12月9日雅思阅读机经考试真题回忆及答案解析
雅思真题 2012年10月13日IELTS机经回忆(网友版)

雅思真题2012年10月13日IELTS机经回忆(网友版)雅思全真试题2012年10月13日IELTS口语阅读机经回忆2012年10月13日雅思口语阅读第一时间回忆回忆1阅读一篇农村地区旅游一篇语言发音的影响因素中间那篇忘了回忆2阅读第一篇美国的两个节日的. 第二篇是生物钟. 第三篇英语的发声变化. 小作文两个线图. 关于东京和悉尼的平均温度的.回忆3阅读matching多。
填空每篇一个。
判断题一个第三片。
求听力8阅读7.5好嘛!!回忆4阅读secrion 1两个美国的乡村节日picnic and cheese s2生物钟s3英语的发音变化回忆5阅读一,没过乡村节,阅读二生物钟,阅读三英语发音,回忆6阅读第三篇是讲语言发音的变化,好像在阅读真经4或是九分达人上做过的2012年10月13日雅思听力第一时间回忆回忆1听力是一个女的想参加drama club了解情况第二个是几个旅游景点有恐龙博物馆冰川好像有个山啥的可以骑马和坐船去第三个是两个学建筑的讨论recycled material的应用第四个是广告我印象中机经上貌似有回忆2section1:好像类似俱乐部还是什么的1.childen不能参加,因为for adults.2.october4-7.matching。
每个月份是什么活动。
选择8是什么剧:comedy9最开始为什么而创作:theater10什么样的人会喜欢,说背景是1960,音乐很好回忆3才考完. 听力S1是机经V100206. S2关于加拿大英属哥伦比亚省的恐龙博物馆的. S3是两个人讨论水泥的. S4是关于广告的.回忆4听力s1 children october college. theater trip(E) drama workshop, outdoor party planning meeting(原文是什么for next...)选择comedy, radio,60s. s2.bones footprint night tour ,这个空没听到。
雅思阅读试题练习与答案全解析

雅思阅读试题练习与答案全解析一、练习题阅读Passage 1:阅读以下段落,回答问题1-5。
1. What is the main topic of the passage?A. The advantages of the Internet.B. The disadvantages of the Internet.C. The impact of the Internet on society.D. The history of the Internet.2. According to the passage, which of the following is a problem caused by the widespread adoption of the Internet?A. Environmental pollution.B. Privacy issues.C. Economic growth.D. Educational improvement.3. Why does the Internet lead to social isolation?A.因为它改变了人们的交流方式B.因为它使人们更容易获取信息C.因为它促进了全球连接D.因为它提供了更多的娱乐方式4. Which of the following is NOT mentioned in the passage?A. Privacy issues.B. The spread of misinformation.C. Social isolation.D. Education inequality.5. In the author's opinion, how should people use the Internet responsibly?A. They should limit their online activities to protect their privacy.B. They should only consume information from trusted sources.C. They should spend more time on social media to stay connected.D. They should use the Internet as an educational tool to enhance their knowledge.阅读Passage 2:阅读以下段落,回答问题6-10。
《雅思阅读机经37》答案解析

37101竹子神奇的植物1利用题目信息定位于B段,“There are almost1,600 recognised species of bamboo,but the report concentrated on the1,200or so woody varieties distinguished by the strong stems,or'culms',that most people associate with this versatile plant.Of these,only38'priority species'identified for their commercial value have been the subject of any real scientific research to date.”因此,正确答案为B。
2利用题目信息定位于E段,'Some plants are threatened because they can’t survive in the habitat-they aren’t strong enough or there aren’t enough of them,perhaps.But bamboo can take care of itself-it’s strong enough to survive if left alone.’因此,正确答案为E。
3利用题目信息定位于D段,’Traditionally it is used in construction,but one of the fastest growing bamboo products is paper-25per cent of paper produced in India is made from bamboo fibre.‘因此,正确答案为D4利用题目信息定位于A段,’All over the world,the ranges of many bamboo species appear to be shrinking,endangering the people and animals that depend upon them.‘因此,正确答案为A。
12月9日雅思听力机经真题回忆及答案解析

12月9日雅思听力机经真题回忆及答案解析一、考试概述:本场考试采用的是20填空与20选择类的题目,整体从题型来说难度适中。
但是S2的地图和选择题容易让考生措手不及,还有部分填空题的单词难度较高。
Section 1:求职——兼职工作,10笔记Section 2:介绍——旅游展览,6单选+4配对地图Section 3:学生——三个人讨论商业案例分析,6单选+4多选Section 4:学术讲座-可可粉应用介绍,10笔记二、具体题目分析:Section 1新旧情况:14106场景:求职——兼职工作题型:10笔记参考答案:1-10)笔记完成题(答案仅供参考)解析:常见的兼职场景,只是有部分词汇如variable拼写可能会有考生不熟悉,定位需要通过横纵轴综合定位。
参考练习:C9T3S1Section 2新旧情况:11206场景:介绍——旅游展览题型:6单选+4配对地图11-16) Multiple choices11. the topic of Manwell Lo (event manager)is:A. staffB. publicC. journalist12. When was the travel show first held?A. 1884B. 1928C. 194913. How many attendants expected to be this year?A. 12000B. 15000C. 1700014. What exhibition Will be held?A. cookeryB. musicC. photograph exhibition15. What does Tom talk about?A. the Nile RiverB. Sahara desertC. the Andes mountain16. the winner of competition could be provided with?A. free ticket to art festivalB. shopping voucherC. free ticket to a park17-20) map matching17. tour operator F18. air lines H19. cook demonstrate A20. India stand B(答案仅供参考)解析:出现了全单选+配对类的地图题,整体难度本身不低。
2011年12月10日雅思机经[A类]
![2011年12月10日雅思机经[A类]](https://img.taocdn.com/s3/m/2e9d12bc783e0912a3162a89.png)
2011年12月10日雅思机经[A 类]DPart 2&3 PersonDescribe a teacher you want to see again.Describe a person who is a good student you can study with.Describe a child.Describe a famous person which impacts you very much, you should say:Who that person is?Why he/she impacts you?What his / her famous works are?Describe a person whom you live / have lived with for a long time. You shouldsay:Who the person is?How long you have been living together?What are the usual things that you do together?Food:Describe a foreign cuisine.Shopping:Describe a special thing you want to buy in the futureWill the special thing help you in your study?Do you like to go shopping?What are the effective ways of advertising?Why do you like shopping?Where do you usually go shopping?How often do you go shopping?What are the advantages and disadvantages of modern ways of shopping?Are there any differences between the old and modern ways of shopping?Media:Do you like writing letters?Do you often write letters?What do you write?Describe a meaningful letter or card.Do you usually write by hand or using a computer?Do you keep contact with your friends by making phone calls or writing letters?Who do you usually receive letters from?Do you think hand writing is important nowadays?How can children improve their handwriting?AdvertisementWhat are the advantages and disadvantages of adverting?Do people usually buy goods after watching advertisements?Are there any differences between the advertisements in magazines and those on TV?Describe a TV program you dislike.Describe an interesting story you saw on televisionWhat are the effects of televisions on family life?What are the effects of televisions on people at different ages?Are there any differences between interviewing online and meeting people face to face?Describe a TV programDescribe a story from a TV programmeDo you talk about the TV programme with other people?Do you think the programme will be changed in the future?How does the programme influence people?Is it educational?Is it fair for those TV stars to be paid huge salaries?What kind of program do you like?Describe a TV program you dislikeAre there many political programmes in China?How do they influence people?Describe a bookDescribe a book you read in your childhood.Describe a equipment(except computer)When did you buy it?What do you use it for?How do you feel about it?Describe a movieHow many types of films are there in China?What are the mainstream films?Are there any differences between watching films in a cinema and at home?Do you prefer original films with subtitles or dubbed films?What kind of films are worth watching in the cinema.Describe an article you read in a magazine/newspaper.Place:Describe a libraryWhere is the library?Is it a campus or public one?Which parts of the library do you like and dislike?Should children go to public libraries? How about the elderly?Does the government have the responsibility to construct public libraries? Is it important to learn how to use a library?Describe how to use a library.How do children benefit from going to public libraries?How can the elderly benefit from libraries?Where is the school located?What do classrooms look like?Describe a place where it is noisy.Where is this place?Why it is so noisy?How do you feel about this place?Historical placeWhy do people go to historical places?Which is your country’s most famous historical place?Should people pay entrance fees to historical places?Could you tell me about a famous historical place that you have visited? What place it was?Where it is located?What about that place interests you the most?Do you agree that people must pay to visit these historical places and museums? Do you think TV is a good medium to learn about the history of any place? Do you think parents should teach their children about history?Do you think history should be taught at school?Do you think people are keen on visiting historical places?Describe a seaside place you want to visitHow to save water?Does the urban area consume more water than the rural area?Does china face the problem of water scarcity?Describe a concert hallWhy is it important to preserve historic buildings?Describe your ideal houseWhen was it built?Should the government invest in maintaining the historical places?Should government invest in creating more employment?What kind of housing do most Chinese people live in?Where is the housing?What are the differences between the architectural styles in the different areas in China?Should a company design its own buildings?Describe a room occupied by your friendDescribe a polluted place.Describe a peaceful place. (How often do you go there? What do you do there? Explain why you like it.Describe a historical building.Describe a modern building.Would you compare modern buildings and old buildings?Do you like high buildings?ArtsDo you think arts are important for people in the modern society?Do you think you can make money from your art?How do the elderly and the young view arts?Describe a handicraftDescribe a children’s songDescribe an oil paintingStages in lifeDescribe an important conversation you had in the past.What was the situation?Who did you talk to?Why is it important to you?Describe a stage of life you enjoyedWhen was it?Who did you live with?What did you do?Why do you think the stage is important or enjoyable?When does a child become an adult?What cannot you do when you become an adult?Do you think the law is reasonable?If you want to make changes, when is the timing?Describe a happy event in your childhoodDescribe a family event.Would it be a shame to forget tradition?Is it good for companies to hire elderly people?What role do elderly people play at home?Do young people change their attitude towards the elderly now?Education:Describe a science classWhen did you attend it?What was it about?What do you think of distance learning?What do you think of home studying?What should the parents do to help their children if they choose home teaching?Do your parents help you when you study at home?Do you think studying at home is a good way to acquire knowledge for adults?Do you think studying at home is becoming more popular? Why?What is your favorite subject?Should youngsters learn science? Why?Do you think boys can learn science better?When should students learn science?Should students learn history?How do we acquire the knowledge of history nowadays?What’s the point of acquiring the knowledge of history?Films with historical themes are very popular now. What do you think about them? 考试日期:2011.12.10图表作文图表种类曲线图图表instruction The graph below shows the average monthly salary in Japan from 1953 to 1973, together with the prices of the black and white TV and colour TV duringthe same period.Summarize the information by selecting and reporting the main features,and make comparisons where relevant.图表要素回忆一共出现3条线,分别代表日本平均月工资以及黑白和彩色电视的价格;描述过程中要牢记不仅做到单条线的变化趋势的细节介绍,更要留意3条线之间的关系和比较;尤其是遇到特殊关系比较时一定要重点标出。
2019年12月21日雅思考试真题回忆+答案

