CAE Practice test booklet with key, sách ôn thi HSG THPT hay

CAE Practice test booklet with key, sách ôn thi HSG THPT hay cho sinh viên tham khảo, ôn tập chuẩn bị cho kì thi sắp tới. Mời bạn đọc đón xem!

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CAE Practice test booklet with key, sách ôn thi HSG THPT hay

CAE Practice test booklet with key, sách ôn thi HSG THPT hay cho sinh viên tham khảo, ôn tập chuẩn bị cho kì thi sắp tới. Mời bạn đọc đón xem!

85 43 lượt tải Tải xuống
Sylwia Wojciechowska-Bartkiewicz
J£ZYK ANGIELSKI
Zestaw cwiczeri
na poziomie
CAE
Gramatyka i sfownictwo
HAKDYBQQKS
Przedmowa
Ksiazka, kt6ra trafia w Panstwa r?ce skierowana jest do osob przygotowujacych si?
do egzaminu Cambridge Certificate in Advanced English, tak wi?c skfada si?
ona z zestawu cwiczeii na poziomie zaawansowanym. Zawarte w niej testy moga^
sluzyc zarowno zapoznaniu si? z zagadnieniami gramatyczno-leksykalnymi
typowymi dla tego egzaminu, jak rowniez jako powtorka przed egzaminem.
Jednoczesnie ksiazka moze przydac si? osobom, ktore nie zdaja^ egzaminu CAE
jednakze chcialyby poszerzyc zasob slownictwa, udoskonalic umiej?tnosc
stosowania wybranych struktur gramatycznych oraz wprawic si? w rozwiazywaniu
testow na poziomie zaawansowanym.
Ksiazka sklada si? z czterech gtownych cz?sci: Grammar, Vocabulary, Punctuation
oraz English in Use Exam Practice. Material zawarty w pierwszych trzech cz?sciach
zostaf dobrany tak, aby okazac si? pomocnym przy rozwiazywaniu konkretnych
testow egzaminacyjnych, czyli np. multiple choice gap
fill,
czy open gap
fill.
Przykfadowo, znajdujace si? w cz?sci gramatycznej cwiczenia na przedimki lub
przyimki okaza. si? przydatne przy rozwiazywaniu testu typu open gap
fill,
natomiast
cwiczenia na kolokacje maja, za zadanie przygotowanie do rozwiazania testu typu
multiple choince gap
fill.
Ostatnia cz?sc ksiazki sprawdza umiej?tnosc
rozwiazywania testow, podobnych do
tych,
ktore spotkaja^ Pahstwo w cz?sci
egzaminacyjnej English in Use.
Niniejsza pozycja moze bye wykorzystana nie tyiko na zaj?ciach, ale rowniez
podczas samodzielnej pracy, dzi?ki pelnemu kluczowi z odpowiedziami do cwiczen
umieszczonemu na kohcu ksiazki.
Napisalam t? ksigzk?, aby podzielic si? doswiadczeniem zdobytym w pracy z
grupami egzaminacyjnymi na poziomie CAE i mam nadziej?, ze zawarte w niej
testy pomogq Panstwu w przygotowaniu si? do tego egzaminu.
Autorka
Spis tresci
CAE Grammar Practice 7
Definite, indefinite and zero articles 9
Modal verbs 13
Gerund or Infinitive 17
Phrasal verbs 21
Prepositions and prepositional phrases 28
CAE Vocabulary Practice
33
Confused words 35
Word formation 50
Collocations and idioms 58
Compounds 64
Punctuation Practice 70
CAE English in Use, Exam Practice
73
Part
1
74
Part 2 84
Part 3 89
Part 4 94
Key to exercises 105
5
CAE Grammar Practice
Definite, indefinite and zero articles
Fill the gaps with the, a, an or no article.
1 Siberian tiger is threatened with extinction because it is
virtually impossible to trace cunning Russian poachers.
2 life of Marco Polo was full of bold and breathtaking adventures.
3. Today for several thousand dollars and with help of professional
mountaineers everyone can climb Mount Everest.
4.
In Hyde Park in central London ordinary people can make
speeches and express their opinions on various issues.
5 bicycles standing on porch belong to our children's friends.
6 Mr Turner called you while you were out, but he didn't want to
leave a message, and said that he would call again later.
7 more I think of prospect of emigrating to Canada, less
idea appeals to me.
8. Don't you recognise the picture? It's Picasso!
9. We're trying to create friendly atmosphere in our company, and
therefore we often go out together after work.
10.
If you happen to come late after midnight, try not to make noise as
other tenants are bound to be fast asleep at that time.
11 candidate for the advertised position should display in-depth
knowledge of IT related issues.
12.
In his novels James Joyce depicts Dublin of his times.
13.
We stayed in New York for so short time that we had no chance to
see Statue of Liberty, not to mention other tourist attractions.
14.
This region of Germany is renowned for excellent white wine its
vineyards turn out.
9
30.
William Wallace devoted his whole life to fighting for freedom of
Scots.
31.
Having looked through various travel brochures I came to
conclusion that it's not worth going on holidays to Greece for one week
only.
32.
I've been racking my brains, but I can't remember exact date of
opening of exhibition. I think it's Thursday, but I can't tell
you which week.
33.
In my opinion, buying shares in this ailing company is quite risky
investment.
34.
Yesterday at 5 p.m. there was pile-up on roundabout close to
where I live. First, driver of blue van didn't give right of
way to approaching sedan and cars collided. Then
cars behind didn't manage to slow down in time, and bumped into them.
blue van wasn't badly damaged, but sedan was really
smashed.
35.
A lot of people believe that it is unlikely for human beings to ever settle
in space.
36.
I don't suppose man like your boss believes in life after
death.
37.
Ask Derek. He keeps up with exchange rate and should know if
currently value of euro against dollar is favourable or
not.
38.
The shortest way to England is through Straits of Dover.
39 only piece of information public prosecutor's office wanted to
give to press was that...... accused is going to stand trial
next Wednesday.
40.
A lot of newlyweds choose Bahamas as destination for their
honeymoon trip.
11
41 editor is person whose duties include supervising work
of journalists in his newspaper or magazine.
42 lion might have been provoked by very fact that
lion-
tamer approached its cage.
43.
Her father is ardent supporter of Republicans and wants her
to marry Republican.
44.
Do you want to say that you talked to Thorn Yorke, singer?
That's unbelievable!
45.
Maggie claims that believing strongly in God helped her
endure a lot of suffering in her life.
46.
Every democratic country should guarantee freedom of
speech.
47.
Newspapers in England can be classified into two types:
broadsheets and tabloids Times is example of
broadsheet.
48.
Tough measures should be taken to decrease amount of
noxious fumes in atmosphere.
49.
As I was leaving office, I caught sight of two dodgy-looking
men coming into secretary's room.
50 crew aboard Canberra didn't realise that they were in
grave danger and were reluctant to abandon ship.
12
Modal verbs
I. Choose the best option to fill each gap.
1.
I didn't know you didn't eat meat. You me
earlier! I would have prepared something vegetarian
then.
a) could tell b) should have told c) should tell d) must have told
2.
One smoke in this room. This is prohibited!
a) mustn't b) shouldn't c) won't d) needn't
3. Kate to the library, as they didn't have the
book for her. She could have called to ask instead.
a) needn't go b) couldn't have gone c) needn't have gone
d) ought to go
4.
'I can see that you are pretty busy at the moment.
I help you in any way?'
a) Should b) May c) Will d) Might
5. The notice says: 'Application forms be
submitted to the office within 15 days.'
a) must b) have to c) need to d) shall
6. 'You have told me it was a formal dinner! I
would have put on something smart. In my old jeans I felt like a bit of a
misfit.'
a) may b) needed c) might d) ought
7. She me that something was wrong. I could
see it clearly the moment she looked at me.
a) needn't have told b) mustn't have told c) didn't need to tell
d) can't have told
13
8. I have much more free time when I was a
student and life seemed to be a piece of cake!
a) would b) was used to c) used to d) could
9. The curtains caught fire when the child was carelessly playing with
matches, but we put it out by ourselves.
a) could b) would c) could have d) were able to
10.
You'd better steer clear of her today. She
be really irritable when she has a headache.
a) may b) can c) could d) might
11.
Come on! Stop moaning! We hurry up or we'll be late for the
plane.
a) shall b) need c) have to d) must
12.
Winter in our country be quite
cold,
so take a warm jacket and
some woollens.
a) may b) could c) is able to d) can
13.
He be the owner of the newspaper, but it doesn't mean that he can
treat his employees like dirt.
a) might b) may c) can d) could
14.
As the film is no longer on at cinemas, we as well watch it on DVD.
a) may b) can c) could d) shall
15.
The instruction says that we write approximately 200 words on this
topic.
a) must b) shall c) can d) have to
14
II.
Paraphrase the italicised fragments in the following sentences
using modal verbs.
1.
No wonder the engine didn't start. The tank was empty.
2.
Although I tried hard to retrieve the file from the hard drive, it was gone
forever.
3. It is necessary that convoys delivering humanitarian aid reached the
famine-stricken area quickly.
4.
It is possible that he changed his name after leaving the country to
avoid being recognised.
5. Whenever you sign a contract, always read carefully the text in fine
print in order not to accept unknowingly some unfavourable terms,
(use lest)
6. Jonathan looks very
tired.
He surely had a hectic day at work.
7. Ask the native inhabitants of the village. They will perhaps give you
more accurate information than the guidebook.
8. In my opinion the party is expected to win the election easily.
9. I'd like to ask my boss for a pay rise, but I'm afraid to do it. (use dare)
15
10.
The two girls spoke in undertones because they didn't want the boy to
overhear what they were saying, (use so that)
11.
It's impossible that it was him that you saw at the cinema yesterday! He
left the country a week ago!
12.
It's surprising that these city slickers are moving to live in the country
after all the disapproving remarks they've made about life on the farm.
13.
I'm sure Brenda is watching her favourite sitcom because she isn't
answering the phone. She simply doesn't want anybody to disturb her.
14.
Ritchie didn't want to sell his battered old Ford because he was very
sentimental about it.
15.
It's typical of computer nerds to sitior hours on end in front of the
screen crunching algorithms.
16
Gerund or infinitive
Put the verbs in brackets into -ing or infinitive form (bare infinitive or
to-infinitive).
1.
I'm afraid we can't afford (buy) a new car. We
have to save some more money and wait till next year.
2.
Oh dear! I forgot (send) her a Christmas
card!
She won't talk to me any more!
3. He advises me (not wear) my favourite pink shirt
for the job interview, as the boss hates that colour.
4.
I'm sure I sent that letter! I remember (put) it in
the post box round the corner.
5. I think she is a great actress! I saw her (act) in a
play at the National Theatre last week. She held the audience
spellbound.
6. As we were passing by our neighbours' house, we heard Sam
(rehearse) for the concert.
7. Now that he's got married, he considers (move)
to a bigger flat.
8. She was made (accept) her new duties because
the boss threatened (dismiss) her if she didn't
accept them.
9. Jack denied (rummage) around in her papers.
He claimed that the mess was due to a wind's blow.
10.
I regret (not go) with my friends to Ireland. They
had such a wonderful time there!
17
11.
God knows why I agreed (look after) their little
son while they were on holiday! Never in my life have I seen such a
naughty kid!
12.
If you don't finish this project till the end of the week, you risk
(lose) the job.
13.
He warned me (not travel) in the mountains
alone,
as one might easily get lost.
14.
My dad encouraged me (try) again in spite of
difficulties.
15.
He probably still hasn't got the money to pay me back, and that's why
he avoids (meet) me.
16.
The defendant offered a bribe, but the judge refused
(take) it.
17.
The airline strives (meet) the highest safety
standards.
18.
Margaret can't help (binge) on chocolate when
she feels depressed.
19.
It's no use (try) to sell state-of-the-art computers
to primary schools as they simply can't afford this.
20.
Derek is such a womaniser! He can't resist (pick
up) all nice girls that he meets at work.
21.
The job involves (be) on call 24 hours a day.
22.
We regret (inform) you that your account is
overdrawn.
23.
The upset customer insisted on (speak) to the
manager immediately.
24.
The policeman was accused of (traffic in) drugs
and was held in custody.
25.
The professor reminded the students (come) to
the lecture 30 minutes earlier next week.
18
26.
After several hours of interrogation the suspect eventually admitted
(take) part in the bank robbery in Northampton
last week.
27.
They don't allow (eat) in the library, so you'd
better put your sandwich back in your bag.
28.
You shouldn't hesitate about (buy) this dress.
You really look stunning in it.
29.
I didn't dare (ask) her this question. It was too
personal.
30.
Tony suggested (invite) more people to the
party. He thinks that the more people there are, the more fun we may
have.
31.
I didn't mean (offend) you, I didn't know that
such music really appealed to you. Now I feel deeply apologetic.
32.
If you suffer from insomnia, and sleeping pills don't help you, try
(drink) a glass of milk before going to bed.
Believe me, it really helped in my case!
33.
Excuse me, I don't speak English
well.
Can you help me
(fill) in this form?
34.
He saw the fear in my eyes and hastened (add)
that I won't have to work on the project alone, but I'll have an assistant
to help me.
35.
I'm afraid we will have to postpone (renovate)
our house for some time because at this moment we have more urgent
expenses.
36.
The writer was forced into exile two years ago, and in every interview
he gives, he says how much he longs (see) his
family.
37.
He bribed one of the customs officers (smuggle)
a crate of wine.
19
38.
Doctor Jenkins, I do appreciate your (come)
here at such a short notice.
39.
In my opinion you should forbid your son (go) to
parties for the next three months after his outrageous behaviour at the
last party. That should teach him a lesson!
40.
As Sheila had missed several consecutive classes in algebra, she
dreaded (meet) the teacher, who was known for
being strict.
41.
Our company has been trying really hard to meet the deadline of
October 5
th
, but unfortunately we have failed
(deliver) on time the last five packaging machines.
42.
There's no point in (repair) this banger. You'd
better sell it for scrap.
43.
At the university meeting, the professor first discussed the items on the
agenda and went on (outline) the most important
issues at the linguistic conference that he had just come back from.
44.
I'm afraid this draft really needs (revise). There
is a considerate number of content-related errors.
45.
Look at his sad wrinkled face. He seems
(endure) a lot of hardship in his life.
46.
Having spent the whole life in a tiny village, Gina couldn't imagine
(move) to one of the biggest cities in the
country.
47.
Do you fancy (go) for a drink after the training
session?
48.
Although he is a prominent political figure, he doesn't mind
(meet) ordinary people.
49.
If you want to boost your sales, it may be worth
(put) an advertisement in the local newspaper.
50.
If I were him, I wouldn't waste time (apply) for a
managerial position with such mediocre qualifications.
20
Phrasal verbs
I. Rewrite the following sentences replacing the underlined
expressions with the correct phrasal verbs in the right forms. In
each sentence you are given part of the phrasal verb in boldface.
1.
She is always criticising her neighbours behind their backs. RUN
2.
He promised that he would come to help me, but he disappointed me
and didn't turn up. DOWN
3. He pretended that he was not a Scotsman, but his accent betrayed him.
AWAY
4.
I wanted to get the job, but they rejected my application because I didn't
know German well enough. TURN
5. They tried to deceive me, but I discovered their true intentions and
realised that they wanted to rob me of my money. THROUGH
6. Tom quarrelled with his boss and a couple of days later he was given
the sack. FELL
7. I can't bear the noise of my neighbour's lawn mower. It always wakes
me up in the morning. PUT
21
8. At first we didn't like our new teacher but when we got to know him
better, we started to like him. TAKE
9. Patti resembles her mother in so many respects. For example, she is as
stubborn and as garrulous as her mother. AFTER
10.
Before you go to your boss to ask for a pay rise, write down quickly the
points that you want to make to support your case. DOWN
11.
You should persuade your brother-in-law to buy this car because it is
such a bargain. TALK
12.
Being full of admiration for her as a singer, I rushed to buy a ticket for
her concert, the moment I heard she was coming to Poland. However,
her performance was far from what I had expected. Now, I can say I
much prefer listening to her CDs to going to her concerts. COME
13.
The American Civil War between the North and the South started in
1861 and was won by the Union in 1865, when General Robert E. Lee
and his army were forced to surrender at Appomattox in Virginia.
BREAK
14.
I'm terribly sorry, I didn't have time to give you a hand with all the
preparations for the party. Please, let me help you with the cleaning
when the party finishes, so that I can compensate for it. UP
22
15.
The deal didn't come to completion because the company didn't agree
to the terms of payment that we proposed. THROUGH
16.
When I organise a party it's always the same. Everything seems to go
according to
plan,
but at the last minute some problems appear
unexpectedly and spoil everything. CROP
17.
The Turners arranged to get a mortgage from a building society to buy
this house and now their biggest concern is how to pay it off. OUT
18.
Terry is a weird bloke. His behaviour is so baffling and his ideas seem
to be so contradictory that I've given up hope of understanding him.
MAKE
19.
The very sight of the restaurant with its shabby interior repelled me.
I wasn't starving to eat in a place like that. OFF
20.
When I was shopping in the new mall I met Andrew accidentally.
I thought he was still on a scholarship in Frankfurt. INTO
21.
At the last session the municipal authorities resolved to demolish the
abandoned tenement buildings at Crocket Street. DOWN
22.
When the flood subsided, we could see clearly that half of the town was
destroyed completely. WIPE
23
23.
He is just a budding playwright, but he has already his own theatre
company and they are performing a play in our city next week. ON
24.
Unfortunately, there are still a lot of instances of xenophobia in the
world and people of different origins are often despised in both their
professional and their private lives. LOOK
25.
Being the sole heir, Daniel inherited his grandmother's vast estate after
her death. INTO
26.
Thousands of people employed in the steel industry in Poland have
been dismissed because some orders have dried up. LAY
27.
If I hadn't been delayed by the traffic in the city centre, I would've
arrived on time for the meeting. UP
28.
The price was exorbitant! I'm afraid the advertising agency really
overcharged you for the commercial. RIP
29.
It goes without saying that James has brilliant acting abilities. Have you
seen him imitating the Prime Minister? That was side-splitting, I tell you!
OFF
30.
The legal advisors of the two companies met to prepare the initial
version of the partnership contract. UP
24
II.
Complete the sentences with the word which best fits each space.
1.
The testimony given by the defendant in court didn't up.
The person contradicted himself on several points.
A make B add C prove D join
2.
The doctor's diagnosis is that the patient's neurosis has been brought
by frequent overwork.
A on B off C in D out
3. There are still some occurrences of strange behaviour among monkeys
that biologists find difficult to for.
A run B account C stand D reason
4.
Calculating the time of your journey to Prague, you will have to
for the possible stops on the way, for example to refuel
your car or have some meals.
A watch B settle C allow D break
5. Whenever there is a climate change I suffer from a thumping headache.
However, as soon as I take a painkiller, the headache starts to
off.
A leave B take C wear D let
6. You can go and buy the tickets for us and I'll see the
luggage until you get back.
A over B about C around D to
7. Mr Thomson, can I take tomorrow afternoon off because my fiancee is
leaving Poland for a couple of months and I'd like to her
off?
A walk B drive C see D send
25
8. The Great Depression set following the huge and sudden
fall of share prices on the US Stock Exchange in October 1929.
A forth B off C down D in
10.
Everyone was over by his decision to quit a well-paid job
and move over to the countryside.
A taken B thrown C struck D bowled
10.
Ladies and gentlemen, now I'd like us to discuss the proposal that Ms
Ridley put during the last meeting.
A across B in C forward D out
11.
When the journalist asked her a question in front of many cameras she
didn't utter a word. We all her reaction down to stress.
A put B laid C took D turned
12.
When the leader of the expedition to the Arctic Circle offered to take
him there, he at the chance.
A called B jumped C got D came
13.
When the professor advanced his theory at a medical conference a
couple of years ago, everyone was sceptical about its validity. However,
the latest research has it out.
A borne B carried C stood D cleared
14.
After the car accident she was in a coma for the whole week but her
mother didn't lose hope that one day her daughter would
round.
A be B bring C come D go
15.
My teenage son kept begging me to buy him the latest version of this
computer game and I finally gave
A out B away C over D in
26
16.
I hope the con artist will not get with the insurance
swindle and will receive a proper punishment.
A away B off C over D out
17.
In this book the film director shares the fun he's had in making films and
lets the reader in some of the secrets of his success.
A to Bon C through D for
18.
Students with a high enough grade point average are eligible to
in for the Fulbright Scholarship.
A go B let C stand D put
19.
Being the world champions they weren't going to for a
draw with a team from the Third Division.
A settle B fall C let D call
20.
As for now, foreigners up only a small proportion of the
student community in our college.
A hold B fill C take D make
27
Prepositions and prepositional phrases
Put the right preposition in each gap.
1.
There has been a huge increase humidity in this region over the
last few months.
2.
While Brian was working for the TRG company, he gained a huge
experience marketing, which turned out to be extremely useful in
his next job.
3. She has a real aptitude photographing. Her photographs are so
impressive.
4.
Jenny is still very angry her brother his attitude
her decision.
5. This pub always reminds me my student years. I often went
there with my mates after classes.
6. Please remind me the next credit instalment for our car. This
month it almost slipped my mind.
7. Don't take any notice the technicians. They will install the
hardware and be gone shortly.
8. Please welcome Prof. Wells, an expert phonetics. Professor,
you may take the floor.
9. Compulsive eaters often can't resist their cravings
food,
regardless the time of day.
10.
As our country has entered the EU, our farmers are now eligible
subsidies from a special EU
fund.
11.
Corporal Peters was given a medal recognition his
devotion to duty.
28
12.
His decision to downshift and swap his managerial position for a less
demanding one took everyone surprise.
13.
Due to changes in her department she's been a lot of stress
recently.
14 fear that the boy may be age, the barman asked him to
produce an ID card before selling some beer.
15.
Drug addicts are incapable controlling their actions when
suffering lack of drugs.
16.
The scientists researching the nature of black holes believe to
be the verge a major breakthrough.
17.
Adolescents rarely trust professional counsellors and choose to confide
their peers.
18.
If you don't comply the rules of the game, the referee may award
a penalty against you.
19.
The thugs were charged assault and battery.
20.
Early models of this CPU were prone constant crashes when
working for a long time.
21.
I'm absolutely convinced that our students shall greatly benefit
the exchange programme with Harvard University.
22.
My bank charges 1 zloty each transfer.
23.
Although she had already been reprimanded by her superior her
casual outfits at work, she persisted wearing jeans.
24.
Our production department prides itself its environmentally-
friendly technologies.
25.
The essential skill the job of a nursery school teacher is to be
good children.
26.
The sportsman is going to make an attempt beating the pole
vault record.
27.
Pregnant women should eat food which is rich proteins.
29
28.
I was really surprised to find out that the naughty boy I knew has grown
such a well-mannered man.
29.
The old king had no direct descendant and the people wondered who
would succeed the throne.
30.
In the last interview the famous charity leader assured everybody that
he's very committed improving the standards of living of the
homeless.
31.
One of the obvious advantages of city life country life is that
shops and leisure facilities are reach.
32.
Many graphic designers claim that Apple computers are more user-
friendly comparison ordinary PCs.
33.
The Daily Telegraph isn't a tabloid; the contrary, it is a serious
quality newspaper which usually supports the ideas of the Conservative
Party.
34.
Manufacturers often increase their productivity the expense
the quality of goods.
35.
The product has been withdrawn from the market response
dramatically poor interest in it from the target group customers.
36.
Polish nurses, construction workers, engineers and IT specialists are
much demand in some European Union countries.
37.
She gained such a top position virtue her hard work and
experience.
38.
This charming little country's main industry is tourism as it is deficient
natural resources.
39.
After Ken had gone skiing without proper warm clothes on, he was ill in
bed for a week influenza.
40.
If you feed your dog only leftovers, no wonder it loses its fur.
41.
Professor Goodman's team of students has performed so well that
all likelihood they will get the scholarship.
30
42.
The majority of the participants of the panel discussion were
favour reintroducing the Welsh language into schools.
43.
Can you tell me what became the cookery book I gave you for
your birthday three years ago?
44.
Sales representatives' commission is commensurate their sales
figures.
45.
Trained orang-utans have astounding capabilities learning
artificially created languages.
46.
Middle aged men have unfathomable fondness red sports cars.
47.
The mob's violent reaction to the government's declaration was
all proportion; many shops were devastated and vehicles burnt.
48.
Our safari guide advised us leaving the vehicle fear
being attacked by wild animals.
49.
Everybody expressed amazement how fast the child grew up.
50.
The President's spokesperson stated that the President's decision
concerning the bill should no means be associated with the
upcoming election.
31
CAE Vocabulary Practice
Similar but different: confused words
Choose the suitable word to fill the sentences. Put the words in the
correct form where needed.
1.
sensible/sensitive
a. Don't be so ! It was just a general remark,
I didn't mean to criticise you.
b. We must think of a solution. There is no room
for mistakes any more.
c. This is a very issue, and I'd rather not talk
about it in public. I'm afraid my point of view may upset some people.
treat/cure
a. Nowadays malaria can be
b. He has been
but he has not been
c. Some time ago doctors couldn't
with drugs.
in hospital for two weeks now,
yet.
tuberculosis.
3. disinterested/uninterested
a. We wanted to hear an objective opinion, hence we sought the advice
of a(n) counsellor.
b. I told her the story but she seemed She
hardly listened to me.
c. Jack is in learning anything, and that's why
he can't see any point in going to university.
35
4.
eminent/imminent
a. We can't do anything to prevent it. The disaster is
b. He is an scientist, well-known and respected
all around the world.
5. compliment/complement
a. The brown colour of her sweater her hazel
eyes perfectly.
b. The best way to win Susan over is to her on
her new clothes or hairstyle. She is so
vain.
c. They each other nicely. She is a dreamy,
artistic soul and he keeps both feet on the ground.
6. stationary/stationery
a. We went to the department to buy some
envelopes.
b. The car collided with a vehicle, but
fortunately nobody was killed.
c. In winter it's difficult to practice sport outdoors. Therefore, I bought
a exercise bike.
7. raise/rise
a. This charity money to help homeless people.
b. The bag is too heavy for me to it. You can try.
c. The unemployment level dramatically
recently. The government must take some measures to improve the
situation.
d.
Emily from the table and went over to the
window to see who had come to visit them.
36
e. The Prime Minister promises that he has no intention of
taxes at present.
8. discrete/discreet
a. They are very reliable assistants, very They
wouldn't go gossiping about anything they discovered while working
for you.
b. There are two business consulting
companies in the town. The competition between them is very
strong.
c. The animals in the picture can be divided into several
categories.
d.
You should ask only questions if you don't
want to offend her.
9. say/tell
a. The doctor me to stay in bed for a couple of
days.
b. Anne him that she was going to leave the
country.
c. What did she to you? Was it something about
my performance?
d.
The twins are so much alike that I can't the
difference between them.
e. I wouldn't trust him. He's known for lies.
37
10.
do/make
a. Can you me a favour and buy these things
for me?
b. My son is so untidy! He never his bed in the
morning before going out to school.
c. I have a complaint to Can I see the
manager?
d.
I'll my best to finish writing the article in time.
e. The storm a lot of damage on the island.
f. You must be thirsty. I'll you some tea.
g.
I'm sorry to leave you for a moment but I have an urgent phone-call
to
11.
hanged/hung
a. The picture has been badly It should be
lower, nearer the mantelpiece.
b. He was found guilty of treason and in front of
crowds of people.
c. He his coat on a hook and came into the
room.
d.
She couldn't stand her pangs of conscience, and
herself in the prison
cell.
12.
misuse/disuse
a. Many people in top positions power for their
own benefit, and exploit other people.
b. The term schizophrenia is frequently
nowadays. People use it to refer to various kinds of mere strange
behaviour, and don't realise the severity of the illness.
c. The goods are stored in a cinema.
38
d.
All the coalmines in the country stand
a lot of miners who worked there can't find a job.
e. Knowing law very
well,
she it on several
and
occasions.
13.
historic/historical
a.
Kate is fond of reading
century England.
In 1945 there was a ...
novels about the 19
b.
meeting of world leaders
which exerted a tremendous impact on the course of world events.
regaining our independence.
d.
William Wallace is an important figure for
Scottish people.
14.
councillor/counsellor
a. He has plenty of brilliant ideas how to improve the work of the local
government. He'll certainly make a good
b. She and her husband often quarrelled, so they decided to seek help
from a marriage
15.
envious/jealous
a. Steven was of his brother's new luxury car.
b. He has a very pretty wife and is blindly of her
each time she talks to or smiles at another man.
c. Children often feel when a new baby arrives.
They are afraid that their parents won't love them that much any
more.
c.
