Breaking the habit ielts answer


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Breaking the habit ielts answer
Do you have any unhealthy habits ielts. Breaking all the rules reading answers mini ielts. Breaking all the rules ielts reading answers. Breaking the habit ielts reading answers.
v. /di'nai/ từ chối, phản đối, phủ nhậnadv. /'grædzuәli/ dần dần, từ từv. bắt đầu một thói quen mớirushedadj. vội vàngget rid ofv.
loại bỏ, tống khứassociate withv. liên quan đếnrespond withv. đáp trả, phản ứngsplitv., n. /split/ tách, chia ra; sự tách, sự chia raappear tov. có vẻ như, dường nhưdevelop a habitv. phát triển, hình thành một thói quento be under pressurechịu áp lực Click the card to flip Click the card to flip suck out thumb
吃手指consciouslyadv. 有意识地; 自觉地
subconsciously
潜意识地graduallyadv.慢慢地;渐渐地grow out of it长大就没了intentionallyadv. 有意地,特意地unintentionallyad.无意地,非故意地pick up拾起;捡起later childhood童年晚期early adulthood成年早期early on在早期program程序rushed1.v. 急忙(rush的过去式);匆促 2.adj. 匆忙的;贸然的 1.v. 急忙(rush的过去式);匆促 2.adj. 匆忙的;贸然的stressed感到压力的
overworkedadj.
过度劳累的get rid of摆脱volunteer志愿者associate with与......关联respondv.回答,响应,作出反应split分裂appear出现completelyadv.完整地;彻底地confirmv.证实,证明responsen.反应,响应,回答remain保持over time随着时间的推移automatic自动的learned bahaviour学会的行为put...into practice把...付诸实践intention意图,目的previouslyadv.先前, 以前 IELTS Speaking Part 1
Break or Breaktime: Below are the sample answers to the recent IELTS Speaking Topic about Break. Each answer is equipped with topic vocabulary words and collocations. Study how each answer is developed and get ideas from those answers so that you will be able to talk smoothly about this topic if you get this on your actual IELTS Speaking
exam.Learn how express your ideas confidently and smoothly like how the speaker of this post expressed his answers. Make sure to achieve a band 7.0 or even get a band 9.0! This topic, Break or Breaktime should never be rocket science. Good luck! PART 1BREAK OR BREAKTIME Do you prefer a long break or several breaks?Answer 1I cannot
choose between the two because both a long break and several breaks are beneficial to me. Indulging long breaks like traveling helps me widen my perspective on life. As you know, traveling opens the door of great opportunities that can help people understand life better such as learning cultural differences, lifestyles, traditions or customs and the
like, which to me is refreshing. On the other hand, doing several breaks recharges my batteries, most especially, when I’ve a pile of paperworks to do in the office. Answer 2I prefer the latter simply because I can maintain my motivation and my interest on what I currently do – may it be work, study, or hobby. For me taking several breaks is similar to
taking a nap, that all you need is a short break for you to recharge your mind and to be ready again to do things well.
If I take long breaks, I tend to become demotivated or lose my desire after not doing my usual routine for quite some time – I notice that I become indolent.LEXICAL RESOURCEIndulge [verb] – to allow oneself to enjoy the pleasure of somethingOpen the door [idiom] – to create an opportunity/opportunitiesRecharge one’s batteries [phrase] – to
regain one’s strength(The) latter [adj.] – the second of the two; the last-mentionedDemotivated [adj.] – less eager; loss of enthusiasmIndolence [noun] – lazinessTIPSi.) ANSWER 1: The speaker was very honest of his attitude toward the question telling the examiner that he couldn’t choose one over the other because both were advantageous to him.
And because of that, he just explained each of them as to what kind of benefits he got having any of those kinds of break.
