Proficiency FINAL Student

23
NEW MICHIGAN ECPE C2 SUPER FINAL ECPE EXAM PREPARATION

description

ecce

Transcript of Proficiency FINAL Student

Page 1: Proficiency FINAL Student

N E W M I C H I G A N E C P E C 2

S U P E RF I N A L

ECPE EXAM PREPARATION

Page 2: Proficiency FINAL Student

2

All rights reserved; no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means without the prior written permission of the publisher.

NEW MICHIGAN ECPE C2SUPER FINAL

ECPE EXAM PREPARATION

Writing TeamGeorge Andreadis

Peter PappasSarah Yu

Maria Ioannou

ISBN 978-9963-710-33-1

Super Course SystemAegaleo 1

2057 StrovolosNicosia, Cyprus

Page 3: Proficiency FINAL Student

3

AUTHOR'S NOTE .......................................................................... 4

EXAM FACTS ................................................................................. 5

SECTION 1 GCVR

PRACTICE EXAMINATION 1 ........................................................ 8

PRACTICE EXAMINATION 2 ...................................................... 16

PRACTICE EXAMINATION 3 ...................................................... 24

PRACTICE EXAMINATION 4 ...................................................... 32

PRACTICE EXAMINATION 5 ...................................................... 40

PRACTICE EXAMINATION 6 ...................................................... 48

PRACTICE EXAMINATION 7 ...................................................... 56

PRACTICE EXAMINATION 8 ...................................................... 64

PRACTICE EXAMINATION 9 ...................................................... 72

PRACTICE EXAMINATION 10 .................................................... 80

PRACTICE EXAMINATION 11 .................................................... 88

PRACTICE EXAMINATION 12 .................................................... 96

PRACTICE EXAMINATION 13 .................................................. 104

PRACTICE EXAMINATION 14 .................................................. 112

PRACTICE EXAMINATION 15 .................................................. 120

PRACTICE EXAMINATION 16 .................................................. 128

PRACTICE EXAMINATION 17 .................................................. 136

PRACTICE EXAMINATION 18 .................................................. 144

PRACTICE EXAMINATION 19 .................................................. 152

PRACTICE EXAMINATION 20 .................................................. 160

SECTION 2 WRITING

DISCURSIVE ESSAYS ............................................................... 168

OPINION ESSAYS ..................................................................... 173

FOR & AGAINST ESSAYS ......................................................... 177

SUGGESTING SOLUTIONS TO PROBLEM ESSAYS ............. 180

DESCRIPTIVE ESSAYS ............................................................. 183

ESSAY 1: the importance of the past ......................................... 184

ESSAY 2: teenage issues ........................................................... 186

ESSAY 3: the media ................................................................... 188

ESSAY 4: human relations ......................................................... 190

ESSAY 5: employment ............................................................... 192

ESSAY 6: education ................................................................... 194

ESSAY 7: advertising ................................................................. 196

ESSAY 8: planet Earth ................................................................ 198

Recently Encountered Exam Writing Topics .......................... 200

SECTION 3 LISTENING

EVALUATION LISTENING TEST 1 ........................................... 202

EVALUATION LISTENING TEST 2 ........................................... 206

EVALUATION LISTENING TEST 3 ........................................... 210

EVALUATION LISTENING TEST 4 ........................................... 214

EVALUATION LISTENING TEST 5 ........................................... 218

EVALUATION LISTENING TEST 6 ........................................... 222

EVALUATION LISTENING TEST 7 ........................................... 226

EVALUATION LISTENING TEST 8 ........................................... 230

EVALUATION LISTENING TEST 9 ........................................... 234

EVALUATION LISTENING TEST 10 ......................................... 238

PRACTICE LISTENING TEST 1 (B1) .......................................... 242

PRACTICE LISTENING TEST 2 (B2) .......................................... 247

PRACTICE LISTENING TEST 3 (B3) .......................................... 252

PRACTICE LISTENING TEST 4 (B4) .......................................... 257

PRACTICE LISTENING TEST 5 (B5) .......................................... 262

PRACTICE LISTENING TEST 6 (B6) .......................................... 267

PRACTICE LISTENING TEST 7 (B7) .......................................... 272

PRACTICE LISTENING TEST 8 (B8) .......................................... 277

PRACTICE LISTENING TEST 9 (B9) .......................................... 282

PRACTICE LISTENING TEST 10 (B10) ...................................... 287

PRACTICE LISTENING TEST 11 (C1) ........................................ 292

PRACTICE LISTENING TEST 12 (C2) ........................................ 297

PRACTICE LISTENING TEST 13 (C3) ........................................ 302

PRACTICE LISTENING TEST 14 (C4) ........................................ 307

PRACTICE LISTENING TEST 15 (C5) ........................................ 312

PRACTICE LISTENING TEST 16 (C6) ........................................ 317

PRACTICE LISTENING TEST 17 (C7) ........................................ 322

PRACTICE LISTENING TEST 18 (C8) ........................................ 327

PRACTICE LISTENING TEST 19 (C9) ........................................ 332

PRACTICE LISTENING TEST 20 (C10) ...................................... 337

SECTION 4 SPEAKING

SPEAKING TEST FORMAT ....................................................... 343

SPEAKING SCORING RUBRIC ................................................. 344

INTERVIEW PREPARATION ..................................................... 346

USEFUL LANGUAGE ................................................................. 347

ANALYZING THE SPEAKING TEST FORMAT .......................... 348

MODEL SPEAKING TEST .......................................................... 349

SPEAKING TEST 1 .................................................................... 351

SPEAKING TEST 2 .................................................................... 353

SPEAKING TEST 3 .................................................................... 355

SPEAKING TEST 4 .................................................................... 357

SPEAKING TEST 5 .................................................................... 359

SPEAKING TEST 6 .................................................................... 361

SECTION 5 EXTRA GCVR

PRACTICE TEST 1 ..................................................................... 364

PRACTICE TEST 1 (KEY) .......................................................... 372

PRACTICE TEST 2 ..................................................................... 380

PRACTICE TEST 2 (KEY) ........................................................... 388

ECPE FINAL GLOSSARY .......................................................... 396

TABLE OF CONTENTS

PAGE

PAGE

Page 4: Proficiency FINAL Student

4

This publication has been prepared in keeping with the University of Michigan’s requirements for the

Certificate of Proficiency. Its purpose is to offer all candidates a tool with which to consolidate, evaluate

and perfect all the skills required at this level. Emphasis has been placed on the understanding of the

organizational features of written text as well as grammatical and pragmatic knowledge of English,

particularly knowledge about expected vocabulary and grammar in certain contexts.

The authors have taken great care to prepare the most challenging and comprehensive publication

available to date, both in choice of subject and skills required. Through detailed analysis of recent

examinations, the latest developments and trends in all aspects of the examination have been

accounted for. Contemporary topics are provided to keep learners at the forefront of language use

and cultural context, permitting them to be proficient language users.

The publication comprises 5 sections:

Authors’ Note

SECTION 1 20 GCVR Practice Examinations

Includes 20 GCVR Practice Examinations that take account of the latest trends in the ECPE curriculum. Particular focus has been placed on the increased complexity of grammatical items that has recently been observed.

SECTION 2 Writing

Includes 33 pages of essential guidance for the candidate so as to assist him in addressing the topic appropriately. Moreover, this section helps the candidate develop the presented topic in an organized way with the appropriate acknowledgement of topic complexity. Emphasis is also placed on how to communicate ideas clearly with accuracy of form. Example essays are presented throughout the section so as to ensure the candidate is aware of topic development, the use of varied syntactic structures and appropriate vocabulary. Finally, it also includes 20 recently encountered exam writing topics.

SECTION 3 Listening

Includes 10 Evaluation Listening Tests and 20 Practice Listening Tests. The former build up the required listening skills and the latter consolidate and perfect them. All the types of listening items are covered: those based on short conversational exchanges, those based on questions, and those based on extended talks on different topics.

SECTION 4 Speaking

Includes comprehensive preparation for the New Format Speaking Test and 6 Complete Practice Speaking Tests. It provides a detailed analysis of the Speaking Test Format, a complete Model Speaking Test, essential useful expressions for all stages of the exam and valuable guidelines for the teacher.

SECTION 5 Extra 2 GCVR Practice Examinations

Includes an additional 2 GCVR Practice Examinations to be used as mock exams or in the candidate’s concluding preparation for the ECPE.

Page 5: Proficiency FINAL Student

5

Exam FactsThe Certificate of Proficiency constitutes an official certification of knowledge of the English language at an advanced

level. It is awarded by the University of Michigan, one of the leading U.S. universities in the field of linguistic research, with

long-term experience in the establishment and development of a broad range of English language examinations. The

University of Michigan’s Certificate of Proficiency is officially recognized by the Greek state as a language certification

and by the private sector as a certification of knowledge of the English language.