It is a
date for our country, the day of
39
16.
negligible/negligent
a. He doesn't have a good reputation as a doctor. People say that he is
allowing the children to swim in dangerous water.
c. The damage done to our car in the accident was
so we decided not to sue the driver.
d.
The price of the entrance ticket to the exhibition was
, almost for free.
17.
assure/ensure/insure/reassure
a. I can you of my good intentions. I don't want
your harm.
b. You should your property against storm
in not giving the patients due care and
attention.
b.
The judge stated that the teacher had been
in
damage.
c. It's very careless of her that she hasn't
car yet.
her
d.
Please that all the light
when you're leaving.
that all the lights are switched off
e. I tried to her and told he
didn't help much and she was still very worried.
her and told her some jokes, but it
f. That song their s>
European charts for a couple of months.
their success. It was on the tops of
g.
The police her that they
to find her missing jewellery.
her that they would do their best
40
18.
compose/comprise/consist/include
a. The collection of around one hundred
pictures, and it , among others, the paintings
by Salvador
Dali.
b. Two actors, one journalist and one teacher
the committee.
c. Students a high proportion of seasonal
workers.
d.
The book is of 10 chapters.
19.
cite/site/sight
a. Sunset over the sea is a beautiful
b. Let me at this point the words of the famous
19
th
century British writer Oscar Wilde.
c. During our stay in England we visited the of
the Battle of Hastings.
d.
They excavated pottery and weapons from the Middle Ages on this
archaeological
20.
economic/economical
a. This is a very car. It doesn't use much petrol.
b. The subject of their debate is the government's
policy.
c. It's usually to buy products in large quantities.
d.
The country has recently introduced some radical
reforms.
41
21.
farther/further
a. The place looks dangerous. We'd better not go any
b. This brochure gives you the basic information. If you have
questions, call the number below.
c. He preferred to run distances.
22.
loose/lose
a. When he heard that his son scratched his brand new car, he
his temper.
b. The team is training intensively. They don't want to
the game.
c. She's some weight, and now her skirt is too
She must have it taken in.
23.
effective/efficient
a. Aspirin is an medicine that helps to shake off
a
cold.
b. We hope the ad will be in attracting
customers to buy our products.
c. She is a very worker. She carries out her
duties quickly and successfully.
d.
This heating system is because it uses
comparatively little energy.
24.
prudent/prudish
a. Don't take her to see that
film.
She is quite
and she may feel offended by some of the sex scenes there.
b. It would be to read the contract before
signing it.
42
c. He is a businessman. He carefully examines
the situation before making any final decisions.
25.
classic/classical
a. His career is a example of how one can
become a rock star over night.
b. She displayed symptoms of depression.
c. I listen to music, as well as rock and jazz.
25.
beside/besides
a. Jim came up and sat me. It was such a nice
feeling to have him by my side.
b. We didn't know anybody at the party Kevin
and Jessica.
c. She leads a very active life going to Spanish
evening classes twice a week she attends a dancing course every
Thursday.
d.
I don't want to go to the concert. I don't like this kind of music;
, I feel pretty tired and would like to go to
sleep early.
27.
illegible/eligible
a. He's an bachelor;
rich,
famous and
handsome. Every woman would like to marry him.
b. The handwriting on the prescription was"so
that the chemist couldn't decipher the names of the medicines.
c. Anyone over the age of 18 is to vote.
43
28.
worthless/invaluable
a.
His support during our project was
But for
him,
we wouldn't have been so successful.
b. What we considered to be a genuine Picasso turned out to be
a forgery. As a result, the painting is now
c. She was criticised so much by her boss that after leaving his office,
she felt
29.
non-flammable/inflammable
a. Firemen wear uniforms made of material to
protect them against fire.
b. This chemical is highly so don't use it near
a flame.
30.
blink/wink
a. She as she came out of the dark cave into
the bright sunlight.
b. Philip at me, and I realised that he was
joking.
c. I guess something must be wrong as the light on your video recorder
31.
politics/policy
a. In response to the recent incidents, the present government has
introduced some changes into its foreign and security
is
b.
I'm not interested in
at all. To be honest,
c.
I think it's boring.
His ambition is to become a major figure in the country's
, the Prime Minister preferably.
44
d.
The company has adopted a firm
shoplifting.
on
32.
amenities/facilities
a. One of the biggest advantages of living in the town over living in the
village is that it's close to shops, banks, schools and other
b. They're staying in a 5-star hotel with many leisure and sports
such as a swimming
pool,
gym and tennis
courts.
c. The school has special for disabled people.
33.
morals/morale
a. The victory boosted the team's enormously.
b. Violent sex images on the Internet are deemed to be a danger to
public
c. Patriotic songs contributed a great deal to the
of the soldiers during the war.
34.
industrial/industrious
a. Sam is a very worker. He works very hard
and stays sometimes after hours.
b. In Britain the Revolution took place between
1750 and 1850.
c. This is mainly an country with plenty of
factories.
45
35.
stimulant/stimulus
a. A good grade at school often acts as a to
develop one's knowledge.
b. Some people consider coffee to be a , and
drink it to feel more active and not sleepy.
c. The discovery of oil was a to the local
economy.
36.
glance/glimpse
a. Lucy yawned and took a at her watch. The
lecture was so tedious.
b. I'm afraid I can't describe the robber
well.
I only caught
a of him as he was running away.
c. He didn't have time to read any articles and only threw a cursory
at the newspaper headlines.
37.
laid/lain/lay
a. George the heavy box on the ground and
called a
taxi.
b. When she came back from the tiring climb in the mountains, first she
down on her bed, and then she started to
stretch her arms and legs.
c. Oh no, don't disturb him right now! He has just
down on the floor and has started to do his
meditation.
d.
Seeing that they would inevitably lose the battle, they
down their weapons.
e. Could you the table, please? The dinner is
almost ready.
46
38.
affect/effect
a. The last reforms had a devastating
country's economy.
b. Bad weather always
my mood. When it's
on the
cloudy, I often feel depressed.
39.
unreadable/illegible
a. I'm sorry but I had difficulties reading your essay. Your handwriting is
You'll have to rewrite the essay, and this
time try to take more care.
b. In my opinion, this novel is The book is too
long,
the plot is boring, and the style is awful.
40.
access/excess
a. For the next week I won't be able to check e-mails. I'll be on a
campsite and I won't have to the Internet.
b. An of information often makes it hard for us
to take decisions and make reasonable judgements.
c. They're trying to improve to the museum for
disabled visitors.
41.
persecute/prosecute
a. He is for fraud. The trial is going to take place
next week.
b. During the early times of Christianity many Christians were
c. The victim has decided that she won't
because she is terrified of what the Mafia can do to her family.
d.
The people who opposed the political system were
and massacred during the regime, and many
sought asylum in the neighbouring countries.
47
42.
vein/vain
a. She is so that people don't want to invite her
to parities. She thinks that she's the most intelligent and beautiful,
and looks down on everybody.
b. I tried in to persuade Bob not to invest his
money in the company, but he didn't want to change his mind.
c. Some drugs have to be injected directly into patients'
43.
human/humane
a. Communication with other people is a basic
need.
b. Farmers should transport their livestock in more
ways.
c. They are campaigning for treatment of the
refugees.
d.
It is supposed that error was behind the
catastrophe.
44.
precede/proceed
a. Jeremy is a better manager than the man who
him.
b. It is always helpful to one's lecture with a nice
introduction.
c. Brian outlined his plans for the development of the company, and
then to explain them in more detail.
d.
We're not sure whether we still want to with
this business. There is not much demand for our products any more.
48
45.
gorilla/guerrilla
a feel miserable when they are kept in captivity
in a zoo.
b. His uncle fought in a army during the war.
46.
heroin/heroine
a. The of his novel is an intelligent and beautiful
girl from a poor family who falls in love with an aristocrat.
b. Richard was found guilty of trafficking in and
sent to prison.
c. Joan of Arc is known as the French of the
Hundred Years' War.
47.
prey/pray
a. The woman didn't give up hope and to God
every day for her son's return home from the war.
b. The lion has been stalking its for hours
before finally catching it.
c. As she was a very gullible person, she easily fell
to his false promises.
48.
urban/urbane
a. Living in areas is not very healthy as the air
pollution is usually rather high there.
b. Mike is a very charming and person. He is
always full of remarks.
49
49.
perspective/prospective
a. The shop assistant should always be nice and polite to
buyers.
b. The book is written from the of an oppressed
black person in a white community.
50.
canvas/canvass
a. Candy usually works with oil paints on a
b. Before elections members of each political party
people from the local area.
c. These shoes are made of
Word formation
Complete each sentence with a word made from the word in capital
letters.
1.
When the foreign powers attacked the town they faced strong
RESIST
2.
You can't tell anybody about what you hear from me. This is a strictly
piece of information. CONFIDENCE
3. Ted is still a(n) worker. This is his first job
and he's been working in our company for only a month.
EXPERIENCE
4.
Betty is so ! She wants to have everything
immediately and hates waiting. She can really be a pain in the neck!
PATIENCE
50
5. In spite of the effort they've put into the work, the results are still
SATISFACTION
6. Jessica's father is extremely of his
daughter's boyfriends. He fears that they may be after her money.
SUSPECT
7. This book describes the of many saints.
MARTYR
8. She told me that she loved him so much that she was ready to marry
him even without her parents' APPROVE
9. The of the expedition convinced him to
invest his money in it. SIGNIFY
10.
When left on their own the kids are often up to some mischief. They can
be really , so you'd better watch them!
TROUBLE
11.
She was in a coma for two months, and we thought she would never
regain CONSCIOUS
12.
The fee in this sailing club is very
high,
and
I can't afford it now. MEMBER
13.
While being a boss of the company he conducted a lot of
transactions. LEGAL
14.
It is highly of you to accept the job and then
drop it after a few weeks. RESPONSE
15 behaviour to teachers is commonplace in
many schools nowadays. RESPECT
16.
There is a wide of stores in this shopping
mall,
from perfumeries to shops with sports equipment. VARY
17.
Her failure to take any precautionary measures was described as an
instance of gross NEGLECT
18.
I've taken out a to this music magazine.
SUBSCRIBE
51
19.
more and more people are enrolling in
foreign language courses. INCREASE
20.
Steven Spielberg's latest film is really ! The
plot is spellbinding! REMARK
21.
The candidate's way of getting voters on his side is
He's exploiting the people's emotions.
CONTEMPT
22.
I'm sorry but the model is currently We
should obtain it next week. AVAILABLE
23.
The crisis is There's nothing we can do to
prevent it. AVOID
24.
The manager thinks that the best solution at the moment is to go into
with the other company. PARTNER
25.
Before I donate money to this charity, I must be sure that it is
a organisation. PROFIT
26.
If I were you, I wouldn't trust her. She's known to be a very
person and often breaks her promises.
RELY
27.
The spokesperson stated that there won't be any major social reforms
in the future. SEE
28.
You'd better not approach her with that request of yours at the moment.
She's exhausted after the whole day's work and may be quite
IRRITATE
29.
I know his behaviour may seem inexcusable at times, but believe me he
has good INTEND
30.
At the back of the book you'll find some
notes,
which may help you to grasp some of the author's ideas.
EXPLAIN
52
31.
The appearance of a large pit in the field over the night is
Nobody has any clue who or what may
have done it. EXPLAIN
32.
When the police entered the barn, they found some
materials stored there. EXPLODE
33.
Prof. Stanley is studying the frequent of
violent storms in the area. OCCUR
34.
My grandpa has an almost memory. He
remembers the events of World War II in detail. FALL
35.
Today people all over the world light candles in
of the victims of the terrorist attack of 11
th
September. REMEMBER
36.
You shouldn't Charles. He's really a very
skilful and efficient worker. ESTIMATE
37.
In my opinion, the film is a bit in the review.
I've seen it and it's not so good, besides the cast is badly chosen.
RATE
38.
When Sheila told Peter about her problem, he listened
, and then offered to help her. SYMPATHY
39.
The meeting is held to make it possible for the employees to air their
GRIEF
40.
A lot of people make an that it's easier to
achieve success in highly developed countries. ASSUME
41.
In many Western countries there's a of
nurses, and they're looking for nurses from other countries. SHORT
42.
When Rachel visited the district, she was struck by
the of its inhabitants. AFFLUENT
43.
The of this successful actor surprised
everybody. He didn't boast about his achievements as other film stars
do.
MODEST
53
44.
The doctor told James that of stress was
indispensable if he wanted his health to improve. AVOID
45.
The war seemed to be We thought it
would never finish. END
46.
Ralph is a musician, and he works as
a freelance music journalist. ADD
47.
She's a very person and is always unwilling
to change her mind. FLEXIBLE
48.
The clinic takes care of people with severe physical
ABLE
49.
Many stray cats are a sight, they're so
skinny and sick. PITY
50.
The politician argued for the of the old
system of taxation. RETAIN
51.
This remote mountain village is almost in
winter, as there's so much snow. ACCESS
52.
Practising sport is to one's health because it
gives strength to the body. BENEFIT
53.
She's been charged with tax EVADE
54.
When he was asked about the party's approach to the problem of
unemployment, he gave some answers.
EVADE
55.
The company's annual has increased in
comparison with the last year, and now it's around £ 4 million. TURN
56.
The news of the of war terrified people all
around the globe. BREAK
57.
He refused to comply with the government's rules and regulations, and
as a result was tried for civil OBEY
58.
Governments make laws, and the police should
them.
FORCE
54
59.
The man was found guilty of robbery and sentenced to five years
PRISON
60.
We haven't yet received the of your room
reservation. CONFIRM
51.
The dancer charmed everybody with her
movements. GRACE
62.
With its weak army the country was
Therefore, it became an easy target for its neighbour. DEFENCE
63.
I was so with thoughts that I didn't notice
when Eric came in. OCCUPY
64.
The fee to the exhibition is rather exorbitant.
ADMIT
65.
She was in expelling the boy from school.
He didn't do anything wrong. JUST
66.
There're still examples of racial in the world.
People can't understand that we're all equal. JUST
67.
We will you of our decision at the end of the
week. NOTE
68.
When I was at primary school, we often had to
a poem as our homework. MEMORY
69.
I don't know him
well,
I've met him just a couple of times. He's only my
, not my friend. ACQUAINT
70.
I must some money from my bank account.
DRAW
71.
In Africa there still live many tribes that are
by civilisation. CORRUPT
72.
They don't want to accept the banknote in any shop, explaining that it's
a FORGE
73.
Because of a fire hazard it is to walk in
forests when it's dry. ADVISE
55
74.
Nowadays, many people can afford
holidays abroad. COMPARE
75.
At the ceremony she admitted that she would never have written the
book without the of her parents.
COURAGE
76.
It was quite of Jenny to criticise English
people when she knew that Karen's husband was an Englishman.
SENSE
77.
She finds it hard to confront and often
escapes to the world of her dreams. REAL
78.
The boxer defeats his opponents so that
nobody wants to fight with him. EFFORT
79.
Laura's date with Jim turned out to be
Their conversation was heavy going, and Laura went home after an
hour. DISASTER
80 I'm going in the same direction today, so
I can give you a lift. COINCIDENCE
81.
The Thomsons live in a large house with a beautiful and
living-room, perfect for the many guests
they invite for parties. SPACE
82.
He tried to convince the jury that the against
him were false. ACCUSE
83.
It was really of Sarah to phone and ask
about his health. THOUGHT
84.
She is so ! She finds it difficult to make up
her mind even when she chooses something to drink. DECISION
85.
What the politician is saying now is with
the statements he made a week ago. So how can we trust him?
CONSIST
86.
I think it's sheer to talk about family values
when you're having an affair yourself. HYPOCRITE
56
87.
A lot of Catholics agree that euthanasia is
MORAL
88.
We warn drivers to be careful as roads are very
SLIP
89.
Last night the Rolling Stones gave an excellent
, just as always! PERFORM
90.
Rick doesn't want to live in this town. He finds it
with its many factories and a lack of green
places. ATTRACT
91.
It's whether they will finish the road repairs
soon.
They're working very slowly. DOUBT
92.
How can you be so to the plight of the
people affected by the floods? One day it may happen to you, and you
may need help. DIFFERENCE
93.
Every nation has a moment in its history
that the people would rather forget about. SHAME
94.
The Times is one of the most popular
newspapers in England. DAY
95.
The high rate of unemployment creates in many graduates deep
feelings of SECURE
96.
Many celebrities show extreme to talk to
journalists. RELUCTANT
97.
The of MPs were against the
bill.
MAJOR
98.
They were celebrating the of slavery.
ABOLISH
99.
A visit to the dentist is to many people quite a
experience. AGREE
100.
If you're too , your boss may never respect
you.
SUBMIT
57
Collocations and Idioms
In the sentences below choose which word or words best fit each gap,
forming the correct collocation or idiomatic phrase.
1.
He still bears a against Tony for choosing somebody
else to represent their company at the conference three years ago.
a) grievance b) complaint c) grudge d) regret
2.
When Mrs Jones was leaving the building, she sight
of two suspicious looking men quarrelling at the car park.
a) got b) caught c) lost d) took
3. Time and they still hadn't heard anything from their
son.
a) moved b) went c) went on d) passed
4.
She has to go on a course in cooking because next
month she's getting married.
a) crash b) speedy c) quick d) fast
5. You're up the wrong tree if you think that I will lend
you money.
a) barking b) shouting c) climbing d) looking
6. You've shaken hands with Bono, I don't believe you! You're
my leg!
a) pushing b) pulling c) holding d) pressing
7. Tomorrow we will go fishing, weather
a) agreeing b) allowing c) permitting d) giving
8. It was a of luck that I won the contest. There were
more knowledgeable people than me.
a) beam b) piece c) drop d) stroke
58
3. I don't think that raising the issue during today's meeting would
any useful purpose.
a) reach b) provide c) serve d) perform
10.
That's unfair that they dismissed him. He was always
his duties very conscientiously.
a) bringing off b) conducting c) fulfilling d) executing
11.
The film didn't to my expectations. It was just
average.
a) come down b) appeal c) live up d) work up
12.
After hours of heated debates the two companies have finally
an agreement.
a) achieved b) reached c) accomplished d) established
13.
Maggie a great pride in her collection of the Beatles
memorabilia. She shows it to everybody who visits her.
a) takes b) puts c) gets d) finds
14.
I'm afraid you missed the of Prof. Hardcastle's
lecture. He claimed something completely different.
a) key b) core c) point d) punchline
15.
Although Mary and Paul are apart in personality,
they make an excellent couple.
a) leagues b) ways c) miles d) poles
16.
Many serial killers immense pleasure in tormenting
their victims before killing them.
a) derive b) get c) experience d) take
17.
Bill Clinton's love affair with Monica Lewinsky the
news in the whole world. People were constantly chatting about it.
a) made b) delivered c) struck d) filled
59
18.
The two countries finally managed to a deal on oil
imports.
a) reach b) produce c) cut d) arrive at
19.
Don't tell Ben about my plans for the evening. You know he can't
a secret.
a) save b) keep c) hold d) stop
20.
Since Tom was made redundant, they can hardly make ends
a) meet b) cross c) link d) together
21.
Rescue teams continue to search for the people who got lost during
the avalanche, but after so many days hopes are
a) dying away b) disappearing c) fading d) flying away
22.
I always have in my stomach before an exam. I can't
help feeling anxious and trembling all over.
a) bees b) ants c) tension d) butterflies
23.
His company went bankrupt, three years of hard work
the drain.
a) into b) in c) down d) low
24.
This leather bag is a real bargain! It's cheap!
a) bun b) dirt c) banana d) waste
25.
When Brenda's father got to know that she scratched his car, he hit
the
a) roof b) ceiling c) table d) desk
26.
The man was staggering from one side of the street to the other. He
was drunk.
a) deep b) hard c) strong d) blind
27.
Polly is the of her father's eye. He indulges her every
whim.
a) pupil b) apple c) treasure d) jewel
60
IS.
After months of strenuous efforts he eventually managed to
Nelly's heart.
a) conquer b) achieve c) get hold of d) win
25.
The Benetton's new advertising campaign aims to
sales.
a) raise b) put up c) boost d) elevate
30.
If you keep washing this blouse, its beautiful bright colours will soon
a) wash out b) bleach c) vanish d) fade
31.
The two escaping prisoners were hiding behind the boxes until the
guard's footsteps
a) died away b) died down c) faded d) came to a halt
32.
The witness was called upon to the court to evidence
at the
trial.
a) provide b) supply c) make d) bring
33.
The governments of the two countries into
negotiations in order to work out the arms reduction treaty,
a) went b) entered c) delved d) came
34.
"It's high time we the issue of staff training", said
the chairperson at the meeting.
a) raised b) brought c) entered d) put up
35.
You shouldn't worry. I can assure you that herbal remedies have no
effects.
a) negative b) side c) harmful d) periphery
36.
The bank employee will trial for embezzlement.
a) pass b) go through c) face d) stand
61
37.
The sun was shining, birds were and I was lying
amidst trees in my uncle's orchard, having absolutely nothing to do.
Could life be more beautiful?
a) chirping b) squeaking c) giggling d) whimpering
38.
Birmingham University has recently a survey into the
British people's attitudes to foxhunting.
a) carried b) conducted c) administered d) directed
39.
When Joan heard the terrible news, she felt devastated. However, she
was brave, and managed to tears until she got back
home.
a) hide away b) hold up c) fight back d) keep in
40.
As the teacher was again droning on about environmental problems,
Nancy couldn't help feeling bored, and she covered her mouth to
a yawn.
a) prevent b) stop c) stifle d) hold
41.
If you want to learn to drive you should take of what
your instructor tells you.
a) care b) attention c) consideration d) notice
42.
Helen was disappointed when she learnt that she
hadn't won the beauty contest.
a) enormously b) bitterly c) strongly d) heavily
43.
In my opinion the only aim of the band's outrageous behaviour on stage
is to the media's attention.
a) seize b) obtain c) attract d) gain
44.
Peter an attempt to resume his career as a musician,
but he failed. His break was too
long.
a) took b) undertook c) made d) did
62
45.
Roger the trouble to inform me about the results
personally.
a) took b) made c) underwent d) undertook
46.
Mrs Goddard's condition was so bad that she had to
an operation.
a) go on b) undergo c) take d) go through
47.
The company Mark's application because he didn't
have the necessary qualifications for the job.
a) put aside b) sent off c) turned down d) threw down
48.
I some valuable experience while working for the
previous company.
a) gained b) received c) collected d) earned
49.
I'm the web to find some interesting materials for my
research paper.
a) combing b) browsing c) looking through d) scanning
50.
It's a convention to end a letter with "I'm sending you my
regards."
a) hot b) hearty c) kind d) deep
63
Compounds
Noun + noun
I. Match the nouns from column A to the appropriate nouns from
column B to make compound words.
1 wind
B a benefit
2 eye b light
3 will c
esteem
4
chain
d
chart
5
hay e sore
6
man f arms
7
unemployment
g
ends
8
self
h
fall
9
spot i
power
10
book
i
screen
11
mouth
k
witness
12 fire
I fever
13
flow
m piece
14
wind
n
smoker
15
eye
o hour
II.
Fill the gaps with the correct noun + noun compounds.
1.
This old tenement house is a(n) in this
newly rebuilt area.
64
2.
It easy to notice from his behaviour that his promotion to department
head really boosted his
3. The American law on the possession of is
said to be too lenient.
4.
Most people get butterflies in their stomachs when they are on stage
and about to step into the
5. For lottery winners a sudden often comes
as a shock and they don't have the faintest idea what to do with the
money.
6. The original handmade samurai sword still takes a master blacksmith
hundreds of to complete.
7. According to a(n) the bomb went off at
exactly four o'clock p.m.
8. She tried several times to give up smoking, but unfortunately she didn't
have the to make it.
9. Jim can't find a job and he receives
which is not enough to make a decent living.
10.
When spring comes and most plants start to blossom a lot of people
suffer from
11.
It's hard to believe that being such a(n) he
enjoyed good health till the end of his life.
12.
Driving through the seemingly impenetrable fog, he held his face quite
close to the
13.
During the presentation the speaker used a(n)
to show the sales figures for the last year.
14.
Not many people realise that the and the
way you blow air through it is crucial for producing a clear sound when
playing a brass instrument.
15.
Antique-looking brass go well with old
leather volumes.
65
Adjective + noun
I. Match the adjectives from column A to the appropriate nouns from
column B to make compound words.
1
hard
2
parting
3 nervous
4 wet
5 stuffed
6
hard
7 formative
8
thorough
9 general
10
prime
11 graphic
12
burning
13
necessary
14
rough
15
quick
a breakdown
b years
c
public
d
question
e
sand
f evil
g
detail
h
labour
i
blanket
J
shot
k shoulder
I
grounding
m
suspect
n shirt
0
diamond
II.
Fill the gaps with the correct adjective + noun compounds.
1.
After his wife left him, he had a(n) and couldn't
cope with his everyday life.
2.
I'm afraid something is wrong with my car. We'd better pull up on
the and check it.
3. Soap operas, reality shows, quizzes and sitcoms cater for the needs of
the
66
4.
Hercule Poirot was convinced that the widow was the
in his murder investigation.
5. Stop sitting in the corner! Come and join us on the dance floor! This is
such a groovy party and you're being a(n) !
6. All TV stations in the country showed the aftermath of the terrorist attack
in The pictures were really gory.
7. Some economists claim that unemployment is a(n)
of market economy.
8. Parents and their relationship has a decisive influence on children during
their
9. Seasoned travellers know how to avoid
when crossing desert.
10.
The advert says that this course will give students a(n)
in accountancy.
11.
The first item on the agenda during the meeting between the board and
the trade union was the of redundancy.
12.
Fancy-dress parties are definitely not for
who feel they may look ridiculous.
13.
The perpetrator was sentenced to four years
14.
Our new companion on our journey through the countryside turned out
to be a(n) and the whole party really took to
him.
15.
Before she slammed the door behind her, she couldn't resist
a(n) at Sam and shouted to him never to
come to her again.
67
Adjective + adjective
I. Match the adjectives from column A to the appropriate adjectives
from column B to make compound words.
1 big
B a
eyed
2 wide
b
powered
3
ill
c
hearted
4 bitter
d
mannered
5
nuclear
e reaching
6
hard f
lasting
7 blue
g
headed
8
bad h
sweet
9
fast
i tempered
10
warm
J
witted
11 flat
k asleep
12
ill
I awake
13
long m
hearted
14
far n
broke
15
quick o equipped
II.
Fill the gaps with the correct adjective + adjective compounds.
1.
I've got memories of my childhood. There
were some wonderful times, but also some very sad moments.
2.
She is constantly boasting about her achievements at work. She is so
3. Signing this contract may have
consequences for the future of our company.
68
4.
What a rude, boy! How could he say such
terrible things to that old man!
5. She is very and can immediately give a
clever reply.
6. She seems to be so ! She does not feel
any sympathy for the poor people she dismisses from the company.
7. Believe me! It's not a good moment to ask Rachel for a pay rise. She is
very today because she has a splitting
headache.
8. Everyone enjoyed staying at my grandmother's place. She was such
a(n) person.
9. I'm afraid the oil crisis may have effects
on the economy of our country.
10.
USS Savannah was the first submarine in
the world.
11.
Having spent almost the whole day at the polling station, the reporter
went straight to bed and was soon
12.
No wonder he's been chosen for the national team. He's always been
the coach's
13.
George refused to lend his brother any money saying he was
14.
The beautician who was to prepare my friend to the wedding ceremony
arrived to do the job. She had no
nailbrush,
no mascara, and no tweezers.
15.
Jessica suffers from insomnia, and very often is still
at 2 a.m.
69
Punctuation Practice
Insert commas where necessary.
1.
Betty entered the room looked at us with surprise shouted loudly and
fainted.
2.
Antonio Bradi 25 has been in coma for several weeks now.
3. The woman who usually cuts my hair has moved to another
hairdresser's.
4.
Certain products e.g. eggs bread rolls oranges are often bought in
dozens.
5. Do you know the scruffy man who lives on the third floor?
6. It is true that the price is extremely low. However we are more
concerned with the quality of the product.
7. It's a family of eight children all of whom are studying music.
8. Where's the money that I lent you?
9. I told Simon that you were not interested in his offer.
10.
Iggy our best athlete is so quick no one can match him.
11.
Stan lives in Pittsburgh New Jersey.
12.
Susie our youngest daughter has just turned 5.
13.
His life was in danger he told me.
14.
The sport which she really likes to practise is softball.
15.
The directors haven't decided whether they will recommend a dividend
or hold over the profits.
16.
I've just met that Mrs. Rasher who wants to buy your car.
17.
Fortunately the crowd dispersed peaceably. If they hadn't the police
might have had to use force.
18.
Anyone who wants to try to pick a fight with him should know that he is
an ex-champion in karate.
70
19.
My mother bought me for Christmas a beautiful soft woollen cardigan.
