cpe hb samp p1


A DETAILED GUIDE TO CPE
Sources
PAPER 1 READI NG
Books (fiction and non-fiction), non-specialist articles from
General Description journals, magazines and newspapers, promotional and
informational materials (e.g. advertisements, guide books,
manuals).
Paper Format
The paper contains four parts.
Answer Format
For all parts of this paper, candidates indicate their answers
Timing
by shading the correct lozenges on an answer sheet.
1 hour 30 minutes.
Candidates should use a soft pencil (B or HB) and mark their
answers firmly. Candidates should use an eraser to rub out
any answer they wish to change.
Length of Texts
Approximately 3,000 words in total.
Marks
Questions in Part 1 carry one mark. Questions in Parts 2, 3
Number of Questions
and 4 carry two marks.
40.
Task Types
Lexical cloze, gapped text, multiple choice.
PART TASK TYPES AND FORMAT TASK FOCUS NUMBER OF
QUESTIONS
1 Four-option multiple-choice lexical cloze Idioms, collocations, fixed 18
phrases, complementation,
Three texts each containing six gaps. Each gap corresponds
phrasal verbs, semantic
to a word and candidates must select the word from the
precision
four options given which fits the gap.
2 Four-option multiple choice Detail, opinion, attitude, tone, 8
purpose, main idea,
Four texts on one theme from a range of sources. Two four-
implication, text organisation
option multiple-choice questions on each text.
features (exemplification,
comparison, reference)
3 Gapped text Cohesion, coherence, text 7
structure, global meaning
One text from which paragraphs have been removed and
placed in jumbled order after the text. Candidates must
decide from where in the text the paragraphs have been
removed.
4 Four-option multiple choice As Part 2 7
One text with seven four-option multiple-choice questions.
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PREPARI NG FOR THE READI NG PAPER In preparation, candidates should be encouraged to learn
whole phrases (rather than just individual words) together
with their appropriate usage. Vocabulary practice which
Introduction
studies the difference in meaning and usage between words
The Reading paper consists of four parts and a total of nine
with similar meanings will also help candidates prepare for
texts. The range of texts and task types which appears on the
this part of the paper.
Reading paper is intended to encourage familiarity with texts
from a range of sources, written for different purposes and
Part 2
presented in different formats. The sources for texts in the
Reading paper are mainly contemporary. The paper includes
Part 2 consists of four short texts with two multiple-choice
material from fiction, non-fiction books and journalism. Such
questions on each which test comprehension of text content.
sources as marketing materials and correspondence may be
Questions may test understanding of the whole short text or
used in Parts 1 and 2. The Reading paper aims to test
of text organisation and some questions will focus on the
comprehension at word, phrase, sentence, paragraph and
detail in sections of the text. The texts share a broad theme
whole text level.
and the linking theme is stated in the instructions. Being
aware of the thematic link between the texts should help
Essential preparation for the Reading paper is exposure to,
candidates in moving from one text to the next. Preparation
and engagement with, a substantial and varied range of
for this part of the Reading paper could usefully include
written English. The most successful CPE candidates are
topic-based activities.
likely to be those for whom reading in English is a leisure
activity as well as an educational requirement. All candidates
The texts come from a variety of sources and candidates
should be encouraged to read extensively as well as
should familiarise themselves with a wide range of sources,
intensively. This enables them to become familiar with a
registers, topics and lexical fields. Candidates should focus
wide range of language and is also helpful when they are
on texts in preparation for multiple-choice questions as
working on the longer texts in Parts 3 and 4.
suggested for Part 4 below.
It is important that candidates familiarise themselves with the
Part 3
instructions on the front page of the question paper, and for
each part of the test. Candidates should also be familiar with
Part 3, the gapped-text task, tests understanding of how texts
the technique of indicating their answers on the separate
are structured and the ability to predict text development.
answer sheet so that they can do this quickly and accurately.
The task consists of a text from which paragraphs have been
Some candidates prefer to transfer their answers at the end of
removed and placed in jumbled order after the text, along
each task rather than wait until they have completed the
with one extra paragraph which does not fit any of the gaps.
whole paper. Answers must be marked on the answer sheet
Candidates must select the paragraphs which fit the gaps in
within the time allowed for the Reading paper (11/2 hours).
the text; only one answer is correct in each case. Candidates
should be trained to read the gapped text first in order to gain
When preparing for the examination, it is helpful for
an overall idea of the structure and the meaning of the text,
candidates to spend time going through a sample paper and
and to notice carefully the information and ideas before and
to consider how to divide up the time between the different
after each gap as well as throughout the whole of the gapped
tasks. The Reading paper has a standard structure and format
text.
so that candidates will know what to expect in each part of
the paper. Candidates should be encouraged to read the
Candidates should beware of approaching the gapped-text
instructions for each task carefully, as they provide a brief
task as an exercise requiring them merely to identify extracts
context for the text and remind candidates of precisely how
from the text and sections in the text which contain the same
the task should be carried out, and where the answers should
words. The task is designed to test understanding of the
be recorded.
development of ideas, opinions and events rather than the
superficial recognition of individual words.
Part 1
The way in which a text has been gapped may require the
Part 1 consists of three unrelated short texts, each with six
reader to consider large sections or even the organisation of
gaps. Candidates must choose one word or phrase from a set
the whole of a text, in order to reconstitute a particular part
of four to fill the gaps. This involves choosing the answer that
of the text. Candidates should be trained to consider the
correctly fits the meaning within a phrase or sentence, and
development of the text as a whole, and not to focus on each
candidates may also have to take into account the broader
gap separately. Sometimes candidates will need to choose
context of the previous or following sentences or the whole
carefully between two extracts as possible answers and will
text. This part of the paper tests idioms, collocations, fixed
need to make decisions about which is the most logical
phrases, complementation, phrasal verbs and semantic
extract to fill the particular gap. Practice is needed in
precision.
recognition of a wide range of linguistic devices which mark
the logical and cohesive development of a text, e.g. words
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and phrases indicating sequence of events, cause and effect,
premise and conclusion. Exercises which involve analysing
the global organisation of a text and understanding how this
affects meaning would also be helpful.
