今天大學(xué)路小編為大家?guī)砹藙?2雅思閱讀test6答案 2023年10月16日雅思閱讀考試真題及答案,希望能幫助到大家,一起來看看吧!
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2023年10月16日雅思閱讀考試真題及答案
您好,我是專注留學(xué)考試規(guī)劃和留學(xué)咨詢的小鐘老師。在追尋留學(xué)夢想的路上,選擇合適的學(xué)校和專業(yè),準(zhǔn)備相關(guān)考試,都可能讓人感到迷茫和困擾。作為一名有經(jīng)驗的留學(xué)顧問,我在此為您提供全方位的專業(yè)咨詢和指導(dǎo)。歡迎隨時提問!
閱讀考試是雅思考試中占分比重比較大的類型,需要大家認(rèn)真對待。以下是小鐘老師為大家整理的雅思2023年10月16日閱讀考試真題及答案,僅供參考。
2023年10月16日雅思閱讀考試
Passage 1
主題:貿(mào)易船競爭
參考答案:
Passage 2
主題:IQ
參考答案:
14-17 判斷
14.FALSE
15.NOT GIVEN
16.TRUE
17.TRUE
18-22 人名匹配
18.A
19.E
20.F
21.C
22.D
23-26 填空
23.scalp electrodes
24.inspiration and elaboration
25.alpha wave activity
26.flexibility
Passage 3
主題:旅游業(yè)的發(fā)展
待更新
雅思閱讀分?jǐn)?shù)對照表
雅思9分對應(yīng)閱讀39-40分;
雅思8.5分對閱讀37-38分;
雅思8.分對應(yīng)閱讀35-36分;
雅思7.5分對應(yīng)閱讀33-34分;
雅思7分對應(yīng)閱讀30-32分;
雅思6.5分對應(yīng)閱讀27-29分;
雅思6分對應(yīng)閱讀23-26分;
雅思5.5分對應(yīng)閱讀20-22分;
雅思5分對應(yīng)閱讀16-19分;
雅思4.5分對應(yīng)閱讀13-15分;
雅思4分對應(yīng)閱讀10-12分;
雅思3.5分對應(yīng)閱讀6-9分;
雅思3分對應(yīng)閱讀4-5分;
雅思2.5分對應(yīng)閱讀3分;
雅思2分對應(yīng)閱讀2分;
雅思1分對應(yīng)閱讀1分。
雅思閱讀題型介紹
選擇題
選擇題其實是在考你對于原文中提及的一些詳細(xì)信息的定位能力。你需要快速讀懂題目并選擇出正確的選項。往往除了正確選項以外還會有幾個迷惑選項給你*陷阱,你必須憑借原文中的特定信息來排除它們(或定位正確選項)。
Summary填空題
這種題目一般是將原文的某一部分信息先進行了一個總結(jié),然后設(shè)計了一些空讓你填空。你有可能需要用原文的單詞進行填空,也可能需要用所給出的一些單詞進行選詞填空。(詞比空多)由于是對原文的總結(jié),所以這段題干的內(nèi)容在原文中肯定是出現(xiàn)的,但是絕對不會是原文重現(xiàn),而是用一些同義詞對原文的關(guān)鍵詞進行替換。
完成句子
這種題目一般是有幾個句子中間有空讓你用原文中的單詞去填。其實這種題目更多的考察你的意譯能力,即題干中的句子跟原文中的句子是兩個同義句,表達的其實是同一個意思,考察你的同義詞掌握能力。一般題目開頭會有這么一句話 ”ChooseNO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the textfor eachanswer”注意,NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS就是不能超過2個單詞,只能填1個或2個;此外,from the text 意味著你只能填原文中的詞匯,而不是自己去編一個。
句子配對題
這種題型就是給你兩組不完整的句子讓你根據(jù)原文的信息進行配對。這種題型并不像 TFNG,填空題那么常見,但我們備考的時候也要練習(xí)。這種題的主要目的就是看你是否讀懂了句子,是否了解原文的大意。給出的選項要遠(yuǎn)遠(yuǎn)多于給出的題干,一般是從 8-9 個句子中選 5-6 個進行配對。(所以排除法也是可以運用的)
判斷題(TFNG)題型