The examination for the University of Michigan’s Certificate of Proficiency has been specially designed for candidates

who have reached a high level of English and have exceptionally well developed abilities in all four language skills. The

content and degree of difficulty of the examination correspond to the language skills and abilities required of a university

level adult. The exam content is set each year by the English Language Institute of the University of Michigan.

Breakdown of Final Examination

Assessment principles of the ECPE:

• Three section bands, High Pass, Pass, and Low Pass, are considered passing section levels. Two section bands,

Borderline Fail and Fail, are considered failing section levels.

• Candidates who pass all four sections of the exam always pass the ECPE.

• Examinees who pass three sections with a Low Pass (or higher) and receive no less than a Borderline Fail in one

section will be awarded an ECPE certificate.

ECPE Final Examination 2 hours 45 minutes – 3 hours

1. Writing.

30 minutes. Candidates choose between two topics for their essay.

2. Listening.

35 - 40 minutes. 50 questions.

3. Grammar, Cloze, Vocabulary and Reading Comprehension.

75 minutes. 120 questions.

4. Speaking.

25-35 minutes. Face to face oral interaction between two candidates

and two examiners.

Page 6: Proficiency FINAL Student
Page 7: Proficiency FINAL Student
Page 8: Proficiency FINAL Student

8

1. Bob Dylan expanded the vocabulary of popular music politics and literary influences into his lyrics. a. by incorporating c. when he incorporated social socially b. incorporating the d. having socially social incorporating

2. Many motorists have embraced these new parking meters, but confusing. a. others say they’re enough c. some say they’re too b. say they’re too much d. say they’re not very

3. Mike has quickly established himself the National Football League’s most valued players. a. to be one of c. as one of b. as d. to be

4. “Between , I think this task is way too difficult to complete. a. me and you c. you and me b. you and I d. I and you 5. Janine’s parents died when she was just a baby, so I family she ever had. a. was all the c. was the whole b. have the whole d. have all the

6. Danielle would still be our best defender an accident. a. if she didn’t have c. if she hadn’t b. had she not had d. hadn’t she had 7. The estranged husband desperately tried to get his message across, without success. a. despite c. however b. even though d. albeit 8. at summer camp will help them tremendously. a. That what the kids learnt c. What the kids learnt b. Learnt the kids that d. That the kids learnt

9. This community diverged from a simple hunting and gathering one a complex pattern of social organization. a. with a demonstration of c. from demonstrating b. to demonstrate d. to one demonstrating

10. We’re running late and I haven’t decided take with me yet. a. what should I c. whether to b. what to d. that to

11. Despite many sophisticated techniques, the simple magnifying glass and gut tools for unmasking fake paintings. a. instinct remains c. instinct remain the best the best b. instinctive remain d. instinctively remains the best the best

12. I had no choice but to the task I had been assigned. a. have Kay to finish c. have Kay finish b. have got Kay finish d. get Kay finish

13. are poised to change the face of the construction industry in the coming years. a. Designing buildings c. Buildings environmentally environmentally designed b. Environmentally d. Designed environmental designed buildings buildings 14. “Was Mary any help with your assignment?” “Actually, me extra reference material was very useful.” a. that she gives c. she was giving b. her giving d. she gave

15. Unfortunately, Christopher failed to win a place in the 1000 meter race because he stamina. a. is lack of c. is lack b. has lack of d. lacks

16. If the firefighters had come earlier, the trapped man . a. should have survived c. might have survived b. would have been survived d. could be survived

17. The endless parade of on television has made today’s young girls obsessed with their bodies. a. celebrities enhancing c. surgically-enhanced surgically celebrities b. surgical celebrities d. enhanced surgically enhanced celebrities

18. Digital technology’s been around for many years, but our firm has been kind up. a. to slow of picking it c. too slowly to pick it b. of slowly in picking d. of slow to pick it

19. that Mr. Jones is planning to run for governor this year. a. Word is it c. Word has it b. Word has d. The words are

20. An inspiring speaker, Reverend Jackson always manages to the best in his congregation. a. bring up c. bring out b. bring over d. bring across

PRACTICE EXAMINATION 1GRAMMAR

Page 9: Proficiency FINAL Student

9

Grammar Score: .........../40

21. Since I’ve spent most of my life in Canada, is what

I’m most comfortable with.

a. French language c. the French

b. these French d. French

22. “Where did you find this old thing?”

“My husband stumbled out the attic.”

a. on it when clearing c. it while he cleared

b. it on while he was d. on it when was he

clearing clearing

23. There’s so much smoke in this room that breathe.

a. hardly can’t I c. hardly I can

b. I can hardly d. I can’t hardly

24. “Didn’t you buy anything at the mall today?”

“No, the dress had been sold.”

a. which I have liked c. that liked to me

b. I liked d. which liked me

25. I’m not surprised that Dave’s not feeling well; he was

eating at the fair this morning.

a. the one ice-cream c. another ice-cream

after the other after another

b. one ice-cream d. after one ice-cream

after another another

26. “This writer’s earlier novels are excellent.”

“That’s no surprise. her most recent one.”

a. So is c. Also is

b. As well d. Is too

27. Why should I throw the milk away? It .

a. isn’t smelling so badly c. isn’t smelling so bad

b. doesn’t smell so bad d. doesn’t smell so badly

28. Philadelphia’s new playmaker has scored over 40 points

his eight games this season.

a. of seven from c. out of seven from

b. from seven of d. in seven of

29. “Did you have a good day at the office today?”

“No. I had to attend a(n) board meeting all

afternoon.”

a. uninteresting c. uninterested

b. disinterested d. disinterest

30. A painting is only a fake if it aims to fool someone into

believing it is the real thing; it’s just a copy.

a. provided c. or

b. otherwise d. unless

31. You didn’t know that it wasn’t until the late 1960s on the surface of the moon, did you? a. that man walked c. did man walk b. man he walked d. that man had walked

32. My father is no good at gardening, so he prefers . a. to have done it c. having done it b. have it done d. to have it done

33. Astronomers have proven that the planets in our solar system were subjected to meteoric bombardment than is the case today. a. a much more intense c. a very intense b. an intensive d. a more intensively

34. I find it difficult working for others because I my own business. a. would always have c. was used to having b. have always had d. have always been having

35. The company spokesman played down the product’s problems, to safety regulations. a. claiming it c. having claimed conform conforming b. and claimed its d. claiming it conforming conforms 36. Homelessness is a condition a person does not have a permanent place of residence. a. in that c. that b. for which d. in which

37. Before you leave, check that you have my e-mail address you can send me some photographs. a. so that c. so as b. in order for d. so as for

38. political ambitions, corporate career and family to care for, Jane has no time for socializing. a. What with her c. There’s her b. It’s not only her d. That’s just her

39. If I’m not mistaken, the man the cigar was one of the robbers. a. smoking c. he is smoking b. that he is smoking d. will smoke

40. Since the early 1980s, the field of cinematography in digital technology. a. have been c. have been deeply immersing deeply immersed b. has been d. has been deeply immersing deeply immersed

Page 10: Proficiency FINAL Student

10

A worsening drought in the Amazon basin has prompted Brazil to (41) on its military to begin distributing supplies and medicine to tens of thousands of people stranded by the dramatic drop in water levels. Low river levels are (42) boats - for many the only (43) of transport - from using the Amazon safely, leaving communities depending on government airlifts for their survival.

Big ships have also been left (44) in the world’s second-largest river and millions of fish are rotting in the sun. The air force has been distributing water-purifying chemicals to (45) the threat of disease from water supplies contaminated by the dead fish.

Witnesses say rivers and lakes have dried up completely, (46) behind miles of sand and mud. Environmental campaign group Greenpeace has blamed deforestation and global warming (47) the drought. It quoted scientists as claiming that the burning of forests has raised temperatures in the Amazon, preventing the (48) of clouds.

Brazilian government meteorologists, (49) , have said the drought is the result of unusually high temperatures in the Atlantic Ocean, (50) have also been linked to devastating hurricanes.

The back of the human eye, called the retina, contains cells

known as photoreceptors. Much human blindness is due to

retina disease or photoreceptor destruction, and once sight

is (51) for either of these two reasons, it cannot be

(52) .

Until recently, experts had thought there were only two

types of photoreceptors - rods and cones. But experiments

on mice, which have had both of these (53) , reveal

that other cells also have (54) form of light response.

Scientists have found how to make eye cells (55) to

light by activating a protein called melanopsin, and have thus

(56) new ways to treat some forms of blindness.

