CPE :: Lesson 1

LOS CURSOS DE INGLES GRATIS PREFERIDOS POR LOS HISPANOHABLANTES

 

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Reading and writing

Para que este curso CPE PROFICIENCY resulte efectivo, cumple estos pasos: 

1.

Realiza todas las actividades y ejercicios de cada unidad de estudio.

2.

  Pulsa este ícono para abrir y consultar las respuestas correctas.

3.

Pulsa el enlace índice del curso – ubicado en la parte superior e inferior de cada página – para pasar a una nueva lección.

4.

Lee aquí las instrucciones del curso y conoce aquí sus símbolos.

5.

Lee aquí si no ves las consolas de audio o no escuchas el sonido.

 

Comprehension

ACTIVITY 1: You are going to read a magazine article about Canadian geese. For questions 1-5, choose the answer (A, B, C or D) which you think best fits according to the text. Then check the correct answers.

THE CUNNING GEESE

In his description of Canadian wild geese in his book Birds in America, John James Audubon, the 19th century ornithologist, tells the reader that wherever these birds may be found and however remote from the haunts of man they may be, they are at all times so vigilant and suspicious that it is next to impossible to take them unaware. In keenness of sight and acuteness of hearing, they are perhaps surpassed by no other bird. They act as sentinels for each other and during those hours when the flock reposes one or more ganders remain on watch.
At the sight of cattle, horses, deer and other animals that do not pose a threat, they are practically never alarmed. However, if one of the sentinels announces a bear or cougar and if the flock is on the ground near a lake, they quickly and silently take to the water and swim to the middle, remaining there until the danger has passed. Should an enemy pursue them in the water, the males utter loud shrieks and the birds arrange themselves close together, rise simultaneously and fly off in a compact body. At such times they seldom form lines or angles; it is only when the distance they have to travel is great that they do this.

So acute is their hearing that they are able to distinguish the different sounds of their foes with amazing accuracy. The breaking of a dry stick by a deer is at once distinguished from the breaking of a stick by a man. If eight or ten large turtles drop into the water, making a loud splash in their fall, or if the same effect is produced by an alligator, the wild goose pays no attention. On the other hand, no matter how faint and distant may be the sound of a man's footsteps it is at once noted; every bird raises its head and looks intently in the direction from which the noise emanated and in silence all watch the movements of their enemy. These wild birds are extremely cunning. To elude being seen by a hunter they silently move into the tall grasses at the edge of the water, lower their heads and lie perfectly still until the peril is over.

QUESTIONS

1.

The most outstanding feature of Canadian Wild geese is their ...

 

A.    support for each other.
B.    keen alertness.
C.    unusual behavioural patterns.
D. 
  aggressive behaviour towards enemies.

2.

One animal that they recognize as a danger to them is the ...

 

A.    alligator.
B.    turtle.
C.    cougar.
D. 
  deer.

3.

If an animal they fear approaches them in the water they ...

 

A.    swim to the middle.
B.    fly off in a group.
C.    make a loud noise.
D. 
  fly off in a line.

4.

Their hearing is so good they ...

 

A.    can hear a man hunting a deer.
B.    pay no attention when their enemies approach.
C.    know exactly which sounds are made by their enemies.
D. 
  can tell the difference between a turtle and an alligator.

5.

They move into the tall grass in order to ...

 

A.    find insects,
B.    keep cool.
C.    hide from possible danger.
D. 
  sleep.

 

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