雅思聽力答題注意事項
雅思聽力答題注意事項, 在這些細節(jié)上失分很可惜,小編今天給大家?guī)砹搜潘悸犃Υ痤}注意事項,希望能夠幫助到大家,下面小編就和大家分享,來欣賞一下吧。
雅思聽力答題注意事項 在這些細節(jié)上失分很可惜
雅思聽力答題注意事項
1.關(guān)于大小寫:
建議喜歡大寫的鴨子全部用大寫,這樣不會錯 : 每個單詞全部字母大寫,對于不確定是否需要首字母大寫的采取這種辦法。(閱讀不需要這種方法。閱讀答案很明確的。除了專有名詞,都不要首字母大寫。)
如果你習(xí)慣小寫,需要注意以下幾點首字母大寫:
a.表格里面的內(nèi)容一般要求大寫
b.特殊名詞 比如: 時間(Monday) 地點(Church Road) 人名(John) 職位(Professor)
c.上下文對應(yīng)位置大寫的你也要大寫
2.關(guān)于縮寫
普遍承認(rèn)的縮寫均可使用
a.1st April=April 1st 但是不能寫成Apr
b.pound,dollar 建議縮寫成符號
c.am pm AD BC都可以寫成縮寫的形式
d.professor 可以寫成pro 但是如果有人名,需要大寫成Pro.
e.CD要寫成CD player
3.幾個容易拼錯的詞
accommodation, cigarette, cassette, tobacco, oxygen, separate,
Australia, communication, aggregate, aggravate
雅思聽力考試技巧
1、如未給例子,時間為5.35;如給例子,則按照例子模仿.另外要注意a.m. 和p.m.
2、專有名詞,人名,地名首字母在填表時必須大寫
3、貨幣數(shù)目必須在前面寫貨幣符號$ A,即使原文已經(jīng)給出,也要轉(zhuǎn)移到答題紙上
4、熟練拼寫星期和月份,不可以使用縮寫!!!!
5、大寫的專有名詞在雅思為路標(biāo)詞匯,使用它幫助定位
6、若所寫答案不超過三個單詞,則每個單詞都必須保留(注意:單詞必須準(zhǔn)確,意思對也不可以)
7、聽力中注意大小寫,單復(fù)數(shù),在沒聽清楚的情況下,確定單詞不是不可數(shù)名詞則為復(fù)數(shù)
8、選擇題時,所有選項在錄音中都會聽到,注意:單選,若聽到并列的選項,則都不是;多選,單獨出現(xiàn)的選項一般不是答案。
9、聽到數(shù)字如百分比,時間,分?jǐn)?shù),年代,年齡,日期,將其寫在空白處作備用答案
10、填空題有and,轉(zhuǎn)移答案到答題紙上的時候要抄上and
11、聽到although后注意放在其后的一句話的意思
12、填空題按照題號的順序走,如故三句話沒跟上,則越過兩個空
13、磁帶中如果有拼寫某個字母的單詞,必是某處答案,將其寫在空白處.
雅思聽力提分訓(xùn)練素材:孕婦吸煙有害嬰兒?
雅思泛聽原文:Is Smoking Pot While Pregnant Safe For The Baby?
DAVID GREENE, HOST:
This month, California became the world's largest jurisdiction with broad legal access to marijuana. Adults in this state can now buy marijuana without a doctor's prescription. But as Sarah Varney reports, obstetricians here are worried about pregnant women getting the wrong message.
本月,加利福尼亞成為世界上最大的合法擁有大麻的司法管轄區(qū)。這個州的成年人可以不用醫(yī)生的處方就買大麻。但Sarah Varney報道,產(chǎn)科醫(yī)生在這里擔(dān)心孕婦得到錯誤的信息。
UNIDENTIFIED WOMAN #1: Please, Mommy.
SARAH VARNEY, BYLINE: Two-year-old Maverick Hawkins sits on a red, plastic car in his grandmother's living room in Nevada City, a picturesque town in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada mountains. His play pal Delilah Smith snacks on hummus and delights over her Princess Peppa stuffie.
COMPUTER-GENERATED VOICE: I'm Princess Peppa (oinking).
VARNEY: It's playtime for the kids of the provocatively named Facebook group Pot Smoking Moms Who Cuss Sometimes. Maverick's mother, Jenna Sauter, started the group after he was born. She was 22 at the time and feeling lonely and depressed.
