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كويز تفاعلي: EOT 12 Advance revision Test
This is an End of Term 12 Advance Revision Test for Grade 12 students prepared by Ms Rabia for Al Royah Girls School. The test covers Vocabulary, Grammar, and Reading tasks, with difficulty levels ranging from IELTS 5.0 Baseline to IELTS 6.5 Peak Competency. The exam contains 50 multiple-choice questions, each evaluated at 2 marks, totaling 100 marks.
رقم الاختبار1846
الصفالصف الثاني عشر
المادةلغة انجليزية
الفصلالفصل الثالث
السنة الدراسية2025/2026
عدد الأسئلة50
إجمالي النقاط100
تاريخ الإضافة2026-06-16
الزيارات94
المعلم
Ms Rabia
الناشرAmal Salman
يرجى الانتباه إلى أن المعلم قام بإعداد الأسئلة فقط، ولم يقم بإعداد الإجابات أو الشروحات المرفقة. وقد تم توليد الإجابات باستخدام تقنيات الذكاء الاصطناعي، لذلك قد تتضمن بعض الأخطاء أو عدم الدقة.
للحصول على الإجابات الصحيحة والمضمونة، يُرجى الرجوع إلى المعلم أو المصدر الدراسي المعتمد.
Question 1
Points: 2
The hospital built an isolation ward to check the rapid _________ of the common flu virus.
Explanation
An isolation ward is built to control the 'spread' of a contagious virus like the flu. 'Storage' and 'creation' do not fit the context of an isolation ward's purpose.
Question 2
Points: 2
Doctors use specific medical tests to _________ the disease before giving medicine.
Explanation
Medical tests are used to 'identify' or diagnose a disease to ensure the correct medicine is prescribed.
Question 3
Points: 2
Washing hands with clear soap is a simple but critical way to prevent becoming _________.
Explanation
Washing hands prevents the spread of germs, thereby preventing one from becoming 'ill'.
Question 4
Points: 2
Many traditional communities value natural therapies as an _________ treatment path.
Explanation
Natural therapies are often seen as an 'alternative' to conventional medicine in traditional communities.
Question 5
Points: 2
Severe cases of contagion mean families must _________ their movements to protect public sectors.
Explanation
During severe contagion, movements are 'limited' to prevent further spread and protect public health.
Question 6
Points: 2
A healthy lifestyle helps individuals preserve high _________ resistance parameters naturally.
Explanation
A healthy lifestyle helps maintain a good 'balance' in the body, which contributes to high resistance.
Question 7
Points: 2
Scientists create specialized vaccines to offer reliable body _________.
Explanation
Vaccines are developed to provide 'protection' to the body against diseases.
Question 8
Points: 2
Clean water channels remain the primary step to preserve proper civic _________.
Explanation
Clean water is essential for maintaining proper civic 'hygiene' and public health.
Question 9
Points: 2
Some patients choose herbal tea because they believe it acts to _________ pain safely.
Explanation
Herbal teas are often used to 'ease' or alleviate pain.
Question 10
Points: 2
Public announcements serve to keep citizens _________ about local clinic hours.
Explanation
Public announcements are made to keep citizens 'informed' about important details like clinic hours.
Question 11
Points: 2
Grammar and Lifestyles Expository Analysis By the turn of the next decade, medical organizations [1] for fifty years to evaluate how extreme sedentary schedules accelerate cellular degradation. The findings are sobering. Health guidelines now explicitly state that frequent active pauses [2] into consecutive school periods to alleviate pressure. Recently, the World Health Organization [3] that persistent screen isolation is now a premier public health hazard. Furthermore, individuals [4] prioritize structured calisthenics or rapid outdoor sprints consistently achieve much [5] cardiovascular efficiency and biological longevity indicators than those who limit themselves to restrictive diets. While organic wellness protocols [6] temporary physical rejuvenation, they shouldn't substitute certified interventions. Ultimately, the local wellness therapist, [7] our regional health council interviewed last week, confirmed that even simple lifestyle adjustments generate immense cellular protection. As academic pressures intensify for modern students, developing a comprehensive schedule that prioritizes active micro-breaks transforms into an absolute physiological necessity. Researchers assert that if schools implement defensive posture programs today, students will have escaped the systemic muscular atrophy typical of technological desk environments. Therefore, balancing focused study tracks with active, dynamic physical pacing functions as the absolute optimal structure for modern developmental well-being. Select the option that best fits gap [1]:
Explanation
The phrase 'By the turn of the next decade' indicates a future point in time, and 'for fifty years' indicates a duration leading up to that point. The future perfect continuous tense 'will have been working' correctly expresses an action that continues up to a future time.
