Guide To ielts (answer key)
REVIEW TEST (pages 62–65)
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Student s Book answer key
REVIEW TEST (pages 62–65)
1 8.30/eight-thirty If you call at eight-thirty, then you can usually get an appointment for that same day. 2 urgent If it’s urgent, we have a surgery in the evening at five o’clock. 3 10/ten minutes A standard consultation is ten minutes. 4 9.30/nine-thirty as long as you ask for the visit by nine-thirty 5 user name I can issue you with a user name. 6 password You’ll also need a password to gain access to the website 7 Haworth H-A-W-O-R-T-H 8 42 Garden Street Is that 42 Garden Street? 9 412398 That’s 412398. 10 Science F: So that’s the Science Faculty? M: Yes, that’s right. 11 C the medals and cups that the club has won … are on the second floor in the first big room you come to after you’ve gone up the stairs. 12 J on the first floor. It’s in the first room you come to on your right as you walk down the main corridor from the entrance. 13 H the type of kit the team members used to play in at various times in its history in a display in the next room on the same side of the corridor on the first floor. 14 F That’s in the middle room on the second floor. 15 B interesting display of posters at the end of the corridor on the first floor – just before you go up the stairs. 16 D you can watch some of the finest moments in the club’s history in the last room on the left-hand side of the corridor on the first floor. You can see old newsreels ANSWER KEY The Complete Guide To IELTS (ANSWER KEY) 13 17 A so we should be finished by 3.15. 18 C no eating and drinking please – that’s our only rule. 19 B you’ll see their shirts hanging up in the places where they normally get changed. 20 A If you could save them until I’ve come to the end of my little talk in each area, that works best. 21 B/D M: households … the amount of rubbish finding its way into the recycling bins … has now risen to 70 per cent of the total, up from 65 per cent last year. F: Great. I found much the same story for commercial rubbish – there the rise has been slightly less, but from a stronger base – recycling from commercial premises was already at 70 per cent before, and has risen to 73 per cent in the last year. 22 D/B Well, it appears that there is some truth in the first of those stories – some refuse is sold to processing plants abroad 23 A/D F: Well, we’re going to share giving the presentation, remember – fifty-fifty – that was our agreement. M: Yeah – but if you’d prefer me to take on all of that, I wouldn’t mind. F: OK 24 D/A F: But maybe writing the body of the report is more your sort of thing. Getting ideas across clearly and concisely on the page is something I find quite tricky. M: OK, I’m up for that 25 F F: everything else goes into a room where somebody plugs them in and switches them on to see if they work – what they call the Testing Area. 26 A M: What route do they follow? F: Well, those items are classed as ‘Beyond Repair’ 27 H F: they then get assessed and broken down into their constituent parts. M: Dismantled, you mean. F: Exactly. That happens in the Dismantling Area. 28 E F: so the next stage is a segregation area, where stuff is divided up into what’s recyclable and what isn’t. 29 D F: They’re called imaging consumables – so there’s a special unit handling those. 30 C M: There’s a special type of recycling known as CRT that applies to them. F: That’s right. 31 reconstructive In 1890, the psychologist William James described memory as ‘reconstructive’. 32 video clip People are wrong, therefore, to think of memory as something similar to a video clip 33 1974 One of the best known experiments showing how memory actually works was carried out by Loftus and Palmer in 1974. They showed students a short film of a car accident. 34 contacted if the students were asked how quickly the car was travelling when it ‘crashed’, the answer was generally: ‘about 60 miles per hour’, but if the word ‘contacted’ was used instead, then the students tended to say ‘about 40 miles per hour’. 35 cognitive interview Elizabeth Loftus’s work led to the development of this technique which is called ‘cognitive interview technique’ 36 TV/television program(me) eventually the woman realised that she’d been watching the TV programme when the attack happened 37 DNA evidence There have even been several cases of people convicted on this basis of eyewitness reports being released after DNA evidence, which is more reliable 38 shopping centre/center Loftus convinced people that they’d been lost in a shopping centre at the age of five. 39 25 per cent / % In a follow-up interview, 25 per cent of participants claimed that they remembered getting lost on the trip - an event that never happened 40 false confession people may be confused into making a false confession if there is enough reliable evidence. |
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