DET c-test Strategy: How to Approach the Hardest Question Type

The Read and Complete (c-test) is the DET question type that catches most candidates off-guard. Here's how it works, why it's weighted heavily, and three drills to build the muscle in two weeks.

DET · c-test · Strategy

1. What c-test actually tests

In DET's Read and Complete, you see a short paragraph (40–60 words) with about a third of the words appearing with only the first half of their letters. You complete each one. The challenge isn't vocabulary alone — it's combining vocabulary, context, grammar, and rapid reading.

That's why it correlates so well with overall English ability. Duolingo weighs it heavily.

2. The mechanics

A word with n total letters shows the first ⌈n/2⌉ letters. So:

  • "language" (8 letters) → "lang____"
  • "interest" (8) → "inte____"
  • "of" (2) → "o_"
  • "the" (3) → "th_"

Even short function words are partially blanked. You can't skim past them.

3. The three skills it combines

Skill 1 — Common-collocation recognition

If you see "dem____" after "the data," it's almost certainly "demonstrate." Native speakers don't even read the second half — they fill from collocation.

Skill 2 — Grammar prediction

If you see "ha_" in "she ha_ been studying," the verb form forces "has" (perfect tense). Function-word prediction is grammar in disguise.

Skill 3 — Topic-prediction reading

If the paragraph is about scientific research and you see "hyp_____," your mind reaches for "hypothesis" before you finish reading.

4. Two-week drill schedule

Week 1 — letter pattern recognition

  • Day 1–7: 5 daily c-test items (switch to c-test mode), focusing on accuracy not speed
  • Target: 90%+ accuracy with unlimited time

Week 2 — speed + accuracy

  • Day 8–14: 8 daily c-test items, set a 90-second timer
  • Target: 80% accuracy in under 90 seconds (DET pace)

5. Common mistakes

  1. Reading left to right, completing as you go. Don't. Read the whole paragraph first, get the topic, then fill blanks.
  2. Filling letter-by-letter. No. Words are units. Either you know it or you don't.
  3. Ignoring grammar agreement. "the cat _____" needs a verb; not a noun.
  4. Stopping at the first plausible word. If you've filled and the sentence doesn't quite make sense, the word is wrong.

6. Real-time hierarchy

When you face an item:

  1. Read the paragraph for the topic (8–10 seconds)
  2. Fill the easy ones (function words, obvious collocations)
  3. Fill the topic-specific ones (vocabulary tied to the subject)
  4. Resolve ambiguous ones with grammar context
  5. Re-read to verify naturalness

7. The c-test advantage

Once you've mastered c-test, your reading speed for normal English goes up too — because c-test specifically trains the predict-as-you-read mechanism native speakers use. So even if DET isn't your final test, the c-test drill is worth doing.