Unit 8. Wonders of The World I. Choose A, B, C or D That Best Fits Each Blank in The Following Sentences
Unit 8. Wonders of The World I. Choose A, B, C or D That Best Fits Each Blank in The Following Sentences
Unit 8. Wonders of The World I. Choose A, B, C or D That Best Fits Each Blank in The Following Sentences
1. The hotel we stayed at had a great range of ___________________, and, as a result, we barely felt the need to
venture out all week.
2. When we arrived, we were informed that the hotel was full to ______________________, and that our room was no
longer available due to an administrative error that had seen it double-booked.
3. A Sunday ______________________ to the hills is all the holiday I need to feel refreshed and ready to face another
week of work.
4. The government-sponsored ______________________ was ostensibly a trade trip but in reality it was a holiday by
any other name.
5. He purchased a traditional drum as a(n) _________________________ to remember his trip by.
6. They strolled along the _________________________ hand-in-hand and watched the sun set over the still ocean.
7. Our Economics lecturer is on _____________________ for the next six months, which means we‘ll have someone
new teaching us this semester.
8. The band took a(n) ________________________ for three months to have a much-needed break from one another.
9. He is staying at a(n) ______________________ up in the mountains for a few weeks; apparently isolating himself
from the outside world is just the form of ____________________ he needs right now to help him recover from his
breakdown.
10. We changed our _________________ somewhat from the original plan and decided to give ourselves some
more _____________________ to relax and do nothing; we realised you were right about our schedule being too
_____________________ and unrealistic.
11. This year‘s _______________________ is predicted to be the best-attended for many a year with a crowd of
10,000 expected to turn out to see the boats off.
12. For me, holidays are a welcome __________________________ from the grim realities of working life. IV.
Give the correct forms of provided words to complete the passage
Holidays for all Workers
Millions of (1. free) ________________ and short-term contract workers won the right to (2. pay) ____________
holidays yesterday in a (3. ground) ___________________ ruling from the European Court of Justice in Luxembourg.
The court's (4. judge) __________________ will force the government to change laws that regulate how much holiday
workers are (5. title) __________________ to.
The judges said the UK had (6. wrong) ____________________ implemented an old EU directive when it gave a right
to holidays only after 13 weeks' (7. continue) ___________________ employment with the same employer. The (8.
restrict) __________________ had excluded millions of freelance and contract employees, including teachers,
cleaners and media workers.
Stephen Cavalier, head of employment rights at the trade union law firm Thompsons, said the government should act
(9. prompt) _______________ to change the law. As long as it remained (10. change) _________________ workers
who were denied holidays could claim compensation from the government.
A Great Staycation
Holidays at home are usually a last (0. COURSE) ___________________ when all other options have been ruled out
for one reason or another, but, in these tough times when money is perhaps tighter than ever before, the grim (1.
REAL) _________________ that the stay-at-home vacation may be the only realistic (2. ALTER)
____________________ is one that more and more of us are faced with.
However, this does not have to mean a (3. MISERY) ___________________ time in the same old (4. ROUND)
___________________ you are in for the other 355-odd days of the year. For those willing to think outside the box a
little, there are, in fact, a (5. MULTIPLE) __________________ of possibilities that should be explored.
Ever thought about a house swap, for example? The house swap is the ultimate holiday (6. RECEDE)
_______________________ buster. And there are now websites on which (7. MIND) _________________ individuals,
couples and families looking to get a flavour of the life lived in someone else‘s home can hook up and start house
swapping.
Okay, so it's not the two weeks in Gran Canaria you might have hoped for, but staying in someone else's (8. RESIDE)
___________________ for a few days at least, whether it be ten, fifty or one hundred miles away, sure beats slouching
around at home on your own sofa.