The researchers are now working with engineers to

(57) prosthetic retinas that might help people with sight

disorders see more clearly. In addition, the current research

suggests (58) possible line of therapy. It is possible

that melanopsin genes could be (59) into intact cells in

diseased retinas, turning them into functional photoreceptors.

(60) , making cells in the eye responsive to light is no

cure for blindness and the resulting ‘vision’ may be little more

than black and white light sensitivity.

CLOZE 1

CLOZE 2

41. a. take c. hold b. call d. carry

42. a. removing c. distracting b. protecting d. preventing

43. a. way c. chance b. means d. type

44. a. stranded c. thereby b. alone d. dependent

45. a. disappear c. contradict b. counter d. dispose

46. a. just c. leaving b. changing d. but

47. a. for c. about b. in d. on

48. a. growth c. increase b. possibility d. formation

49. a. however c. even b. who d. hence

50. a. they c. which b. but d. though

51. a. missing c. lost b. declined d. spoiled

52. a. restored c. responsive b. replaced d. reformed

53. a. reduced c. receptors b. destroyed d. decreased

54. a. the c. any b. no d. some

55. a. due c. correspond b. sensitive d. exposed

56. a. formed c. discovered b. proved d. accepted

57. a. offer c. contain b. develop d. discover

58. a. some c. one b. that d. another

59. a. inserted c. included b. contained d. entered

60. a. However c. Therefore b. Indeed d. Besides

This passage is about the Amazon.

This passage is about retina research.

Cloze Score: .........../20

Page 11: Proficiency FINAL Student

11

61. The Dutch was by far the largest group at the medical conference. a. contingency b. dispatch c. contingent d. franchise

62. The president was on both sides by his devoted bodyguards. a. led b. flanked c. followed d. surrounded

63. Jack Spillane is known to be golfer who never misses a game. a. an avaricious b. a virtuous c. a varied d. an avid

64. Our physics teacher us to listen to what she had to say about our test results. a. compelled b. imposed c. expelled d. repelled

65. Due to the lack of space, the campers rolled the blankets tightly to make a bundle. a. solid b. complete c. compact d. stable

66. The murderer was in the alley for quite a while before he attacked his victim. a. lazing b. limping c. lurching d. lurking

67. Three esteemed artists to create the intricate mural in the entrance of the town hall. a. elucidated b. consolidated c. collaborated d. elaborated

68. The accused man celebrated after he was and set free. a. exonerated b. exorcised c. condemned d. commuted

69. The movie had a effect on him - he couldn’t get it off his mind all day. a. partial b. profound c. trivial d. superficial

70. The organizers said they had sold out, but Marcy somehow to get tickets for tonight’s rock concert. a. contrived b. deprived c. drenched d. repented

71. Don’t wear your denim jacket as the dress at that stylish restaurant are fairly formal. a. convulsions b. conversions c. conventions d. convents

72. The smell of freshly baked bread memories of Marie’s childhood home. a. evaded b. evolved c. evoked d. evicted

73. My husband was when I told him I had lost my job and told me not to worry. a. unhappy b. unrepentant c. unruly d. unruffled

74. Kate felt uneasy as there was definitely something about his proposal. a. dubious b. deliberate c. circuitous d. casual

75. Jason’s ambition is to be a

famous basketball player one day.

a. consoling

b. consuming

c. consummate

d. complete

76. Dawn when we broke the

news to her that her father was in

hospital.

a. broke down

b. fell through

c. came apart

d. broke up

77. The trial was so as to allow

the defense attorney to prepare a

better case.

a. adjourned

b. announced

c. attended

d. opened

78. It is customary for a judge to be

in a black robe.

a. regaled

b. attended

c. attired

d. retired

79. I’m afraid that you will have to

consult Dr. Smith - dermatology is

not in my .

a. place

b. knowledge

c. domain

d. kingdom

80. The police detectives caught the

cat burglar while he was

trying to crack the safe.

a. red-handed

b. out of hand

c. open-handed

d. hands down

VOCABULARY

δυσάρεστο ενδεχόμενο αποστολή

τμήμα ομάδας / αντιπροσωπείαπρονομιακό δικαίωμα πώλησης αγαθών σε κάποια περιοχή

καθοδηγώτοποθετώ εκατέρωθεν

(επ)ακολουθώπεριτριγυρίζω

πλεονέκτης, αχόρταγοςενάρετοςποικίλος

ενθουσιώδης, φανατικός

(εξ)αναγκάζω, εξωθώεπιβάλλω

αποβάλλω, διώχνωαπωθώ

στερεός, συμπαγήςολοκληρωμένος, πλήρηςσυμπαγής, συμπτυγμένος

σταθερός, ευσταθής

τεμπελιάζωκουτσαίνωτρεκλίζω

καραδοκώ, παραμονεύω

διευκρινίζω, αποσαφηνίζωεδραιώνω, παγιώνω

συνεργάζομαιαναπτύσσω λεπτομερώς

απαλλάσσωεξορκίζω

αποδοκιμάζω, καταδικάζωπηγαινοέρχομαι με

συγκοινωνιακό μέσο

προκατειλλημένος / τμηματικόςβαθύς, βαθυστόχαστος

ασήμαντοςεπιφανειακός

μηχανεύομαι, καταφέρνωστερώ

μουσκεύω, μουλιάζωμετανιώνω

σύσπαση, σπασμός μετατροπή / προσηλυτισμός

εθιμοτυπία, τύποιγυναικείο μοναστήρι

αποφεύγω, υπεκφεύγωαναπτύσσομαι, εξελίσσομαι

ξυπνώ στη μνήμηκάνω έξωση ενοικιαστή

δυστυχισμένοςαμετανόητος

ανυπάκουος, απείθαρχοςατάραχος, ήρεμος

ύποπτος, αμφίβολοςσκόπιμος, εσκεμμένος

έμμεσος, πλάγιοςανεπίσημος, πρόχειρος

παρηγορητικός

διακαής

ολοκληρωμένος, τέλειος

ολοκληρωμένος, πλήρης

χαλώ, καταρρέω

αποτυγχάνω, ναυαγώ

καταρρέω, διαλύομαι

διαλύω σχέση

αναβάλλω, αναστέλλω

ανακοινώνω

παρεβρίσκομαι, παρακολουθώ

ανοίγω, κάνω εγκαίνια

διασκεδάζω

παρεβρίσκομαι, παρακολουθώ

ενδεδυμένος

στη σύνταξη

έκφ. δεν είναι η θέση μου να

γνώση

τομέας

βασίλειο

στα πράσα, επ’αυτοφώρω

εκτός ελέγχου

ανοιχτοχέρης

με ευκολία

Page 12: Proficiency FINAL Student

12

Vocabulary Score: .........../40

81. The agile mountain goats the

cliff in no time at all.

a. asserted

b. absconded

c. assented

d. ascended

82. The tickets for this Broadway

production were more expensive

than I had .

a. persevered

b. anticipated

c. evaluated

d. premeditated

83. The embarrassed little girl looked

on as her parents boasted

about her intelligence.

a. inconsolably

b. bashfully

c. enviously

d. fruitlessly

84. Although the mediators to

end the trade dispute, no

agreement was reached.

a. ameliorated

b. endeavored

c. amended

d. enticed

85. Cathy’s such a - I don’t know

why we ever invite her to our parties.

a. wild card

b. dark horse

c. wet blanket

d. dead weight

86. The rude old man to the front

of the line, bumping into everyone.

a. purged

b. merged

c. surged

d. barged

87. Borrowing Marie’s notes my

chances of success and I did very

well in my exams.

a. enhanced

b. embellished

c. construed

d. deployed

88. Drinking instant coffee in the morning unfortunately puts me on all day. a. stilts b. plugs c. pit b. edge

89. My young son was by the strange language around him as soon as we crossed the border into Italy. a. muffled b. raffled c. baffled d. shuffled

90. Macy didn’t want to be distressed, so she her eyes from the scene of the accident. a. converted b. reversed c. averted d. reverted

91. Michelle is a(n) worker who always takes great care not to make any mistakes. a. conducive b. honorable c. meticulous d. careless

92. That traditional English pub was pretty and - I really enjoyed visiting it. a. quaint b. run-down c. derisory d. dilapidated

93. Sally hadn’t studied at all and was about taking her forthcoming geography test. a. comprehensive b. incoherent c. apprehensive d. convoluted

94. It will take a lot of in order not to offend Freda at the premier performance tomorrow. a. brain b. tact c. sensibility d. austerity

95. Mrs. Jenson’s plan to open a chain

of cosmetics stores with a partner is

a(n) venture.