Question 12
Points: 2
Select the option that best fits gap [2]:
Explanation
The phrase 'explicitly state that' implies a strong recommendation or requirement, making 'must be integrated' the most suitable option to express necessity in a passive construction.
Question 13
Points: 2
Select the option that best fits gap [3]:
Explanation
The adverb 'Recently' suggests an action completed in the near past with a present result, which is best expressed by the present perfect tense 'has confirmed'.
Question 14
Points: 2
Select the option that best fits gap [4]:
Explanation
The word 'individuals' refers to people, so the relative pronoun 'who' is correctly used to introduce the defining clause.
Question 15
Points: 2
Select the option that best fits gap [5]:
Explanation
The word 'than' in the sentence indicates a comparison, thus requiring the comparative form of the adjective, which is 'higher'.
Question 16
Points: 2
Select the option that best fits gap [6]:
Explanation
The subject 'organic wellness protocols' is plural, requiring the base form of the verb 'offer' to agree with it.
Question 17
Points: 2
Select the option that best fits gap [7]:
Explanation
The relative pronoun 'whom' is used here as the object of the verb 'interviewed', referring to 'the local wellness therapist'.
Question 18
Points: 2
Complete context clause: "Researchers assert that if schools _________ programs today, students will escape future illness."
Explanation
This is a first conditional sentence ('if' + present simple, 'will' + base verb). The phrase 'students will escape future illness' requires the present simple tense 'implement' in the 'if' clause for 'schools'.
Question 19
Points: 2
Choose the passive arrangement matching active guidelines:
Explanation
Option A is the correct passive voice construction. The active voice equivalent would be 'Medical organizations evaluate extreme sedentary schedules.' Options B and C are active or grammatically incorrect.
Question 20
Points: 2
Choose the correct conditional form: "If screen protection barriers had been installed, health indexes _________ preserved."
Explanation
This is a third conditional sentence, used for hypothetical situations in the past. The 'if' clause uses the past perfect ('had been installed'), so the main clause requires 'would have been' + past participle ('preserved').
Question 21
Points: 2
Delicious Food, Deadly Stoves In many rural communities across industrializing economies, cooking traditional dishes is a source of family pride and deep-seated cultural identity. However, this culinary heritage is increasingly overshadowed by a silent, deadly reality: the reliance on traditional open-fire stoves powered by solid biomass fuels like wood, crop residue, and coal. While these traditional hearths deliver rich, smoky flavors that define ancestral recipes, they also turn poorly ventilated domestic kitchens into toxic environments. This resistance highlights a critical misunderstanding among public health policymakers, who often assume that simply supplying clean liquid petroleum or electric burners will solve the issue. In practice, many families abandon clean devices and return to open-fire hearths. They state that clean gas hobs fail to produce the intense, direct heat necessary for slow-roasted traditional grains. In addition, purchasing clean canisters represents an expensive luxury for families on variable farming incomes, whereas forest wood is easily scavenged without cash. Solving this crisis requires a holistic approach that respects cultural identity and matches agricultural reality. Consequently, international clean-cooking campaigns are shifting toward alternative hybrid initiatives. By manufacturing local insulating stoves that process raw biomass far more cleanly, engineers preserve the historic wood-burning ritual while eliminating eighty percent of fine particulate discharge. True structural transition happens only when local financial constraints and ancestral cooking methods are integrated directly into clean utility distributions, proving that public health solutions cannot succeed through modern technological enforcement alone without authentic community integration. What solid biomass fuel forms are specifically highlighted as ancestral kitchen pollutants within paragraph one?
Explanation
Paragraph one explicitly mentions 'solid biomass fuels like wood, crop residue, and coal' as the power source for traditional open-fire stoves, contributing to toxic environments.
Question 22
Points: 2
Traditional hearth usage persists primarily because it provides:
Explanation
Paragraph one states that traditional hearths 'deliver rich, smoky flavors that define ancestral recipes,' which is a reason for their persistence linked to cultural identity.
Question 23
Points: 2
What common misunderstanding persists among public health policymakers?
Explanation
Paragraph two highlights the misunderstanding that policymakers 'often assume that simply supplying clean liquid petroleum or electric burners will solve the issue,' which implies solving the adoption paradigm.
Question 24
Points: 2
Scavenging forest wood functions economically because it:
Explanation
Paragraph two explicitly states that 'forest wood is easily scavenged without cash,' making it an economical option for farming families.
