0

3️⃣MULTILEVEL | READING

Ingliz tilini bilish darajasi testi
READING PART 1-5

 

Aloqa uchun: @iquizuz_bot  
Telegram kanal: @iquiz_uzb

Kategoriya: Reading Part 1 (Multilevel)

PART 1

Questions 1 - 6. Read the texts. Fill in each gap with ONE word. You must use a word which is somewhere in the rest of the text

ZOO

Last Sunday, my family and I went to the city zoo. It was a sunny day, perfect for a visit. The 1 was bustling with people, all excited to see the animals. We started our tour near the lion enclosure. The lions were magnificent, their powerful bodies lounging in the sun. One even yawned, showing off impressive teeth! It was amazing to see 2 up close. Next, we visited the monkeys. They were incredibly playful and energetic, swinging from branch to branch. One cheeky monkey even snatched a banana from a nearby visitor! It was hilarious to watch. The monkey 3 also had a small waterfall, which the monkeys seemed to love playing in. After the 4 , we headed to the aquarium. There were so many different kinds of fishes swimming around – bright orange ones, long silvery ones, and even some with strange patterns. We spent a good amount of time watching the fishes darting about. My little sister especially loved 5 a large turtle slowly making its way across the bottom of the tank. The zoo was a fantastic day out. We saw so many fascinating animals and had a wonderful 6 together as a family. I learned so much about different animals and their habitats, and I'd definitely recommend a visit to the zoo to anyone!

Kategoriya: Reading Part 2 (Multilevel)

PART 2

Read the texts 7-14 and the statements A-J. Decide which text matches with the situation described in the statements. Each statement can be used ONCE only. There are TWO extra
statements which you do not need to use. Mark your answers on the answer sheet. Questions 7-14

 

7. Story Lovers Club If you're a fan of books and enjoy discussing your favorite stories, the Story Lovers Club is perfect for you. Whether you like mysteries, romances, or fantasy, you'll find like-minded readers to share your thoughts and recommendations.

8. Fit & Fun Group Looking to stay active while making new friends? The Fit & Fun Group organizes regular fitness classes, including yoga, aerobics, and weekend hiking trips. It's a great way to stay in shape and enjoy the company of others.

9. Mystery Novel Collective For those who love a good mystery, the Mystery Novel Collective is the club to join. Here, you'll discuss the latest mystery novels, solve book-based riddles, and even get a chance to write your own stories.

10. Green Action Group Want to make your neighborhood a cleaner and greener place? The Green Action Group is committed to environmental projects like community gardening, park clean-ups, and recycling drives. Join if you're passionate about protecting the planet.

11. Creating Spark – Digital Art Group If you're into digital art and design, Creating Spark offers a fantastic outlet for your creativity. From beginners to digital painting you'll meet other digital art enthusiasts and work on collaborative projects.

12. Dance Lovers Club Do you love dancing and want to join a local club? The Dance Lovers Club hosts various dance classes and workshops, including salsa, ballroom, and hip-hop. It's a fun way to get active and meet new people.

13. Helping Hands If you have a heart for helping others, Helping Hands might be for you. This group focuses on providing assistance in the community with everyday tasks, like grocery shopping and home repairs. Your support can make a big difference.

14. Language Learners Group Want to learn a new language for your future travels? The Language Learners Group is the ideal choice. Practice speaking a new language with other learners, and prepare for your next trip abroad.

  • A) You have a passion for digital creativity and enjoy working on visual projects.
  • B) This group is for those who wish to practice a new language with other learners.
  • C) This club is perfect if you enjoy reading mystery books and want to create your own.
  • D) This club focuses on helping stray animals find homes in your area.
  • E) You want to improve your physical health while making friends.
  • F) You would like to volunteer your time to help elderly residents in your community.
  • G) You are interested in activities that protect nature and promote environmental health.
  • H) This club offers classes for people who want to learn different types of dances.
  • I) This group is for those who love discussing novels and sharing their reading experiences.
  • J) You are keen on organizing outdoor sports competitions for children.
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14

Kategoriya: Reading Part 3 (Multilevel)

PART 3

Questions 15 – 20
Read the text and choose the correct heading for each paragraph from the list of headings below. There are more headings than paragraphs, so you will not use all of them. You cannot use any heading more than once. Mark your answers on the answer sheet.

I. Still determined by the sizeable gaps between the earth's continents, a Hungarian couple is planning an around-the-world trip in a Toyota truck. They know potential dangers waiting them on the way, but this is ignored to watch the thrills of the globe.

II. Eszter and JCnos Hando, both managers at multinational companies, set out for the big trip on May 20th from Hosok tere, but the real adventure will start in Iceland, the official starting point for the journey. "We picked Iceland because it is such an unreal place with its volcanic activities. I just had to see it and show it to my wife,' JCnos said.

III. 'We want to travel and see the world, and meet other cultures, people and languages,' he said. They are not attempting to break records, though the trip is certainly an unusual one. They have own dreams for a long time so they are going to do their best to realize them.