The Canaries: Don’t let their reputation fool you
We often have a (0 TEND) _________________ to buy into what everyone else thinks or the (1. STREAM)
_________________ image of things without ever directly experiencing them or finding out for ourselves. Indeed, my
original (2. PERCEIVE) ____________________ of the archipelago of the Canary Islands is a perfect case in point.
The media's (3. PORTRAY) ___________________ of the islands as solely the domain of the party faithful is, as I
found out on a recent visit there, plainly (4. ACCURATE) ____________________. Indeed, it is only foreigners who
have this horribly (5. GUIDE) _____________________ perception and most locals consider themselves especially
fortunate to reside in their South Atlantic paradise.
And now that I have spent some proper time there, my opinion of the archipelago has definitely shifted (6.
APPRECIATE) _________________________ such that it is now more or less in line with the locally held view. Take,
for example, the notoriously (7. ROW) _____________ island of Gran Canaria. While there are (8. DOUBT)
___________________some party hotspots along the coast, move (9. LAND) ______________ but a few kilometres
and you are rewarded with a virtually (10. TOUCH) ___________________ paradise. And that is before an exploration
of some of the archipelago‘s other gems such as La Isla Bonita (La Palma), has even commenced. Indeed, the islands
are (11. COLLECT) _______________________ and without exception a nature lover's heaven. V. Choose A, B, C or
D that bests fits each blank in the passage
THOMAS COOKER
Thomas Cook could be 0. ____ to have invented the global tourist industry. He was born in England in 1808 and
became a cabinetmaker. Then he 1. ____ on the idea of using the newly-invented railways for pleasure trips and by
the summer of 1845, he was organizing commercial trips. The first was to Liverpool and featured a 60-page handbook
for the journey, the 2. ____ of the modern holiday brochure.
The Paris Exhibition of 1855 3. ____ him to create his first great tour, taking in France, Belgium and Germany. This
also included a remarkable 4. ____ - Cook‘s first cruise, an extraordinary journey along the Rhine. The expertise he
had gained from this 5. ____ him in good stead when it came to organizing a fantastic journey along the Nile in 1869.
Few civilians had so much as set foot in Egypt, let 6. ____ travelled along this waterway through history and the
remains of a vanished civilization 7. ____ back thousands of years.
Then, in 1872, Cook organized the first conducted world tour and the 8. ____ of travel has not been the same since.
0. A. regarded B. said C. presented D. proposed
1. A. dawned B. struck C. hit D. crossed
2. A. pioneer B. forerunner C. prior D. foretaste
3. A. livened B. initiated C. launched D. inspired
4. A. breakthrough B. leap C. step D. headway
5. A. kept B. took C. stood D. made
6. A. apart B. aside C. alone D. away
7. A. flowing B. going C. running D. passing 8. A. scene B. area C. land D. world
Recent archeological studies of the isolated region have (1) ___ astounding evidence of Mesolithic hunter-gatherers,
Neolithic farmers and even an aristocratic dynasty which populated the area during the late Bronze (2) ___. The few
centuries before the time of Christ saw the area at its most remarkable. Artefacts, relics and the remains of dwellings,
bear (3) ___ to its importance. An extraordinary sequence of buildings (4) ___ in the erection of a gigantic wooden
structure, at least 40 metres in diameter, which was probably used for ceremonial (5) ___ before it was eventually
burnt to the (6) ___ and subsequently covered over with turf to create the huge mound which is still visible today.
1. A. unburied B. uncovered C. unfolded D. unmasked
2. A. Years B. Period C. Era D. Age
3. A. testimony B. evidence C. witness D. proof
4. A. terminated B. culminated C. finalised D. ceased
5. A. aims B. intentions C. purposes D. targets
6. A. surface B. ground C. earth D. field
Franklin Delano Roosevelt loved to travel, but not by air. A gregarious man who (1) ___ the company of other people,
he preferred to go by rail or ship, savouring the (2) ___ and comfort that these familiar means of transport could
provide a President of the United States with. His physical (3) ___, moreover, made flying difficult; the aircraft of the
thirties and early forties were not (4) ___ to accommodate persons in wheelchairs. 'I'm in no hurry,' he once explained.
