PET · Collocations & Fixed Phrases · Texas, USA
Collocations & Fixed Phrases for the PET Exam — Texas candidates
8% of the PET test plan. Common B1 collocations, fixed expressions, and idioms used in everyday and semi-formal contexts. Calibrated for Texan 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. Collocations & Fixed Phrases sits at roughly 8% of the Cambridge Preliminary English Test (B1) content distribution — Collocations (words that naturally go together) distinguish B1 candidates from those at A2. The Cambridge B1 Preliminary Reading Part 5 (multiple-choice cloze) specifically tests collocations and fixed phrases. Using natural collocations also improves Writing and Speaking scores. Pass rates for the PET are published annually by the awarding body and vary by cohort and locale. For Texas candidates preparing for PET, the calibration of study to local context matters: Texas is the second-largest CDL-issuing state and a top-3 state for NCLEX-RN candidates. TxDPS administers CDL skills tests; the Texas Board of Nursing recognises NCLEX results from Pearson VUE.
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.
- !Translating collocations directly from L1 — most collocations do not translate literally
- !Confusing "do" and "make" collocations: do housework/make a mistake not make housework/do a mistake
- !Not recognising fixed phrases in reading: "in spite of", "as a result", "in addition to"
Study tips
- 1Learn the do/make distinction: do (activities, tasks) vs make (products, plans, decisions).
- 2Study 5 collocations per topic per week from the Cambridge B1 vocabulary resource.
- 3Notice collocations in everything you read — underline and note them in a vocabulary journal.
- 4For CDL: book your skills test at a TxDPS megacenter (Houston, Dallas, San Antonio, Austin) or one of the 200+ third-party testers; megacenter wait times average 4–6 weeks.
- 5For NCLEX-RN: the Texas Board of Nursing requires fingerprinting via IdentoGO before authorization-to-test (ATT) is issued — start that process the same day you submit your application.
- 6Spanish-language CDL written tests are offered in Texas; the skills/road portion is conducted in English. Many CDL training programs in the Rio Grande Valley teach a bilingual track.
Sample PET Collocations & Fixed Phrases questions
These sample items mirror the format and difficulty of real PET questions. Practice with thousands more on the free Koydo question bank.
- 1
Choose the correct collocation: "She _____ a lot of effort into her presentation."
- Amade
- Bdid
- CputCorrect
- Dgave
Why this answer?
"Put effort into something" is the natural collocation. "Make an effort" is also possible (make vs put have overlapping uses here), but "put a lot of effort into" specifically emphasizes investing effort into a specific activity. "Did" and "gave" are not used in this collocation.
Frequently asked questions
Are idioms tested in B1 Preliminary?
What is the PET pass rate for Texan candidates?
How long should Texan candidates study Collocations & Fixed Phrases for the PET?
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Cambridge B1 Preliminary — every paper, every task type.
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