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Question 1 of 50
1. Question
choose the right answer.
1. Gina’s psychologist advised.. .her routine.
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Question 2 of 50
2. Question
choose the right answer.
2. Please will you let.. .the news!
CorrectIncorrect -
Question 3 of 50
3. Question
choose the right answer.
3. Do you remember.. .you when you were ill?
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Question 4 of 50
4. Question
choose the right answer.
4. She waited.. .before phoning her mother.
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Question 5 of 50
5. Question
choose the right answer.
5. They don’t allow.. .in the reservoir.
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Question 6 of 50
6. Question
choose the right answer.
6. We’d like.. .this gift on behalf of all of us.
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Question 7 of 50
7. Question
choose the right answer.
7. The doctor kept…for over an hour.
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Question 8 of 50
8. Question
Complete the sentences with a pronoun and the verb in brackets. Use an infinitive with or without to or a gerund.
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Question:
A bad experience in Maria’s youth taught lies, (not tell)
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Question 9 of 50
9. Question
Complete the sentences with a pronoun and the verb in brackets. Use an infinitive with or without to or a gerund.
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Question:
We don’t advise with children under 12, though you are welcome to bring teenagers, (come)
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Question 10 of 50
10. Question
Complete the sentences with a pronoun and the verb in brackets. Use an infinitive with or without to or a gerund.
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Question:
They’re late with the pizzas. We planned for here during half-time, (get)
CorrectIncorrect -
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Question 11 of 50
11. Question
Complete the sentences with a pronoun and the verb in brackets. Use an infinitive with or without to or a gerund.
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Question:
I know you’re very good with children, but I can’t imagine as a primary school teacher, (work)
CorrectIncorrect -
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Question 12 of 50
12. Question
Complete the sentences with a pronoun and the verb in brackets. Use an infinitive with or without to or a gerund.
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Question:
A special British Airways course helped his fear of flying. (overcome)
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Question 13 of 50
13. Question
Complete the sentences with a pronoun and the verb in brackets. Use an infinitive with or without to or a gerund.
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Question:
My friends didn’t mind for my drinks last night because they know I’m broke, (not pay)
CorrectIncorrect -
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Question 14 of 50
14. Question
Complete the sentences with a pronoun and the verb in brackets. Use an infinitive with or without to or a gerund.
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Question:
Our visitors are on their way so we’d better hurry home. I’d hate while we were out. (arrive)
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Question 15 of 50
15. Question
Complete the compound adjectives.
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Question:
She’s terribly self- about her new haircut; she thinks it’s too short.
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Question 16 of 50
16. Question
Complete the compound adjectives.
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Question:
Barbara often goes to charity shops to look for second- clothes.
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Question 17 of 50
17. Question
Complete the compound adjectives.
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Question:
Last- holidays tend to be much cheaper than advance bookings.
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Question 18 of 50
18. Question
Complete the compound adjectives.
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Question:
Our next-door neighbour is a narrow- old man who refuses to listen to new ideas.
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Question 19 of 50
19. Question
Match a word in A to a word in B to make compound adjectives, then complete the sentences.
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Question:
It’s a job – there’s no chance he’ll ever be promoted.
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Question 20 of 50
20. Question
Match a word in A to a word in B to make compound adjectives, then complete the sentences.
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Question:
Dogs can hear really sounds.
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Question 21 of 50
21. Question
Match a word in A to a word in B to make compound adjectives, then complete the sentences.
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Question:
It’s a movie which makes you realize that life is worth living.
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Question 22 of 50
22. Question
Match a word in A to a word in B to make compound adjectives, then complete the sentences.
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Question:
Taking a gap year was a decision for my nephew.
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Question 23 of 50
23. Question
Match a word in A to a word in B to make compound adjectives, then complete the sentences.
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Question:
We booked with a airline because the flights were much cheaper.
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Question 24 of 50
24. Question
Match a word in A to a word in B to make compound adjectives, then complete the sentences.
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Question:
Scientists are using technology to develop a new treatment for cancer.
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Question 25 of 50
25. Question
Match a word in A to a word in B to make compound adjectives, then complete the sentences.
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Question:
Washing machines are one of the greatest devices in the home.
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Question 26 of 50
26. Question
Match a word in A to a word in B to make compound adjectives, then complete the sentences.
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Question:
They insist on only using cleaning products so as not to harm the environment.