Question 25
Points: 2
Modern hybrid engineering initiatives aim to address this crisis by:
Explanation
Paragraph three details that 'international clean-cooking campaigns are shifting toward alternative hybrid initiatives. By manufacturing local insulating stoves that process raw biomass far more cleanly...'
Question 26
Points: 2
The text states that clean gas hobs can fail to produce the:
Explanation
Paragraph two explains that 'clean gas hobs fail to produce the intense, direct heat necessary for slow-roasted traditional grains,' which is why many families return to traditional hearths.
Question 27
Points: 2
According to paragraph 3, engineering upgrades can cut fine particulate output by:
Explanation
Paragraph three explicitly mentions that new insulating stoves are capable of 'eliminating eighty percent of fine particulate discharge'.
Question 28
Points: 2
True structural change succeeds when clean utility strategies incorporate:
Explanation
Paragraph three explains that 'True structural transition happens only when local financial constraints and ancestral cooking methods are integrated directly into clean utility distributions'.
Question 29
Points: 2
The phrase "overshadowed by a silent, deadly reality" implies that:
Explanation
The phrase indicates that the positive cultural aspects of traditional cooking ('culinary heritage') are being concealed or overridden by the negative health consequences ('silent, deadly reality') of the cooking methods.
Question 30
Points: 2
What tone does the author hold toward technological-only intervention enforcement?
Explanation
The author states that 'public health solutions cannot succeed through modern technological enforcement alone without authentic community integration,' indicating a critical stance towards interventions that are solely technological and lack integration with cultural and financial realities.
Question 31
Points: 2
The Precision Medicine Revolution: Deciphering the Cellular Blueprint For over a century, the practice of healthcare rested on a generalized standard-of-care model: if patients exhibited similar outward symptoms, they received identical chemical interventions. While this one-size-fits-all methodology saved countless lives, it also suffered from high rates of failure. Many patients failed to respond to treatments, and others experienced toxic side effects. Today, this therapeutic standard is undergoing a major shift. By interpreting unique genetic sequences, clinicians target specific biological root faults instead of surface anomalies. Data complexity and storage present monumental roadblocks. Generating a complete genetic profile produces massive amounts of raw data. Analyzing this information requires substantial processing power and advanced bioinformatics platforms. In addition, the high cost of genetic screening threatens to worsen existing healthcare inequalities. Without major policy changes, this technology risks becoming an exclusive privilege for wealthy patients. For precision medicine to truly succeed, governments must integrate genetic profiling into public health systems, ensuring that cutting-edge diagnostics are accessible to all. Furthermore, medical professionals require continuous structural retraining to transform raw clinical data into operational diagnoses. Because individual cellular pathways adapt continuously to patient lifestyles, relying purely on rigid historical reference models leads to diagnostic misreadings. Overcoming these multi-layered bioinformatic, socio-economic, and clinical educational barriers dictates the speed at which personalized medicine transforms into standard public practice. Healthcare models must evolve alongside genetic insights to preserve systemic equity across global populations. What historical model formed the baseline axis of healthcare standard practices for over a century?
Explanation
Paragraph one describes the historical model as 'a generalized standard-of-care model' where 'if patients exhibited similar outward symptoms, they received identical chemical interventions. While this one-size-fits-all methodology...'
Question 32
Points: 2
According to paragraph 1, identical chemical interventions caused some patients to encounter:
Explanation
Paragraph one explicitly mentions that with the old model, 'Many patients failed to respond to treatments, and others experienced toxic side effects'.
Question 33
Points: 2
Precision medicine tracks target biological anomalies by reviewing what parameters?
Explanation
Paragraph one states that precision medicine works 'By interpreting unique genetic sequences,' which allows clinicians to 'target specific biological root faults'.
Question 34
Points: 2
Why does generating genetic profiles pose massive bioinformatic computational blocks?
Explanation
Paragraph two explains that 'Generating a complete genetic profile produces massive amounts of raw data,' which then requires 'substantial processing power and advanced bioinformatics platforms'.
Question 35
Points: 2
If policy reforms are not active, high screening costs risk turning precision medicine into:
Explanation
Paragraph two states that 'Without major policy changes, this technology risks becoming an exclusive privilege for wealthy patients,' directly answering the question.
Question 36
Points: 2
True clinical success dictates that cutting-edge diagnostics be integrated into:
Explanation
Paragraph two clearly states, 'For precision medicine to truly succeed, governments must integrate genetic profiling into public health systems'.
Question 37
Points: 2
Medical professionals require active retraining primarily because:
Explanation
Paragraph three states that retraining is required 'to transform raw clinical data into operational diagnoses,' which is essentially translating data into treatments.
