PTE Predicted Materials March 2019 PDF
PTE Predicted Materials March 2019 PDF
PTE Predicted Materials March 2019 PDF
2. As to the Industrial Revolution, one cannot dispute today the fact that
it has succeeded in inaugurating in a number of countries a level of mass
prosperity which was undreamt of in the days preceding the Industrial
Revolution. But, on the immediate impact of Industrial Revolution, there
were substantial divergences among writers.
3. While blue is one of the most popular colors, it is one of the least
appetizing. Blue food is rare in nature. Food researchers say that, when
humans searched for food, they learned to avoid toxic or spoiled objects,
which were often blue, black or purple. When food dyed blue is served to
study subjects, they lose appetite.
8. Hundreds of millions of people eat fast food every day without giving it
much thought, they just unwrap their hamburgers and dig in. An hour or
so later, when the burgers are all gone and wrappers were tossed in the
bin, the whole meal has already been forgotten.
11. Major breeding areas, and breeding islands, are shown as dark green
areas or darts. Open darts shown no-breeding records on islands, and are
also used for offshore sightings, that is from ships or boats. Other areas
where species is not meant to be seen are plain pale green, with pale
green hatching where records are usually sparse.
13. The Ford Company provides plenty of opportunities for its employees.
It guarantees not only comfortable and appropriate working conditions,
but also many other advantages. Therefore, becoming a part of the Ford
Motor company is always profitable and beneficial. Moreover, it is
important to mention that Ford Motors provides its employees with
effective and useful services and takes care of their well-being.
14. At the end of this year, we will launch the cup class boats. So these
will be about twice the power. The sailors are down in the cockpits, unlike
today. A lot of power is being generated by these four grinders that are
providing hydraulic power, and that energy is being used to control the
flying surface, the hydrofoil and is also being used to control the wing and
the flaps, effectively the engine, of what we have.
15. Studying abroad is a very popular option for students who come from
a wealthy family. Most people believe that overseas experience provides a
deeper understanding of cultures and develops communication skills.
While this may be true, not all of these new experiences are useful for
finding a job. Employers tend to value interpersonal skills and industry
knowledge more than cultural background.
18. Major breeding areas, and breeding islands, are shown as dark green
areas or darts. Open darts are shown no-breeding records on islands, and
are also used for offshore sightings, that is from ships or boats. Other
areas where species are not meant to be seen are plain pale green, with
pale green hatching were records are usually sparse.
21. Howard believed that all clouds belonged to three distinct groups:
cumulus, stratus and cirrus. He added a fourth category, nimbus, to
describe a cloud in the act of condensation into rain, hail or snow. It is by
observing how clouds change color and shape that weather can be
predicted, and as long as it is the first three of cloud to keep their normal
shape there won't be any rain.
22. Charles Darwin published his paper "On the Origin of Species" in
1859. It is one of the most well-known pieces of scientific literature in
human history. In the paper, Darwin proposes the theory of natural
selection. He states that for any generation of any species, there will
always be a struggle for survival. Individuals who are better suited to the
environment are "fitter", and therefore have a much higher chance of
surviving and reproducing. This means that later generations are likely to
inherit these stronger genetic traits.
23. Such cross-protection is usually seen between two animals. But Gore
studies the same sort of mutualism in microbes. He and his team
demonstrated the first experimental example of that cross-protective
relationship in drug-resistant microbes, using two strains of antibiotic-
resistant E. coli bacteria: one resistant to ampicillin, the other to
chloramphenicol.
24. Written examinations are a fact of life for most high school and
university students. However, recent studies have shown that this
traditional form of assessment may not be an accurate indicator of
academic performance. Tests have shown that many students experience
anxiety during exam weeks, which leads to poorer results. As a result,
some learning institutions are replacing exams with alternative
assessments such as group work and oral presentations.
25. In classes, your teachers will talk about topics that you are studying.
The information that they provide will be important to know when you
take tests. You must be able to take good written notes from what your
teacher says.
27. Hundreds of millions of American people eat fast food every day
without giving it too much thought, unaware of the subtle and not so
subtle ramifications of their purchases. They just grab their tray off the
counter, find a table, take a seat, unwrap the paper, and dig in. The
whole experience is transitory and soon forgotten.
29. Avalanche is rapidly descending large mass of snow, ice, soil, rock, or
mixtures of these materials, sliding or falling in response to the force of
gravity. Avalanches, which are natural forms of erosion and often
seasonal, are usually classified by their content such as a debris or snow
avalanche.
30. The main production of soft drink was stored in 1830’s & since then
from those experimental beginning, there was an evolution until in 1781
when the world’s first cola-flavoured beverage was introduced. These
drinks were called soft drinks, only to separate them from hard alcoholic
drinks. Today, soft drink is more favourite refreshment drink than tea,
coffee, juice etc.
31. Since 2003, borrowing for education advanced faster, in percentage
terms, then all other types of consumer debt that includes mortgages,
auto loans and credit cards, data from the Federal Reserve Bank of New
York show. As of the fourth quarter, student loans represented 10.5
percent of a record $13.1 trillion in household debt, up from 3.3 percent
at the start of 2003.
33. Flags can be unifying to a country, and many times are. A country
that can look to its flag flown high above the landscape in times of trouble
and remember that the country will go on. People that have never met
before can feel unity towards one another knowing that they’re part of the
same country and fly the same flag.
4. She doesn't care about anything but what is honest and true.
8. The library is located on the other side of the campus behind the
student centre.
9. Could you please pass the handouts to the students that are in your
row?
10. Number the bricks and put them away before tomorrow.
11. The library is located on the other side of the campus behind the
student centre.
14. Don't forget to hand in your assignments by the end of next week.
15. Rules of breaks and lunch time vary from one company to another.
17. Research has found that there is no correlation between diet and
intelligence.
18. Please carefully study the framework and complete the survey.
19. It is clear that little accurate documentation is in support of this
claim.
20. Haemoglobin carries oxygen from lungs to other parts of the body.
22. The number of people in the world tripled during the last century.
23. In just 12 years, the global population raised from just six to seven
billion.
24. There are several interesting blocks you can refer to for your
academic writing
26. What is the requirement for the masters of biochemistry course at the
University of Melbourne?
27. There are several technologies available in the market for video
conferencing such as Skype and Google hangouts.
30. Does anyone know how to use the new constitutional voting system?
31. There was a big bushfire and everyone in the town got evacuated.
33. I think it's very important to protect our eyes because we don't want
anything damaged.