IV. From Iceland, the journey will continue in north America and then lead south all the way to Chile. The Handos will take a ship to New Zealand and from thereexplore Australia, Southeast Asia, China and Japan. The trip will take in India, Tibet and Nepal as well. After motoring around the Saudi peninsula, they will go to Egypt.

V. The final destination for the journey will be Cyprus, which the Handos hope to reach by the end of June next year. The journey will cover approxi- mately 110,000 kilometers. This is rather a long journey for ordinary people.

VI. The car, which will also serve as their bed and pantry, is a Toyota Hilux 2.4TD fourwheel-drive jeep. Although there is a bed on top of the car, JCnos said he did not intend to spend all nights up there.

List of Headings

A) Hoping to be famous
B) Reasons for the journey
E) The last stop
F) Places to see
C) Brave decision
D) A wonder of nature
G) Means of transport
H) Choosing the time

15. Paragraph I
16. Paragraph II
17. Paragraph III
18. Paragraph IV
19. Paragraph V
20. Paragraph VI

Kategoriya: Reading Part 4 (Multilevel)

PART 4

Read the following text for questions 21 - 29.

A good night's sleep — an impossible dream? Tonight, do yourself a favor. Shut off the TV, log off the Internet and unplug the phone. Relax, take a bath, maybe sip some herbal tea. Then move into the bedroom. Set your alarm clock for a time no less than eight hours in the future, fluff up your pillows and lay your head down for a peaceful night of restorative shut-eye. That's what American doctors advise.

American sleep experts are sounding an alarm over America's sleep deficit. They say Americans are a somnambulant nation, stumbling groggily through their waking hours for lack of sufficient sleep. They are working longer days — and, increasingly, nights — and they are playing longer, too, as TV and the Internet expand the range of round-the-clock entertainment options. By some estimates, Americans are sleeping as much as an hour and a half less per night than they did at the turn of the century — and the problem is likely to get worse.

The health repercussions of sleep deprivation are not well understood, but sleep researchers point to ills ranging from heart problems to depression. In a famous experiment conducted at the University of Chicago in 1988, rats kept from sleeping died after two and a half weeks. People are not likely to drop dead in the same way, but sleep deprivation may cost them their lives indirectly, when an exhausted doctor prescribes the wrong dosage or a sleepy driver weaves into someone's lane.

What irritates sleep experts most is the fact that much sleep deprivation is voluntary. "People have regarded sleep as a commodity that they could shortchange," says one of them. "It's been considered a mark of very hard work and upward mobility to get very little sleep. It's a macho attitude". Slumber scientists hope that attitude will change. They say people have learned to modify their behavior in terms of lowering their cholesterol and increasing exercise. Doctors also think people need to be educated that allowing enough time for sleep and taking strategic naps are the most reliable ways to promote alertness behind the wheel and on the job.

Well, naps would be nice, but at the moment, employers tend to frown on them. And what about the increasing numbers of people who work at night? Not only must they work while their bodies' light-activated circadian rhythms tell them to sleep, they also find it tough to get to sleep after work. Biologists say night workers have a hard time not paying attention to the 9-to-5 day because of noises or family obligations or that's the only time they can go to the dentist. There are not too many dentists open at midnight.

As one might imagine, companies are springing up to take advantage of sleeplessness. One of the companies makes specially designed shift- work lighting systems intended to keep workers alert around the clock. Shiftwork's theory is that bright light, delivered in a controlled fashion, can help adjust people's biological clocks. The company president says they are using light like a medicine. So far, such special lighting has been the province of NASA astronauts and nuclear power plant workers. He thinks that in the future, such systems may pop up in places like hospitals and 24-hour credit-card processing centers. Other researchers are experimenting with everything from welder's goggles (which night workers wear during the day) to human growth hormones. And, of course, there is always what doctors refer to as "therapeutic caffeine use", but everyone is already familiar with that.

For questions 21-24, choose the correct answer A, B, C, or D. Mark your answers on the answer sheet.

21. The advice of American doctors is all about …

Kategoriya: Reading Part 4 (Multilevel)

22. Having naps during the day would be nice, but …

Kategoriya: Reading Part 4 (Multilevel)

23. People who work at night can hardly …

Kategoriya: Reading Part 4 (Multilevel)

24. The main aim of specially designed shift-work lighting system is …

Kategoriya: Reading Part 4 (Multilevel)

For questions 25-29, decide if the following statements agree with the information given in the text. Mark your answers on the answer sheet.

25. If people are kept from sleeping for two weeks, they will most likely die.

Kategoriya: Reading Part 4 (Multilevel)

26. Experts claim that working, entertaining and other factors are causing less and less time to sleep these days.

Kategoriya: Reading Part 4 (Multilevel)

27. At the beginning of the century, people went to sleep and awakened more earlier than nowadays.

Kategoriya: Reading Part 4 (Multilevel)

28. The bad fact is that people want to sleep less themselves.

Kategoriya: Reading Part 4 (Multilevel)

29. Some companies such has NASA are planning to use shiftwork light systems in the future.

Kategoriya: Reading Part 5 (Multilevel)

PART 5

Read the following text for questions 30-35.