Part 4
Part 4 consists of one longer text with seven multiple-choice
questions which test detailed understanding of a text,
including opinions and attitudes expressed in it. Candidates
need to read the text closely in order to distinguish between,
for example, apparently similar viewpoints, outcomes or
reasons. The questions are presented in the same order as the
information in the text and the final question may depend on
interpretation of the text as a whole, e.g. the writer s purpose,
attitude or opinion. Candidates should read each question
very carefully, as well as the four possible answers. The
questions can be answered correctly only by close reference
to the text. Candidates should be encouraged to read the text
before reading the multiple-choice questions.
Preparation for the multiple-choice task should include
practice in reading a text quickly for a first overall
impression, followed by close reading of the text in order to
prevent any misunderstandings which may lead candidates to
choose a wrong answer. Candidates should also practise
selecting and interpreting specific information from a text.
Activities which focus on recognising and evaluating attitude
and opinion and which enhance candidates abilities to infer
underlying meaning will also be helpful.
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READI NG SAMPLE PAPER (1)
UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE LOCAL EXAMINATIONS SYNDICATE
Examinations in English as a Foreign Language
CERTIFICATE OF PROFICIENCY IN ENGLISH
PAPER 1 Reading
SAMPLE PAPER 1 1 hour 30 minutes
Additional materials:
Answer sheet
Soft clean eraser
Soft pencil (type B or HB is recommended)
TIME 1 hour 30 minutes
INSTRUCTIONS TO CANDIDATES
Do not open this booklet until you are told to do so.
Write your name, Centre number and candidate number on the answer sheet in the spaces provided
unless this has already been done for you.
There are forty questions in this paper.
Answer all questions.
Mark your answers on the separate answer sheet. Use a soft pencil.
You may write on the question paper, but you must transfer your answers to the separate answer
sheet within the time limit.
At the end of the examination, you should hand in both the question paper and the answer sheet.
INFORMATION FOR CANDIDATES
Questions 1-18 carry one mark.
Questions 19-40 carry two marks.
This question paper consists of 11 printed pages and 1 blank page.
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2
Part 1
Mrs Murgatroyd
For questions 1-18, read the three texts below and decide which answer (A, B, C or D) best fits each
 And there s another thing, said Mrs Murgatroyd. Beside her in the taxi her husband concealed a small
gap. Mark your answers on the separate answer sheet.
sigh. With Mrs Murgatroyd there was always another thing. No matter how well things were (13)& .,
Jerome Flynn  Actor Turned Singer
Edna Murgatroyd went through life to the accompaniment of a running commentary of complaints, an
After a variety of jobs, Jerome Flynn became (1)& . successful with fellow actor Robson Green in the TV
endless litany of dissatisfaction. In short, she (14)& . without cease.
series Soldier, Soldier, and then when they (2)& . up as singers in 1995, they had three number one hits.
In the seat beside the driver, Higgins, the young executive from head office, who had been selected for
 It was a whirlwind, fantasy time, says Jerome.  We made the records because we quite (3)& . the
the week s vacation at the (15)& . of the bank on the grounds of being  most (16)& . newcomer of the
money, and it paid off. It was a lot of fun, but you can become (4)& . in the pop world. It s addictive, and
year, sat silent. He was in foreign exchange, an eager young man whom they had only met at London
once you re a pop star, people tend to (5)& . you on a pedestal. It was so mad we had to get out while
airport twelve hours earlier and whose natural enthusiasm had gradually (17)& . away before the
the going was good. Now money doesn t mean so much, although it (6)& . me to leave my career
onslaught of Mrs Murgatroyd. The driver, full of smiles when they selected his taxi for the run to the
behind for a while. But Robson wanted to go back to acting and has made quite a success of it. I d like
hotel a few minutes earlier, had also caught the mood, and he too had (18)& . into silence.
to work with him again one day.
1 A greatly B largely C hugely D grossly
13 A doing B getting C going D being
2 A joined B teamed C fixed D grouped
14 A nagged B gossiped C uttered D voiced
3 A craved B longed C yearned D fancied
15 A liability B expense C debit D deficit
4 A laid up B seized up C taken up D caught up
16 A promising B emerging C favourable D auspicious
5 A lift B have C put D hold
17 A washed B ebbed C dripped D rinsed
6 A enabled B empowered C entitled D effected
18 A paused B reposed C lapsed D desisted
The Sailing Trip
A few days ago, I was (7)& . my new sailing gear ready for my first long trip, around the coast of Britain
on the sailing ship Hirta. I watched a TV report of some fellow yachtsmen crossing the finishing (8)& . off
a place called Ushant to complete a record round-the-world voyage. The sea was rough, the wind
looked fierce and, although they were putting a brave (9)& . on it, the winning yachtsmen looked
exhausted. What I was seeing on the television screen was not my (10)& . of yachting. I felt smug
knowing I had this marvellous opportunity to drift gently round Britain learning to sail, and that I would be
steering (11)& . of the horrors of ocean sailing. Casually I looked up Ushant on the map. I went quite
cold: Ushant was (12)& . 32 kilometres further south than the starting point for my great journey on the
Hirta.
7 A going through B setting down C checking up D passing over
8 A mark B strip C line D sign
9 A face B eye C appearance D view
10 A thought B idea C notion D sense
11 A clean B straight C short D clear
12 A virtually B practically C simply D barely
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Part 2
How important is design?
You are going to read four extracts which are all concerned in some way with products. For questions
19-26, choose the answer (A, B, C or D) which you think fits best according to the text.
All toasters are not exactly the same under the skin but they are as
Mark your answers on the separate answer sheet.
near as makes no difference. They are boxes which neatly grill the
bread, waffles or whatever between little electric fires and eject
them just before they start to burn: an easy, well-proven
Advertisement for a Video technology whether it is purely mechanical or microchip-controlled.
The last fundamental innovation in toaster design was in 1927,
" You want to improve the quality of life, without using drugs or stimulants
when the Sunbeam company of America marketed the first pop-up
" you are ready to start the journey back to health and fitness, however short
model. Since then, there has been little to do design-wise except
or long it may be
to alter the styling according to the tastes of the times.
