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IELTS Mock Test 2024 January

IELTS Mock Test 2024 January

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  • Published on: 06 Sep 2023
  • Tests taken: 3,703,046

Answer Keys:

Part 1: Question 1 - 14
  • 1 B
  • 2 A
  • 3 C
  • 4 A
  • 5 B
  • 6 NO
  • 7 NOT GIVEN
  • 8 NOT GIVEN
  • 9 YES
  • 10 NO
  • 11 F
  • 12 C
  • 13 A
  • 14 E
Part 2: Question 15 - 27
  • 15 I
  • 16 F
  • 17 G
  • 18 D
  • 19 C
  • 20 H
  • 21 C
  • 22 D
  • 23 B
  • 24 one-sixth
  • 25 16th century
  • 26 Mercator
  • 27 John Gould
Part 3: Question 28 - 40
  • 28 iv
  • 29 vii
  • 30 i
  • 31 viii
  • 32 vi
  • 33 ii
  • 34 35 C,D
  • 36 truth
  • 37 journalists
  • 38 nurses
  • 39 dedication
  • 40 documents
Tips for improving your ielts score

Review & Explanations:

Part 1: Questions 1-14

Questions 1-5

Choose the correct letter, A, B, C or D.

Write the correct letter in boxes 1-5 on your answer sheet.

1

According to the writer, which marketing technique attempts to make consumers stay in a shop for longer?

  • A
  • B
  • C
  • D
Answer: B

Keywords in Questions

Similar words in Passage

Q1: According to the writer, which marketing technique attempts to make consumers stay in a shop for longer?

A playing appealing music

B emitting pleasant scents

C displaying attractive posters

D making in-store announcements

More surreptitiously, our olfactory system is targeted by variations of vanilla and citrus perfumes aimed at enticing US to linger in a retail outlet.

Note:

Matching keywords:

“attempts to make consumers stay in a shop for longer” - “aimed at enticing US to linger in a retail outlet”

“pleasant scents” in the answer are “variations of vanilla and citrus perfume” in the text

Answer: B

2

The writer mentions bottled water in order to show that

  • A
  • B
  • C
  • D
Answer: A

Keywords in Questions

Similar words in Passage

Q2: The writer mentions bottled water in order to show that

A consumers buy it because of the fact that it is marketed.

B people purchase it despite the fact that it has no taste.

C marketers need not do taste tests when a campaign is effective.

D tests prove that people cannot differentiate it from tap water.

In the case of bottled water, we are swayed by advertising into paying for something that we can obtain for free.

Note:

The answer to Q2 may be in the same paragraph as Q1 or in the next ones, we can base it on it to find the word “bottle water”.

There are no matching keywords in this question so we need to understand the idea of the text. The author indicates that many people buy bottled water because of they think they can get it for free. The idea is the same meaning as the idea “consumers buy it because of the fact that it is marketed”

Answer: A

3

According to the writer, socially transmitted food preference occurs when

  • A
  • B
  • C
  • D
Answer: C

Keywords in Questions

Similar words in Passage

Q3: According to the writer, socially transmitted food preference occurs when

A only dominant members of an animal group influence what others eat.

B the same types of animals naturally prefer the same types of food.

C animals are influenced by what any other animals of the same species eat.

D a food type is more desirable because an animal views that food as scarce.

However, if we put that rat with another rat that spent its day eating just one type, when faced with a choice, our rat will now show a preference for the same type as the other rat was eating. Psychologists call this ' socially transmitted food preference ‘.

Note:

To find the answer quickly, we can find the term: “socially transmitted food preference occurs” instead. We also need to understand clearly the idea of the text.

Same meaning: “animals are influenced by what any other animals of the same species eat” - “when faced with a choice, our rat will now show a preference for the same type as the other rat was eating.” (explanation for the word “when” in the question)

Answer: C

4

According to the writer, how is learning by observation and imitation a useful feature of the brain?

  • A
  • B
  • C
  • D
Answer: A

Keywords in Questions

Similar words in Passage

Q4: According to the writer, how is learning by observation and imitation a useful feature of the brain?

A it helps people overcome challenges.

B positive models can influence social behaviour.

C it can give an advantage when communicating with others.

D cultural norms and relationships can be understood more easily

Learning by observation can be an extraordinarily valuable brain feature, this is how we learn to communicate and perform motor skills as well as deal with many everyday problems. For example, a newcomer struggling to purchase tickets and navigate the subway system in a foreign city may step back to learn from the people nearby. Humans and other primates exhibit multiple forms of imitative learning and this is called cultural transmission.

Note:

Answer A: The text clearly demonstrates how observation and imitation help overcome a challenge (navigating the subway system). Therefore, this option is correct because it aligns directly with the text's example of overcoming a practical challenge.

Answer B: This specific point is not discussed in the given text. Therefore, this option is not supported by the provided information.

Answer C: While learning to communicate is mentioned, the focus of the text is more on solving practical problems (like navigating the subway) rather than on gaining a communication advantage. Hence, this option is partially correct but not the best answer in the context of the provided text.

Answer D: Although cultural transmission is mentioned, it is not explicitly linked to understanding cultural norms and relationships. The text emphasizes practical problem-solving and not the broader understanding of cultural norms and relationships. Therefore, this option is not fully supported by the text.

Answer: A

5

According to the writer, how does television advertising exploit the human tendency to imitate others ?