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Question 27 of 50
27. Question
Match a word in A to a word in B to make compound adjectives, then complete the sentences.
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Question:
Is it legal to use a phone when you’re driving?
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Question 28 of 50
28. Question
choose the main stress in the compound adjectives.
1. high-|risk
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Question 29 of 50
29. Question
choose the main stress in the compound adjectives.
2. home-|made
CorrectIncorrect -
Question 30 of 50
30. Question
choose the main stress in the compound adjectives.
3. last-|mi|nute
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Question 31 of 50
31. Question
choose the main stress in the compound adjectives.
4. long-|dis|tance
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Question 32 of 50
32. Question
choose the main stress in the compound adjectives.
5. nar|row-|min|ded
CorrectIncorrect -
Question 33 of 50
33. Question
choose the main stress in the compound adjectives.
6. se|cond-|hand
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Question 34 of 50
34. Question
choose the main stress in the compound adjectives.
7. self-|con|scious
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Question 35 of 50
35. Question
choose the main stress in the compound adjectives.
8. well-|be|haved
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Question 36 of 50
36. Question
choose the main stress in the compound adjectives.
9. worn-|out
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Question 37 of 50
37. Question
Listen to a man suggesting activities to try. Write S for summer and W for winter next to the activities.
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i. Go for a walk
ii. Learn a new language
iii. Make a new salad every day
iv. Run five kilometres
v. Start a book club
vi. Write a blog
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Question 38 of 50
38. Question
Listen again and choose the sentences T (true) or F (false).
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i. The five kilometre app requires one hour of your day for three weeks.
ii. A walk in the morning helps start your day in the right way.
iii. There are enough salad recipes to be able to eat a different one every day for about a month.
iv. The man is no longer a member of a book club as he moved house.
v. According to the man, writing a blog can be time-consuming.
vi. The language app only offers a very limited number of languages.
vii. The app provides a series of games for a fixed price.
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Question 39 of 50
39. Question
Read the article once and choose the best summary.
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
HOW LONG DOES IT TAKE?
Everyone knows that it takes 28 days to develop a new habit, or perhaps 21, or 18, depending on who you ask; anyway, the point is that it’s a specific number, which makes it sound scientific and thus indisputably true. The person who is probably responsible for this idea is Maxwell Maltz, the plastic surgeon who wrote the 1960 bestseller Psycho-Cybernetics. He claimed to have observed that amputees took an average of only 21 days to adjust to the loss of a limb.1____. And therefore it must take 21 days to change a habit, maybe, perhaps!
This is, of course, ridiculous, as a new study by the University College London psychologist Phillippa Lally and her colleagues helps confirm. On average, her subjects, who were trying to take up new habits such as eating fruit daily or going jogging, took a depressing 66 days before reporting that the behaviour had
become automatic.2____. One especially silly implication of the 28- or 21-day rule is that it is just as easy to start eating a few more apples as it is to start finding five hours a week to study Chinese.
Self-help culture supports the fiction of the 28-day rule, presumably because it makes changing habits sound plausibly difficult enough, but basically easy. The first problem with this is simple: changing habits is hard. Our brains are designed to take short cuts, in order to make as many behaviours as possible automatic. ‘What would be the point,’ asks the psychologist Ian Newby-Clark, ‘of having a habit that didn’t free up your mind to deal with more pressing matters?’3____
The subtler problem is that we tend to think about habit change wrongly. We get trapped in a paradox. We want to, say, stop watching so much TV, but on the other hand, demonstrably, we also want to watch lots of TV – after all, we keep doing it.4____
The way round this, says Newby-Clark and others, is to see that habits are responses to needs.5____If you eat badly, you might resolve to start eating well, but if you’re eating burgers and ice cream to feel comforted, relaxed, and happy, trying to replace them with broccoli and carrot juice is like dealing with a leaky bathroom tap by repainting the kitchen. What’s required isn’t a better diet, but an alternative way to feel comforted and relaxed. ‘The chains of habit are too weak to be felt until they are too strong to be broken,’ Dr Johnson observed gloomily, but maybe by looking at the problem differently we can still, Houdini-like, slip out of them.CorrectIncorrect -
Question 40 of 50
40. Question
Five sentences have been removed from the article. Read it again and choose the sentences A-G to the gaps 1-5. There are two sentences you do not need to use.
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
HOW LONG DOES IT TAKE?
