Word Formation Star
Word Formation Star
2
Unit 2
My ideal job
One thing I know is that I wouldn't like to have an (0) __ o_C_t_u+f_a_t_l_O_J1__ OCCUpy
that has anything to do with physics, (1) or rnaths: CHEMIST
I am not the (2) type at all. In fact, at school I was a SCIENCE
complete (3) in these subjects. Neither am I very FAIL
good at dealing with people, nor am I (4) , so jobs in AMBITION
business, administration and (5) don't really interest MANAGE
me either. Moreover, I find it (6) to be surrounded by IRRITATE
a lot of people; I would much rather have a job involving creative
work or (7) skills of some sort. I'd like to have the ART
chance to work outdoors (8) and perhaps do a bit of OCCASION
travelling too. I am not (9) concerned about becoming PARTICULAR
rich but I would like to have a (10) income - enough REASON
to live comfortably.
3 _______ you ever bought anything and then not worn it?
9
* The good, the bad and the unbearable
Exam practice: Use of English, Part 4
2 For questions 1-15, read the text below and look carefully at each line. Someof the lines are
correct, and some have a word which should not be there. If a line is correct, put a tick (./).
If a line has a word which should not be there, write the word.
Leave it at home
./ 0 Cars became popular as a quick and comfortable way of getting
will 00 around. This is still true when you will drive along a quiet country
road or a modern rnotorway. As far as you getting from one place
2 to another in the city is concerned, it is a different story. Whenever
3 I want to get up anywhere in a hurry, I leave the car at home
4 and go on foot. It often turns out to be much more quicker. I still make
5 the mistake now and again of thinking the car is an efficient means
6 of a transport. The other day my wife was feeling a bit under the
7 weather. She had been having terrible headaches for some long
8 time and she decided she couldn't take it anymore and asked from
9 me to give her a lift to the doctor, whose surgery is in the centre
____ 10 part of town. We live in a suburb in the old quarter of the city and
____ 11 it is about twenty minutes away on foot. On the way back, however,
____ 12 it is all uphill and I must to admit it can be exhausting, especially on a
____ 13 hot day. Reluctantly I got the car out of the garage and we set it off,
____ 14 me muttering about the wonders of taxis. My heart was sank as we
____ 15 hit the first traffic jam - I knew we were beginning a long journey.
14
* Culture shock
5 Camp will keep them busy all day doing the things they most enjoy them.
6 Skouras is an international camp with our children from all over the
7 world. My children have made friends with children of their own age from
8 Poland, China, Denmark and the United States. Naturally they do get lots
9 of opportunities to practise their English as English is the only language spoken.
____ 10 The Camp it is located in one of the most beautiful parts of Chalkidiki. It is
____ 11 and huge (120 000 square metres) and is just a stone's throwaway from the clear,
____ 12 blue Aegean Sea. It takes the children just five minutes to walk to the golden,
____ 13 sandy beach on the foot. The programme is packed with exciting activities for
____ 14 children. Apart from the usual water sports, my kids' favourite activities are horse
____ 15 riding and table tennis. Other sports include basketball, volley-ball and athletics.
The Camp ends with a sports contest in the last week which all parents are
invited to attend.
20
* Comic genius
Exam practice: Use of English, Part 4
2 For questions 1-15, read the text below and look carefully at each line. Someof the lines are
correct, and some have a word which should not be there. If a line is correct, put a tick (./).
If a line has a word which should not be there, write the word.
A sense of humour
__ ./__ 0 Have you noticed how often people are happy to hear the same joke,
~(}t 00 over and over again? One reason, of course, is that they have not
1 probably forgotten the details of the joke, but I am sure it also has
2 something to do with getting at the same pleasure more than once. So
3 when a person who has just started telling a joke asks his audience,
4 'Do you know it?' or 'Have you heard it before?' people must always
5 answer something like, 'It doesn't matter, let's hear it again.' It is not such
6 surprising that if a joke is worth hearing, it is worth hearing several times.