" you would prefer to use stress to your advantage rather than be its victim line 4
Designers try to give toasters the equivalent of sunroofs and anti-
" you are prepared to take charge of your own destiny and benefit from your
lock brakes  wider slots, double slots,  cool wall designs and the
own well-being
like  but cannot get away from the fact that you need only two
" you would like to get back the shape nature intended you to have
controls: a push-down lever and a timer. Upgrades merely dress
line 8
" you like to understand the principles behind concepts before taking action
up a timeless concept and are anyway almost all adopted
" you want to enhance your mental powers and your ability to focus on the
immediately by other manufacturers.
task in hand
line 11
So what you buy is styling, which can be a dirty word among  pure
" short-term fixes, be they through patches or pills, gimmicks or gizmos, hold
designers, since it is really just packaging, little different from the
no appeal
box the toaster comes in.  Real design, it is said, is more
" you are prepared to take a step at a time, build upon your success and take
fundamental. This is arguable: one of the greatest designers of
pleasure in the results
the 20th century, the French-born, America-based Raymond
line 15
" you have the temperament and strength of character to endure the journey
Loewy, was principally a stylist, and who can argue with the power
to physical, mental and spiritual health
of his famous creation, the Coca Cola bottle, which is functionally
far less efficient than a standard beer or wine bottle?
This is the video for you!
21 What does the writer say about developments in the design of toasters?
19 The advertised video is aimed at people who
A They have spoilt the original design.
B They are made to fool the public.
A are capable of perseverance.
C They are copied from other types of product.
B have been trying to change career.
D They have only been superficial.
C are too absorbed in their work.
D would like to change their personalities.
22 The writer uses the Coca Cola bottle as an example of
20 Which of these words is used dismissively?
A the advantages of using  real design.
B the fact that success may not depend on good design.
A stress (line 4)
C the kind of thing that  pure designers approve of.
B principles (line 8)
D the unpredictability of public response to style.
C patches (line 11)
D journey (line 15)
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7
Dream Cars
Catalogue Shopping in the USA
Daydreaming schoolchildren around the world love to doodle weird and wonderful cars. My favourite parts of the my mind that it would end in never been used again. And
New York Times on Sunday heartbreak. It was a little the thing is that I knew all
Most grow up to drive something much more visually mundane than those adolescent
are the peripheral bits  the reading light that you along that this was how it
flights of fancy. But a few are actively encouraged to continue drawing extraordinary and
parts that are so dull and clipped onto your book so as was going to end, that it
obscure they exert a kind of not to disturb anyone would all be a bitter
largely unrealistic modes of transport when they are studying at college. They are the car
hypnotic fascination. Above sleeping in the same room. disappointment. On second
designers of tomorrow, who will shape what we will drive in the next century.
all I like the advertising In this respect it was thoughts, if I ever ran one of
supplements, like the gift outstanding because it barely those companies I would
On a visit to the Art Centre in Los Angeles, which runs a course for vehicle designers, I
catalogue from the Zwingle worked. The light it cast just send people an empty
was shown some of the work in progress by Ronald Hill, head of transportation design.
Company of New York was absurdly feeble (in the box with a note in it saying
offering scores of products catalogue it looked like the  We have decided not to
Its visual excitement contrasted starkly with the dull, practical silhouettes of many
of the things-you-never- sort of thing you could send you the item you ve
modern production cars.
knew-you-needed variety  signal ships with if you got ordered because, as you well
an umbrella with a transistor lost at sea) and left all but know, it would never work
So are such unrealistic shapes out of touch with the real world of cars, and does it really
radio in the handle. What a the first two lines of a page properly and you would
benefit students to continue their schoolday doodles, albeit in a more sophisticated
great country! in darkness. I have seen only be disappointed. So let
Once in a deranged more luminous insects. this be a lesson to you for
manner? Hill insists that the exploratory designs are vital, and argues that more realistic
moment I bought something After about four minutes its the future.
considerations are, at least temporarily, irrelevant.  This may be the only chance in the
myself from one of these little beam fluttered and
career of these students when they can take some risk, stretch their imaginations and catalogues, knowing deep in failed altogether, and it has
really let fly. There s plenty of time later on for them to worry about constraints of
legislation and practical issues. We call this the  blue sky period, when there really is
25 The writer says that when he bought a light from a catalogue
no limit set on their design innovation.
A he had not thought about it carefully enough.
B it taught him a lesson about misleading adverts.
23 What does the writer imply about trainee car designers?
C it was something he had always wanted to do.
D he was not surprised by the outcome.
A They will go on to design more conservative cars.
B Their designs form the basis of those of production cars.
C They often criticise the designs of existing cars.
26 The writer thinks that the companies who produce such gift catalogues
D Their designs are restricted by what is possible.
A are cynical towards their customers.
24 What does Ronald Hill say about car design?
B should not be allowed to operate.
C are unique to the United States.
A There are too many regulations about it.
D never sell useful goods.
B Impractical designs play an important part in it.
C Cost has too much influence on design.
D Too much of it is dull and predictable.
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Part 3
You are going to read an extract from a short story. Seven paragraphs have been removed from the
extract. Choose from the paragraphs A-H the one which fits each gap (27-33) There is one extra
paragraph which you do not need to use. Mark your answers on the separate answer sheet.
A Rama prepared a limited quantity of E They gloated over it.  Five rupees
Just at that turning between Market Road and of passers-by. And he knew exactly at what hour
snacks for sale, but even then he had to invested in the morning has produced
the lane leading to the chemist s shop he had he would see the wrestler s arm searching for
carry back remnants. He consumed another five&  They ruminated on the
his  establishment . At eight in the evening you the perfect duck s egg. His custom was drawn
some of it himself, and the rest he exquisite mystery of this multiplication.
would not see him, and again at ten you would from the population swarming the pavement: the
warmed up and brought out for sale Then it was put back for further
see nothing, but between those times he arrived, boot polish boys, for instance, who wandered to
again the next day. investment on the morrow and the gains
sold his goods and departed. Those who saw and fro with brush and polish in a bag, endlessly
carefully separated and put away in a
him remarked thus,  Lucky fellow! He has hardly soliciting  Polish, sir, polish! Rama had a soft
little wooden box.
an hour s work a day and he pockets ten rupees spot for them.