判斷題又稱“TFNG”題,要求你根據(jù)原文的信息對給出的題干進行判斷。
標(biāo)題配對題
標(biāo)題配對題又稱 heading 題,需要你把題干中列出個段落標(biāo)題與原文段落配對,主要就是考察你對文章每一段段落大意的掌握情況。heading 一般都是對某一段信息的簡單總結(jié),你必須找出那個最恰當(dāng)?shù)囊粋€,一般來說 headings 多于段落。
圖表題
顧名思義,就是根據(jù)原文提供的信息來完成一個圖表(通常都是圖),原文一般都是描述一個流程,描述一個東西等,有點類似我們小作文的流程圖或地圖題。
人名配對題
題目要求你根據(jù)原文把某個專家,研究員,科學(xué)家等的言論,觀點,發(fā)現(xiàn)或成就等與題干配對。
雅思閱讀提升技巧
1、快速瀏覽全文
考生最好用1—2分鐘大致瀏覽全文,以便掌握文章的結(jié)構(gòu)。
這一步驟雖短,但卻是訓(xùn)練及解題過程中的重點。文章的篇章結(jié)構(gòu)模式可以幫助考生更好地理解內(nèi)容,并理順句子或段落間的關(guān)系,以便在做題過程中有重點的跳讀。
2、解析題目
首先,無論遇到哪種題型,考生都應(yīng)盡可能地找出一些關(guān)鍵詞,以便迅速定出答案可能所在的區(qū)域。其次,考生應(yīng)對各種題型有較深入的理解。
尤其是每種題型的應(yīng)對方法。拿Matching的題來講,在General Reading和Academic Reading中就不一樣,一個是Matching of Information,另一個是Matching of Paragraph Headings,兩種題型的做法不一樣,在前者,考生應(yīng)將注意力集中在題中,將每個問題的核心詞標(biāo)出來,然后根據(jù)這些核心詞去文中找相應(yīng)的信息。
在后者,考生的注意力應(yīng)放在歸納文章上,在進行核心詞分類后,就要對文章的結(jié)構(gòu)和每段的重心進行歸納與分析,找出各段的主題詞,然后在段落的首句中找出相應(yīng)信息。
3、注意詞形變化
考生一定要特別注意詞形變化、同(近)義詞或是相關(guān)詞,因為題目中出現(xiàn)的詞不一定和文章中出現(xiàn)的詞一模一樣。
考生在平時訓(xùn)練中尤其要培養(yǎng)這方面的敏感度。核心詞盡量以信號詞為主,其次才是關(guān)鍵詞。
4、攻克單詞和句子閱讀
雅思閱讀是考試一大難點,很多考生在閱讀上失手。其主要存在以下幾個難點:單詞、句子閱讀、閱讀速度和考生主觀臆斷。
準(zhǔn)備單詞卡片,循環(huán)背誦一般雅思閱讀中涉及詞匯量比較大,但考生具備4000左右即可應(yīng)考。單詞貧乏的考生,一定要及時補充詞匯,打下扎實的基礎(chǔ)。在應(yīng)試時很容易遺忘或混淆單詞的意義,為了避免類似情況發(fā)生,一定要加強單詞意義的理解。
5、句子參考上下文,分析主謂結(jié)構(gòu)
在句子理解方面,考生最容易犯的錯誤就是根據(jù)自己已有經(jīng)驗片面理解。
雅思閱讀中有的題目考的是對于文章中某一句子的理解,要參考上下文客觀地看問題??忌鷳?yīng)對一些復(fù)合句,尤其是雙重否定句、比較句、指代句等有較深了解。
特別在遇到復(fù)雜句時,應(yīng)靜心思考,從把握句子主干一一主謂結(jié)構(gòu)著手來分析解剖句子結(jié)構(gòu)。
6、學(xué)會做標(biāo)記
雅思閱讀追求速度(speed)與準(zhǔn)確度(accuracy)的完美結(jié)合。快而不準(zhǔn)或準(zhǔn)而太慢都會影響考分??忌谇趭^練習(xí)的時候掌握一些閱讀技巧將達到事半功倍的效果。
快速閱讀最關(guān)鍵的是在掃描全文的時候把握每段的主旨,并做出標(biāo)記,在看完全文后對文章的結(jié)構(gòu)主題有大致的了解。此外,考生以單詞為單位看文章,遇生詞就停頓等壞習(xí)慣都要極力避免。
希望以上的答復(fù)能對您的留學(xué)申請有所幫助。如果您有任何更詳細(xì)的問題或需要進一步的協(xié)助,我強烈推薦您訪問我們的留學(xué)官方網(wǎng)站
,在那里您可以找到更多專業(yè)的留學(xué)考試規(guī)劃和留學(xué)資料以及*的咨詢服務(wù)。祝您留學(xué)申請順利!
