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: 7480|回复: 0

[国内外] 2023年7月15日中国大陆雅思A类G类机考真题回忆+答案汇总(...

[复制链接]

8735

主题

1万

帖子

4万

积分

管理员

Rank: 9Rank: 9Rank: 9

积分
44570
发表于 2023-7-13 10:31:28 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式
2023年7月15日中国大陆雅思A类G类机考真题回忆+答案汇总(听说读写答案+机经整理汇总)请进入http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/thread-260880-1-1.html每一场北美、欧洲、澳洲、亚太、非洲、中东雅思考区考试都期待更多的考生来回忆:A类,G类,UKVI,听说读写,最好能回忆英文题目。只有大家积极回忆,才能分享到更全面的考试回忆信息,请回复回忆在本论坛本文下面,或请加微信504918228或者ieltstofel3,QQ504918228积极回忆吧,谢谢。

雅思全球各考区口语真题蹲点回忆汇总2023年7月10日、11日、12日、13日、14日、15日、16日请进入http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/thread-260882-1-1.html或请加微信504918228, ieltstofel3,ieltstoefl2023,或QQ504918228,QQ26346059,也可以关注公共微信号ieltstoefl6688,ieltstofel或ieltsglobal
               
可以搜公众号:雅思托福英语全球网,或者公众号:ieltstoefl6688
                        
互动咨询微信:504918228 或 ieltstofel3或ieltstoefl2023或 公共微信:ieltstofel

雅思公共微信平台1,2: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:ieltstofel或Englishielts----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2023年7月8月9月10月11月12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2023年7月8月9月10月11月12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2023年7月8月9月10月11月12月A类G类真题预测答案范文机经汇总请进入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2023年7月8月9月10月11月12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2023年6月7月8月9月10月11月12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

雅思机考2023年7月8月9月10月11月12月广州、北京、上海、重庆、深圳、沈阳、济南、郑州、南京、杭州、武汉、西安、成都、长沙雅思机考ag类精准预测答案范文机经及全面复指导汇总请进入http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/thread-241830-1-1.html

【雅思机考移民G类答案】2023年7月8月9月10月11月12月雅思机考移民类G类考试真题预测答案范文机经总贴(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-248489-1-1.html

【北美雅思移民
G类机考答案】2023年7月8月9月10月11月12月加拿大,美国等北美雅思移民G类机考真题预测答案范文机经总贴请进入http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/thread-248505-1-1.html

澳洲新西兰雅思机考2023年7月8月9月10月11月12月悉尼,奥克兰,墨尔本等雅思机考a类g类精准预测答案范文机经及全面复指导汇总请进入http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/thread-248308-1-1.html

【亚太雅思机考】2023年7月8月9月10月11月12月香港雅思、台湾雅思、澳门雅思、越南雅思、泰国雅思、韩国雅思、日本雅思、新加坡雅思、迪拜雅思、马来西亚雅思、菲律宾雅思等亚洲雅思机考版A类G类、UKVI雅思真题听力、口语、阅读、写作预测答案范文机经及全面复指导汇总请进入http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/thread-248309-1-1.html

北美雅思机考答案2023年7月8月9月10月11月12月加拿大,多伦多等北美雅思机考a类g类精准预测答案范文机经及全面复指导汇总请进入http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/thread-243363-1-1.html

【欧洲雅思机考】2023年7月8月9月10月11月12月意大利罗马等城市雅思、英国雅思、西班牙雅思、荷兰雅思、爱尔兰雅思、德国雅思、波兰雅思、法国雅思、希腊雅思、瑞典雅思、俄罗斯雅思、葡萄牙雅思、丹麦雅思、芬兰雅思、挪威雅思、瑞士雅思等欧洲国家AG类、UKVI听力、口语、阅读、写作真题预测答案范文机经精准版请进入http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/thread-248478-1-1.html  