35. Well, it's impossible to burn coal and not make pollution.
36. Aussie kids are constantly adding to that pile using social media apps
like Instagram.
37. Some social media companies are working to make it easier for kids
to figure out how to use their apps safely and responsibly.
39. One thing that people might not know about distant education is that
students never miss a day of school even if they are sick.
40. 8 in 10 of the students said that they spend more time in front of a
screen than recommended by experts.
41. On the 2nd of December 1911, Douglas Mawson set sail for
Antarctica.
42. Some online companies and social media sites are not attempting to
sort the fake news from the real stuff.
45. At the moment, 193 countries have signed the Paris agreement.
46. When people breathe in too many polluted particles, it can cause
serious, even life-threatening, health conditions.
47. The twin-engine aircraft should have been able to successfully take
off even after losing an engine.
48. Students who selected two to three courses may need an extension.
49. Could you pass the material to students that are in your row?
50. A lot of people who have up until now been spending money having a
good time now need to be more careful with their money.
51. What distinguishes him from others is the dramatic use of black and
white photography.
56. A preliminary bibliography is due the week before the spring break.
57. Higher fees cause the student to look more critically at what
universities offer.
59. She doesn't even care about anything but what is honest and true.
64. Excuse me sir, do you know the way to the North Church?
65. Every student in this class will need to submit their cover sheet prior
to the release of the assignment.
66. The salt used in this dish was imported from Egypt.
67. The pyramids have been standing for over thousands of years and
draws tourists from all over the world.
71. The great ocean road is a scenic route which stretches on for miles.
72. Parents of children who are found outside of school can be punished
under the law.
73. Companies want to protect their brands from negative comments.
74. Some employees spend two hours a day on social networking sites.
80. Anyone who feels ill should visit our medical centre.
82. The Student’s Union governs the use of the Sports Centre.
1. 2.
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38. 39.
40.
Retell Lectures and Summarise spoken texts:
1. Australian export
2. Brain development
4. Bomb calorimeter
This lecture talks about the renovation of Paris in the 1890s, which
was a vast public program directed by Haussmann, commissioned by
Napoleon the Third.
Napoleon the third told Haussmann to bring air and light to the
center of to make the city safer and more beautiful.
The renovation removed the unhealthy neighbourhood and it
includes building roads, parks and squares, planting more trees and
the construction of new infrastructure.
Finally, the speaker mentions that the reason for doing this is that
the old Paris had many serious problems such as overcrowding,
disease and crime.
8. Air Pollution
9. Visual Description
The comic I show you with lots of people chatting around a room is a
form of description.
Sometimes we have to use visual description, especially when we
cannot witness the scenario.
I was born during the Second World War. I always asked my mom
about the war. I often asked my mom “you have mentioned this or
that when talked to me.” I will ask her about what the shelter was
like and ‘when did you go to the shelter’.
From her response I could get more visual evidence, so that I can
experience as if I were there. This is how I can write my book.
14. Teaching
Students are motivated by the needs to learn and that’s how we can
teach.
Teaching can demonstrate current researches to students. Teaching
can bring intelligence together, find problems in the research
through the teaching process.
Teaching’s goal is to stimulate and to motivate. Teaching is to find
new ideas and new ways to do things.
This is how to become a good professor.
The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) is the largest and the most
powerful particle accelerator in the world. It is used to recreate the
conditions of space after the big bang at the start of the universe.
LHC is operated in a tunnel of 27km long. It can create 1.4 million
times of collisions per second.
Each particle beam collision will generate 7 TeV (teraelectron volt),
which is the largest energy manmade collision of particle beams.
The LHC's main magnets operate at a temperature of 1.9 K (degree
Kelvin) over the absolute zero, which is even colder than the
temperature of the outer space 2.7 K (degree Kelvin).
Traffic light colors (red, amber and green) are used to represent
food healthy standard.
Different colors represent different information and categorize food
types, so that people would know what to eat when they need some
certain type of nutrients.
It is the retailer’s responsibility to label food properly so that
consumers can choose exactly what type of food they need.
In this way, consumers can be aware of food with less salt or less
fat.
This lecture talks about the health trainings for community service
workers
Trainings and consultation will be provided to help them understand
the scope and how to prevent diseases such as HIV.
Large workshops and seminars are held quarterly in India. These
trainings will be provided by big hospitals and professionals.
But these target groups are hard to reach or contact because they
live in remote areas and the team has to cross the river.
This lecture compares the conditions on the earth and Mars, as well
as the habitability of Mars.
There are some similarities such as polar caps, atmospheres and
water climate.
But Mars and the earth also have lots of difference. Even the most
inhabitable areas on the earth are way different from those on Mars.
The lecture also describes different forms of water (hydrology) on
the surface and underground of the earth and Mars.
In this video, when a dog approaches some food, different snarls are
played back.
Sometimes a dog doesn't stop from taking the bones when hearing
the voices, in other cases, it will be deterred.
Therefore, a dog can tell different growls.
This lecture talks about the general conditions of how animals can survive
and reproduce, how they maintain their bodies under water, how they
tolerate different temperature and seasons, how they use their habitats,
and how about their daily activities and behaviours. For example, if the
specie is put into the fridge, it will die, which highlight the
31. Laugh as a therapy
People realized the importance of laughing a long time ago and there are
different understandings about humour in different regions.
There were war jokes about the Berlin Wall spreading among east regions
for 30 years during the second World War that could ease the harm of the
war
As humour, laughing can help people get through bleak and boring time.
As a therapy, laughing can effectively improve people's self-respect and
identity.
The lecturer talks about the changes that have taken place in coffee
production in Vietnam.
The huge demand in Europe and America has helped Vietnam to become
the second largest coffee producer, which had a great impact on
Colombia's production.
The output in central America has significantly decreased and people are
also going through changes in coffee drinking habits.
The spending of Spain is dose to that of the UK. Countries like Denmark
and Finland spent much more than other European countries, which is
about 2% of their GDP.
In the past 20 years, the Latin American economy grew about 80%.
However, after the globalization and reform, the growth rate slow down
from 80% to 10%. Therefore, the speaker mentions the economy after
reform become unsustainable.
In 1900. the population was about 1.5 billion and it increased to 6 billion
in 2000. The increase of energy consumption was much more significant
which is increased by 16 folds. Due to the urbanisation, cities, which only
account for 2% of the land, have 50% of the total population and
consumes 75% of the resources.
At the end, the lecturer emphasizes that people not only use every
resource on the planet but also produce tons of wastes.
