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TRANSLATION & USE OF ENGLISH<br />

30 PKT<br />

1. Chociaż koszykówkę wynaleziono jako grę halową, można w nią także grać na powietrzu. Dla kontrastu,<br />

baseball to typowy sport na powietrzu, zajęcie od kwietnia do września.<br />

__________________________________________________________________________ game,<br />

it ___________________________________________________ By contrast, __________________<br />

_________________________________________ sport, a purely April-to-September____________.<br />

2. Podczas gdy egzekucja Sokratesa nie wymagała {=INVOLVE} żadnej przemocy fizycznej, nie jest prawdą,<br />

że on sam odebrał sobie życie. Prawda jest taka, że zmuszono go do wypicia trucizny.<br />

______________________________ execution _________________________________________<br />

__________________________________ that he ________________________________________<br />

__________________________ that he ___________________________________ the poison.<br />

3. Ludzie pierwotni woleli {=PREFER} raczej siedzieć we względnym bezpieczeństwie swoich jaskiń niż<br />

wędrować {=ROAM} po równinach w poszukiwaniu zdobyczy. Tak jak dzisiejsi mężczyźni siedzący przed<br />

swoimi plazmowymi telewizorami zamiast spędzać czas na czymś pożytecznym.<br />

Early __________________________________________________________________________<br />

rather _____________________________________________ prey. Just ___________________<br />

_________________________________________________________ instead ________________<br />

______________________________________ useful.<br />

4. To, co trzeba było zrobić zanim dało się porozsadzać gości Amy, to zrobienie dla nich miejsca na dywanie.<br />

Najpierw pozbieraliśmy zabawki rozrzucone {=SCATTER} nieporządnie po całym pokoju.<br />

__________________________________________________ before Amy's guests _______________<br />

____________________________________________________________________________ carpet.<br />

________________________________________________________ disorderly _________________<br />

__________________________________________________________<br />

5. To się zmieniło, kiedy XIX-wieczni historycy, przynajmniej ci najwybitniejsi {=EMINENT}, zaczęli<br />

przedstawiać wyprawy krzyżowe jako wojny imperialistyczne, czym one w oczywisty sposób nie były.<br />

That changed ____________________________________________________________________<br />

_______________________________________________________________________________<br />

____________________________________________________________<br />

1


6. Uważać {=BELIEVE}, że europejska piłka nożna stanie się w jakiś sposób grą numer 1 dla Ameryki to po<br />

prostu ignorancja, no w najlepszym razie pobożne życzenia.<br />

______________________________________________________________________________<br />

________________________________________________ short __________________________<br />

well, _____________________________<br />

7. Co ciekawe, Jimmy Carter to jedyny były prezydent Stanów Zjednoczonych, któremu przyznano pokojową<br />

nagrodę Nobla. Al Gore był dwukrotnie wiceprezydentem u Clintona, ale nigdy nie był prezydentem.<br />

_____________________ Jimmy Carter _______________________________________________<br />

to _____________________________________________________________________________<br />

______________________________________________________________________________.<br />

8. Może bylibyśmy mniej skłonni stawiać {=STAKE} tyle pieniędzy na Morning Joy, gdybyśmy nie byli pod<br />

takim wrażeniem jej wyników w tym sezonie. Oraz jej miażdżących {=OVERWHELMING} zwycięstw w<br />

dwu poprzednich gonitwach w Dubaju.<br />

We _________________________________________ ready ______________________________<br />

Morning Joy ____________________________________________________________ her record<br />

this ____________________________________________________________________________<br />

_________________________________<br />

9. Gwałtowny wzrost sprzedaży gruzińskiego wina na Łotwie został ewidentnie spowodowany przez politykę.<br />

Dopiero się okaże, jak długo (jeśli w ogóle) to potrwa.<br />

The surge _______________________________________________________________________<br />

obviously_____________________________________________ It ________________________<br />

______________________________________________________________________________<br />

10. Aby odpowiedzieć na pytanie, jak klimatyzacja wpływa na cerę, musielibyśmy zwrócić się do dermatologów<br />

i ekspertów od kosmetyki. Zwłaszcza tych, którzy pracują na terenach {=REGION}, gdzie w domach<br />

rutynowo zakłada się {=FIT} klimatyzację.<br />

To answer _____________________ of ___________________________________________ skin<br />

we _____________________________________________________________________________<br />