It’s a realistic and relatable answer. ii.) ANSWER 2: The speaker gave his answer directly with the use of a good expression that expressed his choice which was short breaks. Then, he just provided his thorough explanation on why he preferred that choice, and after that, he compared the other choice which was long breaks to his personal choice and
explained what the first choice could do to him. The speaker used the comparison technique to explain his answer better. What do you usually do during a break?Answer 1I’m not sure what the word ‘break’ means here, if it’s a short break from work like 20-30 minutes, I usually sip some coffee to help me awake and re-energize my mind. If it means
days off, more often than not, I binge-watch TV series or movies on Netflix or spend time outside gardening. On the other hand, if we’re talking about a long break like a week or two, I seize the opportunity to see places where I’ve never visited yet. Answer 2Actually, I make the most of my break by doing something that can add value to my life such
as reading books, meeting up with friends, exercising to maintain good health, and more importantly visiting my parents. Well, I’m currently living on my own now so I seldom see my parents, and because of that, I make a habit to visit them whenever I have time.Answer 3As an introvert, I always stay at home whenever I have a break from school. I
just enjoy cooking, reading books, writing poems, watching movies, gardening, and listening to indie music. I’m already content doing those things in my free time. I know that some people say that my life is boring, but I just shrug it off, as they cannot fathom the joys of the introverts.LEXICAL RESOURCESip [verb] – drinkBinge-watch [verb] – watch
multiple episodes of a TV program or movieSeize the opportunity [idiom] – to take advantage of the opportunityMake the most of (something) [phrase] – use to the best advantageMeet up [noun] – informal gatheringMake a habit [phrase] – to do something regularlyIntrovert [adj.] – a person who prefers spending time aloneContent [adj.] – contented
and satisfiedShrug it off [phase] – to ignore something as it is not importantFathom [verb] – comprehend; understandTIPSi.) ANSWER 1: The speaker expressed his confusion about the meaning of the word ‘break’, as a result, he provided the examiner the different types of break he enjoyed having and talked about the different activities that he did
whenever he had those kinds of breaks. It’s a witty answer as he’s able to express his ideas very clearly. ii.) ANSWER 2: The speaker started his answer by introducing a natural expression (make the most…) to express his answer. He enumerated the things that he normally does whenever he has some break. And to extend his answer, he picked one
of the things that he loved doing on his break and explained a little bit more about it. It’s a great way to make himself spontaneous and at the same time providing enough ideas. iii.) ANSWER 3: The speaker expressed his answer by stating his personality to the examiner. Then, he talked about the things that he enjoyed doing that aligns his
personality. And lastly, he talked about the opinion of people about his kind of life and how he thought about their opinion. It’s a very good way to end his answer!When do you usually have a break?(Answer 1 – For Workers)Thankfully, my days off fall on weekends! Saturday and Sunday are my favorite days of the week as I can be with my family.
Saturday is usually a lazy day for me – just playing with my children or watching some cartoons with them and Sunday is the time when we eat out and spend some time at the park. (Answer 2 – For Students)As a student, I’ve summer, winter, and autumn break. Among those breaks, summer is actually my favorite since it’s the longest – that usually
takes up to two months, while, winter and autumn are only up to three weeks. I suppose 100% of students love summer break!(Answer 3 – For Housewives/Mothers)That’s hilarious! Do you think mothers really have a break? Just kidding… Well, after my two children and my husband leave home for school and work, that’s the only time that I can have
a break.
