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TEST 2

PART 1: LISTENING (50 points)

Section 1: Questions 1 – 7

Complete the form below, using NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS AND/OR A
NUMBER for each answer.

Travel Safe
INSURANCE PLC

Department:   Motor Insurance

Client details:
Name:   Elisabeth   1 .......Ricard.............
Date of birth:   8.10.1975
Address:     2 .....60 Forest road............... (street)
     Callington (town)
Policy number:     3 ........CZ8809............

Accident details:
Date:     4 .......12 th September.............
Time: Approx.     5 .......8.30.............
Supporting evidence:     6 ........police report............
Medical problems (if any):     7 .........minor........... injuries

Your answer

1. ........................................................... 5. ...........................................................
2. ........................................................... 6. ...........................................................

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3. ........................................................... 7. ...........................................................
4. ...........................................................

Section 2: Questions 8 – 15

You will hear a radio report about a new type of air transport. For questions 8 - 15,
complete the sentences. Write NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS AND/OR A
NUMBER.

8. It will take 37 hours for the new form of transport to travel from London
to ......New York..............

9. Unlike crowded jets, the Aircruise will allow passengers to travel in .......comfort
and style .............

10. The Aircruise can travel at low altitudes if there is something .......interesting to
see.............

11. Hydrogen fuels the airship and also provides .......power and water............. for the
people on board.

12. Scientists are keen to develop transport options which are both .................... and
environmentally friendly.

13. The Aircruise will carry a total of ........100............ passengers.

14. Compared to airports, the Aircruise has the potential to land closer to .......urban
centres.............

15. The concept is getting a lot of attention from a Korean company which
makes ..........eletrical goods..........

Your answer
8. ........................................................... 12. ...........................................................

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9. ........................................................... 13. ...........................................................
10. .......................................................... 14. ...........................................................
11. .......................................................... 15. ...........................................................

Section 3: Questions 16 – 20

Two people who live in the same house have a “chat” about some problems. Listen
to the conversation between Sasha and Jim, then decide whether the statements are
TRUE or FALSE.

True False
16. Sasha is currently unemployed. ……… ……...
17. Jim understands now why Sasha had problems in her ……… ……...
previous apartment.
18. Sasha didn't know that Jim used the lights in the apartment as ……… ……...
an anti-crime measure.
19. Someone who lives close to Jim and Sasha has complained ……… ……...
about the type of music she listens to.
20. Sasha will be working in the kitchen tonight. ……… ……...

Your answer
16. .....F......... 17 ......T........ 18 ......F........ 19 .....F......... 20 .......T.......

Section 4: Questions 21- 25

You will hear a radio interview with a ghost hunter called Carlene Belfort. For
questions 21 - 25, choose the best answer.

21. How did Carlene become a ghost hunter?

A. She wanted to contact her dead grandmother.

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B. She grew up in a haunted house.

C. Her parents encouraged her.

22. What, according to Carlene, do ghost hunters need most?

A. a special gift B. equipment C. an adventurous mind

23. How does Carlene detect when ghosts are present?

A. She feels cold.

B. She gets evidence from her equipment.

C. She feels them touching her hair.

24. When is Carlene most afraid?

A. when her equipment breaks

B. when things move on their own

C. when bad spirits are nearby

25. What does Carlene feel about her business?

A. She realises she is taking advantage of customers.

B. She feels she is providing a service.

C. She wants to expand and make more money.

Your answer
21 .............. 22 .............. 23 .............. 24 .............. 25 ..............

PART 2: LEXICO-GRAMMAR (50 points)

Section 1: Questions 1 – 20

Choose the word or phrase that best completes each sentence

1. I didn’t see the whole occurrence. I just managed to catch a .................... of it.

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A. glimpse B. look C. sight D. view

2. I suggested .................... to this letter as soon as possible.

A. Mark to reply B. to Mark replying

C. that Mark reply D. replying by Mark

3. You can’t expect to win the competition. Your drawings are ....................

near as professional as the other painters’ ones.

A. never B. nothing C. nowhere D. nobody

4. Raul and I ....................responsibility for the project. That’s why we cooperate so


closely.

A. combine B. divide C. share D. associate

5. You may use the facilities freely. They are all at your ....................

A. disposition B. dispossession C. display D. disposal

6. The more make-up she puts on, ....................

A. she looks less attractive B. less attractive does she look

C. the less attractive she looks D. the less she looks attractive

7. .................... return home so quickly, we’d have seen the rest of the performance.

