Saturday, August 15, 2009
ANGGOTA MGMP BIG 2009/ 2010
TAHUN 2009/2010
NO. NAMA UNIT KERJA TELP/ HP
1. RIRIEN DWI K. SMPN 2 0817312664
2. FIRMANSYAH SMPN 3 08993992262
3. ENDANG TJATUR SMPN 5 08123035038
4. MUNASRI SMPN 7 08123117419
5. TOHA MAKSUN SMPN 8 08123105114
6. RIWIN SMPN 10 08385911411
7. PANCA LUKITA SMPN 11 085732048374
8. WINTARTI SMPN 12 08155183322
9. DWI BUDI W. SMPN 13 081331314748
10. TRI ADHI I. SMPN 14 081231181198
11. BAMBANG IRIANTO SMPN 16 --
12. HERMIN PURWANTI SMPN 17 08815054858
13. M. JULI A. SMPN 19 087852432309
14. ERNANINGSIH SMPN 21 03171920502
15. SITI DJULAIKA SMPN 22 03170183716
16. MARIYONO SMPN 25 03171972162
17. IDA ALFIAH SMPN 27 03170109903
18. MAHRIJANI SMPN 28 03171565156
19. ANDRIANA DWI A. SMPN 31 081615242700
20. SRI SUNDARI SMPN 32 --
21. MAT DRANGI SMPN 34 --
22. ITA EKA O. SMPN 35 --
23. NOOR HUDAWAN SMPN 36 081553125048
24. SARI KUSUMA N. SMPN 37 03172348048
25. DIAN APRIANI R. SMPN 39 --
26. ACHDIJATUN P. SMPN 40 --
27. DEASI I. SMPN 42 081553625791
28. KAMAMI SMPN 44 08883176899
29. HENNY R.A. DAARUL MUTTAQIEN 03171932180
30. ERWIN D. YBPK 1 03177622675
31. ADELIA C.I. AL IRSYAD 081331727323
32. KHOSYATI U. MTs.N 1 081330452170
Friday, August 7, 2009
UNDANGAN PERTEMUAN RUTIN
No : 66/MGMP/BIG/VIII/2009
Kepada Yth : Bpk/Ibu Guru Bahasa Inggris SMP Negeri Surabaya
Dengan Hormat,
Hari / Tanggal : Sabtu, 15 Agustus 2009
Demikian atas perhatian dan kerjasamanya kami sampaikan terima kasih.
Khusnul Khotimah M. Afandi, S.Pd.
Drs.Idris, M.Pd., M.Si.
Sunday, May 10, 2009
1. The skin of a rhinoceros _____ more than an inch thick.
A. may be
B. it may be
C. to be it
D. for it to be
2. The first person who _____ in less than four minutes was Roger Bannister.
A. running a mile
B. a mile was run
C. he ran a mile
D. ran a mile
3. A black hole is what _____ at the end of the life of a star.
A. the remnants
B. remains
C. remaining
D. that remains
4. The 19th Amendment to the Constitution, passed in 1920, _____ the right to vote.
A. granted women
B. women granted
C. granting women
D. the grant for women
5. The lenses on near-sighted eyes do not grow thin enough, so _____ distant objects clearly.
A. they cannot see
B. cannot be seen
C. their sight
D. seeing them
6. In 1869, the first railroad _____ the east and west coasts of the United States was completed.
A. it connected
B. was connecting
C. connecting
D. connected
7. Both Copernicus and Galileo _____ that the Sun was~ the center of the solar system.
A. they postulated
B. postulated
C. it was postulated
D. the postulation
8. Poll taxes, which potential voters had to pay before voting in federal elections, _____ in 1964.
A. were outlawed
B. the outlaws
C. to outlaw
D. outlawing
Underline the wrong part of the sentences below
9. The vertebrae of snakes are distinctively in that each vertebra touches its front and back neighbors at five different points.
10. In 1800, Napoleon Bonaparte took back western Louisiana from Spain, and in 1802 they canceled the American right to trade at New Orleans.
11. Little League baseball bats may not to be longer than 33 inches.
12. A complex system of levers in a piano is accessed as each keys are struck.
13. The first electronic computer, the ENIAC, was introduce in 1946.
14. Some adhesives occur in nature or are easy made from plant or animal materials.
15. On the third Monday in February, Americans celebrate the births of both George Washington or Abraham Lincoln.
16. Something that produces a very low temperature when added to gas are borax.
17. In an orchestra, more than half of the musicians plays stringed instruments.
18. The Earth's crust is very thin under the oceans, but its thicker under the continents.
19. A little types of snakes, such as boas and pythons, retain remnants of vestigial limbs.
20. Harriet Beecher Stowe's novel Uncle Tom's Cabin (1852) achieved great success in the North but banning in most of the South.
