雅思模拟题1套
寄托天下 | 2005-06-24 02:05 | 浏览4742次 |
Practice IELTS Reading Test A (Academic Module)[b][b]READING PASSAGE 1[b]PERSONAL TIME MANAGEMENT[b]Since the early work of Halberg(1960),the existence of human "circadian rhythms" has been well-known to biologists and psychologists. Circadian rhythms dictate that there are certain times of the day when we are at our best both physically and psychologically. At its simplest, the majority of us feel more alive and creative in the mornings, while come the evenings we are fit only for collapsing with a good book or in front of the television. Other of us note that in the morning we take a great deal of time to get going physically and mentally, but by the evening are full of energy and bright ideas, while a very few of us feel most alert and vigorous in the late afternoon .[b][b]Irrespective of our personal rhythms, most of us have a productive period between 10a.m. and noon, when the stomach, pancreas, spleen and heart all appear to be in their most active phases. Conversely, the majority of us experience a low period in the hour or two after lunch (a time when people in some societies sensibly take a rest), as most of our energy is devoted to the process of digestion. The simple rules here are: don't waste too much prime time having a coffee break around 11a.m.when you should be doing some of your best work, and don't make the after-lunch period even less productive by overloading your digestion. A short coffee or tea break is ,in fact, best taken on arrival at the office ,when it helps us start the day in a positive mood, rather than mid-morning when it interrupts the flow of our activities. Lunch is best taken early, when we are just beginning to feel hungry, and we are likely to eat less than if we leave it until later. An early lunch also means that we can get back into our productive stride earlier in the afternoon.[b][b]Changes in one's attitude can also enhance personal time management. For example, the notion of pro-action is eminently preferable to reaction. To pro-act means to anticipate events and be in a position to take appropriate action as soon as the right moment arrives. To react, on the other hand, means to have little anticipation and do something only when events force you to do so. Pro-actors tend to be the people who are always one step ahead of other people, who always seem to be in the right place at the right time, and who are always better informed than anyone else. Many of us like an easy life, and so we tend to be reactors. This means that we aren't alert to the challenges and opportunities coming our way, with the consequence that challenges bother us or opportunities pass us by before we're even properly aware they're upon us. We can train ourselves in pro-action by regularly taking the time to sit down and appraise the likely immediate future, just as we sit down and review the immediate past. [b][b]Psychologists recognise that we differ in the way in which we characteristically attribute responsibility for the various things that happen to us in life. One of the ways in which we do this is known as locus of control (Weiner,1979), which refers to assigning responsibility. At its simplest, some individuals have a predominantly external locus of control, attributing responsibility to outside causes (for example, the faults of others or the help given by them) ,while with other individuals the locus of control is predominantly internal, in which responsibility is attributed to oneself (for example, one's own abilities or lack of them, hard work, etc.).[b][b]However, the picture usually isn't as simple as this. Many people's locus of control is more likely to be specific to a particular situation, for example internal in certain areas, such as their social lives, and external in others, such as their working lives. Or, to take another example, they may attribute certain kinds of results to themselves, such as their successes, and certain kinds of results to other people, such as their failures. Obviously the best kind of locus of control is one that is realistic and able to attribute every effect to its appropriate cause, and this is particularly important when it comes to time management. Certainly, there are occasions when other people are more responsible for our time loss than we are, but for most of us, and for most of the time, the blame must fall fairly and squarely upon ourselves.[b][b] [b][b]Choose ONE phrase (A-J) from the list in the box below to complete each key point below. Write the appropriate letters (A-J) in boxes 1-6 on your answer sheet.[b][b]The information in the completed sentences should be an accurate summary of points made by the writer.