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IELTS Practice Now Practice in Listening, Reading, Writing and Speaking for the IELTS Test ( PDFDrive )
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- Beginning of Sentence
Beginning of Sentence and an End of Sentence. Complete the sentences
numbered 17-22 by adding an end of sentence from the selection A-G below. Write your answers A-G in spaces numbered 17-22 on the answer sheet. The first one has been done as an example. Example: Answer: Examples of Western households .. B Beginning of Sentence 17. Social scientists... 18. Role expectations ... 19. Decisions and power within marriage ... 20. In traditional families, males ... 21. Stereotypes... 22. Males and females ... Question 16 In Reading Passage 2, a number of themes are mentioned. From the selection of themes A- E below, choose ONE which best represents the main theme of theentire passage. Write the appropriate letter in the space numbered 16 on the answer sheet. Paragraph 7 family life, in accordance with current situations So, depending upon demands in life situations, It is these life situations, rather than people, tha men and women assign what they believe are the should be calegorised as typically feminine 01 appropriate masculine and feminine masculine. For example, when a couple begins a characteristics to particular contexts. Moreover, loving relationship, attends to a baby or cares for depending upon how stereotyped the activities a sick relative, it is the feminine qualities that are are that they are involved in, gender-roles may foremost. In contrast, competition and the degree alter. of aggressiveness often required in outside employment, are associated with stereotypical masculine qualities. End of Sentence A . .. are divided by gender. B . .. were considered. C . .. are often difficult to change. D . .. are often in agreement around the home. E . .. and tasks are typically along traditional lines. F G. .. make the key difference. . are divided in their view of what is responsible for the different patterns of domestic division of labour. Questions 23-28 Paragraphs 2-7 in Reading Passage 2 each contain one word highlighted in bold type. Each highlighted word can be paired with a word of approximately opposite meaning which is in the list A-N below. From the list of highlighted words, choose the most suitable opposite meaning. Use each word ONCE only. Write your answers in spaces numbered 23-28 on the answer sheet. The first one is an example. Example: Answer: fostering (Paragraph 1) K Highlighted words 23. bulk 24. breadwinning 25. prescription 26. adopt 27. categorised 28. stereotyped Opposite meanings A differentiated F choice K discouraging B average G loss L named C unclassified H assume M outgoings D owned I repudiate N encourage E minimum J pattern QUESTIONS 29-40 You are advised to spend about 20 minutes on Questions 29-40 which refer to Rending Passage 3 below. READING PASSAGE 3 The Great Barrier Reef All along (he Queensland coast, inshore coral reefs, smothered by silt and algae, are dying. Some lagoons and reefs, once pristine examples of a tropical paradise, now consist of broken skeletons of dead coral, buried in layers of silt. Even the most remote reefs are at risk of pollution from tourist resorts releasing sewage and ships dumping their rubbish. Tourists too are so numerous that at one popular reef, urine from swimmers, and droppings from fish they feed, have increased the nutrient level in the water so much that algal blooms flourish and threaten the very existence of the colourful corals. Marine experts say about 70% of coral reefs around the world are dead or severely degraded. Australia's Great Barrier Reef, the globe's largest reef system, stretching 2300 kilometres and comprising 2900 separate reefs, is in better shape than most. But experts warn that it requires concerted effort and diligence to keep it that way and in some places it is already too late. The Great Barrier Reef is internationally renowned for its spectacular marine life and the tourist and fishing industries are economically important. Reef-based tourism and fishing have a combined economic worth of more than $1 billion a year. Reef tourism is now more valuable than sugar exports and tourist numbers are forecast to quadruple within eight years. The industry depends on protecting a spectacular marine environment that is home to at least 10,000 species of animals (including 400 varieties of coral) and plants. They include such endangered creatures as the dugong, the giant clam and the humpback whale. It is an environment so little known that thousands more species almost certainly await discovery; during one recent 12 month field study, 200,000 new biological records, .information not previously known to science, were made. Many promising compounds for new medical treatments and other products are being discovered on the reef. Compounds derived from sponges and other reef organisms are being evaluated in the United States for possible use in drugs to fight cancer and AIDS. Through newly developing technology, corals are giving us an extraordinary insight into past weather patterns. Scientists have discovered that long-lived on the Great Barrier Reef are vast storehouses weather information. Over the centuries, corals have absorbed humic acid from plant material washed into the reef from mainland rivers. By examining bands in coral skeletons (analogous to tree rings) under ultraviolet light, scientists have been able to trace rainfall levels back to 1640s; eventually, they will know what the rainfall was at least 1000 years ago. Sadly, after several years of research, marine experts agree that inshore reefs are being devastated by a vast deluge of sediment and nutrients washed into the sea as a result of development on the mainland. Some claim that outer reefs will eventually meet the same fate. As internationally renowned marine scientist Leon Zann sums it up: 'It's not the waste on the beaches we have to worry about, it's what we can't see below the surface'. The reef is being assaulted on other fronts: • Research suggests that a new invasion of crown-of-thorns starfish, a coral devouring creature, may be imminent. Authorities believe that human activities are implicated in such population explosions. • Fresh outbreaks of coral bleaching — which occurs when rising temperatures cause polyps to discard the tiny algae that give reefs their colours and which is linked by some scientists to the greenhouse effect, are being recorded. • Catches of reef fish by commercial and Australia is regarded internationally as being in recreational fishermen are falling the forefront of reef management and research • Ships are illegally discharging oil and and is providing $2 million worth of advice on dumping garbage; with only one ranger per 5200 marine issues this year to other countries. square kilometres of the Great Barrier Reef Australian scientists have advised Ecuador on Marine Park, it is difficult to stop them. how to protect the seas around the famed • In a controversial move, the oil industry — Galapagos Islands and are helping the with the government's blessing — plans to explore Association of South-East Asian Nations to waters off the reef for petroleum within the next monitor their marine environment, where 80% decade. of reefs are ruined and fish stocks are close to collapse. The hope is that the Great Barrier Reef will avoid a similar fate. Download 1.65 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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