test 2 cambridge ielts mark griffiths

20 4.1K 32
test 2 cambridge ielts mark griffiths

Đang tải... (xem toàn văn)

Tài liệu hạn chế xem trước, để xem đầy đủ mời bạn chọn Tải xuống

Thông tin tài liệu

Test 2 LISTENING SECTION 1 Questions 1-10 Questions 1-3 Answer the following questions using NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS AND/OR NUMBERS for each. 1. How long will the customer's course last? 2. Which course has the customer already taken at the school? 3. How much discount can returning students qualify for? Questions 4-6 Complete the following sentences using NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS AND/OR NUMBERS for each. 4. The customer's address is ______ . 5. The customer can contact his former teacher by ______ . 6. There are ______ hours of classes each day, Monday to Friday. Questions 7-10 Answer the following questions using NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS for each answer. 7. What is the customer's impression of the female Arabic teacher? 8. What other languages can the customer speak? 9. What does the customer decide is the third factor in choosing a school? 10. What does the customer say the reception area should be like? SECTION 2 Questions 11-20 Questions 11-13 Complete the following sentences using NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS AND NUMBERS for each answer. 11. The Construction Education Centre has existed for ______ . 12. The CEC receives ______ visitors trainees and delegates each year. 13. Equipment is available for ______ days. Questions 14-16 Complete the following information about the various rooms available at the CEC. Name of room Capacity Usage London Room seating 140 reception 200 used for seminars, presentations, receptions divisible into 14 ______ Bloomsbury Room seating 72 reception 100 used for seminars, lectures, receptions Holborn 1 15 ______ used for meetings, training classes, presentations Holborn 2 18 used for meetings, training classes, presentations Oxford Suite used for 16 ______, presentations Questions 17-20 Answer the following questions using NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS AND NUMBERS for each answer. 17. In which part of the CEC was the "Sustainable London" event held? 18. How many schemes were shown at the "Sustainable London" event? 19. When does the CEC expect to have 150 students? 20. What is in Russell Street? SECTION 3 Questions 21-30 Questions 21-23 Choose the correct answer, A, B, C or D. 21. David says that he thinks a gap year is unsuitable for A. a few people. B. some people. C. the majority of people. D. almost all people. 22. Gap years began because Oxford and Cambridge A. demanded all students take one. B. demand all students take one. C. only considered applicants whose results were known. D. only consider applicants whose results are known. 23. Gap years are popular in A. the UK and Australia. B. the UK, Australia and the USA. C. the UK, Australia and most of Europe. D. developed countries. Questions 24-27 Choose the correct answer or answers, A, B, C or D. 24. Students in most European countries A. study 4-year courses at university. B. have longer courses than British students. C. have longer holidays than British students. D. have less chance to earn money during a gap year. 25. David says that gap years cost 15000 to 20000 because that is A. the total cost of travel, accommodation, food, insurance, etc. B. the salary a new graduate can expect. C. the cost of the gap year plus the salary a graduate can expect. D. how much a person loses throughout their career by taking a gap year. 26. Kelly says that a gap year can benefit young people by A. increasing motivation. B. providing insights into their study field. C. making their CV attractive to employers. D. helping them get a higher salary after graduating. 27. David says that A. useful non-academic skills can be learnt during a gap year. B. most young people get good university degrees. C. gap years don't teach young people useful skills. D. employers think gap years are a waste of time. Questions 28-30 Complete the sentences using NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS for each answer. 28. Kelly suggests working for a ______ . 29. Research shows employers appreciate young people who have lived outside ______ . 30. The graduate workplace requires flexibility and ______ . SECTION 4 Questions 31-40 Questions 31-33 Complete the following sentences using NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS for each answer. 31. Prairie Dog barks have ______ meanings. 32. Prairie Dogs are able to invent ______ for things they have never seen before. 33. Prairie Dogs in Arizona and Colorado appear to speak different, but mutually-comprehensible ______ . Questions 34-36 Complete the following notes on the criteria set by linguists for something to be a language. Questions 37-40 Answer the following questions using NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS for each answer. 37. What did the researcher use to record Prairie Dog barks? 38. What kind of animal is the great-horned owl? 39. Why wouldn't the Prairie Dogs know of the European ferret? 