雅思托福英语全球网

 找回密码
 立即注册

QQ登录

只需一步,快速开始

查看: 59620|回复: 0
打印 上一主题 下一主题

[国内外] 2018年4月26日大陆考区雅思A类笔试真题+答案+回忆

[复制链接]

9272

主题

1万

帖子

4万

积分

管理员

Rank: 9Rank: 9Rank: 9

积分
46306
跳转到指定楼层
楼主
发表于 2018-4-23 10:06:35 | 只看该作者 |只看大图 回帖奖励 |倒序浏览 |阅读模式
2018年4月26日陆考区雅思A类笔试真题+答案+回忆请看最下面,
欢迎英国欧洲考区、北美考区等考生积极回忆在我们微信
504918228,ieltstofel3,ielts2013,QQ504918228,QQ26346059上面

20184月24日、25、26国内外雅思口语真题蹲点回忆汇总请进入http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/thread-237939-1-1.html
                        
互动咨询微信:504918228 或 ieltstofel3或 ielts2013或 公共微信:ieltstofel

网络授课:对于长期困扰和急于提高雅思成绩总分1-4分的全球各地烤鸭们,Edward 艾华师提供全球性网络一对一雅思专家型授课, 无数在国内外读语言/预科,硕士博士(需要4个7,4个8移民)的学员的心声:花8-10万,几十万甚至上百万在国外学英语,还不如上Edward的几次课,具体安排和说明请进入http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/thread-33-1-1.html

雅思冲刺快速加分套餐系列1888元-2588元起:IPN资料+1对1辅导请进入

快速提高1到3分:IPN雅思考试题库答案-提供2018年5月6月7月8月9月至12月每一场雅思预测所有口语,写作,听力,阅读等题目详细原创答案范文,整理好的更新型听力和阅读预测机经等说明请进入http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/thread-32-1-1.html或请加QQ26346059或QQ450784339;或公共微信号:ieltstofel 或个人微信:ielts2013,504918228咨询。

雅思公共微信平台1:ieltstofel----最新雅思考试题库,最新每一场预测及配套完整答案范文机经,快速提高总分1到3分,国内外最新每一场雅思口语笔试蹲点题目汇总,最新各种不同层次基础烤鸭雅思考试实用成功经验,雅思4个7,4个8高分实用复习备考经验

托福公共微信平台:tofelielts----最新托福考试题库,最新每一场托福预测及配套完整答案范文机经,快速提高托福20-60分,最新各种不同层次基础托福考试实用成功经验,托福100以上,110以上高分实用复习备考经验,国内外最新每一场托福口语笔试蹲点题目汇总,最新托福听说读写解题方法技巧和考试诀窍,最新托福考试信息资料


雅思成绩出炉!雅思成功之路-最新实用雅思4个8,雅思4个7高分成功经验分享http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/forum-45-1.html


中国亚太,大陆地区、香港、澳门,台湾、阿联酋、迪拜、日本,韩国,泰国,以及新加坡,马来西亚、印度尼西亚等亚太地区等精准雅思A类G类真题预测机经汇总
2018年5月6月7月8月9月雅思a类g类真题预测答案范文机经http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/thread-231231-1-1.html

雅思移民类G类考试真题预测答案范文机经总贴2018年5月6月7月8月9月(中国大陆雅思、亚太雅思、北美雅思,澳洲新西兰雅思、英国等欧洲雅思,非洲雅思、南美洲雅思)请进入http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/thread-233644-1-1.html

澳洲新西兰(奥克兰,悉尼,墨尔本,堪培拉,布里斯班,阿德雷德)等亚太地区雅思预测机经2018年5月6月7月8月9月A类G类真题预测答案范文机经汇总http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/thread-191939-1-1.html

加拿大、美国、墨西哥、格陵兰、巴拿马等国家-北美考区雅思预测机经2018年5月6月7月8月9月雅思A类G类真题预测答案范文机经汇总http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/thread-215691-1-1.html

英国、法国、爱儿兰、德国、意大利、瑞典、挪威、芬兰、荷兰、丹麦、俄罗斯等欧洲考区雅思预测机经2018年5月6月7月8月9月A类G类真题预测答案范文机经汇总http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/thread-190929-1-1.html

南美洲雅思考区真题预测答案:阿根廷、巴西、智利、哥伦比亚、委内瑞拉、圭亚那、苏里南、厄瓜多尔等南美洲考区雅思预测机经2018年5月6月7月8月9月A类G类真题预测答案范文机经汇总http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/thread-232749-1-1.html