B All the coppers that men and women of
 even graduates are unable to earn that! Three
30
this part of the universe earned through
hundred rupees a month! He felt irritated when
their miscellaneous jobs ultimately came F But he was a kindly man in private.  How
he heard such glib remarks and said,  What
It rent his heart to see their hungry, hollow eyes.
to him at the end of the day. He put all the customers survive the food, I can t
these folk do not see is that I sit before the oven
It pained him to see the rags they wore. And it
this money into a little cloth bag dangling understand. I suppose people build up a
practically all day frying all this& 
made him very unhappy to see the tremendous
from his neck under his shirt, and carried sort of immunity to such poisons, with all
eagerness with which they came to him. But
27
it home, soon after the night show had that dust blowing on it and the gutter
what could he do? He could not run a charity
started at the theatre. behind& 
At about 8:15 in the evening he arrived with a show, that was impossible. He measured out
load of stuff. He looked as if he had four arms, their half-glass of coffee correct to the fraction of
so many things he carried about him. His an inch, but they could cling to the glass as long
C No one could walk past his display G He got up when the cock in the next
equipment was the big tray balanced on his as they liked.
without throwing a look at it. A heap of house crowed. Sometimes it had a habit
head, with its assortment of edibles, a stool
bondas, which seemed puffed and big of waking up at three in the morning and
31
stuck in the crook of his arm, a lamp in another
but melted in one s mouth; dosais, white, letting out a shriek.  Why has the cock
hand and a couple of portable legs for mounting
round, and limp, looking like layers of lost its normal sleep? Rama wondered
He lived in the second lane behind the market.
his tray. He lit the lamp, a lantern which
muslin; chappatis so thin that you could as he awoke, but it was a signal he could
His wife opened the door, throwing into the night
consumed six pies worth of kerosene every day,
lift fifty of them on a little finger; duck s not miss. Whether it was three o clock or
air the scent of burnt oil which perpetually hung
and kept it near at hand, since he had to guard a
eggs, hard-boiled, resembling a heap of four, it was all the same to him. He had
about their home. She snatched from his hand
lot of loose cash and a variety of miscellaneous
ivory balls; and perpetually boiling coffee to get up and start his day.
all the encumbrances and counted the cash
articles.
on a stove. He had a separate aluminium
immediately.
pot in which he kept chutney, which went
28
32 gratis with almost every item. H When he saw some customer haggling,
he felt like shouting,  Give the poor fellow
He always arrived in time to catch the cinema
After dinner, he tucked a betel leaf and tobacco
a little more. Don t begrudge it. If you pay
crowd coming out after the evening show. A
in his cheek and slept. He had dreams of traffic
D His customers liked him. They said in an anna more he can have a dosai and a
pretender to the throne, a young scraggy fellow,
constables bullying him to move on and health
admiration,  Is there another place where chappati.
sat on his spot until he arrived and did business,
inspectors saying he was spreading all kinds of
you can get six pies and four chappatis
but he did not let that bother him unduly. In fact,
disease and depopulating the city. But
for one anna? They sat around his tray,
he felt generous enough to say,  Let the poor rat
fortunately in actual life no one bothered him
taking what they wanted. A dozen hands
do his business when I am not there. This
very seriously. The health officer no doubt came
hovered about it every minute, because
sentiment was amply respected, and the
and said,  You must put all this under a glass lid,
his customers were entitled to pick up,
pretender moved off a minute before the arrival
otherwise I shall destroy it some day& Take
examine, and accept their stuff after
of the prince among caterers.
care!
proper scrutiny.
29
33
Though so much probing was going on, he knew
Rama no doubt violated all the well-accepted
exactly who was taking what. He knew by an
canons of cleanliness and sanitation, but still his
extraordinary sense which of the jukta drivers
customers not only survived his fare but seemed
was picking up chappatis at a given moment 
actually to flourish on it, having consumed it for
he could even mention the licence number. He
years without showing signs of being any the
knew that the stained hand nervously coming up
worse for it.
was that of a youngster who polished the shoes
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Part 4
34 What does the writer say about newspapers in the first paragraph?
You are going to read the introduction from a book on sports. For questions 34-40, choose the answer
(A, B, C or D) which you think fits best according to the text. Mark your answers on the separate
A They tend not to include articles readers will find very challenging.
answer sheet.
B Articles in them do not reflect the way many people really speak.
C They are more concerned with profit than with quality of writing.
SPORTSWRITING
D They fail to realise what kind of writing would appeal to readers.
Offices and bars are often full of casual obscenity, but most British newspapers are & . well, not
35 What does the writer imply in the second paragraph?
necessarily careful about language, but careful about bad words anyway. The phrase  family newspaper
is an ineluctable part of our lives. Newspapers are not in the business of giving gratuitous offence. It is a
A GQ magazine contains articles that are well worth reading.
limitation of newspaper writing, and one everybody in the business, whether writing or reading,
B Some of the more recent men s magazines are unlikely to survive.
understands and accepts. There are many other necessary limitations, and most of these concern time and
space. C The standard of sportswriting in newspapers has improved in recent times.
Newspapers have dominated sportswriting in Britain for years, and have produced their own totem
D He is in a position to give an objective view of sportswriting in magazines.
figures and doyens. But ten years ago, a new player entered the game. This was the phenomenon of
men s magazines; monthly magazines for men that had actual words in them  words for actually reading. 36 Why were sportswriters for GQ given new freedoms?
GQ was the pioneer and, in my totally unbiased opinion as the long-term author of the magazine s sports
column, it leads the way still, leaving the rest panting distantly in its wake. A The restrictions of newspaper writing do not apply to writing for GQ.
Sport is, of course, a blindingly obvious subject for a men s magazine  but it could not be tackled
B The magazine s initial plans for its sports articles proved unrealistic.
in a blindingly obvious way. Certainly, one of the first things GQ was able to offer was a new way of
C Notions about what made good sports journalism were changing.
writing about sport, but this was not so much a cunning plan as a necessity. The magazine was doomed,
D The writers that it wanted to employ demanded greater freedom.
as it were, to offer a whole new range of freedoms to its sportswriters. Heady and rather alarming
freedoms. Freedom of vocabulary was simply the most obvious one and, inevitably, it appealed to the
37 What does the writer say about the amount of time allowed for producing articles?
schoolboy within us. But space and time were the others, and these possibilities meant that the craft of
sportswriting had to be reinvented.
A The best articles are often produced under great pressure of time.
Unlike newspapers, a magazine can offer a decent length of time to research and to write. These
B Having a long time to produce an article encourages laziness.
are, you would think, luxuries  especially to those of us who are often required to read an 800-word
C Writers are seldom satisfied by articles produced in a hurry.
match report over the telephone the instant the final whistle has gone. Such a discipline is nerve-racking,
D Having very little time to produce an article can be an advantage.
but as long as you can get it done at all, you have done a good job. No one expects a masterpiece under
such circumstances. In some ways the ferocious restrictions make the job easier. But a long magazine
38 Why can t writers for GQ use the same methods as writers for newspapers?
deadline gives you the disconcerting and agoraphobic freedom to research, to write, to think.