_________________________________________________________________ homes ________<br />

________________________________________________<br />

2


11. Wydawcy tego szczegółowego planu miasta zapytali mnie, czy byłoby możliwe nakłonić policję, żeby<br />

zaznaczyła {=MARK} umiejscowienie wszystkich kamer monitoringu w centrum.<br />

The publishers ___________________________________________________________________<br />

_______________________________________________________________________________<br />

_____________________of all the surveillance _________________________________________<br />

12. Powiedzmy to tak: moglibyśmy wybaczyć zbrodniarzom ale nie wolno nigdy zapomnieć o ich zbrodniach,<br />

jeśli okropności popełnione {=COMMIT} w imię naszego państwanie mają się znów wydarzyć.<br />

__________________ this way: _____________________________________________________<br />

_______________________________________________ lest the atrocities __________________<br />

___________________ government ________________________________________<br />

13. Wspaniałą sprawą w nowoczesnej architekturze jest to, że w coraz większym stopniu łączy {=COMBINE}<br />

ona ludzką kreatywność z inteligencją komputerów dla rozwiązywania problemów, których żadna z osobna<br />

nie mogłaby rozwiązać.<br />

The great thing ________________________________________________________ increasingly<br />

_______________________________________________________________________________<br />

________________________________________________ alone.<br />

14. W tym słynnym nagraniu na YouTubie polityk z Montany Hugh Adams miota przekleństwa na sędziego<br />

zaraz po skazaniu go na dziesięć lat więzienia.<br />

________________________________ YouTube video __________________________________<br />

______________________________________ abuse at __________________________________<br />

________________________________________<br />

15. Nie zapomnij naładować baterię swojego e-czytnika, tak żebyśmy nie musieli znowu jechać 20 mil<br />

w poszukiwaniu gniazdka elektrycznego. Tak jak w zeszłym miesiącu.<br />

____________________________________________________________________ your e-reader<br />

________________________________________________________ 20 miles to look __________<br />

___________________________ Just _____________________________________________<br />

3


VOCABULARY<br />

30 PKT<br />

1. He answered in a tone which was a _ _ _ t _ _ _ of disappointment and irritation.<br />

2. Her refusal was like a _ _ _ _ in the face. It left him speechless for a moment.<br />

3. The main road was _ _ m _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ closed after a car crash.<br />

4. They must have met before as they greeted each other with some _ _ m _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ .<br />

5. In the Roman Catholic church, canonization is the official recognition of a deceased person's<br />

_ _ _ n _ _ _ _ _ .<br />

6. Uncle Sasha was raised in a _ _ _ t _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ environment where four languages were in daily use.<br />

7. We covered our faces with handkerchiefs to protect our mouths, _ _ s _ _ _ _ _ and eyes from the dust.<br />

8. He nearly drowned as a powerful _ _ _ r _ _ _ _ _ sucked him in. He survived by making a deep dive and<br />

resurfacing a hundred metres away..<br />

9. The door was guarded by two police _ _ n _ _ _ _ _ _ _ armed with submachine guns.<br />

10. We quickly _ _ _ i _ _ _ one bottle, then another. None of us had to drive that night.<br />

11. This is the longest stage of the rally – a real <strong>test</strong> of the competitors' _ _ d _ _ _ _ _ _ and stamina.<br />

12. Providing a false alibi is a flagrant example of the crime known as _ _ _ t _ _ _ _ _ _ _ of justice.<br />

13. The _ _ _ n _ _ _ _ of the palace was in stark contrast to the modest appearance of the houses surrounding<br />

it.<br />

14. She tried to _ _ n _ _ _ _ her disappointment with a fake smile. But her anger was visible.<br />

15. To every question about his health, he _ _ v _ _ _ _ _ _ _ responded, 'It's okay, thanks." So there was no<br />

point asking.<br />

16. Strict mechanistic determinism is totally _ _ _ _ m _ _ _ _ _ _ _ with the notion of free will.<br />

17. The _ _ r _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ for the new building on the site of the WTC towers was laid in July 2004.<br />

