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ECPE

Examination for the


Certificate of PRELIMINARY
Proficiency in TEST 1
English

Keep your eyes on your own test. Examinees giving or re- y LANG. (LANGUAGE): print the code number for your
ceiving answers or using notes or other aids will be dis- native language (the examiner will tell you the
qualified, and they will fail. Examination fees will not be number). Darken the circles.
refunded. • CENTER NO.: print the test center number (the
This test may be machine scored, so you must follow examiner will tell you the number). Darken the
instructions carefully. circles.
y REG. NO.: print your 6-digit personal registration
y Mark all your answers on the answer sheet. number. Include all zeros, including those at the
• Do not mark your answers in the test booklet. beginning of the number. Darken the circles.
• You must use a number 2 (soft) pencil. • FORM: Darken the circle corresponding to the number
of the form listed on your test booklet.
y Do not bend or fold your answer sheet.
The example below shows the correct way for Joao Costa
Look at the TOP RIGHT of your answer sheet. Fill in the Almeida dos Santos, born April 3, 1978, tested at center
following information on the lines: no. 001, and whose personal registration number is
y FULL NAME: print your full name in this order: family 100265, to fill out the information section.
name, then first name, then middle initial (MI). Use
capital letters.
y YOUR SIGNATURE: sign your name.
y TEST CENTER: print the name of the test center.
y NATIVE LANGUAGE: print your native language.
y TODAY’S DATE: print the month, day, and year.

Look at the TOP LEFT of your answer sheet. Use capital


letters to fill in the following information in the blocks. Use
the same spelling you used on your registration form:
y LAST NAME: print your main family name in the blocks,
one letter per block. There are 13 blocks. If your last
name is longer than 13 letters, print only the first 13
letters.
y FIRST: print the first 6 letters of your first name.
y MI: print the initial of your middle name.

Look at the columns of CIRCLES BELOW THE BLOCKS:


y Find the letter that is the same as the letter you have
printed in the block above.
y Darken the circle completely so that you cannot see
the letter inside.
y Do this for all the letters of your last name, first name,
and your middle initial.
y Darken only one circle in each of the columns.

Look at the BOTTOM LEFT of your answer sheet.


y BIRTHDATE: find the month you were born and darken
the circle next to it.
y DAY: print the day you were born. If it is a one-digit
day, write zero first. Darken the circles underneath
these numbers. When instructed to, open your test booklet and check to
y YEAR: print the last two digits of the year you were see that it is complete. Check the pages quickly. You
born. Darken the circles underneath these numbers. should have 5 numbered pages in your test booklet. If
y SEX: darken the circle “M” (male) or “F” (female). there are pages missing from your booklet, raise your hand,
and a proctor will give you a replacement.

2004-05 Preliminary Examination for the Certificate of Proficiency in English


This Preliminary Test was designed by the English Language Institute, University of Michigan, to screen applicants for the Examination for the
Certificate of Proficiency in English (ECPE). It contains examples of the grammar, cloze, vocabulary, and reading comprehension sections of
the ECPE. It does not contain examples of the writing, listening, or interactive oral communication sections of the ECPE.

© Copyright 2004 by the Testing and Certification Division, English Language Institute, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan U.S.A.
Prepared by D. Adam, S. Briggs, S. Dart, B. Dobson, J. Johnson, C. Leo, D. Mendis, M. Matice, A. Ohlrogge, M. Reilly, T. Rohlck, M.
Spaan, A. Yamashiro. The Regents of the University of Michigan: David A. Brandon, Laurence B. Deitch, Olivia P. Maynard, Rebecca
McGowan, Andrea Fischer Newman, Andrew C. Richner, S. Martin Taylor, Katherine E. White, Mary Sue Coleman (ex officio).

This Preliminary Test may be reproduced or reprinted after July, 2005, by authorized Examination for the Certificate of Proficiency in English
(ECPE) centers ONLY, as long as the source is clearly acknowledged. This document or any reproductions may not be sold, except by the
English Language Institute, University of Michigan.