7 I think it was Ogden Nash who once said that it is probably better to have
8 an infectious disease than to have a sense of humour. He argued,
9 tongue-in-cheek no doubt, that although that people who possess a sense
____ 10 of humour have a good time, they do never actually achieve anything
____ 11 important, whether good or bad. This, thought Nash, is because when
____ 12 people with a sense of the humour begin to do anything important, they
____ 13 can't help noticing how so funny they look doing it, so they stop to have
____ 14 a good laugh at themselves. As a result, what might to have been a
____ 15 great achievement is left unfinished.
1 The boss of a big company brought all his (0) em'p/~yees together EMPLOY
and told them he had an (1) to make. He told them he had ANNOUNCE
some good news and some bad news for them. 'It is my (2) _ PLEASE
to announce,' he said, 'that we have kept to all (3) _ GOVERN
regulations and we haven't broken any laws.' Everyone smiled with
(4) . 'The bad news,' he continued, 'is that ... SATISFY
2 What are the (5) for any young person who wishes to QUALIFY
become a (6) ? He should be able to foretell what is going POLITICS
to happen tomorrow, next week, next month and next year and have the
(7) afterwards to explain why ... ABLE
26
* Talking sense
Exam practice: Use of English, Part 5
3 For questions 1-10, read the text below. Usethe word given in capitals at the end of each line
to form a word that fits in the spacein the same line.
1 Objects that are close are clearer than objects that are distant.
dear
Distant objects close objects.
2 This month's test and last month's test were equally easy.
just
This month's test last month's test.
32
Unit 7
1-15, read the text below and look carefully at each line. Some of the lines are
some have a word which should not be there. If a line is correct, put a tick (./).
a word which should not be there, write the word.
questions 1-10, read the text below. Usethe word given in capitals at the end of each line
rm a word that fits in the spacein the same line.
.adame Tussaud's
Tussaud's is one of the most popular (0) __ a_tt_fj_-a_c_t_l_O_J1_S__ in AITRACT
________ in summer, make sure CROWD
ENTERTAIN
'U"""-''-''-U11 contains life-like wax figures, which are (3) _ CONTINUE
up to date. On display are (4) models of REAL
aamous people, from the latest pop stars to (5)
.·i·.·····..••. figures. HISTORY
can also see today's politicians and the most well-known TV
- . You can buy a combined ticket which will allow PERSON
________ to both the Museum and the Planetarium next ADMIT
The Planetarium is open (8) from 10.00 am to DAY
pm and (9) are given every hour. Baker Street is PRESENT
(10) underground station for both attractions. NEAR
37
Unit 8
10 had asked my friend to look into the murder. In so doing, Holmes had had
11 discovered the importance of the microscope in the work of a detective.
12 Holmes then told me he was expecting a new client to arrive but that
13 the man was so late. Suddenly he asked me if I knew anything about
14 racing. I admitted I occasionally was spent some of my war pension on
15 betting on the horses but I rarely won anything. 'Then I'll need your advice,'
said Holmes.
mysteries
1~(1IIV~~a
First he entered the house through the window and then he stole the jewels.
broken
______________________ the house through the window he stole the jewels.
43
* Mysterious monsters
Exam practice: Use of English, Part 4
2 For questions 1-15, read the text below and look carefully at each line. Someof the lines are
correct, and some have a word which should not be there. If a line is correct, put a tick (./).
If a line has a word which should not be there, write the word.
Is it a bird or is it a plane?
./ 0 In 1655, a Portugese man appears to have been transported within
some 00 seconds from one country to another by some mysterious forces.
The man was for doing business in the Portugese colony of Goa in
2 India when suddenly he found himself back in Portugal. He was
3 put on trial, which mayor may not have been fair, and he was been
4 condemned to death. The authorities in Portugal at the time tended to
5 explain things according to their religious beliefs as well as and their
6 knowledge of the world. Their world included witches, magicians and
7 devils, who they were believed to be enemies of the Church and
8 authority. One of the characteristics by which these evil creatures
9 could have be recognized was that they were able to fly through the
10 air. We do not know about whether the man from Goa was carried
11 through the air or not. There are no surviving details of the case
12 although that the evidence at the time was thought to be good enough
13 to convict him. Since the seventeenth century, many other cases have
14 been reported in the which people have claimed to have flown through
15 the air. Nowadays most of people do not believe in witches and
magicians and UFOs are offered as an alternative explanation.
48
* What's in a face?
____ 12 grow long.) When her little jokes became threats and were combined
____ 13 with my father's commands to go and get off my hair cut without
____ 14 further delay, I gave them in. I would then spend a few months feeling
____ 15 miserable until my hair had grown. Then, once again, my mother would
start complaining ...
Show me your face and I'll tell you who you are
People have for a long time held the (0) bette! that the face BELIEVE
is in some way a reflection of (1) . There is nothing PERSON
(2) or mysterious about it: we all have different MAGIC
physical (3) and therefore our CHARACTER
(4) is unique. How you feel about yourself also has APPEAR
a direct influence on your facial (5) . If, for example, you EXPRESS
have a lot of (6) self- , this will show in your face. CONFIDENT
From ancient times, this (7) between particular CONNECT
features and aspects of personality was made, and a systematic study of
the (8) developed and became known as physiognomy. RELATE
Physiognomy has proved that people's faces (9) reflect ACCURATE
people's characters. For those who don't find the idea convincing, let us take
the example of (10) twins, who not only look alike but IDENTITY
also behave in a similar way.
