Soal 43
X : Tom, are you sure that we are going to have a math test next Monday?
Y : … We’ve finished lesson \( 5 \), haven’t we?
A. I hope so
B. I agree with that
C. I am sorry to hear that
D. It’s out of the question
E. I am \( 100 \) percent certain about it.
Answer & Analysis
Key: A
Analysis: X asks for certainty about a test next Monday. Y then adds a supporting remark: “We’ve finished lesson \( 5 \), haven’t we?” This suggests Y is not fully certain, but thinks it is likely because they have completed the material. The most natural response showing expectation (not absolute certainty) is “I hope so.”
A. Correct: “I hope so” expresses expectation/hope and fits with giving a reason (finishing lesson \( 5 \)).
B. Incorrect: “I agree with that” is used to agree with a statement/opinion, but X asked a question.
C. Incorrect: “I am sorry to hear that” expresses sympathy and does not fit the context of a possible test.
D. Incorrect: “It’s out of the question” means impossible/not allowed, contradicting the idea that a test is likely.
E. Too strong: this expresses total certainty, but Y’s tag question “haven’t we?” implies uncertainty and checking.
Soal 44
Lawyers : Tom, your wife wants to get half of the property, the investment and also the children.
Tom : I don’t get along with that. She claims too much, I think.
The underlined expression shows …
A. disagreement
B. impossibility
C. uncertainty
D. inability
E. denial
Answer & Analysis
Key: A
Analysis: The phrase “I don’t get along with that” (intended meaning: “I don’t agree with that / I can’t accept that”) is followed by “She claims too much,” which clearly indicates Tom rejects the wife’s demand. This is an expression of disagreement.
A. Correct: Tom disagrees with the proposal and says she claims too much.
B. Incorrect: the sentence does not say it is impossible, only that he does not accept it.
C. Incorrect: Tom is not unsure; he states a clear opinion.
D. Incorrect: inability means “cannot do,” not “do not agree.”
E. Less accurate: while Tom rejects the claim, the function here is disagreement with a demand/proposal rather than denying a fact.
Soal 45
Dito : I heard your brother was robbed in front of a bank after he had withdrawn a lot of money.
Yono : … He is at home and he is fine.
A. It’s not true
B. I cannot deny it
C. I bet you will deny that
D. I disagree with your opinion
E. I’m not sure about it
Answer & Analysis
Key: A
Analysis: Dito reports a rumor. Yono responds by asserting a fact: “He is at home and he is fine.” That strongly indicates the rumor is false, so the best opening is “It’s not true.”
A. Correct: directly denies the rumor and matches the follow-up statement that the brother is fine at home.
B. Incorrect: “I cannot deny it” means it might be true, conflicting with “He is fine.”
C. Incorrect: it comments about denying, not giving an actual response to the rumor.
D. Incorrect: this is not a matter of “opinion,” but a factual claim (robbed or not).
E. Incorrect: “I’m not sure” shows uncertainty, but Yono sounds sure by stating where his brother is.
Soal 46
Waiter : What do you think of our “honey roasted chicken”?
Customer : … with the dishes you served me.
A. I’m extremely satisfied
B. I hate
C. I don’t like
D. I prefer
E. I try
Answer & Analysis
Key: A
Analysis: The waiter asks for an opinion. A natural polite customer response in a restaurant is positive appreciation. “I’m extremely satisfied with the dishes you served me” is grammatically complete and context-appropriate.
A. Correct: expresses satisfaction and fits the phrase “with the dishes you served me.”
B. Incorrect: “I hate with the dishes …” is ungrammatical and overly harsh.
C. Incorrect: “I don’t like with the dishes …” is ungrammatical; it should be “I don’t like the dishes …”
D. Incorrect: “I prefer with the dishes …” is ungrammatical and incomplete (prefer what?).
E. Incorrect: “I try with the dishes …” is ungrammatical and does not answer the waiter’s question.
Soal 47
Ria : We’ll have to steam rice for dinner.
Yanto : Why? What’s happened with the rice cooker?
Ria : It is broken.
Yanto : … then.
A. We’ll get it repaired
B. We’ll have repaired it
C. We’ll get someone repair it
D. We’ll have someone repaired it
E. We’ll have it to repair
Answer & Analysis
Key: A
Analysis: Since the rice cooker is broken, the logical plan is to have it fixed. The correct causative structure is “get + object + past participle”: “get it repaired.”
A. Correct: “We’ll get it repaired” is grammatically correct and fits the situation.
B. Incorrect: “will have repaired” is future perfect, implying the repair is completed by a future time, and it does not fit naturally here.
C. Incorrect: it is missing “to” (“get someone to repair it”) and is ungrammatical as written.
D. Incorrect: causative “have” should be “have someone repair it” (base verb), not “repaired.”
E. Incorrect: “have it to repair” is not a correct English structure.
Latihan Soal Bahasa Inggris SMA/MA
- Latihan Soal Bahasa Inggris SMA/MA - Paket 1
- Latihan Soal Bahasa Inggris SMA/MA - Paket 2
- Latihan Soal Bahasa Inggris SMA/MA - Paket 3
- Latihan Soal Bahasa Inggris SMA/MA - Paket 4
- Latihan Soal Bahasa Inggris SMA/MA - Paket 5
- Latihan Soal Bahasa Inggris SMA/MA - Paket 6
- Latihan Soal Bahasa Inggris SMA/MA - Paket 7
- Latihan Soal Bahasa Inggris SMA/MA - Paket 8
- Latihan Soal Bahasa Inggris SMA/MA - Paket 9
- Latihan Soal Bahasa Inggris SMA/MA - Paket 10
- Latihan Soal Bahasa Inggris SMA/MA - Paket 11
- Latihan Soal Bahasa Inggris SMA/MA - Paket 12