40. What kind of animal is the coyote described as? READING READING PASSAGE 1 You should spend 20 minutes on Questions 1-13, which are based on Reading Passage 1 below. Climate Change: Instant Expert A Climate change is with us. A decade ago, it was conjecture. Now the future is unfolding before our eyes. Canada's Inuit see it in disappearing Arctic ice and permafrost. The shantytown dwellers of Latin America and Southern Asia see it in lethal storms and floods. Europeans see it in disappearing glaciers, forest fires and fatal heat waves. Scientists see it in tree rings, ancient coral and bubbles trapped in ice cores. These reveal that the world has not been as warm as it is now for a millennium or more. The three warmest years on record have all occurred since 1998; 19 of the warmest 20 since 1980. And Earth has probably never warmed as fast as in the past 30 years a period when natural influences on global temperatures, such as solar cycles and volcanoes should have cooled us down. B Climatologists reporting for the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) say we are seeing global warming caused by human activities. People are causing the change by burning nature's vast stores of coal, oil and natural gas. This releases billions of tonnes of carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) every year, although the changes may actually have started with the dawn of agriculture, say some scientists. The physics of the "greenhouse effect" has been a matter of scientific fact for a century. CO 2 is a greenhouse gas that traps the Sun's radiation within the troposphere, the lower atmosphere. It has accumulated along with other manmade greenhouse gases, such as methane and chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs). Some studies suggest that cosmic rays may also be involved in warming. C If current trends continue, we will raise atmospheric CO 2 concentrations to double pre-industrial levels during this century. That will probably be enough to raise global temperatures by around 2 to 5 . Some warming is certain, but the degree will be determined by cycles involving melting ice, the oceans, water vapour, clouds and changes to vegetation. Warming is bringing other unpredictable changes. Melting glaciers and precipitation are causing some rivers to overflow, while evaporation is emptying others. Diseases are spreading. Some crops grow faster while others see yields slashed by disease and drought. Clashes over dwindling water resources may cause conflicts in many regions. D As natural ecosystems such as coral reefs are disrupted, biodiversity is reduced. Most species cannot migrate fast enough to keep up, though others are already evolving in response to warming. Thermal expansion of the oceans, combined with melting ice on land, is also raising sea levels. In this century, human activity could trigger an irreversible melting of the Greenland ice sheet. This would condemn the world to a rise in sea level of six metres enough to flood land occupied by billions of people. E The global warming would be more pronounced if it were not for sulphur particles and other pollutants that shade us, and because forests and oceans absorb around half of the CO 2 we produce. But the accumulation rate of atmospheric CO 2 has doubled since 2001, suggesting that nature's ability to absorb the gas could now be stretched to the limit. Recent research suggests that natural CO 2 "sinks", like peat bogs and forests, are actually starting to release CO 2 . F At the Earth Summit in 1992, the world agreed to prevent "dangerous" climate change. The first step was the 1997 Kyoto Protocol, which came into force during 2005. It will bring modest emission reductions from industrialised countries. Many observers say deeper cuts are needed and developing nations, which have large and growing populations, will one day have to join in. Some, including the US Bush administration, say the scientific uncertainty over the pace of climate change is grounds for delaying action. The US and Australia have reneged on Kyoto. Most scientists believe we are under-estimating the dangers. G In any case, according to the IPCC, the world needs to quickly improve the efficiency of its energy usage and develop renewable non-carbon fuels like: wind, solar, tidal, wave and perhaps nuclear power. It also means developing new methods of converting this clean energy into motive power, like hydrogen fuel cells for cars. Other less conventional solutions include ideas to stave off warming by "mega-engineering" the planet with giant mirrors to deflect the Sun's rays, seeding the oceans with iron to generate algal blooms, or burying greenhouse gases below the sea. The bottom line is that we will need to cut CO 2 emissions by 70% to 80% simply to stabilise atmospheric CO 2 concentrations and thus temperatures. The quicker we do that, the less unbearably hot our future world will be. Questions 1-4 The text has 7paragraphs (A-G). Which paragraph contains each of the following pieces of information? 1. The effects of global warming on animals. 2. The ways in which ordinary people can see the global climate is changing. 3. The science behind global warming. 4. Possible solutions to global warming. Questions 5-8 Complete the following sentences using NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS from the text. 5. Wars could be fought over reduced ______ . 6. Certain pollutants actually protect us from ______ . 7. ______ countries were not required to make cuts in emissions under the Kyoto Protocol. 8. Algal blooms feed on ______ . Questions 9-13 Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage 1? In boxes 9-13 on your answer sheet write TRUE if the information in the text agrees with the statement FALSE if the information in the text contradicts the statement NOT GIVEN if there is no information on this 9. Volcanoes can influence the global climate. 