Articles for ielts the dangers of being over-confident


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Commitment(n) - a thing that you have promised or agreed to do, or that you have 
to do 
Circumstantial(adj) - connected with particular circumstances 
Intention(n) - what you intend or plan to do; your aim 
To land a job(phr.v) - to succeed in getting a job 
Employability(n) - the extent to which somebody has the skills, knowledge, 
attitude, etc. that make them suitable for paid work 


To showcase(v) - to present somebody's abilities or the good qualities of 
something in an attractive way 
To pursue(v) - to do something or try to achieve something over a period of time 
To count(v) - to be important 
Everlasting(adj) - continuing forever; never changing 
Down the line(idiom) - at some point during an activity or a process 
A walk of life(idiom) - a person’s job or position in society 
Perspective(n) - a particular attitude towards something; a way of thinking about 
something 
To defer(v) - to delay something until a later time 
To maximize(v) - to increase something as much as possible 
To retrain(v) - to learn, or to teach somebody, a new type of work, a new skill, etc 
Upfront(adj) - paid in advance, before other payments are made 
To reimburse(v) - to pay back money to somebody which they have spent or lost 
Source: uopeople.edu 
articles_for_IELTS articles_for_IELTS articles_for_IELTS 


articles_for_IELTS articles_for_IELTS 
Did giraffes evolve their long necks for combat? 
Giraffes are widely thought to have evolved such long necks in order to feed 
on high foliage that other animals found difficult to reach. But it may actually have 
been competition for mates that gave them this unique adaptation, researchers at the 
Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology of the Chinese Academy 
of Sciences have found.
Giraffes’ necks can measure two to three meters in length. During courtship 
competitions, the animals fight by using their long necks to whip their heavy skulls, 
which are topped with hard, horn-like ossicones, into their opponents.
Animals with longer necks are able to land more powerful blows on their 
opponents, making them more likely to win fights for mates. It is also believed 
giraffes with longer necks are deemed to be further up the social hierarchy. Now, a 
17-million-year-old fossil of Discokeryx Xie Zhi, an ancient relative of modern 
giraffes, found in Junggar Basin, Xinjiang, western China, suggests that this 
behaviour may be what led to the animals evolving their trademark long necks. 
Though its neck is much shorter than that of modern giraffes, analysis of the fossil 
shows that D. Xie Zhi had an incredibly complex series of joints between its head 
and spine, along with a hard, disc-shaped ossicone on its head that made it 
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