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I. LISTENING SKILL
Part 1
Questions 1-7: There are seven questions in this part. For each question there are three pictures and a short recording. Choose the correct answer A, B, or C
Part 2
Questions 8-13: You will hear a young man called Toby Wood talking on the radio about what it's like to work in the kitchen of a famous chef. For each question, Choose the correct answer A, B, or C
Part 3
Questions 14-19: You will hear part of a radio programme about climbing holidays in North Wales. For each question, Choose the correct answer (A-O)
--- Climbing in North Wales ---
- The Climbing Centre first opened in (14)……………….
- Climbing courses are held from March until (15)…………….
- Accommodation for a maximum of 70 people
The Four-day Course
Costs £280. Includes everything except (16)……………………
Day One
How to use a (17) ……………………………
Day Two
Understanding the weather
Days Three and Four
Two-day trip with one night in a (18) …………………
Evening activities in the Centre
TV or (19) ……………………….
Part 4
Questions 20-25: Look at the six sentences for this part. You will hear a conversation between a girl, Charlotte, and her father about what she's going to study next year.
Decide if each sentence is correct or incorrect. If it is correct, Choose A for YES. If it is not correct, choose B for NO.
II. READING SKILL
Part 1
Questions 1-5: Look at the text in each question. What does it say? Choose the correct letter A, B or C.
Part 2
Questions 6-10: The people below are all visiting the same city in Britain and want to find a suitable hotel. There are descriptions of eight hotels. Decide which hotel would be the most suitable for the following people. For questions 6-10, choose the correct letter A, B, C, D, E, F, G, and H
A. The Salisbury Hotel is a top hotel with a health club, swimming pool, shops and a fully-equipped business centre. Within the hotel are three international restaurants, one with a French chef. The hotel is conveniently located close to the motorway, though airport users should allow plenty of time because traffic is usually heavy.
B. The Cumberland Hotel is well placed for sightseeing on a busy city street, in a district which is full of interesting shops. Rooms are expensive but comfortable and the hotel serves excellent food, typical of the area. A piano player entertains guests every night in the bar.
C. The Rathmore Hotel offers good value accommodation, with wonderful English food in the restaurant. The hotel is well- known for its small orchestra which plays while guests have dinner. It is on the eastern edge of the city but special sightseeing buses are available to take guests into the centre (the trip takes over an hour in traffic).
D. The Russell Hotel is close to the airport, and has quiet, comfortable rooms. However, the journey to the city centre can take time, and prices are above average. Delicious local food is served in the restaurant, and its conference rooms and business facilities are excellent. The hotel is surrounded by woodland, offers a golf course, and there are pleasant walks around the nearby lake.
E. The newly-built Aviemore Hotel is small but in the centre of the city's cinema, restaurant and nightclub district. Rooms are clean, comfortable and reasonably priced, although the food is rather basic. There is an electronic games arcade in the hotel.
F. The Padnal is an older hotel in the heart of the city, with ground-floor rooms opening onto a country-style garden. Prices are reasonable. There is a sports centre and a small cinema and nightclub. A band performs every evening in the hotel restaurant, where excellent French food is served. Airport buses pick up from the hotel.
G. The Westmore Hotel is in beautiful countryside to the east of the city. It is peaceful and inexpensive, although the accommodation is basic. There are opportunities nearby for sailing and diving, and a lot of interesting routes to explore on foot.
H. Although the prices at the Grange Hotel are higher than at many city-centre hotels, it has a lot to offer. It shares a modern complex with nightclubs, cinemas, shops and conference facilities, 20 kilometres west of the centre. Trains run from the nearby railway station to the city centre and the airport, although journeys can take up to an hour.
Part 3
Questions 11-20: Look at the sentences below about tourist flights over the continent of Antarctica. Read the text below to decide if each sentence is correct or incorrect. If it is correct, choose A. If it is not correct, choose B.
ANTARCTICA SIGHTSEEING FLIGHTS WEBSITE
Next flight 31 December!
Welcome to the website. Here is all you need to know before booking a flight.
During the brief Antarctic summer, Antarctica Sightseeing Flights takes tourists in a full- size passenger plane (Bocing 747) from Sydney, Australia, over the continent of Antarctica and back.
Flight dates for next year are not definite yet, but if you make a booking now, your deposit is transferable if we need to change the day.
Questions
These are answers to the most frequently asked questions about Antarctica Sightseeing Flights
How long is the flight?
