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2016年11月5日雅思A类笔试真题答案回忆蹲点汇总 回忆1: 澳洲 阅读第一篇笑声、第二篇科学家们去一个LB湖收集数据。第三篇关于苦味的 回忆2: #澳洲回忆#11.5雅思A类小作文是折线图、比较四个汽车公司制造每一辆车的时间 大作文题目是有些人认为在大城市居住越来越难、有些人认为越来越容易,Discuss. 回忆3: s1 volunteer organization application s2 家庭防火 s3 论文讨论 s4 情感与颜色 回忆4: 澳洲 小作文是折线图、比较四个汽车公司制造每一辆车的时间 大作文是discuss both view and give your own opinon. 题目是有些人认为在大城市居住越来越难、有些人认为越来越容易。 回忆5: 大陆 阅读 蚂蚁 新西兰的bone 购物广告 大作文题目 the modern world individuals are becoming more independent or dependent 回忆6: a类大作文有些人认为个体越来越独立,有些越来越依赖别人 回忆7: 大陆 听力 s1保护鸟类 s2一个地方的租车公司还有公共交通,最后一题是钱很不值钱所以要多到现金 s3两个学生讨论课程和学校设施 s4好像是跟沉船有关 阅读1:找到个人骨头,然后去找它是啥时候的 2:蚂蚁给树治病 3.商场推销的策略 写作小作文是火车乘客数和火车准点的百分比 大作文是人越来越独立还是依赖 回忆8: 阅读P1澳洲人骨P2蚂蚁生物防治P3 销售手段什么的 小作文俩折线图 一张是火车乘客人数变化折线图 另一张是与目标指数相比的火车准点率 听力S1 wildbird club 全是填空题 S2租车配对题和选择题 S3好像是俩学生讨论填学校的什么意见表 匹配题几个填空题一道多选 s4 shipwreck 全是填空题 回忆9:小作文两个线图,写近几年客流量与准点率的关系一个是火车乘客人数一个是准点率和目标准点率 大作文:有人认为现在人越来越依靠别人有人认为越来越独立,讨论两种给自己的观点 回忆10: 大作文some people believe that in modern world people are becoming more and more dependent on others. some people believe that individuals are more independent ON each other. discuss. 回忆11: 回忆12: 小作文是折线图,是火车乘客的数量变化,和火车准时到点的折线图,大作文是,有些人认为现在的人比较独立,有些人认为现在的人比较依赖别人,请讨论这两种观点,给你的opinion,阅读一篇是蚂蚁可以防止果树受其他害虫,生物方法来保护果树,还有一篇是超市和销售人员来销售方法和对客户的影响 回忆13: 听力
section1 wildbird club 野生鸟类组织,保护鸟类 填空题 1. 协会的资金援助方式:fees and donations2. 协助此协会做鸟的record3. 举了个例,还可以guard birds’ breeding
4. 年费:孩子的费用16/year,然后family 的费用是54/year,
5. 协会还会组织一些competitions and outdoor games
6. 协会组织的活动有guide7. 有一个特殊的pack,里面有些纪念品,卷子上给了个T-shirt, 让填中间的一个,是poster8. 付费方式为两种:by post or byphone
9. 日期:25th August application arrive by 25th of Aug 如果他想给他的侄女送生日礼物
10. gift membership
section2 一个地方的租车信息和公共交通 配对题和选择题
section3俩学生讨论填学校的课程和设施 配对+填空
21-25 匹配题 A Both of thestudents agree with the statement. B The studentsneither agree with or disagree with the statement. C The studentsdisagree with the statement 21. need advertiseservice more and academic support B 22. courseoutlines are good B 23. the othermaterials the course need to read c 24. whether thetutor’s feedback for assignments is useful A 25. There is notenough room in the library A 26. There are notenough materials C 27-28 完成句子题 27. need help desk services 28. 需要更多的 part-time job 29-30 多选题 which two parts ofcollege should be improved? 29. catering facilities 30. healthcare services
section4 shipwreck 沉船和金钱价值 填空题
阅读
passage1: 澳洲人骨头
passage2: 蚂蚁防止果树遭受其他害虫,可用生物方法保护橘子树
Chinese Yellow Citrus Ant forBiologicalControl A In 1476,the farmers of Berne in Switzerland decided, according to thisstory, there was only one way to rid their fields of the cutworms(糖蛾 )attacking their crops. They took the pests to court. The worms weretried, found guilty and excommunicated by the archbishop (大主教). In China, farmers had a morepractical approach to pest control. Rather than rely on divine intervention (神学的调停),they put their faith infrogs, ducks and ants. Frogs and duckswere encouraged to snap up (吃 下 )the pests in the paddies ( 稻 田 )and the occasional plague oflocusts (蝗虫).But thenotion of biological controlbegan with an ant. More specifically, the storysays, it started with the predatory yellow citrus (柑橘)ant Oecophylla smaragdina,which has been polishing olf (打败)pests in the orange groves ofsouthern China for at least 1700 years. The yellow citrus ant (黄蚁)is a type of weaver ant, whichbinds leaves and twigs with silk to form a neat, tent-like nest. In thebeginning, farmers made do with the odd ants’nest here and there. But it wasn’tlong before growing demand led to the development of a thriving trade in nestsand a new type of agriculture—ant farming.