A novelist took a long detour in writing but she had no regret about it.
The word 'no art ever came out of not risking your neck' said by Eudora
Welty inspired the novelist and she first started writing when she was
thirty years old in the early 90s. Later she finished the first chapter of her
novel called The Secret Life of Bees.
Summary:
These robots are the first robots; they are characters in the play
People think they are toys, initially, but in fact they were created
after political turmoil, after the end of WW1.
People are thinking about their meaning to human
After all, they are assembled on production line and are designed to
labour.
44. Urbanisation
The lecture focuses on the literal definition of risk and safety. Two parts of
the definition of risk include consequences of some kind of dangers, and
possibilities of loss, whereas the definition of safe, though involves a
circular argument, is free from harm, which is an absolute notion being
either safe or not safe.
56. HTML
When90’s comes around, more and more people could get online.
Thanks to UK, the invention of HTML allowed people to create a wide
variety of works.
During the first decade, people created things like web pages and
lessons without fears, religion, motivation or profitability
Because people can feel a sense of enjoyment through their creation
57. Vitamin D
8. What is the big musical instrument that has 88 black and white keys? -
Piano.
9. How many days are there in February during a leap year? - 29 days.
12. How would you call people who study ancient bones, rocks and
plants? - Archaeologist.
14. What is the joint between your shoulder and your forearm? - Elbow.
15. If you have a toothache, who would you go to? // A person who
studies teeth? - Dentist
17. The instructions that tell you how to cook food? - Recipe.
18. What is the piece of paper that you receive after you have bought an
item? - Receipt
20. What is the red liquid that flows from the heart to the rest of the
body? - Blood
22. Which part at the end of book can be used for further reading? An
index or a bibliography? - Bibliography
24. How do you describe the type of magazine that is published four
times a year? - Quarterly
25. What kind of book would you use to look up a word that you don‘t
understand? – Dictionary
26. What term is used for the amount of money we owe, asset or debt? –
Debt
28. • How would you call someone who likes to drink heavily every day? –
Alcoholic
30. What do humans and animals need to inhale for survival? – Oxygen
31. Which one would you use to describe the desert, humidity or aridity? –
Aridity
33. What kind of book is written by a person about their own life? –
Autobiography
37. If you are happy with an agreement, what would you like to put at
the bottom of the contract with the date? - Signature.
38. What do we call the organ in our chest that we need to breath?—
Lungs
39. Apart from addition, subtraction, and multiplication, what is the other
mathematical calculation method? – Division
45. When you get lost in city, what item do you need to buy to find out
where you are and where to go? – Map.
52. The name of the building where you can borrow books? - Library.
53. How would you describe an animal that no longer exist on the earth?
– Extinct
55. What attitude would you have when you are in a job interview,
enthusiastic or passive? – Enthusiastic
59. What electronic device wakes you up in the morning? – Alarm clock.
61. What is the table that lists chemical elements in order of atomic
numbers in rows and columns? – Periodic Table (of Elements)
62. Do unions work for workers or management? – Workers
64. How many times does a biannual magazine published in one year? –
Twice.
65. Which part of your leg can make it possible to bend? – Knee
70. What do you call a system of government in which people vote for the
people who will represent them? – DEMOCRACY
72. Would you measure the volume of bottle water in litres or Kilos? –
LITRES
73. What's the joint called where your hand is connected to your arm? –
WRIST
75. What do we call the piece of paper that proves you have bought the
item? – RECEIPT
78. Which ocean is located on the west of the US? - The Pacific Ocean
79. The phrase used to describe the way that repeatedly increases and
decreases or rises and falls - Ebb and Flow
88. One who kills animals and sells their flesh. Butcher or barber? -
Butcher
92. A building for keeping and feeding horses in, Stable or Kennel? -
Stable
94. Art and science dealing with rules of language, Grammar or Literature
- Grammar
96. Something that is quickly and easily set on fire and burned, Is it
flammable or Non-flammable? - Flammable
97. The one who is unable to pay his debts, In debt or Insolvent -
Insolvent
106. What is a part of the digestive system and is essential for churning
food? - STOMACH
108. What is the item of footwear intended to protect and comfort human
foot? - SHOES
109. What is a standard set of letters that is used to write one or more
languages based upon the general principle? – ALPHABET
113. When was the tractor invented? (picture will be given) – 1892
114. What's the material that we use to stick two things together? -
GLUE
1.
A. Early rails were used on horse drawn wagon ways originally with
wooden rails, but from the 1760s using strap-iron rails, which consisted of
thin strips of cast iron fixed onto wooden rails.
B. These rails were too fragile to carry heavy loads, but because the initial
construction cost was less, this method was sometimes used to quickly
build an inexpensive rail line.
D. These were superseded by cast iron rails that were flanged (i.e. 'L'
shaped) and with the wagon wheels flat.
F. The first steel rails were made in 1857 by Robert Forester Mushet, who
laid them at Derby station in England. Steel is a much stronger material,
which steadily replaced iron for use on railway rail and allowed much
longer lengths of rails to be rolled.
2.
A. My study of the history of religion has revealed that human beings are
spiritual animals Indeed, there is a case for arguing that Homo sapiens is
also Homo religious.
C. This was not simply because they wanted to propitiate powerful forces.
D. These early faiths expressed the wonder and mystery that seems
always to have been an essential component of the human experience of
this beautiful world.
3.
4.
B. Do not ever choose a school without going to the place and having a
look. You should go and see once you have a chance.
C. You can see the facilities and accommodations around the school.
D. 4 Because you might be living there. 5 And they can be helpful to your
study as well.
5.
6.
A. All over the world students are changing countries for their university
studies.
B. They don't all have the same reasons for going or for choosing a
particular place to study.
C. Take mobile phones, for example, can cause incidents if drivers insist
on talking on the phone instead of looking at roads.
D. But no one would argue that mobile phones can help us to make a
phone call when we are under a crisis. (to be confirmed).
8.
C. An analogy can be made to the Highway Code for driving. Drivers know
the code and have indeed been tested on it to obtain a driving license.
9.
10.
C. The source should be cited under APA guidelines, and the final draft
should be written in APA styles.
D. The final draft is due one week before the final exam.
11.
C. Before writing, you should figure out what the question is after, and
what is not relevant.
D. And then you will have an idea of what you should write.
12.
13.
C. Who could create a house for $300 and if it was possible, why hadn’t it
been done before?
D. Nonetheless, they closed their blog with a challenge: “We ask chief
executives, governments, NGOs, foundations
14.