18. Too restless to settle in one place, the star _ _ p _ _ _ between her London apartment, a house on the Riviera<br />

and a villa in Tuscany.<br />

19. He painted his best portraits in the long intervals of _ _ c _ _ _ _ _ between the fits of madness.<br />

20. His parents were intellectuals and he was used to discussing _ _ _ h _ _ _ _ topics at the table..<br />

21. As an illegal _ _ i _ _ , he preferred to avoid contact with the police.<br />

22. In the warmth of the railway station my glasses steamed over _ _ _ r _ _ _ _ the vision.<br />

23. The billionnaire's _ _ _ n _ _ _ _ _ _ was widely known; with tabloids showing his wife in second-hand<br />

stores.<br />

24. His brother has a slightly _ _ _ t _ _ _ _ _ _ lower jaw, which apparently makes him look more masculine.<br />

25. Ron refuses to study for the exam, so his likely failure will be a self-fullfilling _ _ o _ _ _ _ _.<br />

26. With sales of about 20m, the company is neither a giant nor a _ y _ _ _. among manufacturers.<br />

27. The _ _ _ t _ _ _ _ _ _ _ is a venomous American snake which makes a loud noise with the end of its tail.<br />

28. If you divide 17 by 3, the result is 5 with the _ e _ _ _ _ _ _ _ of 2.<br />

29. The population of the city rose from 30 thousand to over 90 thousand – a _ _ r _ _ _ _ _ _ increase in just<br />

50 years.<br />

30. In the 1940 campaign, German armoured units made _ _ i _ _ _ _ _ _ progress across France, meeting<br />

almost no resistance.<br />

4


Choose the single best option:<br />

READING<br />

15 PKT<br />

Kate was apt to judge her male colleagues by their behaviour when shooting. Masters could never bear<br />

to be outscored by her and seldom was. The qualifying shoot was not intended to be competitive;<br />

officers were supposed to be concerned only with their own achievement. But Masters had never been<br />

able to resist a quick glance at her score and had made no attempt at generosity if she outscored him.<br />

To him success at the shooting range had been an affirmation of masculinity. He had been brought up<br />

with guns and had found it intolerable that a woman, and one with Kate's urban background, could<br />

handle a weapon effectively. Daniel Aaron, on the other hand, had seen the practice shoots as a<br />

necessary part of the job and had cared little whether he scored higher than Kate provided he qualified.<br />

Paul Tarrant, who had succeeded him three months earlier, had already shown himself a better shot<br />

than either of his predecessors. She had yet to learn how much that mattered to him, how important it<br />

was that she could still outscore him.<br />

1. The text suggests ...<br />

A/ Paul was the best shot of all.<br />

B/ Kate was a match to them all.<br />

C/ Kate was the second best shot of all.<br />

D/ Kate was outperformed only by Masters<br />

2. Competition between the officers...<br />

A/ was officially discouraged<br />

B/ was formally encouraged<br />

C/ could not be prevented by formal means<br />

D/ was inevitably sharpened by the gender<br />

3. At the shooting range, Kate...<br />

A/ took some interest in her colleagues' performance<br />

B/ was insensitive to her colleagues' feelings<br />

C/ displayed more ambition than at least one of her colleagues<br />

D/ was primarily interested in qualifying<br />

4. Daniel...<br />

A/ unofficially declined competitiveness in shooting<br />

B/ can be said to be less ambitious than Masters<br />

C/ may have considered shooting to be irrelevant<br />

D/ was vitally interested in his performance at the range<br />

5


Communism in fact proved not the opposite of Nazism, but its kindred spirit. In obedience to Stalin,<br />

the German Communist party played Hitler’s game by helping to destroy the moderates, the Social<br />

Democrats, in a tacit collaboration with Nazism that the Hitler-Stalin Pact of 1939 brought into the<br />

open, and that made world war inevitable. In the last years of peace, living in Paris, Koestler came to<br />

realize that Communism was essentially a religious rather than a political phenomenon; it was a new<br />

faith based on Soviet mythology. The doctrine held that the ends justified the means, and that, he<br />

concluded, was the root of its evil.<br />

Liberated from the Party and in possession of inside knowledge of its workings, Koestler sat down to<br />

write Darkness at Noon. He modeled his hero Rubashov on Bukharin and Radek and other victims of<br />