JENNA SAUTER: I didn't want to have to, like, hide who I was, you know. I wanted it to be, like, you know, friends who I could be open with, you know, and be like, well, I do this, I do this, I enjoy going into river. I like to maybe smoke a joint at the river.
VARNEY: There are nearly 2,600 members now in the Facebook group. Marijuana is offered up as a harmless remedy for everything from morning sickness to postpartum depression. Delilah's mom is Andria Smith. She's 21 and a week away from her due date with her second child. She bristled recently at a doctor's suggestion that she take half a Norco, a powerful pain pill, for her back pain instead of smoking pot.
ANDRIA SMITH: She's like, well, we know more about Norco and blah, blah, blah, and we don't know that much about marijuana. I was like, my kid can count to 10 before she was even 2, and I smoked pot through my whole pregnancy. She's not stupid.
VARNEY: Smith is not smoking in her third trimester because she doesn't want her baby to test positive for pot. The drug's psychoactive compounds cross the placenta, exposing the fetus to at least 10 percent of the THC that the mother receives. It's unclear how many pregnant women in the United States use marijuana. They may be reluctant to tell their doctors since it's considered child abuse in at least 24 states.
But studies show a sharp jump in pot use among pregnant women. Dr. Dana Gosset, an obstetrician at the University of California, San Francisco, says marijuana adversely affects how a baby's brain develops.
DANA GOSSET: Children who have been exposed to marijuana while growing in the womb have poorer performance on visual-motor coordination, visual tasks.
VARNEY: Like catching a ball or solving puzzles.
GOSSET: They may have behavioral problems at higher rates than other children by the age of 14, and interestingly, they are at greater risk for initiating marijuana use, and that is biologically plausible because the effects of the THC in the brain may actually prime that child for addictive behavior, not just to marijuana but potentially to alcohol as well.
VARNEY: The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists warns breastfeeding moms to avoid pot exposure since some amount of THC passes into the baby. But to Andria Smith's conviction that her daughter Delilah is just as smart as her peers, studies show that children exposed to marijuana in utero don't score worse on reading or math as they get older.
UNIDENTIFIED WOMAN #2: Phew.
VARNEY: Back in Nevada City, the play date of Pot Smoking Moms Who Sometimes Cuss, has moved outside.
UNIDENTIFIED WOMAN #2: All right. Where were we?
UNIDENTIFIED CHILD: I want up.
UNIDENTIFIED WOMAN #2: You want up?
VARNEY: Sauter says parents are uncertain if they'll get in trouble using pot now in California. Indeed, child protection laws in most states remain at odds with liberal marijuana laws. Sauter and Andria Smith both had babies who tested positive for THC just after birth and were visited at home by county social services. Though now they never smoke in front of their children. Sauter says some moms on her Facebook page won't go to the doctor even when they're sick.
SAUTER: They don't want to get tested, and that's dangerous. I mean, you got to be honest because if, like, something does go wrong, we got to know.
VARNEY: Obstetricians don't endorse mandatory testing of pregnant women or newborn babies for THC over concerns that women could be jailed or their babies taken away. But with recreational cannabis now legal in eight states, physicians like Gosset are worried that young children whose brains are rapidly developing will inhale pot smoke in their homes and come to know the world in an altered state. I'm Sarah Varney in Nevada City, Calif.
GREENE: And Sarah is with our partner, Kaiser Health News.
雅思聽力高頻詞匯
smoking pot 抽大麻
prescription 處方
pregnant 懷孕
living room 客廳
due date 到期日
back pain 背部疼痛
雅思聽力提分訓(xùn)練素材:印度森林守衛(wèi)者
雅思聽力泛聽內(nèi)容原文:A Lifetime Of Planting Trees On A Remote River Island: Meet India's Forest Man
NOEL KING, HOST:
Deep inside Northeast India, a forest has come bounding back thanks to one man.
在印度東北部的深處,由于一個人的緣故,一片森林正變得越來越近。
He's a farmer. NPR's Julie McCarthy traveled to see him, and she has this report.
JULIE MCCARTHY, HOST:
We've come to one of the most geographically isolated parts of India, the Northeast, nestled along the borders of China, Bhutan and Bangladesh.