[b][b]N.B. There are more phrases (A-J) than sentences, so you will not use them all. You may use any phrase more than once.[b][b]Questions 1-6[b][b]Time management-key points[b][b] Answer [b][b]Example Our patterns of circadian rhythms... G[b][b][b] 1. A proactive person...[b][b] 2. A reactive person...[b][b] 3. Analysing circadian rhythms...[b][b] 4. The idea that the best time to work is in the morning...[b][b] 5. The notion of feeling alert in the late afternoon...[b][b] 6. Productivity appears to be enhanced...[b][b]List of phrases[b][b]A) ...agrees with the circadian rhythms of most people. [b][b]B) ...makes us feel alive and creative.[b][b]C) ...conforms to the circadian rhythms of a minority of people.[b][b]D) ...if our energy is in a low phase.[b][b]E) ...is more able to take advantage of events when they happen.[b][b]F) ...enables one to gauge physical potential at particular times throughout the day.[b][b]G) ...can affect us physically and mentally.[b][b]H) ...when several specific internal organs are active.[b][b]I) ...takes a more passive attitude toward events.[b][b]J) ...when we eat lunch early[b][b][b] [b][b]Questions 7-13[b][b]Complete the sentences below with words taken from Reading Passage 1,"ersonal Time Management."Use NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS for each answer. Write your answers in boxes 7-13 on your answer sheet.[b][b]Answer[b][b]Example Most people are less productive..... after lunch[b][b][b] 7. Our ................ influence our physical and mental performance[b][b] 8. We are more likely to be productive in the afternoon if we have................ .[b][b] 9. A person who reacts tends not to see ................ when they are approaching.[b][b] 10. Assessing the ................ aids us in becoming proactive.[b][b] 11. A person with a mainly internal locus of control would likely direct blame toward ................ .[b][b] 12. A person with a mainly external locus of control would likely direct failure toward ................ .[b][b] 13. A person with a healthy and balanced locus of control would attribute a result, whether negative or positive, to ................ .[b][b] [b][b]READING PASSAGE 2[b][b]You are advised to spend about 20 minutes on Questions 14-25 which are based on Reading Passage 2, "The Muang Faai Irrigation System of Northern Thailand".[b][b]Questions 14-19[b][b]Reading Passage 2 has 7 sections.[b][b]Choose the most suitable heading for each section from the list of headings (A-L) below. Write the appropriate letter (A-L) in boxes 14-19 on your answer sheet.[b][b]N.B. There are more headings than sections, so you will not use all of them.[b][b] [b][b]List of Headings[b][b]A) Rituals and beliefs [b][b]B) Topography of Northern Thailand [b][b]C) The forests of Northern Thailand[b][b]D) Preserving the system[b][b]E) Agricultural practices[b][b]F) Village life[b][b]G) Water distribution principles[b][b]H) Maintaining natural balances [b][b]I) Structure of the irrigation system[b][b]J) User's rights[b][b]K) User's obligations[b][b]L) Community control [b][b][b] 14. Section 1[b][b] 15. Section 2[b][b] 16. Section 3[b][b] 17. Section 4[b][b]Answer[b][b]Example Section 5 A[b][b][b] 18. Section 6[b][b] 19. Section 7[b][b]THE MUANG FAAI IRRIGATION SYSTEM OF NORTHERN THAILAND[b][b]SECTION 1[b][b]Northern Thailand consists mainly of long mountain chains interspersed with valley bottoms where streams and rice fields dominate the landscape. Most of the remaining forests of the North are found at higher altitudes. The forests ensure regular seasonal rainfall for the whole area and at the same time moderate runoff, so that there is water throughout the year.[b][b]SECTION 2 [b][b]The lowland communities have developed an agricultural system adapted to, and partially determining, the distinctive ecosystems of their areas. Practicing wet-rice agriculture in the valley-bottoms, the lowlanders also raise pigs, ducks and chickens and cultivate vegetable gardens in their villages further up the slopes. Rice, beans, corn and native vegetables are planted in hill fields above the villages, and wild vegetables and herbal medicines are gathered and wild game hunted in the forests higher up the hillsides. The forests also serve as grazing grounds for cows and buffalo, and are a source of wood for household utensils, cooking fuel, construction and farming tools. Fish are to be found in the streams and in the irrigation system and wet-rice fields, providing both food and pest control.