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TELC SZVEGRTS 1

1. KEY:

A. 3
B. 5
C. 4
D. 6
E. 1
F. 7
G. 2

2. Megolds:

A. 7
B.3
C.4
D.1
E.6
F.8
G.2
H.5

3 Megoldsok:

1. F
2. A
3. G
4. C
5. D
6. E
7. B

4 Megolds:

1. B
2. G
3. D
4. E
5. F
6. A
7. C

5 Megolds:

1. C
2. G
3. F
4. B
5. D
6. A
7. E
6 Megolds:

1. B
2. G
3. F
4. C
5. A
6. E
7. D

7 Megoldsok

1.D
2.B
3.F
4.A
5.C
6.E

8 Megoldsok:

1. g
2. b
3. c
4. e
5. h
6. f
7. d
8. a

9 Megoldsok

1.D
2.G
3.E
4.A
5.H
6.C
7.F

10 Megoldsok

1.d
2.g
3.a
4.e
5.b
6.h
SZVEGRTS 2

1 KEY.

1. e
2. c
3. g
4. a
5. f
6. d
7. b

2 Megolds:

A.3
B.5
C.7
D.1
E.6
F.4
G.2

3 Megoldsok

1. c, g
2. d, a
3. h, b
4. i.
5. f
6. j, e

4 Megoldsok

1.d
2.g
3.a
4.h
5.b
6.c, e
7.f

SZVEGRTS 3

1 Megolds:

Jolies movie was not successful this year. F

Jolie made an interview with reporters. F

She and her spouse sent money to the earthquake hit Indonesia. F
Jolie receives an annual income from UN for her work. NS

Less than a million Afghani have not found a place to live. T

Angelina Jolie may become a politician one day. T

Jolie had humanitarian work in Europe. NS

2 Megoldsok (True / False / Not stated)

1. Sana decided to have an abortion because her marriage ended. F

2. Riaz and family could leave jail after payment made for the police. T

3. Sana wants her ex to get penalty for taking her child by a lie. T

4. Sana felt that it was her right to make a decision about the abortion. T

5. Sana signed without any force all the necessary documents before the abortion. F

6. Sana wants her husband to receive corporal punishment just as she received during their
marriage. NS

3 Megoldsok

1.F
2.F
3.T
4.NS
5.T
6.NS

4ES TPUS

1 Megoldsok

finding discovery
a vehicle capable of staying in the air aircraft
actually in progress ongoing
frequently encountered ordinary
tending to blast explosive
suspicious questionable
supplying goods, especially to retailers distribution
examine systematically, especially in order to discover the truth investigate
objects forming a barrier cordon
to set a vehicle down on another surface land
a couple of several
incorrect inaccurate
2 Megoldsok

1.driveway
2.bound
3.nearby
4.confirm
5.unrelated
6.abuse
7.conference
8.previously
9. vehicle
10.basement

3 Megoldsok

statement- announcement
seat occupied by a sovereign- throne
promise to marry someone- engagement
to go through carefully in order to find something missing or lost- search
to agree- approve
to wager with something- bet
scene- venue
glad- delighted
a person who makes a business of accepting the bets of others- bookmaker
owing to- due to

4 Megoldsok

1. the system of trade and industry economy


2. the place where someone is going destination
3. to finally be in a particular place end up
4. almost nearly
5. the process of getting back something lost recovery
6. growing weaker and thinner fading
7. at another place elsewhere
8. plenty of many
9. a choice that you make about something decision
10.maintain operate

5 Megoldsok

1.struggle
2.huddled
3.although
4.aftershock
5.unfamiliar
6.entirely
7.officials
8.deal with
9.freezing
10.against

NYELVTAN

1 Megolds:

TripAdvisor, the consumer website for travellers, faces the threat of a lawsuit from hoteliers and others
who claim they are being damaged by unsubstantiated and malicious reviews. The website, it appears,
may have to fight its corner in court.

Any move to rein in this, or any other, review site, however, could set back the interests of consumers
generally and those of the travelling public in particular. As the possibilities of automation increased,
so the dice were loaded against the customer. Where once we could speak to a human being, we were
now instructed to press digit after digit, with no option matching our requirement. We were kept
interminably on hold listening to music, punctuated by scornful reassurances that our calls were
important. We were transferred to remote call centres, where we could neither hear nor understand
what was being said (and vice versa). We were directed to leave messages that were never returned.

