MSU C2 Ss
MSU C2 Ss
MSU C2 Ss
Jenny Dooley
• sample answer sheet
ISBN 978-1-3992-0628-0
Test 1 ................................................................................................................................. p. 5
Test 2 ................................................................................................................................. p. 25
Test 3 ................................................................................................................................. p. 45
Test 4 ................................................................................................................................. p. 65
Test 5 ................................................................................................................................. p. 85
Instructions
For this section of the test, a proctor has given you a special answer form.
Using a Number 2 pencil only, write as much as you can, as well as you
can, in an original composition on one of the two topics below. You have
35 minutes to complete the composition.
1. One of your friends has confided in you that he/she is being bullied by
some other students, but he/she is afraid to go to the college authorities.
How do you react to what he/she tells you? What do you advise him/
her to do? What can be done to prevent this from happening in the
future? Be sure to support your answer with examples, reasons, and
explanations.
OR
2. More people today are living on their own rather than in multi-member
households. What do you think the reasons are for this? What are the
advantages and disadvantages of living on your own? What can be
done to ensure people don’t feel isolated in their daily life? Be sure to
support your answer with examples, reasons, and explanations.
• a test booklet
• a Number 2 pencil.
If you are missing any of these items, raise your hand, and a test proctor
will assist you.
Instructions
This section has three main parts. Part 1 has several short conversations,
and Part 2 has longer conversations. Part 3 contains an extended
monologue and an extended dialogue.
• There are 40 questions on this listening test. For each question, choose
the one best answer.
• For each question, find the letter on the answer sheet that corresponds
to the answer you have chosen. Use your pencil to completely fill in
the circle for your answer.
• If you are not sure of the answer, take your best guess. Unanswered
items will be scored as incorrect.
For each question in your Listen to the conversation You will not hear the question; you will
test booklet, you will hear a and choose the letter of the see it and read it. You will read it quietly
short conversation. Each choice that best answers to yourself. Use your pencil to mark your
conversation has a short title the question that appears answer on your answer sheet. You are
to tell you what it is about. in your test booklet. allowed to take notes in the test booklet.
Now look at Example X, Discussing dinner, and listen to the following conversation.
Discussing dinner
What concern does the woman have?
a. Their friend will intrude on their dinner plans.
b. The food he will make will not taste good.
c. He will eat her food.
In this section you will hear Before listening to each Listen to each conversation
longer conversations. conversation, you will and answer the questions that
read 3 to 5 questions. appear in your test booklet.
10. What advice does the man give the woman? 17. What is the woman’s opinion of her mother?
a. stop buying so many T-shirts a. She doesn’t like her interfering in her life.
b. give away T-shirts she doesn’t wear b. She thinks they have trouble communicating.
c. save money by buying cheaper T-shirts c. She would prefer her to be stricter sometimes.
11. Why is the man thinking of buying a suit? 18. How does the man react to the woman’s description
a. He likes to replace his suits every year. of her mom?
b. There are good deals on suits at the moment. a. He understands her mom’s actions.
c. A suit might come in handy for special events. b. He is surprised the woman feels that way.
c. He thinks her mom has done nothing wrong.
12. What does the woman say about designer clothes?
a. She says they are not worth the high cost. 19. What criticism does the woman make about her dad?
b. She likes them but can’t afford them at full a. He tells boring stories.
price. b. He is always arguing with her mom.
c. She would rather buy cheaper clothes. c. He will often dominate a conversation.
Losing weight 20. What is the woman’s final comments about her
13. Why does the man like to play lots of different parents?
sports? a. She would like them to talk to each other more.
a. It’s the only way he can lose weight. b. She thinks she has inherited their good
b. It allows him to eat as much as he wants. qualities.
c. It exercises different parts of the body. c. She thinks she is nothing like them.
In this section you will hear Before listening to You will listen to the passage
an extended monologue each passage, twice, and then you will answer
and an extended dialogue. you will read questions. a series of questions that
appear in your test booklet.