非洲雅思A类G类、雅思UKVI真题预测答案(机考+纸质)2023年7月8月9月10月11月12月南非雅思、尼日利亚、毛里求斯雅思、坦桑尼亚雅思、安哥拉雅思、马达加斯加雅思、刚果雅思、加纳雅思、赞比亚雅思、苏丹雅思、埃及雅思、津巴布韦雅思、埃塞俄比亚雅思、肯尼亚雅思等非洲雅思考区A类G类、UKVI真题预测听力、口语、阅读、写作答案范文机经(机考+纸质)Ielts in Africa【剑桥雅思考官雅思真题预测IRP快速提高1-3分,一次性攻破雅思VIP资料】每场必中大部分考试内容,剑桥雅思考官发布Ielts Africa请进入http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/thread-254327-1-1.html

中东雅思考区A类G类、雅思UKVI真题预测答案范文机经2023年7月8月9月10月11月12月迪拜、巴林、阿联酋、伊朗、埃及、沙特阿拉伯、土耳其、伊朗科威特伊拉克阿曼卡塔尔以色列巴勒斯坦等中东国家地区(机考+纸质)雅思真题预测机经答案雅思真题预测A类G类UKVI答案范文机经冲刺版【快速提高1-3分,IRP小范围精准版,超高命中率】Ielts in Middle East----紧跟考情每周更新请进入http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/thread-254326-1-1.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
2023年7月8月9月10月11月12月A类G类真题预测答案范文机经汇总请进入http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/thread-232749-1-1.html



2023年7月15日中国大陆雅思A类G类机考真题回忆+答案汇总(听说读写答案+机经整理汇总)
回忆1:
Task 1
Line Chart
1971-2007年间,UK, USA, Canada和France四国国民对医保体系的满意程度百分比变化。

Task 2
重复20190720旧题
Many people aim at trying to keep a balance in work and the part of time. What the problems in trying it? How to overcome it?
回忆2:
雅思阅读
Passage 1
主题:新西兰纪录片制作人
题型:判断+填空
(1-6 判断)
1. False
2. Not Given
3. Not Given
4. False
5. False
6. Not Given
7. True
(8-13 填空)
8. university
9. rat
10. diet
11. archeologist
12. funding
13. database

Passage 2
主题:猛犸象
题型:填空+单选
(14-20 填空)
14. hunting
15. overkill model
16. disease / hyperdisease
17. empirical evidence
18. climatic instability
19. geographical ranges
20. Younger Dryas event
(21-26 单选)
21. A
22. B
23. A
24. B
25. B
26. C

Passage 3
主题:记忆解码
题型:匹配+填空+多选
(27-31 匹配)
27. E
28. A
29. C
30. G
31. F
(32-36 填空)
32. specific person
33. three cards
34. mental walk
35. loci method
36. education
(37-40 多选)
37. A
38. D
39. B
40. E
回忆3:
雅思听力

Section 1
主题:澳洲租房搬家
题型:填空
1. contact work phone
2. come from Simerton West
3. a child almost 3 years’ old
4. type of accommodation: flat
5. location: in the north
6. extra request: close to a park
7. need a pool
8. maximum rent: 650
9. date to move in: 15th December
10. need to book a hotel

Section 2
主题:煤炭博物馆
题型:选择+匹配
(11-15 填空)
11. the museum was closed down in the year of 1988
12. mine museum includes the social and the technological aspect
13. tourists are recommended to take a tour underground for 1 hour by the ex-miner
14. if you do not come, please contact the reception
15. for a relax, please go to restroom area next to the staff office
(16-17 多选)
16-17. What souvenirs are sold beside the postcards?
B. clothes
E. drinks

(18-20 地图题)
B. lecture theater
A. bookstore
C. lift entrance


Section 3
主题:
题型:
(to be followed up....)

