1. A ______ of lions was resting under the shade of the trees.
Anonymous Quiz
17%
A) flock
48%
B) pride
13%
C) swarm
22%
D) pack
β€1
2. A ______ of musicians performed at the school concert.
Anonymous Quiz
10%
A) crew
74%
B) band
12%
C) audience
5%
D) panel
3. A ______ of stars can be seen in the night sky forming a pattern.
Anonymous Quiz
21%
A) collection
4%
B) library
15%
C) set
60%
D) constellation
4. A ______ of crows was perched on the tall tree, cawing loudly.
Anonymous Quiz
19%
A) murder
51%
B) flock
13%
C) pack
18%
D) gaggle
5. A ______ of geese walked along the riverbank in a neat line.
Anonymous Quiz
15%
A) herd
25%
B) troop
23%
C) gaggle
37%
D) swarm
6. A ______ of poets met to discuss their latest works at the literary festival.
Anonymous Quiz
40%
A) panel
26%
B) troop
28%
C) congress
7%
D) flock
7. A ______ of flamingos stood gracefully in the shallow lake.
Anonymous Quiz
42%
A) flock
24%
B) colony
17%
C) squad
17%
D) stand
As for speaking test, its not about grammar but its about your communication. You have to be confident when you speak.
1. Train your brain to think directly in English instead of tryna translate a sentence from BM/Chinese to English because you might get stuck.
2. Use simple and clear English. You dont have to use bombastic words to score well. Your fluency is more important.
3. For discussion part, practice with your partner everyday till your speaking test. This helps to boost your confidence and you'll feel more comfortable with your partner.
NOTE: (Jangan cakap non stop je. You get marks for being interactive)
So, what should you do?
- start the discussion
- agree/disagree with your partner's point politely
- add opinions
- involve your partner by asking them what do they think abt your pov
4. During your actual speaking test, you tend to be nervous. It's fine. It's totally normal guys..
- take a deep breath before you start
- smile (helps to relax your face and voice)
- pauses are okay, so dont rush
@getreadyspm
Min Navi
1. Train your brain to think directly in English instead of tryna translate a sentence from BM/Chinese to English because you might get stuck.
2. Use simple and clear English. You dont have to use bombastic words to score well. Your fluency is more important.
3. For discussion part, practice with your partner everyday till your speaking test. This helps to boost your confidence and you'll feel more comfortable with your partner.
NOTE: (Jangan cakap non stop je. You get marks for being interactive)
So, what should you do?
- start the discussion
- agree/disagree with your partner's point politely
- add opinions
- involve your partner by asking them what do they think abt your pov
4. During your actual speaking test, you tend to be nervous. It's fine. It's totally normal guys..
- take a deep breath before you start
- smile (helps to relax your face and voice)
- pauses are okay, so dont rush
@getreadyspm
Min Navi
β€11
A+ bersama kak daa π·
Photo
kalau dah macamni , sepatutnya undang undang hapuskan akta bawah umur tu. suka sama suka so patutnya dua dua pihak kena diberi hukuman. kalau ikutkan , lelaki tu pun bawah umur. so not fair kalau lelaki je dihukum . kakdaa baca komen kt tt , pp tu siap gelak gelak lagi kt sekolah. tkde rupa trauma langsung. ada yang cakap , dalam vid yang tersebar tu , pompuan tu memang mintak dan enjoy. kawan kawan skolah dorang kata , kes ni dh agak lama. lepas kes tu , fam pp tak buat report pun. bila vid dh tersebar baru nk buat report.
π«‘10
idk la ek betul ke tak. tpi apapun kalau suka sama suka , dua dua patut kena hukum
Forwarded from Study With Rafael β¨ (Rafael Nitesh)
Here are some tips ( personal advice) to help you score well in the SPM English listening test (Paper 4 / 1119/4):
---
π§ Before the Test
1. Familiarize yourself with the format
Know how many parts there are, how many questions per part, how much time you have to read the questions before listening, etc.
This helps reduce surprise and lets you allocate attention wisely.
2. Build your listening habit
Listen to English audio daily (Podcasts, news, YouTube)
Use past-year listening modules / trial papers to practise under exam-like conditions
Do dictation exercises: listen to short sentences and write them down, then check. This improves both listening and spelling.
3. Work on spelling and vocabulary
The listening paper often requires you to write short answers or missing words. Spelling errors can cost you marks.
Reinforce common SPM vocabulary; practise spelling them correctly under time pressure.
4. Learn to predict / anticipate
Before the audio starts, read the questions (and choices if MCQ) and underline or note keywords (WH-words: who, what, where, when, why, how).
