C2 Nominalization & Academic Density English Grammar Test 1 – Advanced Proficiency Practice for IELTS TOEFL YDS
Master C2-level nominalization, syntactic compression, and academic density with this 15-question advanced grammar test. Includes ticked correct answers and very detailed explanations for IELTS, TOEFL, and YDS preparation.
• Each question has three options.
• The correct answer is marked with ✓.
• Focus on nominalization, abstract noun constructions, syntactic compression, and density typical of C2 academic writing.
RESULTS
#1. The rapid expansion of digital platforms has led to the ______ of traditional publishing models.
#2. The committee expressed concern regarding the inadequate ______ of ethical standards.
#3. The failure to ensure transparency resulted in the ______ of public trust.
#4. Increased regulation may contribute to the ______ of financial instability.
#5. The researcher emphasized the necessity of systematic ______ before policy adoption.
#6. The ______ of methodological inconsistencies undermined the credibility of the findings.
#7. Policy reform requires the careful ______ of competing economic priorities.
#8. The unexpected ______ of the dataset complicated further analysis.
#9. The ______ of cross-cultural variables remains insufficiently explored.
#10. The study highlights the ______ between theoretical abstraction and empirical validation.
#11. The delayed ______ of the results sparked considerable debate.
#12. The overreliance on quantitative metrics led to the ______ of qualitative nuance.
#13. The ______ of algorithmic bias demands immediate institutional response.
#14. Sustained economic growth depends on the strategic ______ of innovation.
#15. The systematic ______ of data enhances predictive reliability.
📘 VERY DETAILED EXPLANATIONS
Core Concept: Nominalization
Nominalization = converting verbs or adjectives into nouns to increase formality and density.
Example:
Instead of: “The government failed to regulate properly.”
C2 version: “The government’s failure to implement effective regulation…”
Academic writing prefers noun-heavy structures because they:
• Compress information
• Increase abstraction
• Remove personal agency
• Create objectivity
1. decline ✓
Structure:
the + noun + of
After “the”, we need a noun.
“declining” is participle, “declined” is verb.
Only “decline” functions as abstract noun.
2. implementation ✓
After “inadequate” we need a noun.
“implement” = verb
“implementing” = gerund
“implementation” = abstract noun
C2 writing favors the full nominal form.
3. erosion ✓
“resulted in the ___ of public trust”
Preposition “in” + noun phrase.
Verb forms are structurally impossible here.
4. reduction ✓
“contribute to the…” → prepositional phrase requiring noun.
Nominalization increases academic tone vs. “reduce”.
5. evaluation ✓
“necessity of” requires noun.
At C2 level, “evaluation” adds abstraction beyond “evaluating.”
6. revelation ✓
Subject position requires noun.
“The reveal” would be informal.
“Revelation” = formal academic noun.
7. balance ✓
Tricky:
“careful balance” = compound noun structure.
“balancing” would imply process emphasis;
C2 density prefers abstract noun.
8. withdrawal ✓
“The unexpected withdrawal of the dataset”
Classic nominalization pattern:
the + adjective + noun + of
9. integration ✓
Abstract systemic process → noun preferred.
Verb forms reduce academic density.
10. tension ✓
“The tension between X and Y”
Fixed academic collocation.
11. publication ✓
Delayed publication = noun phrase.
“publishing” would refer to activity, not event.
12. neglect ✓
“led to the neglect of”
Verb must become noun after “the”.
13. recognition ✓
Abstract awareness → noun required.
“Recognizing” would create clause shift.
14. fostering ✓
This one tests nuance.
“depends on” + gerund possible.
Strategic fostering of innovation → process emphasis.
Here gerund acts as noun (gerundial nominalization).
15. analysis ✓
“The analysis of data”
Standard academic collocation.






