CPE · Reading Part 3 — Multiple Choice · Egypt
Reading Part 3 — Multiple Choice for the CPE Exam — Egyptian candidates
10% of the CPE test plan. Answering 6 four-option multiple-choice questions on a long, complex text testing detailed comprehension and inference. Calibrated for Egyptian candidates.
High-stakes exams reward two skills equally: knowledge and test-craft. This page focuses on both for one of the most failure-prone areas. Reading Part 3 — Multiple Choice sits at roughly 10% of the Cambridge Proficiency (C2) content distribution — CPE Reading Part 3 uses an authentic text of approximately 700 words from literary or journalistic sources. Questions test understanding at the finest level of detail, including understanding irony, complex metaphors, and highly nuanced author positioning. The difference between correct and incorrect options is often subtle. Pass rates for the CPE are published annually by the awarding body and vary by cohort and locale. For Egyptian candidates preparing for CPE, the calibration of study to local context matters: Thanaweya Amma is Egypt's school-leaving exam. IELTS, TOEFL, and ICDL are popular for migration and employment; STEP and EmSAT for Gulf study.
Common failure modes
These are the patterns that cause most candidates to lose marks on this topic. Recognising them in advance is half the work.
- !Selecting an option because it contains familiar words from the text, not because it answers the question
- !Misreading the scope of a question (asked about a paragraph, answering about the whole text)
- !Overlooking qualifications and hedges in both the text and the answer options
Study tips
- 1Read comprehension questions as precisely as possible — every word in the question matters.
- 2For inference questions, identify the precise text evidence before committing to an answer.
- 3Practise reading long literary extracts from C2 texts (James, Woolf, Nabokov) and analysing their implied meanings.
- 4Egyptian candidates preparing for CPE typically combine self-study with British Council or AmidEast in-centre prep — combining online practice with proctored mock exams accelerates familiarity.
Sample CPE Reading Part 3 — Multiple Choice questions
These sample items mirror the format and difficulty of real CPE questions. Practice with thousands more on the free Koydo question bank.
- 1
A passage says: "The critic's assessment, delivered with all the certainty of the uninformed, missed the central irony entirely." The author's tone toward the critic is:
- AAdmiring and respectful
- BGently encouraging
- CSharply satirical and dismissiveCorrect
- DNeutral and analytical
Why this answer?
"All the certainty of the uninformed" is a satirical construction — the paradox of being certain while uninformed is itself the critique. "Missed the central irony entirely" adds dismissal. The author is clearly contemptuous of the critic's certainty-without-knowledge. This is a C2-level irony recognition question.
Frequently asked questions
What types of texts appear in CPE Reading Part 3?
What is the CPE pass rate for Egyptian candidates?
How long should Egyptian candidates study Reading Part 3 — Multiple Choice for the CPE?
Practice Cambridge CPE (C2) free with Koydo.
Proficiency — the highest CEFR English credential.
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