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[全国] 2017年12月2日澳洲,新西兰,香港等亚太考区雅思A类笔试真题

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发表于 2017-11-27 17:36:57 | 只看该作者 回帖奖励 |倒序浏览 |阅读模式
2017年12月2日澳洲,新西兰,香港等亚太考区雅思A类笔试真题答案回忆请看最下面,
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2017年12月2日澳洲,新西兰,香港等亚太考区雅思A类笔试真题答案回忆蹲点汇总
回忆1:
澳洲
写作一是地图 working mine redevelopment
写作二 学生去学校上学是否不必要 因为网络可以提供信息
回忆2:
听力第一篇是关于Drama club问询的 还有一篇是关于图书馆科技的,其余不记得了
回忆3:
听力还有一个一男一女在沟通讲座内容 形式 实践 限制的 答案印象里有 time space students  还有一个是关于 apartment complex的一个manager介绍小区layout和小区管理的规定
回忆4:
听力s4 information sector / satisfaction / digital ? / preservation/ marketing /collection?/ linguistics
回忆5:
阅读题 关于jenny spinning的 答案印象里有 :Farming;Husbands;wood;Flying Shuttle; Thomas Hugh. 顺序不是这样 大致

James Hargreaves and Spinning Jenny

关于spinning Jenny纺纱机的发明及影响。在spinning Jenny纺纱机发明之前的纺纱业状况,以及发明的灵感来源,设计及运作机制流程,以及带来的当地经济,生产模式,当地剧名生活状态的改善及影响。

部分参考答案:1.在主人公小的时候,他们村子里的主要的生产方式:farming 2.早期在城镇里从事纺织的人群:wives and daughters 3.发明者是基于谁的技术发明的:Thomas Height 4.机器是用什么做的:wood 判断:一个Not Given

回忆6:
小作文地图题,大作文:Some people think that schools are no longer necessary because people can acquire information by Internet. To what extent do you agree or disagree?
回忆7:
阅读第一篇jenny纺织机,第二个好像给马看牙齿要证,然后各种斗争……
最后一篇是看运动带给人大脑带来的刺激,以及反映的镜像现象
回忆8:
台湾:小作文三个饼图讲咖啡生产消费和盈利 大作文有人认为the news media越来越影响人们生活 并且是negative development 同意不同意
回忆9:
亚太:
News media are more influential on our lives nowadays but some people think it is a negative development. To what extent do you agree or disagree?
回忆10:
亚太听力
Section 1
1. children
2. October
3. college
4. Art trip
5. Drama workshop training
6. Outdoor party
7. Planning meeting
8. A comedy
9. C radio
10. C remember late 60s’
版本二:
S1 话题: Inquiry 一个女的想参加 drama club,了解情况
题型:
Completion+ Multiple Choice
1.Membership limitation:
no children
2.Next membership start:
October
3.Location:
college
Activities in following months:
4.June:
art tip
5.July:
drama workshop
6.August:
outdoor activities
7.September:
planning meeting 题型: (提示:注意拼写 )
单项选择题:
8.Now and then is a
.. A . comedy
9.Now and then is originally written as
.. C . radio
10.
Now and then is good for people .. C . remember late 60s

Section 2 待补充

Section 3
21.habits
22.chart
23.time
24.diet
25.space
26.students
27.closed
28.causes
29.test
30.clear

Section 4
31.information sectors
32. 2hours
33.collection
34.satisfactory
35.digital system
36.preservation
37.marketing
38. 3
39.selection
40.literature
版本二:
S4 教授讲library的一些改进,现代技术对图书馆的影响
31-40填空题:
31首先对图书馆用户进行分类: information sector
32 用户获取信息的方法:电子版send with 2 hours
33. collection of material
34. 及时的反馈satisfaction with the book
35. attachment
36. create a digital storage system of materials
37. long-term preservation of materials
38. 录用的新人员会marketing
39. 目标用户分析的第一步selection
40. 相关study方向的literature
回忆11:
阅读:
passage 1   
James Hargreaves and spinning jenny 珍妮纺纱机
A
James Hargreaves was a weaver living in the village ofStanhill in Lancashire. It is claimed that one day his daughter Jenny,accidentally knocked over over the family spinning wheel. The spindle continuedto revolve and it gave Hargreaves the idea that a whole line of spindles couldbe worked off one wheel.
B  
In 1764 Hargreaves built what became known as theSpinning-Jenny. The machine used eight spindles onto which the thread was spunfrom a corresponding set of rovings. By turning a single wheel, the operatorcould now spin eight threads at once. Later, improvements were made thatenabled the number to be increased to eighty. The thread that the machineproduced was coarse and lacked strength, making it suitable only for thefilling of weft, the threads woven across the warp.
C  
Hargreaves did not apply for a patent for his Spinning Jennyuntil 1770 and therefore others copied his ideas without paying him any money.It  is estimated that by the time James Hargreaves died in 1778, over 20,000Spinning-Jenny machines were being used in Britain.
D   
James Hargreaves was born near Blackburn in about 1720.Hargreavesreceived no formal education and was unable to read or write. Heworked as a carpenter and weaver but had a strong interest in engineering.
E  
By the 1760s Harg reaves was living in the village ofStanhill and was one of the many weavers who owned his own spinning wheel andloom. It is claimed that one day his daughter Jenny accidentally knocked overover the family spinning wheel. The spindle continued to revolve and it gaveHargreaves the idea that a whole line of spindles could be worked off one wheel.
F  
In 1764 Hargreaves built what became known as theSpinning-Jenny. The machine used eight spindles onto which the thread was spunfrom a corresponding set of rovings. By turning a single wheel, the operatorcould now spin eight threads at once. The thread that the machine produced wascoarse and lacked strength,makjng it suitable only for the filling of weft, thethreads woven across the warp.
G  
Originally Hargreaves produced the machine for family use butwhen he began to sell the machines, spinners from Lancashire, fearing thepossibility of cheaper competition, marched on his house and destroyed hisequipment. Hargreaves did not apply for a patent for his Spinning-Jenny until1770 and therefore others copied his ideas without paying him any money.
H   
Hargreaves moved to Nottingham where he erected a smallspinning-mill. Others began to make improvements to the Spinning-Jenny and thenumber of threads was increased from eight to eighty. By the time JamesHargreaves died in 1778, over 20,000 Spinning-Jenny machines were being used inBritain.