20.
White wine is to be enjoyed slightly cooled; red wine in ambient
temperature.
21.
This is Henry whose wife teaches our children.
22.
Is there any reason why we should leave so early?
23.
By the time the fire brigade arrived the house had already burnt down.
24.
It is the invoice that I'm looking for not the
bill.
25.
She spent all evening talking about her latest book which none of us
had ever heard of.
26.
Frankly this is the most appalling concert I've ever been to.
27.
This subject has become really popular. We are therefore quite certain
that it will attract many students to our university.
28.
Mexico City which has a population of over 10 million is probably the
fastest growing city in the world.
29.
Pink is often reserved for girls; blue colour for boys.
30.
Lenny when the meeting is over come to my office please.
31.
The small man in the raincoat whom nobody recognised turned out to
be Olivia's first husband.
32.
"I suppose so" grunted Jack.
33.
Just before the wedding she changed her mind and decided not to
marry Alan which shocked all the guests.
34.
Ralph neither speaks French nor understands it.
35.
The Vikings known for their seafaring skills were the first to reach
America well before Christopher Columbus.
36.
"Your information" I replied "is out of date."
37.
Even a child knows that one shouldn't drink and drive.
38.
Let me know if you can come or not.
39.
After Vicky agreed to go out with him Martin became so self-confident.
40.
Two coffees a cheese cake and an apple pie please.
71
41.
The island boasts a fantastic landscape. Furthermore it has excellent
tourist facilities.
42.
We've tested twenty types of overalls none of which is completely
waterproof.
43.
These souvenirs are handcrafted not mass-produced in a factory.
44.
The loan shark lent Greg a thousand bucks which was exactly the
amount he needed to solve his problems.
45.
Perhaps if you have some time left we could try the new cafe on the
corner?
46.
Nevertheless the idea seems promising enough to draw the Dean's
attention.
47.
Seicento is definitely a decent car to get around the city. On the other
hand it is unsafe and uncomfortable.
48.
The more you practise playing the violin the better you are at it.
49.
Mr Fairclough who used to take care of our garden retired several
months ago.
50.
Angela's date started to tell stupid jokes at which point she decided to
leave.
72
CAE English in Use
Exam Practice
Part 1 Practice
Choose the most suitable word for each gap in the texts below.
Text messaging
Every day more than a billion messages are zapped from one mobile phone
to another. However, although texting has become (1) in
Europe and Asia, it has failed to (2) off in America. Globally,
the average number of messages sent or received each month (3)
a mobile subscriber is now around 30, or one message per
day. In some parts of Asia, such as Singapore and the Philippines, where
large numbers of free messages are thrown in with monthly (4)
plans,
the number of messages sent per subscriber per
month is as high as 200. But the (5) for America is just over
seven,
according to the Cellular Telecommunication's Internet Association.
Why is such a high-tech nation eschewing texting?
The short answer is that in America talk is cheap. Because local
calls on land lines are usually free, wireless operators have to (6)
big "bundles" of minutes to (7) subscribers
to use mobile phones instead.
American telecoms regulations, which encouraged different mobile
operators to choose different, (8) technologies, are also
responsible for the dearth of texting. (9) last year did the
largest American operators agree to pass text messages between their
networks, an agreement still only patchily (10) Moreover,
texting is not (11) as standard in most subscription
packages in America, but as an extra for which customers must pay a few
74
dollars per month. "You have to pay for it, most people's phones don't have
it,
and I don't know how many of my friends have it (12) ,"
says Vince Tobkin, an analyst at Bain & Company in San Francisco. In text-
crazed Europe, in (13) all these conditions are (14)
by default and you can be pretty sure that your message
will get (15)
adapted from "No text please, we're American" in "The Economist"
1.
A familiar B commonplace C prosaic D basic
2.
A take
B get C keep D show
3.
A by
Bto C from
Doff
4.
A invoicing B cost C billing D pricing
5.
A numeral
B figure C score D rate
6.
A suggest B recommend
C propose D offer
7.
A affect
B press
C persuade D make
8.
A incompatible
B unsuitable
C modern
D incompatable
9.
A Just
B Only
C Already
D About
10.
A imposed B implemented
C restricted
D announced
11.
A rejected
B involved
C comprised D included
12.
A empowered B installed C enabled
D purchased
13.
A contrast B particular C spite
D itself
14.
A met
B made
C followed D overruled
15.
A by
B through C into
D ahead
75
Bloodthirsty bears
Kenzo Kudo got in his car one day last May and drove out to a mountain
near Sapporo, on the Japanese island of Hokkaido, to look for wild
vegetables. He never returned. Police found his body a few hundred meters
away with (1) marks on his legs. What happened, they
surmised,
is that Kudo had the misfortune to run (2) a
brown bear.
The Japanese like their (3) animals as much as
anybody, but they're out for blood following an increase in bear encounters,
which often lead to maulings. Some farmers have taken (4)
shooting the bears, (5) on Hokkaido is perfectly legal.
The problem is that on Hokkaido, more people and bears now live
together in tighter quarters than anywhere else on earth. There are 5.6
million people and between 2,000 and 3,700 bears on an intensively farmed
island about the size of Pennsylvania. In recent years the bear population
has been falling due to rapid urban (6) , which is putting
bears and people on (7) course. Some of the recent
maulings occurred within 30 kilometres of Sapporo, making (8)
in the city of 2 million.
The spate of close encounters has (9) more than a
century ago, when fishermen began (10) Hokkaido rivers of
salmon,
then a (11) of the brown-bear diet. The bears
became vegetarians, eating berries, wild mountain grapes, skunk cabbage
and hogweed. From the 1950s to the 1970s loggers began cutting down the
old-growth forests and (12) underbrush that once gave
bears an unusually good (13) Logging cleared space in
the forests that (14) blackberry and raspberry bushes to
thrive.
In recent years forest regeneration and tree farms have replaced
76
berry (15) , and the bears have been forced to look
elsewhere for
food,
bringing them closer to towns and cities.
adapted from 'The trouble with bears" in "Newsweek"
1.
A bite B injury
C wound
D cut
2.
A against
B up
C into
D on
3.
A furry
B hairy C fluffy D tousled
4.
A on
B up Cto
Da
5.
A that
B which
C what
D where
6. A increase
B spread
C extension
D sprawl
7. A dangerous
B collision C fighting
D conflict
8.
A stories
B fuss C headlines
D disaster
9.
A roots
B causes
C reasons D results
10.
A decreasing B depleting
C diminishing D depriving
11.
A foundation
B fundamental C core
D staple
12.
A lavish B lush
C sparse D trimmed
13.
A home
B safety
C lodging
D cover
14.
A allowed
B let C made
D prolonged
15.
A fields B areas
C shreds D patches
77
Dyslexic minds
Why some children (1) so much with reading used to be a
mystery. Now researchers know what's wrong - and what to do about it.
When some children look at a page of text, they can see letters' names.
They can even tell you what sounds those letters make. Nevertheless, even
for (2) high school students, to tell what words those letters
form is baffling, to say the (3) They see a
wall,
a hurdle
to get over, and often (4) that some letters are easier to
(5) out than others.
The condition is called dyslexia, a reading (6) that
persists (7) good schooling and normal or even above-
average intelligence. It's a handicap that (8) 10% of the
population, according to experts, though some put the figure higher - up to
20%.
The exact (9) of the problem has eluded doctors,
teachers, parents and dyslexics themselves since it was first described
more than a century ago. (10) , it is so hard for skilled
readers to imagine what it's like not to be able to effortlessly absorb the
printed word that they often (11) the real problem is
laziness or obstinacy or a proud parent's inability to (12)
that his or her child isn't that smart (13) all.
The mystery may finally be starting to lift. The more researchers
learn about dyslexia, the more they realise it's a flaw not of character but
biology - specifically, the biology of the brain. A growing (14)
of scientific evidence suggests there is a glitch in the
neurological wiring of dyslexics that makes reading extremely difficult for
them.
Fortunately, the science also (15) to new strategies
for overcoming the glitch. The most successful programs focus on
strengthening the brain's aptitude for linking letters to the sounds they
78
represent. Some studies suggest that the right kinds of instruction provided
early enough may rewire the brain so thoroughly that the neurological glitch
disappears entirely.
adapted from 'The New Science of Dyslexia" in "Time"
1.
A fight
B
strive
C struggle D cope
2.
A talkative B articulate
C mindful
D well-educated
3.
A most
B
least C truth D fact
4.
A admit B assume
C predict D accept
5.
A find
B
point C figure
D make
6.
A malfunction
B
disease
C disorder
D fault
7.
A despite
B although
C besides D without
8.
A affects B
effects
C influences
D attacks
9.
A type
B
characteristics C quality
D nature
10.
A However
B
Indeed C Really
D Nevertheless
11.
A doubt B
reject
C wonder
D suspect
12.
A decipher B
decide
C disagree
D recognise
13.
A in
B for
C to
D after
14.
A area
B
spread
C body
D aspect
15.
A shows
B aims
C points D hints
79
The future in biotechnology
Modern industry pollutes, and it also seems to cause significant changes to
the climate. What is needed is an industry that (1) the
benefits without the costs. And the (2) of such an industry
can now be (3)
That industry is based on biotechnology. At the moment, biotech's
main uses are in medicine and agriculture. However, its biggest long-term
impact may be industrial. Biotechnology will (4) demand for
oil by taking the cheapest raw (5) imaginable, carbon
dioxide and water, and using them to make fuel and plastics.
It is now possible to create enzymes that work thousands of times
faster than their natural counterparts. These should turn the manufacture of
ethanol as a petrol (6) from a subsidised boondoggle into
an industry that can pay its (7) Biotechnologists are also
working on enzymes that can (8) cellulose. Turning
cellulose into fermentable sugars really would give petrol a (9)
for its money.
The plastics industry, too, may be (10) by
biotechnology. There are now plastics made entirely by bacteria that have
had their metabolic pathways redesigned. Soon, plastics may be grown on
farms,
in genetically engineered plants, rather than being (11)
in huge, centralised industrial plants.
Plastics and fuels made in this way would have several advantages.
They can be called "renewables", (12) nothing is depleted
to make them. They would be part of the natural carbon cycle, borrowing
that element from the atmosphere for a few months, and returning it when
they were burned or (13) That means that they could not
80
possibly (14) to global warming. They would also be
environmentally friendly in other ways. Bioplastics are biodegradable, and
biofuels are a lot cleaner than petrol and diesel, and would be cleaner (15)
even than the fuel-cell technology.
All in all, the future could be green in ways that traditional
environmentalists had not expected.
adapted from "Saving the world in comfort" in 'The Economist"
1.
A produces
B collects
C reaps
D delivers
2.
A glimmerings
B age
C impact
D outgrowth
3.
A distinguished
B considered
C discerned
D viewed
4.
A diminish B preserve C boost
D satisfy
5.
A deposits
B resources
C materials
D stuff
6.
A ingredient B additive
C addition
D particle
7.
A road
B route
C course D way
8.
A devour B absorb
C digest D consume
9.
A path
B run
C race
D climb
10.
A converted
B transformed
C modulated D substituted
11.
A mingled
B assembled
C constructed D manufactured
12.
A since
B although
C otherwise D therefore
13.
A garbaged B wasted
C dumped
D disposed
14.
A donate
B provide
C contribute D develop
15.
A almost B overall
C wholly
D thoroughly
81
Stop the anti-aging process
In government laboratories and elsewhere, scientists are (1)
a drug able to prolong life and youthful vigor. Studies of
caloric restriction are showing the way. As researchers on aging have
noted,
no treatment on the market today has been proved to slow human
aging - the build-up of molecular and cellular damage that increases (2)
to infirmity as we grow older. But one intervention,
consumption of a low-calorie (3) nutritionally balanced diet,
works incredibly well in a broad (4) of animals, increasing
longevity and prolonging good health. Those (5) suggest
that caloric restriction could (6) aging in humans, too.
(7) , for maximum benefit, people would probably
have to reduce their caloric (8) by roughly 30 percent, (9)
to dropping from 2,500 calories a day to
1,750.
Few mortals
could (10) to that harsh a regimen, especially for years on
end.
But what if someone could create a pill that (11) the
physiological effects of eating less without actually forcing people to go
hungry? Could such a caloric-restriction mimetic enable people to stay
healthy longer, (12) age-related disorders (such as
diabetes, atherosclerosis, heart disease and cancer) until very late in life?
The question was first (13) in the mid-1990s, after a
discovery of a chemical (14) that, in rodents, seemed to
reproduce many of caloric restriction's benefits. Since then the search has
been going on for a compound that would safely achieve the same feat in
people. There has been no success yet, but the (15) have
been informative and have fanned hope that caloric-restriction mimetics can
indeed be developed eventually.
adapted from "Scientific American" www.sciam.com 'The Serious Search for an
Anti-Aging
Pill"
82
1.
A searching B pursuing
C questing
D seeking
2.
A vulnerability B defence C harmfulness D inclination
3.
A nevertheless
B even C still D yet
4.
A range
B span
C number
D scope
5.
A deductions
B goals C scores
D findings
6.
A detain
B suspend C delay
D hold
7.
A Luckily
B Eventually
C Furthermore D Unfortunately
8.
A digestion
B intake C income D processing
9.
A equivalent
B commensurateC matching
D counterpart
10.
A obey B stick
C follow D comply
11.
A mocked
B mimed
C mimicked
D mimiced
12.
A triggering
B cancelling
C postponing
D rejecting
13.
A posed
B roused C evoked
D enquired
14.
A factor
B agent
C composition D ingredient
15.
A breakdowns
B failures C faults
D flaws
83
Part 2 Practice
Complete the following texts by filling the gaps with ONE word only.
Eldest child
The first-born is an only child until the second child comes (1)
- when they go from (2) the centre of attention to sharing
the care (3) parents. This 'dethronement' may be extremely
traumatic and forever shape the first-born's outlook (4)
life.
They may spend the rest of their lives striving (5) regain
their parents' approval. They could even unconsciously feel their parents
had (6) child (7) somehow they weren't
good (8) (9) may lead to feelings of
inadequacy and also contributes to resentment of subsequent siblings. The
first-born is often the least warm (10) frequently the most
hostile to their brothers and sisters.
First-born children always have novice parents, (11)
they grow up in (12) early atmosphere of greater parental
anxiety, (13) may leave the child anxious. New parents'
ambitions for (14) sons and daughters often get channelled
most into the first-born. But (15) other offspring arrive, they
become (16) relaxed about their aspirations for their
children.
This may explain why first-borns are thought to be over-
represented (17) ambitious achievers. First-borns are
significantly more often found as world political leaders than (18)
other birth order position.
adapted from "Does your place in the family mould you for ever?" in Daily Mail
84
The seal's body
Although seals spend some of their time out on rocks, sandy beaches, or
even snow and ice, they are really much (1) adapted for
living in water than on
land.
Their sleek streamlined shape, with the head
merging into the body with no obvious neck, lets (2) move
through the water (3) only the smallest effort. For
swimming,
seals have flippers - a pair near the front of the body and a pair
right at the rear. These flippers are actually modified arms and legs, in
which the long bones have become shorter, (4) the fingers
and toes have become longer. Skin has developed as webbing (5)
the separate fingers and toes. (6) design
gives the seal its four broad, paddle-like flippers. If you look closely at a
flipper, you (7) still see the five claws near the edge, the
animal's equivalent (8) your finger or toe nails.
Because seals are warm-blooded animals, the temperature of their
bodies stays quite high (9) when they are swimming in cold
water. The dense covering of fine hairs over their bodies keeps them (10)
losing some heat. But the layer of fatty blubber under their
skin does much more to keep them warm. Imagine that (11)
rubber raincoat is your
skin.
Your sweater would then be (12)
the seal's blubber. Some species of seal have a thicker
blubber layer in winter, when the sea is colder, (13) in
summer - just as you might wear an extra heavy sweater in cold weather!
The blubber is also important in two (14) ways. First,
it helps the seals stay afloat while out at sea. Then, (15)
they come ashore and sometimes have to drag (16) over
rough ground, the blubber layer acts like a cushion. It prevents injury and
makes it more comfortable for the seals (17) lie out on the
rocks.
adapted from 'The Seal on the Hocks" by Doug Allan
85
Problems of longevity
It is in our nature to try to prolong life, (1) we should also
face (2) to the distinct difficulties that we would encounter if
we succeeded. If a successful longevity treatment (3) to
emerge suddenly out of all the new developments of medical science,
tacking on extra decades (4) even centuries to our lives, the
results could be disastrous. It might (5) well be a case of
the cure's being worse than the disease.
This (6) be true even for the individuals lucky
enough to receive the treatment. Presumably any treatment that conferred
long life would keep people generally healthy, but the extra years would be
a (7) of medical balancing act, akin (8) the
jugglers who dash about keeping plates spinning on top of poles. It would
be nerve-racking (9) best.
(10) if the treatments did little or (11)
to help one's memory? This is a crucial point that is (12)
overlooked in discussions of longevity. The brain is by (13)
the most complex organ known to us, and the workings of
memory are (14) really understood. Keeping the body alive
might be possible before we could do (15) to strengthen or
restore lost memories. Even the ordinary lifetime often seems too (16)
for human memory to hold or recall, and (17)
decades were tacked on, the long middle years of a life
might be substantially forgotten, leaving (18) dim memories
of childhood and recent events.
adapted from "Beware a Senior Society" in "Newsweek"
86
South Africa plagued by HIV virus
Nearly one-in-four adults of working age in South Africa is believed to be
infected with (1) HIV/Aids virus. (2) is a
shocking statistic, and one (3) potentially catastrophic
economic and social consequences for the country.
The limp response from the South African government has already
been condemned, and it has been left to the country's financial community
to tackle what (4) become an epidemic.
At the forefront of a campaign to recognise, report and raise
awareness about (5) disease (6) the South
African Institute of Chartered Accountants (Saica). It is drafting guidelines
on Aids (7) be presented to the Johannesburg stock
exchange. These might (8) day be incorporated into its
listings requirements. Thingle Pather, a chartered accountant and project
director at Saica, heads the HIV working group that is putting together the
first draft.
Pather is working with the Global Reporting Initiative, an organisation
(9) issues guidelines on non-financial reporting, and the
South African Actuarial Society to put together a document that will push
(10) voluntary disclosure of information about the
prevalence levels of HIV/Aids and the estimated financial impact.
The draft document is likely to call on companies to reveal the extent
to (11) they (12) implemented an effective
Aids risk management strategy in eight areas of risk, including operational,
absenteeism, cost of employment, and target market. Responsibility for
reporting (13) information will rest (14) the
board of directors, who (15) have to decide to (16)
extent shareholders should be informed.
adapted from "Businesses count the cost of Aids epidemic" in 'The Guardian Weekly
87
Dangerous tanning pills
Thousands of young women hoping for a summer tan are taking capsules
that promise to turn (1) a beautiful golden colour (2)
protecting them from the sun's harmful rays.
However, the vitamin-filled capsules - which are (3)
marketed in high-street chemists (4) an important skincare
product - are to (5) investigated by a government medical
agency following complaints from cancer scientists that women might
wrongly believe the once-a-day capsules (6) prevent them
burning on the beach.
The manufacturers claim that the tanning pills prepare the skin for
the sun by promoting (7) own sun protection mechanism.
They state that interaction (8) the natural ingredients of
palm fruit extract, lycopene, vitamin C and vitamin E increases the
production of melanin, the pigment in the skin that protects (9)
body from ultraviolet rays.
Cancer Research UK, the leading cancer charity in Britain,
(10) warning that the capsules afford (11)
protection against the sun. It is writing to the Government's Medicines and
Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency this week asking for an
investigation. The agency says it will investigate (12)
complaint made by the charity.
Dr Richard Sullivan, scientific adviser to Cancer Research UK,
said:
This is dangerous because it makes people feel safe in the sun.' He said
that the documentation presented by the manufacturers which outlines two
studies carried (13) on the capsules was 'misleading
pseudo-science', and added: '(14) is no (15)
thing as a safe tan anyway. A tan is a sign that your skin has been damaged
by exposure (16) UV radiation.'
adapted from http://observer.guardian.co.uk "Cancer doctors warn against tanning pills"
88
Part 3 Practice
In most lines of the following three texts, there is ONE unnecessary
word.
It is either grammatically incorrect or does not fit in with the
sense of the text. Cross out the word or tick the line as a correct one.
Coral reefs
1.
Indonesia's coral reefs are in a trouble. Coral mining, industrial pollution and
2.
toxic agricultural runoff all play a role in their destruction, but the fishermen
3. have been being the worst offenders. They not only bomb fish but also poison
4.
them with cyanide, an equally destructive practice. Fishermen are also among
5. in the biggest potential victims of the devastation. Two thirds of Indonesia's 7,000
6. coastal villages are adjacent to coral reefs and thus are depend for their livelihood
7. on the harvest of reef fish and crustaceans. The disappearing reefs are already
8. leading back to a dramatic decline in the productivity of coastal fisheries and to
9. increasing turf wars among fishermen for the remaining of spoils. Indonesia's
10.
reefs are vast - they cover for 51,000 square kilometres, surround 17,500
islands
11.
and stretch 3,500 kilometres from Sumatra to Irian Jaya but they are not much
12.
infinite. Many foreign experts and Indonesians fear it that the region's entire
13.
marine environment could be seriously and irreversibly damaged if the reefs
keep dying at their present rate.
adapted from "Saving the Coral Reefs" in "Newsweek" Nov. 12, 2001
89
The
new
Robonaut
1.
The new
Robonaut,
a
collaborative effort with
the
Defense Advanced Research
2.
Projects Agency,
is
also known
as
DARPA,
has
been under development
at JSC
3.
for the
last
in
several years. Astronaut Nancy Currie stepped into
an
advanced
4.
concept space suit
to
participate
in the
test
as the
squad leader.
The
task
at his
5. hand
was to
assemble
an
aluminum truss
of
structure. Currie
and her
Robonaut
6. companions have assembled
the
truss several times, significantly cutting
the
time
7. that required
to
complete
the
task
on
each run. After the structure
was
assembled,
8.
the
team installed electrical cable, with
the
Robonauts taking
the
cable
out of its
9. package
and by
routing
it
around
the
truss
to
Currie,
who
connected
it to the
truss
10.
and
using
a
standard
EVA
electrical connector
and
wire ties.
To
wrap
up the
test
11.
series, they simulated what would happen
if a
hazardous chemical contaminated
12.
Currie's space suit, with Currie using
a
special brush
to
remove
off the
13.
make-believe chemical
one and
then handing
the
brush
to a
Robonaut
to
clean
the places
she
couldn't.
excerpt from www.spacedaily.com
"Humans. Robots Work Together
To
Test Spacewalk Squad"
90
Fizzy drinks and children
1.
There was a time when children drank water or milk. That has been gone as surely
2.
as short trousers for schoolboys and the rag and bone for man's horse and cart.
3. Wherever today's kids hang out - be it not in fast-food restaurants, in cinemas, at
4.
home or at school - they are swigging cola and cans of fruit-flavoured fizz. Last
5. year more than 200 litres of the stuff bubbled down with each of their gullets.
6. And they are getting alarmingly fat. Could these facts be connected? It is
a suggestion
7. that makes the soft drinks industry be incandescent with rage, but the Geneva-
8. based World Health Organisation (WHO) has for the first time nailed it to
9. the agenda in a ground-breaking draft report on obesity and nutrition. The report
10.
urges those governments to clamp down on TV ads pushing "sugar-rich items"
11.
only to impressionable thirsty youngsters and to consider slapping heavier taxes
12.
on them. It suggests that school vending machines should be turned down into
13.
scrap metal. This is all-out war. The WHO, however concerned about the rising tide
of obesity
14.
that is killing and debilitating millions in rich countries such as the United
15.
States and Britain, and that is now edging into the poor countries to coexist
16.
obscenely with malnutrition, means business. The soft drinks industry, which
17.
appalled at this interference together with its global dominance, disputes not only
18.
the scientific evidence but the WHO's right even to raise issues out of taxes and
advertising.
adapted from "Are fizzy drinks doing this to our childrerf?" in "The Guardian Weekly"
91
In most lines of the following two texts, there is either a spelling or
a punctuation error. In the space provided write the correctly-spelled
word or show the correct punctuation. Indicate the correct lines with
a tick.
Scotland's islands
1.
Scotland lays claim to 780 major islands. Two of Scotland's principial
2.
island groups, Orkney and Shetland, lie of the north coast, and much
3. of their history and culture is routed in their ancient links with Norway
4.
The Western Isles, or Outer Hebrides is the third important group,
5. while the Inner Hebrides, e.g. Skye and
Mull,
are magical, stepping
6. stones between the mainland and the outer isles. The east coast has
7. no inhabitated islands but some spectacular rocks in the Firth of
8. Forth. There are schedulled air services to Orkney, Shetland and
9. the Western Isles, as well as car and passanger ferry services whose
10.
timetables change with the seasons. There are airstripes on some of
11.
the Inner Hebrides, but unless you own or charter a light aircraft they
12.
can only be reached in the best way possible: by sea.
13.
'Island-hopping with the ferries of Caledonian MacBrayne may be a
14.
modest form of cruising but there are few seaways more gloriuos
15.
The individual characters of the Inner Hebrides inspire loyality in
16.
locals and visitors alike. Those who love Skye, will seldom be
17.
persuaded that Mull has much to offer, while the passionatly insular
18.
will despice
both.
The two largest islands lie close to the mainland
19.
and have the most developed tourist-industries. But even at
20.
the height of the tourist season both islands' offer plenty of
21.
opportunity for solitude and repose; not to mention a strong,
sometimes intimidating sense of their essential wilderness.
adapted from "Scotland" by Julie Davidson
92
Death penalty
I.That
the U.S. executes people is troubleing to death-penalty
2.
opponents around the world. But nowhere, perhaps does it pose
3. such a problem as in the European countries that share Americas
4.
democratic values and maintain close economic military and cultural
5. ties with their transatlantic partner. "Europeans are apalled at
6. the unabated pursuit of the application of the death penalty in
7. the U.S., says Bianca Jagger, an official of Amnesty International
8.
U.S.A.
They cannot understand how the U.S. can claim to be
9. the leading champion of democracy and continue to apply the death
10.
penalty." Belgian novelist and essayst Pierre Mertens similarly
11.
observes," It is a tragic paradox that the delux country among
12.
the democracies resorts to this kind of barbarity" Concerning
13.
the question of capital punishment, the U.S. and its allys stand on
14.
opposite sides of a great divide. All members of the European
15.
Union's have banned the death penalty, and the organization actively
16.
promotes its abolition througout the world. Brussels has made
17.
abolition a precondition to E.U. membership, as has the 41-member
18.
Council Of Europe, thereby spurring most East and Central European
aspirants to do away with capital punishment.
adapted from "Life or Death
93
Part 4 Practice
Use the words in the boxes to the right of the text to form a word that
fits in the same numbered space in the text.
Ice Age
Since the latest film by Roland Emmerich (1) The
Day After Tomorrow hit the cinemas with its grim tale of mankind struggling
with the approaching freeze, interest in ice ages, also called (2)
, has increased.
Ice age is a period featuring a (3) temperature
plunge by (4) 10°C, when polar ice sheets, having
many kilometres in (5) , creep towards the equator
and cover the Earth's surface, putting life on the planet at a (6)
risk. Such periods are estimated to descend upon
the Earth with the (7) of 10,000 years.
Ice ages are connected with the water cycle. Normally, sunlight
(8) water from the ocean. This water returns to the
ocean or to the sea in the form of
rain.
During winter, some of the water falls
as snow and ice, but in summer it melts and thus the cycle is maintained.
However, a (9) decrease in temperature may cause
(10) in the whole water cycle. A (11)
amount of snow and ice doesn't melt and piles up on
land.
Ice sheets at the
poles accumulate and (12) begin to creep downwards
as glaciers.
With so much current concern over the effects of global warming, the
prospect of the next ice age may seem (13)
Nevertheless, some scientists claim that (14) global
94
warming can plunge average temperatures by several degrees in merely a
few decades, and hence trigger the (15) of an ice
age.
This could be due to the thawing of Arctic ice which may disrupt deep
water currents responsible for the Gulf Stream. The Gulf Stream transports
warm (16) water to northern Europe and if it is shut
off, the temperature of the currents will plummet and the northern
(17) will freeze.
The forecasts of (18) vary. Some of them
predict that an ice age can start in the next few decades, while others state
that it will be millennia before it happens.
1) TITLE
2) GLACIATE
3) CONSIDER
4) APPROXIMATE
5) THICK
6) STAGGER
7) FREQUENT
8) VAPOUR
9) SIGNIFY
10) DISRUPT
11) SUBSTANCE
12) CONSEQUENCE
13) NEGLECT
14) MAN
15) SET
16) EQUATOR
17) SPHERE
18) CLIMATE
95
Shrek
Who doesn't know the (1) green ogre called Shrek?
