今天雅思无忧小编为大家带来了有没有剑桥雅思1和2的解析 请问2023年2月23日雅思阅读考试真题及答案 剑桥雅思17和12难度对比,希望能帮助到大家,一起来看看吧!
本文目录一览:
有没有剑桥雅思1和2的解析
洛阳大华雅思为您解答:《剑桥12》新鲜出炉,
相信不少同学已经搓着小手坐等口语新题。
今天咱们先对4套题目进行整体归纳,分析出题动向:
Part1
1
Health
健康饮食及资讯、病后康复、生活方式
2
Songs and singing
唱歌的爱好、爱听的歌、音乐文化
3
Clothes
购物场所及频率、挑选方式、喜好变化
4
Art
绘画爱好、艺术展览、喜爱的画作
Part1分析
我们不难发现Part1的题目着眼于“日常习惯”和“艺术爱好”两大部分, 其中health与clothes着重于探讨同学们日常的饮食习惯、购物方式; 而song and singing与art则着重于交流大家的艺术爱好(特长)。
在此, Sunny希望大家能够对领悟到《剑桥12》给大家的提示: 其实日常话题中,foods、mirror、reading、cooking等等话题都属于日常习惯这一大类, 都要在考前做好练习; 而dance、color、history、swimming等等话题则与艺术爱好、历史文化互为关联, 必须重视!
Part2
Part3
1
Describe an occasion when you had to wait a long time for someone or something to arrive. 漫长的等待
·Arriving early
·Being Patient
2
Describe a film/movie actor from your country who is very popular. 著名影星
·Watching movies
·Theatre
3
Describe an interesting discussion you had about how you spend your money. 谈论花钱
·Money and young people
·Money and society
4
Describe a time when you visited a friend or family member at their workplace. 工作场所探访亲友
·Different kinds of workplaces
·The importance of work
Part2&3分析
这4套题从题型比例上来说,与以往有巨大的区别! 除了一道关于 “著名影星”的话题属于人物类,其余三道题——“漫长的等待”、“谈论花钱”、“探访亲友”——均属于事件类!因此2021年下半年,同学们的练习重心必须要着重于素材积累, 对于事件的描述也必须加深功力!其实《剑桥12》的这4道题,对于保持刷题的同学而言并非完全陌生:
“等待”这个话题实际上已作为考前必练题,也是每月预测题中经常上榜的话题,目前看来还会继续作为事件类的重点题型, 需要大家准备好素材,多从日常中需要等待的经历中挖掘;
“著名影星”其实可以跟之前练习过的“喜爱的电影”和“钦佩的名人”关联在一起,素材上结合目前闻名的影视明星,需要注重对人物品质和特点进行深入刻画。
关于“讨论”和“花钱”,考场上已经出现过的真题包括“有趣的谈话”、“花钱较多的活动”和“省钱的好方法”,在素材方面,这三个话题的语料其实拆解细节,再灵活运用于这道题目上;
而在“工作场所”进行“亲友探访”的话题上,我们能够感受到一丝地点类话题的气息,但它实际上更多是希望我们探讨人物与其工作的关系。同学们是否能够想起“Describe a person who can do well in work”以及“Describe a person whose job is important to the society”这两道题呢?其实如果把我们善于描述的努力工作的人物形象抽离出来,结合具体的工作环境展开描述,这个话题的思路其实可以很简单。
请问2023年2月23日雅思阅读考试真题及答案
您好,我是专注留学考试规划和留学咨询的小钟老师。选择留学是人生重要的决策之一,而作为您的指导,我非常高兴能为您提供最准确的留学解答和规划。无论您的问题是关于考试准备、专业选择、申请流程还是学校信息,我都在这里为您解答。更多留学资讯和学校招生介绍,欢迎随时访问。
前两天最新一期的雅思考试圆满结束了,真题及答案也已经新鲜出炉,想必大家都非常感兴趣吧。来和小钟老师看一看2023年2月23日雅思阅读考试真题及答案。
Passage 1
文章题材:说明文(人文历史)
文章题目:丝绸之路
文章难度:★★
文章内容:暂无
题型及数量:7填空题+6判断题
题目及答案:
1、robe
2、taxes
3、gold
4、待补充
5、foreign
6、thread
7、待补充
8、T
9、NG
10、F
11、NG
12、T
13、F
可参考真题:C11T3P1:The Story of Silk
Passage 2
文章题材:说明文(自然动植物)
文章题目:猛犸象
文章难度:★★★★
文章内容:文章介绍了猛犸象及其灭绝的原因猜想。
题型及数量:7填空+6匹配
题目及答案:
14. hunting
15. overkill model
16. disease/hyperdisease
17. empirical evidence
18. climatic instability
19. geographical
20. younger Dryas event
21. A
22. B
23. A
24. B
25. B
26. C
可参考真题:C9T1P3:The History of the Tortoise
考试原文:
Mammoth Kill
Mammoth is any species of the extinct genus Mammuthus, proboscideans commonly equipped with long, curved tusks and in northern species, a covering of long hair. They lived from the Ptiocene epoch from around 5 million years ago, into the Hotocene at about 4,500 years ago, and were members of the family Elephantidae, which contains, along with mammoths, the two genera of modern elephants and their ancestors.
A Like their modern relatives, mammoths were quite large. The largest known species reached heights in the region of 4m at the shoulder and weights up t0 8 tonnes, 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, *all set appeared at about the age of six months and these were replaced at about 18 months by the permanent set. Growth of the permanent set was at a rate of about l t0 6 inches per year. Based on studies of their close relatives, the modem elephants, mammoths probably had a gestation period of 22 months, resulting in a single calf being born. Their social structure was probably the same as that of African and Asian elephants, with females living in herds headed by a matriarch, whilst hulls lived solitary lives or formed loose groups after sexual maturity.