But honestly, it’s not really an absolute break as I have to do what typical mothers in the world need to do in the house – cleaning, doing the laundry, cooking, and anything that you can think of. So I don’t know if that’s a break! LEXICAL RESOURCEFall on [phrase] – take place; occurEat out [phrase] – to eat in a restaurantHilarious [adj.] – very
amusing; funnyAbsolute [adj.] – completeTypical [adj.] – commonTIPSi.) ANSWER 1: The speaker started his answer on a positive note, immediately talking about his days off. Right after that, he talked about how he spent his break with his family, making wonderful activity with his children and his wife or partner. ii.) ANSWER 2: The speaker
introduced his answer stating that he’s still a student, which is a very good start since he would be able to connect it to talking about the different kinds of breaks he usually have. And to extend his answer a bit longer, he talked about which break he considered as his favorite. It’s a great way to end his answer. iii.) ANSWER 3: The speaker developed
her answer in a humorous way and gave a rhetorical question to the examiner and later stated that she’s just joking. With that kind of introduction, she sounded very natural and comfortable in using the English language. Anyway, she continued giving her answer by citing the fact that typical mothers couldn’t really have a complete break since they
always have a lot of things to do in the house. It’s a very natural and realistic answer. How often do you take a break? Answer 1I believe not as much as most people, who have an 8-5 job, do. I work as a freelance digital marketer and as you may know, the biggest challenge of what I do is, this kind of job is very unstable – in other words, my income is
unstable as well. So, for me to achieve financial stability, I don’t care much about taking a break – I work like a dog. Answer 2Well, our company provides us with a 30-days paid holiday a year. So I always divide it in half – I spend my first 15-days leave in summer and the other one in winter. All in all, I can take a break from work twice a
year.LEXICAL RESOURCEFreelance [adj.] – self-employed and hired by many different companiesWork like dog [idiom] – to work very hardAll in all [phrase] – all things considered; on the wholeTIPSi.) ANSWER 1: The speaker gave his answer by comparing his status to other normal workers who have regular jobs. He pointed out the fact that his
work is unstable and that he needed to work much harder than those who have regular and secured jobs for him to achieve financial stability. He ended his answer by stating that taking a break is not his main priority. It’s an honest and realistic answer.ii.) ANSWER 2: The speaker talked about one of the great benefits his company offered to all of
them as workers which is the 30-days paid holiday. Then, he answered the question by stating that he divided that one-month paid holiday twice, which he normally spent every summer and winter time. It’s a direct answer and natural. Learn the RECENT IELTS SPEAKING PART 1 TOPIC about ART or ARTWORKS on this link: that’s all about IELTS
Speaking Part 1 Break or Breaktime recent topic! Now that you have good amount of knowledge or ideas about this topic, make sure to develop your confidence in order for you to deliver your answers better. Good luck!Meanings of Words and Phrases Sources: 1, 2Best of luck to your exam! Be Natural! Breathe Confidence!YOUR DONATION HELPS
A LOT!Did you find this helpful? Help ieltsDragon. Even a dollar can be a huge help. Click the button below.[wpedon id=”68″ align=”center”] Habits, the one thing that shapes us. We often do become what our habits are! But, then there are so many kind of habits that people develop over time. Let us today, have a look at some of the questions related
to habits. Do you have any bad habits? I think I do have my share of bad habits, but the one that tends to affect my work is that I sleep a lot and it becomes quite difficult to get up early in the morning. However, now I am trying to get rid of it by waking up early. I hope I am able to do it. Do children learn bad habits at school or at home? I think they
can learn bad habits anywhere. It could be home or school,completely depends on what sort of environment they are getting. But, what is important is that either of the place, there are people who can pull them back to being a better person.
Do you cut people off in the middle of their stories and conversations? No, I don’t tend to do it. But, yes I do ask questions in between stories. It is not always that I simply listen to what they are saying, it is a conversation, where even I am speaking and questioning. Is it easy or difficult to get rid of a bad habit? I think definitely it is. Habits are
something one forms over a long period of time and banishing them does take time. Because, it becomes part of the characteristic of the individual. But, if one has the determination to do it, nothing can come in between. Do other people’s bad habits get on your nerves? Not most of the times, but yes some things tend to irritate me. Like, there are
some people who themselves are non vegetarian and try to force it on others and it becomes irritating, especially when you are out on dinner with a group of friends. Sometimes even alcohol gets on my nerves. People tend to do horrific things when they are drunk, some fall down, some slap each other, some misbehave with their family members.