A Viking warrior
21. Why does the speaker mention Digging Up the Past? 26. What evidence did the research team reference in
a. It is the title of her latest book. their 2019 article to back up their claims?
b. It is the name of the lecture series. a. photos from Bj.581
c. It is the newest section of the library. b. bone analyses from other sites
c. sketches from over 140 years ago
22. Based on findings in the grave, what is a safe
assumption to make? 27. What do the researchers assume about the person
a. This person used a bow. whose body was discovered at Bj.581?
b. This person played games for fun. a. She was most likely a princess or a queen.
c. This person was an expert weaver. b. She was born and raised in Birka.
c. She moved around a lot.
23. Why did archaeologists originally believe the warrior
was male? 28. What does the speaker believe?
a. because males were buried in a seated a. We should rethink how we evaluate data.
position out of respect b. In the future we will have better testing
b. because the jewelry found in the grave was technology.
masculine c. Excavations should be conducted by local
c. because the grave lacked items associated archaeologists.
with females
29. Who most likely will give the next talk at this function?
24. What tests did researchers perform on the body a. the head librarian
around fifty years ago? b. a historian of Viking lore
a. They analyzed the chromosomes. c. a professor at State College
b. They examined the bones.
c. They studied the DNA. 30. To whom is the speaker addressing her speech?
a. students in a history class
25. What concerns did people have of Hadenstierna- b. anybody who might be interested
Jonson and Price’s findings? c. her colleagues in the field of archaeology
a. They tested the wrong body.
b. They relied on outdated technology.
c. Their testing methods were unreliable.
Healthy habits
31. How does the woman recommend you break any 36. Why does the woman suggest eating fermented
bad habits? sauerkraut?
a. You use your own determination to break the a. It is highly nutritious and really easy to prepare.
bad habits. b. It can increase the amount of willpower we
b. You should see a counselor who will be able have.
to help you. c. It breaks down dependency on unhealthy foods.
c. You adopt good habits that take the place of
the bad habits. 37. Why are homemade fermented foods better than
ones bought from a store?
32. What is the woman’s attitude towards willpower? a. The store-bought ones are full of bacteria and
a. We have lots of it so we can use it whenever are not safe.
we want. b. The store-bought ones have little bacterial
b. It is not necessary so long as you eat the right activity and no health benefits.
foods. c. It’s much easier to prepare your own
c. It is limited and so it should be used carefully. fermented foods than go to the store.
33. Why does the woman believe that new habits should 38. Why is the man put off preparing his own foods?
be repeated for 21 days? a. It’s too much effort and takes too long.
a. Eastern and Western traditions advise it. b. He has never done it before and doesn’t
b. Psychological tests have shown that it works. know how.
c. She has seen results in the people she assists. c. It doesn’t taste as good as the food he buys
at the store.
34. What advice does the woman give about willpower?
a. less than half should be spent on fighting 39. What can the man do if he doesn’t want to make his
urges own fermented sauerkraut?
b. only expend a small amount on a new habit a. He can buy it at an organic food store.
c. use half for new habits and half to fight urges b. He can buy it at any local store.
c. He can order it from an online retailer.
35. Why are the speakers concerned about foods like
sugar? 40. Why do you think the man interviewed the woman?
a. They cause you to put on weight. a. He has some unhealthy habits himself and
b. It’s easy to become dependent on them. wants her advice.
c. They are bad for our dental health. b. He wants to inform others how to lead a
healthier lifestyle.
c. He is interested in how other cultures combat
addictions.
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Instructions
• For each question, find the letter on the answer sheet that corresponds
to the answer you have chosen. Use your pencil to completely fill in
the circle for your answer.
• If you are not sure of the answer, take your best guess. Unanswered
items will be scored as incorrect.
Example
When we lived by the sea we ______ to swim every morning.
a. got used
b. use
c. used
d. would
The correct answer is c. You would mark “c” on your answer sheet.