B MEXICO CITY-Although it’s hard to imagine in this age of urban sprawl and automobiles, North America once belonged to mammoths, camels, ground sloths as large as cows, bear-size beavers and other formidable beasts. Some 11,000 years ago, however, these large bodied mammals and others-about 70 species in all-disappeared. Their demise coincided roughly with the arrival of humans in the New World and dramatic climatic change-factors that have inspired several theories about the die-off. Yet despite decades of scientific investigation, the exact cause remains a mystery. Now new findings offer support to one of these controversial hypotheses: that human hunting drove this megafaunal menagerie ( 巨型动物兽群)to extinction. The overkill model emerged in the 1960s, 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 idea that the first Americans hunted to the extent necessary to cause these extinctions. But at the annual meeting of the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology in Mexico City last October, paleoecologist John Alroy of the University of California at Santa Barbara argued that, in fact, hunting-driven extinction is not only plausible, it was unavoidable. He has determined, using a computer simulation that even a very modest amount of hunting would have wiped these animals out.
C Assuming an initial human population of 100 people that grew no more than 2 percent annually, Alroy determined that if each band of, say, 50 people killed 15 to 20 large mammals a year, humans could have eliminated the animal populations within 1,000 years. Large mammals in particular would have been vulnerable to the pressure because they have longer gestation periods than *aller mammals and their young require extended care.
D Not everyone agrees with Alroy’s asses*ent. For one, the results depend in part on population-size estimates for the extinct animals-figures that are not necessarily reliable. But a more specific critici* comes from mammalogist Ross D. E. MacPhee of the American Museum of Natural History in New York City, who points out that the relevant archaeological record contains barely a dozen examples of stone points embedded in mammoth bones (and none, it should be noted, are known from other megafaunal remains)-hardly what one might expect if hunting drove these animals to extinction. Furthermore, some of these species had huge rangesthe giant Jefferson’s ground sloth, for example, lived as far north as the Yukon and as far south as Mexicowhich would have made slaughtering them in numbers sufficient to cause their extinction rather implausible, he says.
E MacPhee agrees that humans most likely brought about these extinctions (as well as others around the world that coincided with human arrival), but not directly. Rather he suggests that people may have introduced hyperlethal disease, perhaps through their dogs or hitchhiking vermin, which then spread wildly among the immunologically naive species of the New World. As in the overkill model, populations of large mammals would have a harder time recovering. Repeated outbreaks of a hyperdisease could thus quickly drive them to the point of no return. So far MacPhee does not have empirical evidence for the hyperdisease hypothesis, and it won’t be easy to come by: hyperlethal disease would kill far too quickly to leave its signature on the bones themselves. But he hopes that *yses of tissue and DNA from the last mammoths to perish will eventually reveal murderous microbes.
F The third explanation for what brought on this North American extinction does not involve human beings. Instead, its proponents blame the loss on the weather. The Pleistocene epoch witnessed considerable climatic instability, explains paleontologist Russell W. Graham of the Denver Museum of Nature and Science. As a result, certain habitats disappeared, and species that had once formed communities split apart. For some animals, this change brought opportunity. For much of the megafauna, however, the increasingly homogeneous environment left them with shrinking geographical ranges-a death sentence for large animals, which need large ranges. Although these creatures managed to maintain viable populations through most of the Pleistocene, the final major fluctuation-the so-called Younger Dryas eventpushed them over the edge, Graham says. For his part, Alroy is convinced that human hunters demolished the titans of the Ice Age. The overkill model explains everything the disease and climate scenarios explain, he asserts, and makes accurate predictions about which species would eventually go extinct. “Personally, I’m a vegetarian,” he remarks, “and I find all of this kind of gross-but believable.”
Passage 3
文章题材:说明文(人文研究)
文章题目:大师是怎样炼成的
文章难度:★★★
文章内容:待补充
题型及数量:4选择+6判断+4填空
题目及答案:
27、C
28、C
29、A
30、A
31、NG
32、T
33、NG
34、NG
35、F
36、待补充
37、tuition
38、eight
39、four
40、inherited
可参考真题:C10T2P2:Gifted Children and Learning
以上信息希望能帮助您在留学申请的道路上少走弯路。如果您还有更多问题或需要深入探讨,不要犹豫,您可以在我们的留学官方网站上找到更丰富的考试资讯、留学指导和*专家咨询服务。我们的团队始终站在您的角度,为您的留学梦想全力以赴。祝您申请顺利!
剑桥雅思17和12难度对比
剑桥雅思17更难。
干扰信息比较多,对学生的阅读理解能力的考察提高多选题中出现很多同义替换,需要在做题时认真分析有学生反映听力很难做,需要听两遍才行。相比以往难度稍有提升。
雅思剑桥系列是剑桥大学考试委员会外语考试部的雅思考试唯一官方指南,也是各位考生备考过程中必不可少的的参考书。里面收录的题目都是历年考场上出现过的题目,具有权威性。接下来为大家整理一下,剑17的题型,难度,词汇,场景,变化。
以上就是雅思无忧整理的有没有剑桥雅思1和2的解析 请问2023年2月23日雅思阅读考试真题及答案 剑桥雅思17和12难度对比相关内容,想要了解更多信息,敬请查阅雅思无忧。
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