He is the title character of the computer-animated film adaptation of William
Steig's fairy tale which captivated kids and adults alike.
At the beginning of the film we see Shrek leading a (2)
existence in his swamp. He enjoys his peaceful (3)
from the society until the day of (4)
of some fairy tale characters by order of the evil (5)
Lord Farquaad. To the ogre's (6) ,
Seven Dwarves, Pinocchio, the Gingerbread Man and other (7)
settle in his swamp. Shrek immediately goes to Lord
Farquaad and demands (8) The (9)
Lord Farquaad promises the ogre the sole (10)
of the marsh provided that Shrek rescues Princess
Fiona from the lair of a (11) dragon. The ogre
embarks on the quest together with his new companion a talking Donkey.
From this time on Shrek's whole life changes beyond (12)
The plot of the film is (13) engaging, the
soundtrack is exuberant, but (14) it's the jokes, wit
and satire that make Shrek a winner. There are (15)
movie spoofs and amusing (16) to various fairytales.
The film also delivers an important message that you should be yourself and
see beyond surface beauty. Another (17) asset of
Shrek is its brilliant (18) animation. Given this, no
wonder the movie was awarded the first Oscar for Best Animated Feature.
Now, to the delight of the (19) big galoot's
fans,
Shrek sequel is on at cinemas. Shrek 2 is as entertaining as the first
part and the computer animation is (20) and even
more advanced. The characters move more (21) and
96
their (22) muscle movements indicate a careful study
of actual human movement. New characters are also introduced, including
the swashbuckling but cute Puss-in-Boots.
The phenomenon of the popularity of the film Shrek is enormous
though well-deserved.
;1) AGREE
[2) SOLITUDE
[3) DETACH
;4) EVICT
|5) RULE
;6) BEWILDER
[7) CREATE
[8) EXPLAIN
;9) CRAFT
;10) OWN
;11) FEAR
12) RECOGNISE
13) THOROUGH
[14) DOUBT
15) NUMBER
,16) REFER
17) DENY
18) DIGIT
19) LOVE
20) STUN
21) REAL
22) FACE
97
The Beatles - the Greatest Rock'n'Roll Band of all Time
There have been in the history of rock'n'roll a lot of artists that at one time
were considered (1) phenomena. After some time
these stars appeared to be just a passing fad. However, some artists have
(2) in grasping the attention of the world until the
present. The Beatles (3) belong to them.
The Beatles achieved enormous commercial success racking up
more worldwide number-one singles and selling more records than any
other band in the history of popular music. The Fab Four also had really (4)
fans,
which was particularly (5)
at the peak of Beatlemania between 1963 and 1971. Crowds were
screaming at the Beatles' concerts, girls fainted at the very sight of them,
and wherever the Boys went, there were (6) hordes
of fans in (7) so that police protection was a must. In
fact, the Beatles' security (8) cost more than those
for (9) or top politicians.
The bands' status stems not only from their immense popularity but
also from their artistic value. Though (10) a fair
number of the Beatles' songs are sweet and simple with trivial lyrics, they
were only (11) of the (12) of
the bands' activity. Over the course of their career, the music of the Beatles
was constantly evolving. The lyrics also became artistic, capturing the spirit
of the 60's and expressing the experiences and emotions of the generation.
The band started to experiment with sound, introduced exotic instruments
and bizarre sound effects. Their (13) acclaimed
record Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, which comprises a vast
array of styles and (14) ideas, is considered by many
critics the most (15) album in the history of rock'n'roll
98
music. It is believed that the release of this record marks the beginning of
rock'n'roll as a form of art.
Finally, the (16) of the Beatles manifests itself
in the impact they have had on other bands so far. Bob Dylan, another rock
icon,
(17) this, saying: "They were pointing the
direction where music had to go". Not only did the Fab Four had numerous
(18) in style in their contemporary times, including
such bands as the Who or Cream, but also a lot of current rock artists, e.g.
Oasis, admit that they owe (19) to the Beatles.
The Beatles hold a special place in the history of music. The
phenomenon of the band's songs is that they are (20)
and continue to be loved by each generation. Many music critics agree that
the Beatles are the cornerstone of music and but for them, rock may not
have developed as well as it has done.
(1) STAND
(16) GREAT
(2) SUCCESS
(17) KNOW
(3) SURE
(18) FOLLOW
(4) DEVOTION
(19) INSPIRE
(5) NOTICE
(20) MORTAL
(6) HYSTERIA
(7) PURSUE
(8) ARRANGE
(9) ROYAL
(10) ADMIT
(11) CHARACTER
(12) COMMENCE
(13) UNIVERSE
(14) INNOVATION
(15) REVOLUTION
99
Madame Tussaud's
Madame Tussaud's, the (1) famous waxworks
museum,
is one of London's most popular tourist attractions, with over 2
million visitors a year. It has been enchanting and entertaining the public
with its lifelike representations of the famous and (2)
pop stars and royalty for more than 200 years.
The story of Madame Tussaud is as gripping as that of the exhibition
itself. She was born Marie Grosholtz in 1761 in Strasbourg. She learnt the
art of wax modelling from Philippe Curtius, a physician, who employed her
mother as a housekeeper. Marie and her mother moved with Dr Curtius to
Paris.
Curtius' exhibition of wax figures became successful and it started to
be (3) by the French royal family. Marie's talent was
noticed and she was invited to the royal court at Versailles to assist in the
(4) education of King Louis XVI's sister. During the
French Revolution Marie and her mother were (5) in
the Bastille for some years. When she was released, she was asked to
prepare the death masks of decapitated royalty and (6)
When Dr Curtius
died,
Marie inherited the business
and expanded it. Then she married a French engineer, Francois Tussaud,
however, they didn't live together long because she (7)
decided to take the exhibition to Great Britain. Madame Tussaud spent
about 33 years travelling the length and (8) of the
British Isles and presenting her growing collection. In 1835 her exhibition
settled permanently in London.
The wax figures in Madame Tussaud's Museum are placed in five
themed areas. "200 years of Madame Tussaud's" brings together the past,
present, and future of the exhibition. The display comprises both the earliest
figures, among them the original death mask of Robespierre and the half-
burned figure of George IV, damaged during the (9)
100
fire of 1925, and the most current examples of sophisticated animated
figures, called 'audio-animatronics'. Here, there are also exhibits showing
how Madame Tussaud's (10) model from life -
taking many (11) and photographs. "Grand
Hall"
is a
section which assembles renowned kings and queens, great statesmen and
(12) religious leaders. Another themed area,
"Hollywood Legends", contains (13) of superstars of
the past and the present, which are accurate (14) of
real celebrities. There is also "The Spirit of London" which spans London's
history from Elizabethan times to the present day. The atmosphere of each
period is (15) using a host of special effects. Finally,
in the basement of the museum visitors find "The Chamber of Horrors"
which is a macabre collection of portraits of villains and murderers.
Madame Tussaud's Wax Museum is constantly adding to its vast
collection,
and the figures on display are (16) from
time to time with up-to-date portraits. No doubt, a trip to Madame Tussaud's
is a (17) experience.
(1) GLOBE (13) DEPICT
(2) FAMOUS
(14) LIKE
(3) PATRON
(15) CREATE
(4) ART
(16) PLACE
(5) PRISON
(17) MEMORY
(6) REVOLUTION
(7) COURAGE
(8) BROAD
(9) DISASTER
(10) SCULPTURE
(11) MEASURE
(12) INFLUENCE
101
Stonehenge
Stonehenge is surely one of Britain's greatest national icons which
(1) mystery and power. This prehistoric ritual
monument is situated on Salisbury Plain in Wiltshire, southern England and
it is said to have been built in three stages between about 3000 and 1000
BC.
Stonehenge is a (2) arrangement of large
stones called megaliths and is a celebrated example of Neolithic art. The
monument consists of four concentric ranges of stones surrounded by a
ditch with a ring of 56 pits known as Aubrey holes. The outermost range is a
circle of large sandstone blocks called sarsen stones. Within this circle is a
circle of smaller blue stones (3) a horseshoe-shaped
arrangement of five pairs of large sarsen stones. Within this arrangement is
a smaller horseshoe-shaped range of blue stones which surrounds the Altar
Stone.
Moreover, there is a number of round barrows or (4)
mounds in the vicinity of the main structure.
The question of who built Stonehenge still remains (5)
Many ancient peoples have been credited with the
monument's construction over the years, but the most captivating and
enduring (6) has been to Celtic priests, the Druids.
This (7) , first made by the antiquary John Aubrey,
turns out to be (8) as by the time of the Druids, the
stones had already been standing for 2,000 years. Besides, the Druids
didn't need stone structures because they worshipped in forest temples.
The original function of Stonehenge has also been a matter of
conjecture. Some people have speculated that it was a temple made for the
worship of ancient earth deities. Others have claimed that it was a sacred
site for burying high-ranking citizens. However, the most probable seems to
be the idea that Stonehenge was an astronomical (9)
for marking significant events on the prehistoric calendar. The last theory
102
was supported by the (10) of the American (11)
Gerald S. Hawkins, which were reported in 1964.
Hawkins combined computer measurements and astronomical information
and on this basis he concluded that Stonehenge complex could have been
used to predict the summer and winter solstices, the vernal and autumnal
equinoxes, and both (12) and lunar eclipses.
Moreover, all these predictions are believed to have been made with
remarkable (13) While we can't say with any (14)
what the real function of Stonehenge was or who
built it, the monument must have been very important to the ancients, as the
construction required a lot of effort and (15)
The modern age has not treated Stonehenge very
well,
despite the
lip service it pays to the (16) of heritage sites. There
is a major highway running no more than 100 yards away from the
monument and plenty of visitor facilities around it. The organisation, English
Heritage, has (17) the task of providing Stonehenge
with the dignified setting it deserves. According to the project, the
surrounding roads will be removed or tunnelled, the ploughed fields returned
to open grassland and a new visitor centre, which will blend into the
landscape, will be built. Although Stonehenge has been decimated through
the centuries by visitors and (18) forces alike, it
continues to be an awe-inspiring sight.
(1) SYMBOL
(2) CIRCLE
(3) CLOSE
(4) BURY
(5) ANSWER
(6) ATTRIBUTE
(7) ASSUME
(8) ERROR
(9) OBSERVE
(10) FIND
(11) ASTRONOMY
(12) SUN
(13) ACCURATE
(14) CERTAIN
(15) COMMITTED
(16) PRESERVE
(17) TAKE
(18) CLIMATE
103
Key
to
Exercises
Definite, indefinite and zero articles
I. The, - 2. The 3. the, - 4. - 5. The, the 6. A 7. The, the, the, the 8. a
9. a,- 10. a, the
11.
A, an 12. the 13. a, the 14. an 15.- 16. The, a,- 17. a
18.
the, the 19. the, the 20.-, the
21.
A, an, - 22. the, a 23. the,-, - 24. The, -
25.
a, the 26. The, a 27. The, an 28. -/the, a 29. the, -, a, the, the, an 30. the,
the/-
31.
the 32. the, the, the, a 33. a 34. a, the, the, a, -, an, the, the, the, the
35.
- 36. a, -, - 37. the, the, the 38. the 39. The, the, the/-, the, - 40. the, the
41.
An, a, the 42. The, the, the 43. an, the, a 44. the, the 45. -,- 46. -, - 47. -,
-, The, an, a 48. the, -, the 49. the, -, the 50. The, the, -, -
Modal verbs
1.1b 2a 3c 4b 5a 6c 7c 8c 9d 10b
11
d
12d 13b 14a 15d
II.
1. wouldn't start 2. Try as I might 3. should reach 4. He may / might / could
have changed 5. lest you should accept 6. He must have had 7. may / might /
could give 8. should win 9. daren't do / don't dare to do 10. so that the boy
shouldn't overhear 11 It can't / couldn't have been 12. should be moving 13.
must be watching 14. couldn't have sold / wouldn't sell 15. computer nerds will sit
Gerund or infinitive
1.
to buy 2. to send 3. not to wear 4. putting 5. act 6. rehearsing 7. moving
8. to accept, to dismiss 9. rummaging/having rummaged 10. not going/not having
gone
11.
to look after 12. losing 13. not to travel 14. to try 15. meeting 16. to
take 17. to meet 18. binging 19. trying 20. picking up 21. being 22. to inform
23.
speaking 24. trafficking/having trafficked 25. to come 26. (to) taking panV(to)
having taken 27. eating 28. buying 29. to ask/ask 30. inviting
31.
to offend
32.
drinking 33. (to) fill 34. to add 35. renovating 36. to see 37. to smuggle
38.
coming 39. to go 40. meeting
41.
to deliver 42. repairing 43. to outline
44.
revising/to be revised 45. to have endured 46. moving 47. going
48.
meeting 49. putting 50. applying
106
Phrasal Verbs
I.
1.
She is always running down her neighbours behind their backs.
2.
He promised that he would come to help me, but he let me down and didn't turn
up.
3. He pretended that he was not a Scotsman, but his accent gave him away.
4.1 wanted to get the job, but they turned down my application ...
5. They tried to deceive me, but I saw through their true intentions ...
6. Tom fell out with his boss and a couple of days later he was given the sack.
7. I can't put up with the noise of my neighbour's lawn mower.
8. ... but when we got to know him better, we took to him.
9. Patti takes after her mother in so many respects.
10.
Before you go to your boss to ask for a pay rise, jot down the points ...
11.
You should talk your brother-in-law into buying this car...
12.
However, her performance didn't come up to my expectations.
13.
The American Civil War between the North and the South broke out in 1861
14.
... so that I can make up for it.
15.
The deal fell through because the company didn't agree to the terms of payment
16.
... but at the last minute some problems crop up
17.
The Turners took out a mortgage from a building society to buy this house ...
18.
... that I've given up hope of making him out.
19.
The very sight of the restaurant with its shabby interior put me off.
20.
When I was shopping in the new mall I ran into Andrew.
21.
... the municipal authorities resolved to pull down the abandoned tenement
buildings ...
22.
When the flood subsided, we could see clearly that half of the town was wiped
out.
23.
... and they are putting on a play in our city next week.
24.
are often looked down on in both their professional and their private lives.
25.
Being the sole heir, Daniel came into his grandmother's vast estate ...
26.
Thousands of people employed in the steel industry in Poland have been laid off
107
27.
If I hadn't been held up by the traffic in the city centre ...
28.
I'm afraid the advertising agency really ripped you off for the commercial.
29.
Have you seen him taking off the Prime Minister?
30.
The legal advisors of the two companies met to draw up the initial version ...
II.
1.b 2. a 3. b 4. c 5. c 6. d 7. c 8. d 9. d 10. c 11. a 12. b 13. a 14. c
15.
d 16. a 17. b 18. d 19. a 20. d
Prepositions
1.
in 2. in 3. for 4. with / at, about / over, to / towards 5. of 6. about 7. of
8. on/in 9. for, of 10. for 11. in, of 12. by 13. under 14. For, under 15.of,
from 16. into, on, of 17. in 18. with 19. with 20. to
21.
from 22. for 23. for, in
24.
on 25.
for/in,
with 26. at 27. in 28. into 29. to 30. to 31. over, within
32.
in, with/to 33. on 34. at, of 35. in, to 36. in 37. by, of 38. in 39. with
40.
on 41. in 42. in, of 43. of 44. with 45. for 46. for 47. out of 48. against,
for, of 49. at
50.
by
Similar but different: confused words
I. a. sensitive b. sensible c. sensitive 2. a. treated b. treated, cured c. cure
3. a. disinterested b. uninterested c. uninterested 4. a. imminent b. eminent
5. a. complements/complemented b. compliment c. complement 6. a. stationery
b. stationary c. stationary 7. a. raises b. raise c. has risen d. rose e. raising
8. a. discreet b. discrete c. discrete d. discreet 9. a. told b. told c. say d. tell
e. telling 10. a. do b. makes c. make d. do e. has done/did f. make g. make
II.
a. hung b. hanged c. hung d. hanged 12. a. misuse b. misused
c. disused d. disused e. misused 13. a. historical b. historic c. historic
d.
historical 14. a. councillor b. counsellor 15. a. envious/jealous b. jealous
c. envious/jealous 16. a. negligent b. negligent c. negligible d. negligible
108
17.
a. assure b. insure c. insured d. ensure e. reassure f. ensured
g.
assured 18. a. consists, comprises/includes b. compose c. comprise
d.
composed 19. a. sight b. cite c. site d. site 20. a. economical b. economic
c. economical d. economic
21.
a. farther/further b. further c. farther/further
22.
a. lost b. lose c. lost, loose 23. a. effective b. effective c. efficient
d.
efficient 24. a. prudish b. prudent c. prudent 25. a. classic b. classic
c. classical 26. a. beside b. besides c. Besides d. besides 27. a. eligible
b. illegible c. eligible 28. a. invaluable b. worthless c. worthless 29. a.
non-
flammable b. inflammable 30. a. blinked b. winked c. blinking 31. a. policies
b. politics c. politics d. policy 32. a. amenities b. facilities c. facilities
33.
a. morale b. morals c. morale 34. a. industrious b. Industrial c. industrial
35.
a. stimulus b. stimulant c. stimulus 36. a. glance b. glimpse c. glance
37.
a. laid b. lay c. lain d. laid e. lay 38. a. effect b. affects 39. a. illegible
b. unreadable 40. a. access b. excess c. access 41. a. prosecuted
b. persecuted c. prosecute d. persecuted 42. a. vain b. vain c. veins
43.
a. human b. humane c. humane d. human 44. a. preceded b. precede
c. proceeded d. proceed 45. a. Gorillas b. guerrilla 46. .a. heroine b. heroin
c. heroine 47. a. prayed b. prey c. prey 48. a. urban b. urbane
49.
a. prospective b. perspective 50. a. canvas b. canvass c. canvas
Word formation
I. resistance 2. confidential 3. inexperienced 4. impatient 5. unsatisfactory
6. suspicious 7. martyrdom 8. approval 9. significance 10. troublesome
II.
consciousness 12. membership 13. illegal 14. irresponsible
15.
disrespectful 16. variety 17. negligence 18. subscription 19. Increasingly
20.
remarkable
21.
contemptible 22. unavailable 23. unavoidable
24.
partnership 25. non-profit 26. unreliable 27. foreseeable 28.. irritable
29.
intentions 30. explanatory 31. inexplicable/unexplained 32. explosive
33.
occurrences 34. infallible 35. remembrance 36. underestimate
37.
overrated 38. sympathetically 39. grievances 40. assumption
41.
shortage
42.
affluence 43. modesty 44. avoidance 45. endless 46. additionally
109
47.
inflexible 48. disabilities 49. pitiful 50. retention 51. inaccessible
52.
beneficial 53. evasion 54. evasive 55. turnover 56. outbreak
57.
disobedience 58. enforce 59. imprisonment 60. confirmation
61.
graceful 62. defenceless 63. preoccupied 64. admission 65. unjust
66.
injustice 67. notify 68. memorise 69. acquaintance 70. withdraw
71.
uncorrupted .72 forgery 73. inadvisable 74. comparatively
75.
encouragement 76. insensitive 77. reality 78. effortlessly 79. disastrous
80.
coincidentally
81.
spacious 82. accusations 83. thoughtful 84. indecisive
85.
inconsistent 86. hypocrisy 87. immoral 88. slippery 89. performance
90.
unattractive
91.
doubtful 92. indifferent 93. shameful 94. daily
95.
insecurity 96. reluctance 97. majority 98. abolition 99. disagreeable
100.
submissive
Collocations and Idioms
1.c 2. b 3. d 4. a 5. a 6. b 7. c 8. d 9. c 10. c
11.
c 12. b 13. a 14. c
15.
d 16. d 17. a 18. c 19. b 20. a
21.
c 22. d 23. c 24. b 25. a 26. d
27.
b 28. d 29. c 30. d 31. a 32. a 33. b 34. a 35. b 36. d 37. a 38. b
39.
c 40. c 41. d 42. b 43. c 44. c 45. a 46. b 47. c 48. a 49 b 50. c
Compounds
Noun + noun
1.1
j windscreen, 2 k eyewitness, 3 i willpower, 4 n chain-smoker, 5 I hay
fever, 6 o man-hour, 7 a unemployment benefit, 8 c self-esteem, 9 b spotlight,
10 g bookends, 11m mouthpiece, 12 f firearms, 13 d flow chart, 14 h windfall,
15 e eyesore
II.
1. eyesore 2. self-esteem 3. firearms 4. spotlight 5. windfall 6. man-hours
7. eyewitness 8. willpower 9. unemployment benefit 10. hay fever
11.
chain-
smoker 12. windscreen 13. flowchart 14. mouthpiece 15. bookends
110
Adjective + noun
1.1
k hard shoulder, 2 j parting shot, 3 a nervous breakdown, 4 i wet blanket,
5 n stuffed shirt, 6 h hard labour, 7 b formative years, 8 I thorough grounding,
9 c general public, 10 m prime suspect, 11 g graphic detail, 12 d burning
question,
13 f necessary
evil,
14 o rough diamond, 15 e quicksand
II.
1. nervous breakdown 2. hard shoulder 3. general public 4. prime suspect
5.wet blanket 6. graphic detail 7. necessary evil 8. formative years 9. quicksand
10.
thorough grounding
11.
burning question 12. stuffed shirts 13. hard labour
14.
rough diamond 15. parting shot
Adjective + adjective
I.
1
g big-headed, 2 I wide awake, 3 i ill-tempered, 4 h bittersweet, 5 b
nuclear-powered, 6 m hard-hearted, 7 a blue-eyed, 8 d bad-mannered, 9 k fast
asleep, 10 c warm-hearted, 11 n flat broke, 12 o ill-equipped, 13 f long-lasting,
14 e far-reaching, 15 j quick-witted
11.
1. bittersweet 2. big-headed 3. far-reaching 4. bad-mannered 5. quick-witted
6. hard-hearted 7. ill-tempered 8. warm-hearted 9. long-lasting 10. nuclear-powered
II.
fast asleep 12. blue-eyed 13. flat broke 14. ill-equipped 15. wide awake
Punctuation Practice
1.
Betty entered the room, looked at us with surprise, shouted loudly(,) and
fainted.
2.
Antonio Bradi, 25, has been in coma for several weeks now.
3. correct
4.
Certain products, e.g. eggs, rolls, oranges are often bought in dozens.
5. correct
6. It is true that the price is extremely low. However, we are more concerned with
the quality of the product.
111
7. It's a family of eight children, all of whom are studying music.
8. correct
9. correct
10.
Iggy, our best athlete, is so quick(,) no one can match him.
11.
Stanley lives in Pittsburgh, New Jersey.
12.
Susie, our youngest daughter, has just turned 5.
13.
His life was in danger, he told me.
14.
correct
15.
The directors haven't decided whether they will recommend a dividend(,) or
hold over the profits.
16.
correct
17.
Fortunately, the crowd dispersed peaceably. If they hadn't, the police might
have had to use force.
18.
correct
19.
My mother bought me for Christmas a beautiful, soft woollen cardigan.
20.
White wine is to be enjoyed slightly cooled; red wine, in ambient temperature.
21.
This is Henry, whose wife teaches our children.
22.
correct
23.
By the time the fire brigade arrived, the house had already burnt down.
24.
It is the invoice that I'm looking for, not the
bill.
25.
She spent all evening talking about her latest book, which none of us had ever
heard of.
26.
Frankly, this is the most appalling concert I've ever been to.
27.
This subject has become really popular. We are, therefore, quite certain that it
will attract many students to our university.
28.
Mexico City, which has a population of over 10 million, is probably the fastest
growing city in the world.
29.
Pink is often reserved for girls; blue colour, for boys.
30.
Lenny, when the meeting is over, come to my office, please.
31.
The small man in the raincoat, whom nobody recognized, turned out to be
Olivia's first husband.
112
32.
"I suppose so," grunted Jack.
33.
Just before the wedding she changed her mind and decided not to marry Alan,
which shocked all the guests.
34.
correct
35.
The Vikings, known for their seafaring skills, were the first to reach America,
well before Christopher Columbus.
36.
"Your information," he replied, "is out of date."
37.
correct
38.
correct
39.
After Vicky agreed to go out with him, Martin became so self-confident.
40.
Two coffees, a cheese cake and an apple pie, please.
41.
The island boasts a fantastic landscape. Furthermore, it has excellent tourist
facilities.
42.
We've tested twenty types of overalls, none of which is completely waterproof.
43.
These souvenirs are handcrafted, not mass-produced in a factory.
44.
The loan shark lent Greg a thousand bucks, which was exactly the amount he
needed to solve his problems.
45.
Perhaps, if you have some time left, we could try the new cafe on the corner?
46.
Nevertheless, the idea seems promising enough to draw the Dean's attention.
47.
Seicento is definitely a decent car to get around the city. On the other hand, it
is unsafe and uncomfortable.
48.
The more you practise playing the violin, the better you are at it.
49.
Mr Fairclough, who used to take care of our garden, retired several months
ago.
50.
Angela's date started to tell stupid jokes, at which point she decided to leave.
113
CAE English in Use Exam Practice
Parti Practice
Text messaging
1.b 2. a 3. a 4. d 5. b 6. d 7. c 8. a 9. b 10. b
11.
d 12. c 13. a 14. a
15.
b
Bloodthirsty bears
1.a 2. c 3. a 4. c 5. b 6. d 7. b 8. c 9. a 10. b 11. d 12. b 13. d 14. a
15.
d
Dyslexic minds
1.c 2. b 3. b 4. a 5. c 6. c 7. a 8. a 9. d 10. b 11. d 12. d 13. d 14. c
15.
c
The future in biotechnology
1.d 2. a 3. c 4. a 5. c 6. b 7. d 8. c 9. b 10. b
11.
d 12. a 13. c 14. c
15.
b
Stop the anti-aging process
1.d 2. d 3. d 4. a 5. d 6. c 7. d 8. b 9. a 10. b
11.
c 12. c 13. a 14. b
15.
b
Part 2 Practice
Eldest child
1.
along 2. being 3. of 4. on 5. to 6. another 7. because 8. enough
9. This 10. and
11.
hence/therefore/thus 12. an 13. which 14. their
15.
as/when 16. more 17. among 18. any
114
The seal's body
1.
better/more 2. them 3. with 4. while/whereas 5. between 6. This
7. will/can 8. of 9. even 10. from
11.
a 12. like 13. than 14. other/more
15.
when/as 16. themselves 17. to
Problems of longevity
I.
but/however/nevertheless/nonetheless 2. up 3. were 4. or 5. very
6. would/could/might 7. kind/sort 8. to 9.at 10. what 11. nothing
12.
often/sometimes 13. far 14. not 15. anything 16. much 17. if 18. only/just
South Africa plagued by HIV virus
l.the
2. It/This 3. with 4. has 5. the 6. is 7. to 8. one 9. that/which 10. for
II.
which 12. have 13. this/such 14. with 15. will 16. what
Dangerous tanning pills
l.them 2. while 3. being 4. as 5. be 6. will 7. its 8. between 9. the 10. is
11.no 12. any/the 13. out 14. there 15. such 16. to
Part 3 Practice
Coral Reefs
1.a 2. the 3. being 4. correct 5. in 6. are 7. correct 8. back 9. of 10. for
11.
much 12.it 13. correct
The New Robonaut
I.
correct 2. is 3. in 4. his 5. of 6. have 7. that 8. correct 9. by 10. and
II.
correct 12. off 13. one
115
Fizzy Drinks and Children
1.
correct 2. for 3. not 4. correct 5. with 6. correct 7. be 8. correct
9. correct 10. those
11.
only 12. down 13. however 14. correct 15. the
16.
which 17. together 18. out
Scotland's islands
I. principal 2. off 3. rooted 4. correct 5. Outer Hebrides, is the third
6. magical stepping 7. inhabited 8. scheduled 9. passenger 10. airstrips
II.
correct 12. correct 13.'Island-hopping' 14. glorious 15. loyalty
16.
Those who love Skye will 17. passionately 18. despise 19. tourist industries
20.
islands 21. repose - not to mention/repose, not to mention
Death penalty
1.
troubling 2. But nowhere, perhaps, does it pose 3. America's
4.
economic, military 5. appalled 6. correct 7. U.S.," says Bianca Jagger
8.
U.S.A.
"They cannot 9. correct 10. essayist
11.
deluxe 12. barbarity."
