Essay Topic: The Impact of Remote Work and Technology on Modern Careers
The key to success is . It is not enough to just "review grammar rules." You must actively practice past modal speculations, master the Unit 2 collocations on travel and transport, and simulate the exam tasks like the gapped text and listening matching exercises. By focusing on the higher-level material available in the workbook and official test packs, you will ensure you are fully prepared for the challenge.
The exclusive test heavily features vocabulary related to the Unit 2 theme of travel and transport. You are expected to move beyond single words and master collocations—words that naturally go together.
For years, we blamed teenagers’ screen addiction on a lack of willpower. However, neuroscientists now point to a more insidious culprit: the brain’s reward system. Every notification, like, or viral video triggers a small release of dopamine — the same neurotransmitter involved in gambling and substance abuse. Tech companies have exploited this by designing “variable reward schedules” (the same principle as a slot machine). You never know when you’ll get a notification, so you keep checking.
Prompt: "We arrived at the station and then the train left immediately."
Grammar in Unit 2 shifts toward structural precision. You will be tested on your ability to manipulate defining and non-defining relative clauses, as well as reduced relative clauses. 1. Defining vs. Non-Defining Clauses
Refers to the central, often densely populated and economically challenged parts of a city, rather than just "the center."
Standard tests have clear dialogues. The listening features: