Euro Test: Task One: Short Texts (10 Minutes) Questions 1-5
Euro Test: Task One: Short Texts (10 Minutes) Questions 1-5
Euro Test: Task One: Short Texts (10 Minutes) Questions 1-5
TEST 1: READING
You are looking at a travel guide and browsing through programmes for the summer.
• Match the type of the sights with their description that fits best.
• Tick () the appropriate letter on the separate answer sheet.
• The first one has been done for you.
• There are two types of sights that you DO NOT need.
Example: C
The garden, at Menton near the Italian border, was created in the twenties by Major Lawrance
Johnston, from the exotic plants he had collected over 30 years of travel. It fell into disrepair
after his death but is currently undergoing a massive restoration.
1:
In 1916 the American socialite Mabel Dodge Luhan fell in love with the area’s spectacular
scenery, and established a “salon” at Taos, 7,000 feet above sea level. Today, Taos is a
thriving community of weavers, glass-blowers and sculptors.
2:
The best way to visit there is travelling along the coast, past thousands of tiny islands. As a
tourist, you can only sit and stare, and the views are astonishing. The rich Alpine pastures and
dramatic scenery of the fjords is amazing. The service calls at 43 ports.
3:
The palazzo, which has both a land and a water entrance, is set a little off Venice’s tourist
trail, in the Castello district. Even though you can’t have this crowded city to yourself , the
canals here at least are strictly for business and you can see the real Venice from the balcony.
4:
The decline of home cooking in Italy is a national crisis. As more and more people eat ready-
made food, traditional family recipes are being forgotten. Home Food is trying to reverse that
trend. The group has tracked down a number of old-fashioned experts, and asked them to
open up their kitchens so that visitors can sample their expertise.
5:
Drive just ten minutes out of Wellington, and you can experience an altogether different and
much older country. The place is a sanctuary. It has turned the clock back by reintroducing
plants and animals that had been there before the settlers arrived. The difference is subtle but
rather wonderful.
SIGHTS TYPES
A. A PLACE TO STAY
B. A BOAT RIDE
C. AN EXOTIC GARDEN
D. A RESTAURANT
E. A TRAIN JOURNEY
F. A VENUE FOR CRAFTSMEN
G. A CULINARY PROGRAMME
H. AN AUTENTIC WILDLIFE PARK
Task Two: Paragraph Headings (10 minutes – Question 6-11)
Read this magazine article on the Coca Cola Company. The paragraphs have lost their
headings. Choose the paragraph heading that best matches each paragraph. The first has been
done for you. There are two extra paragraph headings that you DO NOT need.
Paragraph Headings
Example: C
In May, 1886, Coca Cola was invented by Doctor John Pemberton a pharmacist from Atlanta,
Georgia. The name was a suggestion given by his bookkeeper Frank Robinson.
Being a bookkeeper, Frank Robinson also had excellent penmanship. It was he who first
scripted „Coca Cola” into the flowing letters which has become the famous logo of today.
6:
In 1887, another Atlanta pharmacist and businessman, Asa Candler bought the formula from
John Pemberton for $2,300.
By the late 1890s, Coca Cola was one of America's most popular fountain drinks, largely due
to Candler’s aggressive marketing of the product. The company increased syrup sales by over
4000% between 1890 and 1900. By the turn of the century, the drink was sold across the
United States and Canada.
7:
Around the same time, the company began selling syrup to independent bottling companies
licensed to sell the drink. Even today, the US soft drink industry is organized on this
principle.
Until the 1960s, the young enjoyed carbonated beverages at the local soda fountain or ice
cream saloon. Often housed in the drug store, it served as a meeting place for people of all
ages. The soda fountain declined in popularity as fast food restaurants became popular.
8:
When the United States entered World War II, Coca-Cola began providing free drinks for
American soldiers. The Army permitted Coca-Cola to operate Coke’s system of providing
refreshments for soldiers. Coca-Cola set up bottling plants in several locations overseas to
assure the drink’s availability, setting the stage for the company’s post-war expansion. The
popularity of the drink exploded as American soldiers returned home from the war with a
taste for the drink.