(SOUNDBITE OF WATER SPLASHING)
MCCARTHY: We arrange ourselves in a boat for a short journey to a river island in Assam, a state famous for tea, the mighty Brahmaputra River we're crossing and the Forest Man.
JADAV PAYENG: (Foreign language spoken).
MCCARTHY: Jadav Payeng, a 58-year-old farmer, keeps the hours of an insomniac.
By 4:30 a.m., we're gliding across a moonlit channel. A pink sky pushes out the stars.
The slap of his oar is all that breaks the predawn tranquility.
(SOUNDBITE OF WATER SPLASHING)
MCCARTHY: We alight on an island of some 250 families from the Mishing tribe that lives along the river banks, and Jadav begins the daily trek to his vegetable fields and his life's mission, reviving the ecosystem here. It's now become full of grasslands and plants and a forest. When Jadav was young, the son of a poor buffalo trader, this strip of land in the middle of the river was attached to the mainland. Erosion from the river severed it. Jadav of picks up a handful of earth and explains how the landscape has changed.
PAYENG: (Through interpreter) Earlier, this was all sand. No trees, no grass, nothing was here. Only driftwood.
(SOUNDBITE OF COWS MOOING)
MCCARTHY: Now pastures nourish cows. Cotton trees stand straight in rows as far as the eye can see. Jadav planted them, his hands transforming this once barren island the size of Martha's Vineyard.
PAYENG: (Through interpreter) First with bamboo trees. I kept planting all different kinds of trees.
MCCARTHY: He says once a tree seeds, the wind, the birds, the entire ecosystem knows how to sow them. Jadav started planting here in 1979, stirred by a freakish sight, snakes piled on the sand in scorching heat. They'd perished from lack of shade.
PAYENG: (Foreign language spoken).
MCCARTHY: "When I saw it," he says, "I thought even we humans will have to die this way in the heat. In the grief of those dead snakes, I created this forest." Local tribesmen advised Jadav of to plant tall grasses to protect the reptiles.
PAYENG: (Foreign language spoken).
MCCARTHY: Over the course of nearly four decades, Jadav says he's planted so many trees he's lost count.
(SOUNDBITE OF FOREST NOISES)
MCCARTHY: Barefoot, this Mishing tribesman prunes plants as he guides us to some of his oldest trees. He leans against a 30-year-old teak tree and points to scratches on the bark. A tiger has sharpened its claws.
PAYENG: (Foreign language spoken). Eighty-five cow. Ninety-five buffalo.
MCCARTHY: Jadav is saying that he's lost 85 cows and 95 buffalo to tigers who have eaten them, killed them.
PAYENG: (Foreign language spoken).
MCCARTHY: He describes coming face to face with one of the big cats. What went through your head? Were you scared to death?
PAYENG: (Through interpreter) No, no. I wasn't scared. I know that tigers have half the courage of women. This one killed a buffalo, saw me and slinked off.
MCCARTHY: He says, unafraid of the wild elephants that cross the river to roam his forest, island villagers complain the herd tramples their rice fields and homes. But Jadav defends the animal and says it is man that must adjust to these woods. Jadav has received one of India's highest civilian awards. The dense forest bears his name and now sprawls over 1,300 acres. India's Forest Man personifies dedication to a dream, rising at 4 a.m., paddling across the river nearly every day for almost 40 years.
他說,不怕的野生大象過河,在他的森林,島上的村民抱怨羊群踐踏他們的稻田和房屋。但Jadav保護動物,說它是人,必須適應(yīng)這些樹林。jadav收到了一個印度平民的最高獎。茂密的森林,現(xiàn)在以他的名字命名的占地1300畝。
Certainly most people, if they acted on it, wouldn't stick with it for 40 years. How did you do that? How do you do that?
PAYENG: (Foreign language spoken).
MCCARTHY: "No one sees God," says Jadav Payeng. "I see God in nature. Nature is God," he says. "It gives me inspiration. It gives me power." Julie McCarthy, NPR News, Assam, India.
雅思聽力高頻詞匯
geographically 地理位置
isolate 分離
buffalo 水牛
villager 村民
trample 踐踏
sprawl 蔓延
inspiration 靈感
dense 稠密的
dedication 奉獻
paddling 劃槳