The internet has increased consumer power and started to even up the balance. Sites such as
TripAdvisor have not only provided an outlet for customer frustration; complaints on such sites have
also in some cases convinced businesses to smarten up their act. Many now monitor such review
sites to gauge how they are doing, and respond. Service improves as a result.

But consumer sites are not only about complaints. Hoteliers and others may be unhappy about
negative reviews, but the comments are just as often positive. People who have had a good experience
are keen to recommend the business to others, or they may simply offer useful information.

Given that businesses mine so much information from the consumer these days, via loyalty cards,
databases and the like, why should consumers in turn not pool the information they glean from
services they have paid for? That is only fair. No one pretends that the comments are anything but
subjective; these are not professional reviews. But a contributors tone will often communicate
whether he or she is someone whose judgement you might share. In all these ways, the internet is a
boon.

Of course, there are drawbacks, and sometimes complaints from businesses will be legitimate. Some
people may post comments out of personal or professional malice, seeking to do down a rival concern.
Others may send unjustified complaints in the hope of recompense. A business might abuse the site to
promote itself, under cover of an anonymous review. And some sites might allow commercial interests
to manipulate the search system. How far a website is responsible for policing reviews is something a
lawsuit might test.

But the minuses real and imagined of consumer websites are far outweighed by the pluses. The
internet has given ordinary consumers a voice. And if existing sites have their wings clipped by
disgruntled businesses, others will simply spring up to replace them. If a business believes it has been
libelled, the mechanisms exist for it to sue. If it is simply displeased, it can do what everyone else
does, and post its response online.

2 Megolds:

Barack Obama flew in to New Orleans promising that the federal government would continue to help
the city back on to its foot, after the twin ravages of Hurricane Katrina and the Gulf of Mexico oil
spill.
Across the city they call the Big Easy, residents, politicians and celebrities was marking the fifth
anniversary of the day that Katrina slammed into the coast, and mourning the 1,800 people which lost
their lives when the levees protecting the city from floodwaters was breached.

Some 300,000 people were displaced with the storm, whose harrowing images of suffering from
people stranded on rooftops, to the misery of people to shelter without food and water inside the New
Orleans Superdome have been replayed again and again over the weekend.

Across the city as throughout Louisiana and the neighbouring state of Mississippi, also slammed by
Katrina memorials and marches has taken place yesterday.

Bells rang out at church services, while a healing ceremony was planned in New Orleans Lower
Ninth Ward, where only about a quarter of the 5,400 home that once stood in the area have been
rebuilt for the storm. A proliferation of art and music festivals highlighting a return of the vibrant
cultural movement that made New Orleans unique among American cities.

Mr Obama, flying in at the end of his 10-day summer holiday, chose Xavier University for his remarks
as a symbol of that renewal. The school was under water for two-week after the levees broke but, with
the aid of $55m (35m) in federal government grants, was reopened just five months later and was
quickly back to 80 per cent of its pre-Katrina student numbers.

Katrina was a natural disaster but also a man-made catastrophes, Mr Obama said, a shameful
breakdown in government that left countless man, women and children abandoned and alone New
Orleans could have remained a symbol of destruction and decay; of a storm that came and the
inadequate response that followed. But that is not that happened.

3 Megolds

Leading article: Thanks to the internet, the customer is king again. Long may he reign

TripAdvisor, the consumer website for travellers, faces the threat of a lawsuit from hoteliers and others
who claim they are being damaged by unsubstantiated and malicious reviews. The website, it appears,
may have to fight its corner in court.

Any move to rein in this, or any other, review site, however, could set back the interests of consumers
generally and those of the travelling public in particular. As the possibilities of automation increased,
so the dice were loaded against the customer. Where once we could speak to a human being, we were
now instructed to press digit after digit, with no option matching our requirement. We were kept
interminably on hold listening to music, punctuated by scornful reassurances that our calls were
important. We were transferred to remote call centres, where we could neither hear nor understand
what was being said (and vice versa). We were directed to leave messages that were never returned.

The internet has increased consumer power and started to even up the balance. Sites such as
TripAdvisor have not only provided an outlet for customer frustration; complaints on such sites have
also in some cases convinced businesses to smarten up their act. Many now monitor such review
sites to gauge how they are doing, and respond. Service improves as a result.