A. If we didn’t have to B. Not having had to

C. Had we not to D. Hadn’t we had to

8. It’s been announced that the officer will .................... trial for leaking secret data to
the enemy’s intelligence.

A. walk B. sit C. lie D. stand

9. The passengers were asked to put on life belts for the .................... of their safety.

A. risk B. sake C. care D. point

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10. A number of scientists and nature lovers have .................... to performing
experiments on animals.

A. refused B. disagreed C. objected D. protested

11. Let’s send an order. We’re running .................... of our medicines supplies.

A. small B. tiny C. short D. low

12. Rather than .................... I would do it myself.

A. having the job to be done by someone

B. to have done the job by someone

C. have the job done by someone

D. I have to do the job by someone

13. ....................was the best thing that could happen to me.

A. Having awarded me the prize B. Being awarded to the prize

C. Being awarding the prize D. To have been awarded the prize

14. Don’t be afraid to .................... your mind whenever you have something
important to say.

A. express B. speak C. tell D. pronounce

15. The rock band played their greatest hits at their fans’ ....................

A. demand B. request C. enquiry D. order

16. Because we live within easy .................... of the city centre, we don’t have to
travel to school by bus.

A. range B. distance C. access D. reach

17. No matter ...................., Betty wouldn’t listen to him.

A. how hardly did Tom try to explain B. as how hard Tom tried explaining

C. if Tom tried to explain hardly D. how hard Tom tried to explain

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18. Stop pulling .................... over my eyes. Tell me the truth.

A. wool B. cotton C. suede D. threads

19. It was hard to make head or .................... of what the man was talking about.

A. neck B. back C. nose D tail

20. I remember .................... again.

A. your promising never to smoke B. you to promise to never smoke

C. that you promised never smoking D. you promise to not ever smoke.

Your answer
1. .............. 2 .............. 3 .............. 4 .............. 5 ..............
6 .............. 7 .............. 8 .............. 9 .............. 10 ..............
11 .............. 12 .............. 13 .............. 14 .............. 15 ..............
16 .............. 17 .............. 18 .............. 19 .............. 20 ..............

Section 2: Questions 21 – 30

Put the words in brackets in the correct form.

21. Experience, flexibility and involvement are the main ......requirements..............


(REQUIRE) of employers nowadays.

22. Tom stood in defence of the woman who was attacked by a mugger. He was later
praised and awarded for his .....bravery......... (BRAVE).

23. The introduction of the tax relief will certainly be ......beneficial........ (BENEFIT)
to large exporters.

24. Doctors claim that the new virus is ....resistible.......... (RESIST) to any kind of
treatment.

25. “Rising .......employee....... (EMPLY) may lead to more strikes” – said one MP.

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26. I’m sorry sir. You will have to leave the country immediately. Your passport
is ......invalid........ (VALID).

27. They say that breathing pure oxygen can be ......advantageous........


(ADVANTAGE) to your health.

28. My participation in the TV documentary was .....well-intentioned.........


(INTENTION). I had no idea a film was being shot.

29. There were numerous ......accusation........ (ACCUSE) against the man but none of
them was supported by credible evidence.

30. Most students hope to find a good .......seasonable....... (SEASON) job during
summer holiday.

Your answer
21. .......................................................... 22. ...........................................................
23. .......................................................... 24. ...........................................................
25. .......................................................... 26. ...........................................................
27. .......................................................... 28. ...........................................................
29. .......................................................... 30. ..........................................................

Section 3: Questions 31 – 40

Find ten mistakes in this passage and correct them.

Newsflash!

‘We interrupt your usual schedule to bring you an important news. We are receiving 1
informations about a spaceship that has landed outside the White House. The large 2
ship seems to be made of glasses. Reports say that a short time ago aliens came out 3
of the craft, Eye-witnesses described them as short and said their clothes was made 4
of metal and their hairs was bright green. Strangely, one of them appeared to be 5

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wearing a jean. Much people said that they seemed to be friendly. The President of 6
the United Sates is currently holding a meeting with the visitors in the hope that we 7
can exchange knowledges. Police advice are to stay indoors and under no 8
circumstances approach the spaceship. We will be back with another news as soon 9
as we can. And now, back to your usual programme, Gardening for Beginners.’ 10

Your answer
31. .......................................................... 32. ...........................................................
33. .......................................................... 34. ...........................................................
35. .......................................................... 36. ...........................................................
37. .......................................................... 38. ...........................................................
39. .......................................................... 40. ..........................................................