  • A
  • B
  • C
  • D
Answer: B

Keywords in Questions

Similar words in Passage

Q5: According to the writer, how does television advertising exploit the human tendency to imitate others ?

A It shows buying behaviour that marketers want to encourage in viewers.

B It features people who have a desirable image.

C It shows older people whom teenagers admire.

D It features successful people endorsing products responsible for their success.

If we are going to imitate someone, we are more inclined to imitate those who appear to be popular and appealing.

Note:

Matching keywords:

“the human tendency to imitate others” - “more inclined to imitate”

“people who have a desirable image” - “those who appear to be popular and appealing”

To find the answer quickly, we need to find the keyword: “imitate”. The idea of the text indicates that people tend to follow a kind of person, who is popular and appealing. That has the same meaning as the statement in the answer.

Answer: B

Questions 6-10

Questions 11-14

READING PASSAGE 1

You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1-14, which are based on Reading Passage 1 below.

Marketing And Mind Control

How marketing and advertising appeal to the associative nature of the brain

While there had been a long tradition of giving rings as a commitment to marry, the custom of giving diamond engagement rings was in large part manufactured by one of the most effective marketing campaigns in history . In the early 1900s, diamond sales were declining, posing a serious problem for the company that essentially had control over the diamond market. In 1938, this company hired an advertising agency. Which proposed reshaping social attitudes toward diamonds? As well as magazines showing film stars draped in diamonds, the agency arranged for movies to incorporate diamond engagement rings into their plots. The campaign culminated with the slogan:' A diamond is forever. At the time, the approach was unique. Rather than pushing a brand, the objective was to promote diamonds as the symbol of everlasting love. This was achieved by exploiting the associative nature of the brain: associating neurons! Activated by the concept of' love ' with neurons that encoded the concept of “diamonds. By 1941, diamond sales had increased by 55 %.

Advertising comes in many forms, from blatant neon signs to subtly embedded products in movies. In each case, the goal is to mould our habits, desires and opinions. Our visual system is targeted by an avalanche of information on the internet, street posters, and billboards and in movie theatres. Our auditory system submits to catchy radio jingles and telemarketers. More surreptitiously, our olfactory system is targeted by variations of vanilla and citrus perfumes aimed at enticing US to linger in a retail outlet. It is difficult to measure how effective these campaigns are, but as in the ' A diamond is forever ’ campaign, they can be so successful that they change the fabric of our culture. In the case of bottled water, we are swayed by advertising into paying for something that we can obtain for free. Most people cannot distinguish bottled from tap water, much less between brands of bottled water, which is why you rarely hear of a bottled water company proposing a blind taste test.

So why is marketing such an effective mind - control technique? It is interesting to consider whether other animals exhibit anything analogous to humans ' susceptibility to advertising. If we provide a lab rat with two types of cereal, it will consume approximately the same amount of each. However, if we put that rat with another rat that spent its day eating just one type, when faced with a choice, our rat will now show a preference for the same type as the other rat was eating. Psychologists call this ' socially transmitted food preference ‘.

What many regard as the first documented examples of cultural learning in primates started with a clever monkey that lived in a colony of Japanese monkeys on the island of Koshima. She began taking her dirt - covered sweet potatoes to the river to wash them before eating them. Upon seeing this, a few 11 other open - minded monkeys picked up on the idea. Potato washing then spread from monkey to monkey and, over the course of a few years, most monkeys were eating clean potatoes. Humans are clearly not the only animals to engage in imitation and social learning.

Learning by observation can be an extraordinarily valuable brain feature, this is how we learn to communicate and perform motor skills as well as deal with many everyday problems. For example, a newcomer struggling to purchase tickets and navigate the subway system in a foreign city may step back to learn from the people nearby. Humans and other primates exhibit multiple forms of imitative learning and this is called cultural transmission.

A component of advertising relies on the marketer's ability to tap into the brain’s propensity for imitation. Anybody who has watched TV knows advertisements are disproportionately populated with attractive, successful looking individuals. If we are going to imitate someone, we are more inclined to imitate those who appear to be popular and appealing.

Although not all researchers are convinced by the findings, a number of studies indicate that some animals also imitate dominant members of their group. Primatologist Frans de Waal provides anecdotal evidence of preferential imitation among chimpanzees. He noted that in one particular group the dominant male was hurt and was limping as a result. Soon unlikely if a non-dominant male had been injured.

Imitation is undoubtedly an invaluable ability, but often our propensity to imitate generalises indiscriminately, leading to poor decisions. When athlete Dick Fosbury revolutionised the high jump by jumping over the bar backward in 1968, imitators obviously copied his jumping style, not his brand of sports shoes. However, today, sports people appear in advertisements asking US to buy the laptops or sports drinks that they promote. Rationally, we know these people's success did not depend on these products, so it seems our propensity to purchase products relates more to neural programs that evolved to encourage imitation of those further up the social ladder. Today , companies engage in stealth marketing campaigns in which people are paid to frequent bars or websites to covertly promote certain products , Companies also perform studies in which they track the eye movements of people viewing displays , and carefully craft names , packages and jingles associated with their products. While we may like to believe that manipulation on a grand scale would not be possible, that's not to say that advertising is innately harmful. To the contrary, the marketing of products or ideas is essential to human culture. The point is that we should ensure our choices reflect our actual goals and desires, and we must distinguish between the dissemination of information which is for our own good, and our manipulation for the benefit of companies

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