Everyone knows that it takes 28 days to develop a new habit, or perhaps 21, or 18, depending on who you ask; anyway, the point is that it’s a specific number, which makes it sound scientific and thus indisputably true. The person who is probably responsible for this idea is Maxwell Maltz, the plastic surgeon who wrote the 1960 bestseller Psycho-Cybernetics. He claimed to have observed that amputees took an average of only 21 days to adjust to the loss of a limb.1____. And therefore it must take 21 days to change a habit, maybe, perhaps!
CorrectIncorrect -
Question 41 of 50
41. Question
Five sentences have been removed from the article. Read it again and choose the sentences A-G to the gaps 1-5. There are two sentences you do not need to use.
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
HOW LONG DOES IT TAKE?
This is, of course, ridiculous, as a new study by the University College London psychologist Phillippa Lally and her colleagues helps confirm. On average, her subjects, who were trying to take up new habits such as eating fruit daily or going jogging, took a depressing 66 days before reporting that the behaviour had
become automatic.2____. One especially silly implication of the 28- or 21-day rule is that it is just as easy to start eating a few more apples as it is to start finding five hours a week to study Chinese.CorrectIncorrect -
Question 42 of 50
42. Question
Five sentences have been removed from the article. Read it again and choose the sentences A-G to the gaps 1-5. There are two sentences you do not need to use.
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
HOW LONG DOES IT TAKE?
Self-help culture supports the fiction of the 28-day rule, presumably because it makes changing habits sound plausibly difficult enough, but basically easy. The first problem with this is simple: changing habits is hard. Our brains are designed to take short cuts, in order to make as many behaviours as possible automatic. ‘What would be the point,’ asks the psychologist Ian Newby-Clark, ‘of having a habit that didn’t free up your mind to deal with more pressing matters?’3______
CorrectIncorrect -
Question 43 of 50
43. Question
Five sentences have been removed from the article. Read it again and choose the sentences A-G to the gaps 1-5. There are two sentences you do not need to use.
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
HOW LONG DOES IT TAKE?
The subtler problem is that we tend to think about habit change wrongly. We get trapped in a paradox. We want to, say, stop watching so much TV, but on the other hand, demonstrably, we also want to watch lots of TV – after all, we keep doing it.4_______
CorrectIncorrect -
Question 44 of 50
44. Question
Five sentences have been removed from the article. Read it again and choose the sentences A-G to the gaps 1-5. There are two sentences you do not need to use.
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
HOW LONG DOES IT TAKE?
The way round this, says Newby-Clark and others, is to see that habits are responses to needs.5_______If you eat badly, you might resolve to start eating well, but if you’re eating burgers and ice cream to feel comforted, relaxed, and happy, trying to replace them with broccoli and carrot juice is like dealing with a leaky bathroom tap by repainting the kitchen. What’s required isn’t a better diet, but an alternative way to feel comforted and relaxed. ‘The chains of habit are too weak to be felt until they are too strong to be broken,’ Dr Johnson observed gloomily, but maybe by looking at the problem differently we can still, Houdini-like, slip out of them.
CorrectIncorrect -
Question 45 of 50
45. Question
Look at the highlighted adverbs in the text. What do you think they mean? Check in your dictionary, then use them to complete the sentences.
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
HOW LONG DOES IT TAKE?
Everyone knows that it takes 28 days to develop a new habit, or perhaps 21, or 18, depending on who you ask; anyway, the point is that it’s a specific number, which makes it sound scientific and thus indisputably true. The person who is probably responsible for this idea is Maxwell Maltz, the plastic surgeon who wrote the 1960 bestseller Psycho-Cybernetics. He claimed to have observed that amputees took an average of only 21 days to adjust to the loss of a limb.1____. And therefore it must take 21 days to change a habit, maybe, perhaps!
This is, of course, ridiculous, as a new study by the University College London psychologist Phillippa Lally and her colleagues helps confirm. On average, her subjects, who were trying to take up new habits such as eating fruit daily or going jogging, took a depressing 66 days before reporting that the behaviour had
become automatic.2____. One especially silly implication of the 28- or 21-day rule is that it is just as easy to start eating a few more apples as it is to start finding five hours a week to study Chinese.