Section 4: Questions 41 – 50

Complete the sentences by filling in the correct particles and prepositions.

41. Pass me the newspaper. I want to see what’s ....on.......... at the cinema tonight.

42. I’m not surprised Sally and Jim broke ....up..........; they kept quarrelling all the
time.

43. John was completely carried ....out.......... by the music and lost track of time.

44. While I was walking down Oxford Street, I came ......across........ a good record
shop.

45. We took advantage .....from......... the fine weather and went for a picnic.

46. This situation calls ......in........ immediate action.

47. Let’s make ......for........ that island and wait for the storm to pass.

48. The butter was left out of the fridge and now it’s gone ..off............

49. I can’t vouch ....out.......... him; I’ve never met him.

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50. All passengers got ready to get off the train as it pulled ....in.......... to the station.

Your answer
41 ………….. 42 ………….. 43 ………….. 44 ………….. 45 …………..
46 ………….. 47 ………….. 48 ………….. 49 ………….. 50 …………..

PART 3: READING (50 points)

Section 1: Questions 1 – 10

Read the text below and decide which word A, B, C or D best fits each space.

Homeopathy

Homeopathy (1) .............. to have gained a lot more respectability in society


than a number of GPs believe it really deserves. (2) .............. there being no evidence
that it is effective, according to a recent UK government report, many prominent
people (3) .............. to support it. In view of this, perhaps the most surprising fact of
all is that homeopathy is offered (4) .............. treatment on the NHS (National Health
Service) in the UK. Like many other alternative forms of medicine, homeopathy has
become so accepted (5) .............. there are few who question its use. People have
become (6) .............. to seeing homeopathy as a treatment for illness and disease.
However, many researchers insist (7) .............. claiming that it is not a valid treatment
because the medicines contain no active ingredients.

The real question is why it is so popular. Many patients swear that was an
effective cure for their disease whilst the report maintains this is simply (9) .............. to
the placebo effect. In other words, just the act of taking the medicine is a good enough
reason for patients to (10) .............. feeling better. In short, while homeopathy many be
useful for helping people get over minor illnesses, it is (11) .............. that anyone with
serious illnesses should seek out conventional treatment.

1. A. feels B. suggests C. seems D. shows

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2. A. Except B. Although C. However D. Despite

3. A. maintain B. keep C. carry D. continue

4. A. as B. from C. on D. to

5. A. until B. that C. enough D. when

6. A. accustomed B. familiar C. acquainted D. fond

7. A. for B. on C. by D. in

8. A. due B. up C. result D. because

9. A. have B. start C. get D. become

10. A. regarded B. referred C. recovered D. recommended

Your answer

1 .............. 2 .............. 3 .............. 4 .............. 5 ..............


6 .............. 7 .............. 8 .............. 9 .............. 10 ..............

Section 2: Questions 11 – 20

Write one word in each gap to complete the text.

Heroes of misfortune

Success is not all it’s cracked up to be, if you ask me. Nowhere is this better
illustrated (11) .............. in the very different stories of the mountaineer George
Mallory and the explorer Ernest Shackleton. Despite failing in what they (12) ..............
set out to do, both are truly awe-inspiring.

On 4 June 1924, George Mallory and his climbing partner, Andrew Irvine, set
out (13) .............. their attempt to reach the summit of Mount Everest. Tragically, the
pair (14) .............. killed in an accident a few days later. Ever since then, mountaineers
have wondered (15) .............. Mallory made it to the summit of Everest before he died.

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(16) .............. he reached the summit, he was the first man to conquer Everest. We
may never know for sure what happened.

Before their ship, Endurance, got stuck in the ice in the Weddell Sea at the
beginning of 1915, Shackleton and his men had (17) .............. planning to carry out a
trans-Antarctic expedition. However, they had to abandon their plans when their trip,
(18) .............. was slowly crushed by the ice, sank eight months later. (19) ..............
made Shackleton a hero is that, under his leadership, every single one of his men was
eventually led to safety. One thing is certain, his extraordinary story of their journey
across stormy frozen seas and snow-covered mountains will never lose (20)
..............fascination.