B Foran insect that bites, the yellow citrusant is remarkably popular. Even byant standards, Oecophylla smaragdina is afearsome predator. It’s big, runs fast and has a powerful nip—painful to humansbut lethal to many of the insects that plague the orange groves of Guangdongand Guangxi in southern China. And for at least 17 centuries. Chinese orangegrowers have harnessed these six-legged killing machines to keep their fruitgroves healthy and productive. The story explains that citrus fruits evolved inthe Far East and the Chinese discovered the delights of their flesh early on.As the ancestral home of oranges, lemons and pomelos, China also has thegreatest diversity of citrus pests. And the trees that produce the sweetestfruits, the mandarins—or kan—attract a host of plant-eating insects, from blackants and sap-sucking mealy bugs to leaf-devouring caterpillars (毛 毛 虫 ).With so many enemies, fruit growers clearly had to have some way ofprotecting their orchards.
C The West did not discover the Chineseorange growers’secret weapon until the early 20th century. At the time, Floridawas suffering an epidemic of citrus canker (相橘溃疡)and in 1915 Walter Swingle, a plant physiologist working for the USDepartment of Agriculture, was, the story says, sent to China in search ofvarieties of orange that were resistant to the disease. Swingle spent
some time studying the citrus orchards around Guangzhou, and there he cameacross the story of the cultivated ant. These ants, he was told, were “grown”bythe people of a small village nearby who sold them to the orange growers by thenestful (—整窝的).
D The earliest report of citrus ants at workamong the orange trees appears in a book on tropical and subtropical botanywritten by His Han in AD 304. “The people of Chiao-Chih sell in their marketsants in bags of rush matting. The nests are like silk. The bags are allattached to twigs and leaves which, with the ants inside the nests, are forsale. The ants are reddish-yellow in colour, bigger than ordinary ants. In thesouth if the kan trees do not have this kind of ant, the fruits will all bedamaged by many harmful insects, and not a single fruit will be perfect.”
E Initially, farmers relied on nests whichthey collected from the wild or bought in the market——where trade in nests wasbrisk. ‘It is said that in the south orange trees which are free of antswill have wormy fruits. Therefore the people race to buy nests for their orangetrees,’wrote Liu Hsun in Strange Things Noted in the South, written about AD890. The business quickly became more sophisticate. From the 10th century,country people began to trap ants in artificial nests baited with fat. “Fruitgrowing families buy these ants from vendors who make a business of collectingand selling such creatures,”wrote Chuang Chi-Yu in 1130. “They trap them byfilling hogs’or sheep’s bladders with fat and placing them with the cavitiesopen next to the ants’nests. They wait until the ants have migrated into thebladders and take them away.This is known as‘rearing orange ants’.”Farmersattached the bladders to their trees, and in time the ants spread to othertrees and built new nests. By the 17th century,growers were building bamboowalkways between their trees to speed the colonization of their orchards. Theants ran along these narrow bridges from one tree to another and establishednests “by the hundreds of thousands”.
