DELE · DELE B2 — Reading Comprehension · Japan
DELE B2 — Reading Comprehension for the DELE Exam — Japanese candidates
10% of the DELE test plan. Understanding complex authentic Spanish texts at B2 level: articles, opinion pieces, and formal documents. Calibrated for Japanese candidates.
Most exam coaching covers the curriculum at the same depth across all topics. That misses the asymmetry of high-stakes testing: a few topics carry disproportionate weight on the score. DELE B2 — Reading Comprehension sits at roughly 10% of the Diplomas of Spanish as a Foreign Language content distribution — DELE B2 Reading uses authentic Spanish texts — newspaper articles, opinion columns, formal documents. Questions test detailed comprehension, inference, and the ability to identify the author's purpose and tone. B2 is the most commonly sought DELE certification for university admission in Spain. Pass rates for the DELE are published annually by the awarding body and vary by cohort and locale. For Japanese candidates preparing for DELE, the calibration of study to local context matters: TOEIC is the dominant English credential in Japan. JLPT is taken by both inbound foreign workers and Japanese students seeking Japanese-language certification.
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 answers based on keywords from the text without understanding the overall argument
- !Missing negative prefixes (in-, des-, in-) that invert meaning
- !Not recognising false cognates: embarazada (pregnant, not embarrassed); sensible (sensitive, not sensible)
Study tips
- 1Read El País, El Mundo, or BBC Mundo in Spanish daily — exposure to authentic editorial Spanish.
- 2Build a false cognates list: Spanish words that look like English words but mean something different.
- 3For reading, identify the author's stance before answering opinion/inference questions.
- 4日本の受験者の方は、DELE の各セクションにおいて時間配分の練習が最も重要です — 模擬試験を本番と同じ条件で繰り返してください。
Sample DELE DELE B2 — Reading Comprehension questions
These sample items mirror the format and difficulty of real DELE questions. Practice with thousands more on the free Koydo question bank.
- 1
An article says: "A pesar de los esfuerzos del gobierno, la tasa de desempleo no ha disminuido." This means:
- AThanks to government efforts, unemployment has decreased
- BDespite government efforts, the unemployment rate has not decreasedCorrect
- CThe government made no effort to reduce unemployment
- DUnemployment has decreased because of government efforts
Why this answer?
"A pesar de" = despite/in spite of; "esfuerzos" = efforts; "no ha disminuido" = has not decreased. The concessive construction "a pesar de... no ha..." means "despite... not..." — the efforts did not produce the desired result.
Frequently asked questions
Which DELE level is required for university study in Spain?
What is the DELE pass rate for Japanese candidates?
How long should Japanese candidates study DELE B2 — Reading Comprehension for the DELE?
Practice DELE free with Koydo.
A1 to C2 — Cervantes-aligned reading, listening, writing, speaking.
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