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41. I have been reading this book for weeks, but ______ 48. It is said that six ______ ten people now live in cities.
I have only reached chapter 2. a. of each of
a. so much b. in all of
b. so that c. of the
c. so long d. out of
d. so far
49. When you’re telling these stories, I’m never sure
42. If I ______ the car, I will get to the mall sooner. whether you ______ serious or not.
a. was taking a. were
b. would take b. are being
c. take c. were being
d. will take d. is
43. You should make sure you have the right currency 50. Lots of people agree that they should live healthier
______ you are going abroad on vacation. lifestyles, but ______ are unwilling to even walk to
a. where work each day.
b. whether a. most
c. so b. few
d. if c. several
d. each
44. I am so tired I think I could ______ in bed all day.
a. lie 51. Steve hadn’t even trained, ______ he still managed
b. lay to win the race.
c. lain a. in spite of
d. be lying b. yet
c. even though
45. If I ______ more attention in class, I might have done d. despite
better on the test.
a. had paid 52. Valerie studied in France for six months. ______ she
b. used to pay greatly improved her French.
c. would have paid a. The time was that
d. will be paying b. That it was when
c. This the time when
46. There were ______ people in line outside the movie d. It was at this time that
theater that we decided to go to a club instead.
a. too many 53. Spending this time with you ______ me the chance
b. so much to really get to know you.
c. such a lot a. it gave
d. so many b. has given
c. give
47. Oh no, not again! Do you remember what I ______ d. it has given
you last time this happened?
a. had told 54. ______ Bob had run out of milk, he went to get some
b. told more at the store.
c. did tell a. Due to
d. will tell b. Since
c. For
d. Yet
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56. ______ before everyone else, Kim sat at her desk and 63. Can you tell me ______ ?
read a book. a. where the nearest gas station it is
a. He would arrive b. where the nearest gas station is
b. Have to arrive c. where is the nearest gas station
c. He had arrived d. where it is the nearest gas station
d. Having arrived
64. Sara kept working on her assignment, ______ it was
57. Sam told his team members ______ he had enjoyed taking so long.
working with them. a. despite
a. so many b. even though
b. what the reason c. however
c. how much d. in spite of
d. so that
65. _____ Fran so furious with Amy.
58. If you want to do a really good job, you should do a. Hardly had I seen
______ it takes to get it right. b. Scarcely has it been seen
a. however c. Rarely have I seen
b. whichever d. Seldom I saw
c. whatever
d. whenever 66. The teacher allowed Sara ______ class early for her
doctor’s appointment.
59. Though he had worked really hard all vacation, John a. leave
______ he still hadn’t earned enough money for b. leaving
college. c. to leave
a. finds d. to be leaving
b. had found
c. found 67. I love all the suggestions, particularly ______ that
d. is finding mean we get more time off work.
a. they
60. Tom did so badly on the test it didn’t seem ______ b. them
he had studied at all. c. this
a. to be d. those
b. as though
c. in order to 68. An important part of my life ______ the people who
d. in case of stood by me.
a. has been
61. Can you tell me what time it is? I seem to ______ my b. have been
watch. c. will be
a. have forgot d. is being
b. forget
c. forgetting
d. have forgotten
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69. When you looked through the viewfinder, ______ 75. Harry avoids ______ in the rain whenever possible.
what I saw? a. driving
a. saw you b. having driven
b. did you see c. to be driven
c. did you saw d. to drive
d. are you seeing
76. As it’s your birthday, I want to treat you ______
70. ______ it’s a warm day, I won’t take my coat with me. a special surprise.
a. Due to a. in
b. Because b. on
c. Despite c. to
d. Whether d. for
71. If you hadn’t given me a clue, I never ______ have 77. I am running so late that by the time I get home,
guessed who it was in the photo. Jonah ______ dinner.
a. shall a. will already have finished
b. will b. has already finished
c. might c. already had finished
d. would d. will have finished already
72. This was a really complicated project. It was ______ 78. I saw an old movie last night that starred lots of
work even for a professional. today’s actors before they ______ .