非洲雅思考区真题预测答案:南非、埃及、尼日利亚、阿尔及利亚、摩洛哥、赞比亚、科特迪瓦等非洲地区雅思预测机经2018年5月6月7月8月9月A类G类真题预测答案范文机经汇总http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/thread-232741-1-1.html

中东地区雅思A类G类真题预测答案:沙特、伊朗、科威特、伊拉克、阿联酋、阿曼、卡塔尔、巴林、土耳其、以色列等中东雅思预测机经2018年5月6月7月8月9月雅思真题预测答案范文机经汇总请进入http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/thread-236315-1-1.html  


2018年4月26日陆考区雅思A类笔试真题+答案+回忆
回忆1:
大作文 教育类:更多的家长选择在家自己教育孩子而代替去学校 在家教育优点多于缺点吗
回忆2:
听力 s1 cwx576884,9 months,GO194KE,middle street,water,switch off,wood,next Tuesday,engineer,post office。s4 ship,written,storm,technology,lifestyle,400,shoot,gun,map,coins
阅读:第一篇通过文学作品嵌入城市描述,第二篇讲戏剧历史,第三篇讲语言。
回忆3:
阅读
第一篇poor people about urban development? 题型填空和选非题。
第二篇 ancient theatre题型配对 多选 填空
第三篇关于protect lost of language,题型选词填空,选非题和单选
小作文表格和柱状图 大作文家长在家教孩子而不送去学校
回忆4:
小作文:混合图形 柱图+表格
大作文:In some countries, many people choosing educate children at home by themselves instead of sending them to school. Do you think the advantages outweigh the disadvantages?
回忆5:
听力
Section 1 保险修赔偿
1. Reference Number: CWX576884
2. When did the woman claim last time: 9 months ago
3. Postcode: GO19 4KE
4. First name of the address: 120, middle street, oxford
5. The floor which is made of wood was wet
6. Because of the water
7. Its was out of control ans she switched off immediately
8. Contact the client engineer to come and check the problem
9. The client inspector could come on Tuesday next week
10. The woman’s house is opposite to the post office

Section 2 City project orientation
11. According to Davina, a typical mentor is someone who: A has lived long in this city
12. Davina says that a mentor could be able to: B suggest best places to shop
13. What other thing does this city offer: A leaflets in foreign language
14. What could people do, if they continue to feel lonely: C take advantage of the informal Thursday evening
15. What advice does Davina offer about fitting into a new life: C accept that thing take time to settle down
16. Open-air market - E
17. Sport center - D
18. Library - C
19. Council house - A
20. Post office - G


Section 4 沉船的水下考古
31. Maoris actually don’t have record on language which is written
32. It indicates a lifestyle
33. Used latest technology on research
34. Possible reason for sunken: it was hit by a bad storm
35. Making a shoot gallery
36. The research opportunity was limited
37. Ship instead of a gun
38. A historical map of wreck was found
39. People came to these place for the cargo of gold
40. A lot of treasure such as jewelry and coins
回忆6:
阅读
passage1:文学作品嵌入城市描述
passage2:古代戏剧的历史