請問2023年10月26日雅思閱讀考試真題及答案
您好,我是專注留學(xué)考試規(guī)劃和留學(xué)咨詢的小鐘老師。選擇留學(xué)是人生重要的決策之一,而作為您的指導(dǎo),我非常高興能為您提供最準(zhǔn)確的留學(xué)解答和規(guī)劃。無論您的問題是關(guān)于考試準(zhǔn)備、專業(yè)選擇、申請流程還是學(xué)校信息,我都在這里為您解答。更多留學(xué)資訊和學(xué)校招生介紹,歡迎隨時訪問。
雅思的最新一期考試,在上周末進行,大家對自己的考試有信心嗎?跟著小鐘老師來一起看看2023年10月26日雅思閱讀考試真題及答案。
Passage1:蝴蝶保護色Copy your neighbour
參考答案:
A THERE’S no animal that symbolises rainforest diversity quite as spectacularly as the tropical butterfly. Anyone lucky enough to see these creatures flitting between patches of sunlight cannot fail to be impressed by the variety of their patterns. But why do they display such colourful exuberance? Until recently, this was almost as pertinent a question as it had been when the 19th-century naturalists, armed only with butterfly nets and insatiable curiosity, battled through the rainforests. These early explorers soon realised that although some of the butterflies’ bright colours are there to attract a mate, others are warning signals. They send out a message to any predators: “Keep off, we’re poisonous.” And because wearing certain patterns affords protection, other species copy them. Biologists use the term “mimicry rings” for these clusters of impostors and their evolutionary idol.
B But here’s the conundrum. “Classical mimicry theory says that only a single ring should be found in any one area,” explains George Beccaloni of the Natural History Museum, London. The idea is that in each locality there should be just the one pattern that best protects its wearers. Predators would quickly learn to avoid it and eventually all mimetic species in a region should converge upon it. “The fact that this is patently not the case has been one of the major problems in mimicry research,” says Beccaloni. In pursuit of a solution to the mystery of mimetic exuberance, Beccaloni set off for one of the megacentres for butterfly diversity, the point where the western edge of the Amazon basin meets the foothills of the Andes in Ecuador. “It’s exceptionally rich, but comparatively well collected, so I pretty much knew what was there, says Beccaloni.” The trick was to work out how all the butterflies were organised and how this related to mimicry.”
C Working at the Jatun Sacha Biological Research Station on the banks of the Rio Napo, Beccaloni focused his attention on a group of butterflies called ithomiines. These distant relatives of Britain’s Camberwell Beauty are abundant throughout Central and South America and the Caribbean. They are famous for their bright colours, toxic bodies and complex mimetic relationships. “They can comprise up to 85 per cent of the individuals in a mimicry ring and their patterns are mimicked not just by butterflies, but by other insects as diverse as damselflies and true bugs,” says Philip DeVries of the Milwaukee Public Museum’s Center for Biodiversity Studies.
D Even though all ithomiines are poisonous, it is in their interests to evolve to look like one another because predators that learn to avoid one species will also avoid others that resemble it. This is known as Miillerian mimicry. Mimicry rings may also contain insects that are not toxic, but gain protection by looking likes a model species that is: an adaptation called Batesian mimicry. So strong is an experienced predator’s avoidance response that even quite inept resemblance gives some protection. “Often there will be a whole series of species that mimic, with varying degrees of verisimilitude, a focal or model species,” says John Turner from the University of Leeds. “The results of these deceptions are some of the most exquisite examples of evolution known to science.” In addition to colour, many mimics copy behaviours and even the flight pattern of their model species.
E But why are there so many different mimicry rings? One idea is that species flying at the same height in the forest canopy evolve to look like one another. “It had been suggested since the 1970s that mimicry complexes were stratified by flight height,” says DeVries. The idea is that wing colour patterns are camouflaged against the different patterns of light and shadow at each level in the canopy, providing a first line of defence against predators.” But the light patterns and wing patterns don’t match very well,” he says. And observations show that the insects do not shift in height as the day progresses and the light patterns change. Worse still, according to DeVries, this theory doesn’t explain why the model species is flying at that particular height in the first place.
