FCE Reading & Use of English Test 6
Official test from Practice Tests Plus, Pearson, 2015
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).
Example
0 A keep out of B PUT UP WITH C miss out on D stand up for
Planes can make it rain
Living next to an airport has always meant having to 0 the noise of planes landing and taking off. Now it seems that 1 residents also have bad weather, according to a 2 published study.
The scientists looked at satellite 3 of clouds above airports, and also studied computer models of the way clouds behave. What they found was that as a plane flies through a very cold cloud, the air behind it expands and then cools 4 rapidly. This sudden drop in temperature, 5 with the hole formed in the cloud where the plane has passed through, can increase the 6 of rain or snow on the ground.
In the case of major airports, with hundreds of flights every day, this can have a significant
7 on weather patterns up to 100 kilometres away. The researchers point out, however, that aircraft passing through clouds are 8 to affect the global climate.
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put up with
Part 2
For questions 9-16, read the text below and think of the word which best fits each gap. Use only one word in each gap. There is an example at the beginning (0).
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Cycling makes financial sense
These days, most people are aware 0 the environmental impact of motor vehicles, and they realise that cars are responsible 9 many of the problems facing their cities. Not 10 people, however, ever stop 11 think about how much money they would save by switching from driving to cycling.
Cars cost a lot to buy, and 12 other major investments such as houses, they quickly lose their value. On 13 of that, there are running costs such as repair bills, tax and insurance, all of 14 seem to go up every year.
Bicycles, by contrast, are far 15 expensive to purchase and maintain, do not require petrol and are easy to park. And if a lot more people took up cycling, the government could spend less of the nation’s resources on roads, which at present their taxes help pay for
16 they drive on them or not.
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of
Part 3
For questions 17-24, read the text below. Use the word given in capitals to form a word that fits in the gap next to it. There is an example at the beginning (0).
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Too many emails
Some years ago, there were 0 (PREDICT) that email would soon be replaced as the most common means of online communication by social 17 (WORK) sites. Since then, however, the number of emails sent has increased 18 , (STEADY) to the point that the volume received on a daily basis has become 19 (STRESS) for many people.
For some users, the situation has become so 20 (BEAR) that they regularly delete all the emails they receive without even bothering to read them, which is rather
21 , (RISK) to say the least. A less extreme measure is to install software that sorts incoming mail into different categories. By doing this, promotions from 22 (COMMERCE) organisations, for instance, go into a separate folder from messages arriving from friends or employers, 23 (ABLE) us to see which emails are more important than others. Not all of us, though, may be so keen to let software make such 24 (DECIDE) for us.​
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predictions
Part 4
For questions 25-30, complete the second sentence so that it has a similar meaning to the first sentence, using the word given. DO NOT CHANGE THE WORD GIVEN. You must use between TWO and FIVE words, including the word given.
25 ‘I’ll take you to the station if you’re ready,’ my brother said.
LONG
My brother said he’d take me to the station ready.
26 My bike needs repairing again.
GET
I’ll have to again.
27 The firm said profits had fallen on account of the recession.
FALL
The firm blamed the recession
28 Sigourney regretted spending so much in the shops.
WISHED
Sigourney less in the shops.
29 People believe that poem was written about these beautiful hills.
HAVE
That poem written about these beautiful hills.
30 Without your help, I wouldn’t have finished the job.
BEEN
I wouldn’t have finished the job if your help.​​
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Part 5
You are going to read an article about studying abroad for a year. For questions 31-36 choose the answer (A, B, C or D) which you think fits best according to the text.
A lot can happen in a year abroad. Like many students before her, studying abroad had a profound affect on Sarah Morrison
As I sat staring out at California’s spectacular Big Sur coastline, I felt fortunate to have a sister who had persuaded me to spend a year of my degree abroad. It seems that there are not enough older siblings explaining just how easy it is to take part in an international exchange.
While most universities offer worldwide exchanges, where students swap places with others from all over the world for a semester or a year during their degree, the number and quality on offer, together with the cost and time spent abroad, vary dramatically.
A deciding factor for me in choosing to study at the University of Edinburgh was the fact it offered more than 230 exchange places at overseas universities in the US, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, India, China, South Korea, Japan, Singapore and South America.
