导语概要雅思培训学校致力于提供专业的英语培训服务,本着因材施教,为学员服务的理念,针对不同学员的自身情况,量身打造学习方案及留学规划,真正实现前期规划学习,个性化私属教学方案最终帮你实现留学梦想。
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参加雅思口语考试准备些什么?雅思口语考试对于中国考生还是有一定难度的,那么参加雅思口语考试准备些什么呢,下面广州新航道小编就为大家就为大家讲讲相关内容,希望可以帮助报正在准备参加雅思考试的同学们。
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备考雅思口语考试需要怎么做具体如下:
1、细节要把握准确
同学们都知道,时态细节是较为基本的,而且是一定要把握的部分,如果时态弄错了的话,将会导致非常严重的后果。而很多的学生,本身便对动词的时态变化不够熟悉,在表达的时候,更容易混淆的一塌糊涂,所以时态变化也是我们练习的一个要点。特别是过去时,所以我们在临考之前,一定要熟悉基本动词的过去式和过去分词,因为考过去时的考题占的比重,还是非常之大的。此外,虚拟语态的考题也有一定的比重,也是大多数学生会出现错误的地方,如If you can redesign your home, what would you do- Would you like to change your job in the future- 在回答这些题目时我们也要用到虚拟语态,这也是我们需要练习的要点。
2、紧扣考题
考题中的修饰语,通常比较容易被考生们错过了,通常一个小小的形容词,便已经点明了,考题的回答方向。而这样的形容词,又很容易在考听题的时侯被错过,特别是那些名词之前,出现的一些形容词,经常会被学生们当作不会影响对考题理解的词,而自动的过滤掉了。但是实质上来说,对于这些词的把握,会对同学们答题的质量和角度,产生决定性的影响。比如在听到Is it convenient for you to buy fresh vegetables and fruits- 这道题的时侯,学生们经常会无视了fresh这个词,而只是泛泛的,去谈论购买蔬菜水果的问题。但是事实上fresh这个词,放在这里,给同学们们提供了很多回答的角度,实质上同学们们便可以抓住这个词,将fresh vegetables and fruits和preserved vegetables and fruits做一个相应的对比。这样,同学们的回答会更加紧扣考题,并且又非常具有特色。
3、回答问题要仔细
有些雅思口语考题,有明确的地域性的规定,如:How's the traffic around your home- What can you see from your window- Are there any fitness facilities near your home- 这些题目中,都是些表明了地点限制的短语。在雅思口语考场中,经常有学生,会忽略这些限制,比如在回答1题的时侯,只是泛泛而谈的说一下上海的交通状况,却只字未提到,自己周围的交通状况。
4、回答避免避免中式思维
有很多我们从小说到大的英语,并不一定是非常贴切的,更加不是老外们的street language.比如,我们从小学到的对于How are you-的标准回答是Fine thank you, and you-实质上来说这种回答,在老外听起来是相当不礼貌的。所以说适当的学习一些地道式的英语表达,将会为同学们的回答增色不少。推荐考生们比较好的办法,是多看一些原版的英语电影和书籍,特别是那些较为生活化的英语情景剧,从情景剧中,我们可以学到不少的地道英语表达方式,从而也可以让同学们自己的回答,听起来洋味十足。
更多关于雅思口语的资讯与详情,可关注广州新航道雅思频道,或咨询广州新航道在线老师。
Listening 听力
Section1
参考答案
1. Date of birth: August 24, 1979
2. Address: Fox Lane
3.What’s the reason for the woman choose yearly payment:
A to save money
B to get free gift
C to get fitter
4.Schedule for June:
A holiday
B business trips
C getting married
5. Fitness class = C She is not interested in it at all
6. Weight class = B She is interested in it now
7. Class in the pool=C She is not interested in it at all
8. Swimming = A She will be interested in it in the future
9. Sauna = B She is interested in it now
10. Child-minding = A She will be interested in it in the future
Section 2
参考答案:
AAACB EHCDF
Section3
参考答案:
21-23
What following contents did they decide to include in assignment?
B some short questions of xxxxx
C some slides presentation of PPT
D a short outline
E short group discussion
F some questions
24. focus on environmental issues
25. The production of petrol will decline
26. No supply problem for power
27. Alternative energy: using hydrogen battery
28. Generate energy and store it
29. Disadvantage: too expensive
30. No suited to present-day engine
Section4
参考答案
31.Research found Jomon’s existence before 10,000 BC.
32.Jomon people arrived in Japan through a land bridge
33.Temperature rise led to the growth of forest and population.
34.As a result of global warming, rising sea levels also changed Jomon people’s migration to other areas.
35.Their major food pattern consists of nuts and fish.
36.They were hunter gatherers whose weapons are arrows and spears.
37.They lived in round buildings in a village.
38.The people used to use pairs of stones in cooking.
39.Tradition of local marriage ceremony has been well preserved till today.
40.And later they learn how to grow rice.
Reading 阅读
Passage 1 The Dinosaurs Footprints and Extinction
A
Everybody knows that the dinosaurs were killed by an asteroid. Something big hit the earth 65 million years ago and, when the dust had fallen, so had the great reptiles. There is thus a nice, if ironic, symmetry in the idea that o similar impact brought about the dinosaurs’ rise. That is the thesis proposed by Paul Olsen, of Columbia University, and his colleagues in this week’s Science.
B
Dinosaurs first appear in the fossil record 230m years ago, during the Triassic period. But they were mostly small, and they shared the earth with lots of other sorts of reptile. It was in the subsequent Jurassic, which began 202million years ago, that they overran the planet and turned into the monsters depicted in the book and movie “Jurassic Park” ( 侏罗纪公园) . (Actually, though, the dinosaurs that appeared on screen were from the still more recent Cretaceous ( 白垩纪) period.) Dr Olsen and his colleagues are not the first to suggest that the dinosaurs inherited the earth as the result of an asteroid strike. But they are the first to show that the takeover did, indeed, happen in a geological eyeblink.