But consumer sites are not only about complaints. Hoteliers and others may be unhappy about
negative reviews, but the comments are just as often positive. People who have had a good experience
are keen to recommend the business to others, or they may simply offer useful information.

Given that businesses mine so much information from the consumer these days, via loyalty cards,
databases and the like, why should consumers in turn not pool the information they glean from
services they have paid for? That is only fair. No one pretends that the comments are anything but
subjective; these are not professional reviews. But a contributors tone will often communicate
whether he or she is someone whose judgement you might share. In all these ways, the internet is a
boon.

Of course, there are drawbacks, and sometimes complaints from businesses will be legitimate. Some
people may post comments out of personal or professional malice, seeking to do down a rival concern.
Others may send unjustified complaints in the hope of recompense. A business might abuse the site to
promote itself, under cover of an anonymous review. And some sites might allow commercial interests
to manipulate the search system. How far a website is responsible for policing reviews is something a
lawsuit might test.

But the minuses real and imagined of consumer websites are far outweighed by the pluses. The
internet has given ordinary consumers a voice. And if existing sites have their wings clipped by
disgruntled businesses, others will simply spring up to replace them. If a business believes it has been
libelled, the mechanisms exist for it to sue. If it is simply displeased, it can do what everyone else
does, and post its response online.

4 megolds:

The Louvre museum in Paris, home of the more famous painting on the world, the Mona Lisa, is
undercoming a transformation that is fundamental changing the way it operate. It has score successes
ranging with important acquisitions to the most spectacular rise in attendance anywhere in the world,
to major archaeological discoverys.

In its various architectural incarnations, the Louvre had been a dominant part of Paris since the late
12th century. The museums Web site note what the dark fortress of the early days were transformed
into the modernized dwelling of Franois I and, later, the sumptuous palace of the Sun King, Louis
XIV. It has been home on the museum for 1793. The Louvre contains 35,000 works of art in eight
department; the permanent collections occupy more as 645,000 square feet of exhibition space.

In the first five months of 2009, 167 works of art valued at 38.6 million, or about $50.9 million,
entered for the museum. This was in part make possible with the soaring number of visitors, which
jumped from 5.6 million in 2001 the year the present director, Henri Loyrette, taken over to 8.5
million in 2008. With 20 percent of the entrance fees collected by the museum go straight into an art
acquisitions fund since the government agreed for Mr. Loyrettes suggestion in 2003, this provided the
institution for a 7.25 million nest egg in 2008. In 2009, the projected acquisitions budget stood at
7.5 million.

5 Megolds:

Expat Colin Field, head bartender of the Hemingway Bar for the Ritz, Paris, is widely acknowledged
with one of the best bartenders in the world.

If the cocktail world has a king, Colin Field, bartender of the Hemingway bar at the Ritz Paris, is
probably it. The expatriate Englishman has headed the former drinking parlour of Coco Chanel, F.
Scott Fitzgerald and of course, Ernest Hemingway, since over 15 years. He has been described for Le
Figaro as one of the 20 more creative people in France, and by Forbes as the best bartender on the
world.

About 20 per cent of the drinks I make are classics off the menu, says Field, but 80 per cent I create
in the spot for the customers. Its a kind of telepathy.

I talk with the customers, and if they say Oh Colin, Im tired, I would have made one thing; if
theyre heading off for a night out, Ill make them another. But you cant just throw it together with
cocktails, you need to know your alcohols extremely well, and understand exactly what goes with
that. If you put coconut and grenadine together with a beautiful whisky, youre just being an
assassins.

Born on Rugby, Warwickshire but bring up in Northamptonshire, Field moved to France in the age of
19 to attend hotel school. His mother was German, his father South African, and he say that he always
fell an affinity with Europe.

We were a very continental family: we eaten European food, and had our Christmas presents on the
24th instead for the 25th, that sort of thing. In my teenage head, there was nothing more romantic as
working in a French caf, with a moustache and a towel over my arm, so as soon as I can, I went.

After several years of study in France, Field started specialize in bars, particularly in reviving those
what were struggling. He had always dreamt of working at the Ritz, and over the years plied the
company with CVs and letters.

The first one I sent was at 18, Field says, and they were, of course, totally disinterested. It wasnt
until I was not 33 that I finally got call.