13.
allies 14. correct 15. Union 16. throughout 17. correct 18. Council of
Europe
Part 4 Practice
Ice Age
I. entitled 2. glaciations 3. considerable 4. approximately 5. thickness
6. staggering 7. frequency 8. evaporates 9. significant 10. disruption
II.
substantial 12. consequently 13. negligible 14. man-made 15. onset
16.
equatorial 17. hemisphere 18. climatologists
116
Shrek
1.
agreeable 2. solitary 3. detachment 4. eviction 5. ruler 6. bewilderment
7. creatures 8. explanation 9. crafty 10. ownership
11.
fearsome / fearful
12.
recognition 13. thoroughly 14. undoubtedly 15. numerous / innumerable
16.
references 17. undeniable 18. digital 19. loveable / lovable 20. stunning
21.
realistically 22. facial
The Beatles - the greatest rock'n'roll band of all time
1.
outstanding 2. succeeded 3. surely 4. devoted 5. noticeable 6. hysterical
7. pursuit 8. arrangements 9. royalty 10. admittedly
11.
characteristic
12.
commencement 13. universally 14. innovative / innovatory 15. revolutionary
16.
greatness 17. acknowledged 18. followers 19. inspiration 20. immortal
Madame Tussaud's
I. globally 2. infamous 3. patronized 4. artistic 5. imprisoned
6. revolutionaries 7. courageously 8. breadth 9. disastrous 10. sculptors
II.
measurements 12. influential 13. depictions 14. likenesses 15. recreated
16.
replaced 17. memorable
Stonehenge
1.
symbolises 2. circular 3. enclosing 4. burial 5. unanswered 6. attribution
7. assumption 8. erroneous 9. observatory 10. findings 11. astronomer
12.
solar 13. accuracy 14. certainty 15. commitment 16. preservation
17.
undertake 18. climatic
117
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Preview text:

Sylwia Wojciechowska-Bartkiewicz J£ZYK ANGIELSKI Z e s t a w cwiczeri na poziomie CAE Gramatyka i sfownictwo HAKDYBQQKS Przedmowa
Ksiazka, kt6ra trafia w Panstwa r?ce skierowana jest do osob przygotowujacych si?
do egzaminu Cambridge Certificate in Advanced English, tak wi?c skfada si?
ona z zestawu cwiczeii na poziomie zaawansowanym. Zawarte w niej testy moga^
sluzyc zarowno zapoznaniu si? z zagadnieniami gramatyczno-leksykalnymi
typowymi dla tego egzaminu, jak rowniez jako powtorka przed egzaminem.
Jednoczesnie ksiazka moze przydac si? osobom, ktore nie zdaja^ egzaminu CAE
jednakze chcialyby poszerzyc zasob slownictwa, udoskonalic umiej?tnosc
stosowania wybranych struktur gramatycznych oraz wprawic si? w rozwiazywaniu
testow na poziomie zaawansowanym.
Ksiazka sklada si? z czterech gtownych cz?sci: Grammar, Vocabulary, Punctuation
oraz English in Use Exam Practice. Material zawarty w pierwszych trzech cz?sciach
zostaf dobrany tak, aby okazac si? pomocnym przy rozwiazywaniu konkretnych
testow egzaminacyjnych, czyli np. multiple choice gap fill, czy open gap fill.
Przykfadowo, znajdujace si? w cz?sci gramatycznej cwiczenia na przedimki lub
przyimki okaza. si? przydatne przy rozwiazywaniu testu typu open gap fill, natomiast
cwiczenia na kolokacje maja, za zadanie przygotowanie do rozwiazania testu typu
multiple choince gap fill. Ostatnia cz?sc ksiazki sprawdza umiej?tnosc
rozwiazywania testow, podobnych do tych, ktore spotkaja^ Pahstwo w cz?sci
egzaminacyjnej English in Use.
Niniejsza pozycja moze bye wykorzystana nie tyiko na zaj?ciach, ale rowniez
podczas samodzielnej pracy, dzi?ki pelnemu kluczowi z odpowiedziami do cwiczen
umieszczonemu na kohcu ksiazki.
Napisalam t? ksigzk?, aby podzielic si? doswiadczeniem zdobytym w pracy z
grupami egzaminacyjnymi na poziomie CAE i mam nadziej?, ze zawarte w niej
testy pomogq Panstwu w przygotowaniu si? do tego egzaminu. Autorka Spis tresci CAE Grammar Practice 7
Definite, indefinite and zero articles 9 Modal verbs 13 Gerund or Infinitive 17 Phrasal verbs 21
Prepositions and prepositional phrases 28
CAE Vocabulary Practice 3 3 Confused words 35 Word formation 50 Collocations and idioms 58 Compounds 64
Punctuation Practice 70
CAE English in Use, Exam Practice 7 3 Part 1 74 Part 2 84 Part 3 89 Part 4 94 Key to exercises 105 5
CAE Grammar Practice
Definite, indefinite and zero articles
Fill the gaps with the, a, an or no article.
1 Siberian tiger is threatened with extinction because it is
virtually impossible to trace cunning Russian poachers.
2 life of Marco Polo was full of bold and breathtaking adventures.
3. Today for several thousand dollars and with help of professional
mountaineers everyone can climb Mount Everest.
4. In Hyde Park in central London ordinary people can make
speeches and express their opinions on various issues.
5 bicycles standing on porch belong to our children's friends.
6 Mr Turner called you while you were out, but he didn't want to
leave a message, and said that he would call again later.
7 more I think of prospect of emigrating to Canada, less idea appeals to me.
8. Don't you recognise the picture? It's Picasso!
9. We're trying to create friendly atmosphere in our company, and
therefore we often go out together after work.
10. If you happen to come late after midnight, try not to make noise as
other tenants are bound to be fast asleep at that time.
11 candidate for the advertised position should display in-depth
knowledge of IT related issues.
12. In his novels James Joyce depicts Dublin of his times.
13. W e stayed in New York for so short time that we had no chance to
see Statue of Liberty, not to mention other tourist attractions.
14. This region of Germany is renowned for excellent white wine its vineyards turn out. 9
15. According to the recently amended labour code, noise is classified as a kind of pollution.
16 death of Czestaw Niemen is great loss to Polish music.
17. When I started working in television, my colleagues gave me hard
time, as happens to all rookies.
18. Jack is a real globetrotter. This year, for instance, he spent two months
in France, then went to Portugal, visiting on way his friends in
Madrid, then decided to stay in Sweden for three months and now he
has just set out for Netherlands.
19. As I see it, the most nerve-racking part of each practical English exam is waiting for results.
20. With your fluent knowledge of English you can easily read such
magazines in English like Newsweek or Economist
21 dictionary is enormous help for novice translators.
22. The passer-by is reported to have been hit on head with beer
bottle and knocked unconscious by one of football hooligans.
23. In summer of 1996 raging storms swept through the country
wreaking havoc and causing panic.
24 computer has become so indispensable that it's difficult to imagine
life without this ingenious invention.
25. Do I get on with my neighbour well? Of course not! He's pain in
neck, always nagging about something for no apparent reason.
26 Bombay Restaurant offers remarkable selection of dishes from India.
27 bicycle is environmentally-friendly means of transport.
28. Her child went down with mumps a couple of weeks ago, but now he's as fit as fiddle.
29. I was woken up at break of dawn by knock on
door. I quickly put on my dressing gown, looked through peephole and saw elderly woman. 10
30. William Wallace devoted his whole life to fighting for freedom of Scots.
3 1 . Having looked through various travel brochures I came to
conclusion that it's not worth going on holidays to Greece for one week only.
32. I've been racking my brains, but I can't remember exact date of
opening of exhibition. I think it's Thursday, but I can't tell you which week.
33. In my opinion, buying shares in this ailing company is quite risky investment.
34. Yesterday at 5 p.m. there was pile-up on roundabout close to
where I live. First, driver of blue van didn't give right of
way to approaching sedan and cars collided. Then
cars behind didn't manage to slow down in time, and bumped into them.
blue van wasn't badly damaged, but sedan was really smashed.
35. A lot of people believe that it is unlikely for human beings to ever settle in space.
36. I don't suppose man like your boss believes in life after death.
37. Ask Derek. He keeps up with exchange rate and should know if
currently value of euro against dollar is favourable or not.
38. The shortest way to England is through Straits of Dover.
39 only piece of information public prosecutor's office wanted to
give to press was t h a t . . . . . . accused is going to stand trial next Wednesday.
40. A lot of newlyweds choose Bahamas as destination for their honeymoon trip. 11
41 editor is person whose duties include supervising work
of journalists in his newspaper or magazine.
42 lion might have been provoked by very fact that lion- tamer approached its cage.
43. Her father is ardent supporter of Republicans and wants her to marry Republican.
44. Do you want to say that you talked to Thorn Yorke, singer? That's unbelievable!
45. Maggie claims that believing strongly in God helped her
endure a lot of suffering in her life.
46. Every democratic country should guarantee freedom of speech.
47. Newspapers in England can be classified into two types:
broadsheets and tabloids Times is example of broadsheet.
48. Tough measures should be taken to decrease amount of noxious fumes in atmosphere.
49. As I was leaving office, I caught sight of two dodgy-looking
men coming into secretary's room.
50 crew aboard Canberra didn't realise that they were in
grave danger and were reluctant to abandon ship. 12 Modal verbs
I. Choose the best option to fill each gap.
1. I didn't know you didn't eat meat. You me
earlier! I would have prepared something vegetarian then.
a) could tell b) should have told c) should tell d) must have told
2. One smoke in this room. This is prohibited!
a) mustn't b) shouldn't c) won't d) needn't
3. Kate to the library, as they didn't have the
book for her. She could have called to ask instead.
a) needn't go b) couldn't have gone c) needn't have gone d) ought to go
4. 'I can see that you are pretty busy at the moment. I help you in any way?'
a) Should b) May c) Will d) Might
5. The notice says: 'Application forms be
submitted to the office within 15 days.'
a) must b) have to c) need to d) shall
6. 'You have told me it was a formal dinner! I
would have put on something smart. In my old jeans I felt like a bit of a misfit.'
a) may b) needed c) might d) ought
7. She me that something was wrong. I could
see it clearly the moment she looked at me.
a) needn't have told b) mustn't have told c) didn't need to tell d) can't have told 13
8. I have much more free time when I was a
student and life seemed to be a piece of cake!
a) would b) was used to c) used to d) could
9. The curtains caught fire when the child was carelessly playing with
matches, but we put it out by ourselves.
a) could b) would c) could have d) were able to
10. You'd better steer clear of her today. She
be really irritable when she has a headache.
a) may b) can c) could d) might
11. Come on! Stop moaning! W e hurry up or we'll be late for the plane.
a) shall b) need c) have to d) must
12. Winter in our country be quite cold, so take a warm jacket and some woollens.
a) may b) could c) is able to d) can
13. He be the owner of the newspaper, but it doesn't mean that he can
treat his employees like dirt.
a) might b) may c) can d) could
14. As the film is no longer on at cinemas, we as well watch it on DVD.
a) may b) can c) could d) shall
15. The instruction says that we write approximately 200 words on this topic.
a) must b) shall c) can d) have to 14
II. Paraphrase the italicised fragments in the following sentences using modal verbs.
1. No wonder the engine didn't start. The tank was empty.
2. Although I tried hard to retrieve the file from the hard drive, it was gone forever.
3. It is necessary that convoys delivering humanitarian aid reached the famine-stricken area quickly.
4. It is possible that he changed his name after leaving the country to avoid being recognised.
5. Whenever you sign a contract, always read carefully the text in fine
print in order not to accept unknowingly some unfavourable terms, (use lest)
6. Jonathan looks very tired. He surely had a hectic day at work.
7. Ask the native inhabitants of the village. They will perhaps give you
more accurate information than the guidebook.
8. In my opinion the party is expected to win the election easily.
9. I'd like to ask my boss for a pay rise, but I'm afraid to do it. (use dare) 15
10. The two girls spoke in undertones because they didn't want the boy to
overhear what they were saying, (use so that)
11. It's impossible that it was him that you saw at the cinema yesterday! He left the country a week ago!
12. It's surprising that these city slickers are moving to live in the country
after all the disapproving remarks they've made about life on the farm.
13. I'm sure Brenda is watching her favourite sitcom because she isn't
answering the phone. She simply doesn't want anybody to disturb her.
14. Ritchie didn't want to sell his battered old Ford because he was very sentimental about it.
15. It's typical of computer nerds to sitior hours on end in front of the screen crunching algorithms. 16 Gerund or infinitive
Put the verbs in brackets into -ing or infinitive form (bare infinitive or to-infinitive).
1. I'm afraid we can't afford (buy) a new car. W e
have to save some more money and wait till next year.
2. Oh dear! I forgot (send) her a Christmas card!
She won't talk to me any more!
3. He advises me (not wear) my favourite pink shirt
for the job interview, as the boss hates that colour.
4. I'm sure I sent that letter! I remember (put) it in
the post box round the corner.
5. I think she is a great actress! I saw her (act) in a
play at the National Theatre last week. She held the audience spellbound.
6. As we were passing by our neighbours' house, we heard Sam (rehearse) for the concert.
7. Now that he's got married, he considers (move) to a bigger flat.
8. She was made (accept) her new duties because
the boss threatened (dismiss) her if she didn't accept them.
9. Jack denied (rummage) around in her papers.
He claimed that the mess was due to a wind's blow.
10. I regret (not go) with my friends to Ireland. They
had such a wonderful time there! 17
11. God knows why I agreed (look after) their little
son while they were on holiday! Never in my life have I seen such a naughty kid!
12. If you don't finish this project till the end of the week, you risk (lose) the job.
13. He warned me (not travel) in the mountains
alone, as one might easily get lost.
14. My dad encouraged me (try) again in spite of difficulties.
15. He probably still hasn't got the money to pay me back, and that's why he avoids (meet) me.
16. The defendant offered a bribe, but the judge refused (take) it.
17. The airline strives (meet) the highest safety standards.
18. Margaret can't help (binge) on chocolate when she feels depressed.
19. It's no use (try) to sell state-of-the-art computers
to primary schools as they simply can't afford this.
20. Derek is such a womaniser! He can't resist (pick
up) all nice girls that he meets at work.
2 1 . The job involves (be) on call 24 hours a day.
22. W e regret (inform) you that your account is overdrawn.
23. The upset customer insisted on (speak) to the manager immediately.
24. The policeman was accused of (traffic in) drugs and was held in custody.
25. The professor reminded the students (come) to
the lecture 30 minutes earlier next week. 18
26. After several hours of interrogation the suspect eventually admitted
(take) part in the bank robbery in Northampton last week.
27. They don't allow (eat) in the library, so you'd
better put your sandwich back in your bag.
28. You shouldn't hesitate about (buy) this dress.
You really look stunning in it.
29. I didn't dare (ask) her this question. It was too personal.
30. Tony suggested (invite) more people to the
party. He thinks that the more people there are, the more fun we may have.
3 1 . I didn't mean (offend) you, I didn't know that
such music really appealed to you. Now I feel deeply apologetic.
32. If you suffer from insomnia, and sleeping pills don't help you, try
(drink) a glass of milk before going to bed.
Believe me, it really helped in my case!
33. Excuse me, I don't speak English well. Can you help me (fill) in this form?
34. He saw the fear in my eyes and hastened (add)
that I won't have to work on the project alone, but I'll have an assistant to help me.
35. I'm afraid we will have to postpone (renovate)
our house for some time because at this moment we have more urgent expenses.
36. The writer was forced into exile two years ago, and in every interview
he gives, he says how much he longs (see) his family.
37. He bribed one of the customs officers (smuggle) a crate of wine. 19
38. Doctor Jenkins, I do appreciate your (come) here at such a short notice.
39. In my opinion you should forbid your son (go) to
parties for the next three months after his outrageous behaviour at the
last party. That should teach him a lesson!
40. As Sheila had missed several consecutive classes in algebra, she
dreaded (meet) the teacher, who was known for being strict.
4 1 . Our company has been trying really hard to meet the deadline of
October 5 , but unfortunately we have failed t h
(deliver) on time the last five packaging machines.
42. There's no point in (repair) this banger. You'd better sell it for scrap.
43. At the university meeting, the professor first discussed the items on the
agenda and went on (outline) the most important
issues at the linguistic conference that he had just come back from.
44. I'm afraid this draft really needs (revise). There
is a considerate number of content-related errors.
45. Look at his sad wrinkled face. He seems
(endure) a lot of hardship in his life.
46. Having spent the whole life in a tiny village, Gina couldn't imagine
(move) to one of the biggest cities in the country.
47. Do you fancy (go) for a drink after the training session?
48. Although he is a prominent political figure, he doesn't mind (meet) ordinary people.
49. If you want to boost your sales, it may be worth
(put) an advertisement in the local newspaper.
50. If I were him, I wouldn't waste time (apply) for a
managerial position with such mediocre qualifications. 20 Phrasal verbs
I. Rewrite the following sentences replacing the underlined
expressions with the correct phrasal verbs in the right forms. In
each sentence you are given part of the phrasal verb in boldface.
1. She is always criticising her neighbours behind their backs. RUN
2. He promised that he would come to help me, but he disappointed me
and didn't turn up. D O W N
3. He pretended that he was not a Scotsman, but his accent betrayed him. AWAY
4. I wanted to get the job, but they rejected my application because I didn't
know German well enough. T U R N
5. They tried to deceive me, but I discovered their true intentions and
realised that they wanted to rob me of my money. T H R O U G H
6. Tom quarrelled with his boss and a couple of days later he was given the sack. FELL
7. I can't bear the noise of my neighbour's lawn mower. It always wakes
me up in the morning. PUT 21
8. At first we didn't like our new teacher but when we got to know him
better, we started to like him. TAKE
9. Patti resembles her mother in so many respects. For example, she is as
stubborn and as garrulous as her mother. AFTER
10. Before you go to your boss to ask for a pay rise, write down quickly the
points that you want to make to support your case. DOWN
11. You should persuade your brother-in-law to buy this car because it is such a bargain. TALK
12. Being full of admiration for her as a singer, I rushed to buy a ticket for
her concert, the moment I heard she was coming to Poland. However,
her performance was far from what I had expected. Now, I can say I
much prefer listening to her CDs to going to her concerts. COME
13. The American Civil War between the North and the South started in
1861 and was won by the Union in 1865, when General Robert E. Lee
and his army were forced to surrender at Appomattox in Virginia. BREAK
14. I'm terribly sorry, I didn't have time to give you a hand with all the
preparations for the party. Please, let me help you with the cleaning
when the party finishes, so that I can compensate for it. UP 22
15. The deal didn't come to completion because the company didn't agree
to the terms of payment that we proposed. T H R O U G H
16. W h e n I organise a party it's always the same. Everything seems to go
according to plan, but at the last minute some problems appear
unexpectedly and spoil everything. CROP
17. The Turners arranged to get a mortgage from a building society to buy
this house and now their biggest concern is how to pay it off. OUT
18. Terry is a weird bloke. His behaviour is so baffling and his ideas seem
to be so contradictory that I've given up hope of understanding him. MAKE
19. The very sight of the restaurant with its shabby interior repelled me.
I wasn't starving to eat in a place like that. OFF
20. W h e n I was shopping in the new mall I met Andrew accidentally.
I thought he was still on a scholarship in Frankfurt. INTO
2 1 . At the last session the municipal authorities resolved to demolish the
abandoned tenement buildings at Crocket Street. D O W N
22. W h e n the flood subsided, we could see clearly that half of the town was
destroyed completely. WIPE 23
23. He is just a budding playwright, but he has already his own theatre
company and they are performing a play in our city next week. ON
24. Unfortunately, there are still a lot of instances of xenophobia in the
world and people of different origins are often despised in both their
professional and their private lives. LOOK
25. Being the sole heir, Daniel inherited his grandmother's vast estate after her death. INTO
26. Thousands of people employed in the steel industry in Poland have
been dismissed because some orders have dried up. LAY
27. If I hadn't been delayed by the traffic in the city centre, I would've
arrived on time for the meeting. UP
28. The price was exorbitant! I'm afraid the advertising agency really
overcharged you for the commercial. RIP
29. It goes without saying that James has brilliant acting abilities. Have you
seen him imitating the Prime Minister? That was side-splitting, I tell you! OFF
30. The legal advisors of the two companies met to prepare the initial
version of the partnership contract. UP 24
II. Complete the sentences with the word which best fits each space.
1. The testimony given by the defendant in court didn't up.
The person contradicted himself on several points.
A make B add C prove D join
2. The doctor's diagnosis is that the patient's neurosis has been brought by frequent overwork.
A on B off C in D out
3. There are still some occurrences of strange behaviour among monkeys
that biologists find difficult to for.
A run B account C stand D reason
4. Calculating the time of your journey to Prague, you will have to
for the possible stops on the way, for example to refuel your car or have some meals.
A watch B settle C allow D break
5. Whenever there is a climate change I suffer from a thumping headache.
However, as soon as I take a painkiller, the headache starts to off.
A leave B take C wear D let
6. You can go and buy the tickets for us and I'll see the luggage until you get back.
A over B about C around D to
7. Mr Thomson, can I take tomorrow afternoon off because my fiancee is
leaving Poland for a couple of months and I'd like to her off?
A walk B drive C see D send 25
8. The Great Depression set following the huge and sudden
fall of share prices on the US Stock Exchange in October 1929.
A forth B off C down D in
10. Everyone was over by his decision to quit a well-paid job
and move over to the countryside.
A taken B thrown C struck D bowled
10. Ladies and gentlemen, now I'd like us to discuss the proposal that Ms
Ridley put during the last meeting.
A across B in C forward D out
11. When the journalist asked her a question in front of many cameras she
didn't utter a word. W e all her reaction down to stress.
A put B laid C took D turned
12. When the leader of the expedition to the Arctic Circle offered to take him there, he at the chance.
A called B jumped C got D came
13. When the professor advanced his theory at a medical conference a
couple of years ago, everyone was sceptical about its validity. However,
the latest research has it out.
A borne B carried C stood D cleared
14. After the car accident she was in a coma for the whole week but her
mother didn't lose hope that one day her daughter would round.
A be B bring C come D go
15. My teenage son kept begging me to buy him the latest version of this
computer game and I finally gave
A out B away C over D in 26
16. I hope the con artist will not get with the insurance
swindle and will receive a proper punishment.
A away B off C over D out
17. In this book the film director shares the fun he's had in making films and
lets the reader in some of the secrets of his success.
A to B o n C through D for
18. Students with a high enough grade point average are eligible to
in for the Fulbright Scholarship.
A go B let C stand D put
19. Being the world champions they weren't going to for a
draw with a team from the Third Division.
A settle B fall C let D call
20. As for now, foreigners up only a small proportion of the
student community in our college.
A hold B fill C take D make 27
Prepositions and prepositional phrases
Put the right preposition in each gap.
1. There has been a huge increase humidity in this region over the last few months.
2. While Brian was working for the TRG company, he gained a huge
experience marketing, which turned out to be extremely useful in his next job.
3. She has a real aptitude photographing. Her photographs are so impressive.
4. Jenny is still very angry her brother his attitude her decision.
5. This pub always reminds me my student years. I often went
there with my mates after classes.
6. Please remind me the next credit instalment for our car. This
month it almost slipped my mind.
7. Don't take any notice the technicians. They will install the hardware and be gone shortly.
8. Please welcome Prof. Wells, an expert phonetics. Professor, you may take the floor.
9. Compulsive eaters often can't resist their cravings food, regardless the time of day.
10. As our country has entered the EU, our farmers are now eligible
subsidies from a special EU fund.
11. Corporal Peters was given a medal recognition his devotion to duty. 28
12. His decision to downshift and swap his managerial position for a less
demanding one took everyone surprise.
13. Due to changes in her department she's been a lot of stress recently.
14 fear that the boy may be age, the barman asked him to
produce an ID card before selling some beer.
15. Drug addicts are incapable controlling their actions when suffering lack of drugs.
16. The scientists researching the nature of black holes believe to
be the verge a major breakthrough.
17. Adolescents rarely trust professional counsellors and choose to confide their peers.
18. If you don't comply the rules of the game, the referee may award a penalty against you.
19. The thugs were charged assault and battery.
20. Early models of this CPU were prone constant crashes when working for a long time.
2 1 . I'm absolutely convinced that our students shall greatly benefit
the exchange programme with Harvard University.
22. My bank charges 1 zloty each transfer.
23. Although she had already been reprimanded by her superior her
casual outfits at work, she persisted wearing jeans.
24. Our production department prides itself its environmentally- friendly technologies.
25. The essential skill the job of a nursery school teacher is to be good children.
26. The sportsman is going to make an attempt beating the pole vault record.
27. Pregnant women should eat food which is rich proteins. 29
28. I was really surprised to find out that the naughty boy I knew has grown such a well-mannered man.
29. The old king had no direct descendant and the people wondered who would succeed the throne.
30. In the last interview the famous charity leader assured everybody that
he's very committed improving the standards of living of the homeless.
3 1 . One of the obvious advantages of city life country life is that
shops and leisure facilities are reach.
32. Many graphic designers claim that Apple computers are more user-
friendly comparison ordinary PCs.
33. The Daily Telegraph isn't a tabloid; the contrary, it is a serious
quality newspaper which usually supports the ideas of the Conservative Party.
34. Manufacturers often increase their productivity the expense the quality of goods.
35. The product has been withdrawn from the market response
dramatically poor interest in it from the target group customers.
36. Polish nurses, construction workers, engineers and IT specialists are
much demand in some European Union countries.
37. She gained such a top position virtue her hard work and experience.
38. This charming little country's main industry is tourism as it is deficient natural resources.
39. After Ken had gone skiing without proper warm clothes on, he was ill in bed for a week influenza.
40. If you feed your dog only leftovers, no wonder it loses its fur.
4 1 . Professor Goodman's team of students has performed so well that
all likelihood they will get the scholarship. 30
42. The majority of the participants of the panel discussion were
favour reintroducing the Welsh language into schools.
43. Can you tell me what became the cookery book I gave you for
your birthday three years ago?
44. Sales representatives' commission is commensurate their sales figures.
45. Trained orang-utans have astounding capabilities learning
artificially created languages.
46. Middle aged men have unfathomable fondness red sports cars.
47. The mob's violent reaction to the government's declaration was
all proportion; many shops were devastated and vehicles burnt.
48. Our safari guide advised us leaving the vehicle fear
being attacked by wild animals.
49. Everybody expressed amazement how fast the child grew up.
50. The President's spokesperson stated that the President's decision
concerning the bill should no means be associated with the upcoming election. 31
CAE Vocabulary Practice
Similar but different: confused words
Choose the suitable word to fill the sentences. Put the words in the
correct form where needed. 1. sensible/sensitive
a. Don't be so ! It was just a general remark,
I didn't mean to criticise you.
b. W e must think of a solution. There is no room for mistakes any more.
c. This is a very issue, and I'd rather not talk
about it in public. I'm afraid my point of view may upset some people. treat/cure a. Nowadays malaria can be with drugs. b. He has been
in hospital for two weeks now, but he has not been yet.
c. Some time ago doctors couldn't tuberculosis.
3. disinterested/uninterested
a. W e wanted to hear an objective opinion, hence we sought the advice of a(n) counsellor.
b. I told her the story but she seemed She hardly listened to me.
c. Jack is in learning anything, and that's why
he can't see any point in going to university. 35 4. eminent/imminent
a. W e can't do anything to prevent it. The disaster is
b. He is an scientist, well-known and respected all around the world.
5. compliment/complement
a. The brown colour of her sweater her hazel eyes perfectly.
b. The best way to win Susan over is to her on
her new clothes or hairstyle. She is so vain.
c. They each other nicely. She is a dreamy,
artistic soul and he keeps both feet on the ground.
6. stationary/stationery
a. W e went to the department to buy some envelopes.
b. The car collided with a vehicle, but
fortunately nobody was killed.
c. In winter it's difficult to practice sport outdoors. Therefore, I bought a exercise bike. 7. raise/rise
a. This charity money to help homeless people.
b. The bag is too heavy for me to it. You can try.
c. The unemployment level dramatically
recently. The government must take some measures to improve the situation.
d. Emily from the table and went over to the
window to see who had come to visit them. 36
e. The Prime Minister promises that he has no intention of taxes at present. 8. discrete/discreet
a. They are very reliable assistants, very They
wouldn't go gossiping about anything they discovered while working for you.
b. There are two business consulting
companies in the town. The competition between them is very strong.
c. The animals in the picture can be divided into several categories.
d. You should ask only questions if you don't want to offend her. 9. say/tell
a. The doctor me to stay in bed for a couple of days.
b. Anne him that she was going to leave the country.
c. What did she to you? W a s it something about my performance?
d. The twins are so much alike that I can't the difference between them.
e. I wouldn't trust him. He's known for lies. 37 10. do/make
a. Can you me a favour and buy these things for me?
b. My son is so untidy! He never his bed in the
morning before going out to school.
c. I have a complaint to Can I see the manager?
d. I'll my best to finish writing the article in time.
e. The storm a lot of damage on the island.
f. You must be thirsty. I'll you some tea.
g. I'm sorry to leave you for a moment but I have an urgent phone-call to 11. hanged/hung
a. The picture has been badly It should be
lower, nearer the mantelpiece.
b. He was found guilty of treason and in front of crowds of people.
c. He his coat on a hook and came into the room.
d. She couldn't stand her pangs of conscience, and herself in the prison cell. 12. misuse/disuse
a. Many people in top positions power for their
own benefit, and exploit other people.
b. The term schizophrenia is frequently
nowadays. People use it to refer to various kinds of mere strange
behaviour, and don't realise the severity of the illness.
c. The goods are stored in a cinema. 38
d. All the coalmines in the country stand and
a lot of miners who worked there can't find a job. e. Knowing law very well, she it on several occasions.