Stalin’s recent and terrifying show trials. They were palpably not guilty of the accusations against<br />

them but confessed nonetheless. An astounded world wondered why they had consented to their own<br />

judicial murder. In Koestler’s account, the Party has higher but hidden reasons for demanding that<br />

these men confess to crimes they could not have committed. Since by definition the Party can do no<br />

wrong, their self-incrimination is a last service to it. “Die in silence” is a refrain running through the<br />

novel. The reality was far simpler: These unfortunates were tortured and their wives and families<br />

victimized because a paranoid Stalin saw them as rivals. Nonetheless this imaginative depiction of<br />

Communism in practice proved more powerful than any number of polemics, and soon gave Koestler<br />

his international reputation.<br />

5. Koestler's opposition to Communism was based on his...<br />

A/ ethics B/ religion C/ biography D/ knowledge of history<br />

6. Koestler was able to expose Communism by ...<br />

A/ alerting the public to the show trials<br />

B/ revealing the true motives behind the purges<br />

C/ his credibility as a former sympathizer<br />

D/ the artistic strength of his narrative<br />

7. The text suggests that the German communists...<br />

A/ had a secret agreement with Hitler prior to 1939<br />

B/ could have prevented the war<br />

C/ welcomed the Stalin-Hitler pact<br />

D/ shared some political objectives with Nazism<br />

8. In comparison to its real-life version, Rubashov's story was somehow...<br />

A/ demonized B/ romanticized C/ brutalized D/ simplified<br />

9. In his novel, Koestler shows the victims as ...<br />

A/ stripped of their faith<br />

B/ too weak to bear suffering<br />

C/ ready for the ultimate sacrifice<br />

D/ caring for their families<br />

6


10. Oddly enough, having more military patients than can be adequately treated is, in terms of warfare,<br />

a gruesome kind of success. These are the war injured who once would have been the war dead. And<br />

it is __________ who in a previous medical era would have been fatalities that has sunk the<br />

outpatient clinics at Walter Reed Medical Center and left those in the VA system lost and adrift.<br />

A/ a far better protection for GIs C/ the unexpected number of casualties<br />

B/ faster battlefield diagnosis of those D/ true that the appearance of soldiers<br />

11. Brookings data show that if the same share of adults were married today as in 1970, poverty would<br />

be reduced by more than a quarter. And yet young women who have a high school degree or less<br />

education __________, and about 40 percent of their babies are born outside marriage, quadrupling<br />

the chance that they and their babies will live in poverty.<br />

A/ prefer childbearing to college C/ delay decisions on education<br />

B/ increasingly do not marry D/ seem to ignore this fact<br />

12. Veerappan was a diminished figure. His gang had dwindled to a handful, and had been infiltrated<br />

by the police. He was lured into a trap, __________ a phoney ambulance on his way, he thought, to<br />

have a cataract operation.<br />

A/ compromising his security on C/ tempting his luck on<br />

B/ leaving his forest hideout in D/ failing to collect a ransom from<br />

13. Their lawsuit is part of a campaign by the Washington, D.C.-based Institute for Justice to restore<br />

respect for economic freedom by forcing governments to __________ between people and their<br />

chosen work.<br />

A/allow for more breathing space<br />

C/ clarify the legal conundrum<br />

B/ ensure a more just relationship D/ justify the barriers they erect<br />

14. That fact is already changing the future of U.S. manufacturing. Companies such as Dow Chemical<br />

and Westlake Chemical are finding that low U.S. energy costs __________ labor in Asia — making<br />

it economical to keep and even build manufacturing facilities in the United States.<br />

A/ can mitigate the lower cost of C/ might become on a par with<br />

B/ combined with relatively cheap D/ no longer stifled by abundant<br />

15. In interviews, Bergman repeatedly rejected the notion that any theoretical apparatus influenced his<br />

vision. Eschewing the thesis that __________ , he commented, “The people in my films are exactly<br />

like myself—creatures of instinct, of rather poor intellectual capacity, who at best only think while<br />

they’re talking. Mostly they’re body, with a little hollow for the soul.”<br />

A/ he had no philosophical agenda to put forward<br />

B/ religious faith played no role in his art<br />

C/ his existentialism was tainted with fear<br />

D/ his characters were vehicles for philosophical debates<br />

7


READING & WRITING<br />

30 PKT<br />

Wpisz brakujące litery w miejsce kresek. Wykreślone zostały zawsze drugie części wyrazów – ani<br />

jedno słowo nie zostało wykreślone w całości. Zacznij od przeczytania całego tekstu.<br />