Predict possible types of answers (names, numbers, places, verbs) so when you hear them you can catch them quickly.
---
ποΈ During the Test
1. Listen actively, not passively
Focus on keywords (you predicted earlier)
Donβt try to catch every single word; understand the meaning or context.
Be alert to synonyms or paraphrases (the wording in the audio may not exactly match the question)
2. Take shorthand notes / jottings
Write down short phrases, numbers, names, connecting words, or anything you hear that seems relevant.
Use symbols, abbreviations, and arrows.
3. Donβt get stuck
If you miss something or canβt understand part of the audio, donβt freeze. Move on to the next bit and use your prediction / context to recover.
4. Use the second listening wisely
The recording is played twice. In the second run, you should check your jottings, confirm your answers, fill blanks, and correct mistakes.
5. Watch for distractors / traps
Sometimes the audio will mention something but then immediately contradict it or shift to a different idea. Donβt pick the first thing you hearβlisten till the end of the relevant segment.
6. Manage your time
You get limited time before each part to read the questions. Use that time well.
Donβt spend too much time on one question or remain blank.
---
π After the Test (During Checking / Revision)
1. Double-check your spelling and grammar (if applicable)
Even if you understood the answer, a spelling mistake can lose you marks.
2. Ensure your answers make sense
Read your answers in context. Sometimes you may need to adjust (e.g. singular vs plural, tense) to fit the grammar of the question.
3. Review your mistakes / weak points
After practising with past papers, always check which kinds of questions you got wrong (e.g. missing details, misheard names, spelling errors). Work on those specifically.
---
π§ Before the Test
1. Familiarize yourself with the format
Know how many parts there are, how many questions per part, how much time you have to read the questions before listening, etc.
This helps reduce surprise and lets you allocate attention wisely.
2. Build your listening habit
Listen to English audio daily (Podcasts, news, YouTube)
Use past-year listening modules / trial papers to practise under exam-like conditions
Do dictation exercises: listen to short sentences and write them down, then check. This improves both listening and spelling.
3. Work on spelling and vocabulary
The listening paper often requires you to write short answers or missing words. Spelling errors can cost you marks.
Reinforce common SPM vocabulary; practise spelling them correctly under time pressure.
4. Learn to predict / anticipate
Before the audio starts, read the questions (and choices if MCQ) and underline or note keywords (WH-words: who, what, where, when, why, how).
Predict possible types of answers (names, numbers, places, verbs) so when you hear them you can catch them quickly.
---
ποΈ During the Test
1. Listen actively, not passively
Focus on keywords (you predicted earlier)
Donβt try to catch every single word; understand the meaning or context.
Be alert to synonyms or paraphrases (the wording in the audio may not exactly match the question)
2. Take shorthand notes / jottings
Write down short phrases, numbers, names, connecting words, or anything you hear that seems relevant.
Use symbols, abbreviations, and arrows.
3. Donβt get stuck
If you miss something or canβt understand part of the audio, donβt freeze. Move on to the next bit and use your prediction / context to recover.
4. Use the second listening wisely
The recording is played twice. In the second run, you should check your jottings, confirm your answers, fill blanks, and correct mistakes.
5. Watch for distractors / traps
Sometimes the audio will mention something but then immediately contradict it or shift to a different idea. Donβt pick the first thing you hearβlisten till the end of the relevant segment.
6. Manage your time
You get limited time before each part to read the questions. Use that time well.
Donβt spend too much time on one question or remain blank.
---
π After the Test (During Checking / Revision)
1. Double-check your spelling and grammar (if applicable)
Even if you understood the answer, a spelling mistake can lose you marks.
2. Ensure your answers make sense
Read your answers in context. Sometimes you may need to adjust (e.g. singular vs plural, tense) to fit the grammar of the question.
3. Review your mistakes / weak points
After practising with past papers, always check which kinds of questions you got wrong (e.g. missing details, misheard names, spelling errors). Work on those specifically.
β€6
ULANGKAJI SEJ VOL 1.pdf
414.6 KB
ULANGKAJI SEJARAH SPM 2025 bersama Miss Ca πβ€οΈ
Tarikh : 16/10/25
Hari : Khamis
Masa : 8 pm
Platform : Livestream channel A+ bersama kak daa
Fokus : Tajuk penting dan sukar beserta teknik menjawab soalan
Tarikh : 16/10/25
Hari : Khamis
Masa : 8 pm
Platform : Livestream channel A+ bersama kak daa
Fokus : Tajuk penting dan sukar beserta teknik menjawab soalan
π1