The average flight is 12 hours. About four hours into the flight, we usually see the first sea ice and icebergs. We spend four hours over Antarctica and the remaining time travelling home. On the way to and from the continent, Antarctica experts who have lived on scientific research stations there give talks on the environment and history, and answer questions. A camera next to the pilot, which is linked to the video system on board, gives you a pilot's eye view throughout, from take-off to landing.
Will I get a seat next to a window?
All passengers are given two boarding passes. At the halfway point of the flight, passengers are asked to move to the seat shown on their second boarding pass. Business and first class passengers will have a window seat for half of the flight and a next-to- window seat for the other half. Economy passengers will have a window seat or the seat next to a window seat for half of the flight and an end of row seat for the other half of the flight. While over Antarctica, we encourage passengers to get up from their seats and move about the plane, allowing everyone to share the sightseeing opportunities. The pilot flies in long figure 8s' over various points of interest to allow these amazing sights to be soen equally well from both sides of the plane.
What happens if the weather is had?
We have 17 different approved flight plans. Our captain looks at the satellite cloud picture on the morning of the flight and selects the direction which promises the clearest views.
Will I see penguins and other wildlife?
As most Antarctic wildlife lives at sea level, over 3,000 metres below the plane, we can't see them in any detail. We do not land on Antarctica, primarily for environmental reasons. To experience Antarctic wildlife, you would need to join a boat tour.
Can I take photographs?
Definitely! All cameras are welcome. We even provide a few fun onboard photo opportunities where you can experience what it is like to wear Antarctic cold weather clothes. Part 4
Questions 21-25: Read the text and questions below. For each question, choose the correct letter A, B, C or D.
---- Breaking the Ice -----
- Michael Sharp visits an outdoor pool -
It's just before 7 a.m. and I'm at an outdoor swimming pool in London, where the temperature of the water is only 11 degrees above freezing! Amazingly, there are already eight people swimming.
I had intended to discover, by taking a swim myself, why anyone would want to swim in such cold water. However, in the end, I decided to ask people instead. Peter Smith has been a swimmer here for three years, coming every morning before work. 'It's wonderful on a cold winter morning,' he says. 'I thought it would make me healthier and I haven't been ill once since I started.'
All the swimmers here say the same thing. They all feel fitter. However, not everyone agrees with them. Some doctors say it helps fight illness, while others say it could be dangerous, especially for your heart.
I asked Peter what they did on the days when the pool was frozen. 'That's easy,' he said. 'There's a place in the middle where the ice is thin and easy to break. You have to avoid the sides where the ice is thicker. I did try to swim there once just to soo what it was liko, but I found that it was impossible to break through the ice.'
I would like to be able to say that I too dived happily into the water and swam a couple of hundred metres. But the truth is, fearing the worst, I walked very carefully into the pool, stood there almost in shock and then got out again after 20 seconds before I became a block of ice!
Part 5
Questions 26-35: Read the text below and choose the correct word for each space. For each question, Choose the correct letter A, B, C or D.
Filming Everest
Film-maker David Breashears had already climbed Mount Everest three times when he (26)…… to make a film, so that audiences could share his (27)……
He set off on this nine-week adventure the following spring, with his photographic equipment and with six climbers from (28)…… the world. (29)…… the conditions were hard and dangerous, with temperatures of -40 °C, the climbers made good (30) …… Then, when they were just one thousand metres from their goal, there was a terrible (31)…… The team didn't give (32)……, however. They hid in a tent on the mountainside until it passed. Thirteen days later they (33) …… the top.
'I was so tired that it was (34)…… to enjoy our success at first,' said David. 'Climbing Everest is difficult enough but filming made it (35)…… harder. I am really proud we did it in the end!'
Questions 36-45: Read the text below and choose the correct word for each space. For each question, Choose the correct letter A, B, C or D.
ZOOS
People began to keep animals in zoos (36)…… 3,000 years ago, when the rulers of China opened an enormous zoo called the Gardens of Intelligence. In many of the early zoos, animals (37)…… taught to perform for the visitors. This no longer (38)…… and it is accepted that the purpose of zoos is for people to see animals behaving naturally.
Today, most cities have a zoo or wildlife park. However, not (39)…… approves of zoos. People who think that zoos are a good idea say they (40)…… us with the opportunity to (41)…… about the natural world and be close to wild animals. Both of (42)…… would not be possible (43)…… zoos. On the other hand, some people disapprove of zoos because they (44)…… it is wrong to put animals in cages, and argue that in zoos which are not (45)…… properly, animals live in dirty conditions and eat unsuitable food.