Your answer
11 .............. 12 .............. 13 .............. 14 .............. 15 ..............
16 .............. 17 .............. 18 .............. 19 .............. 20 ..............

Section 3: Questions 21 – 30

Choose the correct answer to each question by marking the letter A, B, C or D

The work of the railroad pioneers in America became the basis for a great surge
of railroad building halfway through the nineteenth century that linked the nation
together as never before. Railroads eventually became the nation’s number one
transportation system, and remained so until the construction of the interstate highway
system halfway through the twentieth century. They were of crucial importance in
stimulating economic expansion, but their influence reached beyond the economy and
was pervasive in American society at large.

By 1804, English as well as American inventors had experimented with steam


engines for moving land vehicles. In 1920, John Stevens ran a locomotive and cars
around in a circular track on his New Jersey estate, which the public saw as an
amusing toy. And in 1825, after opening a short length of track, the Stockton to

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Darlington Railroad in England became the first line to carry general traffic. American
businesspeople, especially those in the Atlantic coastal region who looked for better
communication with the West, quickly became interested in the English experiment.
The first company in America to begin actual operations was the Baltimore and Ohio,
which opened a thirteen- mile length of track in 1830. It used a team of horses to pull a
train of passenger carriages and freight wagons along the track. Steam locomotive
power didn’t come into regular service until two years later.

However, for the first decade or more, there was not yet a true railroad system.
Even the longest of the lines was relatively short in the 1830’s, and most of them
served simply to connect water routes to each other, not to link one railroad to another.
Even when two lines did connect, the tracks often differed in width, so cars from one
line couldn’t fit onto tracks of the next line. Schedules were unreliable and wrecks
were frequent. Significantly, however, some important developments during the
1830’s and 1840’s included the introduction of heavier iron rails, more flexible and
powerful locomotives, and passenger cars were redesigned to become more stable,
comfortable, and larger. By the end of 1830 only 23 miles of track had been laid in the
country. But by 1936, more than 1,000 miles of track had been laid in eleven States,
and within the decade, almost 3,000 miles had been constructed. By that early age, the
United States had already surpassed Great Britain in railroad construction, and
particularly from the mid-1860’s, the late nineteenth century belonged to the railroads.

21. The word “stimulating” in line 6 is closest in meaning to

A. helping B. changing C. promoting D. influencing

22. The word “their” in line 6 refers to

A. railroad pioneers B. railroads

C. the interstate highway system D. American society

23. Which of the following can be inferred from the passage?

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A. The United States regarded Great Britain as a competitor in developing the
most efficient railroad system

B. Steam locomotive power was first used in 1832

C. American businessmen saw railroads as a threat to established businesses

D. Steam locomotives replaced horses because of the distances across the


country

24. The author concludes that for the first decade or more, there was not yet a true

railroad system because

A. passenger cars were not stable, comfortable or large

B. locomotives were not powerful enough

C. schedules were unreliable and wrecks were frequent

D. lines were relatively short and not usually linked

25. The word “schedules” in line 23 is closest in meaning to:

A. safety procedures B. employees

C. timetables D. railroad tracks

26. Which of the following is NOT true about the 1830’s and 1840’s (line 25)

A. passenger cars became larger B. schedules were reliable

C. locomotives became more powerful D. tracks were heavier

27. The word “stable” in line 26 is closest in meaning to

A. fixed B. supportive C. reliable D. sound

28. By what time had almost 3,000 miles of track been laid?

A. 1830 B. 1836 C. 1840 D. mid-1860s

29. The word “surpassed” in line 30 is closest in meaning to

A. exceeded B. beaten C. overtaken D. equalled

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30. Why does the author include details about Great Britain in the passage?

A. To compare developments in both the United States and Great Britain

B. To illustrate the competitiveness between the two countries

C. To show where Americans got their ideas and technology from

D. To provide a more complete historical context

Your answer
1 .............. 2 .............. 3 .............. 4 .............. 5 ..............
6 .............. 7 .............. 8 .............. 9 .............. 10 ..............

Section 4: Questions 31 – 35

Choose the correct heading for each paragraph from the list of the headings below.
Write the correct number i-v, in boxes 1 – 5 on your answer sheet.