Question 38
Points: 2
Relying blindly on rigid reference models causes misreadings because pathways:
Explanation
Paragraph three explains that 'individual cellular pathways adapt continuously to patient lifestyles,' making rigid models unsuitable and leading to misreadings.
Question 39
Points: 2
The transition speed of personalized health into public sectors is dictated by:
Explanation
Paragraph three states that 'Overcoming these multi-layered bioinformatic, socio-economic, and clinical educational barriers dictates the speed at which personalized medicine transforms into standard public practice'.
Question 40
Points: 2
The overall message regarding the expansion of genetic medicine emphasizes:
Explanation
The passage emphasizes the need for advanced diagnostics to be 'accessible to all' and for healthcare models to 'evolve alongside genetic insights to preserve systemic equity across global populations,' highlighting a balance between technology and societal fairness.
Question 41
Points: 2
Preventative Epidemic Infrastructure: Systemic Pacing Developing systemic resistance protocols within municipal populations requires shifting from active crisis intervention to strategic, preventative infrastructure frameworks. Historically, community responses mobilized only following the presentation of heavy clinical outbreaks, leading to overwhelmed therapeutic spaces and rapid cross-contamination vectors. Modern epidemiologists argue that permanent population defense begins with structural lifestyle integration. Design components including optimized workspace airflow configurations and mandatory biological recreation pauses mitigate environmental pathogen density. However, implementing structural systemic change encounters immediate pushback from corporate operational models focused tightly on uninterrupted performance parameters. Managers regularly argue that integrating operational pacing models degrades industrial throughput capacity. This viewpoint fails to account for macro-economic metrics tracking long-term productivity losses triggered by systemic staff illness. True defensive progress manifests when operational pacing frameworks are calculated as critical resource preservation assets, rather than optional recreational accommodations. Ultimately, verifying the performance metrics of localized containment and pacing structures requires intensive, long-term observational analysis. By linking micro-level physical data indicators with community-wide wellness registries, clinical engineers can trace exact transmission reduction indices. Balancing technical monitoring with active community agency ensures that public health defenses remain durable, equitable, and capable of adapting to modern, highly connected urban centers without causing structural socio-economic disruptions. Shifting to strategic, preventative frameworks requires moving away from:
Explanation
Paragraph one states that developing preventative frameworks 'requires shifting from active crisis intervention,' indicating a move away from such dependencies.
Question 42
Points: 2
What historic failure accompanied population defenses that mobilized only after outbreaks occurred?
Explanation
Paragraph one details that historical responses 'leading to overwhelmed therapeutic spaces and rapid cross-contamination vectors' were a failure of mobilizing only after outbreaks.
Question 43
Points: 2
What structural design components are recommended to drop local pathogen densities?
Explanation
Paragraph one suggests 'optimized workspace airflow configurations and mandatory biological recreation pauses' as design components to mitigate pathogen density.
Question 44
Points: 2
Corporate managers push back against systemic pacing programs because they fear:
Explanation
Paragraph two states that 'Managers regularly argue that integrating operational pacing models degrades industrial throughput capacity,' which is their primary fear.
Question 45
Points: 2
The corporate argument fails to track what critical macro-economic metric area?
Explanation
Paragraph two explains that the corporate viewpoint 'fails to account for macro-economic metrics tracking long-term productivity losses triggered by systemic staff illness,' indicating this is the critical metric missed.
Question 46
Points: 2
Authentic progress happens when pacing frameworks are evaluated as:
Explanation
Paragraph two clearly states that 'True defensive progress manifests when operational pacing frameworks are calculated as critical resource preservation assets'.
Question 47
Points: 2
Validating these complex defense metrics requires what process mechanism?
Explanation
Paragraph three specifies that 'verifying the performance metrics... requires intensive, long-term observational analysis' and linking data for 'exact transmission reduction indices'.
Question 48
Points: 2
Clinical engineers can map precise transmission containment ratios by connecting:
Explanation
Paragraph three explains that engineers can trace indices 'By linking micro-level physical data indicators with community-wide wellness registries'.
Question 49
Points: 2
Balancing tech logs with community agency guarantees that health networks remain:
Explanation
Paragraph three states that balancing these elements 'ensures that public health defenses remain durable, equitable, and capable of adapting to modern, highly connected urban centers'.
Question 50
Points: 2
A major takeaway concerning IELTS 6.5 Level public health defense models implies:
Explanation
The passage advocates for preventative strategies involving 'optimized workspace airflow configurations' (environmental geometry) and 'structural lifestyle integration' (human behavioral factors), emphasizing their seamless integration for effective defense.
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