10. Billions of people live near the sea. 11. Peat bogs usually absorb CO 2 . 12. Improving energy efficiency can be done quickly. 13. Burying greenhouse gases under the sea is not possible. READING PASSAGE 2 You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 14-26, which are based on Reading Passage 2 below. Britain's Canals-the Solution to Overcrowded Roads? A It's hard to imagine that only a decade or so ago many of the nation's canals were little more than the last resting place for abandoned shopping trolleys. There's still work to be done, but their transformation has been remarkable. Projects such as Castlefield in Manchester and Brindley Place in Birmingham have transformed city-centre canals from stagnant reminders of a fading industrial past to the epitome of urban cool. However, 21st-century priorities dictate that the rehabilitation of this 18th-century motorway system cannot stop there. Canals and navigable rivers form a major transport network, in need of only piecemeal investment, and with the spare capacity to take away the need for hundreds of thousands of lorry journeys. In the second half of the 18th century, canals drove the industrial revolution. Today, authorities want them to drive congestion off the roads. Last month, for example, the European Commission proposed a seven-year plan to shift large amounts of freight from roads to inland waterways. B Europe's enthusiasm comes as no surprise. Freight traffic is expected to grow by a third in the next decade. The cost of pollution and congestion is set to swallow one per cent of Europe's entire GDP by 2010. "With a fleet of 11000 vessels and a capacity equalling 10000 trains or 440000 trucks, inland waterways can make transport in Europe more efficient, reliable and environmental friendly," says Jacques Barrot, vice-president of the European Commission in charge of transport. "Europe cannot afford to leave that potential untapped." C Mainland Europe has never, in fairness, left it completely untapped. The canals of the low countries and the rivers of central and eastern Europe buzzed with the sound of freight barges long after British industry had thrown in its lot with railways and roads. Attempts to revive freight on British canals have been hampered by the fact that their heyday lasted barely 60 years, and they were first considered obsolete 150 years ago. For much of the intervening period, many have simply been left to rot. "Our network was in decline for a long time compared to much of Europe," says Eugene Baston of British Waterways. "Whereas other countries developed road and rail transport but carried on using their waterways as well, our canals were neglected. In fact many European countries actually enlarged their canals 100 years ago." D That decline in Britain has been reversed, first by leisure seekers and more recently by industry. Boaters, anglers, walkers and cyclists now benefit from around 4000 miles of navigable waterways and the paths and trails that run alongside them. Waterside living is fashionable, and city-centre canals have been a focus for urban renewal, And, despite our obsession with road transport, environmental considerations are forcing government and business to mm the clock back 200 years and at least in a minor way get our waterways working again. E In fact, industrial goods such as coal, steel, aggregates and petroleum have never completely disappeared from large rivers and designated commercial waterways. Barges on the river Severn have recently started carrying the equivalent of 34000 lorry loads of aggregates each year, the first freight traffic on the river for a decade. British Waterways, which owns about half of the country's navigable inland waterways, carded the equivalent of 64000 25-ten lorry loads of freight in 2004. The organisation says these figures are certain to increase as new schemes start, and environmentalists hope they will. Carrying freight by water uses about a quarter of the energy of an equivalent road journey. In comparison to lorries, barges produce low emissions, low noise and are visually unobtrusive. "We think that anything that can take freight off the roads needs to be fully explored," says Tony Bosworth, transport campaigner for Friends of the Earth. "Canals can do that. They can help cut the pollution that causes climate change." F There is a limit to what canals can carry. The slow pace of water travel does not fit well with the limited shelf-life of fresh produce. If supermarkets won't trust their cherry tomatoes to water, they might trust the waste paper and plastic that protects them. Many of the proposals to utilise Britain's waterways are based around waste management and recycling schemes. For example, a pilot scheme in Hackney, east London, has seen municipal waste collected by truck and transferred to barge for transportation to a reprocessing plant. In the future, the scheme could remove 300000 dustcart miles from the borough's streets every year. Current arrangements could be just the tip of the iceberg. G Planning permission has been given for a Powerday recycling plant at Willesden Junction, a site that sits on the intersection of road, rail and canal networks. "The plant will have the capacity to handle a million and a half tons of waste every year, but the amount carried by road will be capped at 500000 tons," says Ed Fox of British Waterways London. "If they want to grow the business, they will have to work with us." Fox says getting freight back on the canals has been "a nice idea" for 