[b][b]SECTION 3[b][b]In its essentials, a muang faai system consists of a small reservoir which feeds an intricate,branching network of small channels carrying water in carefully calibrated quantities through clusters of rice terraces in valley bottoms. The system taps into a stream above the highest rice field and, when there is sufficient water, discharges back into the same stream at a point below the bottom field. The water in the reservoir at the top, which is diverted into a main channel (Iam muang) and from there into the different fields, is slowed or held back not by an impervious dam, but by a series of barriers constructed of bunches of bamboo or saplings which allow silt, soil and sand to pass through.[b][b]SECTION 4[b][b]Water from the Iam muang is measured out among the farmers according to the extent of their rice fields and the amount of water available from the main channel. Also considered are the height of the fields, their distance from the main channel and their soil type. The size and depth of side-channels are then adjusted so that only the allocated amount of water flows into each farmer's field.[b][b]SECTION 5[b][b]Rituals and beliefs connected with muang faai reflect the villagers' submission to, respect for, and friendship with nature, rather than an attempt to master it . In mountains, forests, watersheds and water,villagers see things of great value and power.This power has a favourable aspect, and one that benefits humans. But at the same time,if certain boundaries are overstepped and nature is damaged, the spirits will punish humans. Therefore, when it is necessary to use nature for the necessities of life, villagers take care to inform the spirits what they intend to do, simultaneously begging pardon for their actions.[b][b]SECTION 6[b][b]Keeping a muang faai system going demands cooperation and collective management, sometimes within a single village, sometimes across three or four different subdistricts including many villages. The rules or common agreements arrived at during the yearly meeting amount to a social contract. They govern how water is to be distributed, how flow is to be controlled according to seasonal schedules, how barriers are to be maintained and channels dredged, how conflicts over water use are to be settled, and how the forest around the reservoir is to be preserved as a guarantee of a steady water supply and a source of materials to repair the system.[b][b]SECTION 7[b][b]The fundamental principle of water rights under muang faai is that everyone in the system must get enough to survive; while many patterns of distribution are possible, none can violate this basic tenet. On the whole, the systems also rest on the assumption that local water is common property. No one can take control of it by force, and it must be used in accord with the communal agreements. Although there are inequalities in land holding, no one has the right to an excessive amount of fertile land. The way in which many muang faai systems expand tends to reinforce further the claims of community security over those of individual entrepreneurship. In the gradual process of opening up new land and digging connecting channels, each local household often ends up with scattered holdings over the whole irrigation areas. Unlike modern irrigation systems, under which the most powerful people generally end up closest to the sources of water, this arrangement encourages everyone to take care that no part of the system is unduly favoured or neglected.[b][b] [b][b]Questions 20-23[b][b]The chart below illustrates the agricultural system of the lowland communities.[b][b]Select words from Reading Passage 2 to fill the spaces in the chart. Use UP TO THREE WORDS for each space. Write your answers in boxes 20-23 on your answer sheet.[b][b]Area[b]Activity[b][b]Example[b][b]Forests[b] [b][b]grazing cows, buffalo [b][b][b] [b][b]Forests [b][b]Hill fields[b][b]Villages[b][b]Valley bottom[b]gathering ...... (20) ......., hunting wild animals [b][b]cultivating ................... (21) ..................[b][b]raising ..... (22) .... cultivating vegetables[b][b]growing .................... (23) ....................[b][b][b]Question 24[b][b]From the list below, select the three main structures which constitute the muang faai irrigation system. Write the THREE appropriate letters, in any order, in box 24 on your answer sheet.[b][b] A) channels [b][b] B) saplings[b][b] C) dam[b][b] D) barriers[b][b] E) reservoir[b][b] F) water[b][b][b]Question 25[b][b]From the list below, select two criteria for allocating water to farmers. Write TWO appropriate letters, in any order, in box 25 on your answer sheet. [b][b] A) field characteristics [b][b] B) social status[b][b] C) location of field[b][b] D) height of barriers[b][b] E) fees paid[b][b] F) water available[b][b][b]READING PASSAGE 3[b][b]You are advised to spend about 20 minutes on Questions 26-39 which are based on Reading Passage 3 below.