passage3:Save EndangeredLanguage拯救濒危语言(文化类)
Obviously we must do some serious rethinking of ourpriorities, lest linguistics go down in history as the only science thatpresided obviously over the disappearance of 90percent of the very field towhich it is dedicated. -Michael Krauss, The Worlds  Languages in Crisis .
A
Ten years ago Michael Krauss sent a shudder through the discipline oflinguistics with his prediction that half the 6,000 or so languages spoken inthe world would cease to be uttered within a century. Unless scientists andcommunity leaders directed a worldwide effort to stabilize the decline of locallanguages, he warned, nine tenths of the linguistic diversity of humankindwould probably be doomed to extinction. Krauss
sprediction was little more than an educated guess, but other respectedlinguists had been clanging out similar alarms. Keneth L. Hale of theMassachusetts Institute of Technology noted in the same journal issue thateight languages on which he had done fieldwork had since passed intoextinction. A 1990 survey in Australia found that 70 of the 90 survivingAboriginal languages were no longer used regularly by all age groups. The samewas true for all but 20 of the 175 Native American languages spoken orremembered in the US., Krauss told a congressional panel in 1992.
B
Many experts in the field mourn the loss of rare languages, for severalreasons. To start, there is scientific self-interest: some of the most basicquestions in linguistics have to do with the limits of human speech, which arefar from fully explored. Many researchers would like to know which structuralelements of grammar and vocabulary
if anyare truly universal and probably therefore hardwiredinto the human brain. Other scientists try to reconstruct ancient migrationpatterns by comparing borrowed words that appear in otherwise unrelatedlanguages. In each of these cases, the wider the portfolio of languages youstudy, the more likely you are to get the right answers.
C
Despite the near constant buzz in linguistics about endangered languages over thepast 10 years, the field has accomplished depressingly little.
You would think that there would be some organizedresponse to this dire situation, someattempt to determine which language can be saved and which should b edocumented before they disappear, says Sarah G. Thomason, a linguist at theUniversity of Michigan at Ann Arbor. But thereisntany such effort organized in theprofession. It is only recently that it has become fashionable enough to workon endangered  languages.Six years ago, recalls Douglas H. Whalen ofYale University, when I asked linguists who wasraising moneyto deal with these problems, I mostly got blank stares.So Whalen and a few other linguists founded theEndangered Languages Fund. In the five years to 2001 they were able to collectonly $80,000 for research grants. A similar foundation in England, directed byNicholas Ostler, has raised just $8,000 since 1995.
D
But there are encouraging signs that the field has turned a corner. TheVolkswagen Foundation, a German charity, just issued its second round of grantstotaling more than $2 million. It has created a multimedia archive at theMaxPlanck Institute for Psycholinguistics in the Netherlands that can houserecordings, grammars, dictionaries and other data on endangered languages. Tofill the archive, the foundation has dispatched field linguists to documentAweti (100 or so speakers in Brazil), Ega (about 300 speakers in Ivory Coast),Waima
a (a few hundred speakers in East Timor),and a dozen or so other languages unlikely to survive the century. The FordFoundation has also edged into the arena. Its contributions helped toreinvigorate a master-apprentice program created in 1992 byLeanne Hinton ofBerkeley and Native Americans worried about the imminent demise of about 50indigenous languages in California. Fluent speakers receive $3,000 to teach ayounger relative (who is also paid) their native tongue through 360 hours ofshared activities, spread over six months. So far about 5 teams have completedthe program, Hinton says, transmitting at least some knowledge of 25 languages.Its too early to call this languagerevitalization,Hinton admits. In California the death rate of elderly speakers willalways be greater than the recruitment rate of young speakers. But at least weprolong the survival of the language.That willgive linguists more time to record these tongues before they vanish.
E
But the master-apprentice approach hasn
t caughton outside the U.S., and Hintons effort is a drop in the sea. At least 440languages have been reduced to a mere handful of elders, according to theEthnologue, a catalogue of languages produced by the Dallas-based group SILInternational thatcomes closest to global coverage. For the vast majority ofthese languages, there is little or no record of their grammar, vocabulary,pronunciation or use in daily life. Even if a language has been fullydocumented, all that remains once it vanishes from active use is a fossilskeleton, a scattering of features that the scientist was lucky and astuteenough to capture. Linguists may be able to sketch an outline of the forgottenlanguage and fix its place on the evolutionary tree, but little more. How did people start conversations and talk to babies?Howdid husbands and wives converse?Hinton asks.Those are the first things you want to learn when youwant to revitalize the language.
F
But there is as yet no discipline of
conservationlinguistics, as there is forbiology. Almost everystrategy tried so far has succeeded in some places but failed in others, andthere seems to be no way to predict with certainty what will work where. Twentyyears ago in New Zealand, Maori speakers set up languagenests,in which preschoolers were immersed in thenative language. Additional Maori-only classes were added as the childrenprogressed through elementary and secondary school. A similar approach wastried in Hawaii, with some successthe numberof native speakers has stabilized at 1,000 or so, reports Joseph E. Grimes ofSIL International, who is working on Oahu. Students can now get instruction inHawaiian all the way through university.
G
One factor that always seems to occur in the demise of a language is that thespeakers begin to have collective doubts about the usefulness of languageloyalty. Once they start regarding their own language as inferior to themajority language, people stop using it for all situations. Kids pick up on theattitude andprefer the dominant language. In many cases, people don
t notice until they suddenly realize that their kidsnever speak the language, even at home. This is how Cornish and some dialectsof Scottish Gaelic is still only rarely used for daily home life in Ireland, 80years after the republic was founded with Irish as its first official language.
H
Linguists agree that ultimately, the answer to the problem of languageextinction is multilingualism. Even uneducated people can learn severallanguages, as long as they start as children. Indeed, most people in the worldspeak more than one tongue, and in places such as Cameroon (279 languages),Papua New Guinea (823) and India (387) it is common to speak three or fourdistinct languages and a dialect or two as well. Most Americans and Canadians,to the west of Quebec, have a gut reaction that anyone speaking another languagein front of them is committing an immoral act. You get the same reaction inAustralia and Russia. It is no coincidence that these are the areas wherelanguages are disappearing the fastest. The first step in saving dyinglanguages is to persuade the world
smajorities to allow the minorities among them to speak with their own voices.

