Pte Apeuni August Monthly Prediction
Pte Apeuni August Monthly Prediction
Pte Apeuni August Monthly Prediction
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A. Speaking 39
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Read Aloud 39
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1. Bill 39
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2. Agricultural Problems 39
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3. Innovative Product 39
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4. Urban Forests 39
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5. Root Network 39
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6. Child Psychology 39
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7. Political Problems 39
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8. Statistics 40
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9. William Shakespeare 40
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10. Rates of Depression 40
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11. Tutor 40
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12. Attendance 40
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13. Enough Fluid 40
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14. Single Research 40
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15. Tortoise 41
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16. Department Stores 41
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17. Attendance to Theater 41
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18. Norms and Values 41
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19. Expression 41
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20. Learner Experience 41
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21. Natural Enviroment 41
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22. Emigrants 41
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23. Humanities 42
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24. Making Notes 42
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25. Word Radical 42
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26. New Textbook 42
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27. Volcano Behaviors 42
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28. Medical Cannabis 42
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29. Hybrid Rice 42
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30. Motivation to Fight 43
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31. Baby Hearing 43
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32. Stroke Risk 43
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33. Pandemic 43
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34. Vitamin and Death 43
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35. Pollution Reduction 43
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36. Video Games 43
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36. Video Games 43
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37. Seismic Mars 43
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38. Ozone Pollution 44
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39. Essential Carbon 44
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40. Subject Outlines 44
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41. Reserve Bank 44
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42. Global Changes 44
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43. Flood Control 44
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44. Contribution to Book 44
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45. Window in Painting 44
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46. Marriage Satisfaction 45
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47. Psychology 45
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48. Climate Effects 45
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49. Gut Microbiome 45
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50. Standard of Living 45
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51. Nikola Tesla 45
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52. Clean Water 45
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53. Japan 46
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54. Carbohydrate Intake 46
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55. Era of Mayan 46
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56. Book Structure 46
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57. University Terms 46
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58. Mature Tree 46
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59. Manchester (Incomplete) 46
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60. Roman Army (Shadowing) 46
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61. Personal Libraries (Shadowing) 47
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62. Undergraduates Education 47
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63. Antarctic 47
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64. Paraphrasing (Incomplete) 47
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65. Night Sky (Shadowing) 47
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66. Language Diversity (Shadowing) 47
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67. Job Hours 47
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68. Blue Whale 48
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69. Spanish and French (Incomplete) 48
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70. Soil 48
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71. Ancient Athens 48
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72. Evidence 48
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73. Losing and Winning 48
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73. Losing and Winning 48
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74. Ed Tech (B) (Incomplete) 48
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75. Microbe Reproduction 49
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76. Largest Moon (Shadowing) 49
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77. Wordsworth 49
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78. Credit Cards (Incomplete) 49
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79. Sandra Lousada (Incomplete) 49
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80. Chaplin and Sydney 49
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81. Interdisciplinary Studies (Incomplete) 50
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82. Biology 50
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83. Decisions 50
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84. X-ray (Shadowing) 50
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85. Protein Tau 50
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86. Natural Networks (Incomplete) 50
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87. Problem of Funding 50
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88. Naked Biome (Shadowing) 51
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89. Microscopic Invaders (Shadowing) 51
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90. Sake Yeast 51
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91. Stone Tools (Incomplete) 51
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92. Economic Well-being 51
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93. Introvert and Extrovert (B) (Shadowing) 51
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94. Information Technology (Shadowing) 51
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95. Black Swan (B) (Shadowing) 52
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96. Becoming Carbon-neutral (Shadowing) 52
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97. Colloquialism (Shadowing) 52
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98. Girls v.s. Boys (Shadowing) 52
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99. Man-made Light (Shadowing) 52
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100. Only Family (Shadowing) 52
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101. Internal Combustion Engine (Shadowing) 52
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102. Online Shopping (Shadowing) 53
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103. Beauty Contests (Shadowing) 53
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104. Companies (Shadowing) 53
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105. Domestic Division 53
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106. Orientalists (Shadowing) 53
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107. Hazard Assessment (Shadowing) 53
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108. Elephant (Shadowing) 53
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109. Leader Waves (Shadowing) 54
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110. Shrimp Farm (Shadowing) 54
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110. Shrimp Farm (Shadowing) 54
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111. Slang (Shadowing) 54
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112. Bookkeeper Fraud (Shadowing) 54
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113. Restaurant Location (Shadowing) 54
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114. Brain Development 54
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115. Black Swan 54
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116. Legal Writing (Shadowing) 55
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117. Lenient Parents (Shadowing) 55
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118. Choice of Book (Shadowing) 55
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119. Curriculum 55
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120. Blue (B) 55
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121. Facebook (Incomplete) 55
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122. Lego 56
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123. Lunar Events (Incomplete) 56
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124. Parents (Incomplete) 56
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125. Co-evolutionary Relationship (Incomplete) 56
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126. Vanilla (Shadowing) 56
·····································································································
127. Linguistic Diversity (Shadowing) 56
·····································································································
128. Living Room 56
·····································································································
129. Augustus (Shadowing) 57
·····································································································
130. Blue (Shadowing) 57
·····································································································
131. Cup Class Boats (Incomplete) 57
·····································································································
132. Botanic Gardens 57
·····································································································
133. Programming Art 57
·····································································································
134. Tool-user (Incomplete) 57
·····································································································
135. Undesirable Programs (Incomplete) 58
·····································································································
136. Work (Shadowing) 58
·····································································································
137. Environment Problems 58
·····································································································
138. Marriage Too Early 58
·····································································································
139. Global Management (Shadowing) 58
·····································································································
140. Middle Ages 58
·····································································································
141. Charles Darwin 58
·····································································································
142. Not-for-profit University 59
·····································································································
143. Market Research 59
·····································································································
144. CD Quality Sound 59
·····································································································
145. Furniture 59
·····································································································
146. Historian 59
·····································································································
147. Business Climate 59
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147. Business Climate 59
·····································································································
148. War on Women 59
·····································································································
149. Global Warming 60
·····································································································
150. Introvert and Extrovert (Shadowing) 60
·····································································································
151. Yellow (Shadowing) 60
·····································································································
152. Father 60
·····································································································
153. Smoking Ban 60
·····································································································
154. Glamorous Person 60
·····································································································
155. Insults and Criticism 60
·····································································································
156. Modern Buildings (Shadowing) 60
·····································································································
157. Grand Canyon (Shadowing) 61
·····································································································
158. Akimbo (Shadowing) 61
·····································································································
159. Tesla & Edison (Shadowing) 61
·····································································································
160. Lincoln (Shadowing) 61
·····································································································
161. Coastal Wetlands 61
·····································································································
162. Mobile Commerce 61
·····································································································
163. Learning English 61
·····································································································
164. Alphabet (Shadowing) 62
·····································································································
165. Domestication 62
·····································································································
166. Chronic Disease 62
·····································································································
167. Shakespeare (Shadowing) 62
······································································································
Repeat Sentence 63
······································································································
Describe Image 76
·····································································································
1. Assessment (Incomplete) 76
·····································································································
2. EU (Incomplete) 76
·····································································································
3. Tax and Payroll 76
·····································································································
4. Wasted Food 76
·····································································································
5. Wheelchair 77
·····································································································
6. Barriers to Museum 77
·····································································································
7. European Headquarters 78
·····································································································
8. Floor Plan 78
·····································································································
9. Production Map (Incomplete) 79
·····································································································
10. Diamond Production 79
·····································································································
11. Airline Passengers 79
·····································································································
12. Cultural Websites 80
·····································································································
13. Flu Vaccination 80
·····································································································
14. Fog 81
·····································································································
15. Chocolate Consumers 81
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15. Chocolate Consumers 81
·····································································································
16. NZ House Price 82
·····································································································
17. Age Group (B) 82
·····································································································
18. European Countries 83
·····································································································
19. Household Budget 83
·····································································································
20. Fast Food Times 84
·····································································································
21. Fast Food Consumption 84
·····································································································
22. Richest Countries or Regions 85
·····································································································
23. Most Powerful Passports 85
·····································································································
24. GNH 86
·····································································································
25. Bermuda Triangle 86
·····································································································
26. Plastic Bottle Recycling 86
·····································································································
27. Tomato Processing Cycle 87
·····································································································
28. Litchfield Population 88
·····································································································
29. Main Hall 88
·····································································································
30. Stationery Shopping (Incomplete) 89
·····································································································
31. Recycling 89
·····································································································
32. Renewable Energy 89
·····································································································
33. Internet Users 90
·····································································································
34. Age group (Incomplete) 90
·····································································································
35. Ship Lock 90
·····································································································
36. Coffee House (B) 91
·····································································································
37. Historic Gardens 91
·····································································································
38. Mosquito Life Cycle 92
·····································································································
39. Ice Thickness 93
·····································································································
40. Disadvantaged Backgrounds of Students 93
·····································································································
41. World Population Density (B) 94
·····································································································
42. Dining Table 94
·····································································································
43. Wash Your Hands 95
·····································································································
44. Personal Protection 95
·····································································································
45. Fruits and Vegetables Market 96
·····································································································
46. Coffee House 96
·····································································································
47. Music Revenues 97
·····································································································
48. A Food Chain 97
·····································································································
49. Upper Arms (B) 98
·····································································································
50. Grape Fruits 98
·····································································································
51. South American Rainforest 99
·····································································································
52. UK Income by Age&Gender 99
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52. UK Income by Age&Gender 99
·····································································································
53. Product Life Cycle 100
·····································································································
54. Computer Then and Now 100
·····································································································
55. Water Cycle 101
·····································································································
56. Germination 101
·····································································································
57. Penguin 102
·····································································································
58. Journeys in the UK 102
·····································································································
59. Number of Texts 103
·····································································································
60. Auditorium 103
·····································································································
61. Commuting Time 104
·····································································································
62. China Age Group 104
·····································································································
63. Tomato Life Cycle 105
·····································································································
64. Sitting Posture 105
·····································································································
65. Palm Oil Production 106
·····································································································
66. Laboratory Plan 107
·····································································································
67. Income of Bachelor 107
·····································································································
68. Temperature and Precipitation 107
·····································································································
69. Forest Annual Change 108
·····································································································
70. Teaching Career 108
·····································································································
71. World Population Development 109
·····································································································
72. Arousal Level 109
·····································································································
73. Australian Population Density 1 110
·····································································································
74. Projected Population 110
·····································································································
75. Customer Satisfaction 111
·····································································································
76. Revenue of Quarter 111
·····································································································
77. Household Energy 112
·····································································································
78. EU Population 112
·····································································································
79. Apartment Plan 1 113
·····································································································
80. Food Pyramid 113
·····································································································
81. Clean Teeth 114
·····································································································
82. Generation from Coal 114
·····································································································
83. ITunes Purchased Songs 115
·····································································································
84. Cell Phone Use in Anytowne 115
·····································································································
85. Overseas Visitors 116
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86. Maslow's Hierarchy 116
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87. Wind Machine 117
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88. Diameter of Planets 117
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89. Female&Male 118
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89. Female&Male 118
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90. 100% Health 118
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91. Gnat Life Cycle 119
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92. Temperature&CO2 119
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93. Past Transport 120
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94. Length of Fish 120
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95. Library Plan 121
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96. Television v.s. Radio 121
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97. Not Attending School 122
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98. London Street View 122
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99. Economic Inactivity 123
·····································································································
100. Garbage Patches 1 123
·····································································································
101. Australian Population Density 124
·····································································································
102. Iron Age Hut 124
·····································································································
103. The Eatwell Plate 125
·····································································································
104. Music Download 125
·····································································································
105. Temperature&Precipitation 126
·····································································································
106. Population&Consumption 126
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107. Poverty Rate 127
·····································································································
108. Pupil/Teacher Ratio 127
·····································································································
109. Homologies of Structure 128
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110. World Water 128
·····································································································
111. Hospital Visits 129
·····································································································
112. Consumer Confidence 129
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113. Double Population 130
·····································································································
114. Sunrise & Sunset 130
·····································································································
115. World Income Distribution 131
·····································································································
116. Pet Expenditure 131
·····································································································
117. Egypt Trading 132
·····································································································
118. Quiz Operation 132
·····································································································
119. Radar Detection 133
·····································································································
120. Power Transmission 133
·····································································································
121. Arctic Food Chain 134
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122. Government Expenditure 134
·····································································································
123. Food&Oil Price 135
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124. Pencil Length 135
·····································································································
125. S&P 136
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126. Deforestation Reasons 136
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126. Deforestation Reasons 136
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127. Switzerland Language 137
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128. Bird Feeder 137
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129. Solar Eclipse 1 138
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130. Parts of Tree 138
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131. Tree Ring and Saw 139
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132. Food Pyramid 1 139
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133. Unemployment by Age 140
·····································································································
134. Happiness 140
·····································································································
135. Water Wheel 141
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136. Internet Population 141
·····································································································
137. Age Percentage 142
·····································································································
138. Fruit&Vegetable Consumption 142
·····································································································
139. Solar Yard Light 143
·····································································································
140. Meat Consumption 143
·····································································································
141. Sleeping Hours 144
·····································································································
142. Foreign Language Proficiency 145
·····································································································
143. Fly Life Cycle 145
·····································································································
144. Fruit Stand Sales 146
·····································································································
145. Weekly Temperature 146
·····································································································
146. Income Distribution 147
·····································································································
147. Taxi Hailing 147
·····································································································
148. Urban Percentage 1 148
·····································································································
149. Thoralby Population 148
·····································································································
150. Most Used Technology 149
·····································································································
151. Internet User Number 149
·····································································································
152. Countries' Age Group 150
·····································································································
153. Underground Passengers 150
·····································································································
154. Dubai Gold Sales 151
·····································································································
155. Air Temperature 151
·····································································································
156. Fish Shoal 151
·····································································································
157. Evacuation Route 152
·····································································································
158. Life Expectancy 152
·····································································································
159. Number of Articles 153
·····································································································
160. Number of Arrests 153
·····································································································
161. Australian Rankings 154
·····································································································
162. Solar Composition 154
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163. Sprouting 155
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163. Sprouting 155
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164. Animal Population 155
·····································································································
165. Language Shares 156
·····································································································
166. National Flags 156
·····································································································
167. Garbage Patches 157
·····································································································
168. Depression Probability 157
·····································································································
169. Earth Crust (2) 158
·····································································································
170. Electricity Generation 158
·····································································································
171. Adult Literacy 159
·····································································································
172. Virus Replication 159
·····································································································
173. Simple Circuit 160
·····································································································
174. Earth Structure 160
·····································································································
175. Height of Tree 161
·····································································································
176. Apartment Plan 161
·····································································································
177. Oxbow Lake 162
·····································································································
178. BMI 162
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179. Solar System 163
·····································································································
180. Typing Hands 163
·····································································································
181. Moon&Fish 164
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182. Global Warming 164
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183. Apple Life Cycle 165
······································································································
Retell Lecture 166
·····································································································
1. Icy Sea (Incomplete) 166
·····································································································
2. Venus (Audio Available) 166
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3. Education (Incomplete) 166
·····································································································
4. Pursuit of Happiness (Incomplete) 166
·····································································································
5. Animal Image (Incomplete) 166
·····································································································
6. Cosmic Civilization (Incomplete) 166
·····································································································
7. Universal Philosophy (Audio Available) 167
·····································································································
8. Facial Recognition (Audio Available) 167
·····································································································
9. Building Design (Incomplete) 167
·····································································································
10. Bananas (Incomplete) 167
·····································································································
11. Automation and Jobs (Incomplete) 167