Part 6
Five sentences have been removed from the text below. There are three extra sentences which you do not need to use. For each question, Choose the correct answer.
--- Identical Twins ---
I look in the mirror and I see my sister. Why? Because we look exactly alike. We have the same face, hair, height and build. The only difference is her eyes. (16)………. She has one green, one blue.
Most people think that twins run in families. In fact, this is untrue. Although there are families who have more twins, this is not due to something 'special' in the family. It is complete chance, or just good luck. (17)…… Only thirty three out of a thousand births are twins. And identical twins are even less. Only three in a thousand!
So what's it like being an identical twin? In other words, to look exactly the same as your brother or sister? Well, it can be great fun but it can be quite challenging, too. My sister and I are very close, to the point that we sometimes think exactly the same thing at the same time! But sometimes we are different, too. (18)…….. However, when we were little we dressed in the same way, which was fun because we got lots of attention, and teachers couldn't tell us apart.
Our main difference is in what we like eating and doing. Gina, my sister, loves sweet things, like cakes or honey. I, on the other hand, eat spicy food and mostly vegetables. Also, we are both sporty, but I'm a swimmer. (19)……. Nobody can explain this fear. She won't even walk near the sea on a beach. She is great at tennis though, and wants to be a tennis coach one day. (20)…….. We are so similar and yet so different.
III. WRITING SKILL
Part 1
Match the beginnings to the endings.
---BEDINNINGS---
1. I am writing with regard to last Thursday's meeting. I would like to apologise for not being able to attend.
2. Hi there! Just a few lines to let you know how I've been getting on.
3. I am writing to express my concern about the extremely poor customer service I received during a recent visit to your store.
4. I'm really sorry to hear things aren't going so well, but I think I can help you.
5. I am writing to express my interest in the position of Personal Assistant to the Director of Public Relations, as advertised on jobhunter.com.
6. I am most grateful for the invitation to your wedding. Sadly, I will be unable to attend due to prior commitments.
7. We're having a barbecue to celebrate Jo's graduation on Saturday, 16th May. It would be great if you could make it.
---ENDINGS---
Part 2
Match the informal phrases (1-10) to their formal equivalents.
1. I can't wait to hear from you.
2. I want to invite you to my school party.
3. I want my money back.
4. Hope I've helped you.
5. I'm really sorry.
6. If you need anything else, just ask.
7. Thanks for everything.
8. Sorry, I can't make it.
9. I'm sorry to tell you. You failed the test.
10. Please sort this out quickly.
Part 1
Questions 1-7: There are seven questions in this part. For each question there are three pictures and a short recording. Choose the correct answer A, B, or C
Part 2
Questions 8-13: You will hear a young man called Toby Wood talking on the radio about what it's like to work in the kitchen of a famous chef. For each question, Choose the correct answer A, B, or C
Part 3
--- Climbing in North Wales ---
- The Climbing Centre first opened in (14)……………….
- Climbing courses are held from March until (15)…………….
- Accommodation for a maximum of 70 people
The Four-day Course
Costs £280. Includes everything except (16)……………………
Day One
How to use a (17) ……………………………
Day Two
Understanding the weather
Days Three and Four
Two-day trip with one night in a (18) …………………
Evening activities in the Centre
TV or (19) ……………………….
Part 4
II. READING SKILL
Part 1
Questions 1-5: Look at the text in each question. What does it say? Choose the correct letter A, B or C.
Part 2
Questions 6-10: The people below are all visiting the same city in Britain and want to find a suitable hotel. There are descriptions of eight hotels. Decide which hotel would be the most suitable for the following people. For questions 6-10, choose the correct letter A, B, C, D, E, F, G, and H
A. The Salisbury Hotel is a top hotel with a health club, swimming pool, shops and a fully-equipped business centre. Within the hotel are three international restaurants, one with a French chef. The hotel is conveniently located close to the motorway, though airport users should allow plenty of time because traffic is usually heavy.
B. The Cumberland Hotel is well placed for sightseeing on a busy city street, in a district which is full of interesting shops. Rooms are expensive but comfortable and the hotel serves excellent food, typical of the area. A piano player entertains guests every night in the bar.
C. The Rathmore Hotel offers good value accommodation, with wonderful English food in the restaurant. The hotel is well- known for its small orchestra which plays while guests have dinner. It is on the eastern edge of the city but special sightseeing buses are available to take guests into the centre (the trip takes over an hour in traffic).