Section 4
主题:服装的历史
题型:填空
31. People were more interested in the gold
32. In good condition because there was no water
33. and because it was frozen
34. Egypt has better climate
35. It was kipt in a university
36. Research done in a cave dating back to 700 years ago
37. Trading pottery and production of agriculture
38. man are doing something without iron
39. women produced cloth at home
40. when silk reached the countries from China
回忆4:
阅读
Passage1:人物传记
难易度:一般
题型:判断+填空
1-7 判断
1.False
2.Not Given
3.Not Given
4.False
5.False
6.Not Given
7.True
8-13 填空
8.university
9.rat
10.diet
11.archaeologist
12.funding
13.database

Passage 2:猛犸象
难易度:一般
题型:填空+选择
14-20 填空
14.hunting
15.overkill model
16.disease/hyperdisease
17.empirical evidence
18.climatic instability
19.geographical ranges
20.Younger Dryas event
21-26 选择
21.A
22.B
23.A
24.B
25.B
26.C

Passage 3:解密记忆
难易度:一般
题型:匹配+填空+选择
27-31 匹配
27.E
28.A
29.C
30.G
31.F
32-36 填空
32.specific person
33.three cards/3 cards
34.mental walk
35.loci method
36.education
37-40 选择
37.A
38.D
39.B
40.E
回忆5:
听力
P1:一个女生租房子
难易度: 简单
题型:填空
1-10 填空
1.work number
2.Somerton
3.3
4.flat
5.North
6.park
7.pool
8.650
9.15 December
10.hotel

P2:对煤炭矿场博物馆的介绍
难易度:一般
题型:填空+选择
11-15 填空
11.1988
12.social
13.underground
14.reception
15.notice board
16-20 选择
16.B clothes
17.E drinks
18.B/G lecture theater
19.A lift entrance
20.C bookstore