'The sooner I get where I'm going, the sooner people will be wanting something from me.' So, while Roosevelt (5) ___
in the White House longer than any President, he made only three trips by air during his entire time in office.
1. A. avoided B. relished C. loathed D. recognized
2. A. leisure B. hardships C. rush D. hassle
3. A. obstacle B. capacity C. hindrance D. handicap
4. A. designed B. done C. promoted D. thought
5. A. evacuated B. occupied C. resided D. prolonged
Visiting Antarctica
For those intrepid travellers who wish to explore every (0) ____ of the globe, Antarctica, which is still considered to be
off the beaten (1) ____ is likely to be high on the list of must-visit destinations. This vast white wilderness attracts
around 35,000 visitors per year, but the experience of (2) ____ at the diversity of wildlife and stunning scenery does
not (3) ____ cheap. A typical passenger on a specially adapted ship can expect to fork out at least £4,000, but if price
is no (4) ____ there are far more expensive alternatives.
Travel agents' clients who prefer to (5) ____ into the more remote interior can stay in opulent camps that are (6) ____
at the end of the season. The price tag for such a stay can reach £20,000. No matter what kind of visit is selected, the
Antarctic never fails to (7) ____ on its promise of the holiday of a lifetime on the most (8) ____ populated land mass on
the planet.
0. A. section B. corner C. boundary D. periphery
1. A. lane B. way C. path D. track
2. A. hailing mưa đá B. marvelling C. revelling D. appreciating
3. A. come B. find C. charge D. cost
4. A. reason B. factor C. object D. barrier
5. A. get through B. go by C. take off D. make over
6. A. uprooted B. debunked C. undone D. dismantled
7. A. deliver B. announce C. follow D. succeed
8. A. randomly B. sparsely C. thinly D. finely
APPALACHIA
Steep green wooded hills with alpine meadows (1) ____ to their sides stretched away for as far as the eye could see.
Before me a sinuous road led down to a valley of rolling farms (2) ____ out along a lazy river. It was as perfect a (3)
____ as I had ever seen. I drove through the soft light of dusk, (4) ____ by the beauty. This was the heart of
Appalachia, the most (5) ____ impoverished region of America, and it was just inexpressibly beautiful. It was strange
that the urban professionals of the eastern seaboard cities hadn‘t (6) ____ an area of such arresting beauty, filling the
dales with rusticky weekend cottages, country clubs and fancy restaurants.
1. A. holding B clinging C. seizing D. embracing
2. A. spread B stacked C. stood D. sat
3. A. set B scenery C. setting D. scenario
4. A. digested B absorbed C. dissolved D. immersed
5. A. severely B strictly C. sharply D. harshly
6. A. possessed B encamped C. overtaken D. colonised
VI. Fill in each blank with a suitable word to complete the passage
The art of travel
Journeys are the midwives of thought. (1) __few____ places are more conducive (2) __to____ internal conversations
than a moving plane, ship or train. (3) _there______ is an almost quaint correlation between what is in front of our eyes
and the thoughts that we are able to have in our heads: large thoughts at (4) _times______ requiring large views, new
thoughts, new places. Introspective reflections (5) ___which______ are liable to stall are helped along by the flow of
the landscape. The mind may be reluctant to think properly when thinking is all it is (6) ____supposed_________ to do.
The task can be as paralysing as having to tell a joke or mimic an accent (7) __on____ demand. Thinking improves
when parts of the mind are given other tasks, (8) __being____ charged with listening to music or following a line of
trees.
Of (9) ______ modes of transport, the train is perhaps the best aid to thought: the views have none of the potential
monotony of (10) ________ on ship or plane, they move fast enough for us not to get exasperated but slowly enough
to identify objects. They offer us brief, inspiring glimpses into private domains, (11) __________ us see a woman at the
precise moment when she takes a cup from a shelf in her kitchen, then carrying us on to a patio where a man is
sleeping and then to a park where a child is catching a ball (12) _________ by a figure we cannot see.
