SUPUESTOS PRÁCTICOS DE INGLÉS SECUNDARIA
Autoras: Teresa Vaello Reos y Maria Vicenta Llorca Llorca
Primera edición, 2014 Autoras: Teresa Vaello Reos, Maria Vicenta Llorca Llorca maquetación: Daniela Vasilache Edita: Educàlia Editorial Imprime: Escenarigràfic S.L. ISBN: 978-84-943622-2-4 Depòsit Legal: V-283-2015 Printed in Spain/Impreso en España. Todos los derechos reservados. No está permitida la reimpresión de ninguna parte de este libro, ni de imágenes ni de texto, ni tampoco su reproducción, ni utilización, en cualquier forma o por cualquier medio, bien sea electrónico, mecánico o de otro modo, tanto conocida como los que puedan inventarse, incluyendo el fotocopiado o grabación, ni está permitido almacenarlo en un sistema de información y recuperación, sin el permiso anticipado y por escrito del editor. Alguna de las imágenes que incluye este libro son reproducciones que se han realizado acogiéndose al derecho de cita que aparece en el artículo 32 de la Ley 22/18987, del 11 de noviembre, de la Propiedad intelectual. Educàlia Editorial agradece a todas las instituciones, tanto públicas como privadas, citadas en estas páginas, su colaboración y pide disculpas por la posible omisión involuntaria de algunas de ellas. Educàlia Editorial, S.L. C/ Av. de las Jacarandas, 2, loft 327 - 46100 Burjassot Tel: 963273517 E-Mail:
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ÍNDICE EJEMPLOS EXÁMENES PRÁCTICOS OPOSICIONES SECUNDARIA INGLÉS 1. The Physician by Noah Gordon 2. Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone by JK Rowling 3. Wuthering Heights by E. Brönte 4. The Girl with a Pearl Earring by Tracy Chevalier 5. Memoirs of a Geisha by Arthur Golden 6. Frankenstein by Mary Shelley 7. Moby Dick by Herman Melville 8. Gulliver’s travels by Jonathan Swift 9. The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald 10. Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen
5 7 12 16 19 23 25 29 32 36 39
SOLUCIONES EXÁMENES PRÁCTICOS OPOSICIONES SECUNDARIA INGLÉS 1. The Physician by Noah Gordon 2. Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone by JK Rowling 3. Wuthering Heights by E. Brönte 4. The Girl with a Pearl Earring by Tracy Chevalier 5. Memoirs of a Geisha by Arthur Golden 6. Frankenstein by Mary Shelley 7. Moby Dick by Herman Melville 8. Gulliver’s travels by Jonathan Swift 9. The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald 10. Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen
43 45 48 51 53 56 58 61 63 67 70
TRADUCCIÓN TEXTOS CLÁSICOS Dracula de Bram stoker El Prícipe y el Mendigo de Mark Twain El Retrato de Dorian Gray de Oscar Wilde El libro de la Selva de Rudyard Kipling La Letra Escarlata de Nathaniel Hawthorne La Máscara de la Muerte Roja de Edgar Allan Poe Canción de Navidad de Charles Dickens Retrato de una Dama de Henry James El Gran Gatsby de F. Scott Fitzgerald Soneto 18 de William Shakespeare Moby Dick de Herman Melville Los Viajes de Gulliver de Jonathan Swift Frankenstein de Mary Shelley El Gran Gatsby de F. Scott Fitzgerald Orgullo y Prejuicio de Jane Austen Robinson Crusoe de Daniel Defoe
73 74 76 78 80 82 84 86 88 90 91 92 94 96 97 98 100
1. The Physician by Noah Gordon
Read carefully the following text and answer the questions about it: “Let us catch some breakfast”, he said as they washed the dirt from their faces and hands. He cut two willow poles and got hooks and line from the wagon. From the shaded place behind the seat he pulled out a box. “This is our grasshopper box.” He said. “It is one of our duties to keep it filled”. He lifted the lid only far enough to allow Rob to stick his hands inside. Living things rustled away from Rob’s fingers, frantic and spiky, and he pulled one gently into his palm. When he withdrew his hand, keeping the wings folded between his thumb and forefinger, the insect’s legs scrabbled frantically. The four front legs were thin as hairs and the hind two were powerful and large-thighed, enabling it to be a hopper. Barber showed him how to slip the point of the hook just beneath the sort section of tough, ridged shell behind the head. “Not too deep or he’ll bleed molasses and die. Where have you fished?” “The Thames.” He prided himself on his ability as a fisher, for he and his father often had dangled