Despite all this choice, I still found that deciding to spend a year abroad was something of a novelty, with most of my friends giving more thought to embracing Edinburgh than packing their bags to leave a city that had only just become their home. Yet, fortified by my sister’s advice and a Californian friend who told me I would love the coast, I applied to spend my third year at the University of California, Berkeley – never guessing that this would affect almost every future decision I would make.
From the start of your exchange, you are aware that the time you have in your new country is limited and not to be wasted. Your experience is shaped by a predetermined start and end, which immediately increases the significance of the time in between.
From the first week I arrived, I started to work at The Daily Californian, Berkeley’s student newspaper. I moved from an international house with more than 600 students from all over the world into a co-operative house where 60 of us shared responsibility for management of the building. I met people from Calcutta, Cairo and Chile, and learnt that holding on to any stereotypes I might have about Americans would be about as useful as assuming that all European people lived on farms.
The grades I earned at Berkeley didn’t actually count towards my degree classification at Edinburgh. However, I studied under a Pulitzer Prize-winning poet, signed up for student-led seminars and took an African American literature class that shaped my dissertation in Edinburgh. Whether I was learning about contemporary poets on a tour of San Francisco or reporting on the President’s speech in San Francisco for the next day’s newspaper, my stay there enabled me to return to Edinburgh with an increased sense of awareness about what I wanted to gain from my English literature degree.
While the expense might seem like an initial barrier to international exchanges, in reality they can actually save a student money. Visas, health insurance and flights to the chosen country will have to be bought, but a student will usually only be charged 25 to 50 per cent of their home university’s annual fees. A student travelling abroad is entitled to a larger student loan, and grants are available at many institutions for students going on an exchange.
Taking part in an exchange may not appeal to all students. You have to research the options independently, apply almost a year before you go away and be aware of the grades required in the first year to qualify for a place on one. Even so, Edinburgh’s international exchange officer, Helen Leitch, says: ‘If I had a pound for every time that students told me it was the best experience of their life, I would be a very wealthy woman indeed.’
Part 6
You are going to read an article in which a television news producer talks about his work. Six sentences have been removed from the article. Choose from the sentences A–G the one which fits each gap (37-42). There is one extra sentence which you do not need to use.
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Working as a TV news producer
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Rob Cole has produced TV news for decades now, working on anything from international celebrities to global conflicts. He shares the benefit of his considerable experience in the industry
Rob’s time behind the cameras has coincided with huge changes in the way news is reported – from a time when everyone bought local newspapers, through the birth of 24-hour rolling news, and now the Internet. But what is the work like on a day-to-day basis?
Rob’s always worked in foreign news, so his focus is obviously on news from around the world. As you can imagine, there’s a lot of that. Rob comes in early, having checked his phone, social media, and listened to as many news programmes as he could. 37______________________. Running the foreign section is like a never-ending contest – constantly trying to get his journalists’ news presented ahead of the TV station’s other sections.
Once you have a story it’s then a matter of making sure that wherever the journalist is, the report comes into the building – through satellite, Internet or other routes – and it is ready to run on air on time. 38______________________. There’s nothing like getting a note from the producer at another network congratulating on a job well done. The low points, on the other hand, are much less pleasant: ‘I’ve had colleagues badly injured.’
So how can you become a news producer? Says Rob: ‘We get loads of applications. 39______________________. Don’t be put off; people in this business admire people who don’t give up easily, for obvious reasons.
You need to be keen to learn and, of course, take a real interest in current affairs. ‘You have to be obsessed with news, constantly following it. Even if you’re a creative producer, doing graphics, you still have to care about what’s going on in the world. Also, some people think about going into the media just because it sounds exciting. That would be a mistake; you have to really want to do the job. Luck’s involved too, of course. 40______________________.
In some ways, Rob’s job should remain fairly constant for the next few years. ‘They will always need someone to make decisions and take responsibility for newsgathering. However, what will change is the way in which news is delivered. When I started in TV, the crew used to consist of a reporter, producer, a camera operator, a sound person, and sometimes even a separate lighting person. 41______________________. Now there’s just the reporter and a multitasking camera operator who also edits and supplies the written material – if you’re lucky!’