These things do irritate me. Have you been successful in getting rid of a bad habit? Oh! yes. Long time back I was a TV and a tea addict. I used to watch tv for most of the part and drink so much of tea. But, then for some reasons, I just felt I should quit and I did quit both of them. Although quitting tea was easier for me, tv is something still to be
conquered completely. Is always coming late a bad habit? I suppose it is, because it tends to bother people who are involved along with you. So, for example if you are late for a meeting, people might get bothered because of you. And, if this happens over a long period of time, people start ignoring your point of view. What bad habits bother you the
most? Untidiness, food habits and over drinking tends to bother me.
Untidiness because I cannot live in a stinky room. Yes, I am not the one who keeps things very orderly but there should be some degree of tidiness in a room or in the way someone keeps things. Also, bad food habits irritate me. There are people who spill food out, chew loudly and then talk when their mouth is full. What good habits do you most
admire? I really like people who get up early and do exercise. It gives me a feeling that they are motivated towards leading a great life. Also, I love people who share things. I think sharing is a really great deed and people who can do that, even when they have so nimble, is a great thing. What unusual habits do you observe in your family members?
Do they bother you? My family is full of weird yet lovely people. We all have so many unusual habits. Like my mother, she is obsessed with her plants and take care of them like her own children.
You cannot harm them in any way. She would go about watering them and then giving them manure and making sure everything is fine. And then there is my father. He is one of those people who is the most planned unplanned person. So, most of the times he would just inform us he is going a km here or there but then later on would tell us about the


exciting places he has gone nearby, like 20-60 km here and there. IELTSBAND7 a Most people have bad habits that they'd like to break. b It can be extremely hard to break a bad habit. c People pick up most of their bad habits while they are growing up. d People are not always aware that they have bad habits. We all think we can break our
bad habits — but they can stay with us for life What is a bad habit? The most common definition is that it is something that we do regularly, almost without thinking about it, and which has some sort of negative consequence. This consequence could affect those around us, or it could affect us personally. Those who deny having bad habits are
probably lying.
Bad habits are part of what makes us human.
Many early habits, like sucking our thumb, are broken when we are very young. We are either told to stop doing it by our parents, or we consciously or subconsciously observe that others do not have the same habit, and we gradually grow out of it. It is when we intentionally or unintentionally pick up new habits in our later childhood or early
adulthood that it becomes a problem. Unless we can break that habit early on, it becomes a part of our life, and becomes 'programmed' into our brain. A recent study of human memory suggests that no matter how hard we try to change our habits, it is the old ways that tend to win, especially in situations where we are rushed, stressed or
overworked. Habits that we thought we had got rid of can suddenly come back. During the study programme, the researchers showed a group of volunteers several pictures, and gave them words to associate with them (for example, see a picture of tea, and associate it with 'breakfast'). They then showed the volunteers the same pictures again, and
gave them new words to associate with them (see a picture of tea, and say 'afternoon'). A few days later, the volunteers were given a test. The researchers showed them the pictures, and told them to respond with one of the words they had been given for each one. It came as no surprise that their answers were split between the first set of words and
the second. Two weeks later, they were given the same test again. This time, most of them only gave the first set of words. They appeared to have completely forgotten the second set. The study confirms that the responses we learn first are those that remain strongest over time. We may try to change our ways, but after a while, the response that
comes to mind first is usually the first one we learned. The more that response is used, the more automatic it becomes and the harder it becomes to respond in any other way. The study therefore suggests that over time, our bad habits also become automatic, learned behaviour.
This is not good news for people who picked up bad habits early in life and now want to change or break them. Even when we try to put new, good intentions into practice, those previously learned habits remain stronger in more automatic, unconscious forms of memory. Do the following statements agree with the claims of the writer in the Reading
passage?
