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IELTS Mock Test 2023 February

IELTS Mock Test 2023 February

3.7
(1,442 votes)
  • Published on: 28 Feb 2023
  • Tests taken: 1,929,821

Answer Keys:

Part 1: Question 1 - 13
  • 1 iv
  • 2 v
  • 3 i
  • 4 vii
  • 5 viii
  • 6 ix
  • 7 ii
  • 8 cottages
  • 9 1086
  • 10 self-sufficient
  • 11 remnants
  • 12 defence
  • 13 triangular
Part 2: Question 14 - 26
  • 14 ii
  • 15 v
  • 16 x
  • 17 iv
  • 18 vi
  • 19 i
  • 20 ix
  • 21 NO
  • 22 YES
  • 23 NOT GIVEN
  • 24 multimedia
  • 25 abstract concepts
  • 26 interactive and stimulating
Part 3: Question 27 - 40
  • 27 E
  • 28 H
  • 29 C
  • 30 F
  • 31 FALSE
  • 32 TRUE
  • 33 TRUE
  • 34 NOT GIVEN
  • 35 FALSE
  • 36 affected
  • 37 blend
  • 38 caring
  • 39 slowly
  • 40 overcome
Tips for improving your ielts score
剑桥雅思3听力原文-TEST4

剑桥雅思3听力原文-TEST4

5.0
(1 votes)
141
19 Oct 2023

Review & Explanations:

Part 1: Questions 1-13

Questions 1-7

Questions 8-13

Complete the following summary of the paragraphs of Reading Passage, using NO MORE THAN ONE WORD from the Reading Passage for each answer. Write your answers in boxes 8-13 on your answer sheet.

Village Green layout and Extending

Impression of British Village usually takes forms of old-styled 8 with church and manor house. However, records in 9 indicated that England was already a cultivated and populated country in the 11th century. During medieval times, farmers literally could support themselves and the community, therefore, needed to be 10 in general.

Green village was usually 11 of dwellings after the invasion from Norman, and it was gathered mainly for the purpose of 12 Village Green’s 13 shape had a connection with its location among the roads, and nowadays it still can be seen in some public venues such as memorial and sports sites.

  • 8 Answer: cottages

    Keywords in Questions

    Similar words in Passage

    Q8:

    When we think of a British village we probably imagine a settlement of traditional cottages around a village green with a church and ancient manor house as a backdrop.

    The answer should be a noun following an adjective ‘old-styles’ which is equivalent to ‘traditional’ in the passage. Thus, the answer for Q8 must be cottages.

  • 9 Answer: 1086

    Keywords in Questions

    Similar words in Passage

    Q9: However, records in 9______ indicated that England was already a cultivated and populated country in the 11th century

    By the time that the Domesday Book was written in 1086 most of the good agricultural land in Britain was already under cultivation, and England was a densely populated country.

    First of all, we detect the keywords for this question should be “England”, “cultivated and populated country”, “11th century”. We can zone the “area” to paragraph K.

    The answer for the question could be a number (year). According to the passage, most of the land in Britain was cultivated which resulted in a dense population by the time the book was written in 1086. Hence, the answer for Q9 is 1086.

  • 10 Answer: self-sufficient

    Keywords in Questions

    Similar words in Passage

    Q10: During medieval times, farmers literally could support themselves and the community, therefore, needed to be 10________ in general.

    In the medieval village, virtually everyone would have earned their living on the territory, hence the community had to be relatively self-sufficient.

    First, the answer can be an adjective which follows the verb ‘be’. Keywords for the questions should be ‘medieval times’. Once reading through, ‘everyone’ refers to ‘farmers’ in the context of the passage and ‘support themselves and the community’ equally means ‘earned their living’. Thus, the answer for Q10 should be self-sufficient.

  • 11 Answer: remnants

    Keywords in Questions

    Similar words in Passage

    Q11: Green village was usually 11______ of dwellings after the invasion from Norman

    Green Villages’ were a common village form, where houses clustered around a central green of common land. They are often the remnants of planned settlements introduced after the Norman Conquest in the 19th century.

    The answer for the question can be a noun since it is followed by ‘of dwellings’. By narrowing to paragraph M through keywords ‘Green village’, ‘invasion from Norman’. The word ‘remnants of planned settlements’ can be replaced by ‘remnants of dwellings’ without changing the meaning.

    Therefore, the answer should be remnants.

  • 12 Answer: defence

    Keywords in Questions

    Similar words in Passage

    Q12: Green village was usually remnants of dwellings after the invasion from Norman, and It was gathered mainly for the purpose of 12 ________

    Green Villages’ were a common village form, where houses clustered around a central green of common land. They are often the remnants of planned settlements introduced after the Norman Conquest in the 19th century. It is suggested that this arrangement allowed for easier defence, especially compared to the village form most common before the Normans, which was simple clusters of farms.

    The answer can be a noun following the word ‘purpose of’. The phrase ‘It was gathered’ can be understood as ‘houses cluster around’ and this is for easier defence. For this reason, the space in Q12 should be filled by defence.

  • 13 Answer: triangular

    Keywords in Questions

    Similar words in Passage

    Q13: Village Green’s 13______shape had a connection with its location among the roads, and nowadays it still can be seen in some public venues such as memorial and sports sites.

    Village greens often take a triangular form, usually reflecting the fact that the village was at the meeting of three roads. The continuing importance of the village green to modern-day communities is reflected in the fact that this is usually where the war memorial is seen, as well as village notice boards, where local cricket matches are played, and where public benches are placed. The Open Spaces Society states that in 2005 there were about 3,650 registered greens in England and about 220 in Wales.