Self-help culture supports the fiction of the 28-day rule, presumably because it makes changing habits sound plausibly difficult enough, but basically easy. The first problem with this is simple: changing habits is hard. Our brains are designed to take short cuts, in order to make as many behaviours as possible automatic. ‘What would be the point,’ asks the psychologist Ian Newby-Clark, ‘of having a habit that didn’t free up your mind to deal with more pressing matters?’3____
The subtler problem is that we tend to think about habit change wrongly. We get trapped in a paradox. We want to, say, stop watching so much TV, but on the other hand, demonstrably, we also want to watch lots of TV – after all, we keep doing it.4____
The way round this, says Newby-Clark and others, is to see that habits are responses to needs.5____If you eat badly, you might resolve to start eating well, but if you’re eating burgers and ice cream to feel comforted, relaxed, and happy, trying to replace them with broccoli and carrot juice is like dealing with a leaky bathroom tap by repainting the kitchen. What’s required isn’t a better diet, but an alternative way to feel comforted and relaxed. ‘The chains of habit are too weak to be felt until they are too strong to be broken,’ Dr Johnson observed gloomily, but maybe by looking at the problem differently we can still, Houdini-like, slip out of them.-
Question:
He was found guilty because his crimes could not be blamed on his state of mind.
CorrectIncorrect -
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Question 46 of 50
46. Question
Look at the highlighted adverbs in the text. What do you think they mean? Check in your dictionary, then use them to complete the sentences.
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
HOW LONG DOES IT TAKE?
Everyone knows that it takes 28 days to develop a new habit, or perhaps 21, or 18, depending on who you ask; anyway, the point is that it’s a specific number, which makes it sound scientific and thus indisputably true. The person who is probably responsible for this idea is Maxwell Maltz, the plastic surgeon who wrote the 1960 bestseller Psycho-Cybernetics. He claimed to have observed that amputees took an average of only 21 days to adjust to the loss of a limb.1____. And therefore it must take 21 days to change a habit, maybe, perhaps!
This is, of course, ridiculous, as a new study by the University College London psychologist Phillippa Lally and her colleagues helps confirm. On average, her subjects, who were trying to take up new habits such as eating fruit daily or going jogging, took a depressing 66 days before reporting that the behaviour had
become automatic.2____. One especially silly implication of the 28- or 21-day rule is that it is just as easy to start eating a few more apples as it is to start finding five hours a week to study Chinese.
Self-help culture supports the fiction of the 28-day rule, presumably because it makes changing habits sound plausibly difficult enough, but basically easy. The first problem with this is simple: changing habits is hard. Our brains are designed to take short cuts, in order to make as many behaviours as possible automatic. ‘What would be the point,’ asks the psychologist Ian Newby-Clark, ‘of having a habit that didn’t free up your mind to deal with more pressing matters?’3____
The subtler problem is that we tend to think about habit change wrongly. We get trapped in a paradox. We want to, say, stop watching so much TV, but on the other hand, demonstrably, we also want to watch lots of TV – after all, we keep doing it.4____
The way round this, says Newby-Clark and others, is to see that habits are responses to needs.5____If you eat badly, you might resolve to start eating well, but if you’re eating burgers and ice cream to feel comforted, relaxed, and happy, trying to replace them with broccoli and carrot juice is like dealing with a leaky bathroom tap by repainting the kitchen. What’s required isn’t a better diet, but an alternative way to feel comforted and relaxed. ‘The chains of habit are too weak to be felt until they are too strong to be broken,’ Dr Johnson observed gloomily, but maybe by looking at the problem differently we can still, Houdini-like, slip out of them.-
Question:
They stared out of the window watching the rain pour down.
CorrectIncorrect -
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Question 47 of 50
47. Question
Look at the highlighted adverbs in the text. What do you think they mean? Check in your dictionary, then use them to complete the sentences.
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
HOW LONG DOES IT TAKE?
Everyone knows that it takes 28 days to develop a new habit, or perhaps 21, or 18, depending on who you ask; anyway, the point is that it’s a specific number, which makes it sound scientific and thus indisputably true. The person who is probably responsible for this idea is Maxwell Maltz, the plastic surgeon who wrote the 1960 bestseller Psycho-Cybernetics. He claimed to have observed that amputees took an average of only 21 days to adjust to the loss of a limb.1____. And therefore it must take 21 days to change a habit, maybe, perhaps!