9:
Coca-Cola only produces syrup concentrate which is then sold to various bottlers throughout
the world who hold a Coca-Cola franchise. Bottlers produce finished product in cans and
bottles from the concentrate in combination with filtered water and sweeteners. The bottlers
then distribute and merchandise the resulting product to stores, vending machines and
restaurants.
10:
Coca-Cola also produces a number of other soft drinks. Fanta’s origins, for example, date
back to Word War II when Coca-Cola in Germany ran out of the ingredients for Coke during
the war, which could be supplied only from the United States. He started producing a
different soft drink, Fanta, which proved to be a hit. After the war, Coca-Cola adopted the
Fanta brand as well. The German “Clear Lemon Fanta” variety became Sprite, another of the
company’s bestsellers.
11:
Coca-Cola has been involved in a number controversies and law suits. These cases include
monopolistic practices, pesticides in the product and even hiring mercenaries to kill union
leaders. However, Coca-Cola is more famous for its giving. It supported the Hurricane
Katrina evacuees, donated millions to Tsunami relief and the September 11 disaster relief
efforts – just to mention some recent causes.
Task Three: Scanning for Information (10 minutes) – Questions 12-18
Read the film reviews below and decide if the information is in the text A, B, C, or D.
Example:
it is based on a real story of a shooting
The correct answer is A.
Letter of text
12. characters are not adequately described
13. viewers tend to know what happens next
14. the director allows the viewers to form their own opinion
15. a couple living in a huge house
16. not a very persuasive biography
17. critics from different countries view the movie differently
18. the main character does now show a balanced performance
A. ELEPHANT
Gus Van Sant’s fictionalised account of the 1999 massacre at Columbine High School won
the Palme d’Or at last year’s Cannes Film festival. Shot in documentary style, Elephant is
deliberately banal. For about an hour we watch ordinary scenes of high school life, until two
armed male students suddenly stride in to blow everybody to hell. It is an undoubtedly
shocking high point of the film, but what is the audience to make of it?
Van Sant makes no effort to provide any insights into the central characters, nor to offer an
explanation for their motives in killing so many students. But does an explanation exist? Isn’t
it simply that Van Sant has the courage to treat his audience as adults and to invite them to
draw their own conclusions?
B. SYLVIA
Brave is the moviemaker who ventures into the life of Sylvia Plath. Ever since Plath killed
herself in 1963, an unholy flock of vengeful academics, conspiracy theorists and agenda-
driven historians has hovering over her literary reputation like ravenous vultures. Christine
Jeffs’ film attempts to portray the stormy relationship between Plath (Gwyneth Paltrow) and
Ted Hughes (Daniel Craig), but it fails to convince. Paltrow is good in the early stages at
portraying Plath as an ambitious middle-class American girl torn between conformity and
revolt but she ends up resembling a passive-aggressive Mia Farrow on a bad hair day. It’s also
hard to escape the feeling that, without her fame, Plath’s story would seem rather ordinary.
D. MYSTIC RIVER
As children, Jimmy (Sean Penn), Dave (Tim Robbins) and Sean (Kevin Bacon) were bound
by a terrible secret. Years later, they are reunited by the murder of Jimmy’s daughter, of
which Dave finds himself accused. Clint Eastwood has directed good movies before, but
nothing as haunting as Mystic River. This extraordinary film, an outburst of tragic realism and
grief, may be as close as we are likely to come on the screen to the spirit of Greek tragedy.
Several American critics have said much the same thing but that’s only because their idea of a
decent film is a Hollywood drama that addresses big, time-honoured themes through a tale of
ordinary people played by esteemed actors. In Britain critics view things rather differently:
Mystic River is undoubtedly an ambitious and serious-minded film, but by no stretch of the
imagination could it be termed a masterpiece.
