ZHAW Proficiency XI
ZHAW CPE Proficiency - Gapsentences
ZHAW CPE Proficiency - Gapsentences
Fichier Détails
Cartes-fiches | 75 |
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Utilisateurs | 11 |
Langue | Deutsch |
Catégorie | Anglais |
Niveau | Université |
Crée / Actualisé | 28.11.2015 / 26.07.2022 |
Lien de web |
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In times (1) _____ by, only the literate knew what was going on in the world, and (2) _____ only after a long delay.
(1) GONE
(2) THEN
But now it is possible for any of us to watch world events as they occur. (1) _____ has shortened the distance that divides our private lives (2) _____ the outside world to (3) _____ an extent as television.
(1) NOTHING
(2) FROM
(3) SUCH
Time and (1) ____ , television transports us to the habitats of rare animals, and we may identify (2) _____ them.
(1) AGAIN
(2) WITH
Concern for damage to the environment extends far and (1) ____ .
(1) WIDE
We worry about the influence of technology not just in our cities but on us (1) _____ .
(1) AS
Increasingly we see (1) _____ as part of the planet (2) _____ than in isolation.
(1) OURSELVES
(2) RATHER
(1) _____ was once the prerogative of scholars is now accessible to countless people through the medium of television.
(2) _____ this form of popular education can be regarded as superficial, it represents a broadening of knowlegdge.
(1) WHAT
(2) ALTHOUGH / THOUGH / WHILE
Of the legions _____ twentieth century scientists, only a handful won worldwide recognition.
OF
Even (1) _____ have won the greatest prize of all, the Nobel Prize, and rarer still are those who have won two. So (2) _____ , only three people have succeeded in achieving this, but there is one scientist whose achievements would have merited four at the (3) _____ least.
(1) FEWER
(2) FAR
(3) VERY
(1) _____ he died a few years (2) _____ soon to receive the first Nobel Prize, Louis Pasteur is arguably the most celebrated of any scientists, (3) ____ name appearing (4) _____ countless products in homes, shops and supermarkets (5) ____ this day.
(1) Though / Although / While / Whilst
(2) TOO
(3) HIS
(4) ON / UPON
(5) TO
Pioneer scientists, conqueror of disease and saviour of industries, Pasteur combined soaring intellectual powers (1) ____ down-to-earth pragmatism, a combination which allowed him, to (2) ____ intents and purposes, to dispose of centuries of pseudo-science.
(1) WITH
(2) ALL
In the year 1822 when he was born, the life sciences were based on _____ more than medieval fairy tales.
LITTLE / NO / NOTHING
The underlying causes of many diseases were quite unknown. What explanations ____ exist were utterly bizarre.
DID
For instance, malaria was said to have (1) ____ origins and 'miasmas' emanating from swamps, whereas influenza was linked to the influence of celestial events, (2) _____ as the passage of comets. Pasteur exploded (3) _____ and many other myths.
(1) ITS
(2) SUCH
(3) THESE / THOSE
Throughout our lives, right from the moment when (1) _____ infants we cry to express hunger, we are engaging in social interaction of one form or (2) _____ .
(1) AS
(2) ANOTHER
Each and (1) ____ time we encounter fellow human beings, some kind of social interaction will take place, (2) _____ it's getting on a bus and paying the fare for the journey, or socialising with friends.
(1) EVERY
(2) WHETHER
It goes without _____ , therefore, that we need the ability to communicat.
SAYING
Without some method of transmitting intentions, we should be (1) _____ a complete loss when it (2) _____ to interacting socially.
(1) AT
(2) CAME / COMES
Communication involves the exchange of information, which can be (1) _____ from a gesture to a friend signalling boredom to the presentation of a university thesis which may (2) _____ ever be read by a handful of others, or it could be something in (3) _____ the two.
(1) ANYTHING
(2) ONLY
(3) BETWEEN
Our highly developed languages set us (1) ____ from animals. (2) ____ for these languages, we could not communicate sophisticated or abstract idear.
(1) APART
(2) BUT
(1) _____ could we talk or write about people or objects (2) _____ immediately present. (3) _____ we restricted to discussing objects already present, we would be (4) _____ to make abstract generalisations about the world.
(1) NOR / NEITHER
(2) NOT
(3) WERE
(4) UNABLE
In 1912, the world's top matehmaticians began to receive letters which were _____ of incredibly complex formulae.
FULL
They came from Madras, in India, (1) _____ a 23-year-old accounts clerk named Srinivasa Ramanujan had seemingly (2) _____ up with hundreds of new soutions to known mathematical problems (3) ____ any form of assistance or training.
(1) WHERE
(2) COME
(3) WITHOUT
For the most (1) _____ , the professional mathematicians' response was the usual one (2) _____ faced with eccentric letters: they consigned them straight (3) _____ the bin.
(1) PART
(2) WHEN / IF
(3) TO
But in 1913, some reached G. H. Hardy, a leading authority in number theory at Cambridge University. He too, initially dismissed the letters (1) _____ the work of an eccentric, but unable to (2) _____ them out of his head, he eventually subjected them to closer scrutiny.
(1) AS
(2) GET
After a few hours, Hardy arrived (1) ____ the conclusion that what he had (2) ____ him was the work of a mathematical genius, a view confirmed by colleagues with (3) _____ he shared his discovery.
(1) AT
(2) BEFORE
(3) WHOM
Before very (1) ____ , Ramanujan had received an invitation to Cambridge and, once there, he soon proved (2) ____ worth. A fruitful collaboration with Hardy (3) _____ in the opening up of vast areas of mathematical research, still being worked on to (4) _____ day.
(1) LONG
(2) HIS
(3) RESULTED / ENDED / CULMINATED / CLIMAXED
(4) THIS
For many people, mobile email is a habit they couldn't give up even (1) _____ they wanted to. And (2) ____ should they want to? (3) _____ all, the ability to send and receive emails from a mobile device means they can stay in touch with colleagues, friends and family, whether they're standing in a queue at the supermarket, downing a quick cup of coffee in (4) _____ meetings or killing (5) _____ before a flight.
(1) IF
(2) WHY
(3) AFTER
(4) BETWEEN
(5) TIME
It's fair to say that access to email while (1) ____ the move has done much to whet appetites for other kinds of collaborative tools.
(1) ON
What's (1) _____ , there's a whoe new way of working that has opened up in recent years and, (2) _____ a result, there's a general expectation that efficiency and productivity don't necessarily take (3) _____ within the four walls of an organisation's physical offices.
(1) MORE
(2) AS
(3) PLACE
In fiction robots have a personality, (1) _____ reality is disappointingly different. Although sophisticated (2) ____ to assemble cars and assist during complex surgery, modern robots are dumb automatons, (3) _____ of striking up relationships with their human operations.
(1) BUT
(2) ENOUGH
(3) INCAPABLE
However, change is (1) _____ the horizon. Engineers argue that, as robots begin to make (2) _____ a bigger part of society, they will need a way to interact with humans. To this end they will need artificial personalities.
(1) ON
(2) UP
The big question is this: what does a synthetic companion need to have so that you want to engage (1) ______ it over a long period of time? Phones and computers have already shown the (2) ______ to which people can develop relationships with inanimate electronic objects.
(1) WITH
(2) EXTENT / DEGREE
Looking further (1) _____ , engineers envisage robots helping around the house, integrating with the web to place supermarket orders using email.
(1) AHEAD / FORWARD
Programming the robot with a human-like persona and (1) ______ it the ability to learn its users' preferences, will help the person feel at ease with it.
(1) GIVING