F “When I first went out to Ecuador, I didn’t believe the flight height hypothesis and set out to test it,” says Beccaloni.”A few weeks with the collecting net convinced me otherwise. They really flew that way.” What he didn’t accept, however, was the explanation about light patterns. “I thought, if this idea really is true, and I can work out why, it could help explain why there are so many different warning patterns in any one place. Then we might finally understand how they could evolve in such a complex way.” The job was complicated by the sheer diversity of species involved at Jatun Sacha. Not only were there 56 ithomiine butterfly species divided among eight mimicry rings, there were also 69 other insect species, including 34 day-flying moths and a damselfly, all in a 200-hectare study area. Like many entomologists before him, Beccaloni used a large bag-like net to capture his prey. This allowed him to sample the 2.5 metres immediately above the forest floor. Unlike many previous workers, he kept very precise notes on exactly where he caught his specimens.
G The attention to detail paid off. Beccaloni found that the mimicry rings were flying at two quite separate altitudes. “Their use of the forest was quite distinctive,” he recalls. “For example, most members of the clear-winged mimicry ring would fly close to the forest floor, while the majority of the 12 species in the tiger-winged ring fly high up.” Each mimicry ring had its own characteristic flight height.
H However, this being practice rather than theory, things were a bit fuzzy. “They’d spend the majority of their time flying at a certain height. But they’d also spend a *aller proportion of their time flying at other heights,” Beccaloni admits. Species weren’t stacked rigidly like passenger jets waiting to land, but they did appear to have a preferred airspace in the forest. So far, so good, but he still hadn’t explained what causes the various groups of ithomiines and their chromatic consorts to fly in formations at these particular heights.
I Then Beccaloni had a bright idea. “I started looking at the distribution of ithomiine larval food plants within the canopy,” he says. “For each one I’d record the height to which the host plant grew and the height above the ground at which the eggs or larvae were found. Once I got them back to the field station’s lab, it was just a matter of keeping them alive until they pupated and then hatched into *s which I could identify.”
1-5. E、B、G 、F 、D
6-E、TRUE、NOT GIVEN、FALSE、NOT GIVEN、TRUE
12-13. D、B
Passage2:CRS企業(yè)社會責(zé)任感
參考答案:
The moral appeal---arguing that companies have a duty to be good citizens and to “do the right thing” ---is prominent in the goal of Business for Social Responsibility, the leading nonprofit CSR business association in the United States.
A An excellent definition was developed in the 1980s ‘‘ Meeting the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.” The notion of license to operate derives from the fact that every company needs tacit or explicit permission from governments, communities, and numerous other stakeholders to do business. Finally,reputation is used by many companies to justify CSR initiatives on the grounds that they will improve a company’s image, strengthen its brand,enliven morale, and even raise the Value of its stock.
B To advance CSR, we must root it in a broad understanding of the interrelationship between a corporation and society. To say broadly that business and society need each other might seem like a cliché, but it is also the basic truth that will pull companies out of the muddle that their current corporate-responsibility thinking has created. Successful corporations need a healthy society. Education, health care, and equal opportunity are essential to a productive workforce. Safe products and working conditions not only attract customers but lower the internal costs of accidents. Efficient utilization of land, water, energy, and other natural resources makes business more productive. Good government, the rule of Jaw, and property rights are essential for efficiency and innovation. Any business that pursues its ends at the expense of the society in which it operates will find its success to be illusory and ultimately temporary. At the same time, a health society needs successful companies. No social program can rival the business sector when it comes to creating the jobs, wealth, and innovation that improve standards of living and social conditions over time.
C A company’s impact on society also changes over time, as social standards evolve and science progresses. Asbestos, now understood as a serious health risk, was thought to be safe in the early 1900s, given the scientific knowledge then available. Evidence of its risks gradually mounted for more than 50 years before any company was held liable for the harms it can cause. Many firms that failed to anticipate the consequences of this evolving body of research have been bankrupt by the results. No longer can companies be content to monitor only the obvious social impacts of today. Without a careful process for identifying evolving social effects of tomorrow, firms may risk their very survival.