·····································································································
12. Computer and Human (Incomplete) 168
·····································································································
13. Animated Rabbit (Incomplete) 168
·····································································································
14. Dead Sea Creatures (Incomplete) 168
·····································································································
15. Cotton Subsidy (Incomplete) 168
·····································································································
16. Hat (Incomplete) 168
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16. Hat (Incomplete) 168
·····································································································
17. Emotions (Incomplete) 168
·····································································································
18. City of Rome (Audio Available) 168
·····································································································
19. Child Language Acquisition (Audio Available) 169
·····································································································
20. Internet and Children (Incomplete) 169
·····································································································
21. Energy Challenge (Audio Available) 169
·····································································································
22. Chemical's Label (Incomplete) 170
·····································································································
23. Digital Jobs (Incomplete) 170
·····································································································
24. Solar Energy (Incomplete) 170
·····································································································
25. Interval Training (Incomplete) 170
·····································································································
26. Red Planet (Audio Available) 170
·····································································································
27. Dietary Health (Incomplete) 171
·····································································································
28. Sunrise and Sunset in Space (Incomplete) 171
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29. Bilingual Parents (Audio Available) 171
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30. DNA (Incomplete) 171
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31. Leadership (Explanation) (Audio Available) 171
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32. A Book (Incomplete) 172
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33. Amazon (Incomplete) 172
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34. Biological Forgetting (Audio Available) 172
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35. Leadership and Management (Incomplete) 172
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36. Graphical Representation (Incomplete) 172
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37. General-purpose Cars (Incomplete) 172
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38. Street Stalls (Incomplete) 173
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39. Edmund Wilson (Explanation) (Audio Available) 173
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40. Children Obesity (Incomplete) 173
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41. Cloud Formation (Explanation) (Audio Available) 173
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42. Procedure (Incomplete) 174
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43. Fatherhood (Incomplete) 174
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44. King (Explanation) (Audio Available) 174
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45. Creativity (Explanation) (Audio Available) 174
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46. Globalization (Explanation) (Audio Available) 175
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47. Performance of Genders (Explanation) (Audio Available) 175
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48. Animal Behavior (B) (Explanation) (Audio Available) 176
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49. Overfishing (Audio Available) 176
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50. Truth and Rhetoric (Explanation) (Audio Available) 176
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51. Ageing Population (Incomplete) 176
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52. Robot and Human (Audio Available) 177
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53. Dimensions (Explanation) (Audio Available) 177
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53. Dimensions (Explanation) (Audio Available) 177
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54. Linguistic Training (Explanation) (Audio Available) 177
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55. Earth v.s. Mars (Incomplete) 178
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56. Advanced Machine (Audio Available) 178
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57. Ship (Explanation) (Audio Available) 178
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58. Anti-HIV Program (Audio Available) 179
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59. Loggerhead Turtle (Incomplete) 179
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60. Motivation (Incomplete) 179
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61. Soot Emission (Explanation) (Audio Available) 179
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62. Silk Road (Incomplete) 180
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63. Telescope (Incomplete) 180
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64. Advertising Standard Authority (Incomplete) 180
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65. Melatonin (Explanation) (Audio Available) 180
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66. Large Hadron Collider (LHC) (Audio Available) 181
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67. Animal Behavior (Audio Available) 181
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68. NGO V2 (Audio Available) 181
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69. Australia’s Export (Explanation) (Audio Available) 182
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70. America’s Economic Size (Incomplete) 182
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71. Teaching (Incomplete) 182
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72. Beautiful Melbourne (Incomplete) 182
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73. Wind Power (Incomplete) 183
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74. Pavlov Experiment (Audio Available) 183
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75. Invention (Audio Available) 183
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76. Springtime (Audio Available) 183
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77. Implicit&Explicit Memory (Audio Available) 184
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78. Arctic and Antarctic (Audio Available) 184
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79. Civilization and Art (Audio Available) 185
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80. London Taxi Drivers (Audio Available) 185
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81. Shy Fish (Audio Available) 185
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82. Happiness (Audio Available) 186
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83. Sugar (Audio Available) 186
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84. Early Robot (Audio Available) 187
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85. International Environmental Law (Audio Available) 187
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86. Genome Structural Variation (Audio Available) 187
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87. Night Sky Darkness (Audio Available) 188
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88. Chest X-Ray (Audio Available) 188
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89. Marshmallow Test (Audio Available) 189
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90. Museum (Audio Available) 189
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90. Museum (Audio Available) 189
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91. Extinction of Language (Audio Available) 190
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92. Bomb Calorimeter (Audio Available) 190
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93. Licking and Grooming (Audio Available) 191
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94. Brain (Audio Available) 191
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95. Wind Turbine (Audio Available) 192
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96. Infinite Monkey Theorem (Audio Available) 192
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97. Trade-off Triangle (Audio Available) 192
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98. Graffiti (Audio Available) 193
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99. (Audio Available) 193
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100. Quantum Foam (Audio Available) 194
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Answer Short Question 195
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B. Writing 217
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Summarize Written Text 217
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1. Carbon (Incomplete) 217
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2. World Population (Incomplete) 217
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3. Immune System (Incomplete) 217
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4. World Population (Incomplete) 217
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5. Telescope (Incomplete) 217
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6. Women in University 217
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7. Levels of Crime 218
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8. Human Traits 218
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9. Brain Wave 219
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10. Farmland (Incomplete) 219
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11. Importance of Water 219
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12. Environmental Technologies 220
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13. Peer Support (Incomplete) 220
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14. Summer Vacation (Incomplete) 220
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15. Deep-sea Mineral Resources (Explanation) 220
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16. Seattle Commuters (Incomplete) 221
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17. New Women (Incomplete) 221
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18. The Women Institute (Incomplete) 221
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19. Image of Africa (Incomplete) 221
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20. Education Technology (Explanation) 222
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21. Positive Mindset (Explanation) 222
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22. Ethics (Explanation) 223
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23. Ecology and Climatology (Explanation) 223
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24. Greenland Shark (Explanation) 224
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24. Greenland Shark (Explanation) 224
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25. Negotiation (Explanation) 224
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26. World Wide Web (Explanation) 225
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27. Energy Demand (Incomplete) 225
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28. Asda (Explanation) 225
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29. Nutritional Science (Explanation) 226
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30. Illusion (Explanation) 226
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31. Reading (Explanation) 227
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32. Biomimicry (Explanation) 228
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33. Plastic Particles (Explanation) 228
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34. Voting Rights in UK (Explanation) 229
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35. Vividity of TV and Newspaper (Explanation) 229
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36. The Great Sphinx (Explanation) 230
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37. Rosetta Stone (Explanation) 230
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38. Written Language (Explanation) 231
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39. Plug-in Vehicle (Explanation) 231
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40. Plants Research (Explanation) 232
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41. Overqualified Employees (Explanation) 232
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42. Online Teaching & Learning (Explanation) 233
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43. Oil Price Decline (Explanation) 233
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44. Malaysia Tourism (Explanation) 234
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45. House Mice (Explanation) 235
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46. Geothermal Energy (Explanation) 235
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47. Electric Cars (Explanation) 236
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48. Double Blind (Explanation) 236
·····································································································
49. Children Allowance (Explanation) 237
·····································································································
50. Cataract Surgery (Explanation) 237
·····································································································
51. Australian Indigenous Food (Explanation) 238
·····································································································
52. Australia-US Alliance (Explanation) 238
·····································································································
53. 2014 Olympics (Explanation) 239
·····································································································
54. American English (Explanation) 239
·····································································································
55. Hookham (Explanation) 240
·····································································································
56. Paleolithic People (Explanation) 241
·····································································································
57. Crime Rate (Explanation) 241
······································································································
Write Essay 243
·····································································································
1. Replaced Textbooks 243
·····································································································
2. Overcrowding 243
·····································································································
3. Nature or Nurture 243
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3. Nature or Nurture 243
·····································································································
4. Hyper Competition 243
·····································································································
5. Financial Learning 243
·····································································································
6. Salary on Achievements 243
·····································································································
7. Age for Activity 243
·····································································································
8. Workplace Exercise 243
·····································································································
9. Success 244
·····································································································
10. Travel for Education 244
·····································································································
11. Foreign Languages 244
·····································································································
12. City or Countryside 244
·····································································································
13. Over-competitive 244
·····································································································
14. Artificial Intelligence (Explanation) 244
·····································································································
15. Wage Cap 244
·····································································································
16. Harder Life 244
·····································································································
17. Old or Modern Buildings 245
·····································································································
18. Compulsory Learning 245
·····································································································
19. Working Women 245
·····································································································
20. Short Weeks 245
·····································································································
21. Celebrities' Privacy 245
·····································································································
22. Less Work Hours 245
·····································································································
23. Television (Explanation) 245
·····································································································
24. Inventions (Explanation) 246
·····································································································
25. Dangerous Activities (Explanation) 246
·····································································································
26. Environmental Influence (Explanation) 246
·····································································································
27. Tourism's Pros and Cons (Explanation) 246
·····································································································
28. Law Effect (Explanation) 246
·····································································································
29. Marketing in Companies (Explanation) 246
·····································································································
30. Studying Climate Change (Explanation) 246
·····································································································
31. Common Exams 246
·····································································································
32. Wealthy Nations 247
·····································································································
33. Tuition Fees 247
·····································································································
34. Education System 247
·····································································································
35. Studying Abroad (Explanation) 247
·····································································································
36. Pressing Problem (Explanation) 247
·····································································································
37. Arts or Technology Research 247
·····································································································
38. Public Transportation 247
·····································································································
39. Concentration 247
·····································································································
40. Distraction (Explanation) 248
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40. Distraction (Explanation) 248
·····································································································
41. Life Experience (Explanation) 248
·····································································································
42. Effective Experience 248
·····································································································
43. Credit Cards (Explanation) 248
·····································································································
44. Journalist 248
·····································································································
45. Age Limit 248
·····································································································
46. Tourism (Explanation) 248
·····································································································
47. Digital Materials (Explanation) 248
·····································································································
48. Building Effects (Explanation) 249
·····································································································
49. Teenagers 249
·····································································································
50. Experiential Learning (Explanation) 249
·····································································································
51. Digital Age 249
·····································································································
52. Television 249
·····································································································
53. Emigration 249
·····································································································
54. Extreme Sports 249
·····································································································
55. Formal Written Examination (Explanation) 249
·····································································································
56. Global Issue (Explanation) 250
·····································································································
57. Personal Life (Explanation) 250
·····································································································
58. Senior Executives (Explanation) 250
·····································································································
59. Facing Issues (Explanation) 250
·····································································································
60. Getting Married (Explanation) 250
·····································································································
61. Inventions (Explanation) 250
·····································································································
62. Reputation or Short Term Strategies (Explanation) 250
·····································································································
63. Transportation Networks (Explanation) 250
·····································································································
64. Information Revolution (Explanation) 251
·····································································································
65. Mark Deduction (Explanation) 251
·····································································································
66. Studying Theater (Explanation) 251
·····································································································
67. Shopping Malls (Explanation) 251
·····································································································
68. Extending Life Expectancy (Explanation) 251
·····································································································
69. Right Balance (Explanation) 251
·····································································································
70. Mass Media (Explanation) 251
·····································································································
71. Birth Rate 252
·····································································································
72. Legal Responsibility (Explanation) 252
·····································································································
73. Personal Life (Explanation) 252
·································································································
C. Reading 253
······································································································
Fill in the Blanks (Reading & Writing) 253
·····································································································
1. New Material (Incomplete) 253
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2. Water Consumption (Incomplete) 253
·····································································································
3. Company Culture (Incomplete) 253
·····································································································
4. Station Service (Incomplete) 253
·····································································································
5. Environmental Policy (Explanation) 253
·····································································································
6. Clinical Trials (Incomplete) 253
·····································································································
7. Types of Women (Incomplete) 254
·····································································································
8. Activity (Incomplete) 254
·····································································································
9. Korean Students (Incomplete) 254
·····································································································
10. Korean Students (Incomplete) 254
·····································································································
11. Financial Crisis (Explanation) 254
·····································································································
12. Crime Prevention (Explanation) 254
·····································································································
13. Sand Dune (Incomplete) 255
·····································································································
14. IQ Test (Incomplete) 255
·····································································································
15. International Trade (Explanation) 255
·····································································································
16. Pinker (Explanation) 255
·····································································································
17. Plains Indians (Explanation) 256
·····································································································
18. Lake (Incomplete) 256
·····································································································
19. Graphene (Incomplete) 256
·····································································································
20. Maps (Incomplete) 256
·····································································································
21. Cultural Fusion (Incomplete) 256
·····································································································
22. Dag Hammarskjold Library (Explanation) 257
·····································································································
23. Coral Reefs (Explanation) 257
·····································································································
24. Mindfulness (Incomplete) 257
·····································································································
25. Dinosaurs (Explanation) 257
·····································································································
26. Shakespeare (Explanation) 258
·····································································································
27. World Map of Happiness (Explanation) 258
·····································································································
28. Spanish (Explanation) 259
·····································································································
29. Village Museam (Incomplete) 259
·····································································································
30. Important Corollary (Explanation) 259
·····································································································
31. Roommates (Incomplete) 259
·····································································································
32. Alcohol Consumption (Incomplete) 259
·····································································································
33. Light Pollution (Explanation) 259
·····································································································
34. Novelist (Incomplete) 260
·····································································································
35. Video Game (Incomplete) 260
·····································································································
36. Kathryn Mewes (Explanation) 260
·····································································································
37. Bhutan (Explanation) 261
·····································································································
38. Dance (Explanation) 261
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39. Teenage Daughter (Explanation) 261
·····································································································
40. Digital Media (Explanation) 262
·····································································································
41. Lionfish (Incomplete) 262
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42. Sound Speed (Explanation) 262
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43. Evolution (Explanation) 262
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44. Facial Appearance (Explanation) 263
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45. Panic-striken Climate (Explanation) 263
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46. Smartphones (Explanation) 264
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47. Hand Art (Incomplete) 264
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48. Digitalization (Explanation) 264
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49. Early Childhood Disadvantage (Explanation) 264
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50. Superintelligence 265
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51. Tokyo Skytree (Explanation) 265
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52. Academic Writing (B) (Explanation) 266
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53. Left-handed Population (Explanation) 266
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54. European Culture (Explanation) 266
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55. Giant Exoplanets (Explanation) 267
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56. Globalization (Incomplete) 267
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57. Science (Incomplete) 267
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58. Selfies (Explanation) 267
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59. Shrimp Farm (Explanation) 268
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60. Product Selling (Explanation) 268
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61. Facial Appearance (Incomplete) 269
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62. Edward (Incomplete) 269
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63. IQ Tests (Incomplete) 269
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64. Plants and Animals (Explanation) 269
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65. Philosophy (Incomplete) 269
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66. Gravity (Incomplete) 269
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67. Dire Prediction (Incomplete) 270
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68. Good Looks in Votes (Explanation) 270
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69. Intelligence Comparison (Explanation) 270
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70. Managers (Incomplete) 270
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71. Eco-friendly Smoothies (Explanation) 270
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72. Learning from History 271
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73. Roman and Water (Explanation) 271
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74. Visual Perception 272
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75. Flower Color 272
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76. Speech of Alchemy (Explanation) 272
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77. Breast-feeding (Explanation) 273
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78. English Language (Explanation) 273
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79. Genius (Explanation) 274
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80. Cheating 274
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81. Symbiosis 274
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82. Basic Organisms (Explanation) 275
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83. Stressors 275
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84. Drinking Water 275
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85. Cell (Explanation) 276
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86. Golden Gate Bridge (Explanation) 276
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87. Families (Explanation) 276
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88. Economic Depression 277
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89. Marketing (Incomplete) 277
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90. PIE 277
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91. Marshmallow Test 278
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92. Drones 278
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93. Harvard Library (Incomplete) 279
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94. Sandra Lousada 279
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95. Novel Device 279
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96. Physical Activity 279
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97. Studying Law 280
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98. Kashmiri 280
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99. Welfare Morality 280
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100. Ikebana 281
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101. Healthcare 281
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102. Colonial Era 281
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103. Colour Preference 282
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104. Sun and Moon 282
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105. Fossil Fuels 282
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106. A Letter (Incomplete) 283
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107. Study of Objects 283
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108. Psychology 283
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109. Mass Extinction 284
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110. Australia's Dwellings 284
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111. Noisy Studying 285
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112. Exams Looming 285
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113. Coastal Fish Farms 285
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114. Biological Systems 286
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115. Cultural Studies 286
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116. Daniel Harris 286
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117. Radioactivity 287
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118. Trinity Sport and Fitness 287
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119. Electrons 287
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120. Amount of Sleep 288
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121. Retirement 288
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122. Agrarian Parties 289
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123. Bedtimes (Incomplete) 289
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124. Home Appliances 289
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125. Decision Making 290
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126. Icebergs' Sound 290
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127. How World Work 290
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128. Brains or Brawn 291
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129. Managing Performance 291
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130. Financial Institutions 292
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131. Sydney 292
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132. Wholeness of Thought 292
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133. Interior Design 293
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134. Computational Thinking 293
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135. When to Revise? 293
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136. Paris Opera 294
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137. Great Engineers 294
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138. Global Textile Industry 294
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139. Significance of Instinct 295
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140. Ancient Egypt Music 295
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141. Very Old Paris 296
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142. Wind 296
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143. Rudman 297
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144. MBA Programs 297
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145. UNEP 297
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146. Origin of Species 298
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147. Women in Labour Force 298