P3:关于包装的讨论
难易度:待回忆
题型:选择+匹配
待回忆

P4:服装的历史
难易度:较难
题型:填空
31-40 填空
31.gold
32.water
33.frozen
34.climate
35.university
36.cave
37.agriculture
38.iron
39.women
40.silk
回忆6:
阅读
第一篇:新西兰纪录片制作人(RadiocarbonDating  The profile Of Nancy Athfield)
原文:
RadiocarbonDating
TheProfile of Nancy Athfield
A
Have youever picked up a small stone off the ground and wondered how old it was?Chances are that stone has been around many more years than your own lifetime.Many scientists share this curiosity about the age of inanimate objects likerocks, fossils and precious stones. Knowing how old an object is can providevaluable information about our prehistoric past. In most societ-ies, humanbeings have kept track of history through writing. However, scientists arestill curious about the world before writing, or even the world before humans.Studying the age of objects is our best way to piece together histories of ourpre-historic past. One such method of finding the age of an object is calledradiocarbon dating. This method can find the age of any object based on thekind of particles and atoms that are found inside of the object. Depending onwhat ele-ments the object is composed of, radiocarbon can be a reliable way tofind an object’s age. One famous specialist in this method is the researcherNancy Athfield. Athfield studied the ancient remains found in the country ofCambodia. Many prehistoric remains were discovered by the local people ofCambodia. These objects were thought to belong to some of the original groupsof humans that first came to the country of Cambodia. The remains had neverbeen scientifically studied, so Nancy was greatly intrigued by the opportunityto use modern methods to discover the true age of these ancient objects.
B
Athfieldhad this unique opportunity because her team, comprised of scientists andfilmmakers, were in Cambodia working on a documentary. The team was trying todiscover evidence to prove a controversial claim in history: that Cambodia wasthe resting place for the famous royal family of Angkor. At that time, writtenrecords and historic accounts conflicted on the true resting place. Many peopleacross the world disagreed over where the final resting place was. For thefirst time, Athfield and her team had a chance to use radiocarbon dating tofind new evidence. They had a chance to solve the historic mystery that manyhad been arguing over for years.
C
Athfieldand her team conducted radiocarbon dating of many of the ancient objects foundin the historic site of Angkor Wat. Nancy found the history of Angkor went backto as early as 1620. According to historic records, the remains of the Angkorroyal family were much younger than that, so this evidence cast a lot of doubtas to the status of the ancient remains. The research ultimately raised morequestions. If the remains were not of the royal family, then whose remains werebeing kept in the ancient site? Athfield’s team left Cambodia with morequestions unan-swered. Since Athfield’s team studied the remains, new remainshave been unearthed at the ancient site of Angkor Wat, so it is possible thatthese new remains could be the true remains of the royal family. Nancy wishedto come back to continue her research one day.
D
In herearly years, the career of Athfield was very unconventional. She didn’t starther career as a scientist. At the beginning, she would take any kind of job topay her bills. Most of them were low-paying jobs or brief community serviceopportunities. She worked often but didn’t know what path she would ultimatelytake. But eventually, her friend suggested that Athfield invest in getting adegree. The friend recommended that Athfield attend a nearby university. Thoughdoubtful of her own qualifications, she applied and was eventually accepted bythe school. It was there that she met Willard Libby, the inventor ofradiocarbon dating. She took his class and soon had the opportunity to completehands-on research. She soon realised that science was her passion. Aftergraduation, she quickly found a job in a research institution.
E
Aftercollege, Athfield’s career in science blossomed. She eventually married, andher husband landed a job at the prestigious organisation GNN. Athfield joinedher husband in the same organisation, and she became a lab manager in theinstitution. She earned her PhD in scientific research, and completed herstudies on a kind of rat in New Zealand. There, she created original researchand found many flaws in the methods being used in New Zealand laboratories. Herresearch showed that the subject’s diet led to the fault in the earlier research.She was seen as an expert by her peers in New Zealand, and her opinion andexpertise were widely respected. She had come a long way from her old days ofworking odd jobs. It seemed that Athfield’s career was finally taking off.
F
ButAthfield’s interest in scientific laboratories wasn’t her only interest. Shedidn’t settle down in New Zealand. Instead, she expanded her areas ofexpertise. Athfield eventually joined the field of Anthropology, the study ofhuman societies, and became a well-qualified archaeologist. It was during herblossoming career as an archaeologist that Athfield became involved with thefamous Cambodia project. Even as the filmmakers ran out of funding and leftCambodia, Ath-field continued to stay and continue her research.
G
In 2003,the film was finished in uncertain conclusions, but Nancy continued herresearch on the ancient ruins of Angkor Wat. This research was not always easy.Her research was often delayed by lack of funding, and government paperwork.Despite her struggles, she committed to finishing her research. Finally, shemade a breakthrough. Using radiocarbon dating, Athfield completed a databasefor the materials found in Cambodia. As a newcomer to Cambodia, she lacked acomplete knowledge of Cambodian geology, which made this feat even moredifficult. Through steady determination and ingenuity, Athfield finallycompleted the database. Though many did not believe she could finish, herresearch now remains an influential and tremendous contribution to geologicalsciences in Cambodia. In the future, radiocarbon dating continues to be avaluable research skill. Athfield will be remembered as one of the first tobring this scien-tific method to the study of the ancient ruins of Angkor Wat.
Questions1 – 7
Do thefollowing statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage 1?
In boxes1-7 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE ifthe statement agrees with the information
FALSE ifthe statement contradicts with the information
NOTGIVEN if there is no information on this
1.NancyAthfield first discovered the ancient remains in Cambodia.
TRUEFALSENOTGIVEN
2.Theremains found in the Cambodia was in good condition.
3.Nancytook some time off from her regular work to do research in Cambodia.
4.TheCambodia government asked Nancy to radiocarbon the remains.
5.Thefilmmakers aimed to find out how the Angkor was rebuilt.
6.Nancyinitially doubted whether the royal family was hidden in Cambodia.
7.Nancydisproved the possibility that the remains belonged to the Angkor royal family.
Questions8 – 13
Completethe flow-chart below.
Choose ONEWORD ONLY from the passage for each answer.
Writeyour answers in boxes 8-13 on your answer sheet.
QQ图片20230715174534.png
QQ图片20230715174554.png

