sábado, 11 de octubre de 2014

Reading test: Love thy neighbour? We don’t even know them

Love thy neighbour? We don’t even know them is an article published by The Independent in mid-August this year. We are going to use it this week for practising the vocabulary and grammar kind of task in the reading paper of the exam.

Read this text and choose the option (a, b or c) that best completes each blank. 0 is an example.

Avoiding neighbours (0) … the moment you leave or enter (1) … your home sounds like something Victor Meldrew might do, but more than half of people in the UK admit to the clandestine antisocial behaviour.
The scale of (2) … in many of Britain’s streets has been revealed by YouGov polling, (3) … shows fewer than a quarter of people in the UK feel a sense of (4) … in the community and one in 10 have no interaction with neighbours. It also suggests that the notion of the North being friendlier is a myth.
Those in the South-west are most likely (5) … a neighbour, with 63 per cent saying they had done it, while the Scots are much more friendly, with just 47 per cent taking steps to avoid (6) … those living next door.
Though the North is typically (7) … as friendlier than the South, the east of England came out as the friendliest region. Half of people there invite their neighbours over for a cup of tea and 60 per cent keep an eye out for each other’s homes while they are away.
The most likely reason (8) … interaction with neighbours is the delivery of an online order, with 57 per cent of people saying they receive parcels for others.
Kate Fox, a social anthropologist and director of the Social Issues Research Centre, said: “Friendlier North is a myth. Leaving aside London, always a law unto itself, the differences between North and South are not significant. Southerners might as well know their neighbours by name, say hello to them and stop for a friendly chat. If anything, the East is the most neighbourly region.”
Ms Fox believes the nation’s (9) … to get to know their neighbours is down to social awkwardness. “If anything, we’re just too polite,” she said. “We’ve created a long list of strict, unwritten rules around privacy that (10) …, making us a bit more socially awkward than other nations. We want a sense of community, but need a bit of a nudge first, to (11) … our inhibitions.”
However, 65 per cent of Britons believe their neighbourhoods would be stronger if people (12) … to get to know each other better.
Jim Maddan, chair of Neighbourhood Watch, the organization that commissioned the poll along with Compare the Market, said: “In an area where there’s good community cohesion the opportunities for crime are diminished because people are (13) … each other. It’s also better for older people as it means they can stay in their homes longer because neighbours collect their medication or respond if they need help.”
Older people and parents tend to connect more. Less than a quarter of 18-34 year olds have invited their neighbours over for a cup of tea. And (14) … almost half of people aged 55 and over would classify their neighbours as friends, less than a fifth of 18-34-year-olds would do the same.
Fox said of the generation (15) … : “A quarter of 18-24-year-olds have only been living in their neighbourhood for a year, compared with just 4 per cent of over-45s.”

0 Example
a) by delaying   b) delaying   c) to delay

1 a) to   b) into   c) ---

2 a) isolation   b) loneliness   c) solitude

3 a) that   b) what   c) which

4 a) belonging   b) insight  c) involvement

5 a) avoiding   b) that avoid  c) to avoid

6 a) bumping into   b) hanging out with   c) meeting with

7 a) considered   b) seemed   c) portrayed

8 a) for   b) of   c) to

9 a) battle   b) fight   c) struggle

10 a) hold us apart   b) hold us back   c) hold us down

11 a) change   b) get rid of   c) replace

12 a) were encouraged   b) would be encouraged   c) would have been encouraged

13 a) looking into   b) looking out for   c) looking up to

14 a) because   b) given that   c) while

15 a) bridge   b) difference   c) gap

Picture by AndBerlin from AndBerlin.com licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License


Key:
1c 2a 3c 4a 5c 6a 7c 8a 9c 10b 11b 12a 13b 14c 15c