D. The Russell Hotel is close to the airport, and has quiet, comfortable rooms. However, the journey to the city centre can take time, and prices are above average. Delicious local food is served in the restaurant, and its conference rooms and business facilities are excellent. The hotel is surrounded by woodland, offers a golf course, and there are pleasant walks around the nearby lake.
E. The newly-built Aviemore Hotel is small but in the centre of the city's cinema, restaurant and nightclub district. Rooms are clean, comfortable and reasonably priced, although the food is rather basic. There is an electronic games arcade in the hotel.
F. The Padnal is an older hotel in the heart of the city, with ground-floor rooms opening onto a country-style garden. Prices are reasonable. There is a sports centre and a small cinema and nightclub. A band performs every evening in the hotel restaurant, where excellent French food is served. Airport buses pick up from the hotel.
G. The Westmore Hotel is in beautiful countryside to the east of the city. It is peaceful and inexpensive, although the accommodation is basic. There are opportunities nearby for sailing and diving, and a lot of interesting routes to explore on foot.
H. Although the prices at the Grange Hotel are higher than at many city-centre hotels, it has a lot to offer. It shares a modern complex with nightclubs, cinemas, shops and conference facilities, 20 kilometres west of the centre. Trains run from the nearby railway station to the city centre and the airport, although journeys can take up to an hour.
Part 3
Questions 11-20: Look at the sentences below about tourist flights over the continent of Antarctica. Read the text below to decide if each sentence is correct or incorrect. If it is correct, choose A. If it is not correct, choose B.
ANTARCTICA SIGHTSEEING FLIGHTS WEBSITE
Next flight 31 December!
Welcome to the website. Here is all you need to know before booking a flight.
During the brief Antarctic summer, Antarctica Sightseeing Flights takes tourists in a full- size passenger plane (Bocing 747) from Sydney, Australia, over the continent of Antarctica and back.
Flight dates for next year are not definite yet, but if you make a booking now, your deposit is transferable if we need to change the day.
Questions
These are answers to the most frequently asked questions about Antarctica Sightseeing Flights
How long is the flight?
The average flight is 12 hours. About four hours into the flight, we usually see the first sea ice and icebergs. We spend four hours over Antarctica and the remaining time travelling home. On the way to and from the continent, Antarctica experts who have lived on scientific research stations there give talks on the environment and history, and answer questions. A camera next to the pilot, which is linked to the video system on board, gives you a pilot's eye view throughout, from take-off to landing.
Will I get a seat next to a window?
All passengers are given two boarding passes. At the halfway point of the flight, passengers are asked to move to the seat shown on their second boarding pass. Business and first class passengers will have a window seat for half of the flight and a next-to- window seat for the other half. Economy passengers will have a window seat or the seat next to a window seat for half of the flight and an end of row seat for the other half of the flight. While over Antarctica, we encourage passengers to get up from their seats and move about the plane, allowing everyone to share the sightseeing opportunities. The pilot flies in long figure 8s' over various points of interest to allow these amazing sights to be soen equally well from both sides of the plane.
What happens if the weather is had?
We have 17 different approved flight plans. Our captain looks at the satellite cloud picture on the morning of the flight and selects the direction which promises the clearest views.
Will I see penguins and other wildlife?
As most Antarctic wildlife lives at sea level, over 3,000 metres below the plane, we can't see them in any detail. We do not land on Antarctica, primarily for environmental reasons. To experience Antarctic wildlife, you would need to join a boat tour.
Can I take photographs?
Definitely! All cameras are welcome. We even provide a few fun onboard photo opportunities where you can experience what it is like to wear Antarctic cold weather clothes. Part 4
Questions 21-25: Read the text and questions below. For each question, choose the correct letter A, B, C or D.
---- Breaking the Ice -----
- Michael Sharp visits an outdoor pool -
It's just before 7 a.m. and I'm at an outdoor swimming pool in London, where the temperature of the water is only 11 degrees above freezing! Amazingly, there are already eight people swimming.
I had intended to discover, by taking a swim myself, why anyone would want to swim in such cold water. However, in the end, I decided to ask people instead. Peter Smith has been a swimmer here for three years, coming every morning before work. 'It's wonderful on a cold winter morning,' he says. 'I thought it would make me healthier and I haven't been ill once since I started.'
All the swimmers here say the same thing. They all feel fitter. However, not everyone agrees with them. Some doctors say it helps fight illness, while others say it could be dangerous, especially for your heart.
I asked Peter what they did on the days when the pool was frozen. 'That's easy,' he said. 'There's a place in the middle where the ice is thin and easy to break. You have to avoid the sides where the ice is thicker. I did try to swim there once just to soo what it was liko, but I found that it was impossible to break through the ice.'
