CPE · Use of English Part 5 — Multiple-Choice Cloze · Karnataka, India
Use of English Part 5 — Multiple-Choice Cloze for the CPE Exam — Karnataka candidates
8% of the CPE test plan. Selecting from four options to fill 8 gaps in a text, testing C2 vocabulary, idioms, and fixed phrases. Calibrated for Kannadiga candidates.
Examiners do not award marks for content alone — they award them for the ability to demonstrate competency in the precise format the test demands. Use of English Part 5 — Multiple-Choice Cloze sits at roughly 8% of the Cambridge Proficiency (C2) content distribution — CPE Part 5 (multiple-choice cloze) tests C2-level vocabulary: idiomatic expressions, formal collocations, near-synonyms with subtle meaning differences, and culturally embedded fixed phrases. The four options per gap are often plausible — distinguishing them requires deep lexical sensitivity. Pass rates for the CPE are published annually by the awarding body and vary by cohort and locale. For Karnataka candidates preparing for CPE, the calibration of study to local context matters: Karnataka runs KCET (state engineering/medical/agriculture entrance) alongside JEE Main and NEET. Bengaluru is the top-3 city for GATE and CAT candidates.
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 based on single-word meaning rather than the full idiomatic phrase
- !Ignoring register: one option may be correct in informal speech but wrong in the formal text register
- !Not testing the selected word in the wider paragraph context
Study tips
- 1Build a C2 idioms list with register labels: formal, informal, neutral.
- 2For each answer option, ask: "Does this collocation actually exist in English?" Test against native sources.
- 3Read opinion pieces from The Times, The New York Times, and The Economist to absorb C2 fixed expressions.
- 4KEA (Karnataka Examinations Authority) issues a separate KCET admit card — KCET, JEE Main, and NEET have non-overlapping dates so a typical student sits all three.
- 5NEET-UG is offered in Kannada (ಕನ್ನಡ) at all KA centres. JEE Main and GATE are English/Hindi only — confirm your medium when applying.
- 6For GATE: Karnataka hosts 12+ test cities including Bengaluru, Mysuru, Mangaluru, and Hubballi; pick a centre near your university to avoid intercity travel on test day.
Sample CPE Use of English Part 5 — Multiple-Choice Cloze questions
These sample items mirror the format and difficulty of real CPE questions. Practice with thousands more on the free Koydo question bank.
- 1
The committee's decision to proceed _____ opposition from several quarters was widely criticized.
- AdespiteCorrect
- Bin spite
- Calthough
- Dregardless
Why this answer?
"Despite" + noun phrase is correct. "In spite" requires "of" (in spite of opposition). "Although" requires a clause (although there was opposition). "Regardless" requires "of" and is typically followed by a gerund or noun, but "regardless opposition" is not a standard construction.
Frequently asked questions
What is the vocabulary level needed for CPE?
What is the CPE pass rate for Kannadiga candidates?
How long should Kannadiga candidates study Use of English Part 5 — Multiple-Choice Cloze for the CPE?
Practice Cambridge CPE (C2) free with Koydo.
Proficiency — the highest CEFR English credential.
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- Reading Part 3 — Multiple Choice for CPE (Karnataka, India)Another CPE topic for Kannadiga candidates
- Use of English Part 4 — Key Word Transformation for CPE (Karnataka, India)Another CPE topic for Kannadiga candidates
- Writing — Essay (Part 1) for CPE (Karnataka, India)Another CPE topic for Kannadiga candidates
- Use of English Part 5 — Multiple-Choice Cloze for CPE — U.S. candidatesSame Use of English Part 5 — Multiple-Choice Cloze topic, different locale framing
- Use of English Part 5 — Multiple-Choice Cloze for CPE — U.K. candidatesSame Use of English Part 5 — Multiple-Choice Cloze topic, different locale framing
- Use of English Part 5 — Multiple-Choice Cloze for CPE — Indian candidatesSame Use of English Part 5 — Multiple-Choice Cloze topic, different locale framing