To write a piece for a newspaper, at about a quarter of the massive GQ length, you require a single
A Articles in GQ are not allowed to consist mainly of interviews.
thought. The best method is to find a really good idea, and then to pursue it remorselessly to the end,
where ideally you make a nice joke and bale out stylishly. If it is an interview piece, you look for a few B They want to be considered better than writers for newspapers.
good quotes, and if you get them, that s your piece written for you. For a longer piece, you must seek the
C Writers for newspapers do not have so much space to fill.
non-obvious. This is a good quality in the best of newspaper writing, but an absolute essential for any
D They have been told to avoid the conventions of newspaper writing.
writer who hopes to complete the terrifying amount of words that GQ requires. If you write for GQ, you
are condemned to try and join the best. There is no other way.
39 What does the writer say in the penultimate paragraph about certain pieces in GQ?
GQ is not restricted by the same conventions of reader expectation as a newspaper. You need not
worry about offending people or alienating them; the whole ethos of the magazine is that readers are there
A They will create enormous controversy.
to be challenged. There will be readers who would find some of its pieces offensive or even impossible
B They unintentionally upset some readers.
in a newspaper, or even in a different magazine. But the same readers will read the piece in GQ and find
C They are a response to demand from readers.
it enthralling.
D They match readers expectations.
That is because the magazine is always slightly uncomfortable to be with. It is not like a cosy
member of the family, nor even like a friend. It is the strong, self-opinionated person that you can never
40 The writer likens GQ magazine to a person who
quite make up your mind whether you like or not. You admire him, but you are slightly uneasy with him.
The people around him might not altogether approve of everything he says; some might not care for him
A says things you wish you had said yourself.
at all. But they feel compelled to listen. The self-confidence is too compelling. And just when you think
B frequently changes his point of view.
he is beginning to become rather a bore, he surprises you with his genuine intelligence. He makes a broad
C forces you to pay attention to him.
joke, and then suddenly he is demanding you follow him in the turning of an intellectual somersault.
D wants to be considered entertaining.
Page 19
READI NG SAMPLE PAPER (2)
UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE LOCAL EXAMINATIONS SYNDICATE
Examinations in English as a Foreign Language
CERTIFICATE OF PROFICIENCY IN ENGLISH
PAPER 1 Reading
SAMPLE PAPER 2 1 hour 30 minutes
Additional materials:
Answer sheet
Soft clean eraser
Soft pencil (type B or HB is recommended)
TIME 1 hour 30 minutes
INSTRUCTIONS TO CANDIDATES
Do not open this booklet until you are told to do so.
Write your name, Centre number and candidate number on the answer sheet in the spaces provided
unless this has already been done for you.
There are forty questions in this paper.
Answer all questions.
Mark your answers on the separate answer sheet. Use a soft pencil.
You may write on the question paper, but you must transfer your answers to the separate answer
sheet within the time limit.
At the end of the examination, you should hand in both the question paper and the answer sheet.
INFORMATION FOR CANDIDATES
Questions 1-18 carry one mark.
Questions 19-40 carry two marks.
This question paper consists of 11 printed pages and 1 blank page.
[Turn over
Page 20
2 3
Part 1
For questions 1-18, read the three texts below and decide which answer (A, B, C or D) best fits each
How economists think
gap. Mark your answers on the separate answer sheet.
Economists are starting to abandon their assumption that humans behave rationally, and instead are
Karri Country
finally (13) & . to grips with the crazy, mixed-up creatures we really are.  Are economists human? is
We took the coast road to our destination, Albany. Albany is at the southernmost point of Western
not a question that occurs to many practitioners of that dismal science, but it is one that (14) & . to the
Australia and from there the oceans (1) & . away to the Antarctic and the South Pole. But Western
minds of many non-economists exposed to conventional economic explanations.
Australia is a land of (2) & . contrasts. Our journey from Perth took us through rolling wheatlands
dotted with small settlements and solitary homesteads many kilometres from their nearest Economists have typically described the thought processes of man as strictly logical, (15) & . on a
neighbours. clearly defined goal and (16) & . from unsteady influences of emotion or irrationality  rather than the
uncertain, error-prone groping with which most of us are familiar. Of course, some human behaviour
The (3) & . eventually began to change, vast forests canopied the road to Walpole. We were
does (17) & . the rational pattern so beloved of economists. But they should remember that the rest
entering Karri country. Raised as I was in a country manicured and miniature by (4) & . , this seemed
of us are human.
to me a strange and alien land.
These days even economists are (18) & . up to this fact. A wind of change is blowing some human
The Karri tree belongs to the Eucalyptus family and is one of the tallest hardwoods in the world. The
spirit back into the dusty universities where economic theory is made.
(5) & . named  Valley of the Giants is truly breathtaking. A metal walkway (6) & . to the highest
branches of the Karri trees takes you on a swaying journey of discovery. Far below lies the dense
13 A bringing B getting C taking D setting
lush valley floor whilst all around the forest reaches out to the blue, misty horizon, silent and majestic!
14 A springs B jumps C pops D strikes
1 A spread B reach C expand D stretch
15 A sited B laid C centred D placed
2 A bright B utter C stark D sheer
16 A absent B free C devoid D lacking
3 A ground B terrain C domain D territory
17 A conform B accept C meet D fit
4 A distinction B resemblance C comparison D similarity
18 A sitting B standing C waking D coming
5 A aptly B correctly C properly D relevantly
6 A merged B attached C combined D added
The drama course
Lisa started back at college for the spring term. The full-time Speech and Drama course had moved
its focus from Stanislavsky to Brecht, which meant that, whereas last term the students were
encouraged to believe absolutely in everything they did and said, now, when acting, they were asked
to (7) & . in mind that they were in a play, and that they had a (8) & . to the audience to remind them
of this fact. There were techniques that could be used  winking, or talking in asides, or even giving
(9) & . information on the plot straight out into the front row, without any (10) & . at mystery or
disguise. Lisa felt completely (11) & . . For her, the whole (12) & . of acting was the licence it gave
you to become another person, protected by a stage set and someone else s words.
