Pre-A2 PS2 R&UofE
Pre-A2 PS2 R&UofE
Pre-A2 PS2 R&UofE
Pre-Advanced 2
Reading & Use of English Practice Test
Semester 2
Timing: 75 minutes
You may write on the question paper, but all answers must be transferred
to the answer sheet in the time given.
NAME: ________________________________________________
TEACHER: _____________________________________________
80
DAY: M/W T/T FRI SAT TIME: ____________
READING & USE OF ENGLISH
Part 1
For questions 1-8, read the text below and decide which answer (A, B, C or D) best fits each gap.
There is an example at the beginning (0).
Mark your answers on the separate answer sheet.
Example:
0 A risen B increased C lifted D enlarged
A B C D
0
Scientists now fear that global warming may be (0) ........ by what they call the ‘urban heat island
effect’. This refers to considerable rises in temperature in big cities, when (1) ........ to surrounding
rural areas, that affect local climate patterns in (2) ........ of rainfall and wind. Basically when plants
and trees are cut down and concrete is put in their (3) ........ , the natural state is already altered.
Then the way the concrete itself absorbs, (4).......... and releases heat further alters the natural
balance. Then waste heat from traffic and buildings, together with ozone pollution, (5) ........ still
further to the problem.
Scientists claim it is important to (6)......... action to counter this effect in cities – by planting as
much vegetation as possible. In addition, they are (7) ........ city developers to use a more
expensive concrete for pavements that absorbs rainwater, thus cooling them down. They also
advise that rooftops and pavements should be made of light-coloured materials, as dark objects
(8) ........ energy into heat whereas white objects reflect light.
6 A take B make C be D do
Example: 0 O F
For the first 24 years (0) ........ my life, I strongly disliked running. At school, I’d been completely
put (9) ........ running after being made to do cross country running in shorts in the middle of winter.
But when I started my first job I found (10) ........ socialising with a different set of people, who
persuaded me to come and (11) ........ a go at training in a gym.
(12) ........ thing led to another, and I began to (13) ........ my fitness seriously. I agreed to try a ten-
kilometre race my friends had entered. I had three months in (14) ........ to train. My very first
training runs were (15) ........ much of a success, so I combined gentle running and walking by
myself, until my legs got more used to the activity.
My cautious approach seemed to be working. By the time I joined my friends for some practice
runs, I was pleasantly surprised to find I could keep (16) ........ with them.
Example: 0 F O U N D E R
Florence Nightingale
Born into a rich English family which did not consider nursing to be
a (20) ........ profession for her, she surprised her parents when she SUIT
announced her (21) ........ to become a nurse. But she rose rapidly INTEND
within the profession and was soon in charge of nursing at a London
hospital. She was (22) ........ to go and lead a team to nurse British CHOICE
soldiers wounded in the Crimean War.
She arrived to find a serious (23) ........ of nurses, badly informed SHORT
about basic hygiene and nutrition, and she worked tirelessly to
improve this situation. The soldiers adored her for her caring
attitude. On her return the grateful British public thanked her for what
she had done in many (24) ........ letters, articles and poems. EMOTION
Example:
0 The boat tour was full, so we had to wait an hour for the next one.
PLACES
There ........................................ left on the boat tour, so we had to wait an hour for the next one.
The gap can be filled with the words ‘were no places’, so you write:
Write only the missing words IN CAPITAL LETTERS on the separate answer sheet.
25 My last visit to Brazil was for my sister’s marriage twelve years ago.
GOT
I haven’t been to Brazil ........................................ twelve years ago.
26 ‘Are you feeling well enough now for a little walk, Joe?’ asked his mother.
RECOVERED
Joe’s mother asked him ........................................ enough for a little walk.
27 Mr Garside had only ever let two neighbours go inside his house.
ALLOWED
Only two neighbours had ........................................ go inside Mr Garside’s house.
29 The tour leader told everyone about the danger of getting too close to the edge of the waterfall.
WARNED
The tour leader ........................................ too close to the edge of the waterfall.
34 The writer implies that students who travel around the world on gap years
A. should stay at university if they want to be considered clever.
B. are wrong to assume that employers will be impressed.
C. would be better off earning some money at home.
D. usually end up in lower paid jobs.
36 In the final paragraph, what part of travel does the writer enjoy personally?
A. The feeling of living somewhere different for a long time.
B. The thought that it makes them a nicer person.
C. The opportunity to be alone and undisturbed.
D. The sense of being as far from home as possible.
Michael being unsure which programme his music will be used for? 43
the factors which affect how long Michael needs to compose some music? 52
A C
Your ears slowly fill with sound, first with It's an odd way to encounter your own work
some foreboding cello, then an eerie female and certainly it’s not the music career he had
vocal and the occasional bang of a drum. The envisaged. At university, Reed studied
sounds gain in intensity before suddenly musical composition and afterwards had his
breaking into the epic sweep of a full heart set on becoming a drummer. He ended
orchestra. Eyes closed, it sounds like the up playing in sessions at the prestigious
soundtrack for a nightmarish futuristic film Abbey Road recording studios. But the reality
landscape, but this is a simple house in of life as a professional drummer was rather
Deven, England. Michael Reed welcomes tedious, with endless car journeys all over
me and shows me to his self-built studio in Britain, transporting his drums around. But
the basement. There the composer of music then some music industry friends introduced
for film, commercials and television has a Reed to composition work. His first
giant sound desk, monitor speakers, piles of successful pitch for a television commercial
dusty synthesisers, and a full drum kit. Reed earned him $3,000 and provided a valuable
has produced hundreds of pieces of music in lesson: it was better paid and being in charge
this room, layering a mix of computer of the whole process was far more fulfilling.
samples and live instrumentation. A piece, he He goes back through his millions of files and
says, ‘could take anything from 15 minutes to digs out samples of his work, from classical
five days, depending on everything from the pieces recorded with a full live orchestra
complexity of instrumentation to how tired through pop, drum and bass to specific work
you are. It’s really difficult to say, ‘Right, on he has produced for films.
this day I’m going to write this bit of music.’
But when it comes down to it, you have to.’ D
Yet from a business point of view, working in
B the music industry is like sailing on a rocky
The majority of Reed’s output is library music, sea. Reed risks producing work that he never
pieces written to a brief but with no specific gets paid for. While his four-monthly earnings
purpose, to be picked up later by shows and statement will have hundreds of individual
film trailers that need a soundtrack. It’s entries, the total for each individual track
usually not until he receives his four-monthly could be anything from thousands of pounds
statement of earnings that he sees where his to pennies. ‘I’ve been doing it 15 years now
work has ended up. In the last period, that and there doesn’t always seem to be a
meant a soap opera, a cookery shoe and a correlation between what you’re most proud
documentary about dogs. ‘I once went on of and what makes you the most money.’
holiday to Lake Geneva,’ he says. ‘I turned Still, Reed is happy about the unexpected
on the TV and saw an advert for Visit Turkey direction his music has taken him in. ‘You
and my music was in the backgrounds. have to remember that you can do something
Another time I was in my old house and heard cool with each piece and experiment with
some music I recognised coming through the new sounds Then you suddenly find yourself
wall. I liked it. Then I realised I’d written it!' really enjoying what you’re writing. … I’m
really lucky.’
Centre
Cultura Inglesa Curitiba
Name
Examination Class
Cambridge B2 First
Title Day / Time
Candidate Assessment
Signature Date