a. squalid

b. perilous

c. expunged

d. irate

96. The three brothers are always

arguing about something, but the

bad feelings soon .

a. get over

b. blow off

c. go down

d. blow over

97. My youngest son has always

to become a successful composer.

a. aspired

b. expired

c. conspired

d. inspired

98. The journalist what the

government spokesman had said,

causing a terrible misunderstanding.

a. disapproved

b. distilled

c. distorted

d. distended

99. Unfortunately, the project was a(n)

failure and it will not receive

further state funding.

a. out and out

b. down and out

c. up and up

d. off the beaten track

100. It would be my honor to introduce

you to Mr. Harriet, an old

from my political days.

a. feud

b. grievance

c. adversary

d. notary

ισχυρίζομαι, υποστηρίζω

“το σκάω”, φυγοδικώ

συγκατατίθεμαι

ανέρχομαι, αναρριχώμαι

εμμένω, επιμένω

προσδοκώ, προβλέπω

αποτιμώ, αξιολογώ

προμελετώ, προσχεδιάζω

απαρηγόρητα

ντροπαλά, συνεσταλμένα

ζηλόφθονα

αναποτελεσματικά, άκαρπα

βελτιώνω, καλυτερεύω

πασχίζω, καταβάλλω προσπάθεια

διορθώνω / τροποποιώ

δελεάζω

μπαλαντέρ

κρυφό ταλέντο

που χαλάει το κέφι της παρέας

απόβαρο, βάρος, φορτίο

εξαγνίζω, καθαρίζω

συγχωνεύω, -ομαι

κινούμαι κατά κύματα, "κατακλύζω"

εισβάλλω, ενσκήπτω

ενισχύω, βελτιώνω

ομορφαίνω, διακοσμώ

ερμηνεύω

παρατάσσομαι / εκμεταλλεύομαι

πλήρως

ξυλοπόδαροβύσμα, πρίζα

λάκκος(be on ~) σε έξαψη, με τεντωμένα νεύρα

κουκουλώνω / καταπνίγω (ήχο)βάζω σε λαχνό

προκαλώ σύγχυση/αμηχανίασέρνω τα πόδια μου /

ανακατεύω (τράπουλα)

μετατρέπωαντιστρέφω

αποστρέφω, αποτρέπωεπανέρχομαι, επιστρέφω

πρόσφορος, που βοηθά σε εξέλιξηέντιμος, αξιέπαινος

διεξοδικός, σχολαστικόςαπρόσεκτος, ατημέλητος

γραφικός (για τοπία) φθαρμένος, σε κακή κατάσταση

γελοίος, ασήμαντος φθαρμένος, ρημαγμένος,

ερειπωμένος

αναλυτικός, περιεκτικός ασυνάρτητος, χωρίς συνοχή ανήσυχος, θορυβημένος

ελικοειδής / περίπλοκος

εγκέφαλοςδιακριτικότητα, τακτ

ευαισθησία, αισθαντικότηταηθική αυστηρότητα

ελεεινός, ποταπός

επικίνδυνος

διεγραμμένος, σβησμένος

εξοργισμένος

ξεπερνώ (δύσκολη κατάσταση)

ακυρώνω σχέδια χωρίς προειδοποίηση

μειώνομαι / καταδικάζομαι

καταλαγιάζω

φιλοδοξώ, εποφθαλμιώ

λήγω (για προθεσμία)

συνομωτώ

εμπνέω

αποδοκιμάζω

αποστάζω, διυλίζω

διαστρεβλώνω, παραμορφώνω

διαστέλλω, -ομαι, πρήζω, -ομαι

τελείως, ολότελα

ξοφλημένος, άνεργος κι απένταρος

ανερχόμενος, σε ανοδική πορεία

απόμερος /

καθόλου πολυσύχναστος

βεντέτα

παράπονο, αδικία

αντίπαλος

συμβολαιογράφος

Page 13: Proficiency FINAL Student

13

The world beneath the ocean waves remains a

great frontier whose rewards could be enormous: oil

and mineral wealth to rival Alaska’s North Slope and

California’s Gold Rush streams; scientific discoveries

that could change our view of how the planet and its

life-forms evolved. Natural substances found deep

within the ocean could even yield new medicines and

new classes of industrial chemicals.

Getting there, though, forces explorers to cope

with an environment just as perilous as outer space.

Unaided, humans can’t dive much more than 10 ft.

before increasing pressure starts causing pain in the

inner ear, sinuses and lungs. Frigid subsurface water

rapidly sucks away body heat. And even the most

capacious of lungs can’t hold a breath for more than

two or three minutes.

For these reasons, the modern age of deep-sea

exploration had to wait for two key technological

developments: engineer Otis Barton’s bathysphere -

essentially a deep-diving tethered steel ball - and the

invention of scuba in the 1940s by Jacques Cousteau

and Emile Gagnan. Barton’s bathysphere could

only go straight down and straight back up again,

but a Swiss engineer, Auguste Piccard, solved the

mobility problem with the first true submersible. His

vessel called a bathyscaphe, consisted of a spherical

watertight cabin suspended below a buoyant gasoline-

filled pontoon.

In 1960, Piccard’s Trieste took a U.S. Navy

Lieutenant, Don Walsh, and Piccard’s son, Jacques,

35,800 ft. down beneath the Pacific to the Challenger

Deep in the Mariana Trench. After its success, the

number of submersibles expanded dramatically.

The Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute’s longtime

workhorse, the three-person Alvin, was launched in

1964. The first tethered robots, the so-called remotely

operated vehicles, or ROVs, were developed several

years later. The result was a remarkable period of

underwater discovery that transformed biology,

geology and oceanography. Today scientists view the

deep sea as an area constantly reformed by tectonic

and volcanic activity and filled with exotic life-forms,

many of whose properties have yet to be explored.

READING 1

101. The world of the ocean as described by the writer...

a. must have gold equal to that found in California.

b. could make us form a different view of the planet.

c. has some potentially beneficial substances for

man.

d. could establish new territorial borders.

102. According to the passage, divers today...

a. experience low temperatures because of the cold

water.

b. can’t yet face the dangers of the ocean.

c. may even experience a rise in blood pressure.

d. have breathing problems.

103. How did Picard’s invention improve on that of

Barton?

a. It was completely submersible.

b. It allowed for improved scuba diving.

c. It allowed occupants to move in more than two

directions.

d. It was round and could accommodate people.

104. What do Alvin and ROVs have in common?

a. They are both a kind of underwater robot.

b. They are both attached to a surface vessel in some

way.

c. They both allow for more extensive underwater

exploration.

d. They both embarked on their maiden voyage in

the Mariana Trench.

105. Which of the following is NOT true, according to the

text?

a. With new developments in diving, scientists are

able to study the ocean more thoroughly.

b. Scientists now have a deeper understanding of the

earth’s structure and how it changes.

c. The ocean still has many undiscovered properties.

d. Underwater eruptions have little bearing on the

formation of the ocean floor.

101

102

103

104

105

Page 14: Proficiency FINAL Student

14

106. Who or what was responsible for bringing the remains of the “Iceman” to the public eye? a. a sharp-eyed tourist b. policemen performing their duty c. a curious looking visitor to the region d. a series of funny mistakes

107. What was the most striking thing about the Stone Age wanderer? a. his remains were thawing b. his remains were spotted with age c. the fine state of his remains d. most of his remains were stolen by onlookers

108. Which of the following is TRUE regarding the events taking place after the discovery? a. The authorities did not act appropriately. b. Onlookers attempted to strip the body. c. The German tourist took possession of the body and gave it to Konrad Spindler. d. The body was at the disposal of experts for five whole days.

Helmut Simon, a German tourist, first spotted the remarkably preserved remains of the Stone Age wanderer who came to be called the “Iceman” in a melting glacier high in the Alps in 1991. A comedy of errors followed. Firstly, Austrian policemen tried to prize the body from the ice with a jackhammer and then curiosity seekers snitched fragments of his garments. Five days later, the find was finally brought to Konrad Spindler, head of the Innsbruck Institute for Prehistory, who exclaimed that he thought it was perhaps what his colleague, Howard Carter, experienced when he opened the tomb of Tutankhamen and gazed into the face of the Pharaoh.

Who was the “Iceman”? Radio-carbon dating established his age at approximately 5,300 years, by far the most ancient human being ever found virtually intact. He stood 5 ft. 2in. tall - short even in his day - and weighed around 110

lbs. Well prepared for the Alpine chill, he wore an unlined fur robe, whip-stitched together in a mosaic-like pattern, under a woven grass cape. His shoes were made of leather and his axe blade was nearly pure copper. He bore a fur quiver laden with a dozen incomplete arrows, two of which were primed for shooting, with flint points and feathers. His bow was made of yew and he was also armed with a tiny, wooden-handled flint dagger; he carried a net of grass and a stone-and-linden tool probably used to sharpen points.