    The answer for Q13 can be an adjective which is followed by ‘shape’. This word is equivalent to ‘form’ in the passage. Reading through the first line in the passage, the village greens often take the triangular shape which indicates that villages usually locate where the three roads intersect.

    Thus, the answer of Q13 is triangular.

READING PASSAGE 1

You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1-13 which are based on Reading Passage 1.

Exploring british village 2

{A} The Neolithic longhouse was a long, narrow timber dwelling built by the first farmers in Europe beginning at least as early as the period 5000 to 6000 BC. The origin of the name blackhouse is of some debate. It could be less than 150 years old and may have been synonymous with inferior. On Lewis, in particular, it seems to have been used to distinguish the older blackhouses from some of the newer white-houses (Scottish Gaelic: taigh-geal, Irish: tí geal, tí bán), with their mortared stone walls. There may also be some confusion arising from the phonetic similarity between the ‘dubh’ , meaning black and taghadh meaning thatch. The houses in Scotland were built high rather than wide; however, some were built small and wide.

{B} The buildings were generally built with double-wall dry-stone walls packed with earth and wooden rafters covered with a thatch of turf with cereal straw or reed. The floor was generally flagstones or packed earth and there was a central hearth for the fire. There was no chimney for the smoke to escape through. Instead, the smoke made its way through the roof. The blackhouse was used to accommodate livestock as well as people. People lived at one end and the animals lived at the other with a partition between them.

{C} It is estimated that there are over ten thousand villages in Britain, yet defining the term ‘village’ isn’t as simple as it may at first sound. When does a hamlet become a village? And when does a village become a town?

{D} Strictly speaking the term ‘village’ comes from the Latin ‘villaticus’, which roughly translates as ‘a group of houses outside a villa farmstead’. Today a village is understood as a collection of buildings (usually at least 20) that is larger than a hamlet, yet smaller than a town, and which contains at least one communal or public building. This is most commonly the parish church, though it can be a chapel, school, public house, shop, post office, smithy or mill. Villagers will share communal resources such as access roads, a water supply, and usually a place of worship

{E} A hamlet is a smaller grouping of buildings that don’t necessarily have any public or service buildings to support it. A significant difference is that it won’t have a parish church like a village does, and most hamlets contain only between three and twenty buildings.

{F} The point at which a village becomes a town is difficult to determine and is probably best defined by those who live there. However, since the Middle Ages, the term ‘town’ has been a legal term that refers to the fact that the community has a borough charter. The situation is confused by the fact that there are many town-like suburban communities calling themselves villages (for example, Oxton Village in Birkenhead), as well as designed suburban ‘villages’ such as those built under the Garden Village Movement.

{G} The 2001 census shows us that approx 80% of people in England live in an urban environment, with under 7% living in rural villages (the remainder live in rural towns or outside concentrated settlements). This is the exact opposite of the situation two centuries ago, when under 20% of the population lived in the town, and the majority lived in rural villages. As late as 1851 agriculture remained the largest single source of employment in Britain, yet today under 3% of us work on the land.

{H} It is essential to remember that villages were created and have evolved because of particular combinations of geographical, commercial, economic and social factors. They expand, decline, move and fluctuate with the times. This article introduces some of the common forms of the village to be found in Britain.

The Medieval Village

{I} When we think of a British village we probably imagine a settlement of traditional cottages around a village green with a church and ancient manor house as a backdrop. This common form of the village has its roots in the medieval period when many villages started out as a cluster of agricultural dwellings

{J} Today farmsteads tend to be scattered about the landscape, but back in the medieval period those working on the land tended to live in small nucleated settlements (villages) and worked ‘open-field’ agriculture where land wasn’t enclosed. In fact, over much of Britain in the period up to 1800, it would have been unusual to have seen a farm or cottage outside of a settlement boundary.

{K} By the time that the Domesday Book was written in 1086 most of the good agricultural land in Britain was already under cultivation, and England was a densely populated country. Two centuries later nucleated settlements were to be found over much of Britain, typically consisting of well-organised village settlements sitting within open fields.

{L} Over lowland Britain on good soil you would typically find a settlement every couple of miles, and the communities would use the open agricultural land around where they lived. The average village would have its church, manor house, and cottage tenements all clustered together, and the open land around would usually be divided into thin strips. In some villages, you can still see the remnants of medieval strip field systems around the periphery of the settlement. There would often be meadows, pasture and woodland held ‘in common, and only the lord of the manor would have his own, private land or ‘demesne’. In the medieval village, virtually everyone would have earned their living on the territory, hence the community had to be relatively self-sufficient.

{M} ‘Green Villages’ were a common village form, where houses clustered around a central green of common land. They are often the remnants of planned settlements introduced after the Norman Conquest in the 19th century. It is suggested that this arrangement allowed for easier defence, especially compared to the village form most common before the Normans, which was simple clusters of farms. However there is also evidence of ‘village’ greens in Anglo-Saxon settlements, and even at Romano-British sites.

{N} The village green was soon adopted as the main social space within a village, as well as its focal point alongside the church or chapel. Village greens often take a triangular form, usually reflecting the fact that the village was at the meeting of three roads. The continuing importance of the village green to modern-day communities is reflected in the fact that this is usually where the war memorial is seen, as well as village notice boards, where local cricket matches are played, and where public benches are placed. The Open Spaces Society states that in 2005 there were about 3,650 registered greens in England and about 220 in Wales.

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