37. light-colored snakes and reptiles’ shell can limit the evaporation
38. they are poisonous, and reduction in numbers
39. squirrels come back to the nearest nest
5. Paragraph E: 答案选 the importance of parks visually accessibility
6. Paragraph F: 答案选 park managers should encourage people to socialize with others
多余的干扰选项为:avoid dangerous public parks; private-owned parks are better to meet needs for activities
40. When frogs wake up, a part of heart would firstly heat up
题型 填空 10 题
(答案仅供参考)
2019 年 12 月 21 日雅思阅读机经考题回忆
——来自环球教育雅思考试院 & 环球教育西安学校 魏维老师
新旧情况
题材
题目
题型
Passage
人名观点匹配 7-10 7. benefits of putting position of changing furniture --- 答案选 William Whyte 8. visually access important for attracting more visitors --- 答案选 Tony Hiss 9. People prefer places where people can socialize to offices --- 答案选 Ray Oldenburg 10. In the later twentieth century, parks once aimed at enhancing ‘lower class’ behavior --- 答案选 Galen Cran
雅思考试真题回忆+答案(1)

2019年12月21日雅思考试真题机经答案回忆:填空11-1711. Student attends class at 8.55 am every day.(There are three traps: 8.40, 8.45, 9.00.)12. How long is it for the break every day: 15 minutes(2 break time, one in the morning, the other in the afternoon)13. During lunch time, cafeteria provide a hot meal for lunch.14. Students are asked to make a special poster.15. There is a test, which is a monthly exam.16. When the class finishes in the afternoon students need to take part in sports17. They can also join in different kinds of clubs地图匹配18-20(大致内部结构图见上)18. Head Office --- 答案选E (there are many receptions, but this school wants to have face to face conversation individually.)19. Music Room --- 答案选A20. Gym --- 答案选F听力文本分析如下:Enter from the main entrance, then anti-clockwise introduce every part, on the right hand side is Head Office, top right corner are 2 classes and one library, on the left are 2 blanks, they are Music Room and Gym, respectively…(其实这个部分听力原文中有很多陷阱,都是先说本来应该是什么设施,但是现在改成了什么设施。
雅思阅读机经真题解析-Making Copier

【点课台出品】雅思阅读机经真题解析-Making Copier点课台独家,雅思阅读机经真题解析。
一切患有雅思阅读刷题强迫症的烤鸭,请看这里。
点课台精心整理了一批雅思阅读机经真题。
如果你的剑桥雅思阅读已是烂熟于心,那么这一系列的雅思阅读机经真题真的很适合你,搭配上绝对原创的讲解,还有全文的中文翻译,这等阅读大餐,还等什么!Making CopierA t first, nobody bought Chester Carlson’s strange idea. But trillions ofdocuments later, his invention is the biggest thing in printing sinceCutenburgA Copying is the engine of civilization: culture is behavior duplicated. Theoldest copier invented by people is language, by which an idea of yours becomes an idea of mine. The second great copying machine was writing. When theSumerians transposed spoken words into stylus marks on clay tablets more than 5,000 years ago, they hugely extended the human network that language had created. Writing freed copying from the chain of living contact. It made ideas permanent, portable and endlessly reproducible.B Until Johann Gutenberg invented the printing press in the mid-1400s,producing a book in an edition of more than one generally meant writing it outagain. Printing with moveable type was not copying, however. Gutenberg couldn’ttake a document that already existed, feed it into his printing press and run off facsimiles. The first true mechanical copier was manufactured in 1780, when James Watt, who is better known as the inventor of the modern steam engine,created the copying press. Few people today know what a copying press was, butyou may have seen one in an antiques store, where it was perhaps called a book press. A user took a document freshly written in special ink, placed a moistened sheet of translucent paper against the inked surface and squeezed the two sheets together in the press, causing some of the ink from the original to penetrate the second sheet, which could then be read by turning it over and looking through its back. The high cost prohibits the widespread use of this copier.C Among the first modem copying machines, introduced in 1950 by 3M, was theThermo-Fax, and it made a copy by shining infrared light through an original document and a sheet of paper that had been coated with heat-sensitivechemicals. Competing manufacturers soon introduced other copying technologies and marketed machines called Dupliton, Dial-A-Matic Autostat, Verifax, Copease and Copymation. These machines and their successors were welcomed bysecretaries, who had no other means of reproducing documents in hand, but each had serious drawbacks. All required expensive chemically treated papers. And allmade copies that smelled bad, were hard to read, didn’t last long and tended tocurl up into tubes. The machines were displaced, beginning in the late 1800s, bya combination of two 19th century inventions: the typewriter and carbon paper.For those reasons, copying presses were standard equipment in offices for nearlya century and a half.D None of those machines are still manufactured today. They were all made obsolete by a radically different machine, which had been developed by an obscure photographic-supply company. That company had been founded in 1906 as the Haloid Company and is known today as the Xerox Corporation. In 1959, it introduced an office copier called the Haloid Xerox 914, a machine that, unlike its numerous competitors, made sharp, permanent copies on ordinary paper-a huge breakthrough. The process, which Haloid called xerography (based on Greek words meaning “dry” and “writing”), was so unusual and nonnutritive that physicists who visited the drafty warehouses where the first machines were built sometimes expressed doubt that it was even theoretically feasible.E Remarkably, xerography was conceived by one person- Chester Carlson, a shy, soft-spoken patent attorney, who grew up in almost unspeakable poverty and worked his way through junior college and the California Institute of Technology. Chester Carlson was born in Seattle in 1906. His parents-Olof Adolph Carlson and Ellen Josephine Hawkins—had grown up on neighboring farms in Grove City, Minnesota, a tiny Swedish farming community about 75 miles west of Minneapolis. Compare with competitors, Carlson was not a normal inventor in 20-century. He made his discovery in solitude in 1937 and offered it to more than 20 major corporations, among them IBM, General Electric, Eastman Kodak and RCA. All of them turned him down, expressing what he later called “an enthusiastic lack of interest” and thereby passing up the opportunity tomanufacture what Fortune magazine would describe as “the most successful productever marketed in America.”F Carlson’s invention was indeed a commercial triumph. Essentially overnight,people began making copies at a rate that was orders of magnitude higher than anyone had believed possible. And the rate is still growing. In fact, most documents handled by a typical American office worker today are produced xerographically, either on copiers manufactured by Xerox and its competitors or on laser printers, which employ the same process (and were invented, in the 1970s, by a Xerox researcher). This year, the world will produce more than threetrillion xerographic copies and laser-printed pages—about 500 for every human onearth.G Xerography eventually made Carlson a very wealthy man. (His royaltiesamounted to something like a 16th of a cent for every Xerox copy made,worldwide, through 1965.) Nevertheless, he lived simply. He never owned a second home or a second car, and his wife had to urge him not to buy third class train tickets when he traveled in Europe. People who knew him casually seldomsuspected that he was rich or even well-to-do; when Carlson told an acquaintance he worked at Xerox, the man assumed he was a factory worker and asked if he belonged to a union. “His possessions seemed to be composed of the number of things he could easily do without,” his second wife said. He spent the last years of his life quietly giving most of his fortune to charities. When he diedin 1968, among the eulogizers was the secretary-general of the United Nations.Questions 1-6Do the following statements agree with the claims of the writer in Reading Passage 1?In boxes 1-6 on your answer sheet, writeTRUE if the statement agrees with the informationFALSE if the statement contradicts the informationNOT GIVEN if there is no information on this1. The earliest languages were recorded on papyrus.2. when applying Johann Gutenberg’s printing machine, it requires lots of training.3. James Watt invented modem steam engine before he made his first mechanical copier.4. using the Dupliton copiers and follower versions are very costly.5. The typewriters with carbon papers were taken place of very soon because they were not sold well6. The Haloid Xerox 914 model also required specially treated paper for making copies.Questions 7-13Complete the notes below using No More Than Three Words from the ReadingPassage.Write your answers in boxes 7-13 on your answer sheet.Calson, unlike a20-centnry 7 , like to work on hisown. In 1937, he unsuccessfully invited 20 major 8 tomake his discovery. However, this action was not welcome among shareholders atbeginning, all of them 9 .Eventually Calson’s creation was undeniably a 10 . Thanks for the discovery of Xerography, Calson became a very 11 person. Even so, his life remains assimple as before. It looks as if he can live without his 12 . At the same time, he gave lots of hismoney to 13 .。
【VIP专享】雅思阅读机经真题解析--How to Achieve Happiness