第二篇:Mammoth Kill 猛犸象灭绝
原文:
  Mammoth is anyspecies of the extinct genus Mammuthus, proboscideans commonly equipped withlong, curved tusks and in northern species, a covering of long hair. They livedfrom the Ptiocene epoch from around 5 million years ago, into the Hotocene atabout 4,500 years ago, and were members of the family Elephantidae, whichcontains, along with mammoths, the two genera of modern elephants and theirancestors.
  A
Like their modern relatives, mammoths were quite large. The largest knownspecies reached heights in the region of 4m at the shoulder and weights up to 8tonnes, while exceptionally large males may have exceeded 12 tonnes. However,most species of mammoth were only about as large as a modern Asian elephant.Both sexes bore tusks. A first, small set appeared at about the age of sixmonths and these were replaced at about 18 months by the permanent set. Growthof the permanent set was at a rate of about l t0 6 inches per year. Based onstudies of their close relatives, the modem elephants, mammoths probably had agestation period of 22 months, resulting in a single calf being born. Theirsocial structure was probably the same as that of African and Asian elephants,with females living in herds headed by a matriarch, whilst hulls lived solitarylives or formed loose groups after sexual maturity.
  B
MEXICO CITY-Although its hard toimagine in this age of urban sprawl and automobiles, North America oncebelonged to mammoths, camels, ground sloths as large as cows, bear-size beaversand other formidable beasts. Some 11,000 years ago, however, these large bodiedmammals and others-about 70 species in all-disappeared. Their demise coincidedroughly with the arrival of humans in the New World and dramatic climaticchange-factors that have inspired several theories about the die-off. Yetdespite decades of scientific investigation, the exact cause remains a mystery.Now new findings offer support to one of these controversial hypotheses: thathuman hunting drove this megafaunal menagerie ( 巨型动物兽群)to extinction. The overkill model emerged in the1960s, when it was put forth by Paul S. Martin of the University of Arizona.Since then, critics have charged that no evidence exists to support the ideathat the first Americans hunted to the extent necessary to cause theseextinctions. But at the annual meeting of the Society of VertebratePaleontology in Mexico City last October, paleoecologist John Alroy of theUniversity of California at Santa Barbara argued that, in fact, hunting-drivenextinction is not only plausible, it was unavoidable. He has determined, usinga computer simulation that even a very modest amount of hunting would havewiped these animals out.
  C
Assuming an initial human population of 100 people that grew no more than 2percent annually, Alroy determined that if each band of, say, 50 people killed15 to 20 large mammals a year, humans could have eliminated the animalpopulations within 1,000 years. Large mammals in particular would have beenvulnerable to the pressure because they have longer gestation periods than smallermammals and their young require extended care.
  D
Not everyone agrees with Alroys assessment. For one, the results depend in part on population-sizeestimates for the extinct animals-figures that are not necessarily reliable.But a more specific criticism comes from mammalogist Ross D. E. MacPhee of theAmerican Museum of Natural History in New York City, who points out that therelevant archaeological record contains barely a dozen examples of stone pointsembedded in mammoth bones (and none, it should be noted, are known from othermegafaunal remains)-hardly what one might expect if hunting drove these animalsto extinction. Furthermore, some of these species had huge ranges the giantJeffersons ground sloth,for example, lived as far north as the Yukon and as far south as Mexico whichwould have made slaughtering them in numbers sufficient to cause theirextinction rather implausible, he says.
  E
MacPhee agrees that humans most likely brought about these extinctions (aswell as others around the world that coincided with human arrival), but notdirectly. Rather he suggests that people may have introduced hyperlethaldisease, perhaps through their dogs or hitchhiking vermin, which then spreadwildly among the immunologically naive species of the New World. As in theoverkill model, populations of large mammals would have a harder timerecovering. Repeated outbreaks of a hyperdisease could thus quickly drive themto the point of no return. So far MacPhee does not have empirical evidence forthe hyperdisease hypothesis, and it wont be easy to come by: hyperlethal disease would kill far too quickly toleave its signature on the bones themselves. But he hopes that analyses oftissue and DNA from the last mammoths to perish will eventually revealmurderous microbes.
  F
The third explanation for what brought on this North American extinctiondoes not involve human beings. Instead, its proponents blame the loss on theweather. The Pleistocene epoch witnessed considerable climatic instability,explains paleontologist Russell W. Graham of the Denver Museum of Nature andScience. As a result, certain habitats disappeared, and species that had onceformed communities split apart. For some animals, this change broughtopportunity. For much of the megafauna, however, the increasingly homogeneousenvironment left them with shrinking geographical ranges-a death sentence forlarge animals, which need large ranges. Although these creatures managed tomaintain viable populations through most of the Pleistocene, the final majorfluctuation-the so-called Younger Dryas event pushed them over the edge, Grahamsays. For his part, Alroy is convinced that human hunters demolished the titansof the Ice Age. The overkill model explains everything the disease and climatescenarios explain, he asserts, and makes accurate predictions about whichspecies would eventually go extinct. Personally, Im a vegetarian, he remarks, and I find all of this kindof gross-but believable.