passage 2  给马牙齿看病

passage 3    Insidethe Mind of Fan 运动心理健康
A
Atabout the same time that the poet Homer invented the epic hero, the ancientGreeks started a festival in which men competed in a single race, about 200metres long. The winner received a branch of wild olives. The Greeks calledthis celebration the Olympics. Through the ancient sprint remains, today theOlympics are far more than that. Indeed, the Games seem to celebrate the dreamof progress as embodied in the human form. That the Games are intoxicating towatch is beyond question. During the Athens Olympics in 2004, 3.4 billionpeople, half the world, watched them on television. Certainly, being aspectator is a thrilling experience: but why?
B
In1996, three Italian neuroscientists, Giacomo Rizzolatti, Leonardo Fogassi andVittorio Gallese, examined the premotor cortex of monkeys. They discovered thatinside these primate brains there were groups of cells that ‘store vocabularies of motor actions’. Just as there are grammars of movement. Thesenetworks of cells are the bodily ‘sentences’ we use every day, the ones our brain has chosen toretain and refine. Thinkfor exampleabout a golf swing. To those who have only watched theMasters’ Tournament on TV, golfing seemseasy. To the novice, however, the skill of casting a smooth arc with a lop-sidemetal stick is virtually impossible. This is because most novices swing withtheir consciousness, using an area of brain next to the premotor cortex. To theexpert, on the other hand, a perfectly balanced stroke is second nature. Forhim, the motor action has become memorized, and the movements are embedded inthe neurons of his premotor cortex. He hits the ball with the tranquility ofhis perfected autopilot.
C
Theseneurons in the premotor cortex, besides explaining why certain athletes seem topossess almost unbelievable levels of skill, have an even more amazingcharacteristic, one that caused Rizzolatti, Fogassi and Gallese to give themthe lofty title ‘mirror neurons’. They note. The main functional characteristic ofmirror neurons is that they become active both when the monkey performs aparticular action (for example, grasping an object or holding it) and,astonishingly, when it sees another individual performing a similar action.’ Humans have an even more elaborate mirror neuronsystem. These peculiar cells mirror,inside the brain, the outside world: they enable us to internalise the actionsof another. In order to be activated, though, these cells require what thescientists call ‘goal-orientated movements’. If we are staring at a photograph, a fixed image of arunner mid-stride, our mirror neurons are totally silent. They only fire whenthe runner is active: running, moving or sprinting.
D
Whatthese electrophysiological studies indicate is that when we watch a golfer or arunner in action, the mirror neurons in our own premotor cortex light up as ifwe were the ones ccompeting. This phenomenon of neural mirror was firstdiscovered in 1954, when two French physiologists, Gastaut and Berf, found thatthe brains of humans vibrate with two distinct wavelengths, alpha and mu. Themu system is involved in neural mirroring. It is active when your bodies arestill, and disappears whenever we do something active, like playing sport orchanging the TV channel. The suprising fact is that the mu signal is also quietwhen we watch someone else being active, as on TV, these results are the effectof mirror neurons.
E
Rizzolatti,Fogassi and Gallese call the idea of mirror neurons the ‘direct matching hypothesis’.They believe that we only understand the movement of sports stars when we ‘map the visual representation of the observed actiononto our motor representation of the same action’.According to this theory, watching an Olympic athlete ’causesthe motor system of the observer to resonate. The “motorknowledge” of the observer is used tounderstand the observed action. ‘ Butmirror neurons are more than just the neural basis for our attitude to sport.It turns out that watching a great golfer makes us better golfers, and watchinga great sprinter actually makes us run faster. This ability to learn bywatching is a crucial skill. From the acquisition of language as infants tolearning facial expressions, mimesis (copying) is an essential part of beingconscious. The best athletes are those with a premotor cortex capable ofimagining the movements of victory, together with the physical properties tomake those movements real.
F
Buthow many of us regularly watch sports in order to be a better athlete? Rather,we watch sport for the feeling, the human drama. This feeling also derives frommirror neurons. By letting spectators share in the motions of victory, theyalso allow us to share in its feelings. This is because they are directlyconnected to the amygdale, one of the main brain regions involved in emotion.During the Olympics, the mirror neurons of whole nations will be electricallyidentical, their athletes causing spectators to feel, just for a second or two,the same thing. Watching sports brings people together. Most of us will neverrun a mile in under four minutes, or hit a home run. Our consolation comes inwatching, when we gather around the TV, we all feel, just for a moment, what itis to do something perfectly.
答案:
14. F     15. B    16. E         17. C       18. D        19. E      20. C
21. A     22. C    23. YES    24. NO      25. NO     26. NOT GIVEN     27. YES

回忆12:


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


2017年11月25日雅思听力命中四旧,阅读两旧、大小作文、口语等大部分真题原题全面大中,全面开花!(本场无G类考试)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-236108-1-1.htmlhttp://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/forum-36-1.html

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