[b][b]THE ORIGINS OF INDO-EUROPEAN LANGUAGES[b][b]The traditional view of the spread of the Indo-European languages holds that an Ur-language, ancestor to all the others, was spoken by nomadic horsemen who lived in what is now western Russia north of the Black Sea near the beginning of the Bronze Age. As these mounted warriors roamed over greater and greater expanses, they conquered the indigenous peoples and imposed their own proto-Indo-European language, which in the course of succeeding centuries evolved in local areas into the European languages we know today. In recent years, however, many scholars, particularly archaeologists, have become dissatisfied with the traditional explanation.[b][b]The starting point of the problem of the origins of Indo-European is not archaeological but linguistic. When linguists look at the languages of Europe, they quickly perceive that these languages are related. The connections can be seen in vocabulary, grammar and phonology (rules for pronunciation). To illustrate the numbers from one to ten in several Indo-European languages. Such a comparison makes it clear that there are significant similarities among many European languages and also Sanskrit, the language of the earliest literary texts of India, but that languages such as Chinese or Japanese are not members of the same family (see figure 1).[b][b] [b][b]ENGLISH[b]OLD GERMAN[b]LATIN[b]GREEK[b]SANSKRIT[b]JAPANESE[b][b]ONE [b][b]TWO[b][b]THREE[b][b]FOUR[b][b]FIVE[b][b]SIX[b][b]SEVEN[b][b]EIGHT[b][b]NINE[b][b]TEN[b]AINS [b][b]TWAI[b][b]THRIJA[b][b]FIDWOR[b][b]FIMF[b][b]SAIHS[b][b]SIBUM[b][b]AHTAU[b][b]NIUN[b][b]TAIHUM[b]UNUS [b][b]DUO[b][b]TRES[b][b]QUATTOUR[b][b]QUINQUE[b][b]SEX[b][b]SEPTEM[b][b]OCTO[b][b]NOVEM[b][b]DECEM[b]HEIS [b][b]DUO[b][b]TREIS[b][b]TETTARES[b][b]PENTE[b][b]HEKS[b][b]HEPTA[b][b]OKTO[b][b]ENNEA[b][b]DEKA[b]EKAS [b][b]DVA[b][b]TRYAS[b][b]CATVARAS[b][b]PANCA[b][b]SAT[b][b]SAPTA[b][b]ASTA[b][b]NAVA[b][b]DASA[b]HITOTSU [b][b]FUTATSU[b][b]MITTSU[b][b]YOTTSU[b][b]ITSUTSU[b][b]MUTTSU[b][b]NANATSU[b][b]YATTSU[b][b]KOKONOTSU[b][b]TO[b][b][b]FIGURE 1 Words for numbers from one to ten show the relations among Indo-European languages and the anomalous character of Japanese, which is not part of that family. Such similarities stimulated interest in the origins of Indo-European languages.[b][b]The Romance languages served as the first model for answering the question.Even to someone with no knowledge of Latin, the profound similarities among Romance languages would have made it natural to suggest that they were derived from a common ancestor.On the assumption that the shared characteristice of these languages came from the common progenitor (whereas the divergences arose later.as the languages diverged),it would have been possible to reconstruct many of the characteristics of the original proto-language. In much the same way it became clear that the branches of the Indo-European family could be studied and a hypothetical family tree constructed,reading back to a common ancestor[img]http://bbs.gter.net/bbs/images/smilies/tongue.gif[/img]roto-Indo-European.[b][b]This is the tree approach. The basic process represented by the tree model is one of divergence:when languages become isolated from one other,they differ increasingly,and dialects gradually differentiate until they become separate languages.[b][b]Divergence is by no means the only possible tendency in language evolution.Johannes Schmidt,introduced a "wave" model in which linguistic changes spared like waves,leading ultimately to convergence;that is, growing similarity among languages that were initially quite different.[b][b]Today, however, most linguists think primarily in terms of linguistic family trees. It is necessary to construct some explicit models of how language change might occur according to a process-based view. There are four main classes of models.[b][b]The first is the process of initial colonization, by which an uninhabited territory becomes populated; its language naturally becomes that of the colonizers. Second are processes of divergence, such as the linguistic divergence arising form separation or isolation mentioned above in relation to early models of the Indo-European languages.The third group of models is based on processes of linguistic convergence.The wave model, formulated by Schmidt in the 1870's, is an example, but convergence methods have not generally found favour among linguists.