CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH / ADVANCED / CAE / USE OF ENGLISH / open Cloze
For questions 1-8, read the text below and think of the word which fits each gap. Use only one word in each gap.
Taste
Taste is (1) ... simply the preserve of a tiny aristocracy, of the court culture of the European. Abbasid or Chinese past or the ‘foodie’ cutting-edge of the present. In the social history of ordinary people, calorie intake, the threat of famine and the supply of urban centres are among the topics (2) ... have given us (3) ... idea of the fragility and difficulty of pre-industrial life. The relevance of the history of food in its (4) ... basic sense needs (5) ... justification.
The exchange of products resulting (6) ... the discovery of the New World, the dependence of societies (7) ... one overwhelmingly important food source, or the impact of modern warfare on civilian diet (8) ... all clearly major topics. In the mid-twentieth century historians’ interest in the conditions of society, and particularly the history of ordinary people, inevitably involved questions of how peasants or workers lived in the past; how well or ill-nourished they were; how they coped with the unpredictability of harvests, food supply and prices.
[start-answers-block type=1 columns=3 textTransform=none]
[answer="not"]
[answer="that/which"] [answer="an"] ! [answer="most"][answer="no"][answer="from"][answer="on"]
[answer="are"]
[end-answers-block]
answer keys
ADVERB | NOT |
A word used for denying, forbidding, refusing, or expressing the opposite of something: We are not going to London. |
RELATIVE PRONOUN | THAT/WHICH |
Used after a noun to show what thing or things you mean: Did you see the book which (that) came today? |
INDEFINITE ARTICLE | AN |
Used when the following word begins with a vowel sound: He gave me an apple. |
ADVERB | MOST |
Used to form the superlative of adjectives and adverbs of two or more syllables: This is the most frequently mentioned reason. |
DETERMINER | NO |
Not one; not any; not a: We have no food. |
VERB + PREPOSITION | RESULT FROM |
If something results from something else, it is caused by it: We will pay for any damage that results from our experiments. |
NOUN + PREPOSITION | DEPENDENCE ON |
The state of needing the help and support of somebody/something in order to survive or be successful: Mr Putin also criticised the world's dependence on the dollar. |
AUXILIARY VERB | ARE |
The present tense and plural of 'be': We are not able to repair this car. |