Thursday, April 30, 2009
1. The skin _____ body's heaviest organ.
A. of the human
B. of humanity
C. on a human's
D. is the human
2. _____ of the space shuttle Columbia began on April 12, 1981.
A. The flight was first
B. The first flight
C. For the first flight
D. On the first flight to be
3. _____ has more than 650 muscles.
A. The human body
B. The body is human
C. For the human body
D. In the body of a human
4. The ancestors of _____ lived on land.
A. once whales and dolphins were
B. whales and dolphins once
C. whales and dolphins were once
D. from whales and dolphins once
5. _____ life on Earth for three billion years.
A. Algae dominated
B. The domination of algae
C. Dominant algae
D. Algae dominating
6. _____ for Coca-Cola is in a safe-deposit vault at the Trust Company of Georgia.
A. The recipe was secret
B. The secret recipe was
C. In the secret recipe
D. The secret recipe
7. The sunflower will _____ from east to west to follow the sun.
A. its head turns
B. turn~ its head
C. the turn of its head
D. its head turning
8. The chief _____ atmosphere are nitrogen and oxygen.
A. gases were in the
B. gases in the
C. gases were the
D. were gases in the
9. _____ from the University of South Alabama in 1994, at the age of 10.
A. Michael Kearney's graduation
B. The graduation of Michael Kearney
C. Graduate Michael Kearney
D. Michael Kearney graduated
10. The largest bone in _____ the thigh bone, or femur.
A. the human body
B. it the human body
C. the ~human body is
D. the human body to be
11. Steven Spielberg _____ at the age of 13 for a 40-minute war film.
A. won~ a contest
B. a winning contestant
C. the contest was won
D. a winner of the contest
12. _____ out of four million Irish at the time of the 1840s potato famine came to the United States.
A. One million were
B. For one million to be
C. One million
D. For one million
13. _____ has the lowest freezing point of any metal.
- Mercury is the one
- On Mercury
- It is Mercury
- Mercury
A. is fixed daily
B. a day to be fixed
C. a day is fixed
D. a daily fixation
15. Approximately two and a half million _____ living in colonial America by the middle of the eighteenth century.
A. people
B. people were
C. people inhabited
D. in people were
16. _____ in the world, with over 4,300 hours of sunshine per year, is the eastern Sahara.
A. The place is sunny
B. Of the sunniest places
C. The sunniest place
D. Sunny places are
17. _____ the result of thermonuclear fusion reactions deep within the sun.
A. Solar energy
B. The energy of the sun
C. In solar energy is
D. Solar energy is
18. The oldest known _____ existence were made on a clay tablet in Babylon in about 3000 B.C.
A. maps in
B. maps
C. maps were in
D. in maps were
19. Aerospace telemetry _____ the 1930s with the development of the balloon-borne radiosonde.
A. a date in
B. dating
C. dates from
D. the date of
20. _____ of mapped passages in Mammoth Cave in Kentucky make it the world's longest known cave network.
A. The 300-mile length
B. It is 300 miles long
C. The 300-mile length is
D. Because of the 300-mile length
Wednesday, April 29, 2009
Reading Comprehension
The Olympic Games have not been staged without interruption since their birth. Instead, there have been two periods in the history of the Olympic Games, with a long hiatus in between.
The first Olympic Games began more than two and a half millennia ago and continued to the latter part of the fourth century. They were first played in Greece in 776 B.C. The first Olympics consisted of only one event, the marathon. Other sports were added later. The early Greek Olympics eventually also included wrestling, boxing, a chariot race, and the pentathlon. These early Olympic Games were held every four years for more than 1,000 years. They were discontinued in 393 A.D. by a ruling from the Roman Emperor.
The Olympic Games were not played again until the end of the nineteenth century. In 1894 Baron Pierre de Coubertin undertook the organization of the International Olympic Committee. Two years later, the first modern Olympic Games were held in Athens, Greece. More than 300 athletes from 13 different countries competed in nine sports: cycling, shooting, fencing, swimming, wrestling, weight lifting, gymnastics, tennis, and track and field.
1. It can be inferred from the passage that the Olympics
A. have run continuously from the start
B. were discontinued for 1,500 years
C. were started in 776 A.D.
D. started 250 years ago
2. The early Olympics were most likely held
A. only once
B. only twice
C. about a hundred times
D. more than 200 times
3. The early Olympic Games were most probably stopped in 393 A.D. because
A. they were declared illegal
B. people were not interested in them
C. they caused a lot of injuries
D. people were afraid of them
4. It is implied in the passage that the first modern Olympics were held
A. in 1800
B. in 1894
C. in 1896
D. in 1900
5. The first modern Olympics most likely included
A. the same events as the early Olympics
B. all of the events from the early Olympics, plus a few more
C. none of the same events as the early Olympics
D. some of the events from the early Olympics, plus a few more
STRUCTCTURE
1. An acre originally represented the area that a yoke of oxen _____ in a single day.
A. a plow
B. to plow
C. plowing
D. could plow
2. _____ the chemicals that make water hard.