7 A store B hold C retain D bear
8 A function B duty C role D task
9 A off B away C in D on
10 A attempt B try C effort D go
11 A thrown B dislodged C mixed D tumbled
12 A matter B aspect C gist D point
[Turn over
Page 21
4 5
Part 2
Punk
You are going to read four extracts which are all concerned in some way with music. For questions
19-26, choose the answer (A, B, C or D) which you think fits best according to the text. Punk was a heterogeneous style, comprising a complex mix of ingredients
Mark your answers on the separate answer sheet.
and orientations, spread across a spectrum of artists. The music was
generally driven by a frantic, eighth-note pulse carried by the entire
The Enigma of Music
ensemble. Words were spewed forth by vocalists unconstrained by
In spite of its widespread diffusion, music remains an enigma.
previous notions of pitch or melody. The majority of lyrics reflected
Music for those who live with it is so important that to be
feelings toward a disintegrating and corrupt society and the plight of
deprived of it would constitute a cruel and unusual
subcultural compatriots. The music and lyrics were embedded in a
punishment. Moreover, the perception of music as a central
confrontational stance that reflected varying degrees of anger, performance
part of life is not confined to professionals or even to gifted
technique, artistic exploration of shock value, and intent to bypass the
amateurs. It is true that those who have studied the techniques
usual music-production institutions.
of musical composition can more thoroughly appreciate the
structure of a musical work than those who have not. But even
listeners who cannot read musical notation and who have never line 9
David Bowie (born David Jones) was one of punk s most influential
attempted to learn an instrument may be so deeply affected
ancestors. Bowie, whose schooling and training included art, theatre, mime
that, for them, any day which passes without being seriously
and music, was a master at creating stories and characters that both
involved with music in one way or another is a day wasted. line 12
symbolised and became reality. Bowie s incarnation as Ziggy Stardust in
In the context of contemporary culture, this is puzzling.
the film and album The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders From
Many people assume that music is a luxury rather than a
necessity, and that words or pictures are the only means by Mars embodied the struggle to succeed in the music business and society.
which influence can be exerted on the human mind. Those line 16
Bowie s expressions of alienation worked at two different, sometimes
who do not appreciate music think that it has no significance
competing levels; his costumed personae were sometimes symbolic,
other than providing ephemeral pleasure. They consider it a
shocking statements, while his feelings were taken as a realistic expression
gloss upon the surface of life; a harmless indulgence rather
of alienation. This duality of pretence and reality side-by-side also came to
than a necessity. This, no doubt, is why our society seldom
exist in punk.
accords music a prominent place in education. Today, when
education is becoming increasingly utilitarian, music is likely
to be treated as an  extra in the school curriculum which only line 23
affluent parents can afford, and which need not be provided for
21 Which word in the first paragraph conveys the idea that punk was sympathetic towards those it
pupils who are not obviously  musical by nature.
addressed?
A frantic
19 In the text as a whole, what does the writer find enigmatic about music?
B spewed
A that it can be appreciated by anybody regardless of their musical ability
C plight
B that a thing so widely loved does not play a more significant role in our society
D embedded
C that so many people who adore music do not indulge their pleasure more often
D that our education systems undervalue music as a professional career option
22 What does the writer say about David Bowie?
A His Ziggy Stardust film/album has different layers of meaning.
20 Which phrase in the text conveys criticism by the writer?
B He was surprised at how other people interpreted the character of Ziggy Stardust.
A who have never attempted (lines 9-10)
C He saw himself in competition with punk.
B a day wasted (line 12)
D His path towards fame required him to overcome many obstacles.
C influence can be exerted (line 16)
D treated as an  extra (line 23)
[Turn over
Page 22
6 7
Studying Bach s Manuscripts
KEF Cresta 2
For Bach,  revision was a part of his routine works seems to provide vital clues for interpreting
working procedure. In almost all of his them from their original context.
Loudspeakers Ł100
manuscripts, one can find some traces of revisions Many examples of Bach s revisions appear to
It was only a matter of time before and leather-look front, and you being made. Revisions appear in many different have been entered during the copying-out process,
forms, covering diverse aspects of the piece from at which point he made revisions instantaneously to
KEF followed the lead of its award- have a pair of speakers whose looks
structural modification to the smallest details of the a particular idea in the piece, subsequently making
winning Cresta 1s with bookshelf belie their Ł100 price-tag.
musical fabric. Naturally, they were made at necessary amendments to the thematically related
and floorstanding siblings. Well, Like the Cresta 1, this is a
various stages of his works development, ranging passages situated earlier in the piece. In some
the wait is over, and here we unveil design that doesn t come over all
from the earliest compositional stage to the later cases, Bach failed to enter necessary revisions
the babies of the Cresta range. fussy when it comes to musical
revisiting of what was intended to be the definitive altogether, leaving the task of correction, in effect,
These are surprisingly dinky genres. If classical is your thing
version. Once classified appropriately, we can to us. Why Bach was unable to enter all the
speakers in the flesh, looking like a then it will replay the likes of
often reconstruct several different versions of the revisions at one sitting we do not know. One can
scaled-down version of the Cresta Gershwin s  Rhapsody in Blue
same piece in gradual development. The only presume that he was preoccupied with various
1s. Their 30cm tall cabinets are with respectable refinement and
knowledge obtained from the study often enables works in the pipeline, so that he was not prepared
built to a very high standard, while tonal accuracy. In absolute terms
us to understand better the character of the to spend his precious time endlessly on a single
the compact dimensions help to image scale is limited and compositions, the cohesion of various musical ideas piece.
make the enclosure inherently rigid, dynamics are curtailed, but judged in them and their overall structural shape. Being
aware of the process of the development of the
a good omen for sound quality. by their price and size these Cresta
Add to that a high-quality vinyl 2s perform excellently.
finish, rounded-off cabinet edges
25 What is the significance of knowing about Bach s particular way of working?
23 In the writer s opinion, the new Cresta 2s look
A It can offer us a more accurate way of seeing Bach s music.
B It can heighten our appreciation of the beauty of the music.
A deceptively fragile at first sight.
C It means we can feel more of Bach s personality in the music.
B rather disappointing compared to the Cresta 1s.
D It reveals the inaccuracy of certain interpretations of his music.
C better quality than they really are.
D as if they should be more expensive.
26 From our knowledge of Bach s revision process, we can conclude that
24 Through the example of Gershwin s  Rhapsody in Blue , the writer shows that the Cresta 2
A he was a meticulous perfectionist.
B he could be distracted by other ideas.