List of headings
i The importance of getting the timing right
ii Young meets old
iii Developments to the disadvantage of tortoise populations
iv Planning a bigger idea
v Tortoises populate the islands
vi Carrying out a carefully prepared operation
vii Looking for a home for the islands’ tortoises
vii The start of the conservation project
i

31. Paragraph A

32. Paragraph B

Example Paragraph C - viii

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33. Paragraph D

34. Paragraph E

Example Paragraph F - vi

35. Paragraph G

Flying Tortoises

An airborne reintroduction programme has helped conservationists take significant


steps to protect the endangered Galapagos tortoise.

A Forests of spiny cacti cover much of the uneven lava plains that separate the
interior of the Galapagos island of Isabela from the Pacific Ocean. With its five
distinct volcanoes, the island resembles a lunar landscape. Only the thick
vegetation at the skirt of the often cloud-covered peak of Sierra Negra offers
respite from the barren terrain below. This inhospitable environment is home to
the giant Galapagos tortoise. Some time after the Galapagos’s birth, around five
million years ago, the islands were colonised by one or more tortoises from
mainland South America. As these ancestral tortoises settled on the individual
islands, the different populations adapted to their unique environments, giving
rise to at least 14 different subspecies. Island life agreed with them. In the
absence of significant predators, they grew to become the largest and longest-
living tortoises on the planet, weighing more than 400 kilograms, occasionally
exceeding 1,8 metres in length and living for more than a century
B Before human arrival, the archipelago's tortoises numbered in the hundreds of
thousands. From the 17th century onwards, pirates took a few on board for food,
but the arrival of whaling ships in the 1790s saw this exploitation grow
exponentially. Relatively immobile and capable of surviving for months without
food or water, the tortoises were taken on board these ships to act as food
supplies during long ocean passages. Sometimes, their bodies were processed into

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high- grade oil. In total, an estimated 200,000 animals were taken from the
archipelago before the 20th century. This historical exploitation was then
exacerbated when settlers came to the islands. They hunted the tortoises and
destroyed their habitat to clear land for agriculture. They also introduced alien
species - ranging from cattle, pigs, goats, rats and dogs to plants and ants - that
either prey on the eggs and young tortoises or damage or destroy their habitat.
C Today, only 11 of the original subspecies survive and of these, several are highly
endangered. In 1989, work began on a tortoise-breeding centre just outside the
town of Puerto Villamil on Isabela, dedicated to protecting the island’s tortoise
populations. The centre’s captive-breeding programme proved to be extremely
successful, and it eventually had to deal with an overpopulation problem.
D The problem was also a pressing one. Captive-bred tortoises can’t be
reintroduced into the wild until they’re at least five years old and weigh at least
4,5 kilograms, at which point their size and weight - and their hardened shells -
are sufficient to protect them from predators. But if people wait too long after that
point, the tortoises eventually become too large to transport.
E For years, repatriation efforts were carried out in small numbers, with the
tortoises carried on the backs of men over weeks of long, treacherous hikes along
narrow trails. But in November 2010, the environmentalist and Galapagos
National Park liaison officer Godfrey Merlin, a visiting private motor yacht
captain and a helicopter pilot gathered around a table in a small cafe in Puerto
Ayora on the island of Santa Cruz to work out more ambitious reintroduction.
The aim was to use a helicopter to move 300 of the breeding centre’s tortoises to
various locations close to Sierra Negra.
F This unprecedented effort was made possible by the owners of the 67-metre yacht
White Cloud, who provided the Galapagos National Park with free use of their
helicopter and its experienced pilot, as well as the logistical support of the yacht,
its captain and crew. Originally an air ambulance, the yacht’s helicopter has a rear
double door and a large internal space that’s well suited for cargo, so a custom

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crate was designed to hold up to 33 tortoises with a total weight of about 150
kilograms. This weight, together with that of the fuel, pilot and four crew,
approached the helicopter’s maximum payload, and there were times when it was
clearly right on the edge of the helicopter’s capabilities. During a period of three
days, a group of volunteers from the breeding centre worked around the clock to
prepare the young tortoises for transport. Meanwhile, park wardens, dropped off
ahead of time in remote locations, cleared landing sites within the thick brush,
cacti and lava rocks.
G Upon their release, the juvenile tortoises quickly spread out over their ancestral
territory, investigating their new surroundings and feeding on the vegetation.
Eventually, one tiny tortoise came across a fully grown giant who had been
lumbering around the island for around a hundred years. The two stood side by
side, a powerful symbol of the regeneration of an ancient species.