2004-05 Preliminary Examination for the Certificate of Proficiency in English


GRAMMAR CLOZE VOCABULARY READING
INSTRUCTIONS

There are 35 multiple choice problems in this test: 10 grammar, 10 cloze, 10 vocabulary, and 5 questions
about a reading passage. You will have 30 minutes to answer all 35 problems. Do not begin this test until you
have read the instructions and examples below and the test administrator has answered any questions you
may have.
In each example below, the correct answer is underlined. For the actual problems, fill in the circle on your
answer sheet that corresponds to your answer choice. For each problem, there are 4 possible answer
choices. Only one is correct. Fill in only ONE circle for each problem. Any problem with more than one
answer marked will be counted wrong. If you are not sure about an answer, you may guess. Answer all
problems. Unanswered problems will be counted wrong. Completely fill in the circle that corresponds to
the answer you have chosen. If you change your mind about an answer, erase your first mark completely.
Do NOT mark your answers in this test booklet. Do not make any stray marks on your answer sheet.

GRAMMAR
Choose the word or phrase that best completes the sentence or the conversation.
“What is that thing?”
“That _____ a spider.”
a. to call
b. calls
c. called
d. is called

CLOZE
Read the passage, then select the word that best fills the blank in both grammar and meaning.
Long ago roads were only trails for people and animals a. way b. road
to walk on, but today roads must be made for cars, c. travel d. walk
trucks, and buses. The most modern _____ is often called
a superhighway.

VOCABULARY
Choose the word or phrase that most appropriately completes the sentence.
The first things we study in school are very _____.
a. sturdy
b. shifty
c. trusty
d. elementary
READING
Read the passage, then answer the questions following it according to the information given
in the passage.
Viruses may be considered as regular
chemical molecules, since they have The writer says that viruses are alive because they . . .
a strictly defined atomic structure, but a. have a complex atomic structure.
on the other hand we must also consider b. move.
them as being alive, since they are able c. multiply.
d. have a regular molecular structure.
to multiply in unlimited quantities.

Please observe silence. Do not leave before the end of the time period. Please remain in your seat until
the test administrator dismisses the group. Remember, you have 30 minutes to complete all 35 problems.
If you have any questions during the test, you should raise your hand, and a proctor will help you.

2004-05 Preliminary Examination for the Certificate of Proficiency in English 1


GRAMMAR GRAMMAR GRAMMAR

1. This show _____ towards children of all ages 6. We can leave for the airport _____ Bill
and even adults. finishes packing his suitcase.
a. is directing a. until
b. is directed b. since
c. directed c. once
d. directs d. afterwards

2. The problem of pollution is a _____ topic. 7. My computer was broken so she _____ use hers.
a. hotly debating a. let me
b. debating hotly b. lets me
c. debated hotly c. let me to
d. hotly debated d. lets me to

3. Everyone has the right to their own _____. 8. _____ for the competition left her exhausted.
a. believing a. Preparing
b. believes b. To prepare
c. believe c. Having prepared
d. beliefs d. Prepared

4. Sally is talented _____ beautiful. 9. The higher the mountain, the more
a. except difficult _____ to climb.
b. besides a. is
c. as well as b. it is
d. in addition to c. is it
d. is that
5. He has no reason _____ angry.
a. of being 10. _____ from traveling for ten hours, Henry
b. for he is decided to stop for the night.
c. that he is a. Having been tired
d. for being b. Had tired
c. Tired
d. Tiring

2 2004-05 Preliminary Examination for the Certificate of Proficiency in English


CLOZE CLOZE CLOZE

Igor Korsikov is credited with inventing the 11. a. related c. explained


helicopter in the 1930s. Early attempts at helicopter b. traced d. drawn
design can be (11) back to the days of Leonardo da
12. a. and c. when
Vinci in 1486, (12) some people attribute the idea to b. so d. although
a Chinese Flying Top designed by Ko Hung around
320 AD. Da Vinci’s notes and drawings (13) his belief 13. a. insist c. reveal
that a large spiral screw (14) literally pull his flying b. deny d. allow
machine into the air as it turned. Although in (15) 14. a. did c. would
his design worked, it would not have functioned if b. had d. to
built on a full-sized scale. Ultimately, however, da
Vinci’s perception that vertical flight was possible was 15. a. theory c. practice
b. case d. fact
not only correct but also (16) of its time.
Between the mid 1700s until the early 1900s, 16. a. behind c. popular
many designs and proposals for helicopters were put b. out d. ahead
forward. The majority, however, never progressed
17. a. at c. beyond
(17) the initial stages of design, (18) at the time, there b. over d. on
was no engine powerful enough to lift a full-sized
machine. A breakthrough came at the end of the 18. a. because c. work
nineteenth century, when the internal combustion b. although d. plan
engine was (19) . This made it possible for scientists 19. a. invented c. discontinued
to develop full-sized helicopters with sufficient power b. inspired d. discovered
to fly.
Following the appearance of the combustion 20. a. jumps c. outs
b. leaps d. bounds
engine, helicopter design improved by (20) and
bounds. Today, modern helicopters still follow the
basic models built in the 1930s and 1940s.