【点课台出品】雅思阅读机经真题解析--How to Achieve Happiness点课台独家,雅思阅读机经真题解析。
一切患有雅思阅读刷题强迫症的烤鸭,请看这里。
点课台精心整理了一批雅思阅读机经真题。
如果你的剑桥雅思阅读已是烂熟于心,那么这一系列的雅思阅读机经真题真的很适合你,搭配上绝对原创的讲解,还有全文的中文翻译,这等阅读大餐,还等什么!You should spend about 20 minutes on Question 1-13 which are based on ReadingPassage below.Throughout the whole period of one’s lifetime, the achieving of happiness canbe seen as our ultimate and everlasting goal. Happiness is far more than astrong body, a magnificent villa or an around-the-world tour; it is something weneed from our heart. However, we can investigate happiness through scientificmethods.AWhen we are asked the question “Where can we find happiness”, it is a puzzledifficult to answer accurately. We can find happiness right in our own home, inour workplace, in school, in the company of our friends, etc. It is up to us tofind the ways and means to achieve that happiness each of us seek and long for.However, it is essential to recognize that there is no one absolute way to achieve happiness. People may have different ideas with regard to the waysofachieving happiness. The following five classifications are perceived by manypeople as sources of happiness: family and friends, wealth, position,educational achievement and fame.BTo give it a comprehensive definition, happiness is a mental state ofwell-being characterized by positive or pleasant emotions ranging fromcontentment to intense joy. A variety of biological, psychological, religious,and philosophical approaches have striven to define happiness and identify itssources. Various research groups, including Positive Psychology, endeavor toapply the scientific method to answer questions about what “happiness” is, andhow we might attain it. While philosophers and religious thinkers often definehappiness in terms of living a good life, or flourishing, rather than simply asan emotion. Happiness in this sense was used to translate the Greek Eudaimonia,and is still used in virtue ethics.CWhile the level of physical healthiness is the biggest determinant ofhappiness, comparison of financial success with others of the same age groupisthe second largest source of happiness and unhappiness. Financially richerpeople tend to be happier than poorer people, according to sociologicalresearcher Glenn Firebaugh of Pennsylvania State University. Their research isfocused on whether the income effect on happiness results largely from thethings money can buy (absolute income effect) or from comparing one’s income tothe income of others (relative income effect). They present their research in asession paper, tided “Relative Income and Happiness: Arc Americans on a HedonkTreadmill?” Firebaugh argues that, in evaluating their own incomes, individualscompare themselves to their peers of the same age. Therefore, a persons reportedlevel of happiness depends on how his or her income compares to others in thesame age group. Using comparison groups on the basis of age, the researchersfind evidence of both relative and absolute effects, but relative income is moreimportant than absolute income in determining the happiness of individuals inthe United States. This may result in a self-indulgent treadmill, becauseincomes in the United States rise over most of the adult lifespan. They alwaysdissatisfy with the salary. For example, the survey indicates that the studentsstudied in Harvard University expect to earn much more money than theirclassmates rather than care about the exact amount of the salary.DWe have long been aware that elements from various perspectives of We couldcontribute to realizing happiness. The Minnesota Study of Twins Reared Apart(MISTRA) has recently conducted a research project, choosing 120 pairs ofreared-apart twins as subjects to test their perception of happiness. In anearly report of results it was found that, on most measurable psychologicaltraits, the level of welfare between the twins in a set felt is varied insteadof being the same or similar. Thus environmental factors may not be the onlyfactor that affects the feeling of happiness significantly. In anotherinvestigation, among persons of European ancestry, for psychological featuresthat can be measured, heritability range from about 25 percent to 80 percent.Or, to put it more concretely, from one-fourth to four-fifths of the variationfrom person to person in such features as IQ, creativity and happiness, isassociated with genetic differences between those persons. That indicates thatgenetic difference may also affect the happiness. Furthermore, neurobiologicalevidence shows that left and right frontal lobes play different roles in theemotion (MC) (M). Happiness is a type of emotion, a positive one. From theexperiments, happiness and the left prefrontal lobe are combined together. Themore active it is, the more positive emotion you sense.EAt the outset of new millennium, a global research had a result that thepeople living in the modern world were even unhappier. With crises being on therise these days, finding happiness can be a bit challenging. Despite of all thestresses associated with life, we still do our best to be happy — because beinghappy is the only way to keep us afloat. Happiness is considered a veryimportant therapy, both physically and mentally. With it, we are inspired toaccomplish whatever goals we want to achieve. It’s a strong drive that keeps usgoing and helps us live our life every single day.FThere are many ways to be happy. Spend time with individuals who are dear toyou. There is nothing more joyful than to be with the people you love. Duringthe weekends, try to schedule a fun trip for you and your partner, or one foryour whole family. Just go somewhere else for a change and enjoy the change ofscenery. Do something nice for others. Helping others is a very honorable way tofind happiness. If your schedule is too tight for volunteer work, you can justdonate a small sum of money or some old clothes or toys to charity. When you eatout, try to be a good tipper to the waiters or the valet who safely parked yourcar. All these simple things will not only make you happy, but other people aswell. Start and end your day with a smile. Smiling is a very powerful gesture.There’s no need for words to describe how pleasant it is. If you have a lousyday, smile your way out of the office. When people smile back at you, it willuplift your mood and make you feel better. Spending some time with your friends.A close circle of friends is one of the most important sources of happiness.Questions 1-5The reading Passage has six paragraphs A-FChoose the correct heading for paragraphs A-E from the list of headingsbelow.Write the appropriate number, i-ix. in boxes 1-5 on your answer sheet.List of Headingsi. Solutions of acquiring happinessii. Happiness helps to ease pressure from modem lifeiii. Smile can make you happyiv. The wealthier, the happierv. The influence of environmentvi. Sources of happinessvii. How to define happinessviii. The comparison of old times and modem lifeix. Factors that affect the happiness1. Paragraph A2. Paragraph B3. Paragraph C4. Paragraph D5. Paragraph EExampleParagraph F iQuestions 6-10Choose the correct letter, A, B, C, or D.Write your answers in boxes 6-10 on your answer sheet6 Which of the following items is NOT the source of happiness?A. company of wife and childrenB. experience of having a big feastC. obtaining higher educationD. high social status7 What is the decisive step of achieving happiness?A. having a positive mindB. strong in social activitiesC. lots of belongings and propertiesD. a healthy body8 Which is NOT mentioned in this passage for affecting the happiness?A. personal characterB. the reflection of frontal lobesC. genetic differencesD. environmental factors9 A worldwide research in the 21st century indicates thatA. Male feels more stressful than female.B. People are leading a happy life.C. Modem life makes people upset.D. Most people are not satisfied with current situation.10 Which suggestion is NOT mentioned in the last paragraph for achieving happiness?A. go out for a picnic during weekendsB. to consult a psychologistC. make donations to charitiesD. a beautiful smileQuestions 11-13Complete each sentence with the correct ending, A-G, below.Write the correct letter, A-G, in boxes 11-13 on your answer sheet.11 A study of reared-apart twins12 The left prefrontal lobe of human13 People living in modern cityA. have no method to escape from pressure.B. may cam more sense of happiness by a circle of close friends.C. encouraged people to make further investigation.D. demonstrates that environment is not the sole factor that affects happiness.E. suggests that people have no control on their welfare.F. has affirmative connection with the feeling of happiness.G. are not sure about what is happiness.(转下一页)。
雅思阅读机经真题解析--CosmeticsInAncientPast