D No business can solve all of society’s problems or bear the cost of doing so. Instead, each company must select issues that intersect with its particular business. Corporations are not responsible for all the world's problems, nor do they have the resources to solve them all. Each company can identify the particular set of societal problems that it is best equipped to helpresolve and from which it can gain the greatest competitive benefit. Addressing social issues by creating shared value will lead to self-sustaining solutions that do not depend on private or government subsidies. When a well-run business applies its vast resources, expertise, and management talent to problems that it understands and in which it has a stake, it can have a greater impact on social good than any other institution or philanthropic organization.
E The best corporate citizenship initiatives involve far more than writing a check: they specify clear, measurable goals and track results over time. A good example is GE’s program to adopt underperforming public high schools near several of its major U.S. Facilities. The company contributes between $250, 000 and $1 million over a five-year period to each school and makes in-kind donations as well GE managers and employees take an active role by working with school administrators to assess needs and mentor or tutor students. The graduation rate of these schools almost doubled during this time period. Effective corporate citizenship initiatives such as this one create goodwill and improve relations with local governments and other important constituencies. What’s more, GE’s employees feel great pride in their participation. Their effect is inherently limited though. No matter how beneficial the program is, it remains incidental to the company's business, and the direct effect on GE’s recruiting and retention is modest.
F Microsoft is a good example of a shared-value opportunity arising from investments in context. The shortage of information technology workers is a significant constraint on Microsoft’s growth, currently, there are more than 450,000 unfilled IT positions in the United States alone. Community colleges, representing 45% of all U.S. Undergraduates, could be a major solution. Microsoft recognizes, however, that community colleges face special challenges: IT curricula are not standardized, technology used in classrooms is often outdated, and there are no systematic professional development programs to keep faculty up to date. In addition to contributing money and products, Microsoft sent employee volunteers to colleges to assess needs, contribute to curriculum development, and create faculty development institutes. Note that in this case, volunteers and assigned staff were able to use their core professional skills to address a social need, a far cry from typical volunteer programs. Microsoft has achieved results that have benefited many communities while having a direct-and potentially significant-impact on the company.
G At the heart of any strategy is a unique value proposition: a set of needs a company can meet for its chosen customers that others cannot. The most strategic CSR occurs when a company adds a social dimension to its value proposition, making social impact integral to the overall strategy Consider Whole Foods Market, whose value proposition is to sell organic, natural, and healthy food products to customers who are passionate about food and the environment. Whole Foods’ commitment to natural and environmentally friendly operating practices extends well beyond sourcing. Stores are constructed using a minimum of virgin raw materials. Recently, the company purchased renewable wind energy credits equal to 100% of its electricity use in all of its stores and facilities, the only Fortune 500 Company to offset its electricity consumption entirely. Spoiled produce and biodegradable waste are trucked to regional centers for composting. Whole Foods’ vehicles are being converted to run on biofuels. Even the cleaning products used in its stores are environmentally friendly. And through its philanthropy, the company has created the Animal Compassion Foundation to develop more natural and humane ways of raising farm animals. In short, nearly every aspect of the company’s value chain reinforces the social dimensions of its value proposition, distinguishing Whole Foods from its compe*s.
V、 viii、 iv、 vii、 i、iii、 ii
equal opportunity、internal cost
C、C、 A、 B
Passage3:沙漠造雨
參考答案:
A. Sometimes ideas just pop up out of the blue. Or in Charlie Paton’s case, out of the rain. “I was in a bus in Morocco travelling through the desert,” he remembers. “It had been raining and the bus was full of hot, wet people. The windows steamed up and I went to sleep with a towel against the glass. When I woke, the thing was soaking wet. I had to wring it out. And it set me thinking. Why was it so wet?”
B. The answer, of course, was condensation. Back home in London, a physicist friend, Philip Davies, explained that the glass, chilled by the rain outside, had cooled the hot humid air inside the bus below its dew point, causing droplets of water to form on the inside of the window. Intrigued, Paton-a lighting engineer by profession-started rigging up his own equipment. “I made my own solar stills. It occurred to me that you might be able to produce water in this way in the desert, simply by cooling the air. I wondered whether you could make enough to irrigate fields and grow crops.”
