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发表于 2020-2-28 12:40:21 | 只看该作者 回帖奖励 |倒序浏览 |阅读模式
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2020年3月5日-3月7日澳洲,新西兰,亚太考区雅思A类笔试真题回忆+答案汇总
回忆1:
3月5日 香港
阅读
第一篇:桥梁共振
参考答案

1D 【根据原文-A】题目翻译:1 传统方式是怎样防止桥梁损坏的,在新监控系统的桥梁出现之前?

A桥梁必须在每一个动作的两个点进行测试

B必须密切监测桥梁的微波设备

C桥梁已经被监视通过传感器

D桥梁必须时常由专业人员的肉眼检查

A段第一句话if at all.Every few months,engineers have to clamber over the structure in an attemptto find problems before the bridge shows obvious signs of damage.

2C 【根据原文-D】末句 题目翻译:2如何运用新的微波监控发现桥梁的问题

A通过调换设备之间的距离

B通过控制桥上的交通流

C通过监测两个点之间的距离产生的运输流量

D通过置换几个桥梁的关键部分

3C 【根据原文-C】末句 题目翻译: 3为什么专家认为有问题的设计称为“断裂临界”

A工程师未能应用新开发的建筑材料

B没有足够的资金来修复桥梁

C桥体的支撑部分出现裂缝,可能导致桥梁的失败

D有更大的交通高峰超过了设计师的预期

4B 【根据原文-E】末句 题目翻译:4 开始,一个基础的方法的缺陷并没有被意识到

A直到桥梁的中间出现断裂

B直到损坏沿着上下的凸缘出现

C直到道路上的各个点被用力推进

D直到共振的频率出现无序

5microwave dish 【根据原文-D】第一句话 After setting up the microwave dish on the ground belowthe bridge.

6accelerometers 【根据原文-D】第二行 Los Alamos team installed conventional accelerometersat several points

7steel girders 【根据原文-E】第三行that can occur in steel girders.'' says Farrar.

8flange 【根据原文-E】末句 girder and finally they cut across the flange-the bottom of thegirder's"I" shape.

9C 【根据原文-C】 题目翻译:他们有很多好的改变测量桥压力的方法

10H【根据原文-H】末句 In a decade I would like to see a battery or solar-powered packagemounted under each bridge, 题目翻译:十年对微波器件的积极变化

11G【根据原文-G】 题目翻译: 一个机会他们获得了荣誉合同

12B【根据原文-B】 题目翻译 : 解释机制装置为了新的微波监测工作

13E【根据原文-E】 题目翻译 : 研究人员是如何故意造成破坏的


第二篇:恐龙时代一种会飞的生物
回忆2:
3月7日澳大利亚
大作文  Some people think that news reports in the media have no connections with people's lives. Therefore, it is a waste of time reading newspapers or watching TV news programs. To what extent do you agree or disagree?

范文:
  News media like TV , newspaper and internet have never lost their unique power to attract people and transport them to a different world. However, nowadays, some people argue that, as  news  reports in the media are not connected with people’s daily life, reading newspapers or watching TV news programs  waste a lot of time. Personally , I totally disagree with this voice.
  Admitted, watching television news programs or reading newspapers is a waste of time, because it is the way most people may want to digest their leisure hours. However, if you believe that news reports have no connections with people's lives, you could not be more wrong. The media and the public can mutually influence each other through the advertising businesses, although it is not at all clear how much the media can influence public opinion and how much public opinion can influence the media.
 Evidences show that the news industry connects people's minds by manipulating public opinion. In this Information Age, whoever controls the news media controls the minds of the masses as well as consumers' pockets. In reporting news to the public, there is no denying that television is the most influential medium, followed by the radio, the Internet, and printed circulations, all of which make people stay connected constantly. You may say that it is connection that people are after in most media since such relationship is based on the popular desire to be informed about almost anything that feeds news desire--crimes, wars, drugs, diseases, and natural disasters, side by side with breaking news, world events, sports, businesses, weather and so on. As the mainstream media has become increasingly dependent on advertising revenues for support, you can not fail to realize that news is actually the bait to attract buyers.
 Relatively, much less is addressed regarding how much public opinion can influence the media through ratings. In their daily lives, most people habitually connect themselves with the current rumors, speculations, predictions, and especially bad news. You can see that it is exactly what the news media outlets are doing in order to please the public. For that matter, it is not entirely the media's fault that they are, for the most part, the bringers of bad news since bad news gets higher ratings and sells more advertisements than good news, and therefore produces more commercial connections. However, it is worth mentioning that about 99.99 percent of what happens on earth is not on the news because it is not worthy enough to motivate the audience to "waste" their money and time.
  To sum up, media can deliver news and give the public what is wanted and desired, and the public can give amazing ratings in return. Hence, it is not really a waste of time for people to read newspapers or watch TV news programs.