13. historic/historical a. Kate is fond of reading novels about the 19 century England. b. In 1945 there was a ... meeting of world leaders
which exerted a tremendous impact on the course of world events. c. It is a
date for our country, the day of regaining our independence.
d. William Wallace is an important figure for Scottish people.
14. councillor/counsellor
a. He has plenty of brilliant ideas how to improve the work of the local
government. He'll certainly make a good
b. She and her husband often quarrelled, so they decided to seek help from a marriage 15. envious/jealous
a. Steven was of his brother's new luxury car.
b. He has a very pretty wife and is blindly of her
each time she talks to or smiles at another man.
c. Children often feel when a new baby arrives.
They are afraid that their parents won't love them that much any more. 39
16. negligible/negligent
a. He doesn't have a good reputation as a doctor. People say that he is
in not giving the patients due care and attention.
b. The judge stated that the teacher had been in
allowing the children to swim in dangerous water.
c. The damage done to our car in the accident was
so we decided not to sue the driver.
d. The price of the entrance ticket to the exhibition was , almost for free.
17. assure/ensure/insure/reassure
a. I can you of my good intentions. I don't want your harm.
b. You should your property against storm damage.
c. It's very careless of her that she hasn't her car yet. d. Please tha that all the light lights are switched off when you're leaving. e. I tried to he her and told he her some jokes, but it
didn't help much and she was still very worried. f. That song thei their s>
success. It was on the tops of
European charts for a couple of months. g. The police he her that they y would do their best
to find her missing jewellery. 40
18. compose/comprise/consist/include
a. The collection of around one hundred
pictures, and it , among others, the paintings by Salvador Dali.
b. Two actors, one journalist and one teacher the committee.
c. Students a high proportion of seasonal workers.
d. The book is of 10 chapters. 19. cite/site/sight
a. Sunset over the sea is a beautiful
b. Let me at this point the words of the famous
19 century British writer Oscar Wilde. t h
c. During our stay in England we visited the of the Battle of Hastings.
d. They excavated pottery and weapons from the Middle Ages on this archaeological
20. economic/economical
a. This is a very car. It doesn't use much petrol.
b. The subject of their debate is the government's policy.
c. It's usually to buy products in large quantities.
d. The country has recently introduced some radical reforms. 41 2 1 . farther/further
a. The place looks dangerous. We'd better not go any
b. This brochure gives you the basic information. If you have
questions, call the number below.
c. He preferred to run distances. 22. loose/lose
a. W h e n he heard that his son scratched his brand new car, he his temper.
b. The team is training intensively. They don't want to the game.
c. She's some weight, and now her skirt is too She must have it taken in.
23. effective/efficient
a. Aspirin is an medicine that helps to shake off a cold.
b. W e hope the ad will be in attracting
customers to buy our products.
c. She is a very worker. She carries out her
duties quickly and successfully.
d. This heating system is because it uses comparatively little energy. 24. prudent/prudish
a. Don't take her to see that film. She is quite
and she may feel offended by some of the sex scenes there.
b. It would be to read the contract before signing it. 42
c. He is a businessman. He carefully examines
the situation before making any final decisions. 25. classic/classical
a. His career is a example of how one can
become a rock star over night.
b. She displayed symptoms of depression.
c. I listen to music, as well as rock and jazz. 25. beside/besides
a. Jim came up and sat me. It was such a nice
feeling to have him by my side.
b. W e didn't know anybody at the party Kevin and Jessica.
c. She leads a very active life going to Spanish
evening classes twice a week she attends a dancing course every Thursday.
d. I don't want to go to the concert. I don't like this kind of music;
, I feel pretty tired and would like to go to sleep early. 27. illegible/eligible
a. He's an bachelor; rich, famous and
handsome. Every woman would like to marry him.
b. The handwriting on the prescription was"so
that the chemist couldn't decipher the names of the medicines.
c. Anyone over the age of 18 is to vote. 43
28. worthless/invaluable
a. His support during our project was But for
him, we wouldn't have been so successful.
b. What we considered to be a genuine Picasso turned out to be
a forgery. As a result, the painting is now
c. She was criticised so much by her boss that after leaving his office, she felt
29. non-flammable/inflammable
a. Firemen wear uniforms made of material to protect them against fire.
b. This chemical is highly so don't use it near a flame. 30. blink/wink
a. She as she came out of the dark cave into the bright sunlight.
b. Philip at me, and I realised that he was joking.
c. I guess something must be wrong as the light on your video recorder is 3 1 . politics/policy
a. In response to the recent incidents, the present government has
introduced some changes into its foreign and security b. I'm not interested in at all. To be honest, I think it's boring.
c. His ambition is to become a major figure in the country's
, the Prime Minister preferably. 44
d. The company has adopted a firm on shoplifting.
32. amenities/facilities
a. One of the biggest advantages of living in the town over living in the
village is that it's close to shops, banks, schools and other
b. They're staying in a 5-star hotel with many leisure and sports
such as a swimming pool, gym and tennis courts.
c. The school has special for disabled people. 33. morals/morale
a. The victory boosted the team's enormously.
b. Violent sex images on the Internet are deemed to be a danger to public
c. Patriotic songs contributed a great deal to the
of the soldiers during the war.
34. industrial/industrious
a. Sam is a very worker. He works very hard
and stays sometimes after hours.
b. In Britain the Revolution took place between 1750 and 1850.
c. This is mainly an country with plenty of factories. 45 35. stimulant/stimulus
a. A good grade at school often acts as a to develop one's knowledge.
b. Some people consider coffee to be a , and
drink it to feel more active and not sleepy.
c. The discovery of oil was a to the local economy. 36. glance/glimpse
a. Lucy yawned and took a at her watch. The lecture was so tedious.
b. I'm afraid I can't describe the robber well. I only caught
a of him as he was running away.
c. He didn't have time to read any articles and only threw a cursory at the newspaper headlines. 37. laid/lain/lay
a. George the heavy box on the ground and called a taxi.
b. W h e n she came back from the tiring climb in the mountains, first she
down on her bed, and then she started to stretch her arms and legs.
c. Oh no, don't disturb him right now! He has just
down on the floor and has started to do his meditation.
d. Seeing that they would inevitably lose the battle, they down their weapons.
e. Could you the table, please? The dinner is almost ready. 46 38. affect/effect
a. The last reforms had a devastating on the country's economy. b. Bad weather always my mood. W h e n it's
cloudy, I often feel depressed.
39. unreadable/illegible
a. I'm sorry but I had difficulties reading your essay. Your handwriting is
You'll have to rewrite the essay, and this time try to take more care.
b. In my opinion, this novel is The book is too
long, the plot is boring, and the style is awful. 40. access/excess
a. For the next week I won't be able to check e-mails. I'll be on a
campsite and I won't have to the Internet.
b. An of information often makes it hard for us
to take decisions and make reasonable judgements.
c. They're trying to improve to the museum for disabled visitors.
4 1 . persecute/prosecute
a. He is for fraud. The trial is going to take place next week.
b. During the early times of Christianity many Christians were
c. The victim has decided that she won't
because she is terrified of what the Mafia can do to her family.
d. The people who opposed the political system were
and massacred during the regime, and many
sought asylum in the neighbouring countries. 47 42. vein/vain
a. She is so that people don't want to invite her
to parities. She thinks that she's the most intelligent and beautiful, and looks down on everybody.
b. I tried in to persuade Bob not to invest his
money in the company, but he didn't want to change his mind.
c. Some drugs have to be injected directly into patients' 43. human/humane
a. Communication with other people is a basic need.
b. Farmers should transport their livestock in more ways.
c. They are campaigning for treatment of the refugees.
d. It is supposed that error was behind the catastrophe. 44. precede/proceed
a. Jeremy is a better manager than the man who him.
b. It is always helpful to one's lecture with a nice introduction.
c. Brian outlined his plans for the development of the company, and
then to explain them in more detail.
d. We're not sure whether we still want to with
this business. There is not much demand for our products any more. 48 45. gorilla/guerrilla
a feel miserable when they are kept in captivity in a zoo.
b. His uncle fought in a army during the war. 46. heroin/heroine
a. The of his novel is an intelligent and beautiful
girl from a poor family who falls in love with an aristocrat.
b. Richard was found guilty of trafficking in and sent to prison.
c. Joan of Arc is known as the French of the Hundred Years' War. 47. prey/pray
a. The woman didn't give up hope and to God
every day for her son's return home from the war.
b. The lion has been stalking its for hours before finally catching it.
c. As she was a very gullible person, she easily fell to his false promises. 48. urban/urbane
a. Living in areas is not very healthy as the air
pollution is usually rather high there.
b. Mike is a very charming and person. He is always full of remarks. 49
49. perspective/prospective
a. The shop assistant should always be nice and polite to buyers.
b. The book is written from the of an oppressed
black person in a white community. 50. canvas/canvass
a. Candy usually works with oil paints on a
b. Before elections members of each political party people from the local area. c. These shoes are made of Word formation
Complete each sentence with a word made from the word in capital letters.
1. W h e n the foreign powers attacked the town they faced strong RESIST
2. You can't tell anybody about what you hear from me. This is a strictly
piece of information. CONFIDENCE
3. Ted is still a(n) worker. This is his first job
and he's been working in our company for only a month. EXPERIENCE
4. Betty is so ! She wants to have everything
immediately and hates waiting. She can really be a pain in the neck! PATIENCE 50
5. In spite of the effort they've put into the work, the results are still SATISFACTION
6. Jessica's father is extremely of his
daughter's boyfriends. He fears that they may be after her money. SUSPECT
7. This book describes the of many saints. MARTYR
8. She told me that she loved him so much that she was ready to marry
him even without her parents' APPROVE
9. The of the expedition convinced him to
invest his money in it. SIGNIFY
10. W h e n left on their own the kids are often up to some mischief. They can
be really , so you'd better watch them! T R O U B L E
11. She was in a coma for two months, and we thought she would never regain CONSCIOUS
12. The fee in this sailing club is very high, and
I can't afford it now. MEMBER
13. While being a boss of the company he conducted a lot of transactions. LEGAL
14. It is highly of you to accept the job and then
drop it after a few weeks. RESPONSE
15 behaviour to teachers is commonplace in
many schools nowadays. RESPECT
16. There is a wide of stores in this shopping
mall, from perfumeries to shops with sports equipment. VARY
17. Her failure to take any precautionary measures was described as an
instance of gross N E G L E C T
18. I've taken out a to this music magazine. SUBSCRIBE 51
19. more and more people are enrolling in
foreign language courses. INCREASE
20. Steven Spielberg's latest film is really ! The
plot is spellbinding! REMARK
2 1 . The candidate's way of getting voters on his side is
He's exploiting the people's emotions. C O N T E M P T
22. I'm sorry but the model is currently W e
should obtain it next week. AVAILABLE
23. The crisis is There's nothing we can do to prevent it. AVOID
24. The manager thinks that the best solution at the moment is to go into
with the other company. PARTNER
25. Before I donate money to this charity, I must be sure that it is a organisation. PROFIT
26. If I were you, I wouldn't trust her. She's known to be a very
person and often breaks her promises. RELY
27. The spokesperson stated that there won't be any major social reforms in the future. SEE
28. You'd better not approach her with that request of yours at the moment.
She's exhausted after the whole day's work and may be quite IRRITATE
29. I know his behaviour may seem inexcusable at times, but believe me he has good INTEND
30. At the back of the book you'll find some
notes, which may help you to grasp some of the author's ideas. EXPLAIN 52
3 1 . The appearance of a large pit in the field over the night is
Nobody has any clue who or what may have done it. EXPLAIN
32. When the police entered the barn, they found some
materials stored there. EXPLODE
33. Prof. Stanley is studying the frequent of
violent storms in the area. OCCUR
34. My grandpa has an almost memory. He
remembers the events of World War II in detail. FALL
35. Today people all over the world light candles in
of the victims of the terrorist attack of 1 1 t h September. REMEMBER
36. You shouldn't Charles. He's really a very
skilful and efficient worker. ESTIMATE
37. In my opinion, the film is a bit in the review.
I've seen it and it's not so good, besides the cast is badly chosen. RATE
38. W h e n Sheila told Peter about her problem, he listened
, and then offered to help her. SYMPATHY
39. The meeting is held to make it possible for the employees to air their GRIEF
40. A lot of people make an that it's easier to
achieve success in highly developed countries. A S S U M E
4 1 . In many Western countries there's a of
nurses, and they're looking for nurses from other countries. SHORT
42. W h e n Rachel visited the district, she was struck by
the of its inhabitants. AFFLUENT
43. The of this successful actor surprised
everybody. He didn't boast about his achievements as other film stars do. MODEST 53
44. The doctor told James that of stress was
indispensable if he wanted his health to improve. AVOID
45. The war seemed to be W e thought it
would never finish. • END
46. Ralph is a musician, and he works as
a freelance music journalist. ADD
47. She's a very person and is always unwilling
to change her mind. FLEXIBLE
48. The clinic takes care of people with severe physical ABLE
49. Many stray cats are a sight, they're so skinny and sick. PITY
50. The politician argued for the of the old
system of taxation. RETAIN
5 1 . This remote mountain village is almost in
winter, as there's so much snow. ACCESS
52. Practising sport is to one's health because it
gives strength to the body. BENEFIT
53. She's been charged with tax EVADE
54. When he was asked about the party's approach to the problem of
unemployment, he gave some answers. EVADE
55. The company's annual has increased in
comparison with the last year, and now it's around £ 4 million. TURN
56. The news of the of war terrified people all
around the globe. BREAK
57. He refused to comply with the government's rules and regulations, and
as a result was tried for civil OBEY
58. Governments make laws, and the police should them. FORCE 54
59. The man was found guilty of robbery and sentenced to five years PRISON
60. W e haven't yet received the of your room reservation. CONFIRM
5 1 . The dancer charmed everybody with her movements. GRACE
62. With its weak army the country was
Therefore, it became an easy target for its neighbour. DEFENCE
63. I was so with thoughts that I didn't notice
when Eric came in. OCCUPY
64. The fee to the exhibition is rather exorbitant. ADMIT
65. She was in expelling the boy from school.
He didn't do anything wrong. JUST
66. There're still examples of racial in the world.
People can't understand that we're all equal. JUST
67. W e will you of our decision at the end of the week. NOTE
68. W h e n I was at primary school, we often had to
a poem as our homework. MEMORY
69. I don't know him well, I've met him just a couple of times. He's only my
, not my friend. ACQUAINT
70. I must some money from my bank account. DRAW
7 1 . In Africa there still live many tribes that are
by civilisation. CORRUPT
72. They don't want to accept the banknote in any shop, explaining that it's a FORGE
73. Because of a fire hazard it is to walk in
forests when it's dry. ADVISE 55
74. Nowadays, many people can afford
holidays abroad. COMPARE
75. At the ceremony she admitted that she would never have written the
book without the of her parents. C O U R A G E
76. It was quite of Jenny to criticise English
people when she knew that Karen's husband was an Englishman. SENSE
77. She finds it hard to confront and often
escapes to the world of her dreams. REAL
78. The boxer defeats his opponents so that
nobody wants to fight with him. EFFORT
79. Laura's date with Jim turned out to be
Their conversation was heavy going, and Laura went home after an hour. DISASTER
80 I'm going in the same direction today, so
I can give you a lift. COINCIDENCE
8 1 . The Thomsons live in a large house with a beautiful and
living-room, perfect for the many guests
they invite for parties. SPACE
82. He tried to convince the jury that the against him were false. ACCUSE
83. It was really of Sarah to phone and ask
about his health. T H O U G H T
84. She is so ! She finds it difficult to make up
her mind even when she chooses something to drink. DECISION
85. What the politician is saying now is with
the statements he made a week ago. So how can we trust him? CONSIST
86. I think it's sheer to talk about family values
when you're having an affair yourself. HYPOCRITE 56
87. A lot of Catholics agree that euthanasia is MORAL
88. W e warn drivers to be careful as roads are very SLIP
89. Last night the Rolling Stones gave an excellent
, just as always! PERFORM
90. Rick doesn't want to live in this town. He finds it
with its many factories and a lack of green places. ATTRACT
9 1 . It's whether they will finish the road repairs
soon. They're working very slowly. DOUBT
92. How can you be so to the plight of the
people affected by the floods? One day it may happen to you, and you
may need help. DIFFERENCE
93. Every nation has a moment in its history
that the people would rather forget about. SHAME
94. The Times is one of the most popular
newspapers in England. DAY
95. The high rate of unemployment creates in many graduates deep feelings of SECURE
96. Many celebrities show extreme to talk to journalists. RELUCTANT
97. The of MPs were against the bill. MAJOR
98. They were celebrating the of slavery. ABOLISH
99. A visit to the dentist is to many people quite a experience. AGREE
100. If you're too , your boss may never respect you. SUBMIT 57
Collocations and Idioms
In the sentences below choose which w o r d or w o r d s best fit each gap,
forming the correct collocation or idiomatic phrase.
1. He still bears a against Tony for choosing somebody
else to represent their company at the conference three years ago.
a) grievance b) complaint c) grudge d) regret
2. W h e n Mrs Jones was leaving the building, she sight
of two suspicious looking men quarrelling at the car park.
a) got b) caught c) lost d) took
3. Time and they still hadn't heard anything from their son.
a) moved b) went c) went on d) passed
4. She has to go on a course in cooking because next month she's getting married.
a) crash b) speedy c) quick d) fast
5. You're up the wrong tree if you think that I will lend you money.
a) barking b) shouting c) climbing d) looking
6. You've shaken hands with Bono, I don't believe you! You're my leg!
a) pushing b) pulling c) holding d) pressing
7. Tomorrow we will go fishing, weather
a) agreeing b) allowing c) permitting d) giving
8. It was a of luck that I won the contest. There were
more knowledgeable people than me.
a) beam b) piece c) drop d) stroke 58
3. I don't think that raising the issue during today's meeting would any useful purpose.
a) reach b) provide c) serve d) perform
10. That's unfair that they dismissed him. He was always
his duties very conscientiously.
a) bringing off b) conducting c) fulfilling d) executing
11. The film didn't to my expectations. It was just average.
a) come down b) appeal c) live up d) work up
12. After hours of heated debates the two companies have finally an agreement.
a) achieved b) reached c) accomplished d) established
13. Maggie a great pride in her collection of the Beatles
memorabilia. She shows it to everybody who visits her.
a) takes b) puts c) gets d) finds
14. I'm afraid you missed the of Prof. Hardcastle's
lecture. He claimed something completely different.
a) key b) core c) point d) punchline
15. Although Mary and Paul are apart in personality,
they make an excellent couple.
a) leagues b) ways c) miles d) poles
16. Many serial killers immense pleasure in tormenting
their victims before killing them.
a) derive b) get c) experience d) take
17. Bill Clinton's love affair with Monica Lewinsky the
news in the whole world. People were constantly chatting about it.
a) made b) delivered c) struck d) filled 59
18. The two countries finally managed to a deal on oil imports.
a) reach b) produce c) cut d) arrive at
19. Don't tell Ben about my plans for the evening. You know he can't a secret.
a) save b) keep c) hold d) stop
20. Since T o m was made redundant, they can hardly make ends
a) meet b) cross c) link d) together
2 1 . Rescue teams continue to search for the people who got lost during
the avalanche, but after so many days hopes are
a) dying away b) disappearing c) fading d) flying away
22. I always have in my stomach before an exam. I can't
help feeling anxious and trembling all over.
a) bees b) ants c) tension d) butterflies
23. His company went bankrupt, three years of hard work the drain. a) into b) in c) down d) low
24. This leather bag is a real bargain! It's cheap!
a) bun b) dirt c) banana d) waste
25. W h e n Brenda's father got to know that she scratched his car, he hit the
a) roof b) ceiling c) table d) desk
26. The man was staggering from one side of the street to the other. He was drunk.
a) deep b) hard c) strong d) blind
27. Polly is the of her father's eye. He indulges her every whim.
a) pupil b) apple c) treasure d) jewel 60
IS. After months of strenuous efforts he eventually managed to Nelly's heart.
a) conquer b) achieve c) get hold of d) win
25. The Benetton's new advertising campaign aims to sales.
a) raise b) put up c) boost d) elevate
30. If you keep washing this blouse, its beautiful bright colours will soon
a) wash out b) bleach c) vanish d) fade
31. The two escaping prisoners were hiding behind the boxes until the guard's footsteps
a) died away b) died down c) faded d) came to a halt
32. The witness was called upon to the court to evidence at the trial.
a) provide b) supply c) make d) bring
33. The governments of the two countries into
negotiations in order to work out the arms reduction treaty,
a) went b) entered c) delved d) came
34. "It's high time we the issue of staff training", said
the chairperson at the meeting.
a) raised b) brought c) entered d) put up
35. You shouldn't worry. I can assure you that herbal remedies have no effects.
a) negative b) side c) harmful d) periphery
36. The bank employee will trial for embezzlement.
a) pass b) go through c) face d) stand 61
37. The sun was shining, birds were and I was lying
amidst trees in my uncle's orchard, having absolutely nothing to do. Could life be more beautiful?
a) chirping b) squeaking c) giggling d) whimpering
38. Birmingham University has recently a survey into the
British people's attitudes to foxhunting.
a) carried b) conducted c) administered d) directed
39. When Joan heard the terrible news, she felt devastated. However, she
was brave, and managed to tears until she got back home.
a) hide away b) hold up c) fight back d) keep in
40. As the teacher was again droning on about environmental problems,
Nancy couldn't help feeling bored, and she covered her mouth to a yawn.
a) prevent b) stop c) stifle d) hold
4 1 . If you want to learn to drive you should take of what your instructor tells you.
a) care b) attention c) consideration d) notice
42. Helen was disappointed when she learnt that she
hadn't won the beauty contest.
a) enormously b) bitterly c) strongly d) heavily
43. In my opinion the only aim of the band's outrageous behaviour on stage is to the media's attention.
a) seize b) obtain c) attract d) gain
44. Peter an attempt to resume his career as a musician,
but he failed. His break was too long.
a) took b) undertook c) made d) did 62
45. Roger the trouble to inform me about the results personally.
a) took b) made c) underwent d) undertook
46. Mrs Goddard's condition was so bad that she had to an operation.
a) go on b) undergo c) take d) go through
47. The company Mark's application because he didn't
have the necessary qualifications for the job.
a) put aside b) sent off c) turned down d) threw down
48. I some valuable experience while working for the previous company.
a) gained b) received c) collected d) earned
49. I'm the web to find some interesting materials for my research paper.
a) combing b) browsing c) looking through d) scanning
50. It's a convention to end a letter with "I'm sending you my regards."
a) hot b) hearty c) kind d) deep 63 Compounds Noun + noun
I. Match the nouns from column A to the appropriate nouns from
column B to make compound words. 1 wind B a benefit 2 eye b light 3 will c esteem 4 chain d chart 5 hay e sore 6 man f arms 7 unemployment g ends 8 self h fall 9 spot i power 10 book i screen 11 mouth k witness 12 fire I fever 13 flow m piece 14 wind n smoker 15 eye o hour
II. Fill the gaps with the correct noun + noun compounds.
1. This old tenement house is a(n) in this newly rebuilt area. 64
2. It easy to notice from his behaviour that his promotion to department head really boosted his
3. The American law on the possession of is said to be too lenient.
4 . Most people get butterflies in their stomachs when they are on stage and about to step into the
5. For lottery winners a sudden often comes
as a shock and they don't have the faintest idea what to do with the money.
6. The original handmade samurai sword still takes a master blacksmith hundreds of to complete.
7. According to a(n) the bomb went off at exactly four o'clock p.m.
8. She tried several times to give up smoking, but unfortunately she didn't have the to make it.
9. Jim can't find a job and he receives
which is not enough to make a decent living.
10. When spring comes and most plants start to blossom a lot of people suffer from
11. It's hard to believe that being such a(n) he
enjoyed good health till the end of his life.
12. Driving through the seemingly impenetrable fog, he held his face quite close to the
13. During the presentation the speaker used a(n)
to show the sales figures for the last year.
14. Not many people realise that the and the
way you blow air through it is crucial for producing a clear sound when playing a brass instrument.
15. Antique-looking brass go well with old leather volumes. 65 Adjective + noun
I. Match the adjectives from column A to the appropriate nouns from
column B to make compound words. 1 hard a breakdown 2 parting b years 3 nervous c public 4 wet d question 5 stuffed e sand 6 hard f evil 7 formative g detail 8 thorough h labour 9 general i blanket 10 prime J shot 11 graphic k shoulder 12 burning I grounding 13 necessary m suspect 14 rough n shirt 15 quick 0 diamond
II. Fill the gaps with the correct adjective + noun compounds.
1. After his wife left him, he had a(n) and couldn't cope with his everyday life.
2. I'm afraid something is wrong with my car. W e ' d better pull up on the and check it.
3. Soap operas, reality shows, quizzes and sitcoms cater for the needs of the 66
4. Hercule Poirot was convinced that the widow was the in his murder investigation.
5. Stop sitting in the corner! Come and join us on the dance floor! This is
such a groovy party and you're being a(n) !
6. All TV stations in the country showed the aftermath of the terrorist attack
in The pictures were really gory.
7. Some economists claim that unemployment is a(n) of market economy.
8. Parents and their relationship has a decisive influence on children during their
9. Seasoned travellers know how to avoid when crossing desert.
10. The advert says that this course will give students a(n) in accountancy.
11. The first item on the agenda during the meeting between the board and
the trade union was the of redundancy.
12. Fancy-dress parties are definitely not for
who feel they may look ridiculous.
13. The perpetrator was sentenced to four years
14. Our new companion on our journey through the countryside turned out
to be a(n) and the whole party really took to him.
15. Before she slammed the door behind her, she couldn't resist
a(n) at Sam and shouted to him never to come to her again. 67 Adjective + adjective
I. Match the adjectives from column A to the appropriate adjectives
from column B to make compound words. 1 big B a eyed 2 wide b powered 3 ill c hearted 4 bitter d mannered 5 nuclear e reaching 6 hard f lasting 7 blue g headed 8 bad h sweet 9 fast i tempered 10 warm J witted 11 flat k asleep 12 ill I awake 13 long m hearted 14 far n broke 15 quick o equipped
II. Fill the gaps with the correct adjective + adjective compounds.
1. I've got memories of my childhood. There
were some wonderful times, but also some very sad moments.
2. She is constantly boasting about her achievements at work. She is so
3. Signing this contract may have
consequences for the future of our company. 68
4. What a rude, boy! How could he say such
terrible things to that old man!
5. She is very and can immediately give a clever reply.
6. She seems to be so ! She does not feel
any sympathy for the poor people she dismisses from the company.
7. Believe me! It's not a good moment to ask Rachel for a pay rise. She is
very today because she has a splitting headache.
8. Everyone enjoyed staying at my grandmother's place. She was such a(n) person.
9. I'm afraid the oil crisis may have effects
on the economy of our country.
10. USS Savannah was the first submarine in the world.
11. Having spent almost the whole day at the polling station, the reporter
went straight to bed and was soon
12. No wonder he's been chosen for the national team. He's always been the coach's
13. George refused to lend his brother any money saying he was
14. The beautician who was to prepare my friend to the wedding ceremony
arrived to do the job. She had no
nailbrush, no mascara, and no tweezers.
15. Jessica suffers from insomnia, and very often is still at 2 a.m. 69 Punctuation Practice
Insert c o m m a s where necessary.
1. Betty entered the room looked at us with surprise shouted loudly and fainted.
2. Antonio Bradi 25 has been in coma for several weeks now.
3. The w o m a n who usually cuts my hair has moved to another hairdresser's.
4. Certain products e.g. eggs bread rolls oranges are often bought in dozens.
5. Do you know the scruffy man who lives on the third floor?
6. It is true that the price is extremely low. However we are more
concerned with the quality of the product.
7. It's a family of eight children all of whom are studying music.
8. Where's the money that I lent you?
9. I told Simon that you were not interested in his offer.
10. Iggy our best athlete is so quick no one can match him.
1 1 . Stan lives in Pittsburgh New Jersey.