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148. Origin of Music 298
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149. Standard Language 299
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150. Conservancy 299
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151. Fresh Water 300
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152. Guilt and Responsibility 300
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153. Transportation System 300
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154. APS 301
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155. Computer 301
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156. Population Change 302
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157. Bones 302
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158. Interdisciplinary Centre 303
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159. Life Expectancy 303
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160. Debt, Poverty and Development 304
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161. Spotted Owls 304
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162. Learning Process 305
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163. Maya 305
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164. Snails 305
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165. English in Change 306
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166. SpaceX 306
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167. History Books 306
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168. Scientists 307
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169. Sleep Patterns 307
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170. Politics Disciplines 307
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171. Australian Women Novelists 308
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172. Siblings 308
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173. Business 309
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174. Delegation 309
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175. Crime 309
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176. Distance Learning 310
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177. Language 310
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178. Film 311
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179. Foreign Policy 311
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180. Allergies 311
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181. Classic 312
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182. Leadership 312
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183. Artists 313
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184. Oxford Course 313
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185. New Zealand 314
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186. Dictatorship 314
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187. Zika 314
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188. Ironbridge Gorge 315
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189. DNA 315
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190. Japan and China 316
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191. Cardona Salt Mountain 316
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192. Tutankhamun 316
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193. Viper 317
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194. Water Security 317
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195. Trip (Incomplete) 317
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196. Generosity 318
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197. Canadian Arctic 318
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198. Business Schools 318
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199. Folklore 319
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200. Zero-gravity 319
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201. David Lynch 319
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202. One City 319
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203. Australia Higher Education Funding 320
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204. Anesthetics 320
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205. Military Advance (Incomplete) 321
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206. Hairstyles 321
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207. Dog 321
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208. Sales Jobs 321
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209. Herbal 322
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210. Sales Activities 322
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211. Settlement 323
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212. Natural Capital 323
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213. Good Schools 324
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214. Video Conference 324
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215. Pollination 324
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216. Definition of Country 325
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217. Burger King 325
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218. Spanish Language 325
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219. Pinker 326
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220. Impressionist 326
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221. Egg-eating Snakes 327
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222. Hans Christian Andersen 327
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223. Southern Cone 328
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224. Push and Pull 328
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225. Active Brain 328
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226. Amyloid Beta 329
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227. Crustaceans' Pain 329
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228. Below-ground Organisms 330
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229. Food Choices 330
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230. Natural-born Runners 331
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231. Australia and New Zealand 331
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232. Cloth-making 332
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233. Longevity 332
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234. Climate 332
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235. Architectural Museum 333
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236. Keith Haring 333
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237. Honorary Degree 333
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Multiple Choice (Multiple) 335
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1. Poetry Training (Incomplete) 335
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2. Dogs (Incomplete) 335
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3. Turks and Caicos (Incomplete) 335
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4. Children Care (Incomplete) 335
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5. Optional Courses (Incomplete) 335
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6. Jails (Incomplete) 336
·····································································································
7. (Incomplete) 336
·····································································································
8. Pink Tube (Incomplete) 336
·····································································································
9. Crystal Palace (Incomplete) 336
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10. ANZAC (Incomplete) 336
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11. History of Sleep 336
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12. Decision 337
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Re-order Paragraphs 339
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1. Crab 339
·····································································································
2. Age (Incomplete) 339
·····································································································
3. Project (Incomplete) 339
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4. Darwin 339
·····································································································
5. Ada (Incomplete) 339
·····································································································
6. Travel (Incomplete) 339
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7. Palm Oil (Incomplete) 340
·····································································································
8. Agriculture (Incomplete) 340
·····································································································
9. E-waste (Incomplete) 340
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10. Learning in Childhood (Incomplete) 340
·····································································································
11. Temperature Measurement (Incomplete) 340
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12. Meerkats 340
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13. Leaf Structure 340
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14. Takeaway Meals 341
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15. Locomotion 341
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16. Mandarin 341
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17. Plato 341
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18. US Manufacturing (Incomplete) 342
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19. Antarctic Ice 342
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20. Poincaré 342
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21. Sun Light (Incomplete) 342
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22. Photogrammetry 342
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23. Arctic Environment 343
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24. History 343
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25. Taste and Toxin (Incomplete) 343
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26. Rectangle and Square (Incomplete) 343
·····································································································
27. Tourism (Incomplete) 343
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28. Invention of Electronics (Incomplete) 343
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29. Selective Books(认真挑选的书籍) 344
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30. Far From Content (远离⽆⽤内容) 344
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31. Sydney (Incomplete) 344
·····································································································
32. Green Areas (Incomplete) 344
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33. Client Management (Incomplete) 344
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34. Probability of Event (Incomplete) 344
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35. Decline(下降) 344
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36. 2100-2013 345
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37. Child Temptation(孩⼦的诱惑) 345
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38. Education Services(教育服务) 345
·····································································································
39. Essential Skill(必要技能) 345
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40. Children's Clothes(⼉童服装) 345
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41. Advertising (Incomplete) 346
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42. Deaf School (Incomplete) 346
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43. O'Keeffe 346
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44. Mobile Phone(⼿机) 346
·····································································································
45. Actors' Performance 346
·····································································································
46. Financial Literacy 347
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47. Understanding Differences(了解差异) 347
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48. Sea Turtles 347
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49. Brain Function 347
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50. DRM 348
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51. Mink 348
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52. Hand Language (Incomplete) 348
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53. E-waste 348
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54. Soda Water(苏打⽔) 348
·····································································································
55. Superpower (Incomplete) 349
·····································································································
56. Turkey(⼟⽿其) 349
·····································································································
57. Nightinggale 349
·····································································································
58. Food Label (Incomplete) 349
·····································································································
59. Mars From Earth(地球到⽕星) 349
·····································································································
60. Pidgin 350
·····································································································
61. Blue Halo 350
·····································································································
62. Ants 350
·····································································································
63. Predators(捕⻝者) 350
·····································································································
64. Art History 350
·····································································································
65. Children's Verbal Skills 351
·····································································································
66. Egyptian Temple 351
·····································································································
67. World Feeding 351
·····································································································
68. Two-and-a-half(2.5升空⽓) 351
·····································································································
69. EU Fishing 352
·····································································································
70. Glow Worm 352
·····································································································
71. Hip Pop 352
·····································································································
72. Montana Two Ways(两条路) 352
·····································································································
73. Protein(蛋⽩质) 353
·····································································································
74. Be Objective(保持客观) 353
·····································································································
75. Carbon Pricing in Canada 353
·····································································································
76. Heart Attack 353
·····································································································
77. Wagonways 353
·····································································································
78. Ocean Floors 354
·····································································································
79. Birds(⻦类是好是坏) 354
·····································································································
80. Results Measurement (Incomplete) 354
·····································································································
81. Amino Acid (Incomplete) 354
·····································································································
82. Financial Crisis (Incomplete) 355
·····································································································
83. TV Program(电视节⽬) 355
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84. Voice above 5mhz 355
·····································································································
85. New Ventures 355
·····································································································
86. Sun's Radiation 355
·····································································································
87. Advertisements 356
·····································································································
88. Foreign Aid 356
·····································································································
89. Thought Processes 356
·····································································································
90. Green Tea 356
·····································································································
91. Pilot 357
·····································································································
92. Local Logger(当地⽊⼯) 357
·····································································································
93. Australia Role Models(澳洲榜样) 357
·····································································································
94. A Big Challenge(⼤挑战) 357
·····································································································
95. Chalk River(粉笔河) 358
·····································································································
96. Sojourner 358
·····································································································
97. Inuit 358
·····································································································
98. Mission 358
·····································································································
99. Share Interest(分享兴趣爱好) 359
·····································································································
100. 1906 San Francisco(1906年旧⾦⼭) 359
·····································································································
101. Speaking English 359
·····································································································
102. Motivation 359
·····································································································
103. Some Type Soda(某些类型的苏打) 360
······································································································
Fill in the Blanks (Reading) 361
·····································································································
1. Ballet-pantomime 361
·····································································································
2. Pidgins 361
·····································································································
3. English Language 361
·····································································································
4. Evolution (Explanation) 361
·····································································································
5. Female Employment (Incomplete) 362
·····································································································
6. Chemistry (Explanation) 362
·····································································································
7. Black Hole (Incomplete) 362
·····································································································
8. Mail (Incomplete) 362
·····································································································
9. Thesis (Incomplete) 362
·····································································································
10. Electrons 362
·····································································································
11. Tooth (Incomplete) 362
·····································································································
12. Thunder (Incomplete) 363
·····································································································
13. Forest and Fish (Incomplete) 363
·····································································································
14. Written Language (Incomplete) 363
·····································································································
15. Cold-blooded Fish (Incomplete) 363
·····································································································
16. Traffic Jams (Explanation) 363
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17. Maya (Explanation) 363
·····································································································
18. MBA (Explanation) 363
·····································································································
19. Banana (B) (Incomplete) 364
·····································································································
20. Performance Appraisals (Explanation) 364
·····································································································
21. Higher Education Shift (Explanation) 364
·····································································································
22. Accounting and Finance (Explanation) 364
·····································································································
23. Chapters (Explanation) 365
·····································································································
24. Bioenergy (Explanation) 365
·····································································································
25. Activity Tracker (Incomplete) 365
·····································································································
26. Banana (Explanation) 365
·····································································································
27. Dictionary (Explanation) 365
·····································································································
28. Marshmallow Test (Explanation) 365
·····································································································
29. Keith Haring 366
·····································································································
30. Bias (Explanation) 366
·····································································································
31. Pop Art (Incomplete) 366
·····································································································
32. Sound Speed (Explanation) 367
·····································································································
33. Airborne Diseases (Explanation) 367
·····································································································
34. Organic Culture 367
·····································································································
35. Management Accounting (Explanation) 367
·····································································································
36. Computational Thinking (Explanation) 368
·····································································································
37. Studying Law (Explanation) 368
·····································································································
38. Thinking Tools (Incomplete) 368
·····································································································
39. Nature Conservation Amendment Act (Explanation) 368
·····································································································
40. Color Preference 368
·····································································································
41. Selfies (Explanation) 369
·····································································································
42. GM Corn (Explanation) 369
·····································································································
43. Egyptian Music (Explanation) 369
·····································································································
44. Barred Owls 370
·····································································································
45. Power Station 370
·····································································································
46. New Ideas 370
·····································································································
47. Green Spaces 370
·····································································································
48. Marriage 370
·····································································································
49. Diamond (Incomplete) 371
·····································································································
50. Long-term Goal (Incomplete) 371
·····································································································
51. Gender Equality 371
·····································································································
52. Textile Industry 371
·····································································································
53. Fossil Fuel (Explanation) 371
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54. Ponzi Scheme 372
·····································································································
55. Electric Eels 372
·····································································································
56. Melting Ice (Explanation) 372
·····································································································
57. Rudman 372
·····································································································
58. Active Learning Classrooms 373
·····································································································
59. Sandra Lousada (Explanation) 373
·····································································································
60. Father in Family 373
·····································································································
61. Chemistry 373
·····································································································
62. Conservancy 374
·····································································································
63. Educational Scheme (Incomplete) 374
·····································································································
64. Weather Predictions 374
·····································································································
65. Giant Exoplanets 374
·····································································································
66. Study of Leadership 374
·····································································································
67. Scientists' Work 375
·····································································································
68. Folklore 375
·····································································································
69. Suez Canal 375
·····································································································
70. Eutrophication 375
·····································································································
71. Private School 375
·····································································································
72. Following Tips 376
·····································································································
73. Alpine Newt 376
·····································································································
74. Dance 376
·····································································································
75. Western Firms 376
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76. Coffee 377
·····································································································
77. Class Participation 377
·····································································································
78. Critical Thinking 377
·····································································································
79. Financial Crisis 377
·····································································································
80. Accounting 377
·····································································································
81. Concentration 378
·····································································································
82. The Environmental Policy 378
·····································································································
83. An Artist's Life 378
·····································································································
84. Physical Activity 378
·····································································································
85. Telephone Networks 379
·····································································································
86. Scrambled Memory 379
·····································································································
87. Lithium 379
·····································································································
88. Repetitive Syllables 379
·····································································································
89. Citizenship Education 380
·····································································································
90. Trees 380
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91. Australian Dwellings 380
·····································································································
92. Shakespeare's Work 380
·····································································································
93. Changing English 380
·····································································································
94. Pupil Charity 381
·····································································································
95. Air Moving 381
·····································································································
96. Investment 381
·····································································································
97. Ozone 381
·····································································································
98. Moth 382
·····································································································
99. Housing Agency 382
·····································································································
100. Revision 382
·····································································································
101. Japan and China 382
·····································································································
102. Lake Turkana 383
·····································································································
103. Linguistic Effects 383
·····································································································
104. Smarter Organisms 383
·····································································································
105. Fingerprint 383
·····································································································
106. Recruitment 383
·····································································································
107. Coral Reefs 384
·····································································································
108. Donors 384
·····································································································
109. Standard Response 384
·····································································································
110. Internet Growth 384
·····································································································
111. Good Looks 385
·····································································································
112. Viper 385
·····································································································
113. Modern Healthcare 385
·····································································································
114. Space 385
·····································································································
115. Walt Disney World 386
·····································································································
116. Dog Emotion 386
·····································································································
117. American People 386
·····································································································
118. Canada Gallery 386
·····································································································
119. Cheating 386
·····································································································
120. Music 387
·····································································································
121. Roman People 387
·····································································································
122. Biological Systems 387
·····································································································
123. Psychoanalytic and Behaviorist 387
·····································································································
124. Fresh Water 387
·····································································································
125. Anthropologists 388
·····································································································
126. Tokyo’s Skytree 388
·····································································································
127. Climate 388
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128. Psychology 388
·····································································································
129. UW Course Description 389
·····································································································
130. Crime Prevention 389
·····································································································
131. Milky Way System 389
·····································································································
132. People’s Savings 389
·····································································································
133. Higher Education Qualifications 390
·····································································································
134. Steven Pinker 390
·····································································································
135. Sun and Moon 390
·····································································································
136. Australia and New Zealand 390
·····································································································
137. Retirement 391
·····································································································
138. Sex-biased Hiring 391
·····································································································
139. Cuteness 392
·····································································································
140. Genius 392
·····································································································
141. Planes 392
·····································································································
142. Ikebana 392
·····································································································
143. Kashmiri 393
·····································································································
144. Sportswomen 393
·····································································································
145. University Science 393
·····································································································
146. Ice Storm 393
·····································································································
147. Chaucer’s Tales 394
·····································································································
148. American Executive 394
·····································································································
149. Australian Business Etiquette (Incomplete) 394
·····································································································
150. Movie (Incomplete) 394
·····································································································
151. Allure of Book 394
·····································································································
152. Volcanoes 395
·····································································································
153. DJIA 395
·····································································································
154. Open Door Policy 395
·····································································································
155. Postmortem 395
·····································································································
156. Desert 395
·····································································································
157. Creative Writing 396
·····································································································
158. Microorganism 396
·····································································································
159. Progressive Enhancement 396
·····································································································
160. Reading 396
·····································································································
161. Dark Matter 397
·····································································································
