QUESTION 2
were wrapped (verb)
QUESTION 3
have completed (verb)
QUESTION 4
are sleeping (verb)
QUESTION 5
as green as (adjective)
QUESTION 6
clearly (adverb)
QUESTION 7
more brilliant (adjective)
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QUESTION 8
most stunning (adjective)
QUESTION 9
one another (pronoun)
QUESTION 10
himself (pronoun)
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END OF QUESTION PAPER
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