This is, of course, ridiculous, as a new study by the University College London psychologist Phillippa Lally and her colleagues helps confirm. On average, her subjects, who were trying to take up new habits such as eating fruit daily or going jogging, took a depressing 66 days before reporting that the behaviour had
become automatic.2____. One especially silly implication of the 28- or 21-day rule is that it is just as easy to start eating a few more apples as it is to start finding five hours a week to study Chinese.
Self-help culture supports the fiction of the 28-day rule, presumably because it makes changing habits sound plausibly difficult enough, but basically easy. The first problem with this is simple: changing habits is hard. Our brains are designed to take short cuts, in order to make as many behaviours as possible automatic. ‘What would be the point,’ asks the psychologist Ian Newby-Clark, ‘of having a habit that didn’t free up your mind to deal with more pressing matters?’3____
The subtler problem is that we tend to think about habit change wrongly. We get trapped in a paradox. We want to, say, stop watching so much TV, but on the other hand, demonstrably, we also want to watch lots of TV – after all, we keep doing it.4____
The way round this, says Newby-Clark and others, is to see that habits are responses to needs.5____If you eat badly, you might resolve to start eating well, but if you’re eating burgers and ice cream to feel comforted, relaxed, and happy, trying to replace them with broccoli and carrot juice is like dealing with a leaky bathroom tap by repainting the kitchen. What’s required isn’t a better diet, but an alternative way to feel comforted and relaxed. ‘The chains of habit are too weak to be felt until they are too strong to be broken,’ Dr Johnson observed gloomily, but maybe by looking at the problem differently we can still, Houdini-like, slip out of them.-
Question:
She’s travelled in Australia, so she has a good understanding of the lifestyle and culture.
CorrectIncorrect -
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Question 48 of 50
48. Question
Look at the highlighted adverbs in the text. What do you think they mean? Check in your dictionary, then use them to complete the sentences.
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
HOW LONG DOES IT TAKE?
Everyone knows that it takes 28 days to develop a new habit, or perhaps 21, or 18, depending on who you ask; anyway, the point is that it’s a specific number, which makes it sound scientific and thus indisputably true. The person who is probably responsible for this idea is Maxwell Maltz, the plastic surgeon who wrote the 1960 bestseller Psycho-Cybernetics. He claimed to have observed that amputees took an average of only 21 days to adjust to the loss of a limb.1____. And therefore it must take 21 days to change a habit, maybe, perhaps!
This is, of course, ridiculous, as a new study by the University College London psychologist Phillippa Lally and her colleagues helps confirm. On average, her subjects, who were trying to take up new habits such as eating fruit daily or going jogging, took a depressing 66 days before reporting that the behaviour had
become automatic.2____. One especially silly implication of the 28- or 21-day rule is that it is just as easy to start eating a few more apples as it is to start finding five hours a week to study Chinese.
Self-help culture supports the fiction of the 28-day rule, presumably because it makes changing habits sound plausibly difficult enough, but basically easy. The first problem with this is simple: changing habits is hard. Our brains are designed to take short cuts, in order to make as many behaviours as possible automatic. ‘What would be the point,’ asks the psychologist Ian Newby-Clark, ‘of having a habit that didn’t free up your mind to deal with more pressing matters?’3____
The subtler problem is that we tend to think about habit change wrongly. We get trapped in a paradox. We want to, say, stop watching so much TV, but on the other hand, demonstrably, we also want to watch lots of TV – after all, we keep doing it.4____
The way round this, says Newby-Clark and others, is to see that habits are responses to needs.5____If you eat badly, you might resolve to start eating well, but if you’re eating burgers and ice cream to feel comforted, relaxed, and happy, trying to replace them with broccoli and carrot juice is like dealing with a leaky bathroom tap by repainting the kitchen. What’s required isn’t a better diet, but an alternative way to feel comforted and relaxed. ‘The chains of habit are too weak to be felt until they are too strong to be broken,’ Dr Johnson observed gloomily, but maybe by looking at the problem differently we can still, Houdini-like, slip out of them.-
Question:
The manager isn’t at his desk – he’s in a meeting.
CorrectIncorrect -
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Question 49 of 50
49. Question
Look at the highlighted adverbs in the text. What do you think they mean? Check in your dictionary, then use them to complete the sentences.
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
HOW LONG DOES IT TAKE?