F Did it work? The orange growers clearlythought so. One authority, Chi TaChun, writing in 1700, stressed how importantit was to keep the fruit trees free of insect pests, especially caterpillars.“It is essential to eliminate them so that the trees are not injured. But handlabour is not nearly as efficient as ant power...”Swingle was just asimpressed. Yet despite this reports, many Western biologists were skeptical. Inthe West, the idea of using one insect to destroy another was new and highlycontroversial. The first breakthrough had come in 1888, when the infant orangeindustry in California had been saved from extinction by the Australian vedaliabeetle. This beetle was the only thing that had made any inroad into theexplosion of cottony cushion scale that was threatening to destroy the state’scitrus crops. But, as Swingle now knew,
California’s “first”was nothing of the sort. The Chinese had been expert inbiocontrol for many centuries.
G The story goes on to say that the long traditionof ants in the Chinese orchards only began to waver in the 1950s and 1960s withthe introduction of powerful organic (I guess the author
meanschemical insecticides). Although most fruit growers switched to chemicals,a few hung onto their ants. Those who abandoned ants in favour of chemicalsquickly became disillusioned (幻想破灭).As costssoared and pests began to develop resistance to thechemicals, growers began to
revive the old ant patrols. They had good reason to have faith in their insectworkforce. Research in the early 1960s showed that as long as there were enoughants in the trees, they did an excellent job of dispatching some pests—mainlythe larger insects--and had modest success against others. Trees with yellowants produced almost 20 per cent more healthy leaves than those without. Morerecent trials have shown that these trees yield just as big a crop as thoseprotected by expensivechemical sprays.
H Oneapparent drawback of using ants—and oneof the main reasons for the earlyskepticism by Western scientists—was thatcitrus ants do nothing to control mealy bugs, waxy-coated scale insects whichcan do considerable damage to fruit trees. In fact, the ants protect mealy bugsin exchange for the sweethoneydew they secrete. The orange growers alwaysdenied this was a
problem but Western scientists thought they knew better. Research in the 1980ssuggests that the growers were right all along. Where mealy bugs proliferateunderthe ants’protection they are usually heavily parasitized and this limitsthe harm they can do. Orangegrowers who rely on carnivorous ants rather thanpoisonous chemicals maintain a better balance of species in their orchards.While the ants deal with the bigger insect pests, other predatory species keep
down the numbers of smaller pests such as scale insects and aphids (蚜虫). In the long run, ants do a lotless damage than chemicals—and they’re certainly more effective thanexcommunication.
Questions 14-18
.............................................................................
Use the information in the passage to match the year (listed A-G) with correct
description below. Write the appropriate letters A-G in boxes 14-18 on youranswer
sheet.
NB you may use any letter more than once
A 1888
B 1476
C 1915
D 1700
E 1130F 304 ADG 1950
14 First record of ant against pests written.
15 WS studied ant intervention method in China.
16 First case of orange crops rescued by insect in western world.
17 Chinese farmers start to choose chemical method.
18 A book wrote mentioned ways to trap ants.
Questions 19-26.............................................................................
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage2?
In boxes 19-26 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE if the sataement agrees with the information