Either... or,both ... and, not only ... but also, neither ... nor
Exam practice: Use of English, Part 3
4 For questions 1-10, complete the second sentence so that it has a similar meaning to the first
sentence, using the word given. Do not change the word given. You must use between two and
five words, including the word given.
o My sister is not old enough to ride a bicycle.
too
My sister is t_O_(}--"r-~_(}_U_J1_:;:_;<Vqf--t(}--------- ride a bicycle.
1 I did not enjoy the performance and I didn't like the theatre.
neither
I liked the theatre.
54
Unit 11
59
Unit 12
;;__ 12 have come about as a result of this. He also told me he was too
..""'--
13 scared of flying. I tried to change the subject by asking if he was
____ 14 planning to go anywhere interesting in the summer and that was my
_---15 most big mistake. He went on to tell me in great detail that his dream
had always been to visit the Bahamas. He asked whether I had ever
been to the Caribbean and explained that it wasn't really all that expensive.
world of dreams 2
some dreams (0) __ dt_:__l_S-,al!Jh,_'P_e_~_r__ forever, other dreams come APPEAR
again and again, which for the (1) is like going DREAM
to the same place for a (2) and doing the same VACATE
We do not only 'go back' to (3) experiences ENJOY
also to (4) ones. An example of a nice dream is PLEASURE
we are doing something very (5) , like winning SUCCESS
while a common nightmare is when we are making fools
________ in public or being in a situation from which it is SELF
________ to escape. Perhaps, then, we should not see POSSIBLE
as an escape from (8) , but as an extension REAL
________ continue to occupy ourselves USUAL
whatever pleasure or problems we have had during the day, while we
________ . So, rather than freeing us from everyday WAKE
65
* Goodies and baddies
Exam practice: Use of English, Part 4
2 For questions 1-15, read the text below and look carefully at each line. Someof the lines are
correct, and some have a word which should not be there. If a line is correct, put a tick (./).
If a line has a word which should not be there, write the word.
Made of money?
have 0 A couple were walking down Oxford Street when they have stopped
./ 00 to look in a jeweller'S window. The woman, who was young and
----
I attractive but a little bit also vain, said she'd love to have a pair of
2 diamond ear-rings. The man, who was not very well off, was madly
3 in love with the girl and didn't want to lose her. Suddenly he did took
4 a brick out of his pocket, smashed the window and grabbed the
5 ear-rings, then which he gave to the woman. She gave him a big hug
6 and a smile and they carried on walking. A little further down the
7 street they stopped at again another jeweller'S and the woman saw
8 a beautiful diamond ring which she said she would love to have on
9 her finger. The man took up another brick from his pocket, smashed
10 a hole in the glass, grabbed at the ring and handed it to the woman,
11 who was, of course, too delighted. A few minutes later, they found
12 themselves standing outside yet another jeweller's window and
13 the woman looked at a pearl necklace of which she said would look
14 gorgeous round her neck. The man turned round angrily to the woman
15 and said: That's enough, you must think I'm made of bricks.'
70
* TV times
9 Andrew Birkin, who wrote The Lost Boys, an award-winning BBC series.
____ 10 Producer Ene Vanaveski who said: 'We went to all the theatre schools,
____ 11 but when we saw Alice she was just the right for the part.' Mr Birkin said
____ 12 he was impressed by both of Alice's acting skills and her natural, unspoilt
____ 13 personality. Alice has been taking on drama lessons for three years,
____ 14 though she has been interested in acting since she was five. She has now
____ 15 got her own agent and has started to go to other auditions.
76
* The end of intelligence?
Exam practice: Use of English, Part 4
2 For questions 1-15, read the text below and look carefully at each line. Some of the lines are
correct, and some have a word which should not be there. If a line is correct, put a tick (./).
If a line has a word which should not be there, write the word.
Brain training
be 0 Do you remember how at school certain subjects seemed be impossible
./ 00 to understand? However much the teacher tried to explain geography,
1 for example, you still did not grasp even though the basics? Now some
2 psychologists are suggesting that learning difficulties may lie in the way
3 the subjects are been presented rather than being a failure on the part
4 of the children. According to a method that called NLP (don't worry what
5 the letters stand for now), people fall into groups depending on how they
6 do learn best - through sight, sound or feeling. For example, a visual
7 child will to learn best through diagrams, an auditory child through spoken
8 words, while a kinesthetic child will benefit most from and practical
9 examples. It is easy to find out at which group your child belongs to.