雅思阅读机经真题解析--CosmeticsInAncientPast(经典版)编制人:__________________审核人:__________________审批人:__________________编制单位:__________________编制时间:____年____月____日序言下载提示:该文档是本店铺精心编制而成的,希望大家下载后,能够帮助大家解决实际问题。
文档下载后可定制修改,请根据实际需要进行调整和使用,谢谢!并且,本店铺为大家提供各种类型的经典范文,如工作报告、致辞讲话、条据书信、合同范本、规章制度、应急预案、心得体会、教学资料、作文大全、其他范文等等,想了解不同范文格式和写法,敬请关注!Download tips: This document is carefully compiled by this editor. I hope that after you download it, it can help you solve practical problems. The document can be customized and modified after downloading, please adjust and use it according to actual needs, thank you!Moreover, our store provides various types of classic sample essays, such as work reports, speeches, policy letters, contract templates, rules and regulations, emergency plans, insights, teaching materials, essay encyclopedias, and other sample essays. If you want to learn about different sample formats and writing methods, please pay attention!雅思阅读机经真题解析--CosmeticsInAncientPast为了帮助大家在备考雅思的时候能够练习到更多的真题材料,下面本店铺给大家带来雅思阅读机经真题解析--Cosmetics In Ancient Past,望喜欢!雅思阅读机经真题解析--Cosmetics In Ancient PastASince cosmetics and perfumes are still in wide use today,it is interesting to compare the attitudes, customs and beliefs related to them in ancient times to those of our own day and age.Cosmetics and perfumes have been popular since the dawn of civilization; it is shown by the discovery of a great deal of pertinent archeological material,dating from the third millennium BC.Mosaics, glass perfume flasks, stone vessels,ovens, cooking-pots, clay jars, etc., some inscribed by the hand of the artisan.evidence also appears in the Bible and other classical writings,where it is written that spices and perfumes were prestigious products known throughout the ancient world and coveted by kings and princes.The written and pictorial descriptions, as well as archaeological findings,all show how important body care and aesthetic appearance were in the lives of the ancient people.The chain of evidence spansmany centuries, detailing the usage of cosmetics in various cultures from the earliest period of recorded history.BIn antiquity, however, at least in the onset, cosmetics served in religious ceremonies and for healing purposes.Cosmetics were also connected with cultic worship and witchcraft: to appease the various gods, fragrant ointments were applied to the statuary images and even to their attendants.From this, in the course of time, developed the custom of personal use, to enhance the beauty of the face and the body, and to conceal defects.CPerfumes and fragrant spices were precious commodities in antiquity, very much in demand, and at times even eXceeded silver and gold in value.Therefore they were luXury products,used mainly in the temples and in the homes of the noble and the wealthy.The Judean kings kept them in treasure houses (2 Kings 20:13).And the Queen of Sheba brought to Solomon "camels laden with spices, gold in great quantity and precious stones."(1 Kings 10:2,10).However, within time, the use of cosmetics became the custom of that period.The use of cosmetics became widespread among the lower classes as well as among the wealthy;in the same way they washed the body, so they used to care for the body with substances that softened the skin and anoint it with fragrant oils and ointments.DFacial treatment was highly developed and women devoted many hours to it.They used to spread various scented creams on the face and to apply makeup in vivid and contrasting colors.An Egyptian papyrus from the 16th century BC contains detailed recipes to remove blemishes, wrinkles, and other signs of age.Greek and Roman women would cover their faces in the evening with a "beauty mask" to remove blemishes, which consisted mainly of flour miXed with fragrant spices, leaving it on their face all night.The neXt morning they would wash it off with asses milk.The very common creams used by women in the ancient Far East,particularly important in the hot climate and prevalent in that area of the globe, were made up of oils and aromatic scents.Sometimes the oil in these creams was eXtracted from olives, almonds, gourds, sesame, or from trees and plants; but, for those of limited means, scented animal and fish fats were commonly used.EWomen in ancient past commonly put colors around theireyes.Besides beautification, its purpose was also medicinal as covering the sensitive skin of the lids with colored ointments that prevented dryness and eye diseases: the eye-paint repelled the little flies that transmitted eye inflammations.Egyptian women colored the upper eyelid black and the lower one green, and painted the space between the upper lid and the eyebrow gray or blue.The women of Mesopotamia favored yellows and reds.The use of kohl for painting the eyes is mentioned three times in the Bible, always with disapproval by the sages (2 Kings, 9:30; Jeremiah 4:30; Ezekiel 23:40).In contrast, Job names one of his daughters “Keren Happukh”—“horn of eye paint” (Job 42:14)FGreat importance was attached to the care for hair in ancient times.Long hair was always considered a symbol of beauty, and kings, nobles and dignitaries grew their hair long and kept it well-groomed and cared for.Women devoted much time to the style of the hair, while not culling, they would apply much care to it by arranging it skillfully in plaits and "building it up" sometimes with the help of wigs.Egyptian women generally wore their hair flowing down to their shoulders or even longer.In Mesopotamia, women cherished long hair as a partof their beauty, and hair flowing down their backs in a thick plait and tied with a ribbon is seen in art.Assyrian women wore their hair shorter, braiding and binding it in a bun at the back.In Ancient Israel, brides would wear their hair long on the wedding day as a sign of their virginity.Ordinary people and slaves, however, usually wore their hair short, mainly for hygienic reasons, since they could not afford to invest in the kind of treatment that long hair required.GFrom the Bible and Egyptian and Assyrian sources, as well as the words of classical authors, it appears that the centers of the trade in aromatic resins and incense were located in the kingdom of Arabia, and even as far as India, where some of these precious aromatic plants were grown."Dealers from Sheba and Rammah dealt with you, offering the choicest spices..." (Ezekiel 27:2(2).The Nabateans functioned as the important middlemen in this trade; Palestine also served as a very important component, as the trade routes crisscrossed the country.It is known that the Egyptian Queen Hatsheput (15th century BC)sent a royal eXpedition to the Land of Punt (Somalia)in order to bring back myrrh seedlings to plant in her temple.In Assyrian records of tribute and spoils of war,perfumes and resins are mentioned; the teXt from the time of Tukulti-Ninurta II (890-884 BC)refers to balls of myrrh as part of the tribute brought to the Assyrian king by the Aramaean kings.The trade in spices and perfumes is also mentioned in the Bible as written in Genesis (37:25-2(6), "Camels carrying gum tragacanth and balm and myrrh".Questions 15-21Reading Passage 2 has 7 paragraphs A-G.Which paragraph contains the following information?Write your answers in boXes 15-21 on your answer sheet.15 recipes to conceal facial defects caused by aging16 perfumes were presented to conquerors in war17 long hair of girls had special meanings in marriage18 evidence eXists in abundance showing cosmetics use in ancient times19 protecting eyes from fly-transmitted diseases20 from witchcraft to beautification21 more eXpensive than goldQuestions 22-27Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage 2?In boXes 22-27 on your answer sheet, writeTRUE if the statement is trueFALSE if the statement is falseNOT GIVEN if the information is not given in the passage22 The written record for cosmetics and perfumes dates back to the third millennium BC.23 Since perfumes and spices were luXury products, their use was eXclusive to the noble and the wealthy.24 In ancient Far East, fish fats were used as cream by women from poor households.25 The teachings in the Bible were repeatedly against the use of kohl for painting the eyes.26 Long hair as a symbol of beauty was worn solely by women of ancient cultures.27 The Egyptian Queen Hatsheput sent a royal eXpedition to Punt to establish a trade route for myrrh.文章题目:古代化妆Cosmetics In Ancient Past篇章结构体裁论说文题目古代化妆结构A段:化妆品和香水在古代就已经非常流行B段:化妆品最早用于宗教和治疗目的C段:香水和香料在古代是奢侈品,但仍被广泛使用D段:古时面部护理十分发达,女性广泛使用面霜和面膜E段:古代女性也将色彩涂在眼睛周围F段:古代人们非常重视头发的保养G段:古代的香料运输及贸易Cosmetics In Ancient Past试题分析Question 1题目类型:题号定位词文中对应点题目解析15 recipe; age D段第四句D段主要在讲古代女性非常重视面部护理,第三句话提到一份埃及莎草纸上记载了去除面部瑕疵的方法,这句话中的recipes to remove blemishes...other signs of age 可以对应题干中的recipe和facial defects caused by aging,故此题选D。
2019年12月07日雅思考试真题回忆+答案

eight. 答案 TRUE
2. Jack Horner achieved distinctive degree in university when he graduated. 答案 FALSE
3. Jack Horner is the first man that discovered T-Rex’s bone in the world. 答案 NOT GIVEN
4. Jack Horner believes that the number of prey should be more than that of predator. 答案 TRUE
5. T-Rex’s number is equivalent to the number of vulture in the Serengeti. 答案 NOT GIVEN
24. How can people get the further information about the …? 答案选 A. contact the tour consultant
25. How can people get the further information after the lecture?
匹配16-20 A. exploring new destinations filming B. combine other sports with ski C. online shopping D. improved skills E. a new footwear makes comfortable ski F. become a coach G. to prevent injuries
36. centre/center
37. accurate 38. ads(听力原文中提到把广告植入电子地图里用来赚钱)
剑桥12test2passage 2阅读解析