FALSE if the statement contradicts the information
NOT GIVEN if there is no information on this
19 China has the most orange pests in the world.
20 Swingle came to China in order to search an insect for the USgovernment.
21 Western people were impressed by Swingle’s theory of pest prevention.
22 Chinese farmers realised that price of pesticides became expensive.
24 Trees without ants had more unhealthy fallen leaves than those with.
25 Yield of fields using ants is larger a crop than that using chemicalpesticides.
26 Chinese orange farmers proposed that ant protection doesn’t work out ofChina.
Chinese Yellow Citrus Ant for Biological Control 中国黄蚂蚁
14 F D段第一行
15 C C段倒数第5行
16 A 53 页6 行
17 G G段第2行
18 E E段中部
19 TRUE 52页顶部
20 FALSE C 段第3行
21 FALSE 53也第2行
22 TRUE G段第5行 cost soared。 。
23 TRUE G段第6行
24 NOT GIVEN
25 TRUE G段倒数第3行
26 NOT GIVEN
passage3: 超市销售人员的销售方法和对客户带来的影响
The Persuaders A We have long lived in an age where powerfulimages, catchy soundbites and too-good-to miss offers bombard us from everyquarter. All around us the persuaders are at work. Occasionally their methodsare unsubtle— the plantingkiss on a baby’s head by awannabe political leader, or a liquidation sale in a shop that has been “closing down” for well over a year, butgenerally the persuaders know what they are about and are highly capable. Bethey politicians, supermarket chains, salespeople or advertisers, they know exactlywhat to do to sell us their images, ideas or produce. When it comes to persuasion,these giants rule supreme. They employ the most skilled imagemakers and use thebest psychological tricks to guarantee that even the most cautious among us areopen to manipulation. B
We spend more time in them than we mean to, we buy 75 percent of our food fromthem and end up with products that we did not realize we wanted. Right form thestart, supermarkets have been ahead of the game. For example, when Sainsburyintroduced shopping baskets into its 1950s stores, it was a stroke of marketinggenius. Now shoppers could browse and pick up items they previously would haveignored. Soon after came trolleys, and just as new roads attract more traffic,the same applied to trolley space. Pro Merlin Stone, IBM Professor ofRelationship Marketing at Bristol Business School, says aisles are laid out tomaximize profits. Stores pander to our money-rich, time-poor lifestyle. Lowturnover products—clothes andelectrical goods——are stocked atthe back while high—turnover items command position at the front. C Stone believes supermarkets work hard to “stall” us because the more time we spend in them, the more we buy. Thus,great efforts are made to make the environment pleasant. Stores play music torelax us and some even pipe air from the in-store bakery around the shop. Inthe USA, fake aromas are sometimes used. Smell is both the most evocative andsubliminal sense. In experiments, pleasant smells are effective in increasingour spending. A casino that fragranced only half its premise saw profit soar inthe aroma— filledareas. The other success story from the supermarkets’ perspective is the loyalty card. Puntersmay assume that they are being rewarded for their fidelity, but all the whilethey are trading information about their shopping habits. Loyal shoppers couldbe paying 30% more by sticking to their favourite shops for essential cosmetics. D Research has shown that 75 percent ofprofit comes from just 30 percent of customers. Ultimately, reward cards couldbe used to identify and better accommodate these “elite” shoppers. Itcould also be used to make adverts more relevant to individual consumers— rather like Spielberg’s futuristic thriller MinorityReport, in which Tom Cruise’s character is bombarded with interactive personalized ads. If thissounds far-fetched, the datagathering revolution has already seen theintroduction of radio— frequency identification—away to electronically tag products to what, FRID means they canfollow the product into people homes. E
