Use of English - Open Cloze
C2
Cambridge English C2 Exam
For questions 1-8, read the text below and think of the word which best fits each gap. Use only one word in each gap. Click the gaps to type your answer.
Supply Chain Fragility
In discussions of a supposedly post-scarcity economy, global supply chains are often presented as systems of near-perfect efficiency, (0) WITH shortages treated as temporary anomalies rather than structural warnings. Yet recent disruptions have shown just how fragile these networks can be, many links (1) .......... which depend on a single port, supplier or data platform. In the wake (2) .......... successive crises, firms have discovered that resilience does not arise automatically from scale. Executives (3) .......... insist that diversification matters, but such claims are often made only after bottlenecks have already emerged. At the behest (4) .......... investors, some companies have shifted production elsewhere, only to find that risk has been redistributed rather than reduced. What supply chains (5) .......... reveal is a paradox: the more seamless a system appears, the less visible its points of failure become. There is also the question of who bears the cost, many of the burdens falling on workers and smaller contractors, neither of (6) .......... is usually in a position to absorb prolonged shocks. If abundance is to mean anything, it must rest (7) .......... infrastructures that can withstand disruption without passing the strain downwards. Otherwise, what looks like plenty may turn (8) .......... to be little more than a finely managed illusion.
About Use of English Open Cloze — Cambridge English C2
In this Cambridge English C2 Use of English Open Cloze exercise you read a short text and think of the one word that best fits each of the 8 gaps.
Open Cloze tests grammar and common fixed expressions — articles, prepositions, pronouns, auxiliary verbs and linking words. Only one word goes in each gap, and it is usually a small grammatical word rather than vocabulary.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many gaps are in this C2 Open Cloze exercise?
There are 8 gaps, and you must write exactly one word in each.
What kind of words go in the gaps?
Usually grammatical words: prepositions, articles, pronouns, auxiliaries, relative pronouns and parts of fixed phrases.
What is the best strategy for Open Cloze?
Read the whole text first for meaning, then look closely at the words around each gap — the answer almost always depends on the immediate grammar.
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What to do
This part consists of a short text with a series of gaps. There are no words from which to choose the answers, candidates have to think of a word which fits the gap correctly.
Errors in punctuation are ignored, although spelling must be correct.
Contractions (e.g. don’t, we’ve, won’t) count as two words. However, can’t is a contraction of cannot, which is one word.
Sometimes, there is more than one correct answer. Cambridge will always account for this and all options will be accepted. However, you should not write more than one answer.
Don't spend time in a word you don't know. Wasting time on this activity might cost you points later in the exam because you won’t have enough time to do other tasks well.
Strategy
- Read the title and the whole text so that you understand what it is about.
- Read the whole sentence in which the gap occurs, to look for clues as to what kind of word you need.
- Check the words before and after each gap and look for grammatical collocations.
- Remember you must write only one word.
- You are never required to write a contraction. If you think the answer is a contraction, it must be wrong, so think again.
- Read the whole text through once you have completed it to make sure you have not missed any connectors, plurals or negatives.
