All English 4U
Test 3 — Reading & Writing
5 Reading Parts (35Q) • Writing Parts 1, 2 & 3 • Auto-graded 40/40
Norwich, the capital of the part of Britain known as East Anglia, has existed as a place to live for more than two thousand years. It began as a small village beside the River Wensum. At the time of the Norman invasion in 1066 it had grown to become one of the largest towns in England.
With two cathedrals and a mosque, Norwich has long been a popular centre for various religions. The first cathedral was built in 1095 and has recently celebrated its 900th anniversary, while Norwich itself had a year of celebration in 1994 to mark the 800th anniversary of the city receiving a Royal Charter. This allowed it to be called a city and to govern itself independently.
Today, in comparison with places like London or Manchester, Norwich is quite small, with a population of around 150,000, but in the 16th century Norwich was the second city of England. It continued to grow for the next 300 years and got richer and richer, becoming famous for having as many churches as there are weeks in the year and as many pubs as there are days in the year.
Nowadays, there are far fewer churches and pubs, but in 1964 the University of East Anglia was built in Norwich. With its fast-growing student population and its success as a modern commercial centre (Norwich is the biggest centre for insurance services outside London), the city now has a wide choice of entertainment: theatres, cinemas, nightclubs, busy cafés, excellent restaurants, and a number of arts and leisure centres. There is also a football team, whose colours are green and yellow. The team is known as ‘The Canaries’, though nobody can be sure why.
Now the city’s attractions include another important development, a modern shopping centre called ‘The Castle Mall’. The people of Norwich lived with a very large hole in the middle of their city for over two years, as builders dug up the main car park. Lorries moved nearly a million tons of earth so that the roof of the Mall could become a city centre park, with attractive water pools and hundreds of trees. But the local people are really pleased that the old open market remains, right in the heart of the city and next to the new development. Both areas continue to do good business, proving that Norwich has managed to mix the best of the old and the new.
When I opened the first ‘Body Shop’ in 1976 my only object was to earn enough to feed my children. Today ‘The Body Shop’ is an international company rapidly growing all around the world. In the years since we began I have learned a lot. Much of what I have learned will be found in this book, for I believe that we, as a company, have something worth saying about how to run a successful business without giving up what we really believe in.
It’s not a normal business book, nor is it just about my life. The message is that to succeed in business you have to be different. Business can be fun, a business can be run with love and it can do good. In business, as in life, I need to enjoy myself, to have a feeling of family and to feel excited by the unexpected. I have always wanted the people who work for ‘The Body Shop’ to feel the same way.
Now this book sends these ideas of mine out into the world, makes them public. I’d like to think there are no limits to our ‘family’, no limits to what can be done. I find that an exciting thought. I hope you do, too.
The Rocky Mountains run almost the length (0) of North America. They start in the North-west, but lie only a (26) hundred miles from the centre in more southern areas. Although the Rockies are smaller (27) the Alps, they are no less wonderful.
There are many roads across the Rockies, (28) the best way to see them is to (29) by train. You start from Vancouver, (30) most attractive of Canada’s big cities. Standing with its feet in the water and its head in the mountains, this city (31) its residents to ski on slopes just 15 minutes by car from the city (32).
Thirty passenger trains a day used to (33) off from Vancouver on the cross-continent railway. Now there are just three a week, but the ride is still a great adventure. You sleep on board, (34) is fun, but travel through some of the best (35) at night.
Here are some sentences about going to the cinema. For each question, complete the second sentence so that it means the same as the first. Use no more than three words. Write only the missing words on your answer sheet.
1 — many seats (left)
2 — a better seat
3 — it difficult / hard
4 — have / ’ve (already) seen
5 — lasted
Question 6
You have recently moved to a town and have bought a postcard of the town to send to your penfriend.
In your postcard to your penfriend, you should
- explain why you have moved
- tell your friend what facilities the town has
- say what you dislike about living there.
Write 35–45 words.
ⓘ This part is not auto-graded. Write your answer, then compare with the model answer from your teacher.
Question 7 — Story
Your English teacher has asked you to write a story.
Your story must begin with this sentence:
It was a fantastic party.
- Write your story in about 100 words on your answer sheet.
ⓘ This part is not auto-graded. Aim for about 100 words.
🎯 Finished all 40 questions?
Submit to grade your whole test, or use 👁 Show Answers per part.