Choose ONE WORD from the Reading Passage for each answer.
The positive ways in which some local communities have responded to tourism
People/Location Activity
Swiss Pays d‘Enhaut Revived production of 10……CHEESE……. Operate
Arctic communities 11 …………TOUR………………………. businesses
Acoma and San Ildefonso
Produce and sell 12………
Navajo and Hopi Activity
POTTERY………………………….
Produce and sell 13…
JEWELLRY……………………………….
VIII. You are going to read an extract from a newspaper article about coral reefs. Six paragraphs have been
removed from the extract. Choose from the paragraphs A-G the one which fits each gap. Reef Encounter
Tropical fish look very colourful to our eyes, but is that how they look to each other? Our reporter Penny Gosh met the
man who may have the answer.
If you‘re snorkelling( LẶN VỚI ỐNG THỞ) around a coral reef, you‘ll see the local marine life in all its carnival LỄ HỘI
colours. But the show clearly isn‘t just a tourist attraction. For the fish that live on the reef, it‘s more a matter of life and
death. As with any other creature, the survival of a fish species depends on two things - food supplies and breeding
success.
(1) __D___
Seeing a coral reef in all its glory, you can‘t help feeling that fish have completely failed to solve this dilemma. The
picture, however, only comes into focus when you take the fish‘s-eye view. For fish, according to Justin Marshall from
the Vision, Touch and Hearing Research Centre at the University of Queensland in Brisbane, see things differently.
(2) ___B__
This means that the carnival looks quite different to the marine life itself. To help him discover exactly how different it
looks, Marshall has designed a unique underwater ‗spectrophotometer‘, which analyses the colours of things
objectively in terms of their physical reflection. He is also measuring the light available in different micro-habitats.
(3) ____A_
The general shift towards the blue end of the spectrum in underwater light explains why most nocturnal reef fish, such
as the soldierfish, squirrelfish and big-eyes, are mainly red in colour. According to Marshall, some reef fish might see
red, in which case they could capitalise on the colour blindness of others and use red markings for private
communication. But in most cases, red species are surprisingly inconspicuous. not clearly visible or attracting
attention
(4) _F____
As any snorkeller will know, lots of reef fish display the sort of colour combinations that suggest camouflage NGUỴ
TRANG is the last thing on the fish‘s mind. The bright blues and yellows that are most common, however, are only
conspicuous at a certain range. They fade to grey at a distance, because the colours are so close together that they
merge.
(5) ___G_
Wider colour bands will be visible much farther away, of course, but still the fish‘s-eye view is different from ours. Most
recently, Marshall has discovered that fish may see hardly any contrast between the blue of many species, such as
tropical angelfish, and the colour of the water around a tranquil reef. More surprisingly, says Marshall, a fish with blue
and yellow stripes can be just as well camouflaged, as even this distinct pattern will merge into some backgrounds.
When the fish are all together in a shoal, it‘s hard for a predator to spot where one individual starts and another ends.
It‘s what Marshall calls 'the zebra effect‘. If Marshall is correct, then a fish with bold blue and yellow markings can either
advertise or hide itself by simply adjusting its behaviour.
(6) ___C__
In other words, one set of colours can send out very different signals depending on the setting. To complicate things
further, most reef fish can vary their colours, whilst it is common for species to change colour from night to day or as
they grow older. Colours may even change with a fish‘s mood - whether it‘s fighting or fleeing from predators.
A. Together with information about the visual sensitivity of individual fish species and their behaviour, this
equipment enables him to begin seeing things as fish do. And it is starting to reveal how the showy and the shy can
make use of the same bright colours.