A is not perfect but good value for money.
C he sometimes regretted making changes to his manuscripts.
B is especially well-suited to playing classical music.
D he sometimes made deliberate mistakes to surprise the listener.
C might be bought by some people as a status symbol.
D will even play cheap imitations well.
[Turn over
Page 23
8 9
Part 3
You are going to read a newspaper article about a wildlife photographer. Seven paragraphs have
been removed from the article. Choose from the paragraphs A-H the one which fits each gap
(27-33). There is one extra paragraph which you do not need to use.
Mark your answers on the separate answer sheet.
A uniquely human bird s-eye view
A Other, less stark images balance E It s a photographic device which
Not all animal photography is absurdly cute or noble.
extreme intimacy with an almost cool conjures up the idea of an eye
detachment and distance. Looking at a scanning the scene. The whole image
Animal photography dwells near the bottom of figuratively, if not literally  in a series of
small bird preparing to drink from a is full of a sense of flux and movement.
the fine-art totem pole, and for good reason. quietly disconcerting photographs made with a
puddle, you feel you have intruded on a This is so even when the featured
Most of it ends up as material for wildlife bifocal lens. This lens renders the foreground
private moment, yet somehow the bird creature is shown in a static pose.
calendars and magazines. Depicting animals and background in crisp detail, but creates a
still seems utterly foreign, defying our
as either contemptibly cute or absurdly noble, flickering blur across the middle of the picture.
anthropomorphic impulses. F Mylayne transforms this vapid genre
such photography inevitably veers between
into a source of subtle and often
31
childlike fantasy and starstruck homage to
B For, in spite of their snapshot aesthetic, startling imagery. Devoid of any trace
nature. The work of the French photographer
In place of the fixed perspective of a classical each of Mylayne s pictures is the result of sentimentality, his best avian
Jean-Luc Mylayne, however, is an exception to
 bird s-eye view , Mylayne s camera anchors of months of planning. After selecting a portraits achieve an idiosyncratic, off-
this rule.
us in a ground-level process of seeing. In one particular type of bird and studying its kilter beauty as elusive as the subjects
memorable photo that is so out of focus it behaviour and habitat, the artist spends he pursues.
27
borders on abstraction, the artist transforms weeks getting to know his individual
His first UK exhibition offers viewers a mini what might have been a mundane picture of a subjects. He then calculates in G This fluid field of vision in this print is
retrospective of variously-sized colour prints bird in a tree into a mysterious maze of colour advance every component of the perhaps akin to the way birds in flight
from the past 20 years. A quick glance and form. After a moment of adjusting, our picture, from lighting to composition, perceive their environment. Or it could
immediately reveals that Mylayne has no eyes start to pick out the blurry details: before settling down and patiently just be an enticing game of
interest in depicting the inhabitants of pristine feathers appear as a wet splash, branches and awaiting the chance arrival of his avian photographic hide-and-seek. In either
wilderness areas or creating definitive leaves form interlacing pools of brown and actor. case, Mylayne s image seductively
mugshots of rare creatures. Sticking to the green, perforated by a few soft drops of blue draws us into another way of seeing.
agricultural areas and rural suburbs of France, sky. C His total dedication gives his
he generally photographs common local endeavour the air of a conceptual H This results in images which not only
32
species, the familiar starlings, robins, and project where art and life meet. To preserve a sense of their winged
sparrows that the average bird-watcher some extent, this inadvertently plays to subjects relative size, but also convey
Looking, of course, takes time, and the shifting
wouldn t look twice at. a tendency to celebrate process over something of the precariousness of
depths of field effectively suggest alternate
product, to value an artist s pursuit of avian existence  the majority of birds
temporal zones. They also allude to the
28
an idea, or the rigour and purity of his in the wild do not live past their first
underlying contradiction of photographic time 
practice, over the end result. birthday. By blurring the outlines of
Occasionally they are obscured by foliage, or the way a still image transforms a fraction of a
their tiny bodies so that they assume a
they may be partially out of focus, appearing second into an eternal moment. The titles 
D Although Mylayne says that he ghostly transparency, Mylayne s
only as a blurred blush of colour, usually (but No. 25 July-August 1980, No. 60 January-
envisions the bird as an  actor to his portraits eloquently hint at the febrile
not always) because they have actually been February 1987  highlight another disparity:
 director , he never frames his subjects mortality of hearts that beat at twice the
photographed in flight. that between the brief minutes we spend
in glamorous close-up. Eschewing the rate of ours.
looking at these images, and the lengthy
use of telephoto lenses, he instead
29
research that the artist engages in before
presents them as small details in a
aiming his camera.
These are not blatantly  poetic pictures,
larger landscape. In many of these
however. Indeed, a few verge on the
33 pictures, the birds presence is almost
grotesque, including a flashlit photo of a bird
incidental: they tend to haunt the edges
feeding worms to its two newborn chicks, both Needless to say, it is a time-consuming way of
and corners of his compositions.
of which look as if they could be auditioning for taking pictures. As a result, the self-taught
the next horror movie. Mylayne has produced fewer than 150
photographs in his career. His chosen subject
30
and working method demand a nomadic
lifestyle, for much like the migrating birds he
Mylayne, it turns out, is not exclusively
tracks and observes, Mylayne maintains no
interested in depicting avian character and
permanent address.
behaviour. His central concerns have to do
with vision and time. This is clearest 
[Turn over
Page 24
10 11
Part 4
34 As a child, how did the writer feel about his home town?
You are going to read part of the introduction to a book. For questions 34-40, choose the answer
A He was saddened by its decline.
(A, B, C or D) which you think fits best according to the text. Mark your answers on the separate
B He was enchanted by its atmosphere.
answer sheet.
C He wished it had more to offer.
Leslie Norris  a poet talks
D He cared little about its history.
I was born in Merthyr Tydfil, a small town in Wales and a marvellous place in
which to grow up. It was probably the first town of the Industrial Revolution in the
35 One of the strengths of the writer s teacher was that he taught his pupils to
19th century, sprouting out of nowhere as people poured in to work in the new steel
mills and coal mines. But when I was small, all the great factories were closed and
A view the world with precision.
the town was one of the poorest in Europe, although that didn t seem to be very
B express their feelings in poetry.
important to me then. The gaunt ruins of the great mills were as romantic and
C describe objects in detail.
imposing as those of any castle, the open mountains were within reach of any boy
who could walk for fifteen minutes.
