0% found this document useful (0 votes)
91 views

From The Words Listed Below, Choose The Ones Which Best Fit The Space

The document discusses a marriage contract between Mr. and Mrs. Stark that placed many restrictions on Mrs. Stark. Some key points of the contract included that Mrs. Stark could only visit her parents twice a month, had to return home in time to make Mr. Stark's dinner, and would receive £2 per week for personal expenses. Mrs. Stark was granted a divorce due to Mr. Stark's unreasonable behavior, but he appealed the decision. The legal fees for the appeal cost him more than the original marriage.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
91 views

From The Words Listed Below, Choose The Ones Which Best Fit The Space

The document discusses a marriage contract between Mr. and Mrs. Stark that placed many restrictions on Mrs. Stark. Some key points of the contract included that Mrs. Stark could only visit her parents twice a month, had to return home in time to make Mr. Stark's dinner, and would receive £2 per week for personal expenses. Mrs. Stark was granted a divorce due to Mr. Stark's unreasonable behavior, but he appealed the decision. The legal fees for the appeal cost him more than the original marriage.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 8

CLOZE: VOCABULARY

From the words listed below, choose the ones which best fit the space.

THE MARRIAGE CONTRACT

But it isn't so (1).................... that marriage is expensive in terms of money, as that it is expensive in terms of life
(2).................... , especially when it goes wrong, as it did in the (3).................... of Mr and Mrs Stark. Mrs Stark was
given a divorce because of the unreasonable behaviour of her husband. He was (4).................... to have (5)....................
up a contract which he forced her to sign. (6).................... some points of view - particularly the point of view of a
husband - the contract does not seem to be too bad a (7)..................... In it, Mrs Stark was not allowed to mention the
names of her parents or brother in the house. She could only visit her parents twice a month, the cost to be
(8).................... from the household budget. She would have to return to the house in (9).................... of time to prepare
Mr Stark's evening meal. Her parents could visit her once a month while he was out. If he was in, then they would have
to meet somewhere else. Mrs Stark would be allowed £2 a week (10).................... money for her personal use. In the
(11).................... of a death in the family, she would be allowed two days (12).................... from the house. She could
spend up to five days a year away in the event of family illness. No presents for her parents were to be paid
(13).................... from the housekeeping.

Mrs Stark was (14).................... a divorce, but Mr Stark appealed against the decision. It cost him £6,000 in legal fees,
much more than it cost him to get married in the first (15)..................... "

01. often great much hard

02. now itself then however

03. event instance time case

04. said considered described enabled

05. made written done drawn

06. To With At From

07. idea thing number theme

08. taken met earned lifted

09. best most plenty hours

10. as for in to

11. cause occasion event happening

12. away holiday leave departure

13. out to for with

14. granted awarded let presented

15. time example point place


CLOZE: STRUCTURE

Complete with the word that best fits the space.

EURO-DISNEY

In Euro-Disney, an investment of $2 billion has created a monstrous funfair. Pirates in the West Indies. Ghosts and
graveyards and a haunted house. Simulated space travel. Railway rides and Peter Pan and Dumbo.... There must be
(01)..................... of Europe's 60 or so million children under the age of 14 who are not nagging (02).....................
parents.

When I hear (03)................ this monstrous creation is a bare 24 miles from the centre of Paris, I think it represents the
death of civilisation. One (04)................... have thought the French (05)................... more sense, better taste, but, then,
they always did have this love-hate relationship (06)...................... the USA.

(07)................... me be clear about it. Disney should stay (08)................... he belongs: in the swamps of Florida or the
suburbs of Los Angeles. People (09).................... appreciate him.

Perhaps the most perplexing response (10)................... Disney, that pap-merchant, has been made by collectors. In the
United States, a four-volume Illustrated Disneyana Catalog and Price Guide is (11)..................... It lists 26,000 prices
(12)................... $1 for a 1966 Donald Duck book (13)....................... $14,000 for a tin wind-up walking Mickey Mouse
of around 1930.

In America, there are an estimated 50,000 collectors. The highest (14)................... are paid for cels, paintings on
celluloid, a specialised market worth an annual $60 million. The most paid (15)................... far for a cel has been
$286,000

RE-PHRASING

Complete the second sentence, using between two and five words, including the word given. Do not change that word in
any way.

01. It was difficult for the yachtsman to steer into the wind.
got

The yachtsman ............................. into the wind.