Yet, for all his sophisticated gear, the Neolithic wanderer was behind the times. While his mountain people still hunted and gathered, far more advanced civilizations were flourishing elsewhere. In the “Iceman’s” day, Alpine Europe lagged far behind Africa, the Middle East and South America in agriculture, commerce and transportation, while in Sumeria, man had just discovered the wheel.

READING 2

109. When Konrad Spindler received the “Iceman’s” remains, he... a. expressed his objection to the delay. b. was under the impression the remains were those of a pharaoh. c. consulted with his colleague Howard Carter. d. was certain scientists in similar conditions shared his emotions.

110. After inspecting the find, scientists reached the conclusion that the “Iceman”... a. had plaited grass to make a cap. b. had been appropriately attired. c. had been the most sophisticated man of his period. d. had been armed for heavy battle.

The formerly radical notion that birds descended from dinosaurs - or may even be dinosaurs, the only living branch of the family that ruled the earth eons ago - has got stronger and stronger since paleontologists first started taking it seriously in the 1970s. Remarkable similarities in bone structure between dinosaurs and birds were the first clue. Then came evidence, thanks to a series of astonishing discoveries in China’s Liaoning province in the late 1990s, that some dinosaurs may have borne feathers. But a few scientists still argued that the link was weak, claiming that the bone similarities could be a coincidence. And possibly those primitive structures visible in some fossils were feathers – but possibly not. One had to use his imagination to see them.

However, this was all soon to change. The find of a spectacularly preserved fossil of a juvenile dromaeosaur by a team of paleontologists from the Chinese Academy

of Geological Sciences and New York City’s American Museum of Natural History, may be the long-sought link. “It has things that are undeniably feathers,” exulted Richard Prum of the University of Kansas Natural History Museum, an expert on the evolution of feathers. “But it is clearly a small, vicious theropod, similar to the velociraptors that chased the children around the kitchen in Jurassic Park.”

In fact, this small relative of Tyrannosaurus rex, dating from 124 million to 147 million years ago, had no fewer than three different types of feathers. The head sported a thick, fuzzy mat of short, hollow fibers, while the shoulders and torso had extremely fine plume-like fibers up to 2 inches long. The backs of its arms and legs were draped in multiple filaments arranged in a classic herringbone pattern around a central stem. Even the theropod’s tail was covered with feathers, with a fan, or tuft at the end.

READING 3

106

108

109

107

110

111

111

112

113

114

115

Page 15: Proficiency FINAL Student

15

111. The passage implies that paleontologists... a. became earnestly involved in paleontology in the 1970’s. b. have begun to accept a once extreme idea. c. are reaching ambivalent conclusions in their research. d. only started looking for more clues in the 1970’s.

112. The evidence found in the 1990’s, ... a. proved that dinosaurs gave birth to feathery offspring. b. showed similarities between the bone structures of birds and dinosaurs. c. was partly based on imagination. d. did not unite the experts in their convictions.

113. What was Richard Prum’s view of the 2001 discovery? It... a. convinced him that some dinosaurs bore feathers. b. disappointed him that the fossil was so young. c. led him to assume that the dromaeosaur had feathers. d. surprised him that a theropod could have been so vicious.

It’s one of the most enduring stories of unsuspecting discovery: four young French boys out playing in nature in September 1940, near Lascaux in the Dordogne region, decide to explore a hole in the ground one of them has recently found. They toss stones in the hole, determine it is deep and set out to explore it. Once inside, they are amazed to see gigantic, vivid paintings of animals covering the walls. The four boys bring their schoolteacher back to the cave. Stunned, he contacts Abbé Henri Breuil, France’s foremost pre-historian, who pronounces them authentic. Already, word of mouth is bringing droves of tourists to the cave. There, they are dazzled to find cavern after cavern covered with paintings - some 200 painted and drawn animals and symbols, along with nearly 1,500 engravings.

This splendid bestiary still has the power to amaze - although it was almost lost owing to careless maintenance. Over the years, as the cave was opened to tourists, the paintings gradually faded under artificial light, then were invaded by algae and bacteria. Hence, the cave was closed to visitors in 1963, while today’s tourists visit a replica.

When scientists first reported the discovery of the paintings in 1941, they cited French authorities in dating them at 30,000 B.C. More recently, radio-carbon dating has established they date back to 15,000 B.C. They are the work of early men called the Magdalenians, after La Madeleine, the site of a rock-center shelter where signs of their culture were first found. The artists apparently stood on scaffolding to reach the ceiling as holes for wooden poles have been found in the walls. The painters mixed their colors on the spot, and an abundance of mixing tools has been found at other nearby sites. In all, there are some 200 caves in southwest Europe alone featuring Paleolithic art, but the caverns at Lascaux remain the most impressive.

READING 4

116. The story behind the discovery of the Lascaux caves is one that... a. had an unpremeditated beginning. b. was contrived by the boys and their schoolteacher. c. represented the ingenuity of the group’s systematic exploration. d. details four boys’ outing on a lake in the Dordogne area.

117. When the boys’ schoolteacher was taken to the caves, he... a. was adamant the paintings were authentic. b. felt rather uncomfortable in their presence. c. was amazed by what he observed. d. brought too many tourists with him.

118. Just after the caves were made public knowledge, their visitors found... a. more portrayals than they expected to. b. an abundance of imprints and symbols of other races. c. 1,500 tented sketches of wildlife. d. many painted symbols alluding to aquatic life forms.

119. Why was the cave closed in 1963? a. Many visitors had defaced the paintings. b. The paintings were becoming damaged. c. A replica was eventually opened to the public. d. The paintings generated bacteria and germs.

120. What do we know about the early artists’ methods? They... a. used a spotted design to paint wildlife. b. weren't able to reach the roofs of the caves. c. used scaffolding poles to decorate the walls of the caves. d. combined different pigments to attain the desired effect.

114. The discovery showed that the dromaeosaur... a. did not have only one kind of feather. b. had a variety of different colored feathers. c. had two kinds of feathers. d. bore thinner feathers on its head compared to its torso.

115. The passage explicitly states that the theropod... a. fanned itself with its tail. b. had a bone-like design on its arms. c. had a bunch of feathers at the tip of his tail. d. had the same plumage all along its tail.

Reading Score: .........../20 TOTAL G+C+V+R = ............../120

116

118

119

117

120

Page 16: Proficiency FINAL Student

16

1. We’ll be happy to offer the new employee our assistance she need it. a. should c. in the case b. in any event d. unless

2. “Shall we visit the zoo or take a walk in the park?” “ is fine with me.” a. Both of them c. Either one b. One another d. Or one or the other

3. This beautiful handmade watch was handed to me by my grandfather. a. in c. down b. over d. through

4. The athlete compete in national events, he competes in international ones too. a. just doesn’t c. just does b. does just d. doesn’t just

5. Although our hotel is quite isolated, guests are from abroad. a. the most c. our most b. most of our d. the most of our

6. “Would you like to help me organize a surprise birthday party for your father?” “ !” a. Would I never c. I would ever b. Would I ever d. I would never

7. As a talented piano player, Jake is also an excellent composer. a. much as being c. much as he is b. well as he is d. well as being

8. earlier, more of your old classmates would have come to the reunion. a. Provided they have c. Had they been informed been informed b. Having been informed d. Were they to have informed

9. I really detest it when Mr. Hodgson speaks to me my boss. a. as if he were c. as though he b. only if he were d. like he is

10. He didn’t manage to see any of his old friends back in his hometown despite so. a. of wishing to do c. wishing to doing b. he’d wished to do d. his wish to do

11. Strange sound, I’m going to Alaska on vacation

this year.

a. though it has to c. though it may

b. as it may be d. as it is to

12. “Have you packed your suitcase?”