No matter how savvy we think we are to their ploys, the ad industry still wins.Adverts focus on what products do or on how they make us feel. Researcher LauretteDube, in the Journal of Advertising Research, says when attitudes are base on “cognitive foundations” (logical reasoning), advertisersuse informative appeals. This works for products with little emotional draw buthigh functionality, such as bleach. Where attitude are based on effect (i.e, emotions),ad teams try to tap into our feelings. Researchers at the University of Floridarecently concluded that our emotional responses to adverts dominate over “cognition”. F Advertisers play on our need to be safe(commercials for insurance), to belong (make customer feel they are in thegroup in fashion ads) and for selfes— teem (aspirational adverts). With time and space at a premium, celebritiesare often used as a quick way of meeting these needs— either because the celebepitomizes success or because they seem familiar and so make the product seem “safe”. A survey of 4,000 campaigns found ads with celebs were 10 percentmore effective than without. Humor also stimulates a rapid emotional response.Hwiman Chung, writing in the International Journal of Advertising, found thatfunny ads were remembered for longer than straight ones. Combine humor withsexual imagery—as inWonderbra’s “Hello Boys” ads——and you are on to a winner. G
Slice-of-life ads are another tried and tested methodthey paint a picture oflife as you would like it, but still one that feels familiar. Abhilasha Mehta,in the Journal of Advertising Research, noted that the more one’s self-image tallies with the brandbeing advertised, the stronger the commercial. Ad makers also use behavioristtheories, recognizing that the more sensation we receive from an object, the better we know it. If anadvert for a chocolate bar fails to cause salivation, it has probably failed.No wonder advertisements have been dubbed the “nervous system of the business world”. H
Probably all of us could make a sale if the product was something we truly believedin, but professional salespeople are in a different league—-the best of them can always selldifferent items to suitable customers in a best time .They do this by usingvery basic psychological techniques. Stripped to its simplest level, sellingworks by heightening the buyer’s perception of how much they need a product or service. Buyersnormally have certain requirements by which they will judge the suitability ofa product. The seller therefore attempts to tease out what these conditions areand then explains how their products’ benefit can meet these requirements. I
Richard Hession, author of Be a Great Salesperson says it is human nature toprefer to speak rather to listen, and good salespeople pander to this. They askpunters about their needs and offer to work with them to achieve their objectives.As a result, the buyer feels they are receiving a “consultation” rather than a sales pitch. All thewhile, the salesperson presents with a demeanour that takes it for granted thatthe sale will be made. Never will the words “if you buy” be used, but rather “when you buy”. J
Dr Rob Yeung, a senior consultant at business psychologists Kiddy and Partner, saysmost salespeople will build up a level of rapport by asking questions abouthobbies, family and lifestyle. This has the double benefit of making the salespersonlikeable while furnishing him or her with more information about the client’s wants. Yeung says effectivesalespeople try as far as possible to match their style of presentingthemselves to how the buyer comes across. If the buyer cracks jokes, the salespeoplewill respond in kind. If the buyer wants detail, the seller provides it, ifthey are more interested in the feel of the product, the seller will focus onthis. At its most extreme, appearing empathetic can even include thesalesperson attempting to “mirror” the hobbylanguage of the buyer. K