____ 10 All you have to do is ask him or her a question, such as 'What was your
____ 11 day at school like?' According to the new theory of NLP, the way the child
____ 12 will answers will tell you whether they learn through sight, sound or feeling.
____ 13 So, a visual child, when answering, will look up to your right, whereas
____ 14 an auditory child will look from left to right. A child that has learns best
____ 15 through feeling will look down to the left and right before giving an answer.
82
Good luck, bad luck
MAR AND USE OF ENGLISH
of the most important days of the year is the first of january and it is celebrated (0) allover the
. It is the time of year (1) people get together and eat and drink a lot and generally behave with
th and affection (2) each other. In London, on the stroke (3) midnight before the
Year begins, people gather in Trafalgar Square and not (4) celebrate in (5) usual
but also sometimes throw themselves into the fountain under Nelson's column. In Spain, people eat
_____ grape for each of the twelve strokes of midnight. No one knows exactly (7) the
of celebrating the New Year began. Some people believe (8) was the Chinese who started it,
_____ say it was the Romans. In China, they celebrate New Year, which is (10) a different
from that in the West, (11) only for one day but for several days. A special custom in some
.'-' ...uu.~'-' is (12) make so-called 'New Year's resolutions'. This means you make a big decision to
_____ way by stopping any bad habits you may (14) . For example,
say they will stop smoking, they will work harder, they will do (15) best to pass their exams,
so on. It is pity that the optimistic spirit of New Year often does not last very long!
or superstition?
__ tlt_e+.fi_n_l_'t_io_n__ of the word DEFINE
BELIEVE
87
* Good luck, bad luck
crazy seemed quite (7) at the time. For example, the REASON
famous and very (8) scientist Aristotle thought that INFLUENCE
the world was flat and for many centuries (9) on TRAVEL
long voyages were (10) about falling off the edge of ANXIETY
the world.
9 Don't break that vase because you'll have to pay for it.
88
Unit 17
A new hobby
been 0 I finished university several years ago and I've been got a degree in
ha---ve- 00 Economics. Before that I have studied graphics and worked in an
1 advertising agency for a short time. I realized very quickly that by hying
2 to persuade people to buy things they did not really need was not my cup
3 of tea. My university degree allowed me to get a job working for various
4 charities so then I have worked for Oxfam and War on Want, which
5 both campaign against hunger in the world and try to help poor countries
6 stand on their own two feet. My ideal job would to be to work for an
7 organisation like Greenpeace as a press officer or something like. After
8 all these years, I have never lost interest in drawing and painting and I
9 have done recently taken up a hobby: I attend art classes at the local
____ 10 college every Monday and Friday. They are teach us to use watercolours
____ 11 and I have already painted a couple of landscapes and still lifes. There
____ 12 are very various people on the course, mostly middle-aged like me.
____ 13 I think we're there for because we're all a bit bored with our lives and
____ 14 our jobs and want to do something other than going to the pub or
____ 15 sitting in front of the TV like as a vegetable.
93
One small step
On 14th April 1961, a young Russian cosmonaut made history by becoming the first man (0) t_o__ be in
space. Seven years later, and just two weeks before the anniversary (1) his historic orbit around the
Earth, he was killed (2) a plane crash. This remarkable man was Yuri Gargarin. Gargarin
_____ born in Gzantsk in Russia and he began to train (4) a pilot while he was still a
_____ university. When he finally qualified as a pilot he (6) made an officer of the
Soviet Airforce. He became a cosmonaut in 1960. The space race (7) the United States and the Soviet
Union had already begun some years (8) , but while the Americans were still getting ready to send
_____ first satellite into space, the Soviet Union sent Sputnik 1 round the Earth. In 1961, Russia took the
by surprise again (10) launching the Vostock rocket into space, inside (11) was
first man in history to travel in space: Yuri Gargarin. (12) first manned space flight lasted only 108
rrunutes, which is (13) very long when you bear in mind that, nowadays, astronauts (14) _
H"JHUlu, if not years, in space. After his death in a test flight (15) the age of 34, his hometown of
·'-JL.alll"n. was renamed 'Gargarin' in his honour.
