Use of English - Multiple Choice
C2
Cambridge English C2 Exam
For questions 1-8, read the text below and decide which answer (A, B, C or D) best fits each gap. Click the gaps to type your answer.
Greying Societies
The (0) DEFINING demographic story of the twenty-first century is not a baby boom but its opposite: societies growing older, and doing so at speed. While longer lives are a triumph of public health, they also (1) .......... a set of fiscal and social dilemmas that governments have been slow to confront. Pension systems designed for shorter retirements are being (2) .......... to breaking point, and healthcare budgets are forced to (3) .......... with chronic conditions that require long-term management rather than one-off cures. Yet the challenge is not merely arithmetic. In many countries, the ratio of workers to retirees is (4) .........., leaving fewer taxpayers to fund services that more people will need. Employers, meanwhile, must (5) .......... with how to retain older staff without blocking progression for younger colleagues, and how to redesign roles so that experience is not lost to premature exit. Policy responses often sound straightforward—raise the retirement age, encourage migration, boost productivity—but each comes (6) .......... political trade-offs. And if the debate is framed as a battle between generations, it can quickly (7) .......... into resentment. A more durable approach is to treat longevity as a resource: invest in prevention, support carers, and build cities that are (8) .......... to living well at every age.
About Use of English Multiple Choice — Cambridge English C2
This is a Cambridge English C2 Use of English Multiple Choice exercise. Read the text and decide which word — A, B, C or D — best fits each of the 8 gaps.
Multiple Choice questions test your vocabulary in context: collocations, phrasal verbs, linking words and words with similar but slightly different meanings. Practising C2 exercises like this builds the instinct to choose the right option quickly in the real exam.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many questions does this C2 Multiple Choice exercise have?
It has 8 gaps, and each gap gives you four options (A–D) to choose from.
What does Cambridge Use of English Multiple Choice test?
It focuses on vocabulary in context — collocations, phrasal verbs, fixed phrases and words that look similar but are not interchangeable.
How can I get better at Multiple Choice?
Read widely, learn words together with the words they combine with, and always read the whole sentence — including the words after the gap — before choosing your answer.
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What to do
In this part, you read a text with eight gaps and choose the best word from four options to fit each gap.
Nothing prepares you for this test better than reading.
Read a lot. Candidates who often read in English (for work, for fun) find this part of the test manageable, while those who never read tend to find it very hard.
If you are 100% sure that two of the 4 choices are completely identical, then neither can be the answer. There is always only one word that fits grammatically and has the right meaning.
Usually the correct option will be part of a fixed phrase or collocation, a phrasal verb, a connector or the only word that fits grammatically in the gap.
Strategy
- Read the title and the whole text quickly to understand its general meaning before you attempt the task.
- Check the words before and after the gap.
- Choose the best option.
- When you have finished, read the text again with the words inserted to check that it makes sense.