He lived alone in a charming small house in Markham street, Chelsea. his parents had moved into it on<br />

his father's retirement from his job in Malaysia nad Japan, and he had lived there with both his parents<br />

until their deaths five years earlier.<br />

Unl_ _ _ most expat_ _ _ _ _ _, th_ _ had bro_ _ _ _ nothing ba_ _ with th_ _ as meme_ _ _ _ of<br />

those al_ _ _ years exc_ _ _ a few deli_ _ _ _<br />

water-colours. F_ _ of these n_ _ rema_ _ _ _.<br />

Monica had ta_ _ _ a fa_ _ _ to the be_ _ of them; his niece h_ _ an alm_ _ _ regal sk_ _ _ in<br />

transf_ _ _ _ _ _ to her owne_ _ _ _ _ those it_ _ _ of va_ _ _ in Markham Street which cau_ _ _<br />

her e_ _.<br />

His par_ _ _ _ had furn_ _ _ _ _ the ho_ _ _ by tak_ _ _ his grandparents' f_ _<br />

pie_ _ _ from st_ _ _ and buying wh_ _ el_ _ they nee_ _ _ from the che_ _ _ _ London auc_ _ _ _<br />

hou_ _ _. He was caged in by he_ _ _ nineteenth-century<br />

maho_ _ _ _, by bulbous armc_ _ _ _ _ and cupb_ _ _ _ _ so ornately car_ _ _ and so he_ _ _ that it<br />

some_ _ _ _ _ see_ _ _ that the deli_ _ _ _ little ho_ _ _ would<br />

coll_ _ _ _ under their wei_ _ _. Everything h_ _ been le_ _ as i_ was wh_ _ the ambu_ _ _ _ _<br />

took h_ _ mot_ _ _ o_ _ to her la_ _ and fi_ _ _ operation. He h_ _ nei_ _ _ _ the wi_ _ nor t_ _<br />

wish to cha_ _ _ a ponderous leg_ _ _ wh_ _ _ he no lon_ _ _ not_ _ _ _, and ind_ _ _ sel_ _ _<br />

saw since mo_ _ of his ti_ _ was sp_ _ _ in his st_ _ _ on the t_ _ fl_ _ _ . He_ _ was the de_ _ he<br />

h_ _ had si_ _ _ his Oxford da_ _, a high-backed wi_ _ ch_ _ _ which w_ _ o_ _ of his parents'<br />

hap_ _ _ _ acquis_ _ _ _ _ _ , a_ _ his lib_ _ _ _ , meticu_ _ _ _ _ _ catal_ _ _ _ _ and arra_ _ _ _<br />

on she_ _ _ _ fit_ _ _ from fl_ _ _ to cei_ _ _ _ and covering the wa_ _ _.<br />

Nothing he_ _ was tou_ _ _ _ by Mrs Jordan, who cle_ _ _ _ for him th_ _ _ days a we_ _, but the<br />

re_ _ of the ho_ _ _ rece_ _ _ _ from her a rigo_ _ _ _ attention. She was a la_ _ _ taci_ _ _ _<br />

woman of fero_ _ _ _ _ energy. The furniture was wa_ _ _ until the surf_ _ _ _ sh_ _ _ like mir_ _ _<br />

_, and the str_ _ _ sm_ _ _ of the lavender pol_ _ _ she us_ _ met him when_ _ _ _ he ope_ _ _ his<br />

do_ _, and perm_ _ _ _ _ the wh_ _ _ house. Occasionally he wond_ _ _ _, but wi_ _ little curi_ _ _ _<br />

_,<br />

whe_ _ _ _ his clo_ _ _ _ sm_ _ _ of it. Mrs Jordan didn't cook for him. A woman who attacked<br />

mahogany as if physically to subdue it was unlikely to be a good cook, and she wasn't. That, too, didn't<br />

worry him. The district was well supplied with restaurants and he dined out and alone most evenings,<br />

greeted at either of his two favourites with a deferential welcome and shown to his usual secluded<br />

table.<br />

Adapted from A Certain Justice by P.D. James<br />

8

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