I would like to be able to say that I too dived happily into the water and swam a couple of hundred metres. But the truth is, fearing the worst, I walked very carefully into the pool, stood there almost in shock and then got out again after 20 seconds before I became a block of ice!
Part 5
Questions 26-35: Read the text below and choose the correct word for each space. For each question, Choose the correct letter A, B, C or D.
Filming Everest
Film-maker David Breashears had already climbed Mount Everest three times when he (26)…… to make a film, so that audiences could share his (27)……
He set off on this nine-week adventure the following spring, with his photographic equipment and with six climbers from (28)…… the world. (29)…… the conditions were hard and dangerous, with temperatures of -40 °C, the climbers made good (30) …… Then, when they were just one thousand metres from their goal, there was a terrible (31)…… The team didn't give (32)……, however. They hid in a tent on the mountainside until it passed. Thirteen days later they (33) …… the top.
'I was so tired that it was (34)…… to enjoy our success at first,' said David. 'Climbing Everest is difficult enough but filming made it (35)…… harder. I am really proud we did it in the end!'
Questions 36-45: Read the text below and choose the correct word for each space. For each question, Choose the correct letter A, B, C or D.
ZOOS
People began to keep animals in zoos (36)…… 3,000 years ago, when the rulers of China opened an enormous zoo called the Gardens of Intelligence. In many of the early zoos, animals (37)…… taught to perform for the visitors. This no longer (38)…… and it is accepted that the purpose of zoos is for people to see animals behaving naturally.
Today, most cities have a zoo or wildlife park. However, not (39)…… approves of zoos. People who think that zoos are a good idea say they (40)…… us with the opportunity to (41)…… about the natural world and be close to wild animals. Both of (42)…… would not be possible (43)…… zoos. On the other hand, some people disapprove of zoos because they (44)…… it is wrong to put animals in cages, and argue that in zoos which are not (45)…… properly, animals live in dirty conditions and eat unsuitable food.
Part 6
Five sentences have been removed from the text below. There are three extra sentences which you do not need to use. For each question, Choose the correct answer.
--- Identical Twins ---
I look in the mirror and I see my sister. Why? Because we look exactly alike. We have the same face, hair, height and build. The only difference is her eyes. (16)………. She has one green, one blue.
Most people think that twins run in families. In fact, this is untrue. Although there are families who have more twins, this is not due to something 'special' in the family. It is complete chance, or just good luck. (17)…… Only thirty three out of a thousand births are twins. And identical twins are even less. Only three in a thousand!
So what's it like being an identical twin? In other words, to look exactly the same as your brother or sister? Well, it can be great fun but it can be quite challenging, too. My sister and I are very close, to the point that we sometimes think exactly the same thing at the same time! But sometimes we are different, too. (18)…….. However, when we were little we dressed in the same way, which was fun because we got lots of attention, and teachers couldn't tell us apart.
Our main difference is in what we like eating and doing. Gina, my sister, loves sweet things, like cakes or honey. I, on the other hand, eat spicy food and mostly vegetables. Also, we are both sporty, but I'm a swimmer. (19)……. Nobody can explain this fear. She won't even walk near the sea on a beach. She is great at tennis though, and wants to be a tennis coach one day. (20)…….. We are so similar and yet so different.
III. WRITING SKILL
Part 1
Match the beginnings to the endings.
---BEDINNINGS---
1. I am writing with regard to last Thursday's meeting. I would like to apologise for not being able to attend.
2. Hi there! Just a few lines to let you know how I've been getting on.
3. I am writing to express my concern about the extremely poor customer service I received during a recent visit to your store.
4. I'm really sorry to hear things aren't going so well, but I think I can help you.
5. I am writing to express my interest in the position of Personal Assistant to the Director of Public Relations, as advertised on jobhunter.com.
6. I am most grateful for the invitation to your wedding. Sadly, I will be unable to attend due to prior commitments.
7. We're having a barbecue to celebrate Jo's graduation on Saturday, 16th May. It would be great if you could make it.
---ENDINGS---
Part 2
Match the informal phrases (1-10) to their formal equivalents.
1. I can't wait to hear from you.
2. I want to invite you to my school party.
3. I want my money back.
4. Hope I've helped you.
5. I'm really sorry.
6. If you need anything else, just ask.
7. Thanks for everything.
8. Sorry, I can't make it.
9. I'm sorry to tell you. You failed the test.
10. Please sort this out quickly.
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