Questions 27-33
The reading passage has eight paragraphs, A-H
Choose the correct heading for paragraphs A-H from the list below.Write thecorrect number, i-xi, in boxes 27-33 on your answer sheet.

List of Headings
i  data consistency needed for language the SI TER
ii  Solution for dying out language
iii  positive gains for protection
iv  minimum requirement for saving a language
v  Potential threat to minority language
vi  Value of minority language to linguists.
vii  native language program launched
viii  Subjective doubts as a negative factor
ix  Practise  in several developingcountries
x   Value of minority language to linguists.
xi  government participation in language field

27 Paragraph  A
28 Paragraph  B
29Paragraph   D
30Paragraph   E
31Paragraph    F
32Paragraph    G
33Paragraph    H
Questions 34-38
Use the information in the passage to match the people (listed A-F) withopinions or deeds below. Write the appropriate letters A-F in boxes 34-38 onyour answer sheet.

A  Nicholas Ostler
B  Michael Krauss
C  Joseph E. Grimes
D  Sarah G. Thomason
E  Keneth L. Hale
F  Douglas H. Whalen
34  Reported language conservation practice in Hawaii
35  Predicted that many languages would disappear soon
36  Experienced languages die out personally
37  Raised language fund in England
38  Not enough effort on saving until recent work
Questions 39-40
Choose the correct letter, A, B, C or D.
Write your answers in boxes 39-40 on your answer sheet.

39 What is purpose of master-apprentice program sponsored by The FordFoundation?
A  Teach children how to speak
B  Revive endangered language
C  Preserve endanger red language
D  Increase communication between students
40 What should majority language speaker should do according to the lastparagraph?
A  They should teach their children endangered language
B  They should learn at least four languages
C  They should show their loyalty to a dying language
D  They should be more tolerant to minority language speaker
答案
27 v,    28 x,   29 iii
  30 i  31vii 32 viii 33 ii
34 C    35 B    36 E   37 A    38. D   39.C   40.D
回忆7:
回忆8:
回忆9:
回忆10:


为更好地促进做好Edward艾华师最新预测,请烤鸭们积极回忆在本文下面评论栏目里面,请尽量详细,并标明城市考点,A/G类,听力,阅读,大小作文,谢谢!特请亚太其他国家,欧洲,北美,南美,非洲等其他考区的烤鸭们也积极回忆吧


2018年4月21日雅思考试总体反馈:2018年4月21日雅思命中A类G类听力三部分旧题,命中大小作文、命中阅读两旧、口语大部分真题原题,4月21日雅思全面大中,全面开花!祝贺IPN会员将出现不少雅思高分人才!总体反馈请复制链接进入http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/thread-237914-1-1.html  http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/forum-36-1.htmlhttp://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/forum-39-1.html

特别提醒:雅思考试20多年来,有非常严格的规律性和出题思路。全世界有6大考区,而只有一个剑桥考试中心几个人在出题,每个考区一周平均要出一份考卷,一个月出24份考卷,考官如何保证达到难度一样呢,如何保证新题难度、准确度和评价机制公平呢,所以只能是20年来的题库旧题目的有效组合,新题不能超出5-10%,每份雅思卷子都是95%-99%以上旧题原题真题。多年雅思考官和专家Edward老师非常熟悉雅思出题规律和听说读写题库出题组合卷子的秘诀,IPN资料因此而诞生!具体请阅读http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/thread-32-1-1.html

分享到:  QQ好友和群QQ好友和群 QQ空间QQ空间 腾讯微博腾讯微博 腾讯朋友腾讯朋友
收藏收藏
回复

使用道具 举报

hello
微信公众号:ieltstofel
互动咨询微信:504918228
互动咨询微信:yafu6668

QQ|Archiver|手机版|小黑屋|雅思托福英语全球网 ( 闽ICP备14014910号 ) | 闽公网安备 35020302034732号  

GMT+8, 2024-11-27 10:46 , Processed in 0.075667 second(s), 30 queries .

Powered by Discuz! X3.2

© 2001-2013 Comsenz Inc.

快速回复 返回顶部 返回列表