a. much a. wasn’t well known
b. a lot of b. were well known
c. too many c. hadn’t been well known
d. plenty d. had been known well
73. Even though you can watch it afterwards online, 79. John’s friend insisted ______ more time completing
there’s nothing like actually ______ at the concert in the assignment if he wanted better grades.
person. a. for taking
a. being b. he take
b. to be c. him to take
c. to have been d. having taken
d. would have been
80. ______ you need any help with your laptop again,
74. If you need assistance, you ______ call the helpdesk. just give me a call.
a. had to a. What
b. must have to b. Will
c. will have to c. Would
d. will need d. Should
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Instructions
This reading test has four passages. Each passage is followed by several
questions.
• For each question, find the letter on the answer sheet that corresponds
to the answer you have chosen. Use your pencil to completely fill in
the circle for your answer.
• If you are not sure of the answer, take your best guess. Unanswered
items will be scored as incorrect.
15
Reading Passage 1
The following article appeared in a travel magazine. Read the article carefully and answer the questions
that follow.
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86. How does the hotel replicate its “book theme” in the
restaurant?
a. The serving staff are named after different
authors.
b. The restaurant is named after a part of a
book.
c. The menu offers dishes that literary
characters have eaten.
d. Patrons receive a complimentary book with
every meal.
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Reading Passage 2
The following article about forests appeared in a nature magazine. Read the article carefully and answer
the questions that follow.
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93. What point is made by revealing that the Fire Service 98. Which of the following is closest in meaning to
now refers to a “fire year” rather than a “fire mitigate in the eighth paragraph?
season”? a. ignore
a. Different terminology can be used to refer to b. exaggerate
the same phenomenon. c. reduce
b. The period which forests are at risk from d. acknowledge
wildfire has lengthened.
c. The term “fire year” is more understandable 99. What does the article suggest to combat wildfires?
to the general public. a. enlarge the budget for fire departments
d. Wildfires are now occurring during every b. provide support to homeowners willing to
month of the year. take precautions
c. convince the government to severely punish
94. According to the article, what particular factor offenders
contributes to the growth of wildfires? d. allow the Wildland Fire System to manage all
a. the fact that the seasons are warmer and severe wildfires
drier than in the past
b. the lack of trained firefighters to tackle 100. What is the main purpose of the article?
outbreaks of wildfire a. to encourage listeners to take immediate
c. the growth in the numbers of forests in recent action
years b. to appeal to the government for more
d. insect and disease epidemics weakening assistance
forest resistance to fires c. to inform the listener about today’s
challenges
95. According to the article, who should be responsible d. to warn listeners not to live in or near
for managing the risk of forest wildfire? forested areas
a. local fire departments and the state
government
b. the people who choose to live in or near the
forests
c. the professional and experienced Forest
Service
d. a combination of all concerned stakeholders
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Reading Passage 3
This article appeared in a science magazine. Read the article carefully and answer the questions that
follow.
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102. Why does the writer tell the story of the chief and 107. Which of the following is closest in meaning to
Lundie? thwart their efforts in the fifth paragraph?
a. to show how the Samoans and missionaries a. suddenly lose their way
lived in harmony b. rudely interrupt a native ritual
b. to illustrate how willing Samoans were to c. successfully oppose their attempts
change their religion d. completely ignore their traditional practices
c. to show the missionaries were interested in
learning about Samoan traditions 108. How did the layout and organization of Samoa help
d. to illustrate how Samoans kept their traditions preserve the tatau ritual?
despite external influences a. Missionaries could not understand all the
different Samoan dialects.
103. What does the writer say about tattoo practices on b. Villages were spread out over a large area
other Pacific islands? and largely governed themselves.
a. They were in danger of completely dying out. c. The traditions survived on islands the
b. Their artists were as skillful as the Samoans. missionaries were unaware of.
c. The missionaries promoted them. d. Samoans lived on islands that were easy to
d. They copied the designs from Samoan tatau. defend from foreign invaders.