A. For carbonates to be
B. Carbonates are
C. Carbonates
D. In carbonates
3. _____ that we see is made up of all the colors of the spectrum.
A. In the light
B. The light
C. It lights
D. Because the light
4. Only beryl _____ deep green in color can be called emerald.
A. that is
B. is
C. it is
D. that
5. Unlike paints, _____ into the material that they color.
A. dyes dispersing
B. the dispersion of dyes
C. dyes are dispersed
D. to disperse dyes
6. A baseball _____ a cork and rubber core that is tightly wrapped with yarn.
A. which has
B. having
C. it has
D. has
7. The muscle that the fiddler crab uses to pull its pincer shut _____.
A. with extreme strength
B. must be extremely strong
C. it must be extremely strong
D. extreme strength
8. The Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution, which _____, was proclaimed on December 18, 1865.
A. abolishing slavery
B. slavery to abolish
C. the abolition of slavery
D. abolished slavery
9. President Herbert Hoover, for whom _____, was educated as an engineer.
A. Hoover Dam's name
B. the name of Hoover Dam
C. Hoover Dam was named
D. naming Hoover Dam
10. _____, which formed in the crater of an extinct volcano, is the deepest lake in the United States.
A. In Crater Lake
B. Crater Lake is a lake
C. Crater Lake
D. The lake has a crater
11. _____ in which most carnivorous plants live do not provide the plants with enough nourishment.
A. The poor soils
B. Within the poor soils
C. The soils are poor
D. The poor soils are
12. Most tundra plants are mosses and lichens _____ the ground for warmth.
A. that hug
B. hug
C. they hug
D. that a hug
13. In 1705, Edmond Halley, for whom Halley's Comet is named, _____ the 1758 return of the comet.
A. accurate prediction
B. prediction with accuracy
C. he predicted accurately
D. accurately predicted
14. George Washington's _____ on the balcony of the Federal Hall in New York City, which was then the national capital.
A. the place of the inauguration
B. inauguration took place
C. was inaugurated in a place
D. took the place of an inauguration
15. _____ of serving lemon with fish derived from the belief that the acid in lemon juice would dissolve fish bones.
A. The custom
B. Because it is customary
C. It is customary
D. The custom is
16. Pandas have a thumb-like sixth finger _____ really an extension of the wrist bone.
A. is
B. it is
C. which
D. which is
17. Hawks have excellent eyesight that they _____ even tiny prey on the ground from high in the air.
A. using to spot
B. to spot a use
C. use to spot
D. a use on spots
18. Keno, an early form of bingo, _____ of chance which dates from the early nineteenth century.
A. it is a game
B. which is a game
C. is a game
D. a game
19. The first reigning king for whom the U.S. _____ an official reception was David Kalakaua, king of the Sandwich Islands.
A. government's hold
B. government held
C. the hold of the government
D. holding the government
20. The people who _____ in North America during colonial times commonly ate cornmeal mush or boiled rice for breakfast.
A. settled
B. settling
C. to settle
D. the settlement
Wednesday, April 22, 2009
Dialog
Sarah: Hey Lisa, wait up! I've wanted to have a chance to talk to you.
Lisa: Hi! What's up?
Sarah: This weekend I'm having a birthday party for Ted. I'd like you to come.
Lisa: I'd love to. When is it?
Sarah: We're having it this Saturday at 8:00 at my house. We're going to order a pizza and play some games. Then whoever wants to stay longer can hang out and watch a video.
Lisa: It sounds like a lot of fun. But now that I think about it, I promised I would do something with Nathan Saturday night.
Sarah: Well why don't you bring him along? It would be fun. Ted would really like that. I'm sure.
Lisa: Really? That would be great. Okay, I'll ask Nathan to come along. What can I bring?
Sarah: Nothing. Just bring yourselves. No presents are necessary and everything else has been planned.
True or False. (Check your understanding).
1. Sarah wants to invite Lisa to a beach party.
2. Lisa asks Sarah what is up on top of the roof.
3. It is Nathan's birthday this weekend.
4. Lisa has plans to do something with Nathan on Saturday night.
5. Sarah wants Nathan to come to the party, too.
6. Everybody is going to watch a video at Sarah's house.
7. Lisa needs to buy a present for Ted's birthday party.