[b][b]Now,the slow and rather static operation of these processes is complicated by another factor: linguistic replacement. That factor provides the basis for a fourth class of models. In many areas of the world the languages initially spoken by the indigenous people have come to be replaced, fully or partially, by languages spoken by people coming from outside. Were it not for this large complicating factor, the world's linguistic history could be faithfully described by the initial distribution of Homo Sapiens, followed by the gradual, ling-term workings of divergence and convergence.So linguistic replacement also has a key role to play in explaining the origins of the Indo-European languages.[b][b] [b][b]Questions 26-32[b][b]Below is a summary of part of Reading Passage 3,"The Origins of Indo-European Languages".[b][b]Read the summary and then select the best word or phrase from the box below to fill each gap. according to the information in the Reading Passage. Write the corresponding letters (A-L) in boxes 26-32 on your answer sheet.[b][b]N.B. There are more words and phrases than you will need to fill the gaps. You may use a word or phrase more than once if you wish.[b][b]Summary-Models of Language Change[b][b]Answer [b][b] Example There are four main models of language .... (Ex) ..... K[b][b][b]The first is the process of initial colonization where an uninhabited territory becomes populated: the language spoken will therefore be that of the .....(26).....[b][b]Processes of .....(27)..... occur where different dialects, and then languages, develop from a common .....(28)..... Many of the original characteristice of this common ancestor can be reconstructed from what we know of the present separate .....(29).....[b][b]Processes of linguistic .....(30)..... occur when languages which were initially different become more similar through contact. The wave model, formulated by Schmidt in the 1870s, is an example.[b][b]The final model is that of linguistic .....(31)..... In this model, a new language replaces the language spoken by the .....(32)..... [b][b]A colonizers[b]G languages[b][b]B invaders[b]H waves[b][b]C proto-language [b]I replacement[b][b]D indigenous people[b]J convergence[b][b]E linguists [b]K development[b][b]F model[b]L divergence[b][b][b]Questions 33-36[b][b]Several aspects of language development discussed in Reading Passage 3 are listed below.[b][b]Match each aspect with the appropriate model from the box below, according to the information in the Reading Passage. Write the appropriate letter (A,B,C,or D) in boxes 33-36 on your answer sheet.[b][b]Aspects of language development[b][b]Answer[b][b]Example Population of territory A[b][b][b] 33. "wave" model[b][b] 34. Romance languages[b][b] 35. proto-Indo-European[b][b] 36. European languages[b][b] Models[b][b]A Colonization [b]C Convergence[b][b]B Divergence [b]D Replacement[b][b][b]Questions 37-39[b][b]Answer the following questions using NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS,according to the information in the Reading Passage. Write your answers in boxes 37-39 on your answer sheet.[b][b]37. What are three ways in which the languages of Europe are related?[b][b]38. On what basis does the author decide that Chinese and Japanese are not related to European languages?[b][b]39. According to the tree model, what was the original proto-language for English? [b][b]1. E[b][b]2. I[b][b]3. F[b][b]4. A[b][b]5. C[b][b]6. H[b][b]7. circadian rhythms.[b][b]8. (an) early lunch[b][b]9. opportunities // challenges // challenges and opportunities[b][b]10. (likely) immediate future // immediate past[b][b]11. himself // herself[b][b]12. others // other people // outside causes // faults of others[b][b]13. (its) appropriate cause(s)[b][b] [b][b] Reading Passage 2 The Muang Faai Irrigation System ... [b][b]14. B[b][b]15. E[b][b]16. I[b][b]17. G[b][b]18. L[b][b]19. J[b][b]20. two correct out of : vegetables, herbal medicines, herbs, wood[b][b]21. two correct out of : rice, beans, corn, (native) vegetables[b][b]22. two correct out of : pigs, ducks, chickens[b][b]23. (wet) rice / (fish) [b][b]24. E, A, D [any order][b][b]25. Two correct out of : F, A, C [any order][b][b] [b][b] Reading Passage 3 The Origins of Indo-European Languages [b][b]26. A[b][b]27. L[b][b]28. C[b][b]29. G[b][b]30. J[b][b]31. I[b][b]32. D[b][b]33. C[b][b]34. B[b][b]35. D[b][b]36. B[b][b]37. vocabulary, grammar, phonology [all three must be correct][b][b]38. comparison of words/vocabulary/numbers/features // compare (the) words[b][b]39. proto-Indo-European [b][b][url=http://bbs.gter.net/bbs/viewthread.php?tid=282385&extra=page%3D1]http://bbs.gter.net/bbs/viewthread.php?tid=282385&extra=page%3D1[/url]
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