worms in the broad river, depending on the fish to help feed the family during the unemployment. Barber grunted. “This is a different kind of fishing,” He said. “Leave the poles for a moment and get on your hands and knees” They crawled cautiously to a place overlooking the nearest pool and lay on their bellies. Rob thought the fat man daft. Four fish hung suspended in glass. “Small,” Rob whispered. “Best eating that size,” Barber said as they crept away from the bank. Your big river trouts are tough and oily. Did you note how these drifted near the head of the pool? They feed facing upstream, waiting for a juicy meal to fall in and come floating down. They’re wild and wary. If you stand next to the stream, they see you. If you tread strongly on the bank they feel your step and they scatter. That’s why you use the long pole. If you stand next back and lightly drop the hopper just above the pool, letting the flow carry it to the fish.” He watched critically as Rob swung the grasshopper where he had directed. With a shock that travelled along the pole and sent excitement up into Rob’s arms, the unseen fish struck like a dragon. After that it was like fishing in the Thames. He waited patiently, giving the trout time to doom itself, and then raised the tip of the pole and set the hook as his father had taught him. When he pulled in the first flopping prize they admired its blood: the gleaming background like oiled walnut wood, the sleek sides splattered with rainbow reds, the black fins marked with warm orange ... The Physician by Noah Gordon
1. Give homophones from the text for the following words (state the line number): were would taut plaice dye sighs tuff
2. Give minimal pairs (from the first paragraph) for the following words: come for calm get thinks 3. Make a phonetic transcription of the following words: Thames
withdrew
wagon
beneath
grasshopper
tough
duties
leave
enough
cautiously
4. Give 6 examples of silent letters found in the text:
5. Give 10 verbs belonging to the lexical field of TYPES OF MOVEMENTS:
6. Give 3 verbs belonging to the lexical field of types of talking:
7. Give 5 words belonging to the lexical field of Nature: NATURE
8. Give 5 words from the text which refer to different parts of animals:
9. Give 7 words from the text which refer to different parts of a person’s body:
10. Give 6 words from the text which refer to the lexical field of types of animals:
11. Name a simile in the text and add two more:
12. Name a metaphor in the text and add two more:
13. Give one example of: Temporal deixis: Personal deixis: Place deixis: 14. Give a euphemism which can be substituted by “decease” or “expire”:
15. Classify the category of the words given in the text according to their word formation (prefixes, suffixes, compounds): unemployment excitement flopping grasshopper rainbow forefinger walnut frantically gleaming enabling
16. Give 5 examples from the text of prepositions of place:
17. Define the following expressions using your own words: pole wagon hook living things wings bleed to feed juicy
18. Find the word or expressions from the text for these definitions: the thick short digit of the forelimb an arc of colored light in the sky caused by refraction of the sun’s rays by rain the feeling of lively and cheerful joy a natural body of running water flowing on or under the earth organ of locomotion and balance in fishes and some other aquatic animals
19. Give examples of synonyms for the following words: skills
back
excited
to fish
bony
almighty
hidden
succulent
glossy
to supply
20. Give examples of antonyms for the following words: tame
Tiny
tender
Wide
weakly
shallow
empty
Cool
fat
Long
21. Give examples of connectors from the text and classify them: 22. Comment the following sentence from a morphosyntactic point of view: “he watched critically as rob swung the grasshopper where he had directed”
23. Complete the following sentences with words from the text: a) Mind your hands! I don’t want you …………….. the needle in your finger b) Ummm, it smells tasty when you’ve .................... from the pot. c) He is not a confident person. He is always.............. of running his own business. d) The city has been destroyed by a huge earthquake. It was a ............... and gloom situation.
