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Test 1
You are going to read a magazine article about being liked. For questions 8-15,
choose the answer (A, B, Cor D) which you think fits best according to the text.
‘Mark your answers on the separate answer sheet
T've just got to talk about this
probiem I'm having with my
postman. It ll began a year ago,
after the birth of his frst child
Not wanting to appear rude, 1
asked him about the baby. The
next week, not wanting him to
think T had asked out of mere
politeness the week before, 1
asked all about the baby again
Now I can’t break the habit. 1
freeze whenever I see him com-
ing. The words ‘How's the
baby?" come out on their own,
1's annoying. t holds me up. It
holds him up. So why can’t T
stop i?
‘The answer, of course, is that
1 want him to like me. Come to
think of it, I want everyone to
like me. This was made clear to
‘me the other day. I found myself
in the bank, replying ‘Oh, as it
comes’ when the cashier asked
how Id like the money. Even as
she was handing me the £20
note, realised I'd have no small
‘change with which to buy my
newspaper. But, not wanting her
to dislike me (she'd already writ-
ten ‘1 x £20" on the back of my
cheque), said nothing.
In order to get the £20 note
down to a decent, paper-buying
size, I went into the grocers
Not wanting to buy things I
didn’t actually need (I do have
some pride, you know), I bought
some large cans of beans and a
frozen chicken for dinner that
night. That got the price up to a
respectable £5.12, which I duly
paid. T then bought my paper at
the station with my hard-gained
£5 note.
With my sister, it wasn’t the
postman who was the problem,
but the caretaker of her block of
flats: “All he ever does is moan
and complain; he talks at me
rather than to me, never listens 10
a word I say, and yet for some
reason I'm always really nice 10
him. I'm worried in case Ihave a
domestic crisis one day, and he
won't lft a finger to help.”
I have a friend called
‘Stephen, who is a prisoner of the
call-waiting device he has had
installed on his phone. ‘T get this
beeping sound to tell me there's
another call on the line, but I can
never bring myself to interrupt
the person I’m talking to, So I
fend up not concentrating on
what the first person's saying,
while at the same time annoying
the person who's trying to get
through.”
‘What about at work? Richard
Lawton, a management trainer,
‘wars: “Those managers who are
actually liked by most of their
staff are always those to whom
being liked is not the primary
goal, The qualities that make
‘managers popular are being hon-
est with staff, treating them as
LOVE ME DO! iim
hhuman beings and observing
common courtesies like saying
hello in the morning.” To illus-
trate the point, Richard cites the
story of the company chairman
who desperately wanted to be
liked and who, after making one
of his managers redundant, said
with moist eyes that he was so,
so sorry the man was leaving, To
which the embittered employee
replied: “If you were that sorry, 1
‘wouldn't be leaving.” The lesson
being, therefore, that if you try
too hard to be liked, people
‘won't like you
‘The experts say ital starts in
childhood. “If children feel they
can only get love from their par-
ents by being good.” says Zelda
West-Meads, a mariage gui
ance consultant, ‘they develop
low self-confidence and become
compulsive givers.” But is there
anything wrong in being a giver,
the world not being exactly short
of takers? Anne Cousins
believes there is. “There is a
point at which giving becomes
unhealthy,” she says. “It comes
when you do things for others
but feel bad about it.”
Tam now trying hard to say to
people ‘I feel uncomfortable
about saying this, but .", and
tell myself ‘Refusal of a request
does not mean rejection ofa per-
son’ and I find Tean say almost
anything to almost anyone.
3610
"
12
13
14
15
Paper 1 Reading
Why does the writer ask the postman about his baby?
‘A Heis interested in the baby.
B He wants to create a good impression
© The postman is always polite to him.
D_ The postman enjoys a chat.
‘The writer went into the grocer’s so that
‘A he had some food for dinner that night.
B_ he could buy a newspaper there.
© he could ask for £20 in change.
D_ he could buy something to get some change.
What do we find out about the writer's sister and the caretaker?
A. She doesn’t want to risk offending him.
B_ She doesn't pay attention to him
C He refuses to help her.
D_ He asks her for advice,
How does Stephen fee! about his call-waiting equipment?
A. He gets annoyed when it interrupts him
B_ Heis unable to use it effectively.
© He finds it a relief from long conversations.
D_ He doesn't think it works property.
Managers are more likely to be popular if they
A. help staff with their problems.
B_ make sure the staff do not lose their jobs.
© encourage staff to be polite to each other.
D_ donot make too much effort to be liked.
When is it wrong to be ‘a giver"?
A. when it makes you ill
B_ whenit does not give you pleasure
when you make other people unhappy
D_ when you are unable to take from others.
What do we learn from this article?
A. fyou tell the truth, it will not make people like you less.
B_ Ifyou take time to talk to people, they will ike you better.
© You should avoid unpleasant situations where possible.
D_ You shouldn't refuse other people’s requests for help.
Why was this article written?
to analyse the kinds of conversations people have
to persuade people to be more polite to each other
to encourage people to have more self-confidence
to suggest ways of dealing with difficult people
voup
37Test 1
You are going to read @ magazine article about a woman who goes gliding. Seven
paragraphs have been removed from the article. Choose from the paragraphs
(AH) the one which fits each gap (16-21). The
do not need to use. There is an example at th
‘Mark your answers on the separate answer
fre is one extra paragraph which you
1e beginning (0).
sheet
‘Twelve months ago, it was Lyn Ferguson wh
had the honour of cutting the ribbon to
Then, there are 10 km flights (straight out and
back to the beginning), and 300 km flights,
‘which show navigation skills. They're flown in
a triangle starting and finishing at the airfield.
]
10
butit wasn’t until January 1986 that [took it
up seriously. My boys had gone to school, [
had lots of spare time and I thought, ‘What a
[going to do?’ Itjust so happened that [had
the opportunity to go up ina glider asa
passenger to sec if I liked it.I did,
offices open. 19
° H ‘Once, when Lwas in Australia, [lost height
whilst attempting a 300 km flight and had to
“Thad my first glider flight when wassixteen, Sel€¢t field to land in, Luckily, sported a
field with a tractor in itand was able to land
there, I think the farmer was pretty surprised
when a glider suddenly landed next to him!
™ He did let me use his phone, though.
16
‘When you have a student who's finding things
Really, it's very
coordi
60 flights before they can go solo, complete
alone, which sounds lot, but the average
instruction flight only takes around eight
sy. All you need is,
did eleven trips in a day when I was training,
7
ination. The average person needs about
minutes, so training doesn’t take long. [once
ifficult, you convince them that they can do
it When they do, they're so pleased with
themselves, When you land and they say “Ian
iy. doit’, ies briliane
24
“Flying is the main part, but there are other
angles too. Gliding is like everything else.
What you put inis what you get out. It's all
‘Well, once you've done it alone, you can
register with the British Gliding Association,
badge
endurance.
then work towards your Bronze Badge. Each
after that is about height, distance and
about team work too, Everybody mucks in to
push gliders around, pull cables in and
generally help out. You can't do it on your
own. 've met people in gliding from all walks
of life, from lots of different countries, that I
‘would never have met if I didn’t go gliding,
So, next time you see a glider soaring,
overhead, it may well be Lyn flying her way to
another badge or, knowing her love of the
sport, ust gliding for the sheer fun of it
38