D create imaginary worlds.
The first school I went to was a red-brick building on the edge of town, in the
district of Georgetown. We had a splendid teacher and he taught us, about sixty
36 In discussing the technique behind The Ballad of Billy Rose, the writer emphasises
small boys, for the four years I was in the school, between the ages of seven and
eleven. He was not only fond of words himself, but he could use them to tell jokes,
A the structure he chose for the poem.
to sing aloud, to explain things so vividly to us that we could see, almost, what he
B the drama of the situation he created.
described. And he educated our senses, too, he made us look at everything so
firmly, to know the textures of things with our skins, to hear the particular noises
C the care with which he chose his words.
that exist in the world all around us. So real were our experiences that we began to
D the emotional impact he wanted.
look for the words necessary to recreate those experiences. That is how I began to
write poetry.
37 What is implied about the poem Gardening Gloves?
I can t say that poetry was my greatest enthusiasm at that time. I loved football
most of all, and after that boxing. I would travel miles just to kick a football. I
A It was particularly difficult to write.
knew all the great boxers of our town. When I was about ten years old I saw the
fight I wrote about in The Ballad of Billy Rose. And years later, in Bristol, I saw
B It is less interesting than his other work.
the same man, old now, and very frail. His name, however, was really Tommy
C It overstretched his imagination.
Rose, and in the first version of my poem I called him that. When I finished it, I
D It is not an obvious subject for a poem.
read it aloud, and I knew that something was wrong. I was forced to change it to
Billy, so that the balance was right, so that there was a satisfying correspondence
between the word  ballad and the word  Billy . Much the same thing happened
38 The writer s interest in successful humorous poems was useful because
when I wrote about his last great fight. I wanted my readers to hear for themselves
the sounds of the fight, and how the words which end in  s are really the shoes of
A they demonstrated good writing practice.
the boxers as they slither on the resin. What I m saying is that in my poems I try
B he wanted to write funny poems himself.
not so much to describe things as actually to make them, with words.
C they made up for the bad poetry he read.
My friend Ted Walker, a very fine poet himself, and I, used to set each other
weekly poetry writing challenges, he choosing a title one week and I the next. In
D they used a wide variety of techniques.
this way I came to write Gardening Gloves. The poem is an example of how
necessary it is for the poet to observe well, so that an old pair of gloves can reveal
39 In taking Edward Thomas s work as a model, the writer could see the potential danger of
all that there is to know about them, and for imagination to begin to build a little
world around them.
A becoming too sombre in his own work.
Poetry is a craft as well as an art. We owe very great responsibility to the
B restricting himself to a narrow range of subjects.
poem; if we do not write well enough the poem fails. Like any other craft,
although some people are more naturally gifted than others, we can all learn the
C attracting unflattering comparisons with Thomas.
skills. I learned by reading the work of other poets. I read everything, good
D oversimplifying the ideas that went into his own poems.
poems, bad poems, learning as I read. I was very fond of funny poems, and that
was valuable for me since, to be successful, funny poems have to be extremely well
made. But as I grew more experienced and severe, as my taste developed, I needed 40 From the text as a whole we understand that the writer s approach to poetry
better examples. I found them in the work of Edward Thomas, a poet who was
killed in the First World War. From him I learned how to write quietly and simply, A has changed to reflect the times in which he has lived.
without, I hope, losing any strength or true complexity of thought I might possess.
B has benefited from the reactions of others to his work.
A Glass Window is in part my tribute to this man, dead years before I was born,
C is heavily influenced by the landscape where he grew up.
who, among many others, taught me what poetry can be, how to listen to it. How
to write it. D is still in tune with what he was taught at school.
Page 25
READI NG PAPER ANSWER KEY (1) READI NG PAPER ANSWER KEY (2)
Questions 1 18 carry one mark each. Questions 1 18 carry one mark each.
Questions 19 40 carry two marks each. Questions 19 40 carry two marks each.
Part 1 Part 1
1 C 1 D
22 B 22 A
2 B 2 C
23 A 23 D
3 D 3 B
24 B 24 A
4 D 4 C
25 D 25 A
5 C 5 A
26 D 26 B
6 A 6 B
Part 3 Part 3
7 A 7 D
8 C 8 B
27 G 27 F
9 A 9 B
28 C 28 D
10 B 10 A
29 D 29 H
11 D 11 A
30 H 30 A
12 D 12 D
31 B 31 E
13 C 13 B
32 E 32 G
14 A 14 A
33 F 33 B
15 B 15 C
Part 4 Part 4
16 A 16 B
17 B 17 D
34 B 34 B
18 C 18 C
35 A 35 A
36 A 36 C
Part 2 Part 2
37 D 37 D
19 A 19 B
38 C 38 A
20 C 20 D
39 D 39 D
21 D 21 C
40 C 40 D
READI NG ANSWER SHEET
Page 26
DP479/346
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
2
2
2
2
3
3
3
3
4
4
4
4
5
5
5
5
6
6
6
6
7
7
7
7
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8
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8
9
9
9
9
A
B
C
D
A
B
C
D
A
B
C
D
A
B
C
D
A
B
C
D
A
B
C
D
A
B
C
D
Part 4
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
Centre No.
Candidate No.
Examination
Details
A
B
C
D
0
A
B
C
D
A
B
C
D
A
B
C
D
A
B
C
D
A
B
C
D
A
B
C
D
A
B
C
D
A
B
C
D
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
Part 2
Part 3
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
Candidate Answer Sheet CPE Paper 1 Reading
For example,
i
f you think B is the right answer,
mark your answer sheet like this:
A
B
C
D
A
B
C
D
A
B
C
D
A
B
C
D
A
B
C
D
A
B
C
D
A
B
C
D
A
B
C
D
A
B
C
D
A
B
C
D
A
B
C
D
A
B
C
D
A
B
C
D
A
B
C
D
A
B
C
D
A
B
C
D
A
B
C
D
A
B
C
D
Part 1
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
11
10
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Supervisor:
If the candidate is
ABSENT
or has
WITHDRAWN
shade here
Rub out any answer you wish to change using an eraser.
Instructions
Use a PENCIL (B or HB). Mark ONE letter only for each question.
Candidate Name
If not already printed, write name
in CAPITALS and complete the
Candidate No. grid (in pencil).
Candidate Signature
Examination Title
Centre
CPE 1


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