Progress Test Files 6-10 Grammar, Vocabulary, and Pronunciation B
Progress Test Files 6-10 Grammar, Vocabulary, and Pronunciation B
Progress Test Files 6-10 Grammar, Vocabulary, and Pronunciation B
Class ____________________________
GRAMMAR
16
Name ____________________________
Class ____________________________
3 Complete the sentences with the correct form of the verb in brackets.
Example: We’ve arranged for the tour to be (be) finished at 9.30.
1 It’s no use ________ (ask) Barry to help this weekend. He’s going to be away until Monday.
2 Ivan’s waiting for the telephone ________ (ring). Ben said he’d call us as soon as he got some
news.
3 Provided Lisa ________ (take) her phone with her when she left this morning, we should be
able to send her a text message.
4 He’s tired of ________ (be) given presents he can’t use. He says he’d rather have money.
5 We would ________ (wait) to start eating, but we didn’t know you were coming.
6 Sheila advised me ________ (contact) the manufacturer. They may be able to repair the laptop.
7 If you ________ (have) a bit more money to spend, you could buy a bigger TV.
8 We ________ (not hear) Franco’s band play tomorrow night if we don’t get tickets.
9 I dislike people ________ (talk) while I’m giving a presentation.
10 We would hate you ________ (think) we don’t want to come to your concert.
11 By next Friday I hope ________ (have) finished this project and started something new.
12 Would you rather ________ (give) me the blue hat and kept the red one for yourself? We can
trade, if you’d like to.
12
Grammar total 40
Name ____________________________
Class ____________________________
VOCABULARY
10
10
Name ____________________________
Class ____________________________
PRONUNCIATION
10
READING
A TRAVELLER OR A TOURIST?
A
What is the difference between a traveller and a tourist? Well, the easy distinction often
made concerns what kind of trip people are on. To put it simply, someone visiting other
countries with a backpack and roaming from place to place without a fixed itinerary is often
regarded, especially by themselves, as a ʻtraveller’. Someone on holiday, especially
someone on a package holiday for one or two weeks, is generally regarded as a ʻtourist’.
According to this distinction, the traveller gains an understanding of the place as it really is –
mixing in with the locals, learning about the culture – whereas the tourist merely skates over
the surface, seeing the sights but ignoring the people and their culture. This is why many
people who consider themselves ʻtravellers’ sneer dismissively at ʻtourists’ and are so
anxious to distance themselves from them.
However, this distinction does not seem to me to hold water in many cases. First of all, let’s
accept that a traveller is someone who fully experiences the place they visit rather than
simply observing it from the outside, as a tourist does. Does everyone calling themselves a
traveller really do this? Of course not. There are herds of young backpackers out there in all
corners of the world who see and learn very little of the places they visit. Sticking together in
groups, their tales on return are seldom of what they learnt of other cultures but of the other
backpackers they met. Contact with local people is negligible, and there is the suspicion that
they are merely ticking boxes so that they can say they have visited all the places that their
peers go to. This seems to me not to distinguish them at all from the package tourists
boasting about the places they have been to, but who the backpackers so deride. Secondly,
there are plenty of people much older than the backpackers who do immerse themselves in
the cultures of the places they visit, even if they are only on short holidays. It’s not about
how long your stay is, how old you are, how you got there, or how you move around there.
It’s all about attitude.
If you really are a traveller, there’s a purpose to your trip beyond simply getting away from
work, taking it easy, or enjoying the weather. You broaden your mind, see other people’s
lives through their eyes, gain new perspectives. You meet and have real conversations with
local people. You learn that some of your expectations and assumptions were wrong. Your
trip has an effect on you. You are wiser about another culture, other ways of thinking and
living. A tourist, on the other hand, isn’t interested in any of that. Tourists hardly engage at
all with the place they are visiting, preferring to confirm their own preconceptions rather than
challenge them, keeping the local people and culture at arm’s length, seeing everything
through the lens of a camera.
Name ____________________________
Class ____________________________
One of the first rules of being a traveller is that you have to accept the place for what it is.
Don’t complain that it’s hot, that there are bugs, that life moves at a different pace, that local
people sometimes stare at you. Don’t keep comparing the place with home or other places
you’ve been. Don’t let disappointments about the quality of service or level of facilities in
your accommodation dominate your thoughts. Instead, get out and about. Watch how local
people interact, how they go about their daily business. Learn some words of the language
that you can use in shops and other places and go where the local people go. Ask questions
rather than thinking you know all the answers. Once you’ve found the various bits of key
information you need, leave the guidebook behind – you’ll learn more from personal contact
and direct experience than you can get from any book. Put the camera away for a while and
instead store images of what you see in your mind. Anyone can do these things, no matter
what kind of trip they’re on. Even if you’re on a short annual holiday, you can be a traveller
rather than a tourist; plenty of people who call themselves travellers are actually tourists. It’s
all in the mind.
8 The writer compares travellers and tourists in section C in connection with ________.
A whether or not they change their views of the places they visit
B what local people in the places they visit think of them
C what they tell other people about their trips when they return
9 At the beginning of section D, the writer lists things that ________.
A people he regards as tourists do
B travellers usually don’t notice
C cause annoyance to local people
10 The writer’s main point in the text as a whole is that ________.
A the kind of trip you take is less important than your attitude towards it
B your attitude towards a trip greatly affects your enjoyment of it
C the attitude of a traveller is no better than the attitude of a tourist
10
5
Reading total 15
Name ____________________________
Class ____________________________
WRITING
Choose one of the titles below and write approximately 250 words:
1 Your teacher has asked you to write an essay on the following topic: ʻAlternative medicine is as
effective as mainstream medicine. ’
2 Write a report using the information below.
The directors of the company you work for would like to know whether or not they should open a
canteen for their employees. You have been asked to get feedback from as many employees as
possible and to write a report detailing whether or not they want a canteen, what food they would
expect, and to make suggestions for getting more people to use the canteen.
You have made notes covering the views of the majority of people:
People like idea of canteen and want it open from 7.00 a.m. for breakfast to 4.00 p.m. for tea.
They will only use it if cheap (if prices same as local shops, they prefer going out).
Want hot and cold food; meat and vegetarian options.
If very crowded (too many people, slow service), they will go to shops outside.
Writing total 10
Reading and Writing total 25
Name ____________________________
Class ____________________________
LISTENING
1 Listen to five people talking about various laws banning certain things. Match the
speakers (1–5) to what they say about the law or ban (A–H).
Speaker 1
Speaker 2
Speaker 3
Speaker 4
Speaker 5
2 Listen to a talk about celebrity chefs who have appeared on TV in Britain. Complete
the sentences using no more than three words.
1 The phrase ʻDelia effect’ refers to something that happens in ________.
2 British people ate, but did not cook ________ and ________ dishes until the 1980s.
3 Jamie Oliver has encouraged people to eat meals that are both ________ and ________-
________.
4 Anton Mosimann’s attempt to get British people to replace salt with ________ failed.
5 The most influential chefs have been the ones whose recipes appeal to ________ people.
5
Listening total 10
SPEAKING
4 Now talk about one of these statements, saying if you agree or disagree. Give reasons.
1 ʻComputer games have a totally negative effect on people.’
2 ʻPeople’s pets cause too much trouble for other people.’
3 ʻPeople who don’t travel only see a limited view of the world.’
Speaking total 20
Listening and Speaking total 30