Reading Comprehension - First Certificate
Reading Comprehension - First Certificate
Reading Comprehension - First Certificate
statements about the passage, each with four suggested answers or ways o f finishing. You
must choose the one which you think fits best. On your answer sheet indicate the letter A, B, C
or D against the number o f each item 26-40 for the answer you choose. Give one answer only
to each question. Read each passage right through before choosing your answers.
FIRST PASSAGE
Steve Courtney wrote historical novels. Not, he was quick to explain, over-colourful love
stories of the kind that made so much money for so many women writers, but novels set, and
correctly set, in historical periods. Whatever difference he saw in his own books, his readers
did not seem to notice it, and his readers were nearly all women. He had studied at university,
but he had not been a particularly good student, and he had never afterwards let any academic
knowledge he had gained interfere with his writing.
Helen, his wife, who did not have a very high opinion of her husband's ability as a
novelist, had been careful to say when she married him that she was not historically minded.
Steve had accepted this, perhaps even welcomed it, and had not expected her to read all his
books, still less to talk to him about them. He had not married her for that. She had, therefore,
never been in danger of revealing her views by accident. All the same she knew that she had to
be careful, especially when relaxing at parties, in case she gave away what she really thought
about Steve's writing. She found it was easier to deal with the women on these occasions
because, although they were all very attracted to Steve, they mostly saw that they could not
compete with Helen in attractiveness, so she could easily be nice to them. Up till now she had
not let these problems worry her, but she was beginning to feel that the situation might not
always be without its difficulties.
Above all, Helen was doubtful whether her relationship with Steve would work at all in
the village of Stretton, to which they had just moved. It was Steve who had wanted to move to
the country, and she had been glad of the change, in principle, whatever doubts she was now
having about Stretton as a choice. But she wondered whether Steve would not, before very
long, want to live in London again, and what she would do if he did. The Stretton house was
not a weekend cottage. They had moved into it and given up the London flat altogether, partly
at least, she suspected, because that was Steve's idea of what a successful author ought to do.
However, she thought he was not going to feel like a successful author half as much in Stretton
as he had in London. On the other hand, she supposed he might just start dashing up to London
for the day to see his agent or have lunch with his publisher, leaving her behind in Stretton, and
she thought on the whole she would like that.
Their house, when properly furnished, was going to be lovely; and, in limited doses, she
could enjoy the heavy peace of the place much more on her own than with Steve behaving like
a successful author in his study upstairs.
The move had been made very quickly. Steve had money and when he wanted anything,
he got it fast. It was, of course, true that the things he wanted, or at least admitted he wanted,
were always things he was capable of getting. Like many self-centred men, he had an exact
awareness of his own limitations.
29 What were Helen's feelings about the move from London to Stretton?
A She wanted to remain in the country.
B She had been unwilling to leave London.
C She thought it was time to return to London.
D She would have preferred a weekend house in the country.
SECOND PASSAGE
A new British medical instrument is about to change dramatically our ability to recognise
disease hidden inside the body. It is called the magnetic scanner, and it gives information about
the body which current machines, such as the brain scanner and the more recent body scanner,
cannot provide. And unlike existing machines the new machine does not use X-ray radiation
waves, which makes it much safer for patients.
Unlike existing scanners, a magnetic scanner can show the side of the back of a suspect part
of the body. Used on, for example, a lung with suspected damage, it can turn the image of the
lung to give a series of different views. The image is not simply worked out in the computer's
'imagination': the magnetic scanner actually examines every side of the lung.
When examining the softer parts of the body with existing scanners, doctors frequently have
to use a 'contrast medium' to make a muscular organ show up to X-ray waves. The usual
'contrast medium' given to patients before a stomach X-ray scan takes place is harmless, but for
some brain-scans a 'contrast medium' has to be given in an injection so that it passes into the
brain. This is unpleasant and painful and it can be dangerous. The magnetic scanner needs no
'contrast medium'.
The new machine can also see in greater detail than ever before. Growths of all kinds show up
clearly on the brain and so do the dead patches which are the signs of the disease, multiple
sclerosis. Until now patients complaining of double vision or an inability to control their
muscles from time to time could be suffering from multiple sclerosis or, equally, from some
much more easily cured disease and a brain scanner could not distinguish between these with
certainty. The doctor can now definitely say whether or not cancer or multiple sclerosis is
present. Previously, these diseases have been missed and patients have been given false
information about their health. The technique is still improving with great speed: pictures
produced a couple of years ago look very simple compared with those of today.
35 The machine is useful in identifying the disease, multiple sclerosis, because it shows
A dark spots in the eyes.
B dead areas in the brain.
C cancer-like growths.
D damage to muscles.
THIRD PASSAGE
Exercise courses on tape are the latest fashion among people who want to keep fit. A magazine
asked three women to try out one different course each. They were told to do the exercises
every day for a fortnight. An instruction chart accompanied each tape. Here are their reports.
36 In what way did Jane not do what the magazine had told her?
A She only did the exercises she liked.
B She did not do the exercises regularly.
C She did not cut down on the amount of food she ate.
D She spent 45 minutes a day on the exercises.
40 Which of the women used the tapes and charts in the way they were supposed to be used?
A Pat
B Jane
C Ann
D None of them
6 Read the following descriptions o f properties and o f some people who are looking for
somewhere to live. Which do you think they will probably choose, and why? Give your
reasons in the spaces provided below.