C. Today, a decade on, his dream has taken shape as giant greenhouse on a desert island off Abu Dhabi in the Persian Gulf ---the first commercially viable Version of his “seawater greenhouse”. Local scientists, working with Paton under a license from his
company Light Works, are watering the desert and growing vegetables in what is basically a giant dew-making machine that produces fresh water and cool air from sum and seawater. In awarding Paton first prize in a design competition two years ago,
Marco Goldschmied, president of the Royal Institute of British Architects, called it “a truly original idea which has the potential to impact on the lives of millions of people living in coastal water-starved areas around the world.”
seawater greenhouse as developed by Paton has three main both air-condition the greenhouse and provide water for front of the greenhouse faces into the prevailing wind so that hot dry air blows in through a front wall is made of perforated cardboard kept moist by a constant trickle of seawater pumped up from purpose is to cool and moisten the incoming desert cool moist air allows the plants to grow faster. And, crucially, because much less water evaporates from the leaves,the plants need much less moisture to grow than if they were being irrigated in the hot dry desert air outside the greenhouse.
air-conditioning of the interior of the greenhouse is completed by the second feature:the roof. It has two layers:an outer layer of clear polyethylene and an inner coated layer that reflects infrared radiation. This combination ensures that visible light can steam through to the plants, maximizing the rate of plant growth through photosynthesis but at the same time heat from the infrared radiation is trapped in the space between the layer, sand kept away keep the air around the plants cool.
F. At the lack of the greenhouse sits the third elements. This is the main water production ,the air hits a second moist cardboard wall that increases its humidity as it reaches the condenser,which finally collects from the hot humid air the moisture for irrigating the condenser is metal surface kept cool by still more seawater. It is the equivalent of the window on Paton’s Morcoccan s of pure distilled water form on the condenser and flow into a tank for irrigating the crops.
Abu Dhai greenhouse more or less runs ors switch everything on when the sun rises and alter flows of air and seawater through the day in response to changes in temperature, humidity, and windless days,fans ensure a constant flow of air through the greenhouse. “Once it is tuned to the local environment,you don’t need anyone there for it to work” says Paton. “We can run the entire operation off one 13-amp plug, and in the future we could make it entirely independent of the grid, powered from a few solar panels.”
ics point out that construction costs of around $4 a square foot are quite illustration, however, Paton presents that it can cool as efficiently as a 500-kilowatt air conditioner while using less than 3 kilowatts of electricity. Thus the plants need only an eighth of the Volume of water used by those grown conventionally. And so the effective cost of desalinated water in the greenhouse is only a quarter that of water from a standard desalinator, which is good economics. Beside it really suggests an environmentally - friendly way of providing air conditioning on a scale large enough to cool large greenhouses where crops can be grown despite the high outside temperatures.
27-31:YES、NO、YES、NOT GIVEN、 NO
32-36:hot dry air、moist、heat、condenser、pure distill water
37-40:fans、solar panels、construction costs、environmentally-friendly
以上信息希望能幫助您在留學(xué)申請的道路上少走彎路。如果您還有更多問題或需要深入探討,不要猶豫,您可以在我們的留學(xué)官方網(wǎng)站上找到更豐富的考試資訊、留學(xué)指導(dǎo)和*專家咨詢服務(wù)。我們的團隊始終站在您的角度,為您的留學(xué)夢想全力以赴。祝您申請順利!