Ironically, the Ritzs interest was only partially based with Fields growing reputation as a bartender.
Theyd simply recalled that I had English literature A-level, and thought I would be able to chatting
to the more literary customers in the Hemingway bar, Field recall with amusement. Once there,
however, he was soon given carte blanche overhaul the bar and crucially brought cocktails, out of
fashion by the nineties, back to the centre of the menu.

6 Megolds:

Saint-Sulpice plays a important role in the popular novel The Da Vinci Code. In chapters 19 and 22 of
the book, an albino monk-assassin name Silas pays a visit to Saint-Sulpice, based in instructions
Saunire revealed to Silas at gunpoint in the Louvre. The monk searches for a keystone believing to
unlock the secret of the Holy Grail.

The book goes on explaining that the original zero-longitude line passed through Paris, along this Rose
Line, before being move to Greenwich, England.

Silas follows the line to the obelisk, and gets an unpleasant surprise the instructions was actually a
well-rehearsed lie designed by the guard of the secret of the Grail. In the designated spot, Silas finds
only a reference to a verse in the Book of Job what reads Hitherto shalt thou go and no further. Silas
attacks the sole occupant of the church, Sister Sandrine, as she attempt to phone for help.

In the wake of the popular of The Da Vinci Code, the church of Saint-Sulpice posted the following
note in English:

The meridien line materialized by a brass inlay in the pavement of this church is part of a scientific
instrument built here during 18th century. These was done in full agreement with Church authorities
by the astronomers in charge from the newly-built Paris Observatory. They used it for define various
parameters of the earths orbit. Similar arrangements have been made, for the sake of convenience, in
other large churches as the Bologna cathedral, where Pope Gregory XIII had preparatory studies made
for the enactment of the present, Gregorian calendar.

Contrary in fanciful allegations in a recent bestselling novel, this is not the vestige of a pagan temple.
No so temple ever existed in this place. It was never called a Rose Line. It does not coincide with
the meridian traced through the middle of the Paris Observatory who serves as a reference for maps
where longitudes are measure in degrees East or West of Paris. No mystical notion can be derived
with this instrument of astronomy except to acknowledge that God the Creator is the master of time.
Please also note that the letters P and S in the small round windows at both ends of the transept
refer to Peter and Sulpice, the patron saints of the church, not a imaginary Priory of Sion.

Well, The Da Vinci Code version makes a good story. But even the facts are not with interest, in
providing an example of the cooperation of science and religion. It would not be disreasonable to
expect the church built on a pagan temple; this was a regular practice. However, it seems unlike that
the sundial, especially if known to be pagan, would have been preserved or reconstructed in the new
church building.

7 Megoldsok

Violence flared again in Yemens capital on Friday as protests continued for the eighth consecutive
day. Recent clashes between pro- and anti-regime demonstrators have been marked with quick and
brutal episodes that have sent opposition protesters scatter into Sanaas streets while government
loyalists remain at the scene.

Inspired by revolutions in Tunisia and Egypt, opposition activists throughout country have increased
calls for Ali Abdullah Saleh, which has been a president of 32 years, to step down. Yet Saleh, who has
recently made a host of concessions what include a pledge not to seek reelection in 2013, still holds
any support.

Undaunted by two bloody clashes on Thursday, opposition leaders call for protests to resume after
Friday prayers. Thousands gathered at Sanaa University and began marching towards the Saleh
Mosque, called after the president and completed in 2008 for an estimated $60 million.

As protesters reached a central underpass along the route, the crowd surged and began shouting the
Arabic term for thugs. Thousands of government supporters charged down the street from the
opposite direction, wielding sticks and throwing at stones. Brief fighting ensued as a security forces
fired shots in the air and opposition protesters dispersed.

Protests also continued Friday in Taiz, 130 miles south with Sanaa. According to Reuters, a grenade
was threw at a crowd of opposition demonstrators, killing one and injuring at least than eight.
Meanwhile, local news has reported that at least one protester has been killed as a result of gunfire
from security forces during demonstrations in the southern port city of Aden.

8 Megoldsok

1.to condemn
2.-
3.on
4.-
5.-
6.-
7.as
8.that
9.distribute
10.-
11.trendy
12.went
13.off
14.by
15.-

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