“That’s one thing off my chest. Fortunately, I last

night.”

a. got it done c. have got it done

b. had done it d. was doing it

13. When Peter heard he had eventually been hired, he was

with joy.

a. come over c. besides him

b. aside himself d. beside himself

14. Her parents are upset the midterm exams.

a. that she fail c. about her failing

b. for her to fail d. for her failure of

15. Look at your dad in this photo; bald?

a. he had always been c. did he always use to be

b. was he always being d. would he always be

16. The old mill at the river has been turned a huge

shopping center.

a. in c. up

b. down d. into

17. In spite of , Sarah’s still kept her job.

a. so doing c. that she did

b. what she did d. she did it

18. In some countries juvenile offenders are made

community service rather than go to prison.

a. have done c. to do

b. to have done d. do

19. In this hospital ward, Paul is the more dedicated doctor

.

a. of both c. out of two

b. of the two d. of two

20. Linda’s been working here for almost ten years so she

a lot about the job.

a. was really known c. really must know

b. is really knowing d. knows really

PRACTICE EXAMINATION 2GRAMMAR

Page 17: Proficiency FINAL Student

17

21. Normally, we don’t allow pets in the hotel, but I suppose

a kitten won’t be a problem.

a. your bringing c. for your bringing

b. to bring d. that you bring

22. When Peter went to the job interview, he was

accompanied his mother.

a. from c. by

b. with d. on

23. You should have told him the truth right from the start;

telling him now .

a. is no use c. it’s no use

b. there’s no point d. it’s no point

24. We are moving out of this apartment or not!

a. should you like c. either you like it

b. whether it likes to you d. whether you like it

25. “She is an excellent actress!”

“You again!”

a. can say that c. may say it

b. say it d. say that

26. being a good student, Jenny failed her entrance

exam.

a. Even if c. However

b. Despite d. Regardless

27. Extreme should be used when the truck is being

operated.

a. cautious c. cautioned

b. cautiously d. caution

28. seeing the police, the fugitive ran into the alley.

a. From c. At

b. On d. When

29. on time for lunch, you would have had some of

your mother’s carrot cake.

a. But for having been c. Were you to be

b. Were you to have been d. Hadn’t you been

30. I’d much sooner you practice on your guitar

right now.

a. hadn’t c. won’t

b. didn’t d. weren’t

31. The kids got up early this morning because they

wanted to go .

a. cycling c. to cycling

b. for the cycling d. for cycling

32. I have no idea why my boss got so angry; all I did

was him for some time off.

a. to asking c. having asked

b. asking d. ask

33. I strongly suggest Trevor with this project before

attempting to tackle the next one.

a. have finished c. having finished

b. to finish d. finish

34. The new employee’s personal problems are

he can’t concentrate on his work.

a. such serious c. very serious

b. too serious d. so serious

35. “How was the film last night?”

“Rarely such a well-directed film!”

a. did I see c. have I seen

b. I had seen d. saw I

36. I didn’t see your father enter the building, but I saw

the car across the street.

a. him to park c. he is parked

b. him parking d. his parking

37. The new train compartment’s bunk beds are 30

centimeters the existing ones.

a. as wide as those of c. wider than those of

b. wider than of d. as wide as

38. The new employee unfortunately fell of the boss’

expectations.

a. short c. shorter

b. shortly d. shortest

39. Herbert doesn’t talk to your friends from abroad because

he’s prejudiced foreigners.

a. on c. from

b. against d. about

40. Jim and I together every morning before

he moved home.

a. would jog c. were jogging

b. would have jogged d. used to jogging

Grammar Score: .........../40

Page 18: Proficiency FINAL Student

18

The advertising industry spends $12 billion every year on ads aimed at children, (41) young audiences with persuasive messages. According to studies, the average child is exposed to more than 40,000 TV commercials a year. And ads are even (42) children in schools - with corporate-sponsored educational materials and product placements in students’ textbooks.

There’s obviously been a (43) in the way our society thinks of children. Not long ago, they were regarded as vulnerable beings that needed to be nurtured; however, today they are (44) an economic resource that must be exploited.

Children aren’t hard to exploit as they (45) to trust adults even when they shouldn’t. They don’t understand the notion of intent to sell and frequently believe advertising messages. Marketers know this, and take advantage of the fact that children don’t (46) the motives behind advertising or realize that the products advertised may not be (47) for them.

Nevertheless, this does not trouble advertisers and marketers. If they have any qualms, they (48) a good job of repressing them. They believe that (49) they can make the child a brand-loyal consumer at an early age, they can (50) the child for years to come.

University researchers have taken samples from a

preserved dodo specimen in an (51) to uncover the

extinct bird’s family tree. They worked with the British Natural

History Museum to collect and study (52) material from

a large number of specimens: a preserved dodo, the extinct

solitaire bird, and 35 kinds of living pigeons and doves. Their

analysis (53) the dodo and the solitaire to be close

relatives with the Nicobar pigeon, their nearest living relative.

The dodo lived on Mauritius in the Indian Ocean. It was

a flightless bird, bigger than a turkey. By 1681, all dodos

had been (54) by hungry sailors. The solitaire, which

(55) a bit like a dodo, had gone the same way by 1800.

By extracting short pieces of the dodo’s DNA and (56)

these with the DNA of living birds, the scientists were able to

deduce when the dodo evolved away from its (57) into

a separate entity.

The scientists can now (58) assume that the dodo

developed its distinctive appearance and features as a

(59) of its geographical isolation. They are now

convinced that it separated from the solitaire about 25 million

years ago, long before Mauritius (60) an island.

CLOZE 1

CLOZE 2

41. a. associating c. exposing b. spreading d. bombarding

42. a. reaching c. getting b. viewing d. aiming

43. a. gap c. transfer b. shift d. move

44. a. regarded c. viewed b. thought d. considered

45. a. turn c. tend b. respond d. appeal

46. a. grasp c. believe b. deny d. control

47. a. enough c. good b. available d. responsible

48. a. do c. get b. have d. make

49. a. when c. if b. only d. once

50. a. contact c. arrange b. own d. conform

51. a. attempt c. intention b. order d. assistance

52. a. living c. extinct b. raw d. genetic

53. a. advises c. involves b. shows d. recommends

54. a. disappeared c. vanished b. killed d. extinct

55. a. appeared c. existed b. looked d. seemed

56. a. studying c. comparing b. researching d. combining

57. a. relatives c. species b. island d. independence

58. a. surely c. hardly b. highly d. safely

59. a. means c. result b. factor d. reason

60. a. discovered c. became b. developed d. transformed

This passage is about advertising.

This passage is about the dodo.

Cloze Score: .........../20

Page 19: Proficiency FINAL Student

19

61. Because of our limited facilities, we

have to the number of

students visiting the library.

a. annihilate

b. restrict

c. agitate

d. constrict

62. Please stop in my affairs and

mind your own business!

a. involving

b. irritating

c. concerning

d. meddling

63. The new rules can’t be

before they are tried and tested.

a. incited

b. acquired

c. stimulated

d. implemented

64. Mrs. Smith gave a short speech

after lunch to express her for

the retirement gift.

a. appreciation

b. apportionment

c. apprehension

d. appeasement

65. The blasting from the quarry

through the rural town.

a. reverberated

b. ricocheted

c. vibrated

d. shuddered

66. Many of the farmer’s chickens were

killed by a dog.

a. nomadic

b. vagrant

c. stray

d. fugitive

67. Peter owns a very business,

so he is quite wealthy.

a. influential

b. affiliated

c. lucrative

d. insolvent

68. There is usually a between

family members that can’t be

broken.

a. chain

b. knot

c. loop

d. bond

69. After a long afternoon sightseeing,

we returned to our hotel at .

a. tusk

b. lawn

c. dusk

d. dawn

70. So as to be more competitive, the

textile companies in this area have

formed a .

a. collusion

b. consideration

c. consortium

d. conglomeration

71. Their plans have been postponed

due to lack of funding.

a. indecisively

b. incompetently

c. indefinitely

d. indelibly

72. The acclaimed author’s new novel

will be in the autumn.

a. freed

b. liberated

c. discharged

d. released

73. I people who pretend to

know everything.

a. disapprove

b. imbibe

c. detest

d. ignite

74. Sandra is raising her two children

and taking care of her father.

a. lush

b. invalid

c. hindered

d. elder

75. The clay pot stood balanced

on the edge of the ledge.

a. haphazardly

b. formidably

c. precariously

d. negligibly

76. As a talent scout, Barry the

country looking for promising

young basketball players.

a. coerces

b. scours

c. fascinates

d. traverses

77. Your great grandmother’s antique

vase was sold at for over

2,000 dollars.

a. auction

b. yield

c. allowance

d. benefit

78. All teenagers are to the

subtle advertising messages they

see on television.

a. attested

b. paramount

c. susceptible

d. objected

79. The hotel manager decided to

distribute the food to a

nearby orphanage.

a. remnant

b. infatuated

c. residue

d. surplus

80. The pill you gave me made me so

that I fell asleep.

a. immune

b. hilarious

c. drowsy

d. lenient

VOCABULARY

αφανίζω, εξολοθρεύω

περιορίζω

(ανα)ταράσσω

(περι)σφίγγω

εμπλέκω, παρασύρω

εξάπτω, εξαγριώνω

αφορώ

ανακατεύομαι, χώνω

τη μύτη μου

εξωθώ, υποκινώ

αποκτώ

διεγείρω, εξάπτω

θέτω σε εφαρμογή

ευγνωμοσύνη, εκτίμηση

καταμερισμός

φόβος, ανησυχία / σύλληψη

κατευνασμός

αντηχώ, αντιλαλώ

εξοστρακισμός (για βλήματα)

