TEA TIMES
A. The chances are that you have already drunk a cup or glass of tea today. Perhaps, you are sipping one as you read this. Tea, now an everyday beverage in many parts of the world, has over the centuries been an important part of the rituals of hospitality both in the home and in trader society.
B. Tea originated in China, and in Eastern Asia tea making and drinking ceremonies have been popular for centuries. Tea was first shipped to North Western Europe by English and Dutch maritime traders in the sixteenth century. At about the same time, a land mule from the Ear East, via Moscow, to Europe was opened up. Tea also figured in America’s bid for independence from British rule – the Boston Tea Party.
C. As, over the last four hundred years, tea-leaves became available throughout much of Asia and Europe, the ways in which tea was drunk changed. The Chinese considered the quality of the leaves and the ways in which they w-ere cured all important. People in other cultures added new ingredients besides tea-leaves and hot water. They drank tea with milk, sugar, spices like cinnamon and cardamom, and herbs such as mint or sage. The variations are endless. For example, in Western Sudan on the edge of the Sahara Desert, sesame oil is added to milky tea on cold mornings. In England tea, unlike coffee, acquired a reputation as a therapeutic drink that promoted health. Indeed, in European and Arab countries as well as in Persia and Russia, tea was praised for its restorative and health giving properties. One Dutch physician, Cornelius Blank art, advised that to maintain health a minimum of eight to ten cups a day should be drunk, and that up to 50 to 100 daily cups could be consumed with safely.
D. While European coffee houses were frequented by men discussing politics and closing business deals, respectable middle-class women stayed at home and held lea parties. When the price of tea fell in the nineteenth century poor people took up the drink with enthusiasm. Different grades and blends of tea were sold to suit every pocket.
E. Throughout the world today, few religious groups object to tea drinking In Islamic cultures, where drinking of alcohol is forbidden, tea and coffee consumption is an important part of social life. However, Seventh-Day Adventists, recognising the beverage as a drug containing the stimulant caffeine, frown upon the drinking of tea.
F. Nomadic Bedouin are well known for traditions of hospitality in the desert. According to Middle Eastern tradition, guests are served both tea and coffee from pots kept ready on the fires of guest tents where men of the family and male visitors gather. Cups of ‘bitter’ cardamom coffee and glasses of sugared tea should be constantly refilled by the host.
G. For over a thousand years, Arab traders have been bringing Islamic culture, including tea drinking; to northern and western Africa, Techniques of tea preparation and the ceremony involved have been adapted, in West African countries, such as Senegal and The Gambia, it is fashionable for young men to gather in small groups to brew Chinese ‘gunpowder’ tea. The tea is boiled with large amounts of sugar for a long time.
H. Tea drinking in India remains an important part of daily life. There, tea made entirely with milk is popular, ‘Chai’ is made by boiling milk and adding tea, sugar and some spices. This form of tea making has crossed the Indian Ocean and is also popular in East Africa, where tea is considered best when it is either very milky or made with water only. Curiously, this ‘milk or water’ formula has been carried over to the preparation of instant coffee, which is served in cafes as either black, or sprinkled on a cup of hot milk.
I. In Britain, coffee drinking, particularly in the informal atmosphere of coffee shops, is currently in vogue. Yet, the convention of afternoon tea lingers. At conferences, it remains common practice to serve coffee in the morning and tea in the afternoon. Contemporary’ China, too, remains true to its long tradition. Delegates at conferences and seminars are served lea in cups with lids to keep the infusion hot. The cups are topped up throughout the proceedings. There are as yet no signs of coffee at such occasions.
Question (1)
Questions 1 – 8
Reading Passage 1 has nine paragraphs A-I.
From the list of headings below choose the most suitable heading for each paragraph.
Write the appropriate numbers i – xiii in boxes 1-8 on your answer sheet.
List of Headings i. Diverse drinking methods ii. Limited objections to drinking tea iii. Today’s continuing tradition – in Britain and China iv. Tea – a beverage of hospitality v. An important addition – tea with milk vi. Tea and alcohol vii. The everyday beverage in all parts of the world viii. Tea on the move ix. African tea x. The fall in the cost of tea xi. The value of tea xii. Tea-drinking in Africa xiii. Hospitality among the Bedouin |
1
Paragraph A
2
Paragraph B
3 Paragraph C
4
Paragraph E
5
Paragraph F
6
Paragraph G
7
Paragraph H
8
Paragraph I
Questions 9-13
Complete the sentences below with words taken from Reading Passage 1.
Use NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS for each answer.
Write your answers in boxes 9-13 on your answer sheet.
For centuries, both at home and in society, tea has had an important role in
9
Falling tea prices in the nineteenth century meant that people could choose the
10
of the tea they could afford.
In the desert, one group that is well known for its traditions of hospitality is the
12
In India
13
as well as tea, are added to boiling milk to make ‘chai’.
Questions 14 - 21
Questions 14-21
Complete the summary below using words from the box.
Write your answers in boxes 14-21 on your answer sheet.
People often associate writing with
14
But being a writer involves managing conflicting emotions as well as
15
and instinct. Advanced technology, contrary to what might be thought, does not make the
16
faster. When a writer has a draft of the text ready, it is a good idea to have a
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for friends and agents to look at. If an author is accepted by a publisher, the draft of the book is given to
18
for vetting .
19
are then often made, which are not easy for the writer to agree. However,
20
compelling, even though there are
21
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Question (22)
Choose the correct letter A, B, C or D.
Write your answers in boxes 22-23 on your answer sheet.
In the planning stages of a book,
- A
- B
- C
- D
The problem with the use of advanced technology in editing is that
- A
- B
- C
- D
Questions 24-27
Complete the sentences below with words taken from Reading Passage 2.
Use NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS for each answer.
Write your answers in boxes 24-27 on your answer sheet.
Once a text is finished, the writer needs to get the 24 of other people.
Some agents may reject the draft of a book, while others may offer
25
Apart from the need for a draft to conform to an in-house style, a publisher’s changes to a text may include
26
The publisher’s alterations to a book are difficult for a writer, as is the 27 as the book grows
Question (28)
28
Koestler
29
Fish berg
30
Emerson
Question (31)
Questions 31-36
Do the following statements reflect the claims of the writer in Reading Passage 3?
In boxes 31-36 on your answer sheet write
YES if the statement agrees with the information in the passage
NO if the statement contradicts the information in the passage
NOT GIVEN if there is no information about the statement in the passage
31
Further study into the science of voice production will cost considerable sums of money.
32
The psychological and socio-linguistic factors that make it difficult for adult learners of foreign languages to gain ‘good’ pronunciation are not as important as other factors.
33
Speech organs are muscles
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New phonemes are difficult to learn.
35
People often make fun of standard British RP.
36 Facial features contribute to the incomprehensibility of Midlands English.
Question (37)
Questions 37- 40
Complete each of the following statements (Questions 37-40) with the best ending A-I from the box below.
Write the appropriate letters A-I in boxes 37-40 on your answer sheet
A can be achieved by using a mental aid B is irrelevant. D use images to assist students with the desired pronunciation. E is a chicken and egg conundrum. F get the target. G can affect appearance. H is not as easy as a Belfast one. I makes you smile. |
37
Voice coaches
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The Scouse accent
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Whether the way we look affects the way we speak or the other way round
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It is important to prove that pronunciation