剑桥12test2passage 2阅读解析
摘要:
1.文章主题概述
2.剑桥12 Test 2 Passage 2 内容分析
3.解题技巧与策略
4.练习与建议
正文:
【1】文章主题概述
本文主要针对剑桥12 T est 2 Passage 2进行阅读解析,通过分析文章内容、结构、主旨,以及考查的考点,为广大考生提供实用的解题技巧和方法。
【2】剑桥12 Test 2 Passage 2 内容分析
Passage 2 的主题为“The digital divide”,文章讨论了数字鸿沟现象,分析了其产生的原因,以及如何缩小数字鸿沟。
文章结构清晰,逻辑严谨,首先介绍了数字鸿沟的概念,接着分析了造成数字鸿沟的原因,包括经济、地理、教育等因素,最后提出了缩小数字鸿沟的策略。
【3】解题技巧与策略
在解答与这篇文章相关的题目时,考生可以运用以下技巧:
1.快速浏览文章,抓住主旨大意;
2.关注文章首段,了解文章立场和观点;
3.留意文章中的关键信息,如数字、例子、转折词等;
4.分析题目类型,如事实细节题、推理判断题、主旨大意题等,采用不同
的解题方法;
5.对照选项,返回原文寻找答案。
【4】练习与建议
1.针对性地练习剑桥12 Test 2 Passage 2 的相关题目,巩固解题技巧;
2.提高阅读速度,扩大词汇量,增强语感;
3.学习文章写作技巧,提高自己的写作能力;
4.关注现实生活中的数字鸿沟现象,积累相关知识。
2014年2月15日雅思考试阅读真题机经 一篇经典旧文

2014年2月15日雅思考试阅读真题机经一篇经典旧文Part II–阅读机经本次阅读(难度适中),其中一篇经典旧文章重复2008 年4 月5日旧题,本次雅思考试涉及到的题型有(Summary,T/F/NG,Multiple choices, 其中Summary和判断题比重比较大)。
建议烤鸭们平时多练习高频题型。
2014年2月15日雅思阅读机经考题回忆——来自环球雅思教研中心&环球雅思上海学校Passage One 新旧情况题材题目题型旧V20080405=V20120820=V20090620科技类珍珠的种类制作和历史5道Matching题 3道Summary题(带词库的) 3道判断题T/F/NG文章大意关于pearl 第一段先说pearl在古代是富贵和地位的象征,在古罗马是怎怎怎的,在波斯还被当成可以医治百病的药(后面有一题问哪个国家提及古代被用于药学就是波斯啦,另外有一个说哪一段提及ancient customer也就是第一段A)。
第二段说pearl分两类,natural,cultural 第三段说cultural pearl 的培养分为盐水培育和淡水培育,盐水培育质量一般比较高,淡水培育也有部分质量比较高的。
第四段imitation,也就是fake,然后说了natural pearl的很多特点。
第五段说cultural pearl与natural不同的地方。
说natural pearl的form和很多因素有关,说明natural pearl很不容易得到。
之后说cultural pearl就好产很多。
第六段这三种pearl 用没有经过训练的肉眼是分不出来的,只有在X光下才看得出来,cultural 的核(core)比natural 大,然后说pearl的价值与size 和光泽度有关,第七段说日本的珍珠是世界上最贵的珍珠之一,7mm 可以达到US150000,但是South Sea的Austria(还有其他两个地方)的珍珠更贵。
雅思剑12阅读真题Test6Passage1原文及答案

雅思剑12阅读真题Test6Passage1原文及答案雅思剑12阅读真题Test6Passage1原文及答案!雅思剑12阅读真题Test6第一篇〔文章〕为The risks agriculture faces in developing countries,考生可以多积累相关阅读背景学问。
下面是雅思剑12阅读真题Test6Passage1练习题和解析,供大家练习。
雅思剑12阅读真题Test6Passage1原文及题目READING PASSAGE 1You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1-13, which are based on Reading Passage 1 below.The risks agriculture faces in developing countriesSynthesis of an online debateA Two things distinguish food production from all other productive activities: first, every single person needs food each day and has a right to it; and second, it is hugely dependent on nature. These two unique aspects, one political, the other natural, make food production highly vulnerable and different from any other business. At the same time, cultural values are highly entrenched in food and agricultural systems worldwide.B Farmers everywhere face major risks, including extreme weather, long-term climate change, and price volatility in input and product markets. However, smallholder farmers in developing countries must in addition deal with adverse environments, both natural, in terms of soil quality, rainfall, etc., and human, in terms of infrastructure, financial systems, markets, knowledge and technology. Counter-intuitively, hunger is prevalent among many smallholder farmers in the developing world.C Participants in the online debate argued that our biggest challenge is to address the underlying causes of the agricultural system’s inability to ensure sufficient food for all, and they identified as drivers of this problem our dependency on fossil fuels and unsupportive government policies.D On the question of mitigating the risks farmers face, most essayists called for greater state intervention. In his essay, Kanayo F. Nwanze, President of the International Fund for Agricultural Development, argued that governments can significantly reduce risks for farmers by providing basic services like roads to get produce more efficiently to markets, or water and food storage facilities to reduce losses. Sophia Murphy, senior advisor to the Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy, suggested that the procurement and holding of stocks by governments can also help mitigate wild swings in food prices by alleviating uncertainties about market supply._he personal names in the text refer to the authors of written contributions to the online debate.E Shenggen Fan, Director General of the International Food Policy Research Institute, held up social safety nets and public welfare programmes in Ethiopia, Brazil and Mexico as valuable ways to address poverty among farming families and reduce their vulnerability to agriculture shocks. However, some commentators responded that cash transfers to poor families do not necessarily translate into increased food security, as these programmes do not always strengthen food production or raiseincomes. Regarding state subsidies for agriculture, Rokeya Kabir, Executive Director of Bangladesh Nari Progati Sangha, commented in her essay that these ‘have not compensated for the stranglehold exercised by private traders. In fact, studies show that sixty percent of beneficiaries of subsidies are not poor, but rich landowners and non-farmer traders.’F Nwanze, Murphy and Fan argued that private risk management tools, like private insurance, commodity futures markets, and rural finance can help small-scale producers mitigate risk and allow for investment in improvements. Kabir warned that financial support schemes often encourage the adoption of high-input agricultural practices, which in the medium term may raise production costs beyond the value of their harvests. Murphy noted that when futures markets become excessively financialised they can contribute to short-term price volatility, which increases farmers’ food insecurity. Many participants and commentators emphasised that greater transparency in markets is needed to mitigate the impact of volatility, and make evident whether adequate stocks and supplies are available. Others contended that agribusiness companies should be held responsible for paying for negative side effects.G Many essayists mentioned climate change and its consequences forsmall-scale agriculture. Fan explained that ‘in addition to reducing crop yields, climate change increases the magnitude and the frequency of extreme weather events, which increase smallholder vulnerability.’ The growing unpredictability of weather patterns increases farmers’ difficulty in managing weather-related risks. According to this author, one solution would be to develop crop varieties that are more resilient to new climate trends and extreme weather patterns. Accordingly, Pat Mooney,co-founder and executive director of the ETC Group, suggested that ‘if we are to survive climate change, we must adopt policies that let peasants diversify the plant and animal species and varieties/breeds that make up our menus.’H Some participating authors and commentators argued in favour of community-based and autonomous risk management strategies through collective action groups, co-operatives or producers’ groups. Such groups enhance market opportunities for small-scale producers, reduce marketing costs and synchronise buying and selling with seasonal price conditions. According to Murphy, ‘collective action offers an important way for farmers to strengthen their political and economic bargaining power, and to reduce their business risks.’ One commentator, Giel Ton, warned that collective action does not come as a free good. It takes time, effort and money to organise, build trust and to experiment. Others, like Marcel Vernooij and Marcel Beukeboom, suggested that in order to ‘apply what we already know’, all stakeholders, including business, government, scientists and civil society, must work together, starting at the beginning of the value chain.I Some participants explained that market price volatility is often worsened by the presence of intermediary purchasers who, taking advantage of farmers’ vulnerability, dictate prices. One commentator suggested farmers can gain greater control over prices and minimise price volatility by selling directly to consumers. Similarly, Sonali Bisht, founder and advisor to the Institute of HimalayanEnvironmental Research and Education (INHERE), India, wrote thatcommunity-supported agriculture, where consumers invest in local farmers by subscription and guarantee producers a fair price, is a risk-sharing model worth more attention. Direct food distribution systems not only encourage small-scale agriculture but also give consumers more control over the food they consume, she wrote.List of PeopleA Kanayo F. NwanzeB Sophia MurphyC Shenggen FanD Rokeya KabirE Pat MooneyF Giel TonG Sonali BishtQuestions 10 and 11Choose TWO letters, A-E.Write the correct letters in boxes 10 and 11 on your answer sheet.Which TWO problems are mentioned which affect farmers with small farms in developing countries?A lack of demand for locally produced foodB lack of irrigation programmesC being unable to get insuranceD the effects of changing weather patternsE having to sell their goods to intermediary buyersQuestions 12 and 13Choose TWO letters, A-E.Write the correct letters in boxes 12 and 13 on your answer sheet.Which TWO actions are recommended for improving conditions for farmers?A reducing the size of food stocksB attempting to ensure that prices rise at certain times of the yearC organising co-operation between a wide range of interested partiesD encouraging consumers to take a financial stake in farmingE making customers aware of the reasons for changing food prices雅思剑12答案解析Test6阅读Passage1Test 6 Passage 1Question 1答案:A。
剑桥雅思12套真题答案及解析