Whatever the method used, all salespeople work towards one aim: “closing the deal”. In fact, they will be looking for“closingsignals” throughtheir dealings with potential clients. Once again the process works by assumingsuccess. The buyer is not asked “are you interested?” as this can invite a negative response. Instead the seller takes itfor granted that the deal is effectively done: when the salesman asks you for aconvenient delivery date or asks what color you want, you will probably respondaccordingly. Only afterwards might you wonder why you proved such a pushover. Questions 28-31 28 YES A段 29 NOT GIVEN 无相关信息 30 YES D段 31 NO I段 Questions 32-35 32 B B段前3行 33 C E段末尾 34 D H段第2行 35 C K段前2行 Questions 36-40 36 trolleys B段第6行 37 aisles B段倒数4行 38 loyalty card C段倒数4行 39 cosmetics D段4行 40 group F段第2行
写作
A类
小作文线图,对比2000年和2009年两年,乘火车出行人数和火车准点率的变化
大作文:Some people think individuals are more and more dependent on each other. some people think individuals are more and more independent. Discuss both views.人们是变得越来越独立还是越来越依赖
回忆14:
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
1.2016年11月3日命中雅思A类大作文原题-故居是否该保护The world has many towns and citiesconstructed in previous centuries that are suitable and livable for people inthose times. What problems will this cause today and what can be done to solvethe problems,Edward老师IPN资料再次命中,这是Edward全球雅思网络一对一课堂透彻讲练过的题目题型和素材,Edward IPN资料最重点有多篇该题目的范文素材论据可以完全使用;再次在最重点预测到课堂中多次讲练过A类小作文是柱图:对比一个国家1980年和2010年成年人业余活动时间比例,有shopping,sport,reading,socializing几项。这是全球雅思网络一对一课堂透彻讲练过的题目题型和素材,IPN会员A类小作文资料有多篇详细剑桥雅思风格的该图型写法和地道范文,素材和论据可以完全使用,恭喜全球网络一对一学员,IPN会员和看我们预测的考生们,应该发挥得很不错。 2.2016年11月3日命中雅思A类大作文题目和素材-学外语必要性Do you agree that forcing children to learn foreign language is correct? (澳洲新西兰香港澳门台湾等亚太考),Edward老师IPN资料再次命中,这是Edward全球雅思网络一对一课堂透彻讲练过的题目题型和素材,Edward IPN资料最重点有多篇该题目的范文素材论据可以完全使用;再次在最重点预测到课堂中多次讲练过A类小作文是柱图:对比一个国家1980年和2010年成年人业余活动时间比例,有shopping,sport,reading,socializing几项。这是全球雅思网络一对一课堂透彻讲练过的题目题型和素材,IPN会员A类小作文资料有多篇详细剑桥雅思风格的该图型写法和地道范文,素材和论据可以完全使用,恭喜全球网络一对一学员,IPN会员和看我们预测的考生们,应该发挥得很不错。 3. 2016年11月3日雅思听力命中三部分S1S2S3原题, S1=V110716S1,S2=V140125S2=V111201S2,S4=V120906S4 =V30042S4这三部分听力都是旧题目,都在我们IPN资料听力预测机经最重点里面,IPN资料里面的听力机经都有完整准确的答案,祝贺IPN将再次缔造多位雅思9分,8.5,8分听力人才了!2016年10月29日雅思听力命中至少一半以上,都在我们IPN资料听力预测机经最重点里面:S2=V110730S2,S3=V110903S3,IPN资料里面的听力机经都有完整准确的答案(中国、澳洲、新西兰、香港、澳门、台湾、越南、泰国、马来西亚、迪拜等亚太考区),祝贺IPN将再次缔造多位雅思9分,8.5,8分听力人才了!2016年10月22日雅思听力考题至少一半以上在我们IPN资料听力预测机经最重点里面:S3=30080S3,S4=V110924S4=V09141S4;10月22日澳洲新西兰香港澳门台湾雅思考区命中全部听力题目S1=销售会议地点安排,S2=V120310S2 ,S3=音乐缓解压力的讨论,S4=V111119S4=V09137S4(在我们IPN资料听力预测机经最重点里面)祝贺IPN将再次缔造多位雅思9分,8.5,8分听力人才了!2016年10月13日雅思听力命中四分之三(三部分旧题),2016年10月13日雅思再次三部分听力旧题在我们IPN资料听力预测机经最重点里面:S1=V100410S1=08143S1,S2=V100828S2=V8121S2,S3=V130606S3 =V08111S3,祝贺IPN将再次缔造多位雅思9分,8.5,8分听力人才了!2016年10月8日雅思听力再次命中一半(两部分旧题)!2016年10月8日雅思再次两部分听力旧题在我们IPN资料听力预测机经最重点里面:S4澳大利亚海豚,S1=V100529S1=09120S1;10月8日澳洲新西兰香港澳门台湾雅思考区也命中一半听力S2=V09129S2 ,S4=V101014S4=06102S4(在我们IPN资料听力预测机经最重点里面)祝贺IPN将再次缔造多位雅思9分,8.5,8分听力人才了!2016年9月24日雅思听力再次四旧全命中!2016年9月24日雅思再次四部分听力旧题连号全在我们IPN资料听力预测机经最重点里面:S1=V140719S1S2=V140719S2,S3=V140719S3=V120428S3,S4=V140719S4=V120225S4,祝贺IPN将再次缔造多位雅思9分,8.5,8分听力人才了!2016年9月10日雅思听力再次四旧全命中!2016年9月10日雅思再次四部分听力旧题全在我们IPN资料听力预测机经最重点里面:S1=V101009S1 S2=V131214S2 S3=V131213S3 S4= V08130S4,祝贺IPN将再次缔造多位雅思9分,8.5,8分听力人才了!震撼9月3日雅思听力再次四旧全命中!2016年9月3日雅思再次四部分听力旧题连号全在我们IPN资料听力预测机经最重点里面:S1= V121117S1=V09105 S1 ,S2=V121117S2=V100415S2 ,S3= V121117S3 ,S4= V121117S4,祝贺IPN将再次缔造多位雅思9分,8.5,8分听力人才了!