C
Dinosaur skeletons are rare. Dinosaur footprints are, however, surprisingly abundant. And the sizes of the prints are as good an indication of the sizes of the beasts as are the skeletons themselves. Dr Olsen and his colleagues therefore concentrated on prints, not bones.
D
The prints in question were made in eastern North America, a part of the world then full of rift valleys similar to those in East Africa today. Like the modern African rift valleys, the Triassic ( 三叠纪) /Jurassic American ones contained lakes, and these lakes grew and shrank at regular intervals because of climatic changes caused by periodic shifts in the earth’s orbit. (A similar phenomenon is responsible for modern ice ages.) That regularity, combined with reversals in the earth’s magnetic field, which are detectable in the tiny fields of certain magnetic minerals, means that rocks from this place and period can be dated to within a few thousand years. As a bonus, squishy (adj. 粘糊糊的) lake-edge sediments are just the things for recording the tracks of passing animals. By dividing the labour between themselves, the ten authors of the paper were able to study such tracks at 80 sites.
E
The researchers looked at 18 so-called ichnotoxo( 群落). These are recognisable types of footprint that cannot be matched precisely with the species of animal that left them. But they can be matched with a general sort of animal, and thus act as an indicator of the fate of that group, even when there are no bones to tell the story.
F
Five of the ichnotaxa disappear before the end of the Triassic, and four march confidently across the boundary into the Jurassic. Six, however, vanish at the boundary, or only just splutter across it; and three appear from nowhere, almost as soon as the Jurassic begins.
G
That boundary itself is suggestive. The first geological indication of the impact that illed the dinosaurs was an unusually high level of iridium in rocks at the end of the Cretaceous, when the beasts disappear from the fossil record. Iridium is normally rare at the earth’s surface, but it is more abundant in meteorites. When people began to believe the impact theory, they started looking for other Cretaceous-end anomalies. One that turned up was a surprising abundance of fern spores in rocks Just above the boundary layer-a phenomenon known as a“fern spike”( 蕨类)
H
That matched the theory nicely. Many modern ferns are opportunists. They cannot compete against plants with leaves, but if a piece of land is cleared by, say, a volcanic eruption, they are often the first things to set up shop there. An asteroid strike would have scoured much of the earth of its vegetable cover, and provided a paradise for ferns. A fern spike in the rocks is thus a good indication that something terrible has happened.
I
Both an iridium ( 铱) anomaly and a fern spike appear in rocks at the end of the Triassic, too. That accounts for the disappearing ichnotaxa: the creatures that made them did not survive the holocaust. The surprise is how rapidly the new ichnotaxa appear. Eubrontes giganteus, for example, is there a mere 10,000 years after the iridium anomaly. The Eubrontes ( 一种大脚印)prints were made by theropods-the dinosaur group that went on to produce such nightmares as Allosaurus( 异龙)and Tyrannosaurus( 暴龙) -and Eubrontes is already 20% bigger than any theropod track recorded from the Triassic.
J
Dr Olsen and His colleagues suggest that the explanation for this rapid increase in size may be a phenomenon called ecological release. This is seen today when reptiles (which, in modern times, tend io be small creatures) reach
islands where they face no competitors. The most spectacul r example is on
the Indonesian island of Komodo, where local lizards have gr wn so large
that they are often referred to as dragons. The dinosaurs, in o her words, could
flourish only when the competition had been knocked out.
K
That leaves the question of where the impact happened. No large hole in the earth’s crust seems to be 202m years old. It may, of course, have been overlooked. Old craters are eroded and buried, and not always easy to find. Alternatively, it may have vanished. Although continental crust is more or less permanent, the ocean floor is constantly recycled by the tectonic processes that bring about continental drift. There is no ocean floor left that is more than 200m years old, so a crater that formed in the ocean would have been swallowed up by now.
1. Dr Paul Olsen and his colleagues believed that asteroid knock also lead to dinosaurs boom---YES
2. Books and movies like Jurassic Park often exaggerate the size of the dinosaurs.---NG
3. Dinosaur footprints are more adequate than dinosaur skeletons---YES
4.The prints were chosen by Dr Olsen to study because they are more detectable than earth magnetic field to track a date of geological precise within thousands years.---NG
5.Ichnotaxa showed that footprints of dinosaurs offer exact information of the trace left by an individual species.---NO
6.We can find more Iridium in the earth’s surface than in meteorites.---NO
这道题大家可以先练习,后面有答案。
Dr Olsen and his colleagues applied a phenomenon named---7---to explain the large size of the Eubrontes, which is a similar case to that nowadays reptiles invade a place where there are no---8---;for example, on an island called Komodo, indigenous huge lizards grow so big that people even regarding them as---9---
However, there were no old impact trace being found? The answer may be that we have---10---the evidence. Old craters are difficult to spot or it probably ---11---due to the effect of the earth moving.Even a crater formed in Ocean had been---12---under the impact of crust movement. Beside, the third hypothesis is that the potential evidences some craters may be---13---
参考答案
7. Ecological release 8. competitors
9. dragons 10. overlooked
11. (have) vanished 12. Swallowed up
13. misdated
Passage 2 Food for thought 2
参考答案:暂无
Passage 3 Human behaviour
参考答案:暂无
Writing 写作
小作文
柱图:The charts below show the distribution of employment in agriculture, industry and services in three countries in 1980 and the projections of distribution in 2020.
大作文
In some cities, there are few controls over the design and construction of new homes and office buildings. Do you think the advantages of this approach outweigh the disadvantages?