剑桥雅思12套真题答案及解析雅思考试是很多留学生选择的英语语言能力考试之一,而剑桥出版社出版的雅思真题系列一直以来备受考生的推崇。
剑桥雅思12套真题作为其中的一本,也备受瞩目。
本文将就这本雅思12套真题进行答案及解析,帮助考生更好地备考雅思。
第一套真题是剑桥雅思12套中的第一套,所包含的四个模块分别是听力、阅读、写作和口语。
首先来看听力部分,题目将提供一段听力材料,包括对话、演讲或广播等,考生需要根据听到的内容回答问题。
回答问题时需要注意理解材料的主旨和细节,并掌握关键词的解释。
对于听力题目,可以先预测答案的类型,再结合听力材料找到答案。
接下来是阅读部分,该部分包含三篇阅读理解的文章,每篇文章都会有填空、判断、选择或配对等不同类型的题目。
对于阅读题目,考生可以通过快速浏览文章来获取大意,再仔细阅读问题和文章相关部分,找到正确答案。
在解答题目时,需要注意答案的位置和答案形式,例如是否为词汇的同义词或者是否为实际数字。
然后是写作部分,本书提供了两个写作题目,分别是图表描述和议论文。
在图表描述部分,考生需要分析和描述图表中的数据和趋势,并给出自己的观点。
写作时要注意清晰的段落结构和连贯的逻辑关系。
而议论文部分,考生需要从两个对立的观点中选择一个立场,并用适当的论据和例子来支持自己的观点。
写作时要注意使用适当的句子结构和词汇,并保持逻辑的连贯性。
最后是口语部分,口语考试分为三个部分,分别是任务型口语、独立口语和和面试官对话。
任务型口语部分需要考生根据所给的提示完成口语任务,独立口语部分要求考生就一个给定的话题发表个人观点。
在口语考试时,考生要尽量准确、流利地表达自己的观点,并注意语音语调的准确性和合理使用恰当的语法结构。
综上所述,剑桥雅思12套真题提供了全面的考试形式和内容,是备考雅思的宝贵资料。
通过对每个模块的答案及解析的学习,考生可以更好地熟悉考试形式和题型,并提高解题技巧和语言能力。
雅思考试需要考生有一定的英语基础,但通过系统的学习和精心的备考,考生一定可以取得理想的成绩。
2019年12月07日雅思考试真题回忆+答案

2019年12月07日雅思考试真题机经更多最新考题回顾请关注“环球师说精粹”微信公众号新旧情况题材题目题型参考文章:2019年12月07日雅思写作机经考题回忆12月7日雅思写作真题思路解析(附7分范文)other people, rather than living with their adult children. is it a positive or negative development?题目大意:当今很多老人选择住在退休社区,而不是和成年子女同住。
利弊如何?思路:利弊类文章,同样强调在论证上要体现合理性,即在具体的分析中,明确能体现出一边的论述的确是大于另一边,或是利弊均等,而利弊是否有说服力并不取决于观点的数量,而是内容是否有说服力。
在具体利弊的切入点,可以从题目的关键词中寻找线索,比如这道题目中的retirement , adult children 提示了2个信息,一是退休群体 的情感需求,二是同成年子女的代沟,好处和坏处都可以从两个角度来考虑提纲梳理如下:12月7日的雅思考试结束啦,我们先一起来看看本次考试的写作解析吧!12.7雅思写作真题解析—利弊类 – 社会类话题Nowadays, some older people choose to live in the retirement communities with范文:There is an increasing trend that senior citizens tend to mix with their peers in retirement communities, rather than living under the same roof with their adult children. While the positive side of the phenomenon is lauded by these elderly people, I would argue that its drawbacks deserve more attention.Indeed, it is easy to understand why more and more old people choose to live away from the next generation. In a fast-paced society where emotional bonds between family members are ever waning, the very problem that plagues the older generation is the loneliness and sense of isolation due to the lack of communication with their loved ones, who are usually entangled with work and therefore cannot afford much time and stamina to accompany their parents. In this sense, apartments for the retired are a place where the old can have opportunities to mix with hundreds of like-minded people, thus relieving their feeling of desolation.Despite the benefit mentioned above, this phenomenon of retired people living on their own could be considered from an opposite angle. Those exponents of this tendency are oblivious to its underlying disadvantages, among which the very issue that concerns me most is its impact on the already frayed family bond: instead of anchoring their hope on some strangers to light up their twilight years, many old people exacerbate the estrangement with their adult children by moving out, which might even lead to further misunderstanding between family members. Another apprehension we cannot afford to ignore is the financial pressure. To living by themselves in retirement apartments inevitably leads to higher living cost for those relying on pensions: they have to pay extra for rent, food, and other household services, which used to be covered by their adult children when they lived together.In conclusion, it looks to me that a life in retirement communities might not be as pleased as some old people have expected.相关词汇:Laud ?赞美Plague ?困扰Entangle ?纠缠Stamina ?精力like-minded ?志同道合的desolation ?孤独oblivious ?无视twilight ?黄昏时分exacerbate ?使恶化estrangement ?疏远。
2019年12月雅思真题回忆及解析