162. Papal Reform 397
·····································································································
163. Botswana 397
······································································································
Multiple Choice (Single) 398
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1. Iceberg 398
·····································································································
2. Social Scientists 398
·····································································································
3. John Robertson 399
·····································································································
4. Lighthouse (Incomplete) 399
·····································································································
5. Language (Incomplete) 400
·····································································································
6. Euripides (Incomplete) 400
·································································································
D. Listening 401
······································································································
Summarize Spoken Text 401
·····································································································
1. Cosmology (Incomplete) 401
·····································································································
2. City and Civilization (Incomplete) 401
·····································································································
3. Music Record (Incomplete) 401
·····································································································
4. Journalism and Internet (Audio Available) 401
·····································································································
5. Singapore (Incomplete) 401
·····································································································
6. Music Recorder (Incomplete) 401
·····································································································
7. Social Diversity (Incomplete) 402
·····································································································
8. Accent and Dialect (Incomplete) 402
·····································································································
9. Women Contribution (Incomplete) 402
·····································································································
10. Dialect (Incomplete) 402
·····································································································
11. Trade System (Incomplete) 402
·····································································································
12. Black Fly (Incomplete) 402
·····································································································
13. African American Rights (Audio Available) 403
·····································································································
14. Fish (Audio Available) 403
·····································································································
15. Air Pollution (Audio Available) 403
·····································································································
16. Primary Sources (Incomplete) 404
·····································································································
17. Biggish City (Audio Available) 404
·····································································································
18. Labor- and Capital- Intensive (Explanation) (Audio Available) 404
·····································································································
19. Time Travel (Incomplete) 405
·····································································································
20. Australian Culture (Explanation) (Audio Available) 405
·····································································································
21. Internet and Journalism (Audio Available) 405
·····································································································
22. Absolutism (Explanation) (Audio Available) 405
·····································································································
23. Generalist (Incomplete) 406
·····································································································
24. Hook Sentence (Explanation) (Audio Available) 406
·····································································································
25. Energy of Internet (Audio Available) 406
·····································································································
26. Approach and Avoidance (Explanation) (Audio Available) 407
·····································································································
27. Boys and Girls (Explanation) (Audio Available) 407
·····································································································
28. Credit Card (Incomplete) 407
·····································································································
29. DNA Pieces (Explanation) (Audio Available) 407
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30. Human Life (Incomplete) 408
·····································································································
31. Chimpanzees (Explanation) (Audio Available) 408
·····································································································
32. Internet Growth (Incomplete) 408
·····································································································
33. Competition and Performance (Audio Available) 408
·····································································································
34. Newspaper Industry (Explanation) (Audio Available) 409
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35. Automatic Driving (Similar) (Audio Available) 409
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36. Sugar (Explanation) (Audio Available) 409
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37. Fish Activities (Incomplete) 410
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38. Stone Balls (Explanation) (Audio Available) 410
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39. Machines (Incomplete) 411
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40. Bees and Darwin (Incomplete) 411
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41. National Wealth (Incomplete) 411
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42. Sleep (Explanation) (Audio Available) 411
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43. Dancing Bees (Explanation) (Audio Available) 411
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44. Children Directors (Explanation) (Audio Available) 412
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45. Literature in Poem (Explanation) (Audio Available) 412
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46. Food Waste (Explanation) (Audio Available) 412
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47. Moods (Incomplete) 413
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48. Leadership (Explanation) (Audio Available) 413
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49. MPA Campaign (Explanation) (Audio Available) 413
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50. Engineer and Engineering (Explanation) (Audio Available) 414
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51. Stock Market and Business (Explanation) (Audio Available) 414
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52. Luxury Brand (Explanation) (Audio Available) 414
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53. Paper Rejection (Explanation) (Audio Available) 415
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54. Global Economy (Explanation) (Audio Available) 415
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55. Inhabitants in Australia (Explanation) (Audio Available) 415
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56. Mars (Explanation) (Audio Available) 416
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57. Survey on Happiness (Explanation) (Audio Available) 417
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58. History of English (Explanation) (Audio Available) 417
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59. Genetic Impact (Explanation) (Audio Available) 418
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60. Sign Language (Explanation) (Audio Available) 418
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61. Decline of Bees (Explanation) (Audio Available) 418
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62. Change of Body Fat (Explanation) (Audio Available) 418
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63. Einstein (Explanation) (Audio Available) 419
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64. Brand Image (Explanation) (Audio Available) 419
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65. Facial Recognition (Explanation) (Audio Available) 420
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66. Judgement (Incomplete) 420
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67. Description (Explanation) (Audio Available) 420
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68. Wildlife as Food (Explanation) (Audio Available) 421
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69. Ugly Building (Explanation) (Audio Available) 421
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70. Orgnization Study (Incomplete) 422
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71. Industrial Revolution (B) (Explanation) (Audio Available) 422
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72. Internet (Explanation) (Audio Available) 423
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73. Architecture Design (Explanation) (Audio Available) 423
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74. IT Development (Explanation) (Audio Available) 423
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75. Children's Life Quality (Incomplete) 424
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76. Globalization (Explanation) (Audio Available) 424
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77. Good Ideas (Explanation) (Audio Available) 424
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78. Mapping of Genes (Incomplete) 425
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79. Big Bang (Explanation) (Audio Available) 425
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80. Dropping from School (Audio Available) 425
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81. Mars and Earth (Explanation) (Audio Available) 426
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82. Separation of Power (Incomplete) 426
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83. Language Levels (Explanation) (Audio Available) 426
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84. Time Machine (Incomplete) 427
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85. Roman Building (Explanation) (Audio Available) 427
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86. Globalization and Detraditionalization (Explanation) (Audio Available) 427
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87. Earthquake and Fault (Explanation) (Audio Available) 428
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88. Canned Food (Explanation) (Audio Available) 428
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89. Indian Peasant Debt(2) (Explanation) (Audio Available) 429
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90. University Competition (Explanation) (Audio Available) 429
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91. Flower Colour (Explanation) (Audio Available) 430
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92. Smile of Mother (Explanation) (Audio Available) 430
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93. Global Warming (Explanation) (Audio Available) 431
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94. Market Economy (Explanation) (Audio Available) 431
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95. DNA&RNA (Explanation) (Audio Available) 432
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96. Recognize Faces (Audio Available) 432
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97. Spectacles (Audio Available) 432
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98. Student Loan (Explanation) (Audio Available) 433
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99. Sound Receptor (Explanation) (Audio Available) 433
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100. Are We Animals (Explanation) (Audio Available) 434
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101. Newspaper (Explanation) (Audio Available) 434
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Multiple Choice (Multiple) 436
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1. University Facilities (Incomplete) 436
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2. Complaints (Incomplete) 436
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3. Nano-gold (Incomplete) 436
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4. Sharks (Incomplete) 436
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Fill in the Blanks 437
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1. LSE (Incomplete) 437
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2. Success (Incomplete) 437
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3. UCLA (Incomplete) 437
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4. Kashmiri (Audio Available) 437
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5. (Incomplete) 437
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6. Shouxing (Incomplete) 437
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7. Culture (Incomplete) 437
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8. Artist Competition (Incomplete) 437
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9. Advertisement (Incomplete) 438
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10. Burial (Audio Available) 438
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11. Degree (Incomplete) 438
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12. Green Chemistry (Audio Available) 438
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13. Life on Mars (Audio Available) 438
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14. Predators (Incomplete) 438
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15. Library Catalog (Audio Available) 438
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16. Belief (Audio Available) 439
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17. Malaria (Audio Available) 439
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18. Corporate Culture (Audio Available) 439
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19. Harry Potter (Incomplete) 439
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20. Locomotion (Audio Available) 439
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21. Industrial Productivity (Audio Available) 440
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22. Banana (Audio Available) 440
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23. Feasting Food (Audio Available) 440
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24. Viking (Audio Available) 441
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25. Curie (Audio Available) 441
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26. Memory (Audio Available) 441
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27. Banana (Audio Available) 441
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28. Adidas (Audio Available) 442
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29. Medical Care (Audio Available) 442
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30. Technology and Business (Audio Available) 442
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31. Age (Audio Available) 442
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32. Lead-in Time (Audio Available) 443
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33. Early Chocolate (Audio Available) 443
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34. Palm Oil (Audio Available) 443
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35. Superiority (Audio Available) 443
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36. Loose Theme (Audio Available) 443
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37. Seminal Difference (Audio Available) 444
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38. Well-being (Audio Available) 444
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39. Cultural Heritage (Audio Available) 444
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40. Cavemen (Audio Available) 444
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41. Dogs (Audio Available) 445
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42. Reptilian Fossil (Audio Available) 445
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43. Rose (Audio Available) 445
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44. Leading (Incomplete) 446
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45. Bees (Audio Available) 446
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46. Benefits (Audio Available) 446
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47. Pharmaceutical Industry (Audio Available) 446
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48. Almonds (Audio Available) 446
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49. Share Prices (Audio Available) 447
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50. Tesla (Incomplete) 447
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51. Arts and Humanities (Audio Available) 447
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52. New Epidemic (Audio Available) 447
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53. Biscuits (Incomplete) 448
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54. Cars in America (Audio Available) 448
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55. Kimbell (Audio Available) 448
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56. Gap Year (Incomplete) 448
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57. Green Chemistry (Audio Available) 448
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58. Sunflowers (Audio Available) 449
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59. Tax Increases (Audio Available) 449
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60. Rebuilding Soils (Audio Available) 449
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61. Entrepreneurs (Audio Available) 449
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62. Economists (Audio Available) 450
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63. Sea Levels (Audio Available) 450
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64. Nanotechnology (Audio Available) 450
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65. Financial Markets (Audio Available) 450
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66. Oceanographer (Audio Available) 451
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67. Beautiful Building (Audio Available) 451
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68. CPG (Audio Available) 451
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69. Planting Bananas (Incomplete) 451
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70. Water Crisis (Audio Available) 451
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71. Shakespeare (Audio Available) 451
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72. Warmer Ocean (Audio Available) 452
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73. Laurence Stephen Lowry (Audio Available) 452
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74. Neo-Latin (Audio Available) 452
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75. (Incomplete) 452
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76. CEO's Duty (Audio Available) 452
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77. Dropping Out (Audio Available) 453
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78. Online Dating (Audio Available) 453
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79. Integrated Ticketing (Audio Available) 453
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80. Japanese Researchers (Audio Available) 453
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81. Job Loss (Audio Available) 454
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Highlight Correct Summary 455
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1. Satellite (Incomplete) 455
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2. Ambassador (Incomplete) 455
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3. Ugly Building (Audio Available) 455
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4. Pancake Ice (Audio Available) 455
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5. Criminal Behavior (Incomplete) 456
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Multiple Choice (Single) 457
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1. Lost Dog (Incomplete) 457
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2. Children Genders (Incomplete) 457
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3. Timetable (Incomplete) 457
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4. Wright Brothers (Incomplete) 457
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5. Newton (Incomplete) 457
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6. Bibliography and Reference (Incomplete) 457
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7. Spy (Audio Available) 457
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Select Missing Word 459
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1. Sweat (Incomplete) 459
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2. Women in University (Incomplete) 459
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3. Ageing Population (Incomplete) 459
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4. Eclipse (Incomplete) 459
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5. Sustained Economic Growth (Audio Available) 459
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Highlight Incorrect Words 460
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1. News Channels (Incomplete) 460
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2. Experimental Scientist (Audio Available) 460
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3. Sotheby (Audio Available) 460
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4. Dramatic Changes (Audio Available) 460
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5. Written Assessment (Audio Available) 461
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6. Definition of Happiness (Audio Available) 461
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7. Cumulative Culture (Audio Available) 461
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8. Australia's Greenhouse Gas (Audio Available) 461
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9. BioBonanza (Audio Available) 461
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10. Tennis (Incomplete) 462
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11. Poverty Ending (Audio Available) 462
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12. Loan Guarantee (Audio Available) 462
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13. Probability (Audio Available) 462
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14. Article (Audio Available) 463
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15. Height (Audio Available) 463
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Write From Dictation 465
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A. Speaking
Read Aloud
1. Bill
The bill calls for the establishment of the National Landslide Hazards Reduction Program within one year
of becoming law. The program serves numerous functions, including to identify and understand landslide
hazards and risks, reduce losses from landslides, protect communities at risk of landslides hazards, and
improve communication and emergency preparedness.
(APEUni Website / App RA #1034)
2. Agricultural Problems
Agricultural problems due to climate change of normal weather, water depletion and the collapse of soil
have become big problems in all parts of the world. Many are now focusing on ethics and family farming
as a way to combat these issues.
(APEUni Website / App RA #1033)
3. Innovative Product
An innovative new product or service can give a firm a head start over its rivals, which can be difficult for
a new entrant to overcome. If the new technology is also patented, then other firms cannot simply copy
its design. It is legally protected.
(APEUni Website / App RA #1032)
4. Urban Forests
A community's urban forest is an extension of its pride and community spirit. Trees enhance community
economic stability by attracting businesses and tourists as people tend to linger and shop longer along
tree-lined streets. Apartments and offices in wooded areas rent more quickly and businesses leasing
office spaces in developments with trees reported higher productivity and fewer absences.
(APEUni Website / App RA #1031)
5. Root Network
The networks of roots that plants use to absorb water and nutrients can encompass a space larger than
the part of the plant visible above ground. The nature of these roots systems can help plants adapt to
challenging environments such as deserts. For instance, mesquite trees can develop tap roots capable of
digging more than 50 yards deep to reach water.
(APEUni Website / App RA #1030)
6. Child Psychology
Within this free course, you will be introduced briefly to the discipline of child psychology and to theories
and approaches that have been developed to help us understand and support children's lives by focusing
on the individual children. Psychologists can assess changes in their child's abilities over time, including
their physical, cognitive, social, and emotional development.
(APEUni Website / App RA #1029)
7. Political Problems
The course considers the ways in which thinkers have responded to the particular political problems of
their day and the ways in which they contribute to a broader conversation about human goods and
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needs, justice, democracy, and the proper relationship of the individual to the state.
(APEUni Website / App RA #1028)
8. Statistics
Statistics are indicators of change and allow meaningful comparisons to be made. While it may be the
issues rather than the statistics as such that grab people's attention, it should be recognized that it is
the statistics that informed the issues. Statistical literacy, then, is the ability to accurately understand,
interpret and evaluate the data that inform these issues.
(APEUni Website / App RA #1027)
9. William Shakespeare
Three hundred and eighty years after his death, William Shakespeare remains the central author of the
English-speaking world; he is the most quoted poet and the most regularly produced playwright — and
now among the most popular screenwriters as well. Why is that, and who "is" he?
(APEUni Website / App RA #1026)
11. Tutor
Your tutor helps you make the most of your time at university by giving you guidance and support along
the way. All new students are allocated a personal tutor who will encourage you to get the most out of
your course, direct you to other sources of support and help you achieve your goals.
(APEUni Website / App RA #1024)
12. Attendance
To some extent, attendance at cultural venues and events is influenced by a person's age and the
composition of the household in which they live. For example, those people in households with
dependent children were more likely to visit zoological parks and aquariums than people living in single
person households.
(APEUni Website / App RA #1023)
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15. Tortoise
The tortoise size and shell shape varies depending on where they live. The shell is made of bone and is a
dull brown color. Their ribs, backbone and breastbone have become part of the shell, which is why you
can never separate the tortoise from its shell.
(APEUni Website / App RA #1021)
19. Expression
Expression became important during the romantic movement with artwork expressing a definite feeling,
as in the sublime or dramatic. Audience response was important, for the artwork was intended to evoke
an emotional response. This definition holds true today as artists look to connect with and evoke
responses from their viewers.
(APEUni Website / App RA #1017)
22. Emigrants
In the late 16th and 17th centuries, many English, French and Dutch emigrants went to North America in
search of gold and silver. But they did not find it. Instead, settlers were forced to support themselves by
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cultivating crops that they could sell in Europe, like tobacco, indigo and rice.
(APEUni Website / App RA #1014)
23. Humanities
We believe in the inherent value of research in the humanities and social sciences. And our research data
agenda is given by the pursuit of new knowledge that will be of benefit of Australia and the world. We
offer one of the most comprehensive programs in the humanities and social sciences in Australia and the
Asian Pacific region.
(APEUni Website / App RA #1013)
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33. Pandemic
Belief that the COVID-19 pandemic was a hoax – that its severity was exaggerated or that the virus was
deliberately released for sinister reasons – functions as a “gateway” to believing in conspiracy theories
generally. In study, pandemic skeptics were more likely to believe in 2020 election fraud.
(APEUni Website / App RA #1003)
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47. Psychology
Psychology is the study of cognitions, emotions, and behavior. Psychologists are involved in a variety of
tasks. Many spend their careers designing and performing research to understand how people behave in
specific situations, how and why we think the way we do, and how emotions develop and what impact
they have on our interactions with others.
(APEUni Website / App RA #819)
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would naturally occur given more time. This means that a plant can create water that is safe to enter
back into the water system as it's so heavily diluted. The river then continues the water purification,
acting as a form of the fourth stage.
(APEUni Website / App RA #801)
53. Japan
Japan is the world's calculator superpower. Japanese manufacturers have led sales of calculators for
over 30 years in many countries. Even in the age of personal computers, calculators are still essential in
accounting jobs. In addition, calculators with graphing capabilities have begun to be used in education.
(APEUni Website / App RA #795)
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wore an undershirt made of linen and a woollen tunic. The linen helped the soldiers to stay cool while the
wool helped to trap heat, keeping the soldiers warm.
(APEUni Website / App RA #755)
63. Antarctic
The world's fifth largest continent: Antarctica is almost entirely covered by ice 2000 meters thick. The
area sustains varied wildlife including seals, whales, and penguins. The Antarctic treaty signed in 1959
and enforced since 1961 provides for international governance of Antarctica.
(APEUni Website / App RA #710)
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Most of us spend on average 18 hundred hours per year in our jobs, and will work for about 40 years
before retirement. When you consider the amount of time spent in the office, you soon realize how
important it is to feel a sense of achievement at the end of the day, rather than just meeting financial
objectives.
(APEUni Website / App RA #600)
70. Soil
Soil is the top layer of the Earth's surface, mostly created from weathered rock. It is made up of varying
amounts of minerals, humus, or decayed organic matter, and useful living creatures like worms. The
finest rock particles within soil - forms sticky clay, the medium particles become silt, and the coarsest
constitute sand. While there is sufficient moisture, soil supports vegetation, providing a habitat for a
variety of animals.
(APEUni Website / App RA #558)
72. Evidence
I've seen no evidence to suggest that students are not able to complete their courses because they're
failing in English yet they're being passed by the universities," she said. "I've not seen any evidence to
back that up.” International education is one of our largest exports, it's our fourth largest export and it's
in the interest of our universities to maintain very high standards because their reputation is at stake."
(APEUni Website / App RA #532)
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billionaire techies such as Mark Zuckerberg and Bill Gates, schools around the world are using new
software to "personalize" learning. This could help hundreds of millions of children stuck in dismal
classes—but only if edtech boosters can resist the temptation to revive harmful ideas about how
children learn. To succeed, edtech must be at the service of teaching, not the other way around.
(APEUni Website / App RA #513)
77. Wordsworth
Early in the 19th century, Wordsworth opposed the coming of the steam train to the Lake District, saying
it would destroy its natural character. Meanwhile, Blake denounced the "dark satanic mills" of the
Industrial Revolution. The conservation of the natural environment, however, did not become a major
theme in politics until quite recently.
(APEUni Website / App RA #453)
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82. Biology
Biology is the natural science that studies life and living organisms, including their physical structure,
chemical processes, physiological mechanisms and evolution. Certain unifying concepts consolidate it
into a single and coherent field that recognizes genes as the basic unit of heredity, and evolution as the
engine that propels the creation and extinction.
(APEUni Website / App RA #443)
83. Decisions
These decisions are highly nuanced. Of course we use a lot of data to inform our decisions, but we also
rely very heavily on iteration, research, testing, intuition and human empathy. Now, sometimes the
designers who work on these products are called "data-driven," which is a term that totally drives us
bonkers. The fact is, it would be irresponsible of us not to rigorously test our designs when so many
people are counting on us to get it right.
(APEUni Website / App RA #438)
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problems. The second most important issue consists in the huge spending. The money social services
achieve is not enough for normal functioning. The third problem, affecting human services, is the lack of
skilled and experienced employees.
(APEUni Website / App RA #396)
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automated inventory control and automated teller machines; and new distribution systems include cable
and satellite TV.
(APEUni Website / App RA #325)
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travel requirements of a given journey. Major US auto manufacturers are now developing feasible hybrid
electric vehicles, and some are exploring fuel-cell technology for their electric cars.
(APEUni Website / App RA #289)
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usual mammal, designed for two main reasons. One is to cope with the great weight of huge grinding
cheek teeth and elongated tusk, making the skull particularly massive. The other is to support the
enormous bulk of such a huge body.
(APEUni Website / App RA #302)
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Before European explorers had reached Australia, it was believed that all swans were white. Dutch
mariner, Antonie Caen, was the first to be amazed at the sight of Australia's Black swans on the Shark
Bay in 1636. Explorer Willem de Vlamingh captured two of these creatures on Australia's Swan River and
returned with them to Europe to prove their existence. From that point on, black swans and Australia
have been closely linked.
(APEUni Website / App RA #283)
119. Curriculum
The curriculum enhances the general management programme with health-related courses, Dr Schulman
says. Required courses include healthcare in the 21st century and the economics and strategy of health-
sector management. Students may also take electives such as medical device commercialisation,
healthcare marketing and the economics and management of the pharmaceutical industry.
(APEUni Website / App RA #261)
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122. Lego
Children will lack the work skills they need in the future because they are not spending enough time
playing, a Lego executive has warned. John Goodwin, head of Lego's charitable arm the Lego
Foundation, says less time in the classroom and more time playing is the solution. The foundation has a
25% stake in the Danish toy market, giving it a vested interest in encouraging play.
(APEUni Website / App RA #208)
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highly recommended that the flooring should be strong enough that it can endure all such amendments
done with your furniture or to the increasing and decreasing ratio of visitors. For this purpose, you can
opt for hardwood flooring.
(APEUni Website / App RA #143)
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145. Furniture
There are perhaps three ways of looking at furniture: some people see it as purely functional and useful,
and don't bother themselves with aesthetics; others see it as essential to civilized living and concern
themselves with design and how the furniture will look in a room - in other words, function combined
with aesthetics; and yet others see furniture as a form of art.
(APEUni Website / App RA #54)
146. Historian
As a historian, if you really want to understand the sensibilities of those who lived in the past, you must
be like a novelist and get into the skins of your characters and think and feel as they do. You are asked
to imagine what it's like to be a peasant in medieval times, asking the sort of questions a peasant might
ask. What the writer is saying is that a historian needs imaginative sympathy with ordinary people in the
past.
(APEUni Website / App RA #50)
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152. Father
Ever since I remembered, father woke up at five thirty every morning, made us all breakfast and read
newspaper. After that, he would go to work. He worked as a writer. It was a long time before I realized
he did this for a living.
(APEUni Website / App RA #22)
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environments demand resources in energy and materials, which are both limited in supply, to build and
operate.
(APEUni Website / App RA #11)
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In the past, naming English as a separate subject seemed relatively easy. The textbook selected and
graded items of language which were put into content and then practiced intensively. New items were
carefully controlled so that students could cope quite easily. Now English is used as a medium of
instruction.