104. Why does the writer believe that Samoans who 109. Why do many Samoans today wait until later in life to
currently live abroad get tattooed? undergo the tattoo ritual?
a. It marks them as different from those who a. They prefer to put their career first.
stayed in Samoa. b. The ceremony can cost a lot of money.
b. It is a way to retain links with their cultural c. They need to travel back to Samoa to do it.
heritage. d. The ceremony takes a long time to complete.
c. It is now considered an art form in many
countries. 110. What is the writer’s main reason for writing this
d. It is an easy way to blend in with the local article?
population. a. to inform readers how tribes used to live
b. to encourage readers to get a tattoo
105. According to the writer, why did Samoans themselves
traditionally get tattooed? c. to attract more tourists to modern-day Samoa
a. to frighten their enemies d. to give information about an ongoing tradition
b. to identify themselves as Samoan
c. to denote a marriage
d. to mark the fact they were no longer children
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Reading Passage 4
The following review was published in your local paper. Read the review carefully and answer the questions
that follow.
A Wonderful Stroke of Luck, Ann Beattie’s 21st book, is compromise progress in Ben’s adult life. He and his
extremely smart: edgy, infectious, witty, and yet a bit Bailey cohorts are having trouble betting on the future or
brooding. Some readers will wonder if it is too smart; if, in even gauging the “really” in “What do I really want?”
style and tone, intelligence has conquered feeling in
While one would assume that Beattie would develop this
paralyzing ways. It certainly seems to have done so in
dimension more fully via a hefty treatment of Ben and his
several of the major characters. They are oddly desperate
fellow Bailey grads in college, that does not happen. Instead,
and oddly blocked.
Beattie jumps over the university years and continues the
We meet Ben and his classmates during their senior year at narrative with portrayals of unsteady career pursuits and
Bailey Academy, a co-ed New Hampshire boarding school unsteady relationships. We watch how these empowered
designed to discover and promote the ambitions of a young adults, described magnificently from their mid-20s
privileged generation – and/or its parents. Beattie’s handling into their mid-30s, stumble in the shadows.
of how these classmates interact, especially how they
Many of them spend some of that early career time in New
speak to one another, is remarkable. So is the anonymous
York City or nearby suburbs. Ben chooses the easiest job by
narrating voice, who seems, at times, like an invisible
which he can make a decent living: writing computer code.
overseer of the teenagers’ potentialities and handicaps –
He lives alone. The concept of things being “for the long
like someone who may have graduated from Bailey a
term” seems to belong to another epoch.
decade or so back and can guess what they’re going
through. When an old friend from Bailey, a woman he had been
fascinated by, comes back into his life, he is seriously
Positioned somewhere in between this voice and those of
shaken. Pierre La Verdere also comes back into his life,
the students is Pierre La Verdere’s. This master teacher is a
exhibiting an unexpected neediness. But, by then, Ben is
complex personality who challenges his students in ways
beyond any compassion for this man whom he once
that don’t always seem responsible. La Verdere manages the
idealized. Perhaps with justification.
school’s honor society, but honor means different things to
different people. La Verdere is youthful and easily relates to Beattie is a magus of atmosphere. She captures the malaise
his charges. Sometimes, he seems too close to them; of her disoriented characters whose spirits have been
sometimes, his closeness feels like an act – a test. He is a suffocated by events. A Wonderful Stroke of Luck is a
brilliant talker who knows how to take full advantage of his powerful, nuanced study of arrested development, filled
charm. But one suspects a hollowness within. with Beattie’s sardonic wit. It is captivating, thought-
provoking, and disturbing.
The students are going through the usual crises: Their
nuclear families are breaking down through divorce and/or
illness. Generational tensions are accelerating. They invade
Ben’s consciousness – or the reader’s – in ways that
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Jenny Dooley
• sample answer sheet
ISBN 978-1-3992-0628-0