I’ve woven typical B2/C1 level vocabulary from Word Store units into a coherent narrative. The Last Answer Key

“You look ,” he said. “What’s the matter ?”

Marco that memorising answers wasn’t the same as understanding. “Give it a shot without the key,” he insisted .

Lena grinned. that’s the point.”

Lena was panic. Her Focus 4 exam was in three hours, and she had come across a set of phrasal verbs she simply couldn’t figure out . She needed the Word Store answer key – but her careless roommate had taken it by mistake .

When she finally her test that afternoon, the teacher smiled. “You didn’t need the key,” she said. “You built the answers yourself.”

She to trust herself. Word by word, she broke down each exercise. Surprisingly, most answers came to her naturally. The only one she got wrong was a tricky idiom: “to be on thin ice ” – which, she realised, was exactly where she’d been.

Lena – a nervous reaction. “I’m going to fail unless I go over collocations for ‘make’ and ‘do’.”