‘Before long there will be a crew of just one, shooting all their own material on a smartphone, then editing and voicing that material, before sending it to head office, where it ends up going straight on air. 42______________________. Actually, this has already started to happen. The technology will just get quicker and quicker and smaller and smaller.’
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Part 7
You are going to read a magazine article about adults who have met an old school friend again through social media. For questions 43-52, choose from the people (A-E). The people may be chosen more than once.
Friends again. Five people talk about the school friends they have met up with again thanks to social media websites.
A Nadia Hassan
Although we’ve been living in different countries for a long time, I know I should have made more of an effort to stay in touch with Amina because we always got on well together, even though we’re quite different people. For instance, I’m much more ambitious than her and have no plans to start a family, whereas she already has two children. It’s quite a contrast in lifestyle, and although it’s great that we’re both content with our own lives – and we’ve enjoyed catching up with each other’s news – I don’t really know whether in the future we’ll have enough in common to keep the relationship going.
Ð’ Julia Nowak
The first thing that struck me was that Natalia still looked much the same as she had ten years earlier, unlike some other people in their late twenties – especially those who have had serious personal issues to deal with during that time. She’s also still very keen on sports, which I’m not, but she remains as sociable as she ever was and I suppose we’re quite alike in that respect. In fact, she was one of the first people I thought of when the idea of contacting my old classmates occurred to me, and it’s great you can do that online so easily. Otherwise you could lose touch with them forever.
C Olivia Morgan
Back in our school days I always liked Megan, but she was never keen on studying so I sort of took it for granted that she would end up doing a job that didn’t require qualifications. Now it turns out she went on to do really well academically and for two years was a Philosophy lecturer at a top university. The other mistake I made was being rather cautious about responding when she first got in touch with me online last autumn, when in fact as soon as we saw each other on the screen we started chatting again as if that ten-year gap had never existed. I think we both quickly realised that we wouldn’t ever let anything like that happen again.
D Maite Silva
I was delighted when Carla told me she has such a good job. Somehow I always knew she’d do well, though I must confess that back then she was the last person I would have imagined becoming an economist because she was pretty hopeless at maths. But when she appeared on my laptop screen after all those years I was impressed by how mature she sounded and looked, and in fact she might be having an influence on me. Ever since we met up again. I’ve found myself taking a more serious attitude to my career, with promotion now a real possibility.
E Уan Lin
When I realised my old classmate Ming was trying to contact me I didn’t hesitate for a second in replying. Somehow I’d always known that one way or another we were bound to run into each other at some point, because when we left school we’d both gone off to do the same subject at different universities. What I hadn’t been prepared for, though, was the news that she’d had to interrupt her studies owing to personal problems. I expressed my sympathy, but she assured me she’d recovered and eventually graduated, and that since then she’s been working in advertising. Which of course is exactly what I do, too.
​Which person
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Heading 1
Part 1​
1. examples
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2. deep
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3. such as
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4. rival
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5. reach
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6. details
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7. regarded
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8. causing
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Part 2
​9. where
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10. to
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11. with
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12. out
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13. what
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14. Though/Although/While
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15. get
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16. make/have​
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Part 3
17. satisfaction
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18. successful
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19. discover
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20. solution
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21. improvement
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22. scientists
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23. performance
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24. uncertain
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Part 4
25. speak English as well as
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26. are not supposed to cycle/aren't supposed to cycle
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27. apologised for not letting
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28. were not able to go/were not able to get/weren't able to get/weren't able to go
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29. came as a disappointment
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30. to pay so much
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Part 5
​31. lives up to her stylish reputation
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32. she's cooked something for her guest
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33. she wasn't old enough to appreciate it fully
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34. had always had ambitions to be a singer
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35. falling off a ladder in her bedroom
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36. she has responded to positive feedback from her customers
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Part 6
37. All that hard work certainly paid off and the competition itself brought out the best in Lucy
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38. That's because in order to reach that target, she had to totally rethink her lifestyle
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39. Having access to this space-age training kit was certainly an advantage
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40. That's why I've always regarded it as a thinking girl's sport really
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41. Nobody complained about women taking part in those events when it was introduced
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42. If the sport was more in the public eye, then fewer people would make that mistake
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Part 7
43. C
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44. A
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45. B
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46. D
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47. A
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48. A
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49. C
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50. B
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51. D
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52. C​​