Everyone knows that it takes 28 days to develop a new habit, or perhaps 21, or 18, depending on who you ask; anyway, the point is that it’s a specific number, which makes it sound scientific and thus indisputably true. The person who is probably responsible for this idea is Maxwell Maltz, the plastic surgeon who wrote the 1960 bestseller Psycho-Cybernetics. He claimed to have observed that amputees took an average of only 21 days to adjust to the loss of a limb.1____. And therefore it must take 21 days to change a habit, maybe, perhaps!
This is, of course, ridiculous, as a new study by the University College London psychologist Phillippa Lally and her colleagues helps confirm. On average, her subjects, who were trying to take up new habits such as eating fruit daily or going jogging, took a depressing 66 days before reporting that the behaviour had
become automatic.2____. One especially silly implication of the 28- or 21-day rule is that it is just as easy to start eating a few more apples as it is to start finding five hours a week to study Chinese.
Self-help culture supports the fiction of the 28-day rule, presumably because it makes changing habits sound plausibly difficult enough, but basically easy. The first problem with this is simple: changing habits is hard. Our brains are designed to take short cuts, in order to make as many behaviours as possible automatic. ‘What would be the point,’ asks the psychologist Ian Newby-Clark, ‘of having a habit that didn’t free up your mind to deal with more pressing matters?’3____
The subtler problem is that we tend to think about habit change wrongly. We get trapped in a paradox. We want to, say, stop watching so much TV, but on the other hand, demonstrably, we also want to watch lots of TV – after all, we keep doing it.4____
The way round this, says Newby-Clark and others, is to see that habits are responses to needs.5____If you eat badly, you might resolve to start eating well, but if you’re eating burgers and ice cream to feel comforted, relaxed, and happy, trying to replace them with broccoli and carrot juice is like dealing with a leaky bathroom tap by repainting the kitchen. What’s required isn’t a better diet, but an alternative way to feel comforted and relaxed. ‘The chains of habit are too weak to be felt until they are too strong to be broken,’ Dr Johnson observed gloomily, but maybe by looking at the problem differently we can still, Houdini-like, slip out of them.-
Question:
The system is unfair: the minority has too much to eat while the majority is left to starve.
CorrectIncorrect -
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Question 50 of 50
50. Question
Look at the highlighted adverbs in the text. What do you think they mean? Check in your dictionary, then use them to complete the sentences.
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
HOW LONG DOES IT TAKE?
Everyone knows that it takes 28 days to develop a new habit, or perhaps 21, or 18, depending on who you ask; anyway, the point is that it’s a specific number, which makes it sound scientific and thus indisputably true. The person who is probably responsible for this idea is Maxwell Maltz, the plastic surgeon who wrote the 1960 bestseller Psycho-Cybernetics. He claimed to have observed that amputees took an average of only 21 days to adjust to the loss of a limb.1____. And therefore it must take 21 days to change a habit, maybe, perhaps!
This is, of course, ridiculous, as a new study by the University College London psychologist Phillippa Lally and her colleagues helps confirm. On average, her subjects, who were trying to take up new habits such as eating fruit daily or going jogging, took a depressing 66 days before reporting that the behaviour had
become automatic.2____. One especially silly implication of the 28- or 21-day rule is that it is just as easy to start eating a few more apples as it is to start finding five hours a week to study Chinese.
Self-help culture supports the fiction of the 28-day rule, presumably because it makes changing habits sound plausibly difficult enough, but basically easy. The first problem with this is simple: changing habits is hard. Our brains are designed to take short cuts, in order to make as many behaviours as possible automatic. ‘What would be the point,’ asks the psychologist Ian Newby-Clark, ‘of having a habit that didn’t free up your mind to deal with more pressing matters?’3____
The subtler problem is that we tend to think about habit change wrongly. We get trapped in a paradox. We want to, say, stop watching so much TV, but on the other hand, demonstrably, we also want to watch lots of TV – after all, we keep doing it.4____
The way round this, says Newby-Clark and others, is to see that habits are responses to needs.5____If you eat badly, you might resolve to start eating well, but if you’re eating burgers and ice cream to feel comforted, relaxed, and happy, trying to replace them with broccoli and carrot juice is like dealing with a leaky bathroom tap by repainting the kitchen. What’s required isn’t a better diet, but an alternative way to feel comforted and relaxed. ‘The chains of habit are too weak to be felt until they are too strong to be broken,’ Dr Johnson observed gloomily, but maybe by looking at the problem differently we can still, Houdini-like, slip out of them.-
Question:
The writer’s latest novel is her finest work to date; there is no doubt about it.
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