C. to test this theory xxx from xxx university gathered 6 students … four
tw...
15.
A. You may have heard about a client management system that can
collaborate clients’ data.
E. Once you have this system, even those people who don’t understand
management can use it well.
16.
17.
D. But the fact that science underlies our lives, our health, our work, our
communications, our entertainment and our transport is undeniable.
18.
19.
A. In 'Easier Said than Done', we set out some of the reasons why we
might find it hard to live in a healthy way, exercising, eating well, getting
adequate sleep, and checking for early warning symptoms.
D. Changing existing behaviour can be a difficult task, but with the help of
these strategies new behaviours can become habitual, facilitating a long-
term sustained healthy lifestyle.
20.
A. Palaus and his colleagues wanted to see if any trends had emerged
from the research to data concerning how video games affect the
structure and activity of our brains.
B. The collected the results from 116 scientific studies, 22 of which looked
at structural changes in the brain and 100 of which looked at changes in
brain functionality and/or behaviour.
C. The studies show that playing video games can change how our brains
perform, and even their structure.
D. For example, playing video games affects our attention, and some
studies found that gamers show improvements in several types of
attention, such as sustained attention or selective attention.
D.” Such defences from the country's most elite universities do not hold
water", Prof Ebdon said, as he urged the institutions to do more to widen
their intakes."
22. Benefit of language
A. Over the years many human endeavours have had the benefit of
language.
23. Tutorial
B. Why is that?
D. They think it is like a small lecture where the tutor gives them
information.
24. Game
25. Earthquake
A. At 5:12 a.m. on April 18, 1906, the people of San Francisco were
awakened by an earthquake that would devastate the city.
C. the result of the rupturing of the northernmost 296 miles of the 800-
mile San Andreas fault.
E. The fire, lasting four days, most likely started with broken gas lines
(and, in some cases, was helped along by people hoping to collect
insurance for their property— they were covered for fire, but not
earthquake, damage).
B. “The energy sector has a fantastic skills shortage at all levels, both
now and looming over it for the next 10 years,” he says.
C. Not only are there some good career opportunities, but there's a lot of
money going into the research side, too.
D. With the pressures of climate change and the energy gap, in the last
few years funding from the research councils has probably doubled".
B. The aim of the school is to cover a wide range of topics associated with
thermal neutron scattering, including powder diffraction, stress analysis,
texture, reflectometry, and small-angle neutron scattering together with
the underlying theory associated with neutron scattering.
29. Copernicanism
D. But the fact that science underlies our lives, our health, our work, our
communications, our entertainment and our transport is undeniable.
31. $300-house
C. Who could create a house for $300 and if it was possible, why hadn’t it
been done before?
D. Nonetheless, they closed their blog with a challenge: “We ask chief
executives, governments, NGOs, foundations: Are there any takers?”
C. The other is that its governments won’t confront their fishing lobbies
and decommission all the surplus boats.
33. Vegetarian
A. They also like to eat peanut butter on graham crackers or celery sticks
top with raisins.
D. Nutritious vegan diets are popular among the vegetarian are typically
high in fibre, low in saturated fat, full of vitamins and minerals, rich in
healthy plant protein, and completely free of cholesterol.
Answer: 4123
Answer: 4231
C. They don’t all have the same reasons for going or for choosing a
particular place to study.
D. They may choose a university because of its interesting courses or
perhaps because they like the country and its language.
E. All over the world students are changing countries for their university
studies.
Answer: 53412
36. CRM
B. When people talk about CRM, they are usually referring to a CRM
system, a tool that is used for contact management, sales management,
productivity, and more.
Answer: 4321
C. Music was conveyed orally only, until the 11th century when physical
instruments were invented to perform music.
Answer: 12345
A. The fibers are as strong and soft as wool and silk, but up to 30 times
cheaper.
B. Fibers suitable for clothing have been made for the first time from the
wheat protein gluten.
D. Narendra Reddy and Yiqi Yang, who produced the fibers at the
University of Nebraska in Lincoln.
Answer: 2143
READING BLANKS:
1.
2.
3.
4.
A Dog may be man's best friend. But man is not always a dog's. Over the
centuries selective breeding has pulled at the canine body shape to
produce what is often a grotesque distortion of the underlying wolf.
Indeed, some of these distortions are, when found in people, regarded as
pathologies. Dog breeding does, though, offer a chance to those who
would like to understand how body shape is controlled. The ancestry of
pedigree pooches is well recorded, their generation time is short and their
litter size reasonably large, so there is plenty of material to work with.
Moreover, breeds are, by definition, inbred, and this simplifies genetic
analysis. Those such as Elaine Ostrander, of America's National Human
Genome Research Institute, who wish to identify the genetic basis of the
features of particular pedigrees thus have an ideal experimental animal.
5.
6.
8.
9.
10.
Leonard Lauder, chief executive of the company his mother founded, says
she always thought she "was growing a nice little business." And that it is.
A little business that controls 45% of the cosmetics market in U.S.
department stores. A little business that sells in 118 countries and last
year grew to be $3.6 billion big in sales. The Lauder family's shares are
worth more than $6 billion. But early on, there wasn't a burgeoning
business, there weren't houses in New York, Palm Beach, Fla., or the
south of France. It is said that at one point there was one person to
answer the telephones who changed her voice to become the shipping or
billing department as needed. You more or less know the Estée Lauder
story because it's a chapter from the book of American business folklore.
In short, Josephine Esther Mentzer, daughter of immigrants, lived above
her father's hardware store in Corona, a section of Queens in New York
City.
She started her enterprise by selling skin creams concocted by her uncle,
a chemist, in beauty shops, beach clubs and resorts. No doubt the potions
were good — Estée Lauder was a quality fanatic — but the saleslady was
better. Much better. And she simply outworked everyone else in the
cosmetics industry. She stalked the bosses of New York City department
stores until she got some counter space at Saks Fifth Avenue in 1948.
And once in that space, she utilized a personal selling approach that
proved as potent as the promise of her skin regimens and perfumes.
12.
13.
14.