2021年6月12日雅思閱讀考試部分真題答案
雅思閱讀這一部分的考試相對來說還是比較容易的,但是在平時的備考中,還是要多加練習(xí),在6月12日雅思考試中,閱讀考試的部分真題答案,大家可以來看看。
2021年6月12日雅思閱讀考試真題答案
P1
小島旅游
選擇題1-5:BBDDB
填空題6-10:ferry,bicycle,fan,air-conditioner,mosquito
多選題11-13:ACE
P2
人類情緒
P3
文學(xué)獎項的價值
雅思閱讀提升技巧
1、高質(zhì)快速地閱讀
第1遍讀文章時,我們應(yīng)當(dāng)模擬考試的緊張氣氛,盡量高質(zhì)快速。但,對完答案后,我們有充足的時間再次閱讀文章。第二次閱讀文章我們的目的不在是獲取信息,而是把握文章的布局安排,分析作者的意圖。
2、要把握句子結(jié)構(gòu)規(guī)律
同學(xué)們應(yīng)當(dāng)做的是找一本好的語法書,認(rèn)認(rèn)真真學(xué)習(xí)句子結(jié)構(gòu)那部分。英語的句子主干往往并不復(fù)雜,只是其粘著修飾成分過多。我們一開始應(yīng)當(dāng)學(xué)會如何寫出簡單的基本句型,然后再通過附加各種從句、插入語、非謂語形式,來逐步擴充句子結(jié)構(gòu)。
3、要對文章分類
可是如果我們把自己讀過的所有文章按照主題分類,比如分為校園類、醫(yī)學(xué)類、家庭類、環(huán)境類等等,到了考前,再按類別復(fù)習(xí)這些文章,我們不僅能系統(tǒng)掌握某一類別文章常用的詞匯,也能把握該類文章的結(jié)構(gòu)特點和出題規(guī)律。
雅思閱讀考前準(zhǔn)備
1.注意身體,多喝水,吃些水果??记吧眢w千萬不要出問題,尤其是感冒之類的,不僅頭疼,頭沉沉的,心情不好,神志不清,更可怕的是聽力還會受此影響。在考前還要養(yǎng)成一個生物鐘比較好。按照考試順序和考試時間來要求自己。早上8點左右可以開始練習(xí),先做聽力,然后是閱讀,之后是寫作,下午可以練習(xí)口語,嚴(yán)格把握時間。這樣的順序都收悉之后,想必考試的時候就信手拈來了。
2.準(zhǔn)備證件??荚囈罂绝唫償y帶身份證件,照片和準(zhǔn)考證按時到考場。照片需要按照考試要求,自己提前準(zhǔn)備好。準(zhǔn)考證提前一天打印即可。而考試工具就不用擔(dān)心了,雅思考試時,筆和橡皮是已經(jīng)準(zhǔn)備好的,無需烤鴨擔(dān)心。
3.踩點兒看考場。根據(jù)不同的考試地點,烤鴨們需要自己去考點看看,熟悉乘車路線,把握乘車時間,提前出門,更不能因為堵車而耽誤考試。熟悉考點,幫助烤鴨們消除陌生感,心態(tài)上會有所放松。
溫故而知新。考前把老師講的技巧復(fù)習(xí)一遍。戰(zhàn)略上藐視對手,戰(zhàn)術(shù)上重視對手。把老師講過的重點認(rèn)真復(fù)習(xí)一遍,打有準(zhǔn)備之戰(zhàn)。
4.自己準(zhǔn)備的知識再次消化。除了老師給的技巧之外,自己在雅思考試準(zhǔn)備過程中,肯定也有自己的總結(jié),比如某些單詞或優(yōu)美句子。在考試前,務(wù)必把自己的總結(jié)再來一遍。
5.心態(tài)要好。穩(wěn)住,不要害怕或緊張。我們沒有要求自己聽說讀寫都9分,更何況9分還是允許自己錯一個也可以。所以我們沒有給自己太大壓力。
6.時間觀念。考試時,在閱讀,寫作部分,監(jiān)考老師會給我們提示,還剩15分鐘,5分鐘,2分鐘。還剩15分鐘時,不要慌,合理規(guī)劃剩下的考題。在剩下5分鐘時,一定要把答案寫在或謄到答題卷上,2分鐘的時候,確保自己都填正確,都填寫完畢。在考試時,合理安排時間,先難后易,一定不要交空白卷或把答案寫在其他地方。
7.答題技巧??荚嚂r會有答題卡,直接把答案填進去就行了。認(rèn)真審題。例如閱讀的是非無題一定要看清要求,是填寫TURE,F(xiàn)ALSE,NOTGIVEN或者YES,NO,NOTGIVEN.千萬不要簡寫,去考驗考官的判斷力。還有summary題的字?jǐn)?shù)要求,是一個還是兩個或是不超過三個。題目仔細(xì)推敲,幫助烤鴨們拿高分,至少,不失分。
8.時間與體力智力的比拼??荚嚽翱梢猿砸粔K兒巧克力,幫助自己有體力支撐到最后的寫作??记氨M量少進流食,減少自己去衛(wèi)生間辦事兒的可能。
9.檢查。不管干什么事兒,檢查一下自己的情況。出門前看考試證件,交卷時檢查自己的拼寫或答題格式。細(xì)心做事。使自己能在考試前的最后一分鐘都牢牢把握,不因為馬虎而失去寶貴的一分。
以上就是大學(xué)路整理的劍橋12雅思閱讀test6答案 2023年10月16日雅思閱讀考試真題及答案相關(guān)內(nèi)容,想要了解更多信息,敬請查閱大學(xué)路。