Task Four: Reading for detailed Information (10 minutes) – Questions 19-25
Read the following text taken from a British magazine about cannibalism. Answer the
multiple-choice questions about it and choose the best answer: A, B, C, or D.
ANSWERS
19 20 21 22
23 24 25 --------------------
TEST 3: WRITING
You are planning to move in together Jane, with another student at your London school,
to save money.
1.1 Write a note to Jane outlining your choice AND reasons. (60-80 words)
AND
1.2 Write a letter to the real estate agency asking for more information about your choice (60-
80 words)
Hi!
I found these ads yesterday in the Week. These places look promising but I’m still at the
hospital and I couldn’t look through them. Let me know which one we should pick and why.
Also consider
· affordable but not run down?
· enough room for both of us?
· commuting to the university?
· what about shops and entertainment nearby?
Could you write a nice letter of inquiry to the real estate agent? Ask them about:
· availability (from/to)
· what about deposit? how much?
· can they show it? when?
Regards,
Jane
TO LET
2-room flat in a busy area with all amenities nearby
In prime condition
5 minutes from tube station
GBP 1300
TO LET
2-room converted office close to London (20km)
Nice, refurbished flat
Quiet, peaceful neighbourhood
GBP 980
TO LET
2 room flat with nice living room
in need of minor repairs
10-minute walk to tube
Bars, restaurants, shopping in the neighbourhood
GBP 1150
1. You have read a new book recently that you especially enjoyed.
Write a review and recommend it to others.
3. “Old relatives are often abandoned.” To what extent do you agree with this statement?
Write an essay.
Task Two: Multiple Choice Gap Fill (10 minutes) Questions 1-10
Complete the following article by choosing the most suitable word from each of the 4
possible options.
…Example… as it sounds, we could learn a few things about urban regeneration from
Albania, says Andrew Mueller. …1…. I visited Tirana, I imagined that the capital of Europe’s
poorest country would ….2…. a large, dismal housing estate. And a couple of years ago it
probably did. But under its current …3…, a conceptual artist named Edi Rama, the city has
had a radical makeover. Almost every building in downtown Tirana is now painted in a …4…
of bright colours, zigzags, stripes and polka-dots. From space, the city must …5… like a giant
Hawaiian shirt. If the visual transformation is amazing, …6… too is the effect it has had on
the city’s residents. Not everyone likes the colour scheme, but they are talking about it. After
years of meekly …7… their depressing surroundings, the population has been shocked into
thinking about what constitutes an ideal urban environment.
Tirana shares many of the …8… problems as London: crime, drugs, apathy, and low
expectations. These can’t ….9… be cured with a lick of paint. But many studies show that
people undoubtedly …10… to their surroundings – so why not try Edi’s plan here?
EXAMPLE:
A unlikely B probably C possible D possibly
The correct answer is A.
Please read the following text and fill each gap with ONE appropriate word. The first one has
been done for you as an example.
For questions 11-20, complete the following article by writing the missing words in the table
below. Use only ONE word for each space.
YOU MUST THINK OF THE WORD – THERE ARE NO MULTIPLE CHOICES.
When the local authorities in a small town in Montana banned smoking in ...Example…
public places, many local residents were none too pleased. But the effect on their health was
dramatic: heart attack rates fell …11… nearly 60% in the first six months. Researchers said
…12… were amazed by the results. “We know from longer-term studies …13… effects of
second-hand smoke occur within minutes,” Stanton Glantz of the University of California told
the International Herald Tribune. “But it was quite stunning …14… see this large effect so
quickly.” …15… happened next was no less remarkable. When the state legislature lifted the
ban, …16… response to pressure from the tobacco industry, heart attack rates bounced back
again, almost as quickly …17… they had fallen. Helena was a perfect place to conduct such a
study. The town is relatively isolated, and …18… is only one cardiac-care hospital within a
60 mile radius. This made …19… easy to control the study sample and methodology.
Researchers also found there was no change in heart attacks for those living outside the city,
…20… there was no ban.
ANSWERS
11 12 13 14 15
16 17 18 19 20