SOLUCIONES EXAMEN PRACTICO 1 1. Give homophones from the text for the following words (state the line number): were would taut plaice dye sighs tuff
Where Wood Taught Place Die Size Tough
2. Give minimal pairs (from the first paragraph) for the following words: Come For Calm Get Thinks
Some Four Palm Got Things
3. Make a phonetic transcription of the following words: Thames Wagon grasshopper Duties Enough
tɛmz wægən græshɑpər Dutiz ənəf
withdrew beneath tough leave cautiously
wɪθdru bəniθ təf liv kɒʃəsli
4. Give 6 examples of silent letters found in the text: Some
knees
Allow
where
often
would
5. Give 10 verbs belonging to the lexical field of TYPES OF MOVEMENTS: to cut withdrew lay on come
Pulled scrabbled Crept scatter
lifted to slip drift struck
6. Give 3 verbs belonging to the lexical field of types of talking: said
grunted
whispered
stick crawled fall
7. Give 5 words belonging to the lexical field of Nature: NATURE willow river bank stream fish 8. Give 5 words from the text which refer to different parts of animals: Fin
wings
head
legs
shell
9. Give 7 words from the text which refer to different parts of a person’s body: Faces
hands
fingers
palm
knees
thumb
bellies
forefinger
10. Give 6 words from the text which refer to the lexical field of types of animals: Insect
worms
grasshopper
trout
fish
dragon
11. Name a simile in the text and add two more: The four front legs were thin as hairs 12. Name a metaphor in the text and add two more: The unseen fish struck like a dragon. 13. Give one example of: Temporal deixis: “…breakfast” Personal deixis: “Barber, Rob” Place deixis: “the Thames” 14. Give a euphemism which can be substituted by “decease” or “expire”: “ to die” 15. Classify the category of the words given in the text according to their word formation (prefixes, suffixes, compounds): unemployment excitement flopping grasshopper rainbow forefinger walnut frantically gleaming enabling
noun that results adding the prefix un- to the noun employment forming its antonym noun that results adding the suffix –ment to the verb to excite adjective that results from adding the suffix –ing to the verb to flop compound noun compound noun compound noun compound noun adverbs that result from adding the suffix –ly to the adjective frantic adjective that results from adding the suffix –ing to the noun gleam verb resulting from the prefix –en and the suffix –ing added to the verb to able
SESGADO
Dracula de Bram stoker En cuanto llegué a esta conclusión escuché pesados pasos que se acercaban detrás de la gran puerta, y vi a través de las grietas el brillo de una luz que se acercaba. Se escuchó el ruido de cadenas que golpeaban y el chirrido de pesados cerrojos que se corrían. Una llave giró haciendo el conocido ruido producido por el largo desuso, y la inmensa puerta se abrió hacia adentro. En ella apareció un hombre alto, viejo, limpiamente afeitado, a excepción de un largo bigote blanco, y vestido de negro de la cabeza a los pies, sin ninguna mancha de color en ninguna parte. Tenía en la mano una antigua lámpara de plata, en la cual la llama se quemaba sin globo ni protección de ninguna clase, lanzando largas y ondulosas sombras al fluctuar por la corriente de la puerta abierta. El anciano me hizo un gesto con su mano derecha, haciendo un gesto cortés y hablando en excelente inglés, aunque con una entonación extraña: - Bienvenido a mi casa. ¡Entre con libertad y por su propia voluntad! No hizo ningún movimiento para acercárseme, sino que permaneció inmóvil como una estatua, como si su gesto de bienvenida lo hubiese fijado en piedra. Sin embargo, en el instante en que traspuse el umbral de la puerta, dio un paso impulsivamente hacia adelante y, extendiendo la mano, sujetó la mía con una fuerza que me hizo retroceder, un efecto que no fue aminorado por el hecho de que parecía fría como el hielo; de que parecía más la mano de un muerto que de un hombre vivo. Dijo otra vez: - Bienvenido a mi casa. Venga libremente, váyase a salvo, y deje algo de la alegría que trae consigo. La fuerza del apretón de mano era tan parecida a la que yo había notado en el cochero, cuyo rostro no había podido ver, que por un momento dudé si no se trataba de la misma persona a quien le estaba hablando; así es que para asegurarme, le pregunté: - ¿El conde Drácula? Se inclinó cortésmente al responderme. - Yo soy Drácula; y le doy mi bienvenida, señor Harker, en mi casa. Pase; el aire de la noche está frío, y seguramente usted necesita comer y descansar.
Dracula by Bram stoker Just as I had come to this conclusion I heard a heavy step approaching behind the great door, and saw through the chinks the gleam of a coming light. Then there was the sound of rattling chains and the clanking of massive bolts drawn back. A key was turned with the loud grating noise of long disuse, and the great door swung back. Within, stood a tall old man, clean shaven save for a long white moustache, and clad in black from head to foot, without a single speck of colour about him anywhere. He held in his hand an antique silver lamp, in which the flame burned without a chimney or globe of any kind, throwing long quivering shadows as it flickered in the draught of the open door. The old man motioned me in with his right hand with a courtly gesture, saying in excellent English, but with a strange intonation. “Welcome to my house! Enter freely and of your own free will!” He made no motion of stepping to meet me, but stood like a statue, as though his gesture of welcome had fixed him into stone. The instant, however, that I had stepped over the threshold, he moved impulsively forward, and holding out his hand grasped mine with a strength which made me wince, an effect which was not lessened by the fact that it seemed cold as ice, more like the hand of a dead than a living man. Again he said. “Welcome to my house! Enter freely. Go safely, and leave something of the happiness you bring!” The strength of the handshake was so much akin to that which I had noticed in the driver, whose face I had not seen, that for a moment I doubted if it were not the same person to whom I was speaking. So to make sure, I said interrogatively, “Count Dracula?” He bowed in a courtly was as he replied, “I am Dracula, and I bid you welcome, Mr. Harker, to my house. Come in, the night air is chill, and you must need to eat and rest.”