2019年12月雅思真题回忆及解析信念和斗志宜聚,懈怠和悲观宜散,我们的斗志因信念而燃起,不懈怠、不悲观,落实每一个知识点。
无忧考网搜集整理了2019年12月雅思真题回忆及解析,希望对大家有所帮助。
2019年12月举行了3场考试,时间分别为12月7日、12月12日、12月14日。
以下内容仅供参考。
12月7日雅思口语真题回忆:Part 1考题总结考题总结基本题HometownWhere’s your hometown?Do you like it?What do you like most about it?What don’t you like about it?Are there any tourist attractions?Do you like to live beside the seaside?Study or WorkDo you work or study?What’s your major?Do you like it? Do you find it interesting?What work do you do?What do you find most difficult with your jobs/studies?Do you think your job/subject is easy or difficult?What are you planning to do in the future?NamesDo you like your names?Does your name have any special meaning?What kinds of names are popular in China?Are there many Chinese people who have the same names as you?Is there any tradition about naming babies?AccommodationDo you live in a house or flat?Which part of your house do you like most?What’s the difference between an apartment and a house? Which do you prefer? What facilities are there in your neighbourhood?What’s your favourite place in your home?Do you live with your family?娱乐题AnimalsWhat wild animal do you like most?Have you ever seen any wild animals before?Do you like to go to the zoo?Have you ever kept pets?MoviesWhat’s your favourite movie?Do your friends like this movie?Do you want to be a movie star?What kinds of movies do you think young people like?TravelDo you like travelling?Which city have you travelled to?What kinds of cities do you like to travel to?What is the place that left you the deepest impression when travelling? OutdoorDo you prefer to be indoors or outdoors?Did you like to go outside when you were young?Did you often go over to your friends’house when you were young?Is it important for children to play outdoors?WalkingDo you walk a lot?Do you walk more often now than the past?Do you think people will walk more in the future?Where do you usually take a walk?MusicDo you like to listen to music?What kinds of music do you like?Have you been to a concert or live performance?What are the differences between listening to live music and listening to recordings?What kinds of music are popular in China?Is music an important subject at school in China?Public HolidaysWhat public holidays do you have in your country?Do people in your country celebrate foreign festivals?What do you usually do during public holidays?What did you do during the last public holiday?Do you think public holidays are important?Why do we need public holidays?How many public holidays do you have in China?Do you think people need more public holidays?How do you usually spend your holidays?Which holiday is your favourite?PhotosDo you like to take photos?Do you prefer to take photos yourself or to have other people take photos?How often do you take photos?In what situations do you take photos?How do you keep your photos?环境题CountrysideHave you ever lived in the countryside?Do you enjoy living in the countryside?What do you usually do in the countryside?Will you live in the countryside in the future?The Area You Live InDo you like the area that you live in?What are some changes in the area recently?Do you know any famous people in your area?Where do you like to go in that area?休闲题ReadingDo you like reading?What kinds of books do you read?Do you read electronic books?Do you read books related to your profession?MathDo you think mathematics is important?Do you think it’s difficult to learn mathematics well? Are your girls generally good at mathematics?Do you often use a calculator?LanguagesWhat languages can you speak?Do you think it’s difficult to learn a new language? Will you learn other languages in the future?Why do you learn English?PlanDo you make plans every day?Are you good at managing your time?What is the latest plan you made?What is the hardest part about making plans?人类题FriendsWhat kinds of people do you like to make friends with? Do you think you are a good friend for others?What do you think makes good friends?Do you keep in contact with friends from your childhood? Visit RelativesDo you often visit your relatives?What do you do when visiting relatives?When was the last time you visited a relative?Why do people visit their relatives?另类题Borrowing/LendingHave you borrowed books from others?Have you ever borrowed money from others?Do you like to lend things to others?How do you feel when people don’t return things they borrowed from you? PerfumeDo you use perfume?What kind of perfume do you like?What does perfume mean to you?Do you give perfume as a gift?Social NetworkHow often do you use social networking applications?Why do you use social networking apps?What are the disadvantages of social networking apps?Do you think it’s good to make friends online?SmileDo you like to smile?When do people smile at others?Do you smile when people take pictures of you?Can you recognize a fake smile?PatienceWere you patient when you were young?How do you feel when other people are not patient?Were you less or more patient when you were angry?Tea and CoffeeDo Chinese people like to drink tea or coffee?Do you prepare tea or coffee for the guests at home?When was the last time you drank tea or coffee?MarketWhat do street markets sell?Are there many street markets in China?What are the differences between street markets and supermarkets? Do you often go to the supermarket?HaircutHow often do you have a haircut?How long have you had your current haircut?Have you ever had an unhappy haircut experience?Do you like to have your hair cut?JeansDo you wear jeans?How often do you wear jeans?Do you like wearing jeans, why?Why do you think jeans are popular?ConcentrationWhen do you need to be focused?What may distract you when you're trying to stay focused?What do you do to help you concentrate?Is it difficult for you to stay focused?VoiceHas your voice ever changed?Do you like your own voice?Do you enjoy recording your voice and listening to it?Does your voice sound similar to your parents’?Part 2考题总结考题总结人类题1. A person who often travels by plane2. A person who is good at his or her job3. A foreign celebrity you want to meet in person4. A person who made you laugh happily when you were a child5. A person who encouraged and helped you to achieve a goal6. Someone who speaks a foreign language well7. Your favourite singer or band8. A person who often helps others地点题9. A beautiful sky you enjoyed seeing10. A school you went to in your childhood11. A place (not your home) where you read and write12. A place you remember well that is full of colours13. A historical building you have been to物件题14. A popular product (e.g. food, handicraft...)15. Something useful you borrowed from others16. A picture or photograph you like in your room17. A toy you liked in your childhood18. A gift that took you a lot of time to prepare19. Something special you took home from a tourist attraction20. A prize you want to win21. A piece of clothing you enjoy wearing22. A kind of food people eat during a special event经验体验题23. A leisure activity you do with your family24. An experience that you played an indoor game with others25. A time you were sleepy but had to stay awake26. A piece of advice you received27. A time when you visited a park28. An occasion when you met someone for the first time29. A special day that you remember well30. A time you enjoyed a free day off from work or school31. An experience that you got bored when you were with others32. An occasion when you celebrated your achievement33. A time you gave others advice34. An experience you solve a problem through the Internet35. An experience that the vehicle you took broke down in your travel36. An occasion that you got incorrect information37. An experience that you went out with your friends and had a good time38. An experience that you heard a stranger talking on the phone39. An occasion when you got up early文娱类40. A film you would like to share with your friends41. A success you have achieved42. An unusual experience of travelling43. A water sport you would like to try in the future44. An advertisement you remember well45. A competition you want to take part in.本次考试考题精选范例解析1. What are the common reasons when people need to change plans?Analysis: 大家改变计划的原因可以有很多,所以开场白的时候可以说的比较open一些,然后后面给出大家改变计划的常见原因,如天气,个人(身体)等原因导致的计划改变即可。
雅思G类阅读答案机经 文档