(APEUni Website / App RA #47)
165. Domestication
Domestication is an evolutionary, rather than a political development. They were more likely to survive
and prosper in an alliance with humans than on their own. Humans provided the animals with food and
protection, in exchange for which the animals provided the humans their milk and eggs and yes — their
flesh.
(APEUni Website / App RA #6)
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Repeat Sentence
Audio Available: There're audio records available for this question. Search by the question number at
APEUni Website / App to listen.
1. The graph shows the population growth in the last century. #2305 (Audio Available)
2. The origin of psychology can be traced back to ancient Greece. #2304 (Audio Available)
3. Experts cannot agree on a single definition of intelligence. #312 (Audio Available)
4. There is a lot more about this topic in the university website. #2303 (Audio Available)
5. The literal output of this research is prolific and diverse. #656 (Audio Available)
6. Knowledge becomes a vital role in young generations. #2302 (Audio Available)
7. All students depend on their future. #2301 (Audio Available)
8. Students must attend the safety course before entering the engineering workshop. #2300
(Audio Available)
9. At that time, people moved from towns to villages. #1065 (Audio Available)
10. Points: Students fear to write essays because they do not know how to ... #2299 (Incomplete)
11. She has a small business about toys. #2298 (Audio Available)
12. Points: The ... staff ... student union. #2297 (Incomplete)
13. It is expected that all students have their own laptops. #2296 (Audio Available)
14. You have to submit the project by the end of the week. #2295 (Audio Available)
15. None of the students found it difficult to get a job. #2294 (Audio Available)
16. His particular interest is in the eighteenth century French society. #2293 (Audio Available)
17. Such behaviors are regarded as a deviation of the norm. #2292 (Audio Available)
18. There are lots of opportunities available for the student on campus. #2291 (Audio Available)
19. Before submitting the paper, your thesis must be approved by your tutor. #2290 (Audio Available)
20. The office opens on Monday and Thursday following the freshman seminar. #2289
(Audio Available)
21. The professor took a year off to work on her book. #450 (Audio Available)
22. You may not be allowed to read any books without the reading list. #761 (Audio Available)
23. Most of the student advisors are extremely helpful. #2288 (Audio Available)
24. If you are worried about your work, you should see a study counselor. #2287 (Audio Available)
25. We have specially assigned staff to help you find appropriate work placements. #2286
(Audio Available)
26. Renewable energy sources are now used to produce electricity. #2285 (Audio Available)
27. Living in the twenty first century is increasingly stressful. #2284 (Audio Available)
28. Please make sure you use the standard form of quotation. #2283 (Audio Available)
29. Please read the article that was given out yesterday. #2282 (Audio Available)
30. Compiling a bibliography can present a major challenge for some students. #2281
(Audio Available)
31. By logging in, you agree to all terms and conditions regarding your enrollment. #2280
(Audio Available)
32. We weren't able to agree on the appropriate independent variables. #697 (Audio Available)
33. The chemistry building is located near the entrance of the campus. #2279 (Audio Available)
34. Today we have a guest speaker who is visiting from Canada. #2228 (Audio Available)
35. Tomorrow's lecture has been canceled due to the power cut. #2177 (Audio Available)
36. The assessment of this course will begin next week. #2176 (Audio Available)
37. This will be the first art exhibition to be held by the university. #2175 (Audio Available)
38. I think that to raise the issue and to talk about it is great. #2174 (Audio Available)
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39. The university hosts a wide range of events both on and off campus. #2173 (Audio Available)
40. Our capacity to serve the community is a vital part of our role. #2172 (Audio Available)
41. A balanced diet will help you study more effectively. #2171 (Audio Available)
42. At the end of the day, people want to profit from return on their investment. #2170
(Audio Available)
43. The support and advice of lecturers within the department has been invaluable. #2169
(Audio Available)
44. Graduates from this course generally find jobs in the insurance industry. #2168 (Audio Available)
45. All the works you consult need to be mentioned in the bibliography. #2167 (Audio Available)
46. One of the first mass transit systems was located in France. #2166 (Audio Available)
47. Speaking one or more foreign languages will be useful in your career. #2165 (Audio Available)
48. I have lectures on Tuesday from nine o'clock until two o'clock. #2164 (Audio Available)
49. The professor plans to discuss issues in the news that reflect concepts taught in class. #2163
(Audio Available)
50. Each group should submit a rough outline of their project to their tutor. #370 (Audio Available)
51. What's going on can help patients leave their fears at the door. #2162 (Audio Available)
52. There is a fitness center next to the student union. #2161 (Audio Available)
53. Animal behavior appears to contain both similar and distinct aspects to that of humans. #2160
(Audio Available)
54. Tomorrow evening, there will be a panel discussion on sustainable development. #800
(Audio Available)
55. It's a great privilege to welcome our guest speaker to our college. #2159 (Audio Available)
56. Key aspects of this investigative paradigm may prove useful in other spheres. #2158
(Audio Available)
57. Points: New universities should allow students to enroll on other ... activities. #2156 (Incomplete)
58. All laboratory equipment will be provided in class. #2155 (Audio Available)
59. The key findings seem to contradict our initial hypothesis. #2154 (Audio Available)
60. Students’ papers should be about a current social issue. #2153 (Audio Available)
61. Students who study overseas can significantly improve work chances. #2150 (Audio Available)
62. Please note, submission deadlines are only negotiable in exceptional circumstances. #2149
(Audio Available)
63. Eating a healthy breakfast can provide energy throughout the day. #2146 (Audio Available)
64. The bibliography needs to be removed prior to the publication. #2145 (Audio Available)
65. The cafeteria is open on Monday and Thursday. #2143 (Audio Available)
66. The temporary library will be closed in the winter break. #2142 (Audio Available)
67. Points: When we take exams ... radio and audio. #2141 (Incomplete)
68. The first assignment is due on the fourteenth of September. #860 (Audio Available)
69. The bus right out in the front will take you to the station. #1862 (Audio Available)
70. Extension is only available under special circumstances. #1840 (Audio Available)
71. The deadline of assignments is the fourth of February. #1795 (Audio Available)
72. The program is for technical and scientific students. #1794 (Audio Available)
73. The beggar was laughed at by the children. #1710 (Audio Available)
74. The information you need for this meeting is on the website. #1709 (Audio Available)
75. The percentage of respondents who knew that the earth circles the sun once each year remained
essentially unchanged. #1708 (Audio Available)
76. What he’s bringing to the company is financial expertise. #1694 (Audio Available)
77. This Thursday is the last day for students to withdraw subjects without any penalty. #755
(Audio Available)
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78. The amount of time spent on configuration varies considerably. #1690 (Audio Available)
79. An essay should use evidence from both primary and secondary sources. #1688 (Audio Available)
80. The final exam will test material from all chapters covered in class this term. #1686
(Audio Available)
81. The tutorial rooms are located along the left-hand side. #1683 (Audio Available)
82. The English expression is just a way of saying that age is not important. #1682 (Audio Available)
83. You can borrow up to two books at the same time in the library. #1681 (Audio Available)
84. I am glad that Professor Gordon just joined our faculty. #846 (Audio Available)
85. Mobile phone chargers vary enormously from one place to another. #1680 (Audio Available)
86. There are many welcoming activities for new undergraduate and postgraduate students. #1678
(Audio Available)
87. Students can choose graduate certificate, graduate diploma and master course. #1677
(Audio Available)
88. Please note, the proposal submission deadline has been extended. #1676 (Audio Available)
89. Many species have not yet been discovered by biologists. #1673 (Audio Available)
90. He told me it was the most important assignment of all. #1671 (Audio Available)
91. The trial experiment is to increase the interests of the issue and the jurisdiction clause. #1670
(Audio Available)
92. We’ve been doing research in that area for probably 25 years. #1669 (Audio Available)
93. The media have had a great influence on people's beliefs and attitudes. #1668 (Audio Available)
94. You realize that you can deal with a lot of situations. #1667 (Audio Available)
95. Marks will be awarded for a bibliography in the correct format. #1666 (Audio Available)
96. The campus car park will be closed next weekend. #1665 (Audio Available)
97. Understanding the historical context will help you appreciate the art in this era. #1664
(Audio Available)
98. She's doing a master's degree by distance learning. #1663 (Audio Available)
99. Numerous courses devoted to life sciences are listed in the prospectus. #1662 (Audio Available)
100. It's obviously vital that companies should fully understand their customers. #1660 (Audio Available)
101. The results of the study challenge previously held assumptions. #1658 (Audio Available)
102. Please make an appointment before attending the next meeting. #1657 (Audio Available)
103. Please make sure you have filled in all your details before submitting. #1656 (Audio Available)
104. Assignments should be submitted to the department office before the deadline. #1655
(Audio Available)
105. Points: Chocolate ... machine ... #1653 (Incomplete)
106. You have to submit projects by the end of this week. #1652 (Audio Available)
107. Points: ... review chapter five discussed on Monday. #58 (Incomplete)
108. You may use your student identification card to borrow books at the library. #1650
(Audio Available)
109. Keeping organized class notes will make study time more efficient. #1646 (Audio Available)
110. In Russia, my colleagues said my written language was hard to understand. #1644
(Audio Available)
111. For further information, you need to contact a member of our administration team. #1643
(Audio Available)
112. Students may not use calculators in the final exams. #1642 (Audio Available)
113. The first draft of the presentation is almost ready. #1641 (Audio Available)
114. The subject is complex and difficult to explain. #1585 (Audio Available)
115. In your introduction, show you understand the question in no more than four sentences. #1584
(Audio Available)
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151. Everyone should get access to art galleries no matter where they live. #1085 (Audio Available)
152. Until you complete the form, you cannot attend. #1084 (Audio Available)
153. There is too much information on this topic. #1083 (Audio Available)
154. Presentation skills are important to both universities and workplaces. #1082 (Audio Available)
155. Major sports on campus include rugby, soccer and tennis. #1081 (Audio Available)
156. It is clear that the effects of climate change will damage the world economy. #1080
(Audio Available)
157. The framework will help pose more research questions systematically. #1079 (Audio Available)
158. Experience would be an advantage for this managerial role. #1077 (Audio Available)
159. The library is located on the north side of the campus. #1075 (Audio Available)
160. I would like the assignment less than 2000 words. #902 (Audio Available)
161. Biographical information should be removed prior to the publication of the results. #1068
(Audio Available)
162. The United States is the largest chocolate manufacturing country. #1067 (Audio Available)
163. If you forget your password, you need to contact the student center. #1066 (Audio Available)
164. Please be careful when using internet sources. #1030 (Audio Available)
165. If you need help, I can give you a hand in finding a flat. #1022 (Audio Available)
166. The course comprises twenty hours of lectures, seminars and tutorials each week. #1021
(Audio Available)
167. To get further extension, you need to call the education executive on 401. #1020 (Audio Available)
168. Professor Gordon just called me a few minutes ago. #1014 (Audio Available)
169. Those students have to retake the module if their marks are too low. #1011 (Audio Available)
170. There won't be any space for me in the car. #1007 (Audio Available)
171. I look forward to meeting you and to helping you realize your goals. #1006 (Audio Available)
172. The books are filled with drawings of machines invented when he was a student. #1004
(Audio Available)
173. Our tutorial will take place on the second floor in room one. #1000 (Audio Available)
174. The library offers group study rooms, so you can work with other students. #999
(Audio Available)
175. If you want to receive the reimbursement, you must submit the original receipts. #980
(Audio Available)
176. Students can download the lecture handouts from the course website. #975 (Audio Available)
177. Being a vegan means not consuming any animal products. #974 (Audio Available)
178. Students should take advantage of the internet before attending the lecture. #710
(Audio Available)
179. I would like an egg and tomatoes on white sandwich bread with orange juice. #640
(Audio Available)
180. Applicants for the course preferably have a degree in English or journalism. #516 (Audio Available)
181. Critical literature theories broaden interpretation. #431 (Audio Available)
182. Any textual references you make should be cited appropriately in the bibliography. #351
(Audio Available)
183. The cafeteria closes soon but the snack machine is accessible throughout the night. #826
(Audio Available)
184. The technician left the new microscope in the biology lab. #969 (Audio Available)
185. Only those who are over 18 years of age are eligible to open a bank account in our bank. #243
(Audio Available)
186. Ideally, free trade is beneficial to both trading partners. #968 (Audio Available)
187. All applications of internship are available in the office. #967 (Audio Available)
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188. In English, the first letters of the months of the year are always capitalized. #931
(Audio Available)
189. A thorough bibliography is needed at the end of every assignment. #961 (Audio Available)
190. Contemporary critics dismissed his idea as eccentric. #960 (Audio Available)
191. You are required to submit the assignment before Friday. #949 (Audio Available)
192. We are required to submit the assignment before Friday. #948 (Audio Available)
193. The lecture theater one is located on the ground floor of the Pack Building. #944
(Audio Available)
194. The bookstore is located on the main campus behind the library. #943 (Audio Available)
195. Is the hypothesis on black hole rendered moot as the explanation of astrophysics? #939
(Audio Available)
196. In this library, the reserve collection of books can be borrowed for up to three hours. #938
(Audio Available)
197. The number of company bankruptcy skyrocketed in the third quarter. #934 (Audio Available)
198. It is argued that students can learn more in collaborative rather than individual study. #638
(Audio Available)
199. Our capacity to respond to national needs will determine our ability to flourish. #933
(Audio Available)
200. In my free time, I would like to read current affairs and newspapers. #930 (Audio Available)
201. Anonymous behaviors can be identified without intervention. #917 (Audio Available)
202. Internet provides unusual opportunities for students and current events. #911 (Audio Available)
203. Children can share their lunch at around noon. #910 (Audio Available)
204. I don't like cheese and tomato sandwiches on white bread and orange juice. #907
(Audio Available)
205. If she doesn't speak the language, she's not going to sit around and wait for a translator. #906
(Audio Available)
206. To answer such a complex question with a simple yes or no is absolutely impossible. #905
(Audio Available)
207. Fishing is a sport and a means for surviving. #904 (Audio Available)
208. In eighteen thirty, periodicals appeared in large numbers in America. #903 (Audio Available)
209. Arteries carry oxygenated blood from the heart to other parts of the body. #901 (Audio Available)
210. We will study the following two pictures in the next lecture. #896 (Audio Available)
211. Companies are aiming to earn the money not to change the society. #895 (Audio Available)
212. We need to read the first five chapters to prepare for next week's tutorial. #894 (Audio Available)
213. It is good for the environment also good for your electricity bill. #893 (Audio Available)
214. As a student union member, we can influence the change of the university. #892 (Audio Available)
215. The generic biology technology lab is located at the North Wing of the library. #888
(Audio Available)
216. Don’t hesitate to email me if you have any questions. #883 (Audio Available)
217. It is within the framework that we're making our survey. #870 (Audio Available)
218. The timetable will be posted on the website before the class starts. #868 (Audio Available)
219. It is interesting to observe the development of language skills of toddlers. #866 (Audio Available)
220. In eighteen eighty, cycling became a major phenomenon in Europe. #134 (Audio Available)
221. The hypothesis on black hole is rendered moot as the explanation of the explosion. #103
(Audio Available)
222. We want to attract the very best students regardless of their financial circumstances. #848
(Audio Available)
223. Expertise in particular areas distinguishes you from other graduates in a job interview. #842
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(Audio Available)
224. I didn't agree with the author’s argument, but his presentation was good. #825 (Audio Available)
225. Students are competing for every place in the computer courses. #824 (Audio Available)
226. Our school of arts and technology accepts applications at all points throughout the year. #811
(Audio Available)
227. There are a range of housing options near the university. #810 (Audio Available)
228. All sources of materials must be included in your bibliography. #807 (Audio Available)
229. Negative discourse continues to be predominant in discussion of gender. #806 (Audio Available)
230. Many undergraduate students go back home to stay with their parents after graduation. #788
(Audio Available)
231. 39.5% of Californian residents do not speak English at home. #784 (Audio Available)