A home-sewing revival: the return of Clothkits

In the 1970s, Clothkits revolutionised home sewing. Later, a woman from Sussex, England, revived the nostalgic brand and brought it up to date ‘I can’t remember many of the clothes I wore before I was six, but I have a vivid memory of a certain skirt whose patterns I can still trace in my mind. It was wraparound, with a belt that threaded through itself, decorated with cats in two shades of green. I wore it with a knitted red jersey my mum bought in a jumble sale, and brown sandals with flowers cut into the toes. It was 1979, and I was not yet five. I forgot about that skirt for a long time, but when a girlfriend mentioned the name Clothkits while we were chatting, it was as if a door suddenly opened on a moment in the past that resonated with vivid significance for me.’ The brand, founded in 1968, had by the late 1980s mostly vanished from people’s lives, but by a combination of determination and luck Kay Mawer brought it back.

Clothkits was created by the designer Anne Kennedy, who came up with the ingenious idea of printing a pattern straight on to coloured fabric so that a paper pattern was not needed. It was accompanied by instructions that almost anyone could follow on how to cut the pieces out and sew them together. ‘I was rebelling against the formulaic lines of textile design at that time,’ Kennedy says. ‘My interest was in folk art and clothes that were simple to make as I had lots of unfinished sewing disasters in my cupboard.’

Clothkits has always embodied the spirit of the late 1960s and 1970s. Its initial design was a dress in a geometric stripe in orange, pink, turquoise and purple. It cost 25 shillings (£1.25), and after it was featured in the Observer newspaper, Kennedy received more than £2,000 worth of orders. She ran the company from Lewes in Sussex, where at its peak it employed more than 400 people, selling to 44 countries worldwide. Sew-your-own kits formed the core of the business, supplemented by knitwear. Kennedy’s children demonstrated the patterns by wearing them in photographs.

Kennedy sold the company in the late 1980s. There had been a few administrative problems with postal strikes and a new computer system, which back then took up an entire room, ‘but the times were changing as well,’ she says. ‘More women were going out to work and sewing less for their children.’ She sold the company to one of her suppliers, who then sold it on to Freeman’s, which ran Clothkits alongside its own brand for a while, using Kennedy’s impressive database, but its ethos are big, corporate company did not sit well alongside the alternative and artistic of Clothkits. In 1991, Clothkits was made dormant, and there the story may have ended, were it not for Mawer’s fascination with discovering what happened Clothkits.

Mawer’s mother bought her a sewing machine when she was ten and taught her basic pattern-cutting and garment construction, encouraging her to experiment with colour and design by trial and error. The first garment Mawer made was a pair of trousers, which she made by tracing around an existing pair of trousers. In her late twenties, she spent five years working on digital and sculptural installations. ‘It was an amazing, mind-expanding experience, but I knew it was unlikely I could make a living as a practising artist. I was definitely looking for a way that I could work in a creative industry with a commercial edge.’ The experience inspired Mawer to return to education, studying for a degree in fine art at the University of Chichester. Her passion for vintage fabric, which her mother had encouraged her to start collecting, led her back to Clothkits, and from there to a journey into the heart of Freeman’s. Negotiations with the company took 18 months, but in October 2007 Clothkits was hers.

The ethos of Clothkits remains the same, and Mawer is proud that her fabric is printed either in London or the north of England, and that packaging is kept to an absolute minimum. ‘I wanted to feel that everyone involved in the brand, from design to production, was part of a process I could witness. I couldn’t see the point of manufacturing on the other side of the world, as that’s not what Clothkits has ever been about.’ The revival of Clothkits has also, of course, coincided with a growing sense of dissatisfaction at our disposable society, and the resulting resurgence of interest in skills such as sewing and knitting. ‘Making your own clothes gives you a greater appreciation of the craftsmanship in the construction of a garment,’ Mawer says. ‘When you know the process involved in making a skirt, you treasure it in a way you wouldn’t if you’d bought it from a mass- producing manufacturer.’

For questions 30-33, fill in the missing information in the numbered spaces. Write no more than ONE WORD and / or A NUMBER for each question.

 

The early days of Clothkits

Clothkits was started by a designer named Anne Kennedy. Her clothing company specialised in selling 30. with a pattern printed on it. This came with instructions which meant that buyers were able to make their own garments. The very first garment Anne Kennedy made was a multi-coloured striped dress with a 31. pattern. A  32. article led to many orders for this from around the world. As the company grew, she increased her workforce, and also sold 33. as part of her business. She exhibited her designs using her children as models.

Kategoriya: Reading Part 5 (Multilevel)

For questions 34-35, choose the correct answer A, B, C, or D. Mark your answers on the answer sheet.

34. What does the reader learn about Clothkits in the 1960s and 1970s?

Kategoriya: Reading Part 5 (Multilevel)

35. Why did Clothkits close in 1991?

Sizning natijangiz

0%

Baholang:

Qabul qilindi!

  • UMUMIY
  • TOP-10
B2+0
B10
T/RIsmDavomiyligiBallUmumiy
Hali ma'lumot yo'q
Scroll to Top