δονώ, -ούμαι

ανατριχιάζω / τρέμω

νομαδικός

περιπλανώμενος

αδέσποτος (για ζώο)

φυγάς

που έχει επιρροή

αδελφοποιημένος

επικερδής

χρεοκοπημένος

αλυσίδα

κόμπος

θηλιά

δεσμός

χαυλιόδοντας

γρασίδι, γκαζόν

σούρουπο, δειλινό

αυγή

συμπαιγνία

μελέτη, εξέταση

κοινοπραξία

συνονθύλευμα /

κοινοπραξία επιχειρήσεων

αναποφάσιστα

ανίκανα, ανεπαρκώς

επ’αόριστον

ανεξίτηλα

(απ)ελευθερώνω

(απ)ελευθερώνω

απαλλάσσω / απολύω

(απ)ελευθερώνω / κυκλοφορώ

(για βιβλίο κλπ)

αποδοκιμάζω

ρουφώ / εισπνέω

απεχθάνομαι, αντιπαθώ

αναφλέγω, -ομαι

πλούσιος, πολυτελής

ανήμπορος

παρεμποδισμένος

γεροντότερος

ανοργάνωτα

τρομερά, φοβερά

με επισφαλή τρόπο

ασήμαντα, μηδαμινά

(κατ)αναγκάζω

διατρέχω αναζητώντας

σαγηνεύω, γοητεύω

διασχίζω

πλειστηριασμός, δημοπρασία

σοδειά

επίδομα / χαρτζιλίκι

(οικονομικό) επίδομα

επιβεβαιωμένος

ύψιστος

επιρρεπής, ευεπηρέαστος

αντιτιθέμενος, εναντιωμένος

υπόλειμμα

ξετρελαμένος, καταγοητευμένος

υπόλοιπο, ό,τι απομένει

πλεονάζων, παραπανήσιος

με ανοσία

ξεκαρδιστικός

νυσταγμένος, γλαρωμένος

επιεικής

Page 20: Proficiency FINAL Student

20

81. We could just the ship on

the horizon.

a. disguise

b. discern

c. dislodge

d. distinct

82. Gavin has trouble making ends

meet on such salary.

a. a countless

b. an ample

c. a vast

d. a meager

83. “Can I use your computer for my

project?”

“Sure! But please be careful not to

any of my files.”

a. detract

b. withdraw

c. tamper

d. delete

84. What a child! One would

think she was an adult the way

she acts.

a. precarious

b. premature

c. premeditated

d. precocious

85. You will have to pay off your car

loan in twenty four, monthly .

a. insurances

b. installations

c. installments

d. interests

86. If you drink a glass of water, your

may just stop.

a. hiccups

b. hints

c. hoards

d. homage

87. The vegetation allowed

many birds to find shelter in the

nature reserve.

a. lash

b. lust

c. lush

d. leash

88. The new printer was not with

our software, so we had to return it.

a. compatible

b. conscientious

c. complacent

d. competent

89. Members of Parliament were unable

to reach a on the issue of the

capital punishment.

a. conduct

b. milestone

c. contract

d. consensus

90. When we asked Amber if she knew

where Mary was, she

ignorance.

a. ruminated

b. mimicked

c. feigned

d. inflicted

91. The police suspect that was

the cause of the fire.

a. arson

b. aspiration

c. arsenal

d. array

92. Passengers are kindly requested to

from smoking in the aircraft.

a. prevent

b. distract

c. refrain

d. proceed

93. I’ll never forget the details of that

day; they are in my mind.

a. scratched

b. carved

c. etched

d. curbed

94. “And then John got really mad.”

“He probably doesn’t appreciate

such jokes.”

a. prolific

b. primitive

c. crude

d. savage

95. A of wind blew my hat away

while I was walking up the stairs.

a. gusto

b. gust

c. gutter

d. gut

96. May considers those who

against immigrants to be narrow-

minded and conservative.

a. disgruntle

b. disregard

c. discriminate

d. disinfect

97. In many European countries, much

of a store’s is displayed

outside.

a. clientele

b. merchandise

c. conversion

d. avarice

98. The invitation arrived ; three

days after the seminar was held.

a. belatedly

b. awkwardly

c. genially

d. perpetually

99. I had a that you would be

late for the appointment.

a. hunt

b. hurdle

c. hump

d. hunch

100. For justice to be served, a trial

must be fair and .

a. impromptu

b. impartial

c. congenial

d. prosperous

Vocabulary Score: .........../40

μεταμφιέζω

διακρίνω

αποσπώ, αποκολλώ

ευδιάκριτος

αμέτρητος

ευρύχωρος, επαρκής

απέραντος, τεράστιος

ανεπαρκής, ισχνός

αφαιρώ, μειώνω

αποσύρω

σκαλίζω, νοθεύω

διαγράφω

επισφαλής , αβέβαιος

πρώιμος, πρόωρος

προμελετημένος

μικρομέγαλος

ασφάλεια, ασφάλιση

εγκατάσταση

(χρηματική) δόση

τόκος

λόξυγγας

υπαινιγμός / υπόδειξη

αποταμίευση / οικονομίες

φόρος τιμής

μαστίγιο

πόθος

πολύβλαστος

λουρί (σκύλου)

συμβατός

ευσυνείδητος, φιλότιμος

ευησυχασμένος

ικανός

διαγωγή / χειρισμός

“ορόσημο”, ιστορική καμπή

(έγγραφο) συμβόλαιο

αμοιβαία συναίνεση

στοχάζομαι

μιμούμαι

υποκρίνομαι, προσποιούμαι

προξενώ, πλήττω

εμπρησμός

φιλοδοξία, επιδίωξη

οπλοστάσιο

παράταξη, σειρά / συλλογή,

ποικιλία

αποτρέπω

αποσπώ την προσοχή

αποφεύγω

προχωρώ, συνεχίζω

γρατζουνίζω

χαράσσω, λαξεύω

χαραγμένος στη μνήμη μου

χαλιναγωγώ, ελέγχω

καρπερός, γόνιμος

πρωτόγονος

άξεστος / ακατέργαστος

άγριος, πρωτόγονος

απόλαυση

ριπή (ανέμου)

υδρορροή, λούκι

έντερο, σπλάχνο

δυσαρεστώ

αγνοώ, αψηφώ

κάνω διακρίσεις

απολυμαίνω

πελατεία, σύνολο πελατών

εμπόρευμα

μετατροπή / κατάχρηση

πλεονεξία

καθυστερημένα

άβολα / αδέξια

καλοσυνάτα, εγκάρδια

αδιάκοπα, συνεχώς

κυνήγι

(κινητό) εμπόδιο

καμπούρα

προαίσθημα

αυτοσχέδιος, πρόχειρος

αμερόληπτος, απροκάλυπτος

ευχάριστος, συμπαθητικός

που ευημερεί / ευνοϊκός

Page 21: Proficiency FINAL Student

21

READING 1

The adult human liver normally weighs between 1.3 -

3.0 kilograms, and is a soft, pinkish-brown “boomerang

shaped” organ. It is the second largest organ (the largest

organ being the skin) and the largest gland within the

human body. Its anatomical position in the body is

immediately under the diaphragm on the right side of the

upper abdomen. The liver lies on the right of the stomach

and makes a kind of bed for the gallbladder. The liver is

supplied by two main blood vessels on its right lobe: the

hepatic artery and the portal vein, which brings venous

blood from the spleen, pancreas, and small intestines, so

that the liver can process the nutrients and byproducts of

food digestion.

The liver is among the few internal human organs

capable of natural regeneration of lost tissue; as little as

25% of remaining liver can regenerate into a whole liver

again. This is predominantly due to the hepatocytes acting

as unipotential stem cells (i.e. a single hepatocyte can

divide into two hepatocyte daughter cells).

Apart from a patch where it connects to the diaphragm,

the liver is covered entirely by a thin, double-layered

membrane that reduces friction against other organs.

In the growing fetus, a major source of blood to the

liver is the umbilical vein which supplies nutrients to the

growing fetus. The umbilical vein enters the abdomen at

the umbilicus, and passes upward along the free margin

of the falciform ligament of the liver to the inferior surface

of the liver. There it joins with the left branch of the portal

vein. In the fetus, the liver is developing throughout normal

gestation, and does not perform the normal filtration of the

infant liver. The liver does not perform digestive processes

because the fetus does not consume meals directly, but

receives nourishment from the mother via the placenta.