小作文:柱状图 动态的
回忆3:
澳洲 阅读
第一篇:英国戏剧发展
History of theaters in Britain   
文章大意:主要讲英国剧院的历史发展  
  British theatre has a rich history, from playwrights like William Shakespeare to actors like Laurence Olivier. Today audiences still love to go to the theatre to be entertained and challenged, hearing ideas that may not be expressed anywhere else.
  But it wasn't always like that. Initially theatre was used by the church and royalty to spread their ideas. Gradually it became a vehicle to make everyone's voice heard. So how did this come about?
  During the upheaval of the medieval period the church used religious stories as a way of controlling and distracting the country.
  Theatre essentially grew out of this religious storytelling. Entertaining the public became necessary especially after the trauma of the Black Death. Plays took the form of mystery cycles and miracle plays. Mystery cycles dramatised stories from the Bible, while miracle plays told stories about the lives of saints. Parishes created these plays in order to communicate moral lessons to society. Through these organised performances, the concept of theatre began to take root in Britain.After centuries of religious inspiration for theatre, Henry VIII banned all religious performances to prevent plays from spreading Catholicism. He had set up his own church – the Church of England – and demanded his people follow this faith instead. Post Reformation plays instead aimed to entertain influential people and foreign VIPs. Theatre flourished in the 16th Century and The Theatre, one of the first purpose- built playhouses, opened its doors in London in 1576.
  After the English Civil War, theatres experienced more restrictions. King Charles II saw theatre as a way to establish control over the country. While in exile he saw how Louis XIV managed and controlled French theatre and Charles copied his approach by issuing royal patents to just two theatres. This restricted dramatic opportunity as only these two could perform serious drama and the remaining theatres had to perform comedy or melodrama instead. Patented theatre became known as legitimate theatre and non-patented theatre as illegitimate theatre. But progress was seen when Margaret Hughes became the first woman on stage in 1660.
  Despite the restrictions of the royal patents, theatre began to satirise the government. In response politicians tightened theatrical censorship. Tipped over the edge by plays attempting to ridicule him, Robert Walpole, the first ever Prime Minister, introduced the 1737 Licensing Act. It gave the Lord Chamberlain – a senior government adviser - the power to stop plays being performed. With dramatic creativity effectively stifled, writers turned to novels or illegitimate theatre for creative freedom. Despite an amendment in 1843, the act remained in place and in use until 1968.
  Ten years later, David Garrick’s theatrical innovations marked the point when actors, writers and other theatre makers began to take control. David Garrick was an actor and manager who introduced sweeping changes. Actors were subjected to new and intensive rehearsal techniques and audiences were discouraged from sitting on the stage, as the rich used to do. He was also a champion of Shakespeare and his debut performance on the London stage as Richard III made him an overnight star. Garrick was responsible for radical stylistic advances in acting. He brought more emotion and realism to the exaggerated expressions of the time.
  In the Victorian era theatre's popularity meant the patent system no longer worked. So it was ended in 1843 allowing more opportunities in drama. TW Robertson was one playwright to benefit from this. He presented the audience with realistic sets, everyday stories and natural dialogue. His representations of domestic realism became known as ‘cup and saucer dramas’: one of his greatest successes was Caste, a play about rank and social classes. The end of the patent system allowed theatre to develop artistically. It set the stage for playwrights such as Oscar Wilde who like Robertson tended to focus on the lives of the privileged.
  Interest in the arts grew in post-war Britain and audiences were keen to see stories that they identified with. ‘Kitchen sink’ dramas provided them. Almost a century on from Robertson’s naturalist plays, this new style of play, showed working class life in a level of detail that was still unusual. Men Should Weep by Ena Lamont Stewart premiered in 1947 and told a bleak tale of poverty in 1930s Glasgow. Also in the 1950s writers like John Osborne and Shelagh Delaney were acclaimed for the social realism of their work. The success of Lamont Stewart and Delaney helped pave the way for other women to make their voices heard on the stage.
  During the 20th Century, more changes happened off stage when the role of the director became the key creative force. The notion of a directors’ theatre began in Europe and spread to Britain. Sir Peter Hall is one of Britain’s most celebrated directors. In 1955 he directed the first English language production of Samuel Beckett's Waiting for Godot, which cemented his reputation. His vision also created the blueprint for the Royal Shakespeare Company, a defining moment in British theatre history. Despite his creative innovations he was still restricted by the censorship laws.
  By the swinging 60s, not only was the power of theatre in the hands of theatre makers, but it had begun to challenge authority.
  Until it ended in 1968 theatres avoided the constraints of government censorship by trading as private clubs. The freedom this gave them allowed much more challenging and radical subject matter to be tackled. Plays such as Sartre’s Huis Clos – which was set in Hell and featured a homosexual character – were staged. One of the leading theatres of this movement was Edinburgh’s Traverse theatre.
  As the 21st Century dawned, theatre continued to evolve as a vehicle for challenging the establishment and pushing boundaries. Black Watch, which premiered at the 2006 Edinburgh Festival Fringe, told the story of the Iraq War through the eyes of soldiers from the Black Watch regiment. The play did exactly what the government feared in 1737 and challenged those in power by holding British politicians accountable for the suffering of the soldiers. It was theatre at its controversial and arresting best – a far cry from the restrictive and controlling theatre of the past.
  While playwrights have more freedom than ever before, some issues around race and religion have proved problematic for theatres to navigate. Religious outrage forced the closure of Behzti at the Birmingham Repertory Theatre in 2004. The play sparked riots due to the staging of a rape and murder in a Sikh temple. And in 2015 a National Youth Theatre play called Homegrown, about Islamic radicalisation in a London school, was cancelled days before opening. But despite the difficulties, British theatre continues to reflect modern life, telling stories and challenging taboos.
 
参考答案:  
1. wood   2. roof   3. playhouses   4. fire   5. concrete   6. bioscope   
7. TRUE   8. FALSE   9. FALSE   10. FALSE   11. TRUE   
12. NOT GIVEN   13. TRUE  
回忆4:
听力
第一篇的定一个活动室
第二篇貌似两个老师交流实验活动 后半部分是一个容器图  最后是一个刺激活动 类似蹦极那种 叫land 啥啥的 填空题
回忆5:
回忆6:
回忆7:
回忆8:
回忆9:
回忆10:


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