B. This is because our visual system is a primate one, he says. It‘s very good at seeing yellows and reds versus
greens. However, 30 metres below sea level there is no red light. So fish tend to see blues and ultraviolets well - and
to be less sensitive to reds and yellows.
C. The striking bands of colour seem to shout ‗come and get me‘ to a potential mate BẠN TÌNH TIỀM NĂNG
when displayed against a plain background or close up. But put them up against a background of solid contrasting
colours and they work on the same principle as the disruptive camouflage used for concealment of military equipment
D. The trouble is that eating and not being eaten both need stealth cautious and surreptitious action or
movement.. Therefore, it is helpful for a fish to blend into the background. To attract a mate, on the other hand,
requires a certain flamboyance.
E. If this means that fish really can‘t see the difference, then it looks to him as though they have only two types of
receptors for colour. This is a controversial claim, as others have argued that fish have four types of colour receptor.
F. During the day, such fish RED SPECIES hide in reef crevices. Once there, they may look obvious to human
eyes, but to other fish, they blend into the dark background.
G Even in fish which sport fine stripes, such as parrotfish and wrasse, the different shades are distinct for only one
metre and certainly no more than five. Beyond this, they too blend into the general sea colour around the reef.
IX. You are going to read a magazine article about white-water rafting. Seven paragraphs have been removed
from the extract. Choose from the paragraphs A-H the one which fits each gap. There is one extra paragraph
which you do not need to use.
A Wet and Wonderful Ride
Cameron Wilson is swept away by the thrill of Tasmania's formidable Franklin River
Tasmania‘s Franklin River is a renowned rafting destination, both for the beauty and remoteness of the country through
which it flows and for the challenge it presents the rafter, I‘d been told by one of the guides on my trip that ‗portage‘ is
an indispensable word in the river rafter‘s lexicon. It derives from the French where it means ‗physically carrying boats
between two navigable stretches of a river‘.
(1) ____B__
Such is the challenge of expedition rafting and the truth is, I was loving every minute of it. I glanced over at Brendan, at
twenty-one the younger of our two river guides, and his grin confirmed that he too was having a ball, despite appearing
in imminent danger of being swept off his feet and into the torrent. ‗Mate,‘ he yelled over the roar of the rapids, ‗like I
keep telling them... this is not a holiday!‘ (2) ___G___
A measure of respect, therefore, seemed in order, as I psyched myself up for rafting through the heart of the
wilderness that had been so hard fought for. I was one of a group of ten - eight clients plus two guides - mustered over
an early breakfast in Collingwood Bridge, two and a haLf hours north-west of the Tasmanian capital, Hobart.
(3) _E_____
A light drizzle was beginning to close in as we donned helmets and life-jackets, and pushed off into the gentle currents
of a calm tributary. It was plain sailing so far, but I knew these tranquil waters would carry us on down to the raging
Franklin. The afternoon was spent becoming acquainted with our raft buddies, or with pressing Shaun and Brendan for
stories about Franklin expeditions from days gone by.
(4) ___D___
Thanks to the light but steady rain, however, the river level turned out to be high enough for us to glide over small
rocks, and portage comfortably around the bigger ones, on the way to our first campsite. Conditions there turned out to
be typical of those for the entire trip; the ravine drops steeply to the river and there is not much level ground, so rock
overhangs make handy shelters.
(5) ___H___
The summit is more than half a vertical mile above the Franklin. It‘s the perfect spot from which to take in the unspoilt
beauty of the country we‘d been travelling through, its mountains, forests, high-country lakes and tarns.
(6) __F____
Ironically enough, it was not until we struck one of the less celebrated stretches of white water that our only real rafting
drama occurred. Shaun and his crew had wrapped their raft around a boulder and there it stayed for twenty minutes,
held in place by the fast-flowing white water.