The last tourists may have been leaving the Valley of the Kings on the
West Bank in Luxor but the area in front of the tomb of Tutankhamun
remained far from deserted. Instead of the tranquillity that usually
descends on the area in the evening it was a hive of activity. TV crew’s
trailed masses of equipment, journalists milled and photographers held
their cameras at the ready. The reason? For the first time since Howard
Carter discovered the tomb in 1922 the mummy of Tutankhamun was
being prepared for public display. Inside the subterranean burial chamber
Egypt's archaeology supremo Zahi Hawass, accompanied by four
Egyptologists, two restorers and three workmen, were slowly lifting the
mummy from the golden sarcophagus where it has been rested -- mostly
undisturbed – for more than 3,000 years. The body was then placed on a
wooden stretcher and `transported to its new home, a high- tech,
climate-controlled plexi-glass showcase located in the outer chamber of
the tomb where, covered in linen, with only the face and feet exposed, it
now greets visitors.
15.
16.
Legal deposit has existed in English law since 1662. It helps to ensure
that the nation’s published output (and thereby its intellectual record and
future published heritage) is collected systematically, to preserve the
material for the use of future generations and to make it available for
readers within the designated legal deposit libraries. The legal deposit
system also has benefits for authors and publishers: • Deposited
publications are made available to users of the deposit libraries on their
premises, are preserved for the benefit of future generations, and become
part of the nation’s heritage. • Publications are recorded in the online
catalogues, and become an essential research resource for generations to
come.
17.
In these distant times the sun was seen to make its daily journey across
the sky. At night the moon appeared. Every new night the moon waxed or
waned a little and on a few nights it did not appear at all. At night the
great dome of the heavens was dotted with tiny specks of light. They
became known as the stars. It was thought that every star in the heavens
had its own purpose and that the secrets of the universe could be
discovered by making a study of them. It was well known that there were
wandering stars, they appeared in different nightly positions against their
neighbors and they became known as planets. It took centuries, in fact it
took millennia, for man to determine the true nature of these wandering
stars and to evolve a model of the world to accommodate them and to
predict their positions in the sky.
18.
Stars and the material between them are almost always found in gigantic
stellar systems called galaxies. Our own galaxy, the Milky Way System,
happens to be one of the two largest systems in the Local Group of two
dozen or so galaxies. The other is the Andromeda galaxy; it stretches
more than one hundred thousand light-years from one end to the other,
and it is located about two million light-years distant from us.
20.
21.
Team Lab's digital mural at the entrance to Tokyo’s Skytree, one of the
world’s monster skyscrapers, is 40 metres long and immensely detailed
but however massive this form of digital art becomes -and it's a form
subject to rampant inflation--Inoko's theories about seeing are based on
more modest and often pre-digital sources. An early devotee of comic
books and cartoons (no surprises there), then computer games, he
recognized when he started to look at traditional Japanese art that all
those forms had something in common: something about the way they
captured space. In his discipline of physics, Inoko had been taught that
photographic lenses, along with the conventions of western art were the
logical way of transforming three dimensions into two, conveying the real
world on to a flat surface. But Japanese traditions employed “a different
spatial logic”, as he said in an interview last year with j-collabo.org that is
“uniquely Japanese”.
WRITE FOR DICTATION:
1. I think space travel will become affordable within the next century.
12. We study science to understand and appreciate the world around us.
14. Science library is currently located on the ground floor of the library.
15. Our courses help improve critical thinking and independent learning.
17. Our new medical students must attend the talk about optional
courses/classes.
18. Most of the students have not considered this issue before.
22. Authoritarian regimes were more common in the past than they are
today.
23. The new law was harder to impose than the government thought.
24. Course work in exam will form part of the annual assessments.
25. The cotton industry purchased all its new cotton from abroad.
26. Political power only disappears when this stage has been completed.
35. New credit cards will soon use the finger press technology.
42. Native speakers are exempt from the language tests in their own
language.
43. The synopsis contains the most important information.
60. When workers ask for higher wages, companies often raise their
prices.
66. Checking the website if you are looking for discounted textbooks.
68. We study science to understand and appreciate the world around us.
70. Most of the students have not considered this issue before.
71. The business policy seminar includes an internship with a local firm.
77. It was four more years before the theory was fully developed.
81. The nation achieved prosperity by opening its ports for trade.
82. The sociology department is highly regarded worldwide.
83. Those who seek for formal extension should contact their faculty for
information.
84. The artists tied to conservative politicians earned their own roles
as/of critics.
88. Observers waited nervously and with bated breath for the concert.
92. Your lowest quiz grade has been omitted from the calculations.
95. The chemistry building is located near the entrance to the campus.
100. They were struggling last year to make their service pay.
101. The same issue featured both the explanations and the problems.
102. Good research paper delivers practical benefits for real people.
106. Scientists are always asking the government for more money.
110. Our courses help improve critical thinking and independent learning
skills.
117. Resources and materials are on hold at the library’s reference desk.
123. One function of the body fat is to keep (all) internal organs warm.
124. Our new medical students must attend the talk about optional
courses/classes.
125. Several candidates were graded as the greatest scientists of all
time.
127. Farming methods around the world have greatly developed recently.
In exchange for these services the grasses offer ruminants a plentiful and
exclusive supply of lunch. For cows (like sheep, bison, and other
ruminants) have evolved the special ability to convert grass— which
single-stomached creatures like us can't digest—into high-quality protein.
They can do this because they possess what is surely the most highly
evolved digestive organ in nature: the rumen. About the size of a
medicine ball, the organ is essentially a forty-five-gallon fermentation
tank in which a resident population of bacteria dines on grass.
2. Rosetta Stone
When the Rosetta Stone was discovered in 1799, the carved characters
that covered its surface were quickly copied. Printers ink was applied to
the Stone and whitepaper was laid over it. When the paper was removed,
it revealed an exact copy of the text but in reverse. Since then, many
copies or facsimiles have been made using a variety of materials.
Inevitably, the surface of the Stone accumulated many layers of material
left over from these activities, despite attempts to remove any residue.
Once on display, the grease from many thousands of human hands eager
to touch the Stone added to the problem.
He is the man who has changed the world more than anyone else in the
past hundred years. Sir Tim Berners-Lee may be a mild-mannered
academic who lives modestly in Boston, but as the inventor of the World
Wide Web he is also a revolutionary. He is a scientist who has altered the
way people think as well as the way they live. Since the web went global
20 years ago, the way we shop, listen to music and communicate has
been transformed. There are implications for politics, literature,
economics — even terrorism — because an individual can now have the
same access to information as the elite. Society will never be the same.
The computer scientist from Oxford, who built his own computer from a
television screen and spare parts after he was banned from one of the
university computers, is a cultural guru as much as a technological one.
“It is amazing how far we’ve come,” he says. “But you’re always
wondering what the next is Crazy idea, and working to make sure the
web stays one web and that the internet stays open. There isn’t much
time to sit back and reflect.” He invented the web, he says, because he
was frustrated that he couldn’t find all the information he wanted in one
place. It was an imaginary concept that he realized.