232. Nearly half of television outputs are given away for educational programs. #782 (Audio Available)
233. The minimum mark for Distinction grade is no less than 75%. #780 (Audio Available)
234. Number the beakers and put them away until tomorrow. #775 (Audio Available)
235. Organic food is grown without applying chemicals and the process is without artificial additives.
#768 (Audio Available)
236. I would like tomato and cheese sandwiches on white bread and orange juice. #762
(Audio Available)
237. You can only choose one subject from biology and media. #760 (Audio Available)
238. The student service center is located on the main campus behind the library. #752
(Audio Available)
239. The United States has the maximum production of chocolate. #749 (Audio Available)
240. A renowned economist is selected to have a speech tonight at eight. #721 (Audio Available)
241. Arteries carry blood from heart to the other parts of the body. #715 (Audio Available)
242. The hypothesis needs to be tested in a more rigorous way. #713 (Audio Available)
243. It seems that language appears from nowhere. #557 (Audio Available)
244. Today, we will be discussing the role of government in preventing injustice. #362
(Audio Available)
245. We didn't have any noticeable variance between the two or three tasks. #354 (Audio Available)
246. The theoretical proposal was challenged to grasp. #885 (Audio Available)
247. The cafe will close soon but you can use the snack machine which is running overnight. #878
(Audio Available)
248. Higher fees make students think more critically about what universities can offer. #877
(Audio Available)
249. We are constantly looking for ways to bring industry and agriculture closer together. #875
(Audio Available)
250. She is an expert of the eighteenth-century French literature. #862 (Audio Available)
251. The Arts Magazine is looking for a new Assistant Editor. #854 (Audio Available)
252. Genetic and biochemical analyses have generated a detailed portfolio of mechanisms. #847
(Audio Available)
253. Newspapers across the world are reporting stories of presidents. #843 (Audio Available)
254. Student loans are now available for international students. #839 (Audio Available)
255. By clicking this button, you agree with the terms and conditions of this website. #838
(Audio Available)
256. Physics is a detailed study of matter and energy. #836 (Audio Available)
257. This small Indian state is a land of forests, valleys and snowy islands. #823 (Audio Available)
258. Globalization has been an overwhelming urban and urbanization phenomenon. #816
(Audio Available)
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259. You should include your name and identification number on the registration form. #808
(Audio Available)
260. We offer a broad range of undergraduate and postgraduate courses. #804 (Audio Available)
261. To receive the reimbursement, you must keep the original receipts. #799 (Audio Available)
262. The wheelchair lift has been upgraded this month. #793 (Audio Available)
263. The visiting professor is going to give a lecture on geology. #792 (Audio Available)
264. The recent study has thrown out the validity of the argument. #789 (Audio Available)
265. The office said Dr. Smith will arrive later today. #786 (Audio Available)
266. The office opens on Mondays and Thursdays directly following the freshman seminar. #785
(Audio Available)
267. The first few sentences of an essay should capture the readers' attention. #776 (Audio Available)
268. The current statistical evidence indicates the need of further research. #773 (Audio Available)
269. The author expressed an idea that modern readers inevitably cannot accept. #766
(Audio Available)
270. Sport is the main cause of traumatic brain injuries in the United States. #759 (Audio Available)
271. The resident's hall is closed prior to the closing time of the academic building at the end of the
semester. #756 (Audio Available)
272. Put the knife and fork next to the spoon near the edge of the table. #754 (Audio Available)
273. Please finish all the reading chapters before the field trip. #753 (Audio Available)
274. Most of the assignments should be submitted on the same day. #746 (Audio Available)
275. More females than males graduated from universities last year. #745 (Audio Available)
276. Meeting with tutors could be arranged for students who need additional help. #744
(Audio Available)
277. It’s time to finalize the work before the Wednesday seminar. #740 (Audio Available)
278. I’ve got a tutorial in an hour and I haven’t had any time to prepare for it. #738 (Audio Available)
279. I will be in my office every day from ten to twelve. #736 (Audio Available)
280. I believe children should read aloud more. #733 (Audio Available)
281. Farmers do not always receive price for agricultural goods. #732 (Audio Available)
282. Elephant is the largest land living mammal. #731 (Audio Available)
283. Don’t forget to hand in your assignments by the end of next week. #730 (Audio Available)
284. The context includes both the land history and the human history. #727 (Audio Available)
285. Being a student representative on the union really cuts into my study time. #724 (Audio Available)
286. Anyone who has a problem with their accommodation should speak to the welfare officer. #722
(Audio Available)
287. Allergy problems do run in the family, but we don’t understand why. #720 (Audio Available)
288. All students and staff have access to printers and scanners. #718 (Audio Available)
289. All undergraduate students should participate in the seminar. #717 (Audio Available)
290. All necessary information is in the assignment. #716 (Audio Available)
291. A computer virus has destroyed all my files. #702 (Audio Available)
292. You can change your courses on the website during the registration period. #783
(Audio Available)
293. Your watch is fast, you need to reset it. #700 (Audio Available)
294. You can pay using cash or a credit card. #353 (Audio Available)
295. You can find the student service center on level one of Home Building. #709 (Audio Available)
296. Please do not bring food into the classroom. #708 (Audio Available)
297. Please pass the handouts along to the rest of the people in your row. #699 (Audio Available)
298. I expect a long and stagnant debate for a week or two on this issue. #349 (Audio Available)
299. The politics combine both the legislative and the political authorities. #687 (Audio Available)
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300. Vessels carry blood from the heart to other parts of the body. #686 (Audio Available)
301. The current and conventional method has many disadvantages including the side effects. #680
(Audio Available)
302. In marketing short-term thinking leads to many problems. #670 (Audio Available)
303. The gap between the rich and the poor did not decrease rapidly as expected. #669
(Audio Available)
304. The problem with this is that it fails to answer the basic question. #667 (Audio Available)
305. Number the beakers and put them away. #665 (Audio Available)
306. Our university has strong partnerships with industry as well as collaborative relationships with
government bodies. #664 (Audio Available)
307. What distinguishes him from others is his dramatic use of black and white photography. #663
(Audio Available)
308. A lot of people who have up until now been spending money in having a good time now need to be
more careful with their money. #662 (Audio Available)
309. In our campus, prospective students had access to thirteen college libraries. #661
(Audio Available)
310. Student discount cards can be used on campus in the coffee house. #659 (Audio Available)
311. Meeting with mentors can be scheduled for students who require additional support. #648
(Audio Available)
312. The US ranks twenty second in foreign aid, given it as a percentage of GDP. #647
(Audio Available)
313. He is almost never in his office. #639 (Audio Available)
314. Leading scientists speculate that numerous planets could support life forms. #637
(Audio Available)
315. The study of archeology requires intensive international fieldwork. #635 (Audio Available)
316. She doesn't even care about anything but what is honest and true. #632 (Audio Available)
317. But they haven't come to widespread use yet. #623 (Audio Available)
318. You can retake the module if your marks are too low. #621 (Audio Available)
319. Students are not allowed to take the journal out of the library. #619 (Audio Available)
320. Please explain what the author means by sustainability. #618 (Audio Available)
321. Hypothetically, insufficient mastery in the areas slows future progress. #616 (Audio Available)
322. Once more under the pressure of economic necessity, practice outstripped theory. #615
(Audio Available)
323. Please sort and order the slides of the presentation according to topic and speech time. #614
(Audio Available)
324. You can download all lecture handouts from the course website. #613 (Audio Available)
325. Our class is divided into two groups. You come with me, the others stay here. #609
(Audio Available)
326. Does the college refectory offer vegetarian dishes on a daily basis? #607 (Audio Available)
327. All essays and seminar papers submitted must be emailed to your tutor. #313 (Audio Available)
328. No crop responds more readily than careful husbandry and skillful cultivation. #597
(Audio Available)
329. You should raise your concern with the head of school. #596 (Audio Available)
330. You must complete this chapter before going to the field trip. #592 (Audio Available)
331. We are delighted to have professor Robert to join our faculty. #584 (Audio Available)
332. There's an hourly bus service from the campus into town. #572 (Audio Available)
333. There will be a guest lecturer visiting the psychology department next month. #570
(Audio Available)
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334. There is no entrance fee for tonight’s lecture. #567 (Audio Available)
335. The seminar on writing skills has been cancelled. #554 (Audio Available)
336. The School of Arts and Design has an open day on Thursday next week. #553 (Audio Available)
337. The Psychology Department is looking for volunteers to be involved in research projects. #550
(Audio Available)
338. The pharmacy was closed when I went past this morning. #548 (Audio Available)
339. The lecture tomorrow will discuss the educational policies in the United States. #546
(Audio Available)
340. The clear evidence between brain events and behavioral events is fascinating. #541
(Audio Available)
341. The bus in front of the building will take you to bus station. #537 (Audio Available)
342. The agricultural sector in that country has been heavily subsidized. #525 (Audio Available)
343. Students will not be given credits for assignments submitted after the due date. #522
(Audio Available)
344. No more than four people can be in the lab at once. #511 (Audio Available)
345. Meteorology is a detailed study of earth’s atmosphere. #509 (Audio Available)
346. It is important to take gender into account when discussing the figures. #502 (Audio Available)
347. If you forgot your student number, you should contact Jenny Brice. #496 (Audio Available)
348. I didn’t understand the author’s point of view on immigration. #479 (Audio Available)
349. Reserve collection of books can be borrowed for up to three hours. #467 (Audio Available)
350. A preliminary bibliography is due the week before the spring break. #449 (Audio Available)
351. The topic next week on colonialism will be the nuclear disarmament. #448 (Audio Available)
352. The library is located at the other side of the campus behind the student center. #447
(Audio Available)
353. Residence Hall is closed prior to the academic building closing time in the semester. #446
(Audio Available)
354. Many students are so scared of writing essays, because they never learned how. #442
(Audio Available)
355. In consultation with your supervisor, your thesis is approved by the faculty committee. #440
(Audio Available)
356. The program depends entirely on private funding. #434 (Audio Available)
357. The first person in space was from the Soviet Union. #426 (Audio Available)
358. People with an active lifestyle are less likely to die early or to have a major illness. #424
(Audio Available)
359. Lecture theater is located on the ground floor of the building. #422 (Audio Available)
360. I could not save my work as my computer got crashed. #421 (Audio Available)
361. To understand its entity, we need to go back to its origin. #416 (Audio Available)
362. The tutor is there for help, so do ask if you don't understand anything. #413 (Audio Available)
363. Anatomy is the study of internal and external body structures. #411 (Audio Available)
364. The verdict depends on which side was more convincing to the jury. #410 (Audio Available)
365. All the assignments should be submitted by the end of this week. #398 (Audio Available)
366. Even with the permit, finding a parking spot on campus is still impossible. #397 (Audio Available)
367. Please register your student email account at your earliest convenience. #394 (Audio Available)
368. Due to rising enrollment for courses, universities should increase their staff, too. #429
(Audio Available)
369. Basketball was created in 1891 by a physician and physical education instructor. #432
(Audio Available)
370. A demonstrated ability to write clear, correct and concise English is obligatory. #444
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(Audio Available)
371. Unfortunately, the two most interesting economics electives clash on my timetable. #401
(Audio Available)
372. Portfolio is due to the internal review office no later than Tuesday. #393 (Audio Available)
373. The original Olympic Games were celebrated as religious festivals. #391 (Audio Available)
374. The real reason for global hunger is not the lack of food, but poverty. #390 (Audio Available)
375. A study skill seminar is on for the students who require assistance. #387 (Audio Available)
376. The university celebrated the Earth Day by planting trees. #383 (Audio Available)
377. 39.5% California residents don’t speak English at home. #381 (Audio Available)
378. 39.5% California residents speak a language other than English at home. #379 (Audio Available)
379. I'm glad that you've got it. #375 (Audio Available)
380. Students are afraid of writing an essay, because they have learned nothing about it. #371
(Audio Available)
381. All filed assignments should have a full list of bibliography. #369 (Audio Available)
382. Your enrollment information, results and fees will be available online. #366 (Audio Available)
383. The café house is closed down and the snack machine is still running (throughout the night) #348
(Audio Available)
384. The original Olympic game is one kind of original festival. #347 (Audio Available)
385. Rules about breaks and lunch time vary from one company to another. #346 (Audio Available)
386. Company exists for money, not for society. #344 (Audio Available)
387. Acupuncture is a technique involved in traditional Chinese medicine. #342 (Audio Available)
388. Knives and forks should be placed next to the spoon on the edge of the table. #338
(Audio Available)
389. I will now demonstrate how the reaction can be arrested by adding a dilute acid. #336
(Audio Available)
390. A periodical is a publication that is issued regularly. #324 (Audio Available)
391. New York City is famous for its ethnic diversity. #323 (Audio Available)
392. The mismatch between the intended and reported uses of the instrument has become clear. #322
(Audio Available)
393. The medical centre is located near the supermarket on North Street. #321 (Audio Available)
394. Essays should be typed with double space in white paper. #320 (Audio Available)
395. Students can get access to computers on a daily basis. #311 (Audio Available)
396. Doctor Green's office has been moved to the second floor of the building. #309 (Audio Available)
397. The United Kingdom is a constitutional monarchy and parliamentary democracy. #305
(Audio Available)
398. We are not going to accept the assignment after the due date on Friday. #302 (Audio Available)
399. The student welfare officer can help with questions about exam techniques. #299
(Audio Available)
400. The English word Typhoon comes from the Chinese word big wind. #295 (Audio Available)
401. International students can get help with locating housing near the university. #287
(Audio Available)
402. In the last few weeks, we've been looking at various aspects of the social history of London. #286
(Audio Available)
403. During the next few centuries, London became one of the most powerful and prosperous cities in
Europe. #284 (Audio Available)
404. A lot of agricultural workers came to the East End to look for alternative work. #283
(Audio Available)
405. Knife and fork should be placed next to the spoon on the edge of the table. #280
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(Audio Available)
406. This part of the story is the story of my father. #276 (Audio Available)
407. If you want to quit the student union, tell the registrar. #272 (Audio Available)
408. I'll start with a brief history of the district, and then focus on life in the first half of the twentieth
century. #285 (Audio Available)
409. The minimal mark for distinction is 75%. #377 (Audio Available)
410. The glass is not a true solid, because it doesn't have crystal structure. #372 (Audio Available)
411. Make sure you correctly cite all your sources. #264 (Audio Available)
412. Trade financing for the local market or the international market for exports begins from the first
stop at the banks. #258 (Audio Available)
413. At the end of the ice age there would have been enormous changes in animal and plant life. #248
(Audio Available)
414. This brought about the tremendous change in the environment, with the sea level rising and
creeping steadily inland. #246 (Audio Available)
415. At night, sailors in the Mediterranean can see the glow from the fiery molten material that is thrown
into the air. #235 (Audio Available)
416. The future of English is in the hands of countries where non-native speakers live. #222
(Audio Available)
417. English is expanding as a lingua-franca but not as a mother tongue. #221 (Audio Available)
418. Higher numbers of patients were infected than during previous outbreaks of the illness. #208
(Audio Available)
419. By the way, if you want more information about any of the trips, have a look in the student
newspaper. #202 (Audio Available)
420. Students should take advantage of the online resources before attending the lecture. #521
(Audio Available)
421. I won't be able to attend the lecture because I have a doctor appointment. #478 (Audio Available)
422. The initial results are intriguing, but statistically speaking, they are insignificant. #358
(Audio Available)
423. All students are encouraged to vote in the forthcoming elections. #170 (Audio Available)
424. The bus will depart from outside of the building in 5 minutes. #160 (Audio Available)
425. Some of the worst accidents in history have been linked to sleep deprivation. #146
(Audio Available)
426. Some teenagers in my school are not very well-behaved but fortunately all my friends are. #124
(Audio Available)
427. I hope I can take early retirement before I'm sixty. #121 (Audio Available)
428. An understanding of persuasive techniques should help you recognise their use. #92
(Audio Available)
429. First of all, a lot of students don't even know how to type very fast. #78 (Audio Available)
430. It's important for people to connect to each other. #63 (Audio Available)
431. Sometimes ads promote a brand rather than a particular product. #16 (Audio Available)
432. It's difficult for us to control our feelings of disgust. #15 (Audio Available)
433. Adverts might use humor, drama or catchy slogans to grab people's attention. #7
(Audio Available)
434. The research looked at the neighborhood cooperative schemes such as community gardens. #6
(Audio Available)
435. Please come to the next seminar properly prepared. #3 (Audio Available)
436. He would yell if he was interrupted while painting. #2 (Audio Available)
437. He was an abstract expressionist painter. #28 (Audio Available)
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438. He's shown an interest in exciting new art movements. #42 (Audio Available)
439. Teenagers more than most age groups feel strong pressure to conform. #54 (Audio Available)
440. I've had a very happy childhood so I sometimes forget that others haven't. #9 (Audio Available)
441. There are on-going problems with over-consumption of junk food. #39 (Audio Available)
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Describe Image
1. Assessment (Incomplete)
Points: 'Assessment' may be 'Dissertation'
(APEUni Website / App DI #904)
2. EU (Incomplete)
Points: A table about EU.
(APEUni Website / App DI #903)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about payroll and superannuation in recent years. The items
include countries like Australia, Austria, and Denmark. According to this graph, in Australia, the value is
around sixteen point six percent, and that of Austria is the same. You can see from this graph that the
lowest value is in Denmark, which is eight percent. You can also see from this graph that the weighted
average is thirteen percent. In conclusion, Both Australia and Austria have the highest percentage.
(APEUni Website / App DI #902)
4. Wasted Food
Answer:
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The following graph gives information about wasted food in UK. The items include saved, recycled and
thrown away. According to this graph, in distribution and retail, the value of saved food is around one
megaton, and that of household including to drain is higher which is around two megaton. You can see
from this graph that the highest value of thrown away food is in household including to drain, which is
eight megatons. You can also see from this graph that the highest value of saved food is in food and
drink manufacturing waste. In conclusion, hospitality sector has the second highest amount of thrown
away food.
(APEUni Website / App DI #726)
5. Wheelchair
Answer:
The following graph gives information about a wheelchair. This is a very beautiful picture, and it shows a
number of things. According to this graph, at the central area, there is a wheelchair in which a woman is
sitting. You can see from this graph that, behind the wheelchair, there is a younger man who is pushing
the wheelchair. You can see from this graph that, in the background, there are many trees in a large
lawn, and the color is green. The weather is sunny. The sky is blue and clear. In conclusion, this picture
is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #724)
6. Barriers to Museum
Answer:
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The following graph gives information about barriers to visiting museums or galleries. The items include
lack of time, cost of entry and transport problems. According to this graph, in caregiver responsibilities,
the value is around ten percent, and that of cost of entry is higher, which is around twelve percent. You
can see from this graph that the highest value is in lack of time, which is fifty-five percent. You can also
see from this graph that the lowest value is in lack of information about events. In conclusion, this bar
chart is informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #187)
7. European Headquarters
Answer:
The following graph gives information about where international companies have their headquarters. The
items include UK, Germany, France and other countries. According to this graph, in Belgium, the value is
around twelve, and that in Ireland is higher, which is around twenty. You can see from this graph that the
highest value is in UK, which is two hundred and ten. You can also see from this graph that the lowest
value is Denmark. In conclusion, this bar chart is informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #723)
8. Floor Plan
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the floor plan. Usages of different areas are displayed on
the map. In the upper area, there are the bedroom and the living room. In the lower left corner, there is a
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bathroom with a closet next to it. According to this graph, the kitchen is next to the closet on the right
side. In addition, there is a balcony next to the kitchen. In conclusion, the floor plan is shown on the
map.
(APEUni Website / App DI #718)
Answer:
The following pie chart gives information about diamond production by value. The items include Russia,
Botswana, Canada, and other countries. According to this graph, the value of Canada is around fourteen
percent, and that of others is higher, which is eighteen percent. You can see from this graph that the
highest value is Russia, which is around twenty-six percent. You can also see from this graph that the
lowest value is South Africa, which is around eight percent. In conclusion, the countries produce so much
diamond.
