All Guides
Practice English
Part 1 · Multiple Choice Cloze

Multiple Choice:
Mastering Collocations & Idioms

Part 1 of the Use of English paper might look simple — four options, pick one — but at C2 level, all four options are grammatically correct. The difference is always about meaning, collocation or register.

5 min read·C2 Level·Updated March 2026

1What Exactly Does Part 1 Test?

Part 1 consists of a text with 8 gaps. For each gap, you choose from four options (A, B, C, D). The correct answer always depends on one of these categories:

Collocations

Which word "sounds right" with the surrounding words (e.g. make a decision, not do a decision)

Idioms & Fixed Phrases

Set expressions with meanings that cannot be guessed literally (e.g. the tip of the iceberg)

Phrasal Verbs

Multi-part verbs where the particle changes the meaning (e.g. put up with vs put off)

Semantic Precision

Words that are synonyms but differ subtly (e.g. slim vs thin vs slender)

2The 4-Step Elimination Strategy

Don't just pick the first answer that "feels right." Use this systematic approach for every gap:

1
Read the whole sentence

Never look at the gap in isolation. Read 5 words before and 5 words after the gap to understand the full context.

2
Identify the grammatical context

Notice prepositions, articles and surrounding verbs. Many collocations are locked to specific prepositions (e.g. "consistent with", not "consistent to").

3
Eliminate two options

Usually two options are clearly wrong because they don't collocate. Remove these first to improve your odds.

4
Test the remaining two

Say both sentences out loud (mentally). Which one sounds like natural, native English? Trust that instinct — it's usually right at C2 level.

3High-Frequency Collocations to Know

These verb-noun collocations appear repeatedly in CPE Part 1 exams. Memorise them as chunks, not individual words:

CollocationCommon DistractorContext
make a decisiondo a decisionAfter long deliberation, she ___ a decision.
reach an agreementarrive at an agreementBoth sides finally ___ an agreement.
raise awarenessgrow / lift awarenessThe campaign aimed to ___ awareness.
conduct researchdo / make researchScientists ___ extensive research.
set a precedentcreate / make a precedentThe ruling ___ a landmark precedent.
come to terms withaccept / settle withShe struggled to ___ her diagnosis.
take something for grantedassume / take as givenWe often ___ clean water for granted.
draw a conclusionmake / take a conclusionFrom the data, we can ___ this conclusion.

4Pro Tips for Part 1

Words that look like synonyms rarely are.

At C2, avoid or is not the same as shun, prevent is not the same as hinder — context determines which is correct.

Watch for "verb + preposition" traps.

Often the options differ only in the preposition they require. Check what follows the gap (e.g. "insist on doing" vs "persist in doing").

Register matters at C2.

Some options are too informal for a formal text (e.g. "get" vs "obtain"). Read the tone of the passage before choosing.

Time: spend 12 minutes max on Part 1.

Each question is worth 1 mark. Don't lose 5 minutes on one question. Move on, mark it, and come back if time allows.

Ready to test these strategies?

Apply everything from this guide with our free Part 1 practice exams. Immediate feedback on every answer.

Practice Part 1 Now