4. Overqualified employees
If your recruiting efforts attract job applicants with too much experience—
a near certainty in this weak labor market—you should consider a
response that runs counter to most hiring managers’ MO: Don’t reject
those applicants out of hand. Instead, take a closer look. New research
shows that overqualified workers tend to perform better than other
employees, and they don’t quit any sooner. Furthermore, a simple
managerial tactic— empowerment—can mitigate any dissatisfaction they
may feel. The prejudice against too-good employees is pervasive.
Companies tend to prefer an applicant who is a “perfect fit” over someone
who brings more intelligence, education, or experience than needed. On
the surface, this bias makes sense: Studies have consistently shown that
employees who consider themselves overqualified exhibit higher levels of
discontent. For example, over qualification correlated well with job
dissatisfaction in a 2008 study of 156 call-center reps by Israeli
researchers Saul Fine and Baruch Nevo. And unlike discrimination based
on age or gender, declining to hire overqualified workers is perfectly legal.
But even before the economic downturn, a surplus of overqualified
candidates was a global problem, particularly in developing economies,
where rising education levels are giving workers more skills than are
needed to supply the growing service sectors. If managers can get
beyond the conventional wisdom, the growing pool of too-good applicants
is a great opportunity. Berrin Erdogan and Talya N. Bauer of Portland
State University in Oregon found that overqualified workers’ feelings of
dissatisfaction can be dissipated by giving them autonomy in decision
making. At stores where employees didn’t feel empowered,
“overeducated” workers expressed greater dissatisfaction than their
colleagues did and were more likely to state an intention to quit. But that
difference vanished where self-reported autonomy was high.
5. PLUG-IN VEHICLE:
Here's a term you're going to hear much more often: plug-in vehicle, and
the acronym PEV. It's what you and many other people will drive to work
in, ten years and more from now. At that time, before you drive off in the
morning you will first unplug your car - your plug-in vehicle. Its big on
board batteries will have been fully charged overnight, with enough power
for you to drive 50-100 kilometers through city traffic. When you arrive at
work you'll plug in your car once again, this time into a socket that allows
power to flow form your car's batteries to the electricity grid. One of the
things you did when you bought your car was to sign a contract with your
favorite electricity supplier, allowing them to draw a limited amount of
power from your car's batteries should they need to, perhaps because of
a blackout, or very high wholesale spot power prices. The price you get
for the power the distributor buys from your car would not only be most
attractive to you, it would be a good deal for them too, their alternative
being very expensive power form peaking stations. If, driving home or for
some other reason your batteries looked like running flat, a relatively
small, but quiet and efficient engine running on petrol, diesel or
compressed natural gas, even biofuel, would automatically cut in, driving
a generator that supplied the batteries so you could complete your
journey. Concerns over 'peak oil', increasing greenhouse gas emissions,
and the likelihood that by the middle of this century there could be five
times as many motor vehicles registered world-wide as there are now,
mean that the world's almost total dependence on petroleum-based fuels
for transport is, in every sense of the word, unsustainable.
6. AMERICAN ENGLISH
American English is, without doubt, the most influential and powerful
variety of English in the world today. There are many reasons for this.
First, the United States is, at present, the most powerful nation on earth
and such power always brings with it influence. Indeed, the distinction
between a dialect and a language has frequently been made by reference
to power. As has been said, a language is a dialect with an army. Second,
America’s political influence is extended through American popular
culture, in particular through the international reach of American films
(movies, of course) and music. As Kahane has pointed out, the
internationally dominant position of a culture results in a forceful
expansion of its language… the expansion of language contributes… to the
prestige of the culture behind it. Third, the international prominence of
American English is closely associated with the extraordinarily quick
development of communications technology. Microsoft is owned by an
American, Bill Gates. This means a computer’s default setting for
language is American English, although of course this can be changed to
suit one’s own circumstances. In short, the increased influence of
American English is caused by political power and the resultant diffusion
of American culture and media, technological advance, and the rapid
development of communications technology.
7. COLUMBUS
What makes teaching online unique is that it uses the internet, especially
the World Wide Web, as the primary means of communication. Thus,
when you teach online, you don’t have to be someplace to teach. You
don’t have to lug your briefcase full of paper or your laptop to a
classroom, stand at a lectern, scribble on a chalkboard (or even use your
high-tech, interactive classroom “smart” whiteboard), or grade papers in
a stuffy room while your students take a test. You don’t even have to sit
in your office waiting for students to show up for conferences. You can
hold “office hours” on weekends or at night after dinner. You can do all
this while living in a small town in Wyoming or a big city like Bangkok,
even if you are working for a college whose administrative office is
located in Florida or Dubai. You can attend an important conference in
Hawaii on the same day you teach your class in New Jersey, logging on
from your laptop via the local café’s wireless hotspot or your hotel room’s
high-speed network. Or you may simply pull out your smartphone to
quickly check on the latest postings, email, or text messages from
students. Online learning offers more freedom for students as well. They
can search for courses using the Web, scouring their institution or even
the world for programs, classes, and instructors that fit their needs.
Having found an appropriate course, they can enrol and register, shop for
their books, read articles, listen to lectures, submit their homework
assignments, confer with their instructors, and receive their final grades-
all online. They can assemble virtual classrooms, joining other students
from diverse geographical locales, foraging bonds and friendships not
possible in conventional classrooms, which are usually limited to students
from a specific geographical area.
A miner in the state of Chiapas found a tiny tree frog that has been
preserved in amber for 25 million years, a researcher said. If
authenticated, the preserved frog would be the first of its kind found in
Mexico, according to David Grimaldi, a biologist and curator at the
American Museum of Natural History, who was not involved in the find.
The chunk of amber containing the frog, less than half an inch long, was
uncovered by a miner in Mexico’s southern Chiapas state in 2005 and was
bought by a private collector, who loaned it to scientists for study. A few
other preserved frogs have been found in chunks of amber — a stone
formed by ancient tree sap mostly in the Dominican Republic. Like those,
the frog found in Chiapas appears to be of the genus Craugastor, whose
descendants still inhabit the region, said biologist Gerardo Carbot of the
Chiapas Natural History and Ecology Institute. Carbot announced the
discovery this week. The scientist said the frog lived about 25 million
years ago, based on the geological strata where the amber was found.
Carbot would like to extract a sample from the frog’s remains in hopes of
finding DNA that could identify the particular species but doubts the
owner would let him drill into the stone.