一直以来Edward 预测听力几乎每场平均中两个到四个部分的旧题目,有购买我们整理好的预测听力机经的烤鸭和IPN会员应该是受益非浅。 4.2016年11月3日再次最重点命中雅思G类大作文原题目-小孩子看太久的电视怎么办?(中国、澳洲、新西兰香港、澳门、台湾、中国等考区)Edward老师再次命中,这是Edward全球雅思网络一对一课堂透彻讲练过的题目题型和素材,Edward G类预测IPN资料最重点第3题(电视媒体对孩子影响大)命中, IPN资料有多篇该题目的范文素材论据可以完全使用; 再次在最重点预测到课堂中多次讲练过G类小作文-请求信:准备了一演讲 但是要换topic。这是全球雅思网络一对一课堂透彻讲练过的题目题型和素材,IPN会员G类小作文资料有多篇详细剑桥雅思风格的该书信写法和地道范文,素材和论据可以完全使用,恭喜全球网络一对一学员,IPN会员和看我们预测的考生们,应该发挥得很不错。 5.雅思口语11月2日3日所有已经考完的话题,Edward再次在最重点连续全部预测命中,绝大部分是旧题和旧题目改造,IPN资料里面都有详细答案或者可以互相套同的答案,出现的新题库新题目已经更新到IPN资料: 近期口语新题和高频热点题 1.Part2 Describe a useful websitethat you like to visit. (Or, that you have visited) Youshould say:what the contents of the website are (or, were) howand when you first found this website howoften you go to this website andexplain why you think this website is (or, was) useful. 2.Part 2 Describe a gift that takesa long time to prepare/describe a gift that you want to give to someone.
3.Part 2 Describe asmall but successful company Youshould say: thename of this company whatthis company does whatkinds of people work in this company andexplain why you think this company is successful. Part 3 What are thecharacteristics of a small company/business? How can a small company /businessbe run successfully?
4.Part2Describe a place you often visit/Describe a favorite part of your city/Describean interesting public place you would like to visit Describe a place near water/ Describe a historical attraction/Describea tourist attraction/Describe a seaside place you want to visit Where is this place What is it like Why you like to visit And how interesting itis describe a place youwork or study 5.Part2 Describe an occasion you had to use imagination you should say: what this occasion was what you imagined atthat time why you had to useyour imagination and explain how youfelt about this 6.Part 2 Describea leader who you admire/Describe a famous person (for example, in sport,business or politics) Youshould say: whothis person is ? Howhe or she became a leader? whatthis person did (has done) that you admire? part3 What are the abilities of a goodleader? Would you like to be aleader?Would you like to be a leader? 7.Part2 Describe an interesting wild animal in yourcountry. You should say: What is it? What does it look like? When and where did yousee it? And why is this wildanimal interesting. 8.Part2 Describea special dinner/Describe your favorable meal/a memorable meal ordinner you had. You should say: what you ate where you had thismeal who you ate with and explain whythis was a special meal to you. 9.Part 2 Describe an area of science that you areinterested in You should say: What it is When you started tobecome interested in it What you have learnedfrom it And explain why youhave an interest in it 10.Part2 Describe a convenienttransportation 11.Part 2 Describe a positive change in your life. You should say: What the change was When it happened How it happened and explain why it wasa positive change. 