The fetal liver releases some blood stem cells that migrate

to the fetal thymus, so initially the lymphocytes, called T-

cells, are created from fetal liver stem cells. Once the fetus

is delivered, the formation of blood stem cells in infants

shifts to the red bone marrow.

101. The liver is...

a. oval in shape.

b. to the right of the diaphragm.

c. underneath another organ.

d. slightly lighter than the largest organ.

102. What allows the liver to regenerate itself?

a. It receives blood from two main sources.

b. It has cells which can break into two cells.

c. Unipotential cells behave like another type of cell.

d. Hepatocytes process nutrients, thereby

producing more cells.

103. The double-layered membrane...

a. allows the liver to process substances.

b. protects the liver from potential damage from

other organs.

c. is a thin layer which completely covers the liver.

d. functions better because of its connection to the

diaphragm.

104. In the fetus, the liver...

a. receives food from the mother.

b. seems to perform no useful function.

c. fulfils a specific function only until the baby is

born.

d. functions much in the same way as it would in an

adult.

105. What is true of the umbilical vein?

a. It carries nutrients from the developing fetus.

b. The blood it carries flows into the portal vein.

c. It assists the undeveloped liver in digesting food.

d. It does not actually pass through the fetus.

101

102

103

104

105

Page 22: Proficiency FINAL Student

22

READING 2

READING 3

Forbes magazine has just published its annual list of billionaires on the planet, reminding us once again how much easier it is to count the extremely rich than the extremely poor. The latest list includes 587 billionaires - up by 111 from last year. Their total wealth comes to more than $1.9 trillion. Meanwhile, of course, the net worth of the 587 poorest people on Earth is, to a certainty $0. It would be worth sitting down with a calculator on a long rainy afternoon and figuring out how many of the world’s poorest people it would take to equal the wealth of these 587 billionaires.

A list like this is packed with trivia – if only trivia didn’t seem like such an undersized word when talking about billionaires. On its web site, Forbes makes it possible to search the list by industry, residence, marital status, etc. But there are so many other ways to analyze a list like this. It would be useful to be able to search by charitable giving,

value of art collection, criminal record and something that might be called privacy quotient - a category that would surely be won by the reclusive Vance brothers, who own an enormous chain of German supermarkets. It would be interesting to be able to analyze the list by political giving, political leanings and tax payments. No point analyzing for serendipity, of course, since wealth on this scale implies plenty of that, whatever else it may imply.

The most surprising name on the list is that of J.K.Rowling, the author of the Harry Potter books. The tale of her economic life since the 1997 publication of the first book in the series simply out-Potters Potter. True, she comes in near the end of the list, at $1 billion. But it’s a proud day for writers everywhere nonetheless. At least that’s the tone in which these billionaires are presented by Forbes, as if they were graduates of a rather striking high school. Our hopes and dreams go with them, or so the list seems to suggest.

Nietzsche is considered to be one of the greatest modern philosophers, most famous for his ideas concerning the “will to power”. The concept of the “will to power” in Nietzsche’s thought has had many interpretations, most notoriously its misappropriation by the Nazis, which amounts to its characterization as a “desire for and of power” (“power” here specifically denoting the more limited concept of “dominance”). To understand the will to power, one must first of all take into account Nietzsche’s background and criticism of Arthur Schopenhauer. Schopenhauer posited a “will to live,” in which living things were motivated by sustaining and developing their own lives. Nietzsche instead posited a will to power, a significant point of contrast to Schopenhauer’s idea, in which living things are not just driven by the mere need to stay alive, but in fact by a greater need to wield and use power, to grow, to expend their strength, and, possibly, to subsume other “wills” in the process. Thus, Nietzsche regarded such a “will to live” as secondary to the primary “will to power”. Henceforth, he opposed himself to Darwinism, as he contested the validity of the concept of “adaptation”, which he considered a mere “will to live”.

Nietzsche perhaps developed the will to power concept furthest with regard to living organisms, and it is there that the concept is perhaps more inviting to understand by way of analogy. There the will to power is taken as an animal’s most fundamental instinct or drive, even more fundamental than the act of self-preservation; the latter is but a resulting phenomenon of the former.

trivia = , reclusive = , serendipity =

106. How did the Nazis interpret Nietzsche’s “will to power”? a. as an extension of Schopenhauer’s philosophy b. as way to survive c. not correctly d. in a way that allowed them to justify defeat

107. What is the connection between Schopenhauer’s “will to live” and Nietzsche’s “will to power”? a. The latter was a development of the former. b. There is very little connection. c. They are in opposition. d. The former was a response the latter.

108. According to Nietzsche, what motivates us? a. a need to live b. a need to be more powerful c. the desire to develop d. a tendency to be defeated by other wills

109. What was Nietzsche’s opinion of Darwinism? a. He had mixed feelings about it. b. He agreed that humans must adapt. c. He disagreed that adaptation was simply a “will to live’. d. He believed it was weak, and thus untrue.

110. According to Nietzsche, self-preservation... a. is the most basic human act. b. is at the root of human society. c. comes from the will to power. d. is a human weakness.

ασήμαντα πράγματα ερημίτης / μοναχικός εύνοια / τύχη

111

112

113

114

107

108

109

110

106

Page 23: Proficiency FINAL Student

23

116. The author is interested in other cuisines because they are... a. tangible products of different cultures. b. artistic endeavors in their own right. c. appreciated by all travelers. d. a way of understanding a country’s policies.

117. The author suggests that female cooks... a. were incapable of attaining a professional status. b. have been undervalued. c. deceived the culinary world by posing as men. d. cannot compete with male chefs.

118. What does the writer say about 19th century cuisine? a. It is too complicated to be comprehended by laymen. b. It was developed by famous cooks. c. It strives to create a certain image. d. It developed from the royal classes.

119. The precision demanded by traditional, non- European cuisines results from... a. careful measurements. b. fresh local produce. c. pleasure in entertaining. d. necessity to feed many mouths.

120. The author argues that elaborate cuisines are a result of... a. world-wide trade. b. luxuries such as spices. c. a plentiful supply of foodstuffs. d. the availability of leisure for all classes.

subtle =

culinary =

READING 4

Reading Score: .........../20

TOTAL G+C+V+R = ............../120

Cuisine and probably also music are the most accessible parts of a culture and, at the same time, the most resistant to outside influence. They are the first points of real physical contact with a different society. Part of knowing how to travel is to have an appreciation for other cuisines as this is still one of the rare ways in which people of different backgrounds can learn easily from each other.

Cuisine is an art which (discounting a handful of outstanding professionals) has always been developed by amateurs or, to be more precise, by professionals who have never been recognized as such because they were women. Perhaps most of the European cuisine of the leisured classes of the nineteenth century is so unnecessarily complicated and pretentious because it was elaborated by the great chefs. Elsewhere, even the most subtle cuisines, whether aristocratic or popular in origin, are relatively simple apart from a few dishes.

The art of cooking calls for a little patience, organization and precision: that customary precision of traditional societies that seems so vague in quantified terms. It derives from an interest in the taste of food and the sheer delight of satisfying the guest. The final, and probably most important requirement, is that one must cook with natural, wholesome ingredients.

The search for provisions, from indispensable staples to the luxury of spices, has shaped the development of human societies. Through the ages, the problems of food, whether of sheer necessity or of idle indulgence, have led to conflicts, growth, trade and the discovery of the New World. All this time most of the world has been short of food, and will continue to be so. The culinary heritage of the world, in the sense of haute cuisine, is, however, the product of abundance.

114. What are we told about the Vance brothers? a. They shun publicity. b. They invented the phrase ‘privacy quotient’. c. They are sociable. d. They are reckless.

115. How does the author feel about the Forbes list? a. He approves of the list. b. He deems it worthy of further analysis. c. He satirizes it. d. He wishes it included his name.

111. What creates a paradox with the use of the word “trivia” in paragraph 2? a. the size of the word to describe the list b. the meaning of the word and the amount of money referred to c. the bizarre sound of the word when describing billionaires d. the meaning of the word when related to the size of the population

112. What is offered on Forbe’s website? a. information about the charity donations from billionaires b. the net worth of the rest of the global population c. the possibility of a more in-depth study of the billionaires d. the assets owned by these people

113. Why does the writer say it would be useful to search the list under ‘criminal record’ in paragraph two? a. He imagines all billionaires have committed the crime of serendipity. b. He believes that the billionaires steal valuable art. c. He suspects they have not paid their taxes. d. He thinks some billionaires may have acquired their wealth illegally.

ανεπαίσθητος / απλός

μαγειρικός

116

117

118

119

119

120