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IELTS Mock Test 2024 June

IELTS Mock Test 2024 June

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(504 votes)
  • Đăng ngày: 03 Jul 2024
  • Tests taken: 385,126
Part 1: Question 1 - 14
  • 1 18 (years old)
  • 2 biologist
  • 3 storm/lightning
  • 4 A
  • 5 D
  • 6 C
  • 7 A
  • 8 B
  • 9 C
  • 10 D
  • 11 NO
  • 12 NO
  • 13 YES
  • 14 NOT GIVEN
Part 2: Question 15 - 27
  • 15 B
  • 16 C
  • 17 B
  • 18 A
  • 19 B
  • 20 NOT GIVEN
  • 21 NO
  • 22 NO
  • 23 NOT GIVEN
  • 24 NO
  • 25 pollution
  • 26 wrinkling
  • 27 60
Part 3: Question 28 - 40
  • 28 projection
  • 29 axis
  • 30 perspective
  • 31 compare
  • 32 M
  • 33 M
  • 34 P
  • 35 M
  • 36 A
  • 37 B
  • 38 C
  • 39 A
  • 40 C
Tips for improving your ielts score
剑桥雅思4听力原文-TEST3

剑桥雅思4听力原文-TEST3

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19 Oct 2023

Giải thích chi tiết

Part 1: Questions 1-14

Questions 1-3

Answer the following questions using NO MORE THAN ONE WORDS AND/OR A NUMBER from the passage.

How old was Juliane at the time of the crash?

1

What is her occupation now?

2

What was the cause of the plane crash?

3

  • 1 Answer: 18 (years old)

    Keywords in Questions

    Similar words in Passage

    Q1: How old was Juliane at the time of the crash?

    In a remarkable documentary, Wings of Hope, German director Werner Herzog re-counts the true story of an eighteen-year-old girl, the sole survivor of a plane crash in the Amazon jungle in 1971.

    Note: The keyword in Q1 is How old as we look for the information in the passage. From the question, we can assume that the answer is a number. After skimming, we can notice that paragraph 1 mentions the keyword. Considering every details in the question and in the passage, we can conclude that eighteen is confirmed in Q1.

    Therefore, the answer for Q1 is 18 (years old)

  • 2 Answer: biologist

    Keywords in Questions

    Similar words in Passage

    Q2:. What is her occupation now?

    Twenty-nine years later, Herzog returns to the jungle with Juliane Koepke, now a 46-year-old biologist, and she tells her amazing story on film.

    Note: The blank should be filled with a noun. The answer should be the name of job. The keywords here is her occupation now. The parallel expressions of keywords can be found in paragraph 1. Considering every details in the question and in the passage, we can conclude that biologist is confirmed in Q2.

    For that reason, the answer is biologist.

  • 3 Answer: storm/lightning

    Keywords in Questions

    Similar words in Passage

    Q3: What was the cause of the plane crash?

    A half hour into the flight they encountered a horrific storm. In the midst of wild turbulence, the plane was struck by lightning and fell into a nosedive.

    Note: The blank should be filled with a noun. The keywords here is the cause. The parallel expressions of keywords can be found in paragraph 2. Considering every details in the question and in the passage, we can conclude that storm/lightning is confirmed in Q3.

    For that reason, the answer is storm/lightning.

Questions 4-10

Choose the correct letter A-D.

4

What happened to the plane?

  • A
  • B
  • C
  • D
Answer: A

Keywords in Questions

Similar words in Passage

Q4: What happened to the plane?

Then the plane broke into pieces and suddenly Juliane found herself outside free-falling 30,000 feet.

Note: The keyword of Q4 is happened to the plane when we look for the information in the passage. After skimming, we can notice that paragraph 2 mentions the keyword. It states clearly in the passage that the plane broke into pieces and suddenly Juliane found herself outside free-falling 30,000 feet.

Therefore, the answer for Q4 is A.

5

Which of the following did NOT help to slow her fall?

  • A
  • B
  • C
  • D
Answer: D

Keywords in Questions

Similar words in Passage

Q5: Which of the following did NOT help to slow her fall?

In the film, she speculates on a number of factors which may have combined to save her. First, the storm had produced a strong updraft from the thunder clouds. Secondly, being strapped into a row of seats, she was aware of falling in a spiralling movement, like a maple seed pod. Then, hitting the canopy of trees, she tumbled through a maze of vines which slowed her landing in deep mud.

Note: The keyword of Q5 is help to slow her fall when we look for the information in the passage. The parallel expressions of keywords can be found in paragraph 2. Considering every details in the question and in the passage, we can conclude that D is confirmed in Q5.

For that reason, the answer is D.

6

Which of the following injuries did she sustain?

  • A
  • B
  • C
  • D
Answer: C

Keywords in Questions

Similar words in Passage

Q6: Which of the following injuries did she sustain?

Staggering to her feet, she assessed her injuries: a fractured bone in the neck, concussion and deep cuts in her leg and back.

Note The keyword of Q6 is injuries did she sustain when we look for the information in the passage. After skimming, we can notice that paragraph 4 mentions the keyword. Considering every details in the question and in the passage, we can conclude that C is confirmed in Q6.

For that reason, the answer is C.

7

What, helped her to survive?

  • A
  • B
  • C
  • D
Answer: A

Keywords in Questions

Similar words in Passage

Q7: What helped her to survive?

No doubt it was her familiarity with the wilderness that enabled her to cope.

Note Scanning all over the passage, It states clearly in the passage that her familiarity with the wilderness that enabled her to cope.

So that, the answer is A.

8

What was the biggest threat to her survival?