12.Part 2 Describea perfect job/an ideal job you want to have in the future/Describea paid job you or someone else did/Describe a person you know who has animportant job. You should say: Who the person is Where the person works What the person doesin the job And explain why youthink the person’s job is important. 13.Part 2 Describe atime when you had to share something with others/Describe something that youhave shared with others (or another person). You should say: what you shared when you shared it who you shared it with and explain why youshared it or how you felt when you shared it. 14.Part 2 Describe an interesting tradition in yourcountry. You should say: What the tradition is When do you celebrateit How you can celebrateand explain why it is interesting 15.Part 2Describe a wedding you attended
you should say: Whose wedding it was Who was there Where it was And explain how youfelt at this wedding 16.Part 2 Describe an occasion you got up extremely early. You should say: When this happened What you needed to dothat day Who you were with And explain how youfelt about getting up so early on that day. 17.Part 2 Describe a tallbuilding/an important/a modern building. Youshould say: whereit is whatit is used for whatit looks like whenyou visited this building (Or: Whether you have visited this building) andexplain why you like or dislike this building. 6.2016年11月3日雅思阅读三篇是:P1 不同体形的鱼类和它们被吃掉的几率的关系 ,P2 各种货币的特点 ,P3 看到细节容易被我们大脑忽视。具体题目、题型和内容还在不断更新确认中……2016年10月29日雅思阅读至少命中两篇文章Passage 1 英国鱼鹰保护Passage2:早期人类航海,第3篇 蚂蚁 (不确定)(IPN资料有完整文章、题目、标准答案,祝贺IPN会员将出现不少阅读8分9分的天才)。2016年10月22日雅思阅读至少命中两篇文章Passage1 沙丘沙漠food desert,Passage2:ancinetcity/lost city,passage3:新西兰一种保护动物(不确定) (IPN资料有完整文章、题目、标准答案,祝贺IPN会员将出现不少阅读8分9分的天才)。震撼2016年10月13日雅思阅读文章三篇全部命中Passage1 恐龙Passage2:情感和面部表情,passage3:生物钟(IPN资料有完整文章、题目、标准答案,祝贺IPN会员将出现不少阅读8分9分的天才)。2016年10月8日雅思阅读命中文章Passage2:家长对教育的参与度 (IPN资料有完整文章、题目、标准答案)。2016年2016年9月24日雅思阅读文章命中Passage2:仿生科技,passage3:18世纪文化科技化学发展 (IPN资料有完整文章、题目、标准答案)。2016年9月10日雅思阅读命中文章Passage1: 澳洲海滩, Passage3: 古人御寒 (IPN资料有完整文章、题目、标准答案)。2016年9月3日雅思阅读命中文章:蝴蝶拟态,微表情测谎。9月3日雅思考试阅读第一篇,蝴蝶拟态及其他昆虫对其模仿形成的。阅读第二篇,英国1991年一次因4天无风导致尾气堆积致居民死亡事件相关研究。阅读第三篇,微表情测谎,lie to me的lightman原型……具体题型题目反馈还在不断等待更新中(IPN资料有完整文章、题目、标准答案)。2016年8月20日雅思阅读全部命中文章:大猩猩,古代战车,英国影院建筑 (IPN资料有完整文章、题目、标准答案)。2016年8月13日雅思阅读命中文章:厄尔尼诺,汽车发展史,一种身体缺陷 (IPN资料有完整文章、题目、标准答案)。2016年8月4日雅思阅读命中:ancient voyage, corporatesocialresponsibility;mothertongueonchildren…(IPN资料有完整文章、题目、标准答案)。2016年7月30日雅思阅读命中:澳洲能源,蜜蜂澳洲清洁能源和钟(航海用的) (IPN资料有完整文章、题目、标准答案)……………实际上一直以来雅思历次大部分阅读考试都是旧题目,都在我们预测中命中,接下来的考试肯定是二到三旧居多。我们IPN资料里面的阅读预测机经都有完整准确的答案,2012-2016年以来Edward 预测几乎每场平均中70-100%阅读文章和题目(每场考试平均1-3篇旧题),恭喜购买我们整理好的预测阅读机经的烤鸭和IPN会员,应该是受益非浅。
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