(APEUni Website / App DI #713)
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Answer:
The following graph gives information about domestic airline passengers. The items include inter-capital,
leisure, and all. According to this graph, in all, the value is around two, and that of inter-capital is higher,
which is around two point five. You can see from this graph that the highest value is in mining exposed,
which is around eight. You can also see from this graph that the lowest value is in leisure. In conclusion,
airline passengers have different values.
(APEUni Website / App DI #712)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about popularity of cultural websites in Scotland. The items
include none of these, concert websites, and library websites. According to this graph, in historical and
heritage, the value of popularity is around twenty percent, and that of concert websites is higher, which
is around thirty percent. You can see from this graph that the highest value is in none of these, which is
fifty-five percent. You can also see from this graph that the lowest value is in record websites. In
conclusion, website popularities vary greatly.
(APEUni Website / App DI #710)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about flu vaccination rates. The items include South Korea, UK,
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and USA. According to this graph, in USA, the value of vaccination rate is around sixty-eight percent,
and that of UK is higher, which is around seventy-two percent. You can see from this graph that the
highest value is in South Korea, which is eighty-five. You can also see from this graph that the lowest
value of is in Turkey. In conclusion, flu vaccination rates vary greatly.
(APEUni Website / App DI #709)
14. Fog
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the view of a street in fog. This is a very beautiful picture,
and it shows a number of things. According to this graph, at the central area, there are three bicycles
ridden by women at the front. The color of them is black. You can see from this graph that, behind the
bicycles, there is a thick blanket of fog covering a lot of people and street lights; the color of the fog is
white. You can see from this graph that, at the background, there are four straight dashed lines on the
road surface, the color of those are white. The weather is foggy. The sky is grey. In conclusion, this
picture is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #686)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about pounds of chocolate consumed per capita in countries each
year. The items include Switzerland, Germany, Ireland, Norway, etc. According to this graph, in Sweden,
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the value is eleven point nine, and that of Australia is lower, which is around ten point eight. You can see
from this graph that the highest value is in Switzerland, which is nineteen point eight. You can also see
from this graph that the lowest value is in France. In conclusion, Switzerland consumes more chocolate
than any another county does.
(APEUni Website / App DI #680)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about New Zealand house price. The items include New Zealand
and OECD. The horizontal axis is year, ranging from nineteen ninety to twenty-fourteen. According to
this graph, in nineteen ninety, the value of New Zealand is around one hundred, and that of OECD is
almost the same. According to this graph, the highest value of New Zealand is two hundred and fifty,
which is in two thousand and seven. According to this graph, the value of New Zealand is higher than
OECD. In conclusion, OECD has smaller changes.
(APEUni Website / App DI #668)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about percentages by age and sex. The items include age groups,
female and male. According to this graph, in male, the value of eighty-five plus is around zero point
seven, and that of seventy-five to eighty-four is higher, which is around three. You can see from this
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graph that the highest value of female is in twenty-five to thirty-four, which is sixteen point five. You
can also see from this graph that the value of less than four is seven point eight. In conclusion, eighty-
five plus has the lowest percentage of population in female.
(APEUni Website / App DI #577)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about Europe. Positions of different countries are displayed on the
map. At the central area, there are Austria, Germany, Poland and Czechia. In the left area, there are
Ireland and Portugal. According to this graph, the largest country is Russia, which is located on the right
side. In comparison, small countries include Denmark and Belgium. In conclusion, there are many
European countries shown on the map.
(APEUni Website / App DI #576)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about average weekly household expenditure. According to this
graph, the items include food, medical, transport, and holidays. You can see from this graph that the
value of food is one hundred and twenty-three. And the value of medical care is fifty. The value of
transport is one hundred and twenty-four. According to this graph, the value of holiday is thirty-three.
As you can also see that the value of housing is one hundred and sixty-four. In conclusion, this graph is
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very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #575)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about fast food times a week. The items include everyday, once a
week, and never. According to this graph, in several times a week, the value of July two thousand and
three is around seventeen percent, and that of twenty thirteen is lower, which is around sixteen percent.
You can see from this graph that the highest value of December two thousand and six is in about once a
week, around thirty-three percent. You can also see from this graph that the lowest value of July twenty
thirteen is in every day, around three percent. In conclusion, Americans usually eat fast food.
(APEUni Website / App DI #572)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about fast food consumption by meal. The items include
breakfast, lunch, dinner, and snack. According to this graph, in breakfast, the value is around twenty-
two point seven percent, and that of snack is lower, which is around twenty-two point six percent. You
can see from this graph that the highest value of lunch is forty-three point seven. You can also see from
this graph that the second highest value of dinner is forty-two percent. In conclusion, fast food
consumption has four kinds.
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Answer:
The following graph gives information about which economies are really richest. The items include
Switzerland, the United States, and Hong Kong. According to this graph, in Australia, the value of
average wealth is around four hundred thousand dollars, and that of Netherland is lower, which is around
three hundred thousand dollars. You can see from this graph that the lowest value of median wealth is in
Denmark, which is one hundred thousand dollars. You can also see from this graph that the highest value
of median wealth is Australia. In conclusion, Switzerland has the highest rank.
(APEUni Website / App DI #570)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the world's most powerful passports. The items include
countries' names, their ranks and visa-free countries' numbers. According to this graph, in the first row,
the value of Japan is one hundred and ninety-three. And in the second row, the value of Singapore is
one hundred and ninety-two. You can see from this graph that the third highest value is in South Korea,
which is one hundred and ninety-one. You can also see from this graph that the lowest value is in
Luxembourg, which is one hundred and ninety. In conclusion, Japan has the most powerful passport.
(APEUni Website / App DI #566)
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24. GNH
Answer:
The following graph gives information about Gross National Happiness. Information of different areas
are displayed on the map. In the central area, there is a large circle named GNH. There are many small
circles surrounding the large circle. According to this graph, these small circles are health, time use,
education, good governance, community vitality, living standards, psychological wellbeing and cultural
diversity and resilience. And these small circles are respectively red, green, purple, blue, brown, and so
on. In conclusion, there are many factors in Gross National Happiness.
(APEUni Website / App DI #565)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about Bermuda Triangle in Atlantic. Information of different areas
are displayed on the map. In the central area, there is a light blue triangle named Bermuda, whose points
are at Florida peninsula, Puerto Rico, and Bermuda islands. In the left area, there is Gulf of Mexico and
Tropic of Cancer runs through it. According to this graph, the largest area is the mainland of America. In
comparison, Caribbean Sea is south to Cuba. In conclusion, there are many seas and islands shown on
the map.
(APEUni Website / App DI #563)
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Answer:
The following graph gives information about plastic bottle recycling. The steps include new bottles,
refilling, used bottles and plastic processing, and . According to this graph, the first step is newly-
produced bottles, which are empty. According to this graph, the second step is to fill the empty bottles
with beverage. You can see from this graph that the third step is to open the bottles and drink up it,
followed by the forth step is to transport used bottles back to the factory and use them as materials.
The final step is the plastic materials turn into new bottles waiting for refilling. In conclusion, this graph
is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #558)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about how tomatoes come to consumers. The steps include a
tomato tree, transportation, filtering, packaging. According to this graph, the first step is the tomato
tree, which grows many tomatoes on the branches. According to this graph, the second step is to
transport tomatoes by a green truck. You can see from this graph that the third step is to filter bad
tomatoes out on a conveyer belt, followed by a crate full of good tomatoes as the fourth step. The final
step is to fill the shopping cart with the good tomatoes for consumers. In conclusion, this graph is very
informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #557)
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Answer:
The following graph gives information about Litchfield population. The horizontal axis is the years,
ranging from nineteen o one to twenty eleven. According to this graph, in the year of nineteen eleven,
the value is around eight thousand. And according to this graph, in the year of nineteen forty-one, the
value is around ten thousand. The highest value is around thirty-two thousand five hundred, which is in
twenty eleven. On the contrary, the lowest value is seven thousand, which is in nineteen o one. In
conclusion, if this trend continues, the Litchfield population will keep rising in the future.
(APEUni Website / App DI #330)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about a floor plan. The items include a main hall, an office, a
kitchen and toilets. You can see from this graph that there is a main hall, which is in the upper area of
the plan. You can see from this graph that there are toilets for males and females,which are on the
right of the plan. You can see from this graph that there is a toilet for the handicapped,which is in the
bottom right corner with a sign of wheelchair. You can see from this graph that there are a kitchen in
the bottom left corner and an office in the middle of the plan. In conclusion, this graph is very
informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #553)
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31. Recycling
Answer:
The following graph gives information about different types of recycling. The items include thermal
recycling, chemical recycling, and material recycling. You can see from this graph that, in unrecycling,
the value is around one point eighty-five million tons. You can see from this graph that, in material
recycling, the value is around two million tons, which is higher. You can see from this graph that, in
thermal recycling, the value is around five point two million tons,which is the highest. You can also see
from this graph that, in chemical recycling, the value is around zero point thirty-eight million tons, which
is the lowest. In conclusion, this graph is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #551)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about renewable energy. The items include heating and cooling,
transport and power. You can see from this graph that there are two thermometers in heating and
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APEUni PTE Monthly Priority Materials Practice PTE with AI scoring at www.apeuni.com
cooling,which is fifty-one percent with ten percent renewable energy in it. You can see from this graph
that there are a ship and a plane in transport,which is thirty-two with three percent renewable energy
in it. You can see from this graph that there is a plug in power,which is seventeen with twenty-six
renewable energy in it. You can see from this graph that there is an arrow below power,which means
an increase of the share of renewable energy. It’s a beautiful picture and it shows a lot of things. In
conclusion, this graph is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #550)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about internet users who accessed via mobile phone. The items
include sixteen to twenty-four, fifty-five to sixty-four, and sixty-five plus. You can see from this graph
that, in forty-five to fifty-four, the value is around thirty-two percent. You can see from this graph that,
in thirty-five to forty-four, the value is around fifty, which is higher. You can see from this graph that, in
sixteen to twenty-four, the value is around seventy percent,which is the highest. You can also see from
this graph that, in sixty-five plus, the value is around eight percent, which is the lowest. In conclusion,
this graph is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #549)
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APEUni PTE Monthly Priority Materials Practice PTE with AI scoring at www.apeuni.com
Answer:
The following graph gives information about how a ship lock works. It shows how the process is done.
The items include a ship lock, a ship, dams, and pipes under the bottom. You can see from this graph
that the first step is that the upstream gate opens and the ship goes into the lock. You can see from this
graph that the second step is that the upstream gate closes and the water level evens. You can see
from this graph that the third step is that the downstream gate opens and the ship moves out of the
lock. In conclusion, this graph is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #548)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about a coffee house. The items include a sale clerk, a customer
and the counter. You can see from this graph that there is a wooden counter,which is brown and has
some glass coffee kettles and cups on it. You can see from this graph that there is a female sale clerk
in pink,who is smiling and has a POS terminal and a paper bag in the hands. You can see from this
graph that there is a male customer,who is in a blue T-shirt and passing a blue card to the clerk. You
can see from this graph that there are a blackboard and some cupboards on the wall. It’s a beautiful
picture and it shows a lot of things. In conclusion, this graph is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #547)
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APEUni PTE Monthly Priority Materials Practice PTE with AI scoring at www.apeuni.com
Answer:
The following graph gives information about historic garden noticeboard. The items include icons,
characters and background. You can see from this graph that there is a notice board,which is saying
'please respect and enjoy these historic gardens' with black characters. You can see from this graph
that there is a notice board,which has three red icons and one green icon on it. You can see from this
graph that there are forbidden icons,which say 'no cycling', 'no drinking' and 'no football'. You can see
from this graph that there is a permitted activity on the board,which is a guide dog. It’s a beautiful
picture and it shows a lot of things. In conclusion, this graph is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #543)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the mosquito life cycle. It shows how the process is done.
The items include adult, eggs, larva and pupa. You can see from this graph that the first step is the
adult laying eggs into water. You can see from this graph that the second step is eggs developing as the
larva below the water surface. You can see from this graph that the third step is the larva developing as
the pupa. You can see from this graph that the next step is the adult emerging on the water surface.
The final step is a new fully developed adult flying out of water. In conclusion, this graph is very
informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #372)
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APEUni PTE Monthly Priority Materials Practice PTE with AI scoring at www.apeuni.com
Answer:
The following graph gives information about minimal ice thickness guidelines. The items include an adult,
a kid, a car and a truck. You can see from this graph that, in the kid, the value of ice thickness is around
four inches. You can see from this graph that, in the sled, the value of ice thickness is around five to
seven inches, which is higher. You can see from this graph that, in the green truck, the value of ice
thickness is around twelve to fifteen inches,which is the highest. You can also see from this graph that,
in the adult, the value of ice thickness is around zero, which is the lowest. In conclusion, this graph is
very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #542)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about percentage of students from disadvantaged backgrounds
entering university in England. The items include years and student percentages. You can see from this
graph that the value of two thousand and seven is around twelve percent. You can see from this graph
that the value of two thousand and eight is around thirteen percent, which is higher. You can see from
this graph that the value of twenty fourteen is around eighteen, which is the highest. You can see from
this graph that the value of two thousand and six is around eleven percent, which is the lowest. In
conclusion, this graph is very informative.
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Answer:
The following graph gives information about world population density. The items include Asia, Africa,
America and Europe. You can see from this graph that the values of central Europe and some eastern
areas of the United States are around 350 people per square kilometer. You can see from this graph
that the values of coastal areas of north Africa, southeast Asia and Turkey are around 400, which are
higher. You can see from this graph that the values of eastern China and India are around 700 people
per square kilometer, which is the highest. You can see from this graph that the values of Antarctic,
northern Russia and the inland area of Australia are around 0, which is the lowest. In conclusion, this
graph is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #505)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about people at dining table. The items include tableware, table
and food. You can see from this graph that there is a brown table,which is made of wood and
surrounded by adults and babies. You can see from this graph that there is a lot of tableware on the
table,which includes forks and knives. You can see from this graph that there are some drinks,which
are water, orange juice and wine. You can see from this graph that there is some salad in a glass
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bowl,which is in the middle of the table. It’s a beautiful picture and it shows a lot of things. In
conclusion, this graph is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #504)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the way hands are washed. It shows how the process is
done. The items include 'rub fingertips', 'rub palms with fingers interlaced', and 'rinse with water', and so
on. You can see from this graph that the first step is to wet the hands. You can see from this graph that
the second step is to take liquid soap. You can see from this graph that the third step is to rub hands to
lather. You can see from this graph that the next step is to rub hand backs. You can see from this
graph that the next step is to rub thumbs. The final step is to rinse well with running water. In
conclusion, this graph is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #503)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about personal protection. The items include a worker, helmets
and rubber boots. You can see from this graph that there is a worker wearing a yellow helmet and a pair
of brown gloves, who is standing in the middle of the graph. You can see from this graph that there is a
pair of goggles on the face of the worker, which protects his eyes. You can see from this graph that
Page 95 of 472
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there is a pair of earplugs worn by the worker, which protects his ears. You can see from this graph that
there is a blue T-shirt worn by the worker, which is under the yellow overall. You can see from this
graph that there is a pair of rubber boots worn by the worker, which protects his feet. It’s a beautiful
picture and it shows a lot of things. In conclusion, this graph is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #493)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about a fruit and vegetable Market. The items include market
stalls, products, traders and customers. You can see from this graph that there are bunches of bananas,
which are yellow and piled next to green grapes on the stall. You can see from this graph that there is a
woman standing in front of the stall, who is buying some green vegetables, with a black plastic bag on
the left arm. You can see from this graph that there are many basins,which are red and blue, and put
on the electronic balances. It’s a beautiful picture and it shows a lot of things. In conclusion, this graph
is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #466)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about a coffee house. The items include sale clerks, customers
and the counter. You can see from this graph that there is a coffee house,which is bright with sunshine
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through big windows. You can see from this graph that there is a female sales clerk in white and
black,who is smiling and taking a customer's order on an Ipad. You can see from this graph that there
is a male customer,who is wearing glasses with black rims and a blue T-shirt. You can see from this
graph that there are some coffee facilities including cabinets and coffee makers, which are behind the
sale clerks It’s a beautiful picture and it shows a lot of things. In conclusion, this graph is very
informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #464)
Answer:
The following line chart gives information about music revenues by dollars from 1977 to 2017. According
to the line chart, the blue area means the physical revenue, which drops from sixteen billion in nineteen
seventy eight to nine billion in nineteen eighty two, before reaching the highest point, twenty two billion
in two thousand. Then the green area means the digital revenue, which rises from zero in two thousand
and five to seven billion in twenty seventeen. In conclusion, we can find the physical revenue is always
higher than the digital revenue. The following graph gives information about music revenues by dollars
from 1977 to 2017. The items include physical revenue in blue and digital revenue in green. You can see
from this graph that, in physical revenue, the value of nineteen seventy eight is around sixteen billion.
You can see from this graph that, in physical revenue, the value of two thousand is around twenty two
billion, which is higher. You can see from this graph that, in digital revenue, the value of two thousand
and five is around zero, which is the lowest. You can see from this graph that, in digital revenue, the
value of twenty seventeen is around seven billion, which is the highest. In conclusion, this graph is very
informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #252)
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Answer:
The following graph gives information about a food chain. It shows how the process is done. The items
include bees, small fish, bear, and a tree. You can see from this graph that the first step is bees feeding
on flowers of the tree. You can see from this graph that the second step is small fish feeding on bees.
You can see from this graph that the third step is a bear feeding on fish and a fish skeleton remaining.