50 years, but until recently little more than an idea. "The Powerday project, on the other hand, is proof of what really can be done." H Though details have yet to be decided, British Waterways believes the most appropriate way to transport some of the building materials destined for London's giant Olympic construction project is by the network of waterways that links the Thames and east London. The Olympic Delivery Authority says: "It's being looked at and the final solution could well involve some transportation by water. What exactly we do will be based on a range of factors, but one of those will be sustainability." Their gentle pace will always make canals a niche player in a busy world, but after 200 years of neglect, the tide is starting to turn. Questions 14-17 The text has 8 paragraphs (A-H). Which paragraph does each of the following headings best fit? 14. Olympic transport 15. The decline of British canals 16. Modern leisure uses 17. Energy efficient Questions 18-22 According to the text, FIVE of the following statements are true. Write the corresponding letters in answer boxes 18 to 22 in any order. A Canals were important in the industrial revolution in Britain. B The use of canals in Europe is expected to grow by a third over the next ten years. C Britain was the only European country to let its canals decline. D Canals in Britain have become a focus for city-centre renewal. E Barges are less polluting than lorries. F In London, most waste is transported on canals. G The amount of waste that can be taken to the Powerday plant by road is limited. H Canals will not become a major form of transport in the world. Questions 23-26 According to the information given in the text, choose the correct answer or answers from the choices given. 23. Canals will require A. relatively little investment. B. considerable investment. C. investment equal to 1% of Europe's transport budget. 24. The European canal network A. transported most of Europe's goods for 60 years. B. was built mostly about 150 years ago. C. has actually been expanded in some countries over the last hundred years. 25. Suitable products for transportation by canal include A. fresh fruit and vegetables. B. waste materials for recycling. C. fuels. 26. Waste can be transported to the Powerday project by A. lorry. B. train. C. barge. READING PASSAGE 3 You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 27-40, which are based on Reading Passage 3 below. Are You Being Served? The world's factory, it turns out, has a sizeable canteen attached, not to mention an office block and shopping mall. Last month's official revision of China's gross domestic product revealed an economy worth 16 trillion yuan ( 1.9 trillion) in 2004, 17% more than previously thought. Some 265 billion of the increase 93% of it was ascribed to the services sector. As a result, services' share of the economy has jumped by nine percentage points, to 41%, compared with 46% for manufacturing and 13% for primary industries (mainly agriculture and mining). Where has all this extra activity come from? The bulk of it is obvious to any traveller in China. As people grow wealthier, they want more restaurants and bars, clothes stores, car dealerships, bookshops, private hospitals, English language classes and beauty salons. In many of these businesses, however, turnover and profits have not previously been captured by a statistical system geared to measuring factory production. The small, often private, companies that dominate these areas have also often been at pains to escape notice and therefore taxes. Li Deshui, commissioner of China's National Bureau of Statistics, confirms that most of the newly unearthed GDP comes from three categories. The first is wholesale, retail and catering; the second, transport, storage, post and telecommunications. While postal and telecoms services are still state-controlled and thus readily measured, more than a million small tracking and removal companies are not. The third activity is real estate, booming particularly in the coastal cities and increasingly inland too, leading to an influx of private money not least from overseas speculators. Property development has, in turn, boosted demand for architects, decorators, do-it-yourself stores and other building services. There is more to China's services boom than dishing up stir-fries, shipping boxes and fitting out apartments. Recent years have seen a surge in media and technology services, including the internet; in financial services such as leasing; and in education and leisure. In a small way, for example, China is starting to rival India as an outsourcing hub: less for call-centres that require excellent English than for such tasks as preparing reports and patent filings. In October Microsoft took a stake in a Chinese software firm in Dalian, a city in north-east China with a thriving outsourcing industry preparing tax returns and software for companies from Japan and South Korea. China's rapid economic growth is fuelling demand for accountants, lawyers, bankers and all manner of consultants, as Chinese companies expand and restructure. Specialists in marketing, advertising and public relations advise on the relatively new area of marketing products and developing brands. The new wealth has other consequences, too. China now has nearly a million security guards. It can offer its new rich everything from cosmetic surgeons to pet salons. Meanwhile, a huge new market is opening up for private education fuelled by the combination of a poor public