Your answer
31 .......v....... 32 ........iii...... 33 .....viii......... 34 ...i........... 35 ...iv...........

Questions 36 - 40

Complete the notes below. Choose ONE WORD ONLY from the passage for each
answer.

The decline of the Galapagos tortoise

• Originally from mainland South America

• Numbers on Galapagos islands increased, due to lack of predators

• 17th century: small numbers taken onto ships used by (36) .................

• 1790s: very large numbers taken onto whaling ships, kept for (37) .................

and also used to produce (38) .................

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• Hunted by (39) ................. on islands

• Habitat destruction: for the establishment of agriculture and by various species not
native to the islands, which also fed on baby tortoises and tortoises’ (40) .................
Your answer
36 37 38 ....high 39 40
......pirates........ ......food........ grade..oil........ ......settlers........ .....eggs.........

PART 4: WRITING (50 points)

Section 1: Questions 1 – 5 (20 points)

Complete the second sentence so that it has a similar meaning to the first sentence,
using the word given

1. She assumed that the tribe wouldn’t understand her. UNDER

 She ..was under the impression. that the tribe wouldn’t understand her.

2. I had such a bad headache after the aromatherapy treatment that I felt sick. SO

 My headache after the aromatherapy treatment was so bad that I felt sick.

3. It’s Paul’s duty to check on patients. RESPONSIBLE

 Paul is responsible for checking on the patients.

4. She described the treatment to us in detail. DETAILED

 She gave us the detailed description of the treatment.

5. We decided not to go to the party on Friday night. DECISION

 We made our decision not to go to the party on Friday night.

Section 2: Questions 6 – 10 (10 points)

Complete the second sentence so that it has a similar meaning to the first sentence,
starting with the word give.

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6. It is thought that the two injured men were repairing overhead cables.

 The two injured men are thought to have been repaired overhead cables.

7. If Pauline hadn’t been interested, the project would have been abandoned.

 But for Pauline’s interest, the project would have been abandoned.

8. You are not to leave the hospital under any circumstances.

 Under no circumstances are you to leave the hospital

9. The minister proposed regular meetings for the committee.

 The minister suggested that the committee should have regular meetings.

10. A true story forms the basis of Mary’s new novel.

 Mary’s new novel is based on a true story.

Section 3: Write a paragraph of 150 words on the following topic (30 points)

What is a very important skill a person should learn in order to be successful in the
world today? Choose one skill and use specific reasons and examples to support
your choice.

The world became more complex, even the people whom have lived in it. So the
human needs to be more smart in dealing with these changes. Successful person means
there are specific skills in his or her characteristic that made from him an effective
person. Some of these skills are knowledge, cooperation, good communication and
others. From my point of view, the first and most important is survival skills.

 First of all, each year in developed countries there are thousands of people who
get lost while going out on hikes or during other recreational activities in jungles,
deserts, and mountainous areas. Fortunately most of these individuals are eventually
rescued, but dozens are never found and die in the wild due to dehydration, starvation,

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exposure, or some other malady related to their inability to cope with what nature
throws at them.

Besides getting lost, other events where knowing survival skills is paramount
includes being caught in natural disasters, experiencing extreme shifts in weather,
accidents causing some form of incapacitation, and many other unforeseen
circumstances. 

Secondly, learning survival skills teaches you much about the environment


around you and greatly increases your knowledge of the plants, animals, and geology
of your surroundings. As you practice various survival tactics, you will learn to
appreciate the usefulness of numerous plant species including, as well as the behaviors
and habits of animal species that inhabit the local area. Additionally, your awareness
of the landscape is greatly enhanced as you begin to pay attention to geological
features telling you where water and other vital materials are likely to be located. Over
time, you will learn to discover where different ecotones and micro-habitats reside that
contain other key natural resources.

Finally, by learning and practicing primitive survival skills, your awareness


and appreciation of the beauty all around you will be greatly enhanced, opening up a
whole new world to you each time you step outside. As a result of these experiences,
your desire to help protect and conserve the earth and all of its amazing habitats will
grow as well.

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