第一篇:收音机Radio AutomationToday they are everywhere. Production lines controlled by computers and operated by robots. There's no chatter of assembly workers, just the whirr and click of machines. In the mid-1940s, the workerless factory was still the stuff of science fiction. There were no computers to speak of and electronics was primitive. Yet hidden away in the English countryside was a highly automated production line called ECME, which could turn out 1500 radio receivers a day with almost no help from human hands.AJohn Sargrove, the visionary engineer who developed the technology, was way ahead of his time. For more than a decade, Sargrove had been trying to figure out how to make cheaper radios. Automating the manufacturing process would help. But radios didn't lend themselves to such methods: there were too many parts to fit together and too many wires to solder. Even a simple receiver might have 30 separate components and 80 hand-soldered connections. At every stage, things had to be tested and inspected. Making radios required highly skilled labor-and lots of it.BIn 1944, Sargrove came up with the answer. His solution was to dispense with most of the fiddly bits by inventing a primitive chip-a slab of Bakelite with all the receiver's electrical components and connections embedded in it. This was something that could be made by machines, and he designed those too. At the end of the war, Sargrove built an automatic production line, which he called ECME (electronic circuit-making equipment), in a small factory in Effingham, Surrey.ECME LineCAn operator sat at one end of each ECME line, feeding in the plates. She didn't need much skill, only quick hands. From now on, everything was controlled by electronic switches and relays. First stop was the sandbluster, which roughened the surface of the plastic so that molten metal would stick to it. The plates were then cleaned to remove any traces of grit. The machine automatically checked that the surface was rough enough before sending the plate to the spraying section. There, eight nozzles rotated into position and sprayed molten zinc over both sides of the plate. Again, the nozzles only began to spray when a plate was in place. The plate whizzed on. The next stop was the milling machine, which ground away the surface layer of metal to leave the circuit and other components in the grooves and recesses. Now the plate was a composite of metal and plastic. It sped on to be lacquered and have its circuits tested. By the time it emerged from the end of the line, robot hands had fitted it with sockets to attach components such as valves and loudspeakers. When ECME was working flat out, the whole process took 20 seconds.DECME was astonishingly advanced. Electronic eyes, photocells that generated a small current when a panel arrived, triggered each step in the operation, so avoiding excessive wear and tear on the machinery The plates were automatically tested at each stage as they moved along the conveyor. And if more than two plates in successionwere duds, the machines were automatically adjusted-or If necessary halted. In a conventional factory, workers would test faulty- circuits and repair them. But Sargrove's assembly line produced circuits so cheaply they Just threw away the faulty ones. Sargrove's circuit board was even more astonishing for the time. It predated the more familiar printed circuit, with wiring printed on aboard, yet was more sophisticated. Its built-in components made it more like a modem chip.EWhen Sargrove unveiled his invention at a meeting of the British Institution of Radio Engineers in February 1947, the assembled engineers were impressed. So was the man from The Times. ECME, he reported the following day, "produces almost without human labour, a complete radio receiving set. This new method of production can be equally well applied to television and other forms of electronic apparatus."FThe receivers had many advantages over their predecessors. Wit components they were more robust. Robots didn't make the sorts of mistakes human assembly workers sometimes did. "Wiring mistakes just cannot happen/ wrote Sargrove. No wires also meant the radios were lighter and cheaper to ship abroad. And with no soldered wires to come unstuck, the radios were more reliable. Sargrove pointed out that the circuit boards didn't have to be flat. They could be curved, opening up the prospect of building the electronics into the cabinet of Bakelite radios.GSargrove was all for introducing this type of automation to other products. It could be used to make more complex electronic equipment than radios, he argued. And even if only part of a manufacturing process were automated, the savings would be substantial. But while his invention was brilliant, his timing was bad. ECME was too advanced for its own good. It was only competitive on huge production runs because each new job meant retooling the machines. But disruption was frequent. Sophisticated as it was, ECME still depended on old-fashioned electromechanical relays and valves-which failed with monotonous regularity. The state of Britain's economy added to Sargrove's troubles. Production was dogged by power cuts and post-war shortages of materials. Sargrove's financial backers began to get cold feet.HThere was another problem Sargrove hadn't foreseen. One of ECME's biggest advantages-the savings on the cost of labour-also accelerated its downfall. Sargrove's factory had two ECME production lines to produce the two circuits needed for each radio. Between them these did what a thousand assembly workers would otherwise have done. Human hands were needed only to feed the raw material in at one end and plug the valves into their sockets and fit the loudspeakers at the other. After that, the only job left was to fit the pair of Bakelite panels into a radio cabinet and check that it worked.ISargrove saw automation as the way to solve post-war labor shortages. With somewhat Utopian idealism, he imagined his new technology would free people from boring, repetitive jobs on the production line and allow them to do more interestingwork. "Don't get the idea that we are out to rob people of their jobs,' he told the Daily Mirror. “Our task is to liberate men and women from being slaves of machines."JThe workers saw things differently. They viewed automation in the same light as the everlasting light bulb or the suit that never wears out-as a threat to people's livelihoods. If automation spread, they wouldn't be released to do more exciting jobs. They'd be released to join the dole queue. Financial backing for ECME fizzled out. The money dried up. And Britain lost its lead in a technology that would transform industry just a few years later.Question 1-7SummaryThe following diagram explains the process of ECME:Complete the following chart of the paragraphs of Reading Passage, using no more than two words from the Reading Passage for each answer. Write your answers in boxes 1-7 on your answer sheet.Question 8-11SummaryComplete the following summary of the paragraphs of Reading Passage, using no more than two words from the Reading Passage for each answer. Write your answers in boxes 8-11 on your answer sheet.Sargrove had been dedicated to create a___8___radio by automation of manufacture. The old version of radio had a large number of independent___9___After this innovation made, wireless-style radios became___10___and inexpensive to export oversea. As the Sargrove saw it, the real benefit of ECME's radio was that it reduced___11___of manual work .which can be easily copied to other industries of manufacturing electronic devices.Cheaper、components、lighter、costQuestion 12-13Choose the correct letter, A, B, C or D.Write your answers in boxes 12-13 on your answer sheet.12 What were workers attitude towards ECME Model initially? AA anxiousB welcomingC boringD inspiring13 What is the main idea of this passage? CA approach to reduce the price of radioB a new generation of fully popular products and successful businessC an application of the automation in the early stageD ECME technology can be applied in many product fields篇章结构:体裁说明文题目收音机自动化---集成电路的先驱结构Paragraph 1: 在电子技术极其落后的1940s, 英国出现了收音机自动化生产线---ECME.A段:收音机并不特别适合用自动化流程生产。
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12月9日雅思阅读机经考试真题回忆及答案解析一、考试概述:本次考试的文章两篇旧题一篇新题,第一篇是诺贝尔的人物传记,第二篇是讲了一种叫howler的猴子的生活习性,第三篇是讲澳大利亚博物馆的特点,题目方面难度较大的List of Headings没有出题,但是其它配对题出题量较大共15道题目,对考生的做题速度要求还是比较高的。
二、具体题目分析Passage 1:题目:Alfred Nobel题型:判断题6 +填空题7新旧程度:旧题文章大意:讲了Alfred Nobel的生平以及他一生做的贡献参考文章:Alfred NobelThe man behind the Nobel PrizeA Since 1901, the Nobel Prize has been honoring men and women from all comers of the globe for outstanding achievements in physics, chemistry, medicine, literature, and for work in peace. The foundationsfor the prize were laid in 1895 when Alfred Nobel wrote his lost will, leaving much of his wealth to the establishment of the Nobel Prize.B Alfred Nobel was born in Stockholm on October 21. 1833. His father Immanuel Nobel was an engineer and inventor who built bridges and buildings in Stockholm. In connection with his construction work Immanuel Nobel also experimented with different techniques for blasting rocks. Successful in his industrial and business ventures, Immanuel Nobel was able, in 1842, to bring his family to St. Petersburg. There, his sons were given a first class education by private teachers. The training included natural sciences, languages and literature. By the age of 17 Alfred Nobel was fluent in Swedish, Russian, French, English and German. His primary interests were in English literature and poetry as well as in chemistry and physics. Alfred’s father, who wanted his sons t o join his enterprise as engineers, disliked Alfred’s interest in poetry and found his son rather introverted.C In order to widen Alfred’s horizons his father sent him abroad for further training in chemical engineering. During a two year period Alfred Nobel visited Sweden, Germany. France and the United States. In Paris,the city he came to like best, he worked in the private laboratory of Professor T. J. Pelouze, a famous chemist. There he met the young Italian chemist Ascanio Sobrero who, three years earlier, had invented nitroglycerine, a highly explosive liquid. But it was considered too dangerous to be of any practical use. Although its explosive power greatly exceeded that of gunpowder, the liquid would explode in a very unpredictable manner if subjected to heat and pressure. Alfred Nobel became very interested in nitroglycerine and how it could be put to practical use in construction work. He also realized that the safety problems had to be solved and a method had to be developed for the controlled detonation of nitroglycerine.D After his return to Sweden in 1863, Alfred Nobel concentrated on developing nitroglycerine as an explosive. Several explosions, including one (1864) in which his brother Kmil and several other persons were killed, convinced the authorities that nitroglycerine production was exceedingly dangerous. They forbade further experimentation with nitroglycerine within the Stockholm city limits and Alfred Nobel had to move his experimentation to a barge anchored on Lake Malaren. Alfred was not discouraged and in 1864 he was able to start mass production of nitroglycerine. To make the handling of nitroglycerine safer Alfred Nobelexperimented with different additives. He soon found that mixing nitroglycerine with kieselguhr would turn the liquid into a paste which could be shaped into rods of a size and form suitable for insertion into drilling holes. In 1867 he patented this material under die name of dynamite. To be able to detonate the dynamite rods he also invented a detonator (blasting cap) which could be ignited by lighting a fuse. These inventions were made at the same time as the pneumatic drill came into general use. Together these inventions drastically reduced the cost of blasting rock, drilling tunnels, building canals and many other forms of construction work.E The market for dynamite and detonating caps grew very rapidly and Alfred Nobel also proved himself to be a very skillful entrepreneur and businessman. Over the years he founded factories and laboratories in some 90 different places in more than 20 countries. Although he lived in Paris much of his life he was constantly traveling. When he was not traveling or engaging in business activities Nobel himself worked intensively in his various laboratories, first in Stockholm and later in other places. He focused on the development of explosives technology as well as other chemical inventions, including such materials as synthetic rubber and leather, artificial silk, etc. By the time of his death in 18% hehad 355 patents.F Intensive work and travel did not leave much time for a private life. At the age of 43 he was feeling like an old man. At this time he advertised in a newspaper “Wealthy, highly-educated elder gentleman seeks lady of mature age, versed in languages, as secretary and supervisor of household. " The most qualified applicant turned out to be an Austrian woman. Countess Bertha Kinsky. After working a very short time for Nobel she decided to return to Austria to marry Count Arthur von Suttner. In spite of this Alfred Nobel and Bertha von Suttner remained friends and kept writing letters to each other for decades. Over the years Bertha von Suttner became increasingly critical of the arms race. She wrote a famous book, Lay Down Your Arms and became a prominent figure in the peace movement. No doubt this influenced Alfred Nobel when he wrote his final will which was to include a Prize for persons or organizations who promote peace. Several years after the death of Alfred Nobel, the Norwegian Storting (Parliament) decided to award the 1905 Nobel Peace Prize to Bertha von Suttner.G Alfred Nobel died in San Remo, Italy, on December 10, 1896. Whenhis will was opened it came as a surprise that his fortune was to be used for Prizes in Physics, Chemistry. Physiology or Medicine, Literature and Peace. The executors of his will were two young engineers, Ragnar Sohlman and Rudolf Lilljequist. They set about forming the Nobel Foundation as an organization to take care of the financial assets left by Nobel for this purpose and to coordinate the work of the Prize-Awarding Institutions. This was not without its difficulties since the will was contested by relatives and questioned by authorities in various countries.H Alfred Nobe l’s greatness lay in his ability to combine the penetrating mind of the scientist and inventor with the forward-looking dynamism of the industrialist. Nobel was very interested in social and peace-related issues and held what were considered radical views in his era. He had a great interest in literature and wrote his own poetry and dramatic works. The Nobel Prizes became an extension d a fulfillment of his lifetime interests.参考答案:判断题:1. The first Nobel Prize was awarded in 1895. FALSE2. Nobel’s father wanted his son to have better education than what he had had. NOT GIVEN3. Nobel was an unsuccessful businessman. FALSE4. Bertha von Suttner was selected by Nobel himself for the first peace prize. FALSE5. The Nobel Foundation was established after the death of Nobel. TRUE6. Nobel’s social involvement was uncommon in the 1800’s. TRUE填空题:7. chemical engineering8. Ascanio Sobrero9. gunpowder10. Stockholm11. detonator12. pneumatic drill13. cost(答案仅供参考)。