system, the preoccupation of middle-class parents with giving their (often) only child the best chances, and demand from business. Chinese families spend more on education than on anything except housing the market for courses, books and materials more than doubled from 2002 levels, to 90 billion in 2005. Richer households have also caused a tourism boom, which is still chiefly domestic, though more mainlanders are venturing overseas as visa restrictions are lifted. The World Travel & Tourism Council predicts that China's annual tourism market will more than triple to 300 billion within a decade. China's services sector, on this basis, is well-developed and roughly as large as those of Japan and South Korea were at a similar stage of development, notes the HSBC bank. In reality, it is bigger still, since the GDP revision cannot capture activities such as kerbside lending and tax-dodging cash transactions in property or entertainment all of which Dong Tao, chief Asia economist at CSFB, another bank, reckons add another 220 billion to the economy. Even so, the 41% of GDP claimed by services in China remains below the 60-75% typical in developed countries. It is smaller even than India's 52%. One reason for this is a bias towards manufacturing "China's 'real-men-make-stuff' attitude," as Gordon Orr of McKinsey's Shanghai office puts it. This has led to a plethora of ill-thought-through regulations for services, made worse by China's continuing suspicion of private business, which is mostly concentrated in the services sector. The lack of a national trucking licence, for example, means hauliers must get approval from each province to move goods across the country and unload them on to different trucks at each border delaying delivery and increasing spoilage and pilfering. In retailing, local governments often maintain inefficient supply chains, in part to protect local jobs. David Wei, head of B&Q in China, says his 48 do-it-yourself stores on the mainland are served by 1800 suppliers, compared with 600 suppliers in Britain for more than 300 stores. Worse, though China took an early decision to invite foreign direct investment into manufacturing, it has been reluctant to open up services. Diana Farrell, director of the McKinsey Global Institute, the consultancy's think-tank, argues that allowing more foreign investment in services could bring not just capital and technology but a competitive dynamic. The presence of Carrefour and Wal-Mart has led to domestic copycats, creating innovation and productivity growth. Questions 27-30 For each question, only ONE of the choices is correct. Write the corresponding letter in the appropriate box on your answer sheet. 27. "The world's factory" refers to A. the total mount of goods produced in the world. B. China. C. the United States. 28. It is not easy to measure the finances of A. large state-owned companies. B. foreign companies. C. numerous small companies. 29. Real estate has helped increase the size of the service economy because A. real estate is a service industry. B. it involves a lot of investment from abroad. C. developing real estate requires services. 30. The largest portion of household spending in China goes towards A. education. B. accommodation. C. travel. Questions 31-35 Complete the following sentences using NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS from the text. 31. China is not really a ______ to India as a call-centre hub. 32. Most tourism in China is ______ . 33. Many transactions in the real estate and leisure industries are in cash and so avoid ______ . 34. Most private business in China is ______ in the service sector. 35. China has brought far less ______ into services, slowing development of that sector. Questions 36-40 Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage 3? In boxes 36-40 on your answer sheet write TRUE if the information in the text agrees with the statement FALSE if the information in the text contradicts the statement NOT GIVEN if there is no information on this 36. Officially, the largest sector in China is the service sector. 37. Some of the newly-discovered GDP comes from the education sector. 38. Dalian is a successful outsourcing center for Japan and Korea. 39. As visa restrictions are lowered, Chinese people are expected to spend more than 300 billion on tourism. 40. China's services sector is about the same size as Japan's and South Korea's. WRITING WRITING TASK 1 You should spend about 20 minutes on this task. The graphs show winter travel trends in the United States from 1999 to 2003. (Figures are shown in millions of person-trips.) Summarise the information by selecting and reporting the main features and by making comparisons where relevant. Write at least 150 words. WRITING TASK 2 You should spend about 40 minutes on this task. Write about the following topic: At present, science is developing quickly, but some people still have a high opinion of artists. What can the arts tell us of life that science cannot? Give reasons for your answer and include any relevant examples from your own knowledge or experience. Write at least 250 words. SPEAKING PART 1 The examiner asks the candidate about him/herself, his/her home, work or studies and other familiar topics. EXAMPLE Study What subject are you studying? Which part of your studies do you like best? What is the most difficult part of your studies? How do you think studying this subject will help you in the future? Books How often do you read books? Who is your favourite writer? When do you usually