(7) ____A__
As the river widened, such white-knuckle experiences became fewer and further between, and as we eased into a
leisurely paddling rhythm, twice I caught sight of platypus crossing the river. The silences grew longer and more
comfortable, and as we slipped along under a blue sky the quiet was broken now and then by Shaun enquiring: ‗How‘s
the serenity?‘ On each occasion it was well above par.
A. Having hung gamely on for a minute or two, Simon, a tax auditor from Brisbane, was finally dragged away for a
bumpy solo ride to the bottom of the cascades. He came up bruised but smiling. I think it summed up how we were all
feeling about the trip at that point.
B. I had reason to reflect upon this information as I scrambled about on a slippery rock, trying to carry a heavy
rubber raft between two boulders. The gap was too narrow and I was under constant assault from thousands of litres of
white water. However expressed, this was a skill you couldn‘t do without if you were going to raft down the Franklin.
C. It just went to prove how right our guide had been. A Franklin expedition is not a joy ride. It is, however, an
opportunity to experience life on a river that, thanks to those who campaigned to save it, survives as one of the world‘s
great wilderness journeys.
D. Some of the stretches we‘d be doing could be rafted straight through apparently, with the boulders under two
metres of water. At other times the river gets so low we‘d have to do a high portage - unload the gear, deflate and carry
the lot through the forest. But you never knew because the river presents a new challenge each and every time.
E. The moment arrived to pack our gear and supplies into barrels and ‗dry bags‘ and lash these to aluminum
frames, which were then secured in the two rafts. Our trip leader, Shaun, briefed us on how to handle a difficult portage
or riding a rugged set of rapids, and talked us through ways of getting back into a raft from which you‘ve just tumbled.
F. The next few days saw both raft crews functioning superbly as we traversed the next section of river,
responding as one to commands, as we bounced off logs and boulders through rapids. These were evocatively
referred to by names such as The Cauldron‘, ‗Nasty Notch‘ and ‗Thunderush‘.
G. There was no doubting the truth of this assertion. I‘d chosen this trip for a number of reasons, not least the fact
that the Franklin is famous for the events of 1983. That‘s when thousands of people took to the streets or chained
themselves to bulldozers to save it from being dammed and flooded, in what remains one of the largest environmental
campaigns in Australia‘s history.
H. Roused by Brendan, we‘d be coaxed from our cocoons each day with the aroma of fresh coffee. On the day of
our third such awakening, the sky had cleared beautifully, which meant fleece jackets and waterproofs could give way
to dark glasses and sunscreen. The conditions were ideal for the long day‘s hike to Frenchman‘s Cap.
X. You are going to read an article about travel and people’s perceptions and attitudes towards it. Choose from
the sections (A-E). The sections may be chosen more than once.
Which person expresses each of these opinions about travel?
1. Travel undertaken through necessity is never pleasurable. A
2. Staying with friends is preferable to hotel accommodation. A
3. To travel every week Extensive travel takes its toll on the body. A
4. Holidays are pointless if you can't recharge your batteries. C
5. Travel is a truly educational exploit. B
6. The logistics of travel are rarely enjoyable. D
7. Travel makes us appreciate our lot. D
8. It must provide respite(a short period of rest or relief from something difficult or unpleasant) from the daily grind.
C
9. It is a means to encounter unusual minority groups. B
10. Not showing an interest in other cultures is frowned upon. Không bằng lòng, không đồng ý C
A. Samuel
It's a common misconception that those of us who have jobs which involve clocking up to collect or achieve a large
number of similar things air miles are the lucky ones. There is nothing worse than spending countless nights in a
string of faceless (of a building or place) characterless and dull. hotels, because no matter what the standard is, they
are still totally devoid of LACK OF that essential element of homeliness which is present in your own environment or
even when being put up by friends. The night-time accommodation is only one of the aspects of imposed travel that I
abhor( Regard with disgust and hatred) I always travel Business or First, the intention being that I lose no
unnecessary time catching up on sleep and the dramatic shifts from day to night have minimal impact on my sleep
patterns. But no level of comfort can compensate for regular sleep! There is no way round the fact that if on a weekly
basis you change time zone four times, - and we‘re not talking just a couple of hours' time difference - you are going to
feel and see the side effects. Bloating, bad skin, hormonal imbalances, not to mention fatigue. Added to that, the
disagreeable reality that office work left behind has to be dealt with on my return. No, when my holiday comes round,
the prospect of an exotic destination holds zero appeal. I'd rather cycle round the park.