2004-05 Preliminary Examination for the Certificate of Proficiency in English 3


VOCABULARY VOCABULARY VOCABULARY

21. John was driving much too fast, so I tried 26. With a bit of _____ Joan might agree to take on
to _____ him to slow down. the project.
a. persuade a. coaxing
b. insist b. taunting
c. convey c. vexing
d. assert d. dusting

22. He failed the course because he had _____ 27. He’s an excellent professor. We find his lectures
reading skills. very _____.
a. deterrent a. infinite
b. reluctant b. eminent
c. insufficient c. illuminating
d. maladjusted d. augmenting

23. Mary went to the doctor because she was 28. That _____ man cannot stop looking at himself
suffering from extreme _____. in the mirror.
a. fatigue a. overt
b. eminence b. vain
c. squalor c. futile
d. depletion d. magnified

24. The president didn’t _____ to lower taxes. 29. If John leaves, the company will have trouble
a. accept finding a replacement of his _____.
b. allow a. equality
c. agree b. periphery
d. select c. amplitude
d. caliber
25. We added more memory to our computer
for _____ performance. 30. Though his team continues to lose, Henry
a. amended still _____ supports them.
b. enhanced a. sordidly
c. rectified b. interchangeably
d. distended c. eventually
d. staunchly

4 2004-05 Preliminary Examination for the Certificate of Proficiency in English


READING READING READING

This passage about thiamine comes from 31. What is the main purpose of the passage?
multiple medical and scientific publications. a. to discuss causes of a medical condition
b. to discuss a controversial medical theory
c. to compare two types of medical
One of the risks of alcoholism is depletion of
treatments
nutrients like thiamine and folic acid. Thiamine,
d. to discuss a proposal to solve a medical
found in foods such as cereals, lean meats, dairy
problem
products, fruit, and eggs, is needed to regulate the
body’s metabolism. Depletion of thiamine can lead
32. What is one effect of thiamine depletion?
to the development of Wernicke’s syndrome, a
a. anemia
condition characterized by severe confusion, lack of
b. genetic damage
balance, and paralysis of certain eye muscles. Folic
c. problems with vision
acid helps in the synthesis of the cell’s genetic
d. damage to digestive tract
material and maturation of certain blood cells, and
deficiency can lead to anemia. These vitamin 33. What does the word “medicating” at the
deficiencies are thought to be caused not only by poor beginning of the second paragraph mean?
diet but also by alcohol-induced damage to the a. discouraging alcohol consumption
digestive tract. b. increasing alcohol content
Recognizing these risks, scientists in Great c. changing the taste
Britain have proposed “medicating” beer by adding d. supplementing with a vitamin
thiamine to it. They claim fortification of beer or
other alcohol would be among the most direct 34. According to the passage, the pub owners
measures yet taken to address problems associated advocate that . . .
with alcohol abuse. Supporters point out that in a. increased beer consumption improves
addition to helping heavy drinkers avoid certain one’s health.
diseases, such a measure could reduce the b. beer and other food products be fortified.
burgeoning national health care bill. Additionally, c. current methods for beer production be
they argue that fortifying food products is hardly maintained.
unprecedented. They point out, for example, that d. the national health care bill be reduced.
bakers routinely add thiamine to bread to make up
for its loss during production. However, the proposal 35. What position does the author of this passage
is not without its detractors. Brewers, pub owners, advocate? The author . . .
and drinkers’ organizations tend to oppose the move. a. is neutral.
Among their concerns is that supplements could b. supports medicating beer.
change the taste of beer. Some even suggest that to c. opposes medicating beer.
add vitamins to beer might encourage more people d. offers an alternative proposal.
to drink too much in the mistaken belief that if one
beer is good for you, ten beers are better.

2004-05 Preliminary Examination for the Certificate of Proficiency in English 5

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