97
* One small step
spacecraft by the USAand the Russians in the 1960s and finally
the landing of the first man on the Moon in 1969 made possible the
direct (7) of the Moon's surface. The Apollo astronauts EXPLORE
collected rocks and sent thousands of photographs back to
(8) in Houston. They set up instruments which HEAD
calculated the Moon's (9) and through the use of laser MEASURE
beams they discovered the exact (10) between the DISTANT
Moon and the Earth.
future (2): future perfect simple, future perfect continuous, future continuous
Exam practice: Use of English, Part 3
3 For questions 1-10, complete the secondsentence so that it has a similar meaning to the first
sentence, using the word given. Do not change the word given. You must use between two and
five words, including the word given.
o My sister is not old enough to ride a bicycle.
too
My sister is to_O~.Y'-O-U-J1...."
.....
-:l-q-t.-o--------- ride a bicycle.
8 I have tickets for the theatre tomorrow so I can't come for a meal.
be
I can't come for a meal tomorrow because to the
theatre.
98
Unit 19
Journey of my dreams
./ 0 Until a few months ago, Colin, my husband, was looking for a job without
bij 00 big success and feeling life had little to offer to him. Now, after winning the
1 Lottery, we are rich and are both in a position to enjoy our leisure time as we
2 have never been able to do in our lives before. Our children are being grown
3 up and living abroad so we have no one to share out our good fortune with.
4 Anyway, we have decided to go on a long cruise. Colin came home a few
5 days ago with a huge pile of some colourful brochures for exotic holidays, the
6 kind of holiday I thought only film stars went on, not people like us. Now it
7 will be me lying on the deck of a luxury liner, sipping my Campari and sunbathing
8 as we will sail to some far-off destination. The idea of a swimming pool on a ship
9 is something more I have only read about. We started looking through the
er
10 brochures last night, for finding all those mythical places very tempting. It is hard to
s 11 believe that the Pyramids and the Taj Mahal will not just still be pictures in a book,
12 but that we could actually be there, standing inside and having our photograph
13 taken so we can show people back in home that we have really been. Of course
14 we will have to buy a new camera; our little Kodak hasn't been working good
15 since our Harry's wedding, which was ten whole years ago. And when I think of
the washing machine we couldn't afford to get repaired six months ago ...
103
Unit 20
8 I was foolish enough to admit I didn't have any money with which to pay up the
9 fees for my training, so even if though they thought I could act, they couldn't
10 see how I was going to pay my way. I had reached a dead end. Then I saw
11 a poster in the university English department which advertising jobs for teachers
12 in Italy. I had always wanted to go to Italy because I had heard of so much about
13 it from my father. He had been born in Italy and ran a small pizzeria in Camden
14 Town. Just for fun a friend and I we decided to go along to the interview in
15 London, though we had not been inside a classroom since we left school.
Hollywood forever?
Apart from television, the cinema is the most popular form of
(0) entertat'nment for most people because it is still relatively ENTERTAIN
(1) . Hollywood is, of course, the capital of the EXPENSE
(2) cinema industry. Hollywood movies make up NATION
(3) 75% of all the films we watch at our local cinemas. ROUGH
Although we may find it difficult to remember the names of
(4) and French film stars, Hollywood stars, such as ITALY
Sylvester Stallone and Meryl Streep are (5) names HOUSE
all around the world. Moreover, only Hollywood seems to make
certain kinds of films (6) _ SUCCESS
________ are one example but we can also include westerns, MUSIC
although for a time 'spaghetti westerns' (made in Italy) were quite
________ with cinema goers. But cowboys and Indians are FASHION
really a Hollywood (9) and they are still going strong SPECIAL
after all these years. Such films, however, have not remained
________ by time and changes in attitudes. The cowboys TOUCH
are no longer always the goodies as they were in the 1940s.
709
* Potato races
Exam practice: Use of English, Part 4
2 For questions 1-15, read the text below and look carefully at each line. Someof the lines are
correct, and some have a word which should not be there. If a line is correct, put a tick (if)
If a line has a word which should not be there, write the word.
114
* Holidays are bad for your health
7 and I had to continue my search. The owner, who was friendly and helpful,
8 told me I should have phoned earlier but he also told me that where I would
9 find a vacant room. I have followed his directions and came to a little,
____ 10 concrete block, with a big sign saying 'Rooms' hanging from an olive tree in
____ 11 the front yard. Luckily, they already had a couple of free rooms and I chose
____ 12 the one with the best view. After I having a quick shower, I set out to explore
____ 13 the town. Arriving in May meant I could to avoid the crowds, which in the
____ 14 high season fill the narrow streets. Now I nearly had the place to myself,
____ 15 except for a few German tourists and except elderly English couples who were
staying in the four-star hotel just outside the town.
120