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The best resources to prepare for Cambridge Exam English assessments!
¡El mejor material para preparar los exámenes de Cambridge Exam English!
The OPEN CLOZE exercise is part 6 in the B1 Preliminary, part 2 of the B2 First and C1 Advanced exams from Cambridge Exam English as they are both similar with regards to their format. For this part of the exam you need to fill in the gaps in a text with just one word. The gaps are all based on grammar structures, so you must therefore look at the different grammatical forms needed to pass these exams, for example HERE.
Los ejercicios de OPEN CLOZE son la parte 6 del B1 Preliminary y la parte 2 del B2 First y el C1 Advanced. Son todos muy parecidos en cuanto al formato, pero la dificultad es otra historia. En esta prueba, el candidato ha de rellenar los huecos en un texto con una palabra. Las palabras suelen ser gramaticales, así que conviene repasar la gramática a fondo antes de presentarse a esta prueba. Haz click AQUÍ.
DOWNLOAD THE OPEN CLOZE EXERCISES IN PDF:
Fill in the gaps in the texts with JUST ONE WORD: the words are usually prepositions, auxiliary verbs, articles, pronouns, connectors, determiners or adverbs
B1 EXERCISES
(NEW) B1 OPEN CLOZE: MARVEL
(NEW) B1 OPEN CLOZE: RAFAEL NADAL
(NEW) B1 OPEN CLOZE: RUGBY TOWN
(NEW) B1 OPEN CLOZE: LONDON
(NEW) B1 OPEN CLOZE: SANDWICHES
(NEW) B1 OPEN CLOZE: TRUE FRIENDS
(NEW) B1 OPEN CLOZE: RICHARD FEYNMAN
B2 EXERCISES
(NEW) B2 OPEN CLOZE: PEEP SHOW
(NEW) B2 OPEN CLOZE: WORLD WAR 1
(NEW) B2 OPEN CLOZE: WORLD WAR 2
(NEW) B2 OPEN CLOZE: ENIGMA
(NEW) B2 OPEN CLOZE: FACEBOOK
(NEW) B2 OPEN CLOZE: REGULAR EXERCISE
(NEW) B2 OPEN CLOZE: EPIDEMICS
(NEW) B2 OPEN CLOZE: FAKE NEWS
(NEW) B2 OPEN CLOZE: UNIVERSITY
B2 OPEN CLOZE: SUCCESSFUL PEOPLE
C1 EXERCISES
(NEW) C1 ADVANCED: THE FALKLAND ISLANDS
(NEW) C1 OPEN CLOZE: THE DEMOGRAPHIC TRANSITION
(NEW) C1 OPEN CLOZE: THE THEORY OF RELATIVITY
You need to focus on these different points to do Open Cloze exercises well. These are the types of words that are missing from the texts as they are normally grammatical words and not specific vocabulary.