  • A
  • B
  • C
  • D
Answer: B

Keywords in Questions

Similar words in Passage

Q8. What was the biggest threat to her survival?


Para 6: I knew I’d perish in the jungle so I stayed in the water.’ Walking in the stream, however, presented one risk more serious than any others. Before each step she had to poke ahead in the sand with a stick, to avoid treading on poisonous sting rays, lying hidden on the bottom.

Note

In paragraph 6, it’s said the she thought she would perish (die) in the jungle, so this is closely related to her survival. She tried her best to avoid sting rays, so they were the biggest threats.

Answer: B

9

How long was she lost in the jungle?

  • A
  • B
  • C
  • D
Answer: C

Keywords in Questions

Similar words in Passage

Q9. How long was she lost in the jungle?

On the tenth day, starving and barely conscious, she spotted a hut and a canoe.

Note

The keywords in this question is How long. After skimming, we notice that paragraph 7 mentions that. Considering every details in the question and in the passage, we can conclude that option C is confirmed in Q9.

Therefore, the answer for Q9 is C.

10

How was she finally rescued?

  • A
  • B
  • C
  • D
Answer: D

Keywords in Questions

Similar words in Passage

Q10 How was she finally rescued?

On the tenth day, starving and barely conscious, she spotted a hut and a canoe. They belonged to three woodcutters working nearby. Rescue was at hand.

Note

The keywords in this question is finally rescued. After skimming, we notice that paragraph 7 mentions that. Considering every details in the question and in the passage, we can conclude that D is matched with Q10.

Therefore, the answer for Q10 is D.

Questions 11-14

Part 1

Reading Passage 1

You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1-14 which are based on this passage.

Survivor from the sky

In a remarkable documentary, Wings of Hope, German director Werner Herzog re-counts the true story of an eighteen-year-old girl, the sole survivor of a plane crash in the Amazon jungle in 1971. Twenty-nine years later, Herzog returns to the jungle with Juliane Koepke, now a 46-year-old biologist, and she tells her amazing story on film.

Juliane had just graduated from high school in Lima, Peru and, with her mother, was flying out to spend Christmas at her father’s research station in the jungle. A half hour into the flight they encountered a horrific storm. In the midst of wild turbulence, the plane was struck by lightning and fell into a nosedive. Passengers screamed as baggage flew around the compartment. Then the plane broke into pieces and suddenly Juliane found herself outside free-falling 30,000 feet. ‘I was suspended in mid-air, still in my scat. It wasn’t so much that I had left the plane but that the plane had left me. It simply wasn’t there any more. I was all alone with my row of seats,’ says Juliane. ‘I sailed on through the air, then I tumbled into a fall. The seatbelt squeezed my stomach and I couldn’t breathe any more.’ Before she lost consciousness, Juliane saw the dense jungle below, ‘a deep green, like broccoli’, with no clearings for hundreds of miles.

Somehow, miraculously, Juliane survived that fall from the sky. In the film, she speculates on a number of factors which may have combined to save her. First, the storm had produced a strong updraft from the thunder clouds. Secondly, being strapped into a row of seats, she was aware of falling in a spiralling movement, like a maple seed pod. Then, hitting the canopy of trees, she tumbled through a maze of vines which slowed her landing in deep mud.

But surviving the fall, though miraculous in itself, was just the beginning. When Juliane awoke hours later, wet and covered with mud, she was still strapped to her seat. Staggering to her feet, she assessed her injuries: a fractured bone in the neck, concussion and deep cuts in her leg and back. She was also in shock, lost and totally alone in the Amazon jungle.

No doubt it was her familiarity with the wilderness that enabled her to cope. Her parents were biologists and Juliane had grown up in the jungle. She realised her only hope was to follow a little stream of water nearby, trusting that it would eventually lead to a larger river and rescue. With no provisions, dressed in the miniskirt she had worn on the plane and wearing just one shoe, she set off through the jungle. She passed broken fragments from the plane - a wheel, an engine. ‘Initially, I saw planes circling above me, but after a few days I realised the search had been called off,’ she said.

Surprisingly she felt no hunger but as the days passed her health was deteriorating rapidly. The gash in her shoulder, where flies had laid their eggs was now crawling with maggots. ‘I knew I’d perish in the jungle so I stayed in the water.’ Walking in the stream, however, presented one risk more serious than any others. Before each step she had to poke ahead in the sand with a stick, to avoid treading on poisonous sting rays, lying hidden on the bottom.

As the stream grew into a river, swimming was the only option. However, here in deeper water, there were new threats. Crocodiles basking on the shores slipped silently into the water as she passed. Juliane trusted that they feared humans and were entering the water to hide. She swam on. On the tenth day, starving and barely conscious, she spotted a hut and a canoe. They belonged to three woodcutters working nearby. Rescue was at hand.

For this 46-year-old woman, re-living such a traumatic experience on film must have been a great challenge. But she shows little emotion. Flying back into the jungle, she sits in the same seat (19F) as on that fateful day. She is dispassionate, unemotional in describing the flight. On the ground, when they finally locate the crash site, in dense jungle, Juliane is scientific in her detachment, looking through the debris, now buried under dense vegetation. She examines a girl’s purse, the skeleton of a suitcase. Walking along the stream, she spots the engine which she remembers passing on the third day. Her arms and legs are covered with mosquitoes, but she seems to ignore all discomfort. Then, back in the town, standing in front of a monument erected in memory of the victims of the crash, entitled Alas de Esperanza (Wings of Hope), Juliane comments simply, T emerged, as the sole embodiment of hope from this disaster.

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