12. Susie our youngest daughter has just turned 5.
13. His life was in danger he told me.
14. The sport which she really likes to practise is softball.
15. The directors haven't decided whether they will recommend a dividend or hold over the profits.
16. I've just met that Mrs. Rasher who wants to buy your car.
17. Fortunately the crowd dispersed peaceably. If they hadn't the police might have had to use force.
18. Anyone who wants to try to pick a fight with him should know that he is an ex-champion in karate. 70
19. My mother bought me for Christmas a beautiful soft woollen cardigan.
20. White wine is to be enjoyed slightly cooled; red wine in ambient temperature.
2 1 . This is Henry whose wife teaches our children.
22. Is there any reason why we should leave so early?
23. By the time the fire brigade arrived the house had already burnt down.
24. It is the invoice that I'm looking for not the bill.
25. She spent all evening talking about her latest book which none of us had ever heard of.
26. Frankly this is the most appalling concert I've ever been to.
27. This subject has become really popular. W e are therefore quite certain
that it will attract many students to our university.
28. Mexico City which has a population of over 10 million is probably the
fastest growing city in the world.
29. Pink is often reserved for girls; blue colour for boys.
30. Lenny when the meeting is over come to my office please.
3 1 . The small man in the raincoat whom nobody recognised turned out to be Olivia's first husband.
32. "I suppose so" grunted Jack.
33. Just before the wedding she changed her mind and decided not to
marry Alan which shocked all the guests.
34. Ralph neither speaks French nor understands it.
35. The Vikings known for their seafaring skills were the first to reach
America well before Christopher Columbus.
36. "Your information" I replied "is out of date."
37. Even a child knows that one shouldn't drink and drive.
38. Let me know if you can come or not.
39. After Vicky agreed to go out with him Martin became so self-confident.
40. Two coffees a cheese cake and an apple pie please. 71
4 1 . The island boasts a fantastic landscape. Furthermore it has excellent tourist facilities.
42. We've tested twenty types of overalls none of which is completely waterproof.
43. These souvenirs are handcrafted not mass-produced in a factory.
44. The loan shark lent Greg a thousand bucks which was exactly the
amount he needed to solve his problems.
45. Perhaps if you have some time left we could try the new cafe on the corner?
46. Nevertheless the idea seems promising enough to draw the Dean's attention.
47. Seicento is definitely a decent car to get around the city. On the other
hand it is unsafe and uncomfortable.
48. The more you practise playing the violin the better you are at it.
49. Mr Fairclough who used to take care of our garden retired several months ago.
50. Angela's date started to tell stupid jokes at which point she decided to leave. 72
CAE English in Use Exam Practice Part 1 Practice
Choose the most suitable word for each gap in the texts below. Text messaging
Every day more than a billion messages are zapped from one mobile phone
to another. However, although texting has become (1) in
Europe and Asia, it has failed to (2) off in America. Globally,
the average number of messages sent or received each month (3)
a mobile subscriber is now around 30, or one message per
day. In some parts of Asia, such as Singapore and the Philippines, where
large numbers of free messages are thrown in with monthly (4)
plans, the number of messages sent per subscriber per
month is as high as 200. But the (5) for America is just over
seven, according to the Cellular Telecommunication's Internet Association.
Why is such a high-tech nation eschewing texting?
The short answer is that in America talk is cheap. Because local
calls on land lines are usually free, wireless operators have to (6)
big "bundles" of minutes to (7) subscribers to use mobile phones instead.
American telecoms regulations, which encouraged different mobile
operators to choose different, (8) technologies, are also
responsible for the dearth of texting. (9) last year did the
largest American operators agree to pass text messages between their
networks, an agreement still only patchily (10) Moreover,
texting is not (11) as standard in most subscription
packages in America, but as an extra for which customers must pay a few 74
dollars per month. "You have to pay for it, most people's phones don't have
it, and I don't know how many of my friends have it (12) ,"
says Vince Tobkin, an analyst at Bain & Company in San Francisco. In text-
crazed Europe, in (13) all these conditions are (14)
by default and you can be pretty sure that your message will get (15)
adapted from "No text please, we're American" in "The Economist" 1. A familiar
B commonplace C prosaic D basic 2. A take B get C keep D show 3. A by B t o C from D o f f 4. A invoicing B cost C billing D pricing 5. A numeral B figure C score D rate 6. A suggest B recommend C propose D offer 7. A affect B press C persuade D make 8.
A incompatible B unsuitable C modern D incompatable 9. A Just B Only C Already D About 10. A imposed
B implemented C restricted D announced 11. A rejected B involved C comprised D included 12. A empowered B installed C enabled D purchased 13. A contrast B particular C spite D itself 14. A met B made C followed D overruled 15. A by B through C into D ahead 75
Bloodthirsty bears
Kenzo Kudo got in his car one day last May and drove out to a mountain
near Sapporo, on the Japanese island of Hokkaido, to look for wild
vegetables. He never returned. Police found his body a few hundred meters
away with (1) marks on his legs. What happened, they
surmised, is that Kudo had the misfortune to run (2) a brown bear.
The Japanese like their (3) animals as much as
anybody, but they're out for blood following an increase in bear encounters,
which often lead to maulings. Some farmers have taken (4)
shooting the bears, (5) on Hokkaido is perfectly legal.
The problem is that on Hokkaido, more people and bears now live
together in tighter quarters than anywhere else on earth. There are 5.6
million people and between 2,000 and 3,700 bears on an intensively farmed
island about the size of Pennsylvania. In recent years the bear population
has been falling due to rapid urban (6) , which is putting
bears and people on (7) course. Some of the recent
maulings occurred within 30 kilometres of Sapporo, making (8) in the city of 2 million.
The spate of close encounters has (9) more than a
century ago, when fishermen began (10) Hokkaido rivers of
salmon, then a (11) of the brown-bear diet. The bears
became vegetarians, eating berries, wild mountain grapes, skunk cabbage
and hogweed. From the 1950s to the 1970s loggers began cutting down the
old-growth forests and (12) underbrush that once gave
bears an unusually good (13) Logging cleared space in
the forests that (14) blackberry and raspberry bushes to
thrive. In recent years forest regeneration and tree farms have replaced 76
berry (15) , and the bears have been forced to look
elsewhere for food, bringing them closer to towns and cities.
adapted from 'The trouble with bears" in "Newsweek" 1. A bite B injury C wound D cut 2. A against B up C into D on 3. A furry B hairy C fluffy D tousled 4. A on B up C t o D a 5. A that B which C what D where 6. A increase B spread C extension D sprawl 7. A dangerous B collision C fighting D conflict 8. A stories B fuss C headlines D disaster 9. A roots B causes C reasons D results 10. A decreasing B depleting C diminishing D depriving 11. A foundation B fundamental C core D staple 12. A lavish B lush C sparse D trimmed 13. A home B safety C lodging D cover 14. A allowed B let C made D prolonged 15. A fields B areas C shreds D patches 77 Dyslexic minds
Why some children (1) so much with reading used to be a
mystery. Now researchers know what's wrong - and what to do about it.
W h e n some children look at a page of text, they can see letters' names.
They can even tell you what sounds those letters make. Nevertheless, even
for (2) high school students, to tell what words those letters
form is baffling, to say the (3) They see a wall, a hurdle
to get over, and often (4) that some letters are easier to (5) out than others.
The condition is called dyslexia, a reading (6) that
persists (7) good schooling and normal or even above-
average intelligence. It's a handicap that (8) 1 0 % of the
population, according to experts, though some put the figure higher - up to
2 0 % . The exact (9) of the problem has eluded doctors,
teachers, parents and dyslexics themselves since it was first described
more than a century ago. (10) , it is so hard for skilled
readers to imagine what it's like not to be able to effortlessly absorb the
printed word that they often (11) the real problem is
laziness or obstinacy or a proud parent's inability to (12)
that his or her child isn't that smart (13) all.
The mystery may finally be starting to lift. The more researchers
learn about dyslexia, the more they realise it's a flaw not of character but
biology - specifically, the biology of the brain. A growing (14)
of scientific evidence suggests there is a glitch in the
neurological wiring of dyslexics that makes reading extremely difficult for
them. Fortunately, the science also (15) to new strategies
for overcoming the glitch. The most successful programs focus on
strengthening the brain's aptitude for linking letters to the sounds they 78
represent. Some studies suggest that the right kinds of instruction provided
early enough may rewire the brain so thoroughly that the neurological glitch disappears entirely.
adapted from 'The New Science of Dyslexia" in "Time" 1. A fight B strive C struggle D cope 2. A talkative B articulate C mindful D well-educated 3. A most B least C truth D fact 4. A admit B assume C predict D accept 5. A find B point C figure D make 6. A malfunction B disease C disorder D fault 7. A despite B although C besides D without 8. A affects B effects C influences D attacks 9. A type
B characteristics C quality D nature 10. A However B Indeed C Really D Nevertheless 11. A doubt B reject C wonder D suspect 12. A decipher B decide C disagree D recognise 13. A in B for C to D after 14. A area B spread C body D aspect 15. A shows B aims C points D hints 79
The future in biotechnology
Modern industry pollutes, and it also seems to cause significant changes to
the climate. What is needed is an industry that (1) the
benefits without the costs. And the (2) of such an industry can now be (3)
That industry is based on biotechnology. At the moment, biotech's
main uses are in medicine and agriculture. However, its biggest long-term
impact may be industrial. Biotechnology will (4) demand for
oil by taking the cheapest raw (5) imaginable, carbon
dioxide and water, and using them to make fuel and plastics.
It is now possible to create enzymes that work thousands of times
faster than their natural counterparts. These should turn the manufacture of
ethanol as a petrol (6) from a subsidised boondoggle into
an industry that can pay its (7) Biotechnologists are also
working on enzymes that can (8) cellulose. Turning
cellulose into fermentable sugars really would give petrol a (9) for its money.
The plastics industry, too, may be (10) by
biotechnology. There are now plastics made entirely by bacteria that have
had their metabolic pathways redesigned. Soon, plastics may be grown on
farms, in genetically engineered plants, rather than being (11)
in huge, centralised industrial plants.
Plastics and fuels made in this way would have several advantages.
They can be called "renewables", (12) nothing is depleted
to make them. They would be part of the natural carbon cycle, borrowing
that element from the atmosphere for a few months, and returning it when
they were burned or (13) That means that they could not 80
possibly (14) to global warming. They would also be
environmentally friendly in other ways. Bioplastics are biodegradable, and
biofuels are a lot cleaner than petrol and diesel, and would be cleaner (15)
even than the fuel-cell technology.
All in all, the future could be green in ways that traditional
environmentalists had not expected.
adapted from "Saving the world in comfort" in 'The Economist" 1. A produces B collects C reaps D delivers 2. A glimmerings B age C impact D outgrowth 3.
A distinguished B considered C discerned D viewed 4. A diminish B preserve C boost D satisfy 5. A deposits B resources C materials D stuff 6. A ingredient B additive C addition D particle 7. A road B route C course D way 8. A devour B absorb C digest D consume 9. A path B run C race D climb 10. A converted
B transformed C modulated D substituted 11. A mingled B assembled C constructed D manufactured 12. A since B although C otherwise D therefore 13. A garbaged B wasted C dumped D disposed 14. A donate B provide C contribute D develop 15. A almost B overall C wholly D thoroughly 81
Stop the anti-aging process
In government laboratories and elsewhere, scientists are (1)
a drug able to prolong life and youthful vigor. Studies of
caloric restriction are showing the way. As researchers on aging have
noted, no treatment on the market today has been proved to slow human
aging - the build-up of molecular and cellular damage that increases (2)
to infirmity as we grow older. But one intervention,
consumption of a low-calorie (3) nutritionally balanced diet,
works incredibly well in a broad (4) of animals, increasing
longevity and prolonging good health. Those (5) suggest
that caloric restriction could (6) aging in humans, too.
(7) , for maximum benefit, people would probably
have to reduce their caloric (8) by roughly 30 percent, (9)
to dropping from 2,500 calories a day to 1,750. Few mortals
could (10) to that harsh a regimen, especially for years on
end. But what if someone could create a pill that (11) the
physiological effects of eating less without actually forcing people to go
hungry? Could such a caloric-restriction mimetic enable people to stay
healthy longer, (12) age-related disorders (such as
diabetes, atherosclerosis, heart disease and cancer) until very late in life?
The question was first (13) in the mid-1990s, after a
discovery of a chemical (14) that, in rodents, seemed to
reproduce many of caloric restriction's benefits. Since then the search has
been going on for a compound that would safely achieve the same feat in
people. There has been no success yet, but the (15) have
been informative and have fanned hope that caloric-restriction mimetics can
indeed be developed eventually.
adapted from "Scientific American" www.sciam.com 'The Serious Search for an Anti-Aging Pill" 82 1. A searching B pursuing C questing D seeking 2. A vulnerability B defence
C harmfulness D inclination 3.
A nevertheless B even C still D yet 4. A range B span C number D scope 5. A deductions B goals C scores D findings 6. A detain B suspend C delay D hold 7. A Luckily B Eventually
C Furthermore D Unfortunately 8. A digestion B intake C income D processing 9. A equivalent
B commensurateC matching D counterpart 10. A obey B stick C follow D comply 11. A mocked B mimed C mimicked D mimiced 12. A triggering B cancelling C postponing D rejecting 13. A posed B roused C evoked D enquired 14. A factor B agent
C composition D ingredient 15. A breakdowns B failures C faults D flaws 83 Part 2 Practice
Complete the following texts by filling the gaps with ONE word only. Eldest child
The first-born is an only child until the second child comes (1)
- when they go from (2) the centre of attention to sharing
the care (3) parents. This 'dethronement' may be extremely
traumatic and forever shape the first-born's outlook (4)
life. They may spend the rest of their lives striving (5) regain
their parents' approval. They could even unconsciously feel their parents
had (6) child (7) somehow they weren't
good (8) (9) may lead to feelings of
inadequacy and also contributes to resentment of subsequent siblings. The
first-born is often the least warm (10) frequently the most
hostile to their brothers and sisters.
First-born children always have novice parents, (11)
they grow up in (12) early atmosphere of greater parental
anxiety, (13) may leave the child anxious. New parents'
ambitions for (14) sons and daughters often get channelled
most into the first-born. But (15) other offspring arrive, they
become (16) relaxed about their aspirations for their
children. This may explain why first-borns are thought to be over-
represented (17) ambitious achievers. First-borns are
significantly more often found as world political leaders than (18) other birth order position.
adapted from "Does your place in the family mould you for ever?" in Daily Mail 84 The seal's body
Although seals spend some of their time out on rocks, sandy beaches, or
even snow and ice, they are really much (1) adapted for
living in water than on land. Their sleek streamlined shape, with the head
merging into the body with no obvious neck, lets (2) move
through the water (3) only the smallest effort. For
swimming, seals have flippers - a pair near the front of the body and a pair
right at the rear. These flippers are actually modified arms and legs, in
which the long bones have become shorter, (4) the fingers
and toes have become longer. Skin has developed as webbing (5)
the separate fingers and toes. (6) design
gives the seal its four broad, paddle-like flippers. If you look closely at a
flipper, you (7) still see the five claws near the edge, the
animal's equivalent (8) your finger or toe nails.
Because seals are warm-blooded animals, the temperature of their
bodies stays quite high (9) when they are swimming in cold
water. The dense covering of fine hairs over their bodies keeps them (10)
losing some heat. But the layer of fatty blubber under their
skin does much more to keep them warm. Imagine that (11)
rubber raincoat is your skin. Your sweater would then be (12)
the seal's blubber. Some species of seal have a thicker
blubber layer in winter, when the sea is colder, (13) in
summer - just as you might wear an extra heavy sweater in cold weather!
The blubber is also important in two (14) ways. First,
it helps the seals stay afloat while out at sea. Then, (15)
they come ashore and sometimes have to drag (16) over
rough ground, the blubber layer acts like a cushion. It prevents injury and
makes it more comfortable for the seals (17) lie out on the rocks.
adapted from 'The Seal on the Hocks" by Doug Allan 85
Problems of longevity
It is in our nature to try to prolong life, (1) we should also
face (2) to the distinct difficulties that we would encounter if
we succeeded. If a successful longevity treatment (3) to
emerge suddenly out of all the new developments of medical science,
tacking on extra decades (4) even centuries to our lives, the
results could be disastrous. It might (5) well be a case of
the cure's being worse than the disease.
This (6) be true even for the individuals lucky
enough to receive the treatment. Presumably any treatment that conferred
long life would keep people generally healthy, but the extra years would be
a (7) of medical balancing act, akin (8) the
jugglers who dash about keeping plates spinning on top of poles. It would be nerve-racking (9) best.
(10) if the treatments did little or (11)
to help one's memory? This is a crucial point that is (12)
overlooked in discussions of longevity. The brain is by (13)
the most complex organ known to us, and the workings of
memory are (14) really understood. Keeping the body alive
might be possible before we could do (15) to strengthen or
restore lost memories. Even the ordinary lifetime often seems too (16)
for human memory to hold or recall, and (17)
decades were tacked on, the long middle years of a life
might be substantially forgotten, leaving (18) dim memories
of childhood and recent events.
adapted from "Beware a Senior Society" in "Newsweek" 86
South Africa plagued by HIV virus
Nearly one-in-four adults of working age in South Africa is believed to be
infected with (1) HIV/Aids virus. (2) is a
shocking statistic, and one (3) potentially catastrophic
economic and social consequences for the country.
The limp response from the South African government has already
been condemned, and it has been left to the country's financial community
to tackle what (4) become an epidemic.
At the forefront of a campaign to recognise, report and raise
awareness about (5) disease (6) the South
African Institute of Chartered Accountants (Saica). It is drafting guidelines
on Aids (7) be presented to the Johannesburg stock
exchange. These might (8) day be incorporated into its
listings requirements. Thingle Pather, a chartered accountant and project
director at Saica, heads the HIV working group that is putting together the first draft.
Pather is working with the Global Reporting Initiative, an organisation
(9) issues guidelines on non-financial reporting, and the
South African Actuarial Society to put together a document that will push
(10) voluntary disclosure of information about the
prevalence levels of HIV/Aids and the estimated financial impact.
The draft document is likely to call on companies to reveal the extent
to (11) they (12) implemented an effective
Aids risk management strategy in eight areas of risk, including operational,
absenteeism, cost of employment, and target market. Responsibility for
reporting (13) information will rest (14) the
board of directors, who (15) have to decide to (16)
extent shareholders should be informed.
adapted from "Businesses count the cost of Aids epidemic" in 'The Guardian Weekly 87
Dangerous tanning pills
Thousands of young women hoping for a summer tan are taking capsules
that promise to turn (1) a beautiful golden colour (2)
protecting them from the sun's harmful rays.
However, the vitamin-filled capsules - which are (3)
marketed in high-street chemists (4) an important skincare
product - are to (5) investigated by a government medical
agency following complaints from cancer scientists that women might
wrongly believe the once-a-day capsules (6) prevent them burning on the beach.
The manufacturers claim that the tanning pills prepare the skin for
the sun by promoting (7) own sun protection mechanism.
They state that interaction (8) the natural ingredients of
palm fruit extract, lycopene, vitamin C and vitamin E increases the
production of melanin, the pigment in the skin that protects (9) body from ultraviolet rays.
Cancer Research UK, the leading cancer charity in Britain,
(10) warning that the capsules afford (11)
protection against the sun. It is writing to the Government's Medicines and
Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency this week asking for an
investigation. The agency says it will investigate (12)
complaint made by the charity.
Dr Richard Sullivan, scientific adviser to Cancer Research UK, said:
T h i s is dangerous because it makes people feel safe in the sun.' He said
that the documentation presented by the manufacturers which outlines two
studies carried (13) on the capsules was 'misleading
pseudo-science', and added: '(14) is no (15)
thing as a safe tan anyway. A tan is a sign that your skin has been damaged
by exposure (16) UV radiation.'
adapted from http://observer.guardian.co.uk "Cancer doctors warn against tanning pills" 88 Part 3 Practice
In most lines of the following three texts, there is ONE unnecessary
word. It is either grammatically incorrect or does not fit in with the
sense of the text. Cross out the word or tick the line as a correct one.
Coral reefs
1. Indonesia's coral reefs are in a trouble. Coral mining, industrial pollution and
2. toxic agricultural runoff all play a role in their destruction, but the fishermen
3. have been being the worst offenders. They not only bomb fish but also poison
4. them with cyanide, an equally destructive practice. Fishermen are also among
5. in the biggest potential victims of the devastation. Two thirds of Indonesia's 7,000
6. coastal villages are adjacent to coral reefs and thus are depend for their livelihood
7. on the harvest of reef fish and crustaceans. The disappearing reefs are already
8. leading back to a dramatic decline in the productivity of coastal fisheries and to
9. increasing turf wars among fishermen for the remaining of spoils. Indonesia's
10. reefs are vast - they cover for 51,000 square kilometres, surround 17,500 islands
11. and stretch 3,500 kilometres from Sumatra to Irian Jaya but they are not much
12. infinite. Many foreign experts and Indonesians fear it that the region's entire
13. marine environment could be seriously and irreversibly damaged if the reefs
keep dying at their present rate.
adapted from "Saving the Coral Reefs" in "Newsweek" Nov. 12, 2001 89
The new Robonaut
1. The new Robonaut, a collaborative effort with the Defense Advanced Research
2. Projects Agency, is also known as DARPA, has been under development at JSC
3. for the last in several years. Astronaut Nancy Currie stepped into an advanced
4. concept space suit to participate in the test as the squad leader. The task at his
5. hand was to assemble an aluminum truss of structure. Currie and her Robonaut
6. companions have assembled the truss several times, significantly cutting the time
7. that required to complete the task on each run. After the structure was assembled,
8. the team installed electrical cable, with the Robonauts taking the cable out of its
9. package and by routing it around the truss to Currie, who connected it to the truss
10. and using a standard EVA electrical connector and wire ties. To wrap up the test
11. series, they simulated what would happen if a hazardous chemical contaminated
12. Currie's space suit, with Currie using a special brush to remove off the
13. make-believe chemical one and then handing the brush to a Robonaut to clean the places she couldn't.
excerpt from www.spacedaily.com "Humans. Robots Work Together To Test Spacewalk Squad" 90
Fizzy drinks and children
1. There was a time when children drank water or milk. That has been gone as surely
2. as short trousers for schoolboys and the rag and bone for man's horse and cart.
3. Wherever today's kids hang out - be it not in fast-food restaurants, in cinemas, at
4. home or at school - they are swigging cola and cans of fruit-flavoured fizz. Last
5. year more than 200 litres of the stuff bubbled down with each of their gullets.
6. And they are getting alarmingly fat. Could these facts be connected? It is a suggestion
7. that makes the soft drinks industry be incandescent with rage, but the Geneva-
8. based World Health Organisation (WHO) has for the first time nailed it to
9. the agenda in a ground-breaking draft report on obesity and nutrition. The report
10. urges those governments to clamp down on TV ads pushing "sugar-rich items"
11. only to impressionable thirsty youngsters and to consider slapping heavier taxes
12. on them. It suggests that school vending machines should be turned down into
13. scrap metal. This is all-out war. The WHO, however concerned about the rising tide of obesity
14. that is killing and debilitating millions in rich countries such as the United
15. States and Britain, and that is now edging into the poor countries to coexist
16. obscenely with malnutrition, means business. The soft drinks industry, which
17. appalled at this interference together with its global dominance, disputes not only
18. the scientific evidence but the WHO's right even to raise issues out of taxes and advertising.
adapted from "Are fizzy drinks doing this to our childrerf?" in "The Guardian Weekly" 91
In most lines of the following two texts, there is either a spelling or
a punctuation error. In the space provided write the correctly-spelled
word or show the correct punctuation. Indicate the correct lines with a tick.
Scotland's islands
1. Scotland lays claim to 780 major islands. Two of Scotland's principial
2. island groups, Orkney and Shetland, lie of the north coast, and much
3. of their history and culture is routed in their ancient links with Norway
4. The Western Isles, or Outer Hebrides is the third important group,
5. while the Inner Hebrides, e.g. Skye and Mull, are magical, stepping
6. stones between the mainland and the outer isles. The east coast has
7. no inhabitated islands but some spectacular rocks in the Firth of
8. Forth. There are schedulled air services to Orkney, Shetland and
9. the Western Isles, as well as car and passanger ferry services whose
10. timetables change with the seasons. There are airstripes on some of
11. the Inner Hebrides, but unless you own or charter a light aircraft they
12. can only be reached in the best way possible: by sea.
13. 'Island-hopping with the ferries of Caledonian MacBrayne may be a
14. modest form of cruising but there are few seaways more gloriuos
15. The individual characters of the Inner Hebrides inspire loyality in
16. locals and visitors alike. Those who love Skye, will seldom be
17. persuaded that Mull has much to offer, while the passionatly insular
18. will despice both. The two largest islands lie close to the mainland
19. and have the most developed tourist-industries. But even at
20. the height of the tourist season both islands' offer plenty of
21. opportunity for solitude and repose; not to mention a strong,
sometimes intimidating sense of their essential wilderness.
adapted from "Scotland" by Julie Davidson 92 Death penalty
I.That the U.S. executes people is troubleing to death-penalty
2. opponents around the world. But nowhere, perhaps does it pose
3. such a problem as in the European countries that share Americas
4. democratic values and maintain close economic military and cultural
5. ties with their transatlantic partner. "Europeans are apalled at
6. the unabated pursuit of the application of the death penalty in
7. the U.S., says Bianca Jagger, an official of Amnesty International
8. U.S.A. They cannot understand how the U.S. can claim to be
9. the leading champion of democracy and continue to apply the death
10. penalty." Belgian novelist and essayst Pierre Mertens similarly
11. observes," It is a tragic paradox that the delux country among
12. the democracies resorts to this kind of barbarity" Concerning
13. the question of capital punishment, the U.S. and its allys stand on
14. opposite sides of a great divide. All members of the European
15. Union's have banned the death penalty, and the organization actively
16. promotes its abolition througout the world. Brussels has made
17. abolition a precondition to E.U. membership, as has the 41-member
18. Council Of Europe, thereby spurring most East and Central European
aspirants to do away with capital punishment.
adapted from "Life or Death 93 Part 4 Practice
Use the words in the boxes to the right of the text to form a word that
fits in the same numbered space in the text. Ice Age
Since the latest film by Roland Emmerich (1) The
Day After Tomorrow hit the cinemas with its grim tale of mankind struggling
with the approaching freeze, interest in ice ages, also called (2) , has increased.
Ice age is a period featuring a (3) temperature
plunge by (4) 10°C, when polar ice sheets, having
many kilometres in (5) , creep towards the equator
and cover the Earth's surface, putting life on the planet at a (6)
risk. Such periods are estimated to descend upon
the Earth with the (7) of 10,000 years.
Ice ages are connected with the water cycle. Normally, sunlight
(8) water from the ocean. This water returns to the
ocean or to the sea in the form of rain. During winter, some of the water falls
as snow and ice, but in summer it melts and thus the cycle is maintained.
However, a (9) decrease in temperature may cause
(10) in the whole water cycle. A (11)
amount of snow and ice doesn't melt and piles up on land. Ice sheets at the
poles accumulate and (12) begin to creep downwards as glaciers.
With so much current concern over the effects of global warming, the
prospect of the next ice age may seem (13)
Nevertheless, some scientists claim that (14) global 94
warming can plunge average temperatures by several degrees in merely a
few decades, and hence trigger the (15) of an ice
age. This could be due to the thawing of Arctic ice which may disrupt deep
water currents responsible for the Gulf Stream. The Gulf Stream transports
warm (16) water to northern Europe and if it is shut
off, the temperature of the currents will plummet and the northern (17) will freeze.
The forecasts of (18) vary. Some of them
predict that an ice age can start in the next few decades, while others state
that it will be millennia before it happens. 1) TITLE 2) GLACIATE 3) CONSIDER 4) APPROXIMATE 5) THICK 6) STAGGER 7) FREQUENT 8) VAPOUR 9) SIGNIFY 10) DISRUPT 11) SUBSTANCE 12) CONSEQUENCE 13) NEGLECT 14) MAN 15) SET 16) EQUATOR 17) SPHERE 18) CLIMATE 95 Shrek
Who doesn't know the (1) green ogre called Shrek?
He is the title character of the computer-animated film adaptation of William
Steig's fairy tale which captivated kids and adults alike.
At the beginning of the film we see Shrek leading a (2)
existence in his swamp. He enjoys his peaceful (3)
from the society until the day of (4)
of some fairy tale characters by order of the evil (5)
Lord Farquaad. To the ogre's (6) ,
Seven Dwarves, Pinocchio, the Gingerbread Man and other (7)
settle in his swamp. Shrek immediately goes to Lord
Farquaad and demands (8) The (9)
Lord Farquaad promises the ogre the sole (10)
of the marsh provided that Shrek rescues Princess
Fiona from the lair of a (11) dragon. The ogre
embarks on the quest together with his new companion a talking Donkey.