02. I couldn't have managed without your help.


been

If it ............................. your help, I couldn't have managed.

03. We had just arrived when it started to rain.


than

Hardly ............................. it started to rain.

04. He only did the work after he had been paid.


did

Not until he had been paid ............................. the work.

05. The idea that the Scots are miserly is simply not true.
truth

There ............................. the idea that the Scots are miserly.


06. She was too busy to see us.
so

She was ............................. see us.

07. It is quite pointless to complain.


point

There ............................. complaining.

08. I've never met anyone who works as hard as he does.


man

He is the most ............................. met.

09. A long speech is unlikely to be interesting.


little

There ............................. a long speech being interesting.

10. It was difficult to hear the speaker from the back of the room.
difficulty

From the back of the room, we ............................. the speaker.

ERROR CORRECTION

Some of the following lines are correct; others have a word that should not be there. Tick the correct lines. Underline
the words that should not be there.

THE POLE-SITTER

01. Valentine Pushup has a very strange own job. He is a competition pole-sitter,

02. and takes it all very professionally. For publicity, he sits on a small platform

03. on top of a high pole, the higher up the better. He started out early

04. as a teenager in Paris when up he tried to climb to the very top

05. of the Eiffel Tower. He got his name written in the newspapers in Italy

06. when a night watchman found him hiding on the upper steps

07. of the Leaning Tower of Pisa. Mr Pushup explained that, "I have always ever been

08. fascinated by the tall towers. It must be something psychological."

09. Recently, he had made a telephone installed at the top of his pole

10. in the St Elemo shopping Plaza, Los Angeles. It was while he was having a try

11. to break the world pole-sitting record. The first call he had at the top of his

12. pole was from a woman who she had lost her dog somewhere below him
13. The second call was from his only trainer, a Mr Harold Simon, who told him the

14. world record was not 4 months and 8 days as they had thought it. It was 8 months

15. and 4 days, set up by a Mrs Trudi Schnell in Luxembourg.

Said Mr Pushup, "I shall sit on, but I am having the phone disconnected."

WORD FORMATION

To fill the spaces, use a word formed from the words in the list below.

PIGEON POWER

Tom Jones, a psychologist, reports a new role for pigeons. Asked by a pharmaceutical company to measure the effects
of drugs on animal behaviour, Jones noticed one day that some 70 women were employed to check flawed capsules.
"That is a job any pigeon could do," he said, because he knew about the pigeon's learning (01)............................ .

On (02)............................ , capsules left the (03)............................ line. There, Jones arranged for a bright, narrow beam
of light to pass through them. If a capsule was perfect, the light showed a single spot; if it was (04)............................ ,
the light showed a double spot.

In their training, two pigeons were rewarded with food every time they correctly identified a wrong capsule. The
experiment worked. A (05)............................ belt carried the capsules as fast as two a second past the pigeon
(06)............................ , who achieved 99 per cent success within a week.

But the company rejected (07)............................ of the pigeons on a permanent basis. They feared (08)............................
that might be bad: The public might think pigeons were not as (09)............................ as humans. "A main obstacle to
progress," commented Jones sadly, " remains man's obstinate belief in his (10)............................ over other creatures."

01. able 06. inspect

02. complete 07. employ

03. produce 08. public

04. perfect 09. rely

05. convey 10. superior


ANSWERS

THE MARRIAGE CONTRACT

1. much
2. itself
3. case
4. said
5. drawn
6. from
7. thing
8. met
9. plenty
10. as
11. event
12. away
13. for
14. granted
15. place

EURO DISNEY
1. few
2. their
3. that
4. might / would
5. had
6. with
7. let
8. where
9. there
10. to
11. published / available / sold
12. from
13. to
14. prices
15. so

WORD BUILDING PIGEON POWER

01. ability

02. completion

03. production

04. imperfect

05. conveyor

06. inspectors

07. employment

08. publicity

09. reliable
10. superiority

PART 4: RE-PHRASING

Check your answers.

1. got into difficulties steering


2. had not been for

3. had we arrived than

4. did he do

5. is no truth in

6. so busy she did not

7. was no point in

8. hard-working man I have (ever)

9. is little likelihood

10. had difficulty hearing

ERROR CORRECTION THE POLE-SITTER

01. own

02. -

03. up

04. up

05. written

06. -

07. ever

08. the

09. made

10. -

11. -

12. she

13. only

14. it
15. up

You might also like