Designed to mirror the real PET listening exam — picture selection and inferential comprehension. 10 sets, 148 questions. PET listening doesn't just test what you hear — it tests what the speaker actually means. Build the inferential skills that separate B1 from A2.
You understood the general meaning — but PET listening doesn't ask what was said. It asks what the speaker's attitude is, what they really mean, what caused something. That's a different skill entirely.
"Causes & Effects", "Opinions & Evaluations", "Suggestions & Decisions" — these questions require you to infer and judge while listening. Keeping pace with the audio and doing that analysis at the same time is genuinely hard without specific practice.
Picture selection at B1 is trickier than at A2. Speakers frequently mention something first, then correct or change it. If you pick the first thing mentioned, you've fallen into the trap.
Practising single questions and running a full PET listening set are completely different experiences. You don't yet know whether you can sustain focus across the whole format.
Listen to a short dialogue and choose the correct picture from three options — numbers, prices, objects, locations, activities, weather. At B1 level, speakers often mention something then revise it. Identifying the final correct answer, not the first thing mentioned, is the key skill.
Every set · 6–7 questionsListen to longer dialogues and answer questions about causes and effects, attitudes and emotions, opinions and evaluations, suggestions and decisions. Not what was said — what was meant. The defining capability gap between B1 and A2 listening.
Every set · 7–9 questionsFull course: 148 practice questions · 28 scenario types covered · continuously expanding
10 full mock sets · 148 questions · picture selection + inferential comprehension · real PET listening exam structure
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