B. Phoebe
I'm definitely a traveller, not a tourist. My ultimate aim when seeking new travel experiences is to expand my
understanding of different cultures. To that end, hotels are out for me. I don't care much for them anyway and on the
kind of budgets that I move around on, they are not really accessible. I tend to find accommodation with local families;
that way I get a better understanding of the real people, their habits, customs and the accepted forms of behaviour for
me and them. It also allows exposure to language in a different way. I might hear unrestricted slang used in a real
context. You'd never find that in a language learning book. Language and culture are my passion and the more I travel,
the more I see connections. It's true we are all somehow connected. I would never have realised half of these things
from reading books. I've worked with small indigenous communities on four continents and in ten different countries.
Every single experience has been unique, precious and taught me something new about myself. It's a cliche, but travel
really does broaden the mind.
C. Myriam
Destination is of tittle importance, what matters to me is the setting when I reach it. Coastal, hot, clean, luxurious, those
are the boxes that must be ticked. Aside from that, it really is irrelevant. My requirements are a holiday involving
relaxation, comfort and security. I go away up to three, times a year but always on all-inclusive deals which offer good
value for money. The prospect of leaving the resort or complex holds no appeal for me. Do I sound ignorant,
uncultured, chauvinistic even? Not at all, I'm a working mum! My everyday life is a hellfire of fatigue and a relentless
treadmill of activities. When I get my time off, all I want to do is put my feet up and enjoy the cocktails, no visiting,
cooking, cleaning, worrying. The kids love the kids' clubs and I love the sun. When I come to the end of my holidays, I
feel rested and ready to go again. I have friends who holiday independently with their offspring, only to come back and
need a week's recovery period. What's the point of that? Holidays are for unwinding. Try out my tried-and-tested
formula before you criticise.
D. Marvin
Honesty seems to have come with age. Were I absolutely truthful with myself, then I would admit that any holiday or
trip is always greatly improved by hindsight. When I look back at photos or read my travel diary or discuss experiences
with old travelling companions, I realise that the memories are better than the actual reality. Travelling is tiresome.
Flying is exhausting. Constantly making whimsical decisions on what to visit, where to eat, how to choose is irritating
because you feel a constant pressure: Is this the right thing to do? Are we missing something? Are we being swindled
or taken for a ride? All these insecurities of the traveller are swept away when we think back, but when we're living
them, we ask ourselves why we took steps to immerse ourselves in an alien culture, with an alien language and
peculiar customs. Perhaps it's because we want to force ourselves to battle with new experiences and manage, or
maybe it simply serves as a point of reference from which we can safely conclude that home is best and we are truly
lucky. Travel is an essential part of life, if only to see what we are not missing.
XI. You are going to read an article about an annual flower show. Choose from the sections (A-E). The sections
may be chosen more than once.
In which section are the following mentioned?
1. garden features whose popularity has not diminished D
2. an activity that did not immediately capture the public's imagination C
3. the apparent absence of new experiences for visitors B
4. an eagerness to proceed which paid off C
5. an aim to spur on the ordinary gardener SPUR ON To urge, encourage, or goad someone onward in some task
or activity D
6. the timing of an event to coincide with a busy spell for leisure-time horticulturalists A
7. a period when cost cutting did not lead to a reduction in quality D
8. a concern that proved to be unfounded B
9. times at which the show is not open to the general public C
10. lively floral compositions designed by top horticulturalists A