Skip to main content
Examen de Pratique d'Anglaisenglishpracticeexam.com
Tests de PratiqueGuides d'ExamenTarifs
Se connecterS'inscrire
Examen de Pratique d'Anglais

English Practice Exam · englishpracticeexam.com

Tests de pratique gratuits pour vous aider à réussir vos examens de compétence en anglais.

Liens Rapides

  • Accueil
  • Tests de Pratique
  • Tarifs

Mentions Légales

  • Politique de Confidentialité
  • Conditions d'Utilisation
  • Nous Contacter

Autres Langues

FrançaisالعربيةবাংলাEnglishગુજરાતીहिन्दीBahasa Indonesia日本語한국어Bahasa Melayu普通话नेपालीPortuguês (Brasil)ਪੰਜਾਬੀEspañolภาษาไทยTiếng Việt

© 2025 Examen de Pratique d'Anglais. Tous droits réservés.

Site web par S-Block TechnologiesS-Block Technologies

2 tests pratiques gratuits restantsPasser Pro

  1. Accueil
  2. /
  3. Cambridge
  4. /
  5. C1 Advanced
  6. /
  7. Partie 7
  8. /
  9. Test de Pratique
C1Reading and Use of EnglishPartie 7

Gapped text

You are going to read an extract. Six paragraphs have been removed from the extract. Choose from the paragraphs A-G the one which fits each gap (1-6). There is one extra paragraph which you do not need to use.

The Map That Forgot the City

On the morning my phone refused to load a map, I discovered how thoroughly I had outsourced my sense of direction. I was standing outside a station I had used for years, yet the streets beyond it looked oddly unfamiliar, as if the city had shifted overnight. That small failure—no signal, no blue dot—felt inconvenient at first. Then, as I slipped the phone back into my pocket, it became an invitation: to walk, to notice, and to see whether I could still find my way without being told where to turn.
By the time I stepped back outside, the coffee had done its work and so had the builders’ debate. I began testing myself, turning left where I would normally wait for instructions, and then right simply because the street ‘felt’ like it should connect to something larger. However, this wasn’t reckless wandering; I checked my assumptions against what I could see. When a road dipped under a railway bridge, I followed it, reasoning that such routes often lead towards older, busier neighbourhoods.
Later, when my phone finally regained its signal, I noticed that I didn’t reach for it immediately. Instead, I compared the route it suggested with the one I had taken, and I could explain my choices in a way I wouldn’t have managed that morning. In other words, I now had a mental map, not just a record of turns. Consequently, I arrived at the office a little late but oddly energised, as if I had returned from a short trip rather than a commute. Since then, I have not abandoned maps, and I doubt I ever will; they are useful, and sometimes they are necessary. What I have changed, however, is the assumption that efficiency is the only sensible goal. Every few weeks I take a ‘no-blue-dot’ walk, using a river, a tower, or even the smell of fresh bread as my guide, and I let the city surprise me again. It turns out that getting slightly lost is not the opposite of belonging. In a quiet way, it can be practice for it.

Paragraphes à Insérer

Cliquez sur un paragraphe, puis sur un espace pour le placer

0 / 6 espaces remplis
← Retour à tous les tests de Gapped textVoir toutes les sections de C1 Advanced

Also practice for:

IELTSTOEFLTOEICPTE Academic