CPE Use of English Parts 1-4 Week 2.2

CPE Use of English: Parts 1-4
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Slide 1: Slide
EngelsHBOStudiejaar 3

This lesson contains 45 slides, with interactive quizzes and text slides.

Items in this lesson

CPE Use of English: Parts 1-4

Slide 1 - Slide

Use of English Part 1
  • See handout
  • You can fill in your answers on the following slides
  • Tip: try to guess the answer before looking at the options
timer
5:00

Slide 2 - Slide

‘You’ve not had much luck with the book, I hear.’
That had to be the (0) …A… of the year. My novel had been rejected four times (1) ……… far.
I’ve no doubt that behind my (2) …… the family were having a good snigger. Rhona of course had been the loyal (3) ………. , though I admit that her piteous expressions when the thing limped home battered by franking stamps were harder to (4) ……………. than her sister’s outright sarcasm: ‘Has your boomerang got back yet, Patton?’ she’d enquire, while her husband Jack would give the knife an extra twist by asking if I’d managed to sell any of my daubs. Which meant that he presumed I’d (5) ……………….. my job on the railways to pursue a painting career. Maybe I should have. The manuscript had begun to show bruises from its days, weeks and months (6) …………….. in the ‘slush pile’ of various publishing firms. Actual criticism of the novel by its rejectors was very (7) ……………. on the ground, although the consensus of opinion seemed to indicate that its main weakness (8) …………………… in its apparent ‘lack of plot’.

The Rejected Novel
‘You’ve not had much luck with the book, I hear.’
That had to be the (0) …A… of the year. My novel had been rejected four times (1) ……… far.
I’ve no doubt that behind my (2) …… the family were having a good snigger. Rhona of course had been the loyal (3) ………. , though I admit that her piteous expressions when the thing limped home battered by franking stamps were harder to (4) ……………. than her sister’s outright sarcasm: ‘Has your boomerang got back yet, Patton?’ she’d enquire, while her husband Jack would give the knife an extra twist by asking if I’d managed to sell any of my daubs. Which meant that he presumed I’d (5) ……………….. my job on the railways to pursue a painting career. Maybe I should have. The manuscript had begun to show bruises from its days, weeks and months (6) …………….. in the ‘slush pile’ of various publishing firms. Actual criticism of the novel by its rejectors was very (7) ……………. on the ground, although the consensus of opinion seemed to indicate that its main weakness (8) …………………… in its apparent ‘lack of plot’.

Slide 3 - Slide

Question 1
A
yet
B
thus
C
hence
D
by

Slide 4 - Quiz

B: Thus far = 'until now/then, 'so far'. 
A: 'As yet'= until now/then
C: 'Hence' = from/after this time (your exam takes place three weeks' hence) OR therefore
D: 'By far' = by a great amount

All options can complete phrases connected with time or phrases with 'far'

Slide 5 - Slide

Question 2
A
back
B
head
C
ears
D
face

Slide 6 - Quiz

A: 'behind someone's back = secretly
B: to go over someone's head = go to someone in a higher position of authority (He was only a junior manager so I went over his head and complained to a senior manager).
C: out of earshot = cannot be heard by person mentioned
D: say something to someone's face = say it directly to them rather than only saying it to someone else.

Slide 7 - Slide

Question 3
A
omission
B
exclusion
C
difference
D
exception

Slide 8 - Quiz

D: the exception = the only case of something not being true
A: omission = something that is left out
B: exclusion = the act of not including someone/something
C: The difference = the way something is different
Only D fits the precise meaning:
Rhona was the only family member who did not secretly make fun of him.

Slide 9 - Slide

Question 4
A
bear
B
defy
C
cope
D
resist

Slide 10 - Quiz

A: can't bear something=unable to accept/deal with something unpleasant and affects you personally
B: defy someone/something = refuse to do what you have been told
C: can't cope with something = unable to deal with something putting you under pressure
D: resist something/resist doing something = keep your self-control so that you not do something you are tempted to do.
C fits the meaning but not grammatically.

Slide 11 - Slide

Question 5
A
broken off
B
wound up
C
pulled out
D
packed in

Slide 12 - Quiz

D: to pack something in/pack in something = give it up or stop doing it
A: Break off = stop talking in the middle of doing so. (He broke off when the phone rang). 
A: Break something off = end a relationship. (They had a row and broke off their engagement).
B: Wind something up = bring it to an end. (Let's wind up the meeting now).
B: Wind up somewhere = end up somewhere. (I got lost and wound up on the other side of the city).
C: Pull out of something = withdraw

Slide 13 - Slide

Question 6
A
stationed
B
encased
C
buried
D
consigned

Slide 14 - Quiz

C: buried in=at or near the bottom
A: Stationed somewhere = sent to perform an official duty (Armed guards were stationed outside the building).
B: Encased = inside a container, surrounded on all sides (Because of the injury, his arm was encased in plaster).
D: If something is consigned to a place, it is put there, usually because it is not wanted or someone does not want to deal with it (His application was consigned to the list of those unlikely to be accepted).
D would fit the meaning but is followed by 'to' not 'in'.

Slide 15 - Slide

Question 7
A
light
B
shallow
C
thin
D
scant

Slide 16 - Quiz

C: thin on the ground=not much of it
A: If conversation is LIGHT, it is meant to be amusing or entertaining (not serious).
B If someone is SHALLOW, they show a lack of serious thought or sincerity.
D: SCANT=very little/not enough (He acted with scant regard for other people's feelings).
All options are connected with the idea of 'not much of something/not serious' but only C completes the idiom.

Slide 17 - Slide

Question 8
A
stood
B
revolved
C
lay
D
centered

Slide 18 - Quiz

C: to lie in = to be found there/ exists there
A: How something stands = its situation or circumstances (how do the negotiations stand at the moment?)
B: If something revolves around something = it has as its main concernor most important aspect (Everything he does revolves around his job.)
D: If something centres on something, it has it as its main point or most important aspect
B and D would fit the meaning but only C fits grammatically

Slide 19 - Slide

Use of English Part 2
  • See handout
  • You can fill in your answers on the following slides
  • Tip 1: read directly before and after the gap
  • Tip 2: read to the end of each sentence
timer
5:00

Slide 20 - Slide

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Slide 21 - Open question

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Slide 22 - Open question

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Slide 23 - Open question

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Slide 24 - Open question

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Slide 25 - Open question

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Slide 26 - Open question

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Slide 27 - Open question

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Slide 28 - Open question

Use of English Part 3
  • See handout
  • You can fill in your answers on the following slides
  • Tip 1: read directly before and after the gap
  • Tip 2: read to the end of each sentence
timer
5:00

Slide 29 - Slide

17

Slide 30 - Open question

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Slide 31 - Open question

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Slide 32 - Open question

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Slide 33 - Open question

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Slide 34 - Open question

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Slide 35 - Open question

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Slide 36 - Open question

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Slide 37 - Open question

Use of English Part 4
  • See handout
  • You can fill in your answers on the following slides
  • Tip 1: do not change the given word
  • Tip 2: do not go over/under the word limit (3-8)
  • Tip 3: always attempt an answer, even if you are not sure (you could still get one point)
timer
5:00

Slide 38 - Slide

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Slide 39 - Open question

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Slide 40 - Open question

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Slide 41 - Open question

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Slide 42 - Open question

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Slide 43 - Open question

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Slide 44 - Open question

Slide 45 - Slide