We live in an ageing world. While this has been recognized for some time
in developed countries, it is only recently that this phenomenon has been
fully acknowledged. Global communication is “shrinking” the world, and
global ageing is “maturing” it. The increasing presence of older persons in
the world is making people of all ages more aware that we live in a
diverse and multigenerational society. It is no longer possible to ignore
ageing, regardless of whether one views it positively or negatively.
Demographers note that if current trends in ageing continue as predicted,
a demographic revolution, wherein the proportions of the young and the
old will undergo a historic crossover, will be felt in just three generations.
This portrait of change in the world’s population parallels the magnitude
of the industrial revolution traditionally considered the most significant
social and economic breakthrough in the history of humankind since the
Neolithic period. It marked beginning of a sustained movement towards
modern economic growth in much the same way that globalization is
today marking an unprecedented and sustained movement toward a
“global culture”. The demographic revolution, it is envisaged, will be at
powerful.
While the future effects are not known, a likely scenario is one where both
the challenges as well as the opportunities will emerge from a vessel into
which exploration and research, dialogue and debate are poured.
Challenges arise as social and economic structures try to adjust to the
simultaneous phenomenon of diminishing young cohorts with rising older
ones, and opportunities present themselves in the sheer number of older
individuals and the vast resources societies stand to again from their
contribution.
This ageing of the population permeates all social, economic and cultural
spheres. Revolutionary change calls for new, revolutionary thinking, which
can position policy formulation and implementation on sounder footing. In
our ageing world, new thinking requires that we view ageing as a lifelong
and older person.
American employees are paid $300 a year to sleep fame than seven hours
per night and they can record their sleep manually or through an
automatic wrist monitor, as sleeping affects daytime performance by
influencing employees’ alertness, which diminish productivity and leads to
financial loss accumulated to $63 Z billion a year, and similar policies
adopted to encourage people taking exercise.
Armed police have been brought into NSW schools to reduce crime rates
and educate students.
The 40 School Liaison Police(SLP) officers have been allocated to public
and private high schools across the state.
Organizers say the officers, who began work last week, will build positive
relationships between police and students. But parent groups waned of
potential dangers of armed police working at schools in communities
where police relations were already under strain.
Among their duties, the SLPs will conduct crime prevention workshops,
talking to students about issues including shoplifting, offensive behaviour,
graffiti and drugs and alcohol. They can also advise school principals. One
SLP, Constable Ben Purvis, began work in the inner Sydney region last
week, including at Alexandria Park Community School’s senior campus.
Previously stationed as a crime prevention officer at The Rocks, he now
has 27 schools under his jurisdiction in areas including The Rocks,
Redfern and Kings Cross.
Constable Purvis said the full–time position would see him working on the
broader issues of crime prevention. “I am not a security guard,” he said.
“I am not there to patrol the school. We want to improve relationships
between police and schoolchildren, to have positive interaction. We are
coming to the school and giving them knowledge to improve their own
safety.” The use of fake ID among older students is among the issues he
was already discussed with principals. Parents ‘groups responded to the
program positively, but said it may spark a range of community reactions.
“It is a good thing and an innovative idea and there could be some
positive benefits,” Council of Catholic School Parents executive officer
Danielle Cronin said. “Different communities will respond to this kind of
presence in different ways.”
17. Autism
20. Cities
How can we design great cities from scratch if we cannot agree on what
makes them great ?None of the cities where people most want to live
such as London, New York ,Paris and Hong Kong comes near to being at
the top of surveys asking which are best to live in.
The top three in the most recent Economist Intelligence Units liveability
ranking, for example, were Melbourne, Vancouver and Vienna. They are
all perfectly pleasant, but great? The first question to tackle is the
difference between liveability and greatness.
Perhaps we cannot aspire to make a great city, but if we attempt to make
a liveable one, can it in time become great ?
There are some fundamental elements that you need. The first is public
space. Whether it is Viennas Ringstrasse and Prater Park, or the beaches
of Melbourne and Vancouver, these are places that allow the city to pause
and the citizens to mingle and to breathe, regardless of class or wealth.
Good cities also seem to be close to nature, and all three have easy
access to varied, wonderful landscapes and topographies.
A second crucial factor, says Ricky Burdett, a professor of urban studies
at the London School of Economics, is a good transport system.
Affordable public transport is the one thing which cuts across all
successful cities, he says.
21. Columbus
Diasporas -communities which live outside, but maintain links with, their
homelands-aee getting larger, thicker and stronger. They are the human
face of globalization. Diaspora consciousness is on the rise: diasporas are
becoming more interested in their origin, and organizing themselves more
effectively; homelands are revising their opinions of their diasporas as the
stigma attached to emigration declines, and stepping up their
engagement efforts; meanwhile, host countries are witnessing more
assertive diasporic groups within their own national communities,
worrying about fifth columns and foreign lobbies, and suffering outbreaks
of ‘diasporaphobia.’i
This trend is the result of five factors, all of them connected with
globalization: the growth in international migration; the revolution in
transport and communications technology, which is quickening the pace
of diasporas’ interactions with their homelands; a reaction against global
homogenized culture, which is leading people to rethink their identities;
the end of the Cold War, which increased the salience of ethnicity and
nationalism and created new space in which diasporas can operate; and
policy changes by national governments on issues such as dual citizenship
and multiculturalism, which are enabling people to lead transnational
lives. Diasporas such as those attaching to China, India, Russia and
Mexico are already big, but they will continue to grow, the migration flows
which feed them are likely to widen and quicken in the future.
All non-human animals are constrained by the tools that nature has
bequeathed them through natural selection. They are not capable of
striving towards truth; they simply absorb information, and behave in
ways useful for their survival. The kinds of knowledge they require of the
world have been largely pre-selected by evolution. No animal is capable of
asking question or generating problems that are irrelevant to its
immediate circumstances or its evolutionarily designed needs. When a
beaver builds a dam, it doesn’t ask itself why it does so, or whether there
is a better way of doing it. When a swallow flies south, it doesn’t wonder
why it is hotter in Africa or what would happen if it flew still further south.
Humans do ask themselves these and many other kinds of questions,
questions that have no relevance, indeed make little sense, in the context
of evolved needs and goals. What marks out humans is our capacity to go
beyond our naturally defined goals such as the need to find food, shelter
or a mate and to establish human created goals.