Write YES if the statement agrees with the claims of the writer NO if the statement contradicts the claims of the writer NOT GIVEN if it is impossible to say what the writer thinks about this 1. We usually develop bad habits when we are very young. 2. We can only break bad habits if people tell us to do so. 3.
Bad habits may return when we are under pressure. 4. Researchers were surprised by the answers that the volunteers gave in the first test. 5. The volunteers found the test more difficult when they did it the second time. 6. People find it more difficult to remember things they learnt when they were young. 7. If we develop bad habits early in life, they
are harder to get rid of. Summary completion with a box 1. to do or make something which behaves or looks like something real, but which is not real 2. the work of treating mental or physical illness without surgery 3. using computer images and sounds that make you think an imagined situation or object is real 4. to make someone experience
something or be affected by it 5. an extreme fear of something 6. someone whose job is to treat a particular type of mental or physical illness Computers are not just for entertainment, shopping or research purposes - as one woman found out when she tried to cure her fears Most people have at least one thing they are afraid of.
A fear of things like snakes, spiders, dogs, heights or open spaces affects over 90% of the population. In extreme cases, a fear can develop into a phobia, where the fear of something is so powerful it can affect the way the sufferer lives their life. About 10% of people suffer from a phobia. Most sufferers never seek treatment, because the most common
type of cure - 'exposure therapy' - involves them being exposed to the object of their fear, and this is the last thing many of them are prepared to do. There is now a new cure for phobias, using something called virtual reality exposure therapy (VRET). The concept is simple. The person with the phobia wears a virtual reality headset. A computer,
controlled by a therapist, then simulates a variety of situations in which the sufferer is gradually exposed to the object of their fear, which they view on the headset's screen. At the same time, the therapist explains why they should not be afraid of it. The technique is surprisingly successful, as this case demonstrates. Sara Considine had a serious
spider phobia, and had developed several spider-related behaviour patterns. Before going to bed, for example, she would check her room for spiders, then seal the windows with tape so none could get in. She had frightening dreams about spiders every night. Eventually, she decided to get treatment. During twelve one-hour virtual reality sessions
over a three-month period, Ms Considine started very slowly. First, she stood a long way from the virtual spider and just looked at it. Slowly, she moved a little closer. The therapist controlling the computer programme then made the virtual spider move. After just two sessions, Ms Considine reported that although she still saw spiders in her dreams,
they were no longer frightening, and she had even managed to have an amusing `conversation' with one of them. A few sessions later, the therapist encouraged her to hold the virtual spider in her virtual hand, and put it in places where the presence of a real spider would cause her fear. The next stage was to introduce touch. A large toy spider was
placed next to her. Ms Considine then reached out to touch the virtual spider she could see on the screen, and at the same time her real hand touched the toy spider. After her sessions were over, Sara Considine was able to stop her spider-related behaviour. She even took up camping, something she would never have considered before therapy.
More recently she has appeared on a television nature programme, where for the first time she was able to hold a real spider in her hands.
Questions 1-5 Complete the summary using the list of words and phrases, A-J, below. Treating a phobia using VRET Sara Considine's programme of treatments lasted for 1……………. months. At first, the sessions did not move very 2……………., as she just 3 ……………. the virtual spider through her headset. It only took two sessions for her to stop
being 4 …………….the spiders in her dreams. After a while, she could hold the virtual spider in her virtual hand, and the next stage involved making physical 5……………. with a toy spider. A afraid of B amused by C contact D held E observed F quickly G slowly H touch I
three J twelve Mọi thông tin chi tiết, các bạn vui lòng liên hệ: DU HỌC UNIGLOBE 10/3 Nguyễn Thị Minh Khai, Phường Đa Kao, Quận 1, TP.HCM ĐT: (08) 35 173 345 – 35 173 678 Email: info@uniglobe.edu.vn Website: www.uniglobe.edu.vn Academia.edu uses cookies to personalize content, tailor ads and improve the user experience. By
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