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CAE MEDIA AND COMMUNICATION
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Delimiter between question and answer:

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  • Each line maps to a question.
  • If the delimiter is used in a question, the question should be surrounded by double quotes: "My, question","My, answer"
  • The first answer in the multiple choice question must be the correct answer.






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She .... about/over the clothes she had seen at the Paris fashion shows. ( to praise something very much)
raved
I think I got (= understood) the .... of what she was saying. ( the most important pieces of information about something, or general informat)ion without details
gist
The baby's just .... all over my new dictionary! ( to write or draw something quickly or carelessly)
scribbled
He's always .... (on) about the government ( to speak, write or shout in a loud, uncontrolled, or angry way)
ranting
There's no point .... about/over a couple of dollars. ( to argue about, or say you disapprove of, something that is not important)
quibbling
He was ... after two beers. ( to make a mistake, such as repeating something or pausing for too long, while speaking or playing a piece of music)
stumbling
He was .... to himself. ( to speak or say something very quietly)
murmuring
She .... something about being too busy. ( to speak quietly and in a way that is not clear so that the words are difficult to understand)
mumbled
The police have ... that two officers are under internal investigation. (to make something known publicly)
disclosed
His poetry ... a great sense of religious devotion. ( to express a thought, feeling, or idea so that it is understood by other people)
conveys
He ... (to her) that his hair was not his own. ( to tell something secret or personal to someone who you trust )
confided
The meeting was a complete and ... waste of time. (complete or extreme:)
utter
He ... that she stole money from him. (to say that something is certainly true:)
asserts
The two men ... (that) the police forced them to make false confessions. (to say that someone has done something illegal or wrong without giving proof)
allege
The threat of attack has been greatly .... ( to make something seem larger, more important )
exaggerated.
I knew he was only ... me because he wanted to borrow some money. ( to praise someone in order to make them feel attractive or important)
flattering
If you're both going to lie, at least stick to the same story and don't ... each other! ( to say the opposite of what someone else has said)
contradict
He didn't talk about his exam results in case people thought he was ... ( to speak too proudly or happily)
boasting.