Some contemporary thinkers believe that there are indeed certain
questions that humans are incapable of answering because of our evolved
nature. Steven Pinker, for instance, argues that “Our minds evolved by
natural selection to solve problems that were life and death matters to
our ancestors, not to commune with connectness or to answer any
question we are capable of asking. We cannot hold ten thousand words in
our short term memory. We cannot see ultra violet light. We cannot
mentally rotate an object in the fourth dimension. And perhaps we cannot
solve conundrums like free will and sentience.”
I knew it was a good idea because I had been there before. Born and
reared on a farm I had been seduced for a few years by the idea of being
a big shot who lived and worked in a city rather than only going for the
day to wave at the buses. True, I was familiar with some of the minor
disadvantages of country living such as an iffy private water supply
sometimes infiltrated by a range of Flora and fauna including, on one
memorable occasion, a dead lamb, the absence of central heating in farm
houses and cottages and a single-track farm road easily blocked by snow,
broken-down machinery or escaped livestock.
But there were many advantages as I told Liz back in the mid-Seventies.
Town born and bred, eight months pregnant and exchanging a warm,
substantial Corstorphine terrace for a windswept farm cottage on a much
lower income, persuading her that country had it over town might have
been difficult.
29. London
Who would have thought back in 1698, as they downed their espressos,
that the little band of stockbrokers from Jonathan’s Coffee House in
Change Alley EC3 would be the founder members of what would become
the world’s mighty money capital?
Progress was not entirely smooth. The South Sea Bubble burst in 1720
and the coffee house exchanges burned down in 1748. As late as Big
bang in 1986, when bowler hats were finally hung up, you wouldn’t have
bet the farm on London surpassing New York, Frankfurt and Tokyo as
Mammon’s international nexus. Yet the 325,000 souls who operate in the
UK capital’s hub have now overtaken their New York rivals in size of the
funds managed (including offshore business); they hold 70% of the global
secondary bond market and the City dominates foreign exchange trading.
And its institutions paid out £9 billion in bonuses in December. The
Square Mile has now spread both eastwards from EC3 to Canary Wharf
and westwards into Mayfair, where many of the private equity ‘locusts’
and their hedge fund pals now hang out.
For foreigners in finance, London is the place to be. It has no Sarbanes
Oxley and no euro to hold it back, yet the fact that it still flies so high is
against the odds. London is one of the most expensive cities in the world
to live in, transport systems groan and there’s an ever present threat of
terrorist attack. But, for the time being, the deals just keep on getting
bigger.
30. Malaysia
When the Rosetta Stone was discovered in 1799, the carved characters
that covered its surface were quickly copied. Printers ink was applied to
the Stone and white paper was laid over it. When the paper was removed,
it revealed an exact copy of the text but in reverse. Since then, many
copies or facsimiles have been made using a variety of materials.
Inevitably, the surface of the Stone accumulated many layers of material
left over from these activities, despite attempts to remove any residue.
Once on display, the grease from many thousands of human hands eager
to touch the Stone added to the problem.
An opportunity for investigation and cleaning the Rosetta Stone arose
when this famous object was made the centre piece of the Cracking
Codes exhibition at The British Museum in 1999. When work commenced
to remove all but the original, ancient material, the stone was black with
white lettering. As treatment progressed, the different substances
uncovered were analysed. Grease from human handling, a coating of
carnauba wax from the early 1800s and printers ink from 1799 were
cleaned away using cotton wool swabs and liniment of soap, white spirit,
acetone and purified water. Finally, white paint in the text, applied in
1981, which had been left in place until now as a protective coating, was
removed with cotton swabs and purified water. A small square at the
bottom left corner of the face of the Stone was left untouched to show the
darkened wax and the white infill.
33. Twins
UCLA neurology professor Paul Thompson and his colleagues scanned the
brains of 23 sets of identical twins and 23 sets of fraternal twins. Since
identical twins share the same genes while fraternal twins share about
half their genes, the researchers were able to compare each group to
show that myelin integrity was determined genetically in many parts of
the brain that are key for intelligence. These include the parietal lobes,
which are responsible for spatial reasoning, visual processing and logic,
and the corpus callosum, which pulls together information from both sides
of the body.
The researchers used a faster version of a type of scanner called a HARDI
(high-angular resolution diffusion imaging) — think of an MRI machine on
steroids — that takes scans of the brain at a much higher resolution than
a standard MRI. While an MRI scan shows the volume of different tissues
in the brain by measuring the amount of water present, HARDI tracks
how water diffuses through the brain’s white matter — a way to measure
the quality of its myelin.
“HARDI measures water diffusion,” said Thompson, who is also a member
of the UCLA Laboratory of Neuro-Imaging. “If the water diffuses rapidly in
a specific direction, it tells us that the brain has very fast connections. If it
diffuses more broadly, that’s an indication of slower signalling, and lower
intelligence.”
Essay:
5. How widely of you think the problem spreads that people spend too
much time on work than their personal life and experience time shortage?
What problems will it cause?
8. Study needs time, peace and comfort, whereas employment needs the
same thing. Someone says it is impossible to combine those two because
one distracts one another. Do you think this is realistic in our life today?
To what extent do you agree with it? Support your opinion with example.
10. Do you think cashless society is realistic and why? What are the
advantages and disadvantages? (use of credit card)
11. Governments and international institution are faced with many global
problems. What these problems could be? Measure?
12. Works of literatures are a waste of time for students today. Do you
agree or disagree? Use your own experience.
13. In social situations, some people believe that it is better to be a good
listener than a good talker. Do you agree or disagree?
14. Young people should not do things like driving or voting. Young
people under 25 years old are not responsible enough and lack of life
experiences. Discuss and give your opinion with examples.
15. City population has been growing rapidly. To cope with this problem,
should we rely on city planners or new policies?
16. Internet or media is bad for young people because they make the
young generation poor in communication and forming relationships. Do
you agree with this opinion? Please use examples or your personal
experience to support your idea.
17. Some people think school leavers should go to find a job rather than
university education. Others think the university education is essential for
professional development. What’s your opinion of these two views?
20. Workers and nurses should be paid more. What is your opinion?
24. Most people with university degree can earn higher salaries than
those who not go to the university, so they should pay full cost of their
education. Your opinion.
25. moving from rural areas to big cities will provide more opportunities.
Your opinion.
26. Study needs time, peace and comfort, whereas employment needs
the same thing. Someone says it is impossible to combine those two
because one distracts one another. Do you think this is realistic in our life
today? To what extent do you agree with it? Support your opinion with
example.
28. Governments and international institution are faced with many global
problems. What these problems could be? Measure them.