From this time on Shrek's whole life changes beyond (12)
The plot of the film is (13) engaging, the
soundtrack is exuberant, but (14) it's the jokes, wit
and satire that make Shrek a winner. There are (15)
movie spoofs and amusing (16) to various fairytales.
The film also delivers an important message that you should be yourself and
see beyond surface beauty. Another (17) asset of
Shrek is its brilliant (18) animation. Given this, no
wonder the movie was awarded the first Oscar for Best Animated Feature.
Now, to the delight of the (19) big galoot's
fans, Shrek sequel is on at cinemas. Shrek 2 is as entertaining as the first
part and the computer animation is (20) and even
more advanced. The characters move more (21) and 96
their (22) muscle movements indicate a careful study
of actual human movement. New characters are also introduced, including
the swashbuckling but cute Puss-in-Boots.
The phenomenon of the popularity of the film Shrek is enormous though well-deserved. ;1) AGREE [2) SOLITUDE [3) DETACH ;4) EVICT |5) RULE ;6) BEWILDER [7) CREATE [8) EXPLAIN ;9) CRAFT ;10) OWN ;11) FEAR 12) RECOGNISE 13) THOROUGH [14) DOUBT 15) NUMBER ,16) REFER 17) DENY 18) DIGIT 19) LOVE 20) STUN 21) REAL 22) FACE 97
The Beatles - the Greatest Rock'n'Roll Band of all Time
There have been in the history of rock'n'roll a lot of artists that at one time
were considered (1) phenomena. After some time
these stars appeared to be just a passing fad. However, some artists have
(2) in grasping the attention of the world until the
present. The Beatles (3) belong to them.
The Beatles achieved enormous commercial success racking up
more worldwide number-one singles and selling more records than any
other band in the history of popular music. The Fab Four also had really (4)
fans, which was particularly (5)
at the peak of Beatlemania between 1963 and 1971. Crowds were
screaming at the Beatles' concerts, girls fainted at the very sight of them,
and wherever the Boys went, there were (6) hordes
of fans in (7) so that police protection was a must. In
fact, the Beatles' security (8) cost more than those for (9) or top politicians.
The bands' status stems not only from their immense popularity but
also from their artistic value. Though (10) a fair
number of the Beatles' songs are sweet and simple with trivial lyrics, they were only (11) of the (12) of
the bands' activity. Over the course of their career, the music of the Beatles
was constantly evolving. The lyrics also became artistic, capturing the spirit
of the 60's and expressing the experiences and emotions of the generation.
The band started to experiment with sound, introduced exotic instruments
and bizarre sound effects. Their (13) acclaimed
record Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, which comprises a vast
array of styles and (14) ideas, is considered by many
critics the most (15) album in the history of rock'n'roll 98
music. It is believed that the release of this record marks the beginning of rock'n'roll as a form of art.
Finally, the (16) of the Beatles manifests itself
in the impact they have had on other bands so far. Bob Dylan, another rock
icon, (17) this, saying: "They were pointing the
direction where music had to go". Not only did the Fab Four had numerous
(18) in style in their contemporary times, including
such bands as the Who or Cream, but also a lot of current rock artists, e.g.
Oasis, admit that they owe (19) to the Beatles.
The Beatles hold a special place in the history of music. The
phenomenon of the band's songs is that they are (20)
and continue to be loved by each generation. Many music critics agree that
the Beatles are the cornerstone of music and but for them, rock may not
have developed as well as it has done. (1) STAND (16) GREAT (2) SUCCESS (17) KNOW (3) SURE (18) FOLLOW (4) DEVOTION (19) INSPIRE (5) NOTICE (20) MORTAL (6) HYSTERIA (7) PURSUE (8) ARRANGE (9) ROYAL (10) ADMIT (11) CHARACTER (12) COMMENCE (13) UNIVERSE (14) INNOVATION (15) REVOLUTION 99
Madame Tussaud's
Madame Tussaud's, the (1) famous waxworks
museum, is one of London's most popular tourist attractions, with over 2
million visitors a year. It has been enchanting and entertaining the public
with its lifelike representations of the famous and (2)
pop stars and royalty for more than 200 years.
The story of Madame Tussaud is as gripping as that of the exhibition
itself. She was born Marie Grosholtz in 1761 in Strasbourg. She learnt the
art of wax modelling from Philippe Curtius, a physician, who employed her
mother as a housekeeper. Marie and her mother moved with Dr Curtius to
Paris. Curtius' exhibition of wax figures became successful and it started to
be (3) by the French royal family. Marie's talent was
noticed and she was invited to the royal court at Versailles to assist in the
(4) education of King Louis XVI's sister. During the
French Revolution Marie and her mother were (5) in
the Bastille for some years. When she was released, she was asked to
prepare the death masks of decapitated royalty and (6)
When Dr Curtius died, Marie inherited the business
and expanded it. Then she married a French engineer, Francois Tussaud,
however, they didn't live together long because she (7)
decided to take the exhibition to Great Britain. Madame Tussaud spent
about 33 years travelling the length and (8) of the
British Isles and presenting her growing collection. In 1835 her exhibition
settled permanently in London.
The wax figures in Madame Tussaud's Museum are placed in five
themed areas. "200 years of Madame Tussaud's" brings together the past,
present, and future of the exhibition. The display comprises both the earliest
figures, among them the original death mask of Robespierre and the half-
burned figure of George IV, damaged during the (9) 100
fire of 1925, and the most current examples of sophisticated animated
figures, called 'audio-animatronics'. Here, there are also exhibits showing
how Madame Tussaud's (10) model from life -
taking many (11) and photographs. "Grand Hall" is a
section which assembles renowned kings and queens, great statesmen and
(12) religious leaders. Another themed area,
"Hollywood Legends", contains (13) of superstars of
the past and the present, which are accurate (14) of
real celebrities. There is also "The Spirit of London" which spans London's
history from Elizabethan times to the present day. The atmosphere of each
period is (15) using a host of special effects. Finally,
in the basement of the museum visitors find "The Chamber of Horrors"
which is a macabre collection of portraits of villains and murderers.
Madame Tussaud's Wax Museum is constantly adding to its vast
collection, and the figures on display are (16) from
time to time with up-to-date portraits. No doubt, a trip to Madame Tussaud's is a (17) experience. (1) GLOBE (13) DEPICT (2) FAMOUS (14) LIKE (3) PATRON (15) CREATE (4) ART (16) PLACE (5) PRISON (17) MEMORY (6) REVOLUTION (7) COURAGE (8) BROAD (9) DISASTER (10) SCULPTURE (11) MEASURE (12) INFLUENCE 101 Stonehenge
Stonehenge is surely one of Britain's greatest national icons which
(1) mystery and power. This prehistoric ritual
monument is situated on Salisbury Plain in Wiltshire, southern England and
it is said to have been built in three stages between about 3000 and 1000 BC.
Stonehenge is a (2) arrangement of large
stones called megaliths and is a celebrated example of Neolithic art. The
monument consists of four concentric ranges of stones surrounded by a
ditch with a ring of 56 pits known as Aubrey holes. The outermost range is a
circle of large sandstone blocks called sarsen stones. Within this circle is a
circle of smaller blue stones (3) a horseshoe-shaped
arrangement of five pairs of large sarsen stones. Within this arrangement is
a smaller horseshoe-shaped range of blue stones which surrounds the Altar
Stone. Moreover, there is a number of round barrows or (4)
mounds in the vicinity of the main structure.
The question of who built Stonehenge still remains (5)
Many ancient peoples have been credited with the
monument's construction over the years, but the most captivating and
enduring (6) has been to Celtic priests, the Druids.
This (7) , first made by the antiquary John Aubrey,
turns out to be (8) as by the time of the Druids, the
stones had already been standing for 2,000 years. Besides, the Druids
didn't need stone structures because they worshipped in forest temples.
The original function of Stonehenge has also been a matter of
conjecture. Some people have speculated that it was a temple made for the
worship of ancient earth deities. Others have claimed that it was a sacred
site for burying high-ranking citizens. However, the most probable seems to
be the idea that Stonehenge was an astronomical (9)
for marking significant events on the prehistoric calendar. The last theory 102
was supported by the (10) of the American (11)
Gerald S. Hawkins, which were reported in 1964.
Hawkins combined computer measurements and astronomical information
and on this basis he concluded that Stonehenge complex could have been
used to predict the summer and winter solstices, the vernal and autumnal
equinoxes, and both (12) and lunar eclipses.
Moreover, all these predictions are believed to have been made with
remarkable (13) While we can't say with any (14)
what the real function of Stonehenge was or who
built it, the monument must have been very important to the ancients, as the
construction required a lot of effort and (15)
The modern age has not treated Stonehenge very well, despite the
lip service it pays to the (16) of heritage sites. There
is a major highway running no more than 100 yards away from the
monument and plenty of visitor facilities around it. The organisation, English
Heritage, has (17) the task of providing Stonehenge
with the dignified setting it deserves. According to the project, the
surrounding roads will be removed or tunnelled, the ploughed fields returned
to open grassland and a new visitor centre, which will blend into the
landscape, will be built. Although Stonehenge has been decimated through
the centuries by visitors and (18) forces alike, it
continues to be an awe-inspiring sight. (1) SYMBOL (9) OBSERVE (17) TAKE (2) CIRCLE (10) FIND (18) CLIMATE (3) CLOSE (11) ASTRONOMY (4) BURY (12) SUN (5) ANSWER (13) ACCURATE (6) ATTRIBUTE (14) CERTAIN (7) ASSUME (15) COMMITTED (8) ERROR (16) PRESERVE 103 Key to Exercises
Definite, indefinite and zero articles
I. The, - 2. The 3. the, - 4. - 5. The, the 6. A 7. The, the, the, the 8. a
9. a,- 10. a, the 11. A, an 12. the 13. a, the 14. an 15.- 16. The, a,- 17. a
18. the, the 19. the, the 20.-, the 21. A, an, - 22. the, a 23. the,-, - 24. The, -
25. a, the 26. The, a 27. The, an 28. -/the, a 29. the, -, a, the, the, an 30. the,
the/- 31. the 32. the, the, the, a 33. a 34. a, the, the, a, -, an, the, the, the, the
35. - 36. a, -, - 37. the, the, the 38. the 39. The, the, the/-, the, - 40. the, the
41. An, a, the 42. The, the, the 43. an, the, a 44. the, the 45. -,- 46. -, - 47. -,
-, The, an, a 48. the, -, the 49. the, -, the 50. The, the, -, - Modal verbs
1.1b 2a 3c 4b 5a 6c 7c 8c 9d 10b 11 d 12d 13b 14a 15d
II. 1. wouldn't start 2. Try as I might 3. should reach 4. He may / might / could
have changed 5. lest you should accept 6. He must have had 7. may / might /
could give 8. should win 9. daren't do / don't dare to do 10. so that the boy
shouldn't overhear 11 It can't / couldn't have been 12. should be moving 13.
must be watching 14. couldn't have sold / wouldn't sell 15. computer nerds will sit Gerund or infinitive
1. to buy 2. to send 3. not to wear 4. putting 5. act 6. rehearsing 7. moving
8. to accept, to dismiss 9. rummaging/having rummaged 10. not going/not having
gone 11. to look after 12. losing 13. not to travel 14. to try 15. meeting 16. to
take 17. to meet 18. binging 19. trying 20. picking up 21. being 22. to inform
23. speaking 24. trafficking/having trafficked 25. to come 26. (to) taking panV(to)
having taken 27. eating 28. buying 29. to ask/ask 30. inviting 31. to offend
32. drinking 33. (to) fill 34. to add 35. renovating 36. to see 37. to smuggle
38. coming 39. to go 40. meeting 41. to deliver 42. repairing 43. to outline
44. revising/to be revised 45. to have endured 46. moving 47. going
48. meeting 49. putting 50. applying 106 Phrasal Verbs I.
1. She is always running down her neighbours behind their backs.
2. He promised that he would come to help me, but he let me down and didn't turn up.
3. He pretended that he was not a Scotsman, but his accent gave him away.
4.1 wanted to get the job, but they turned down my application ...
5. They tried to deceive me, but I saw through their true intentions ...
6. Tom fell out with his boss and a couple of days later he was given the sack.
7. I can't put up with the noise of my neighbour's lawn mower.
8. ... but when we got to know him better, we took to him.
9. Patti takes after her mother in so many respects.
10. Before you go to your boss to ask for a pay rise, jot down the points ...
11. You should talk your brother-in-law into buying this car...
12. However, her performance didn't come up to my expectations.
13. The American Civil War between the North and the South broke out in 1861
14. ... so that I can make up for it.
15. The deal fell through because the company didn't agree to the terms of payment
16. ... but at the last minute some problems crop up
17. The Turners took out a mortgage from a building society to buy this house ...
18. ... that I've given up hope of making him out.
19. The very sight of the restaurant with its shabby interior put me off.
20. When I was shopping in the new mall I ran into Andrew.
21. ... the municipal authorities resolved to pull down the abandoned tenement buildings ...
22. When the flood subsided, we could see clearly that half of the town was wiped out.
23. ... and they are putting on a play in our city next week.
24. are often looked down on in both their professional and their private lives.
25. Being the sole heir, Daniel came into his grandmother's vast estate ...
26. Thousands of people employed in the steel industry in Poland have been laid off 107
27. If I hadn't been held up by the traffic in the city centre ...
28. I'm afraid the advertising agency really ripped you off for the commercial.
29. Have you seen him taking off the Prime Minister?
30. The legal advisors of the two companies met to draw up the initial version ... II.
1.b 2. a 3. b 4. c 5. c 6. d 7. c 8. d 9. d 10. c 11. a 12. b 13. a 14. c
15. d 16. a 17. b 18. d 19. a 20. d Prepositions
1. in 2. in 3. for 4. with / at, about / over, to / towards 5. of 6. about 7. of
8. on/in 9. for, of 10. for 11. in, of 12. by 13. under 14. For, under 15.of,
from 16. into, on, of 17. in 18. with 19. with 20. to 21. from 22. for 23. for, in
24. on 25. for/in, with 26. at 27. in 28. into 29. to 30. to 31. over, within
32. in, with/to 33. on 34. at, of 35. in, to 36. in 37. by, of 38. in 39. with
40. on 41. in 42. in, of 43. of 44. with 45. for 46. for 47. out of 48. against, for, of 49. at 50. by
Similar but different: confused words
I. a. sensitive b. sensible c. sensitive 2. a. treated b. treated, cured c. cure
3. a. disinterested b. uninterested c. uninterested 4. a. imminent b. eminent
5. a. complements/complemented b. compliment c. complement 6. a. stationery
b. stationary c. stationary 7. a. raises b. raise c. has risen d. rose e. raising
8. a. discreet b. discrete c. discrete d. discreet 9. a. told b. told c. say d. tell
e. telling 10. a. do b. makes c. make d. do e. has done/did f. make g. make
I I . a. hung b. hanged c. hung d. hanged 12. a. misuse b. misused
c. disused d. disused e. misused 13. a. historical b. historic c. historic
d. historical 14. a. councillor b. counsellor 15. a. envious/jealous b. jealous
c. envious/jealous 16. a. negligent b. negligent c. negligible d. negligible 108
17. a. assure b. insure c. insured d. ensure e. reassure f. ensured
g. assured 18. a. consists, comprises/includes b. compose c. comprise
d. composed 19. a. sight b. cite c. site d. site 20. a. economical b. economic
c. economical d. economic 21. a. farther/further b. further c. farther/further
22. a. lost b. lose c. lost, loose 23. a. effective b. effective c. efficient
d. efficient 24. a. prudish b. prudent c. prudent 25. a. classic b. classic
c. classical 26. a. beside b. besides c. Besides d. besides 27. a. eligible
b. illegible c. eligible 28. a. invaluable b. worthless c. worthless 29. a. non-
flammable b. inflammable 30. a. blinked b. winked c. blinking 31. a. policies
b. politics c. politics d. policy 32. a. amenities b. facilities c. facilities
33. a. morale b. morals c. morale 34. a. industrious b. Industrial c. industrial
35. a. stimulus b. stimulant c. stimulus 36. a. glance b. glimpse c. glance
37. a. laid b. lay c. lain d. laid e. lay 38. a. effect b. affects 39. a. illegible
b. unreadable 40. a. access b. excess c. access 41. a. prosecuted
b. persecuted c. prosecute d. persecuted 42. a. vain b. vain c. veins
43. a. human b. humane c. humane d. human 44. a. preceded b. precede
c. proceeded d. proceed 45. a. Gorillas b. guerrilla 46. .a. heroine b. heroin
c. heroine 47. a. prayed b. prey c. prey 48. a. urban b. urbane
49. a. prospective b. perspective 50. a. canvas b. canvass c. canvas Word formation
I. resistance 2. confidential 3. inexperienced 4. impatient 5. unsatisfactory
6. suspicious 7. martyrdom 8. approval 9. significance 10. troublesome
I I . consciousness 12. membership 13. illegal 14. irresponsible
15. disrespectful 16. variety 17. negligence 18. subscription 19. Increasingly
20. remarkable 21. contemptible 22. unavailable 23. unavoidable
24. partnership 25. non-profit 26. unreliable 27. foreseeable 28.. irritable
29. intentions 30. explanatory 31. inexplicable/unexplained 32. explosive
33. occurrences 34. infallible 35. remembrance 36. underestimate
37. overrated 38. sympathetically 39. grievances 40. assumption 41. shortage
42. affluence 43. modesty 44. avoidance 45. endless 46. additionally 109
47. inflexible 48. disabilities 49. pitiful 50. retention 51. inaccessible
52. beneficial 53. evasion 54. evasive 55. turnover 56. outbreak
57. disobedience 58. enforce 59. imprisonment 60. confirmation
61. graceful 62. defenceless 63. preoccupied 64. admission 65. unjust
66. injustice 67. notify 68. memorise 69. acquaintance 70. withdraw
71. uncorrupted .72 forgery 73. inadvisable 74. comparatively
75. encouragement 76. insensitive 77. reality 78. effortlessly 79. disastrous
80. coincidentally 81. spacious 82. accusations 83. thoughtful 84. indecisive
85. inconsistent 86. hypocrisy 87. immoral 88. slippery 89. performance
90. unattractive 91. doubtful 92. indifferent 93. shameful 94. daily
95. insecurity 96. reluctance 97. majority 98. abolition 99. disagreeable 100. submissive
Collocations and Idioms
1.c 2. b 3. d 4. a 5. a 6. b 7. c 8. d 9. c 10. c 11. c 12. b 13. a 14. c
15. d 16. d 17. a 18. c 19. b 20. a 21. c 22. d 23. c 24. b 25. a 26. d
27. b 28. d 29. c 30. d 31. a 32. a 33. b 34. a 35. b 36. d 37. a 38. b
39. c 40. c 41. d 42. b 43. c 44. c 45. a 46. b 47. c 48. a 49 b 50. c Compounds Noun + noun
1.1 j windscreen, 2 k eyewitness, 3 i willpower, 4 n chain-smoker, 5 I hay
fever, 6 o man-hour, 7 a unemployment benefit, 8 c self-esteem, 9 b spotlight,
10 g bookends, 11m mouthpiece, 12 f firearms, 13 d flow chart, 14 h windfall, 15 e eyesore
II. 1. eyesore 2. self-esteem 3. firearms 4. spotlight 5. windfall 6. man-hours
7. eyewitness 8. willpower 9. unemployment benefit 10. hay fever 11. chain-
smoker 12. windscreen 13. flowchart 14. mouthpiece 15. bookends 110 Adjective + noun
1.1 k hard shoulder, 2 j parting shot, 3 a nervous breakdown, 4 i wet blanket,
5 n stuffed shirt, 6 h hard labour, 7 b formative years, 8 I thorough grounding,
9 c general public, 10 m prime suspect, 11 g graphic detail, 12 d burning
question, 13 f necessary evil, 14 o rough diamond, 15 e quicksand
II. 1. nervous breakdown 2. hard shoulder 3. general public 4. prime suspect
5.wet blanket 6. graphic detail 7. necessary evil 8. formative years 9. quicksand
10. thorough grounding 11. burning question 12. stuffed shirts 13. hard labour
14. rough diamond 15. parting shot Adjective + adjective
I. 1 g big-headed, 2 I wide awake, 3 i ill-tempered, 4 h bittersweet, 5 b
nuclear-powered, 6 m hard-hearted, 7 a blue-eyed, 8 d bad-mannered, 9 k fast
asleep, 10 c warm-hearted, 11 n flat broke, 12 o ill-equipped, 13 f long-lasting,
14 e far-reaching, 15 j quick-witted
11. 1. bittersweet 2. big-headed 3. far-reaching 4. bad-mannered 5. quick-witted
6. hard-hearted 7. ill-tempered 8. warm-hearted 9. long-lasting 10. nuclear-powered
I I . fast asleep 12. blue-eyed 13. flat broke 14. ill-equipped 15. wide awake Punctuation Practice
1. Betty entered the room, looked at us with surprise, shouted loudly(,) and fainted.
2. Antonio Bradi, 25, has been in coma for several weeks now. 3. correct
4. Certain products, e.g. eggs, rolls, oranges are often bought in dozens. 5. correct
6. It is true that the price is extremely low. However, we are more concerned with the quality of the product. 111
7. It's a family of eight children, all of whom are studying music. 8. correct 9. correct
10. Iggy, our best athlete, is so quick(,) no one can match him.
11. Stanley lives in Pittsburgh, New Jersey.
12. Susie, our youngest daughter, has just turned 5.
13. His life was in danger, he told me. 14. correct
15. The directors haven't decided whether they will recommend a dividend(,) or hold over the profits. 16. correct
17. Fortunately, the crowd dispersed peaceably. If they hadn't, the police might have had to use force. 18. correct
19. My mother bought me for Christmas a beautiful, soft woollen cardigan.
20. White wine is to be enjoyed slightly cooled; red wine, in ambient temperature.
21. This is Henry, whose wife teaches our children. 22. correct
23. By the time the fire brigade arrived, the house had already burnt down.
24. It is the invoice that I'm looking for, not the bill.
25. She spent all evening talking about her latest book, which none of us had ever heard of.
26. Frankly, this is the most appalling concert I've ever been to.
27. This subject has become really popular. We are, therefore, quite certain that it
will attract many students to our university.
28. Mexico City, which has a population of over 10 million, is probably the fastest growing city in the world.
29. Pink is often reserved for girls; blue colour, for boys.
30. Lenny, when the meeting is over, come to my office, please.
31. The small man in the raincoat, whom nobody recognized, turned out to be Olivia's first husband. 112
32. "I suppose so," grunted Jack.
33. Just before the wedding she changed her mind and decided not to marry Alan, which shocked all the guests. 34. correct
35. The Vikings, known for their seafaring skills, were the first to reach America,
well before Christopher Columbus.
36. "Your information," he replied, "is out of date." 37. correct 38. correct
39. After Vicky agreed to go out with him, Martin became so self-confident.
40. Two coffees, a cheese cake and an apple pie, please.
41. The island boasts a fantastic landscape. Furthermore, it has excellent tourist facilities.
42. We've tested twenty types of overalls, none of which is completely waterproof.
43. These souvenirs are handcrafted, not mass-produced in a factory.
44. The loan shark lent Greg a thousand bucks, which was exactly the amount he needed to solve his problems.
45. Perhaps, if you have some time left, we could try the new cafe on the corner?
46. Nevertheless, the idea seems promising enough to draw the Dean's attention.
47. Seicento is definitely a decent car to get around the city. On the other hand, it is unsafe and uncomfortable.
48. The more you practise playing the violin, the better you are at it.
49. Mr Fairclough, who used to take care of our garden, retired several months ago.
50. Angela's date started to tell stupid jokes, at which point she decided to leave. 113
CAE English in Use Exam Practice Parti Practice Text messaging
1.b 2. a 3. a 4. d 5. b 6. d 7. c 8. a 9. b 10. b 11. d 12. c 13. a 14. a 15. b Bloodthirsty bears
1.a 2. c 3. a 4. c 5. b 6. d 7. b 8. c 9. a 10. b 11. d 12. b 13. d 14. a 15. d Dyslexic minds
1.c 2. b 3. b 4. a 5. c 6. c 7. a 8. a 9. d 10. b 11. d 12. d 13. d 14. c 15. c
The future in biotechnology
1.d 2. a 3. c 4. a 5. c 6. b 7. d 8. c 9. b 10. b 11. d 12. a 13. c 14. c 15. b
Stop the anti-aging process
1.d 2. d 3. d 4. a 5. d 6. c 7. d 8. b 9. a 10. b 11. c 12. c 13. a 14. b 15. b Part 2 Practice Eldest child
1. along 2. being 3. of 4. on 5. to 6. another 7. because 8. enough
9. This 10. and 11. hence/therefore/thus 12. an 13. which 14. their
15. as/when 16. more 17. among 18. any 114 The seal's body
1. better/more 2. them 3. with 4. while/whereas 5. between 6. This
7. will/can 8. of 9. even 10. from 11. a 12. like 13. than 14. other/more
15. when/as 16. themselves 17. to Problems of longevity
I. but/however/nevertheless/nonetheless 2. up 3. were 4. or 5. very
6. would/could/might 7. kind/sort 8. to 9.at 10. what 11. nothing
12. often/sometimes 13. far 14. not 15. anything 16. much 17. if 18. only/just
South Africa plagued by HIV virus
l.the 2. It/This 3. with 4. has 5. the 6. is 7. to 8. one 9. that/which 10. for
II. which 12. have 13. this/such 14. with 15. will 16. what
Dangerous tanning pills
l.them 2. while 3. being 4. as 5. be 6. will 7. its 8. between 9. the 10. is
11.no 12. any/the 13. out 14. there 15. such 16. to Part 3 Practice Coral Reefs
1.a 2. the 3. being 4. correct 5. in 6. are 7. correct 8. back 9. of 10. for 11. much 12.it 13. correct The New Robonaut
I. correct 2. is 3. in 4. his 5. of 6. have 7. that 8. correct 9. by 10. and II. correct 12. off 13. one 115
Fizzy Drinks and Children
1. correct 2. for 3. not 4. correct 5. with 6. correct 7. be 8. correct
9. correct 10. those 11. only 12. down 13. however 14. correct 15. the
16. which 17. together 18. out Scotland's islands
I. principal 2. off 3. rooted 4. correct 5. Outer Hebrides, is the third
6. magical stepping 7. inhabited 8. scheduled 9. passenger 10. airstrips
I I . correct 12. correct 13.'Island-hopping' 14. glorious 15. loyalty
16. Those who love Skye will 17. passionately 18. despise 19. tourist industries
20. islands 21. repose - not to mention/repose, not to mention Death penalty
1. troubling 2. But nowhere, perhaps, does it pose 3. America's
4. economic, military 5. appalled 6. correct 7. U.S.," says Bianca Jagger
8. U.S.A. "They cannot 9. correct 10. essayist 11. deluxe 12. barbarity."
13. allies 14. correct 15. Union 16. throughout 17. correct 18. Council of Europe Part 4 Practice Ice Age
I. entitled 2. glaciations 3. considerable 4. approximately 5. thickness
6. staggering 7. frequency 8. evaporates 9. significant 10. disruption
I I . substantial 12. consequently 13. negligible 14. man-made 15. onset
16. equatorial 17. hemisphere 18. climatologists 116 Shrek
1. agreeable 2. solitary 3. detachment 4. eviction 5. ruler 6. bewilderment
7. creatures 8. explanation 9. crafty 10. ownership 11. fearsome / fearful
12. recognition 13. thoroughly 14. undoubtedly 15. numerous / innumerable
16. references 17. undeniable 18. digital 19. loveable / lovable 20. stunning 21. realistically 22. facial
The Beatles - the greatest rock'n'roll band of all time
1. outstanding 2. succeeded 3. surely 4. devoted 5. noticeable 6. hysterical
7. pursuit 8. arrangements 9. royalty 10. admittedly 11. characteristic
12. commencement 13. universally 14. innovative / innovatory 15. revolutionary
16. greatness 17. acknowledged 18. followers 19. inspiration 20. immortal Madame Tussaud's
I. globally 2. infamous 3. patronized 4. artistic 5. imprisoned
6. revolutionaries 7. courageously 8. breadth 9. disastrous 10. sculptors
I I . measurements 12. influential 13. depictions 14. likenesses 15. recreated 16. replaced 17. memorable Stonehenge
1. symbolises 2. circular 3. enclosing 4. burial 5. unanswered 6. attribution
7. assumption 8. erroneous 9. observatory 10. findings 11. astronomer
12. solar 13. accuracy 14. certainty 15. commitment 16. preservation 17. undertake 18. climatic 117