14-20 Summary completion
The reason why had big size mammals become extinct 11,000years ago is under hot debate. First explanation is that 14.hunting ofhumanmade it happen. This so called 15.overkill model began from1960s suggested by an expert, who however received criticismoflack of further information. Another assumption promoted by MacPhee isthat deadly 16.disease/hyperdisease fromhuman causes their demises. However his hypothesis required more17.empirical evidence to testify its validity.Graham proposed athird hypothesis that 18.climaticinstability in Pleistoceneepoch drove some species disappear, reduced 19.geographicalranges posed a dangerous signal to these giants, and 20.Younger Dryas event finally wiped themout.

21-26 Matching features
A John Alroy
B Ross D. E. MacPhee
C Russell W. Graham
21 Human hunting well explained which species would finally
disappear. A
22 Further grounded proof needed to explain human’s indirect
impact on mammals. B
23 Over hunting situation has caused die-out of largemammals. A
24 Illness rather than hunting caused extensive extinction. B
25 Doubt raised through the study of several fossil records. B
26Climate shift is the main reason of extinction. C


第三篇:解密记忆 Memory Decoding
原文:
QQ图片20230715175312.png
QQ图片20230715175346.png
QQ图片20230715175411.png
QQ图片20230715175453.png
QQ图片20230715175514.png

回忆7:
听力
QQ图片20230715171633.png

QQ图片20230715171648.png

QQ图片20230715171703.png
回忆8:
回忆9:
回忆10



2023年7月8日雅思考试报告和总体反馈:重磅!2023年7月8日雅思考试IRP在最重点精准命中至少三部分听力原文原题原答案精准命中大小作文原题答案范文!精准命中口语99%-100%真题原题答案!精准命中阅读原文原题原答案对于大部分考生来说,本次考试总体上旧题较多,总体难度较大,但是对于购买了我们IRP资料的会员考生来说,这是简单轻松的一场考试,直接神操作写上原题答案。202378日雅思听说读写全面大中,全面开花!(全球不同考区时差、A类、G类UKVI考生回忆数据比较少、收集不够齐全,待补充,还在不断更新中…)祝贺IRP会员将出现不少雅思高分人才!总体反馈请(复制链接)进入

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纸质考卷,机考考区每个月平均出24-30份考卷。(尤其是2019-2023年以来,全世界各考区和众多城市开始增加雅思机考的选择,机考的城市几乎每天都有雅思考试,一个月考官要组合20几份雅思机考卷子,机考跟传统纸质考试的区别只是纸质和电脑上考试的区别,考试内容、评分标准、难度等级、考试题型、考试安全设置等方面均与现行的纸笔模式完全一致。)雅思考试如此频繁,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几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90%-99%以上旧题。每一份雅思考试试题其实是大部分旧题原题真题+个别新题目的重新组合,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,IRP资料因此而诞生!紧跟考情雅思真题预测答案!IRP听说读写全套!场场命中90%-100%!精准小范围!快速提升雅思1-4分!具体详细内容请进入http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/thread-32-1-1.html
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, 2024-10-4 03:45 , Processed in 0.127999 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