like to read? Do you read more for pleasure or to get information? Do you often buy books as gifts for family or friends? Clothes Do you wear different clothes for study and for leisure? Which kind of clothes do you prefer to wear? Do you have a special set of clothes for special occasions? Do you pay more attention to the quality of clothes you buy or to the price? How important do you think it is to be fashionable? PART 2 Describe a restaurant that you have either been to or heard about. You should say: what kind of restaurant it is what special dishes are served there where it is located and explain why this restaurant is special. You will have to talk about the topic for one to two minutes. You have one minute to think about what you're going to say. You can make some notes to help you if you wish. PART 3 Discussion topic: Food Example questions What kinds of food do people in your country like to eat? Do you think that most people in your country eat healthily? Do older people and younger people prefer the same kinds of food? What kinds of food do you think will be more popular or less popular in the future? Is food an important aspect of cultural life in your country? Tapescripts TEST 2 SECTION 1 Saleswoman: Good afternoon. Can I help you? Customer: Yes, I'd like to sign up for the intermediate course in Arabic, please. [...]... READING Reading Passage 1, Questions 1-13 1 D 2 A 3 B 4 G 5 water resources 6 global warming 7 Developing 8 iron 9 True 10 True 11 True 12 Not Given 13 Not Given Reading Passage 2, Questions 14 -26 14 H 15 C 16 D 17 E 18 -22 IN ANY ORDER A D E G H 23 A 24 C 25 IN EITHER ORDER B C 26 IN ANY ORDER A B C Reading Passage 3, Questions 27 -40 27 B 28 C 29 C 30 B 31 rival 32 domestic 33 tax 34 concentrated 35 foreign... meetings 17 (in/the) exhibition area/part 18 over 60 19 in two /2 years 20 (a) car park Section 3, Questions 21 -30 21 C 22 C 23 A 24 IN EITHER ORDER B C 25 B 26 IN ANY ORDER A B C 27 A 28 charity 29 their comfort zones 30 improvisation skills Section 4, Questions 31-40 31 distinct, individual(NB just one of these two words is acceptable) 32 (new) terms 33 dialects 34 abstract meanings 35 smaller elements... key TEST 2 LISTENING Section L Questions 1-10 1 4/four weeks 2 Arabic refresher (course) 3 5% 4 38 Temple Way 5 email 6 4/four 7 well spoken, friendly 8 French (and) German 9 location 10 welcoming Section 2, Questions 11 -20 11 almost seventy/70 years 12 over 100000 13 half And/or whole 14 three/3 separate rooms 15 20 -22 16 executive meetings 17 (in/the) exhibition area/part 18 over 60 19 in two /2 years... sample answers for TEST 2 TEST 2, WRITING TASK 1 MODEL ANSWER The bar chart tells us how many winter person-trips were made in the USA for business and for leisure between 1999 and 20 03 The number of business person-trips was about 38 million in 1999, falling slightly to 37 million in 20 00 Then there was a bigger drop to 32 million in 20 01 and a further fall to 30 million in 20 02, followed by a slight... million in 20 03 Overall, we see that the number of person-trips was always much higher for leisure than for business and that the number of business person-trips showed a decline every year except for between 20 02 and 20 03 On the other hand, the number of person-trips made for leisure showed a constant increase, with the most notable rise being between 20 00 and 20 01 TEST 2, WRITING TASK 2 MODEL ANSWER... in 20 03 The number of leisure person-trips was far higher than the number of business ones In 1999 148 million person-trips were made There was a small increase on this figure in 20 00, when the number was 150 million Between 20 00 and 20 01, there was a much larger increase, with 160 million person-trips being made in 20 01 The number of person-trips continued to rise, reaching 1 62 million in 20 02 and... similar Indeed, we have given them virtually identical names We call them Holborn 1 and Holborn 2 They are both suitable for small meetings, training classes and presentations Hol-born 1 is slightly larger, capable of hosting 20 -22 people, whilst Holborn 2 holds a maximum of 18 people The Oxford Suite measures 12 by 6 metres and provides a more spacious and luxurious environment for executive meetings... of the prairie dog is a light tan colour They have short legs and sharp claws to help them dig their homes Their bodies are 12- 15 inches long with a 3-4 inch tail and they weigh 2- 4 pounds I've been interested in these animals for a long time and would like to talk about a remarkable discovery The barks of prairie dogs have distinct, individual meanings Prairie dogs have different "words" for tall... more to life than finding out facts They tell us that there are many beautiful things in the world and that creativity is an important part of what makes us human Model answers for speaking tests Speaking Test 2 PART 1 Study I'm studying medicine It's something I've wanted to do ever since I was a little kid The thing I like doing most is reading about new developments in the medical field There are... panels, making it an ideal venue for seminars of up to 140 people or receptions for up to 20 0 The suite may also be used for presentations The room may be divided into three separate rooms if required This slide shows you the Bloomsbury Room It is also ideally suited for seminars and lectures There is seating for 72 people or it can be used as a reception area for up to 100 Next, we have two rooms that

Ngày đăng: 11/05/2015, 23:26

Từ khóa liên quan

Tài liệu cùng người dùng

Tài liệu liên quan