Succeed In Cambridge English Advanced - 10 Cae Practice Tests Audio
A 3–4 minute monologue with 8 gaps. This is the most “brutal” part for many students because you have to write the exact words you hear. The audio trains you to listen for paraphrasing. For example, the recording might say, “The professor postponed the lecture” but the answer is simply “postponed” .
A 3–4 minute conversation among 2–3 speakers, followed by 5 questions. You match each speaker to a list of options (e.g., opinions, reasons, experiences). This is where the shines: with ten different conversations on varied topics (work, travel, education, technology), you learn to distinguish between main ideas and distracting details. A 3–4 minute monologue with 8 gaps
Establish baseline scores (e.g., 18/30, 20/30) and identify patterns. Are you weak in Part 2 sentence completion? Do you panic in Part 4’s long monologue? Write it down. For example, the recording might say, “The professor
The audio will include sample instruction tracks. Never skip them in your practice. Why? Because they tell you whether you will hear the recording once or twice. (Part 3 is twice. Part 4 is twice. Parts 1 and 2 are once.) Your audio package replicates this exactly. Use the first seconds of the instructions to read ahead and predict. This is where the shines: with ten different