You can see from this graph that the next step is the dead bear decaying into a skeleton. The final step
is dead bear nourishing the tree. In conclusion, this graph is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #463)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about different species' upper limbs. The items include human
arm, seal limb, bird wing, and bat wing. You can see from this graph that, in human, hand, wrist and
fingers are smaller than those in seal limb. You can see from this graph that, in bird wing, radius and
ulna are thin and short. You can see from this graph that, in bat wing, humerus is thinner than that in
seal limb. You can see from this graph that, in bat wing, there is a wing membrane connecting fingers. In
conclusion, this graph is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #461)
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Answer:
The following graph gives information about how the fruits grapes come to customers. According to the
graph, the first step is purple grapes ripening on the vine, followed by the second step, in which the
grapes are loaded onto a truck and transported. After that, the third step is the grapes conveyed on a
conveyer belt, followed by the fourth step, in which the grapes are stowed into a brown paper box as its
package. The final step is the grapes loaded in a cart, which means the grapes reach customers. In
conclusion, this graph is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #449)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the rain forest distribution in South America. According to
this graph, the largest part of rain forest is in Brazil, Bolivia, Peru, Colombia, Suriname, which is tropical
rain forest, coloured with light green. We can also see a narrow, long stretch of tropical rain forest lying
along the eastern coast of South America, next to Atlantic Ocean. And aother stretch is located along
the northwest coast of South America, next to Pacific Ocean. We see temperate rain forests in Chile, the
southmost area of South America, coloured with dark green. In conclusion, this is an informative map.
(APEUni Website / App DI #448)
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Answer:
The following line chart gives information of median pre-tax income by age and gender in the UK.
According to the graph we can see three lines, in which the blue one is male, the red one both, and the
green one female. We can see male rises from 12 thousand at under 20, reaches the highest point of 30
thousand at 45 to 49, and falls to the lowest point of 18 thousand at 70 to 74. We can also see female
rises from 11 thousand, reaches the highest point of 21 thousand at 30 to 34, and falls to the lowest
point of 15 thousand at and over. Finally both reaches the highest point of 25 thousand at 35 to 39, and
falls to the lowest point of 17 thousand at and over. In conclusion female is the lower than both, with
both lower than male.
(APEUni Website / App DI #432)
Answer:
This line chart gives the information about product life cycle, in which sales vary in different periods of
time. There are four phases in the line chart, which are intro, growth, maturity and decline. In intro, sales
rise from zero, followed by growth, in which sales keep rising. In maturity, sales reach the highest point,
and then in decline, sales begin to drop gradually. In conclusion, this line chart gives very thorough
information about product life cycle.
(APEUni Website / App DI #430)
Answer:
This picture gives a comparison between computer then and now. In the left half, there is a primitive
computer with a black and white screen, a green keyboard, and a black panel, which is very cumbersome
and can only be placed on the ground. In the right half, there is a modern computer with a blue screen, a
black keyboard and a black mouse, which is light-weight and is also called desktop. In conclusion, this
picture about computer then and now is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #428)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about water cycle in nature. It shows how the process is done.
The steps include evaporation, transportation, precipitation and surface run-off. According to this graph,
the first step is evaporation in the sun, with water forming clouds into the sky from the blue sea. The
second step is clouds' transportation into the sky above green and grey mountains, followed by the third
step of precipitation, in which water forms surface run-offs. The final step is surface run-offs going to
the sea. In conclusion, this graph is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #423)
56. Germination
Answer:
This picture gives information about the process of germination. In the first step, a seed is buried in the
soil, before it develops its green embryo in the second step. In the third step, the seed coat begins to
peel off and the black root begins to grow. After that, the light green cotyledon can be seen and the
seed rises from the soil. Finally, the dark green foliage leaves grow. In conclusion, this picture tells how a
seed grows.
(APEUni Website / App DI #421)
57. Penguin
Answer:
The following graph gives information about heights of penguins. According to this graph, emperor is the
tallest, which is about 1.2 meters tall. After that, the second tallest penguin is king, which is about 1
meter. The third tallest penguin is gentoo, then chinstrap and macaroni. The smallest penguin is adelie,
which is less than 0.7 meter tall. In conclusion, this graph compares the heights of several kinds of
penguin.
(APEUni Website / App DI #409)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about journeys made in the UK in 2006 according to their
purpose. The items include walking, education, shopping, personal business, school run, day trip, sport,
entertainment, and commuting. According to this graph, in walking, the value of men and women are
around 4%. You can see from this graph that the highest value of women is in shopping, which is 23%,
and the highest value of men is in commuting and business, which is 23%. In conclusion, men and
women have the lowest value in holiday and day trip, which around 3%.
(APEUni Website / App DI #407)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about adults versus teens, number of texts on a typical day. The
items include None, one to ten, eleven to twenty, twenty-one to fifty and one hundred and one plus. You
can see from this graph that, in None, the value of adults is around 9%. You can see from this graph
that, in None, the value of teens is around 2%, which is lowest. You can see from this graph that, in one
to ten, the value of adults is around 51%, which is the highest. You can see from this graph that, in
eleven to twenty, the value of teens is around 11%, which is the second lowest. In conclusion, this graph
is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #397)
60. Auditorium
Answer:
The following graph gives information about an auditorium. This is a very beautiful picture, and it shows
a number of things. According to this graph, there are seven columns of seats, which are red. Followed
by that, there is a small dais standing in front of the seating area. You can see from this graph that the
indoor lighting is very bright. You can also see from this graph that there is a big and white projection
screen behind the dais. There are six windows in the walls. In conclusion, this graph is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #394)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about commuting time in different regions in Britain, 2014. The
items include London, Yorkshire, South east, North west, and South west. According to this graph, in
London, the value of the commuting time is around 107 minutes, which is the highest value. You can see
from this graph that the second highest value of the commuting time is in East of England, which is 71.
The lowest value of commuting time is in South west, which is around 56. In conclusion, London has the
highest value of commuting time.
(APEUni Website / App DI #350)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about age group in China. The items include male, female, age
group, and the population. According to this graph, in male, the population of age from 20 to 24 is
around 52 million, and that of age from 0 to 4 is lower, which is around 45 million. You can see from
this graph that the highest population of age from 80 to 84 is in female, which is around 10 million. You
can also see from this graph that the lowest population of age from 90 to 94 is in male, which is around
0.5 million. In conclusion, this graph is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #338)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about how a tomato seed can become a tomato plant. It shows
how the process is done. The steps include tomato seed, a young plant, a mature plant, a flower, and a
fruit. According to this graph, the first step is tomato seed, which is in a tomato fruit cut in half.
According to this graph, the second step is to become a young tomato plant, which is green. You can
see from this graph that the third step a mature tomato plant with green leaves rooted in brown soil,
followed by a flower as the fourth step. The final step is a red fruit that comes out of the flower, and the
cycle will start over. In conclusion, this graph is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #337)
Answer:
This picture gives information about correct and incorrect posture; It is a very interesting picture,
because it shows a number of things; (According to the picture, at the top area, I can see there is a
clock and a bookshelf, also I can see the window and the sky is dark blue.) According to the picture, at
the left area, there is a man sitting on the chair, he sits very straight and his eyes are looking at the
computer screen, and his hands placed naturally on the keyboard; According to the picture, at the right
area, the man is sitting on the chair and his back is hunched [hʌntʃt]弯腰驼背bend over; (and his hands
placed too close to the table) In conclusion, this picture is very informative (because it gives information
about correct and incorrect posture; )
(APEUni Website / App DI #315)
Answer:
The following line chart gives information about palm oil production of Indonesia and Malaysia.
According to the line chart, we can see the red line of Indonesia rises from the lowest point, about 5
million tones in 1997/1998, to the highest point, about 18 million tons in 2007/2008. We can also see
the blue line of Malaysia rises from the lowest point, about 8.5 million tons in 1997/1998, to the highest
point, about 16 million tons in 2007/2008. And Malaysia is always higher than Indonesia until
2005/2006. After that, Indonesia is higher than Malaysia. In conclusion, this chart is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #308)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the graduation laboratory. Data of different areas are
displayed on the map. At the central area, there are storage and toilets. At the left area, there are animal
sciences. According to this graph, the largest area is plant sciences. In comparison, the smallest area is
office. In conclusion, there are computer station and meeting room shown on the map.
(APEUni Website / App DI #301)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the annual income of bachelor degrees holders in different
fields. The items include business, education, language and literature. According to this graph, in
business, the value of annual income in 1980 is around 91000. And in education, the value of annual
income in 1980 is around 78000, which is lower. You can see from this graph that the highest value of
annual income is business in 2000, which is around 1050000. You can also see from this graph that the
lowest value of annual income is language and literature in 1980, which is around 64000. In conclusion,
in 2000, the business has the highest annual income.
(APEUni Website / App DI #297)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the monthly temperature and precipitation. The data on
precipitation and temperature are displayed. According to this graph, the highest value is the
temperature of 70 degree, which is in July. On the contrary, the lowest value is the temperature of 20
degree, which is in January. You can see from this graph that the largest proportion is precipitation of 5
inch, which is in June You can also see from this graph that the smallest proportion is precipitation of 1
inch, which is in February. In conclusion, June has the highest number of precipitation.
(APEUni Website / App DI #286)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the annual change in forest area by region. Data of different
areas are displayed on the map. The items include net gain, states, and net loss, According to this
graph, the largest areas of forest gain in the 1990-2000 year are in Asia. In comparison, the smallest
areas of the net gain in 1990-2000 are in Africa. You can see from this graph that the largest areas of
net loss in 1990-2000 are in Africa. In conclusion, the area of the net gain in Asia is much larger than
that of the net loss.
(APEUni Website / App DI #284)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about teaching as a career. The items include final year student
who wants to be a teacher, graduate students working in teaching, employed in the teaching field.
According to this graph, the value of final year students who want to be a teacher is around 1%. And the
value of graduate students working in teaching is around7%, which is higher. You can see from this
graph that the highest value is in employed in the teaching field, which is around 95%. You can also see
from this graph that the lowest value is in final year students who want to be a teacher, which is
around1%. In conclusion, employed in the teaching field has the highest teaching as a career.
(APEUni Website / App DI #209)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about world population development from 1750 to 2050 in
developing and industrialized countries. Form the graph we can see that the population in developing
countries has remained stable in 1 billion from 1750 to 1900, after that it witnessed a dramatic increase
to 10 billion until 2050. . However, for industrialized countries, it remained at a relatively low level
throughout the years, which is around 1 billion. In conclusion, while developing countries have undergone
a sharp population increase, the population in industrialized countries has seen little change.
(APEUni Website / App DI #79)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the relationship between arousal level and performance
quality. The blue line represents the difficult tasks, and the red line represents the easy tasks. It is clear
that when the arousal level and performance quality start at a low level, boredom or apathy. Then
difficult tasks reach the highest point called the optimal level earlier than easy tasks. After that the two
lines drop to the lowest point called high anxiety. In conclusion, this graph is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #110)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the Australian population density. Data of different areas
are displayed on the map, based on statistical local area boundaries, with one dot equal to one thousand
people. According to this graph, the most densely populated cities are Sydney, Canberra and Melbourne
which are located in southeast coast, followed by eastern Australia's Brisbane, southern Australia's
Adelaide, Hobart, western Australia's Perth, northern Australia's Darwin. In comparison, the most sparsely
populated areas are the vast outback in the middle of the continent. In conclusion, the most highly
populated areas are in the southeast coast.
(APEUni Website / App DI #33)
Answer:
The line chart shows the projected population in Australia in millions. .According to the chart, the series
A has increased dramatically from 20 in 2001 to 65 in 2101. Following that, series B has increased
moderately from 20 to 45, from 2001 to 2101. However, series C has increased slowly from 20 to 35
over the same period. In conclusion, the projected population in Australia is expected to increase in the
coming years.
(APEUni Website / App DI #533)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the process flow chart. It shows how the process is done.
The steps include initial stage, presentation, and signing of the contract. According to this graph, the
first step is the initial stage. Followed by that, the second step questions and presentation. You can see
from this graph that the third step is the signing of the contract . You can also see from this graph that
the next step is construction. Followed by that, the next step is handling over after completion. Followed
by that, the next step defects liability period. The final step is customer satisfaction. In conclusion, this
graph is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #497)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the revenue of the quarter. The items include growth,
revenue, and the year. According to this graph, the highest value of the revenue is around 60000, which
is in 2014. On the contrary, the lowest value of the revenue is around 30000, which is in 2011. You can
see from this graph that the largest value in growth is around 30, which is in 2012. You can also see
from this graph that the smallest value in growth is around 0, which is in 2013. In conclusion, this graph
is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #488)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the average household energy consumption. The items
include other appliances, water heating, cooking and so on. According to this graph, the proportion of
other appliances is around 24%, and that of water heating is lower, which is around 23%. You can see
from this graph that the highest proportion is other appliances, which is around 24%. You can also see
from this graph that the lowest proportion is cooking and stand by, which is around 5%. In conclusion,
other appliances have the highest proportion of average household energy consumption.
(APEUni Website / App DI #481)
78. EU Population
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the populations of countries of the European Union in 1998
and 2007 by percentage. The items include populations of countries in 1998 and 2007. The data of all
other countries, Germany, Spain and so on. According to this graph, the highest value of 1998 is 29.4%,
which is all other countries. On the contrary, the lowest value of 1998 is 8.3%, which is Spain. You can
see from this graph that the largest proportion is all other countries, which is grey. You can also see
from this graph that the smallest proportion in Spain, which is yellow. In conclusion, all other countries
are the most popular choice in both years.
(APEUni Website / App DI #472)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the apartment plan. Data of different areas are displayed on
the map. According to this graph, the house is 6.2 meters long and 3.8 meters wide. According to this
graph, the bathroom is 2 meters long and 1.4 meters wide. You can see from this graph that the kitchen
design is without doors. In conclusion, this graph is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #540)
Answer:
This picture shows the pyramid of food. At the bottom of the pyramid, we can see water, which is the
most essential to human bodies. Above water, on the second layer of the pyramid, we can see fruits,
bread, and cereals. Above the fruits, bread, and cereals., there is a milk, cheese and meat level. Above
the milk products and meat, we can see junk food, which at the top of the pyramid. In conclusion, this
graph is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #538)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the number of times people clean teeth. The items include
once, three times, and more than three times. According to this graph, in three times, the number of
times people clean teeth is around 33. and that of once is lower, which is around 12. You can see from
this graph that the highest number of times people clean teeth is in twice, which is around 53. You can
also see from this graph that the lowest number of times people clean teeth is in more than three times,
which is around 8. In conclusion, this graph is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #445)
Answer:
This line graph provides information about a net generation from coal and share of total generation from
coal from 1960 to 2010. Net generation from coal is represented in a black line and measured in billion
milliwatt hour. The initial number is about 0.5 MWh in 1960 and it keeps increasing to a maximum of
about 2 MWh in 2010. it fluctuates a bit at the end. The share of total generation is represented in a
blue line and measured in percentage. It starts at about 55% in 1960 and fluctuates until the end of
about 48% in 2010. in conclusion, this graph shows very important information.
(APEUni Website / App DI #429)
Answer:
This line graph contains the information about songs purchased on iTunes, depending on week number
from week 0 to week 150, measured in million songs. The song purchased in week 0 is 1 million and at
first, the increase is gradual, and the number of songs achieves about 100 million in week 60. After that,
the increase becomes much more rapid and the number quickly doubles and reaches 200 in week 80.
Over the last 30 weeks from week 120 to week 150, the number of songs rapidly increases from 500
million to 1000 million. In conclusion, this graph gives very thorough information about iTunes purchased
songs.
(APEUni Website / App DI #427)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about cell phone use in Anytown. The items include men, women,
and the year. The horizontal axis is the year, ranging from 1996 to 2002. According to this graph, in
1996, the value of both sexes is around 3000, and that of men is lower, which is around 1500. According
to this graph, the highest value of both sexes is around 3500, which is in 2002. According to this graph,
the lowest value of women is around 1500, which is in 2000. In conclusion, this graph is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #416)
Answer:
This line graph contains information about overseas visitors to three different areas including the coast,
the mountains, and the lakes, in a European country between 1987 and 2007, measured in thousands of
people. The coast, which is represented in blue, starts at 40 thousand people in 1987 and concludes at a
maximum of about 70 thousand people in 2007. The minimum occurs in 1992 at about 35 thousand
people. The lakes are represented in green and it starts at 10 thousand people in 1987, after which it
increases very rapidly to a maximum of 75 thousand people in 2002. It concludes at 50 thousand people
in 2007. In conclusion, this graph shows significant information.
(APEUni Website / App DI #415)
Answer:
The pyramid shows Maslow’s pyramid with different levels of needs. Form the top to the bottom; we can
see there are 5 kinds of needs, which are self-actualization, esteem needs, belongingness and love
needs, safety needs, and physiological needs. Specifically, safety needs include security and safety and
belongingness and love needs include intimate relationships and friends. Apart from that, we can also
see from the right-hand side that the needs can be divided into three categories, self-fulfillment needs,
psychological needs, and basic needs. In conclusion, Maslow’s needs demonstrate that the people’s
needs are gradually growing from lower level to higher level.
(APEUni Website / App DI #410)
Answer:
The picture describes the wind machine. As can be seen from the graph, the wind machine is rotating
counter-clockwise and the rotation used the power of wind blades. We can also see that the advantage
of this wind machine is its no pollution and the disadvantaged part is its dependence on wind power. In
conclusion, the picture shows a vivid description of the wind machine.
(APEUni Website / App DI #406)
Answer:
The graph gives information about the diameter from the earth for different planets. As we can see the
largest is taken up by Jupiter, which is 150000 km away. After that Saturn has occupied the second
largest, this is 120000 km away. Following that, Neptune and Uranus have a similar diameter, which is
50000 km away. However, Pluto has the smallest which is only 1 km. In conclusion, different planets have
different diameters from the earth.
(APEUni Website / App DI #405)
89. Female&Male
Answer:
The following graph gives information about 100% health. It shows how the process is done. The steps
include food&nutrition, fitness&exercise, relaxation&stress management. According to this graph, the
first step is through food&nutrion to achieve health and wellbeing. According to this graph, the second
step is through fitness&exerciese to make a positive change. The final step is through relaxation&stress
management to achieve motivation. In conclusion, the process will repeat.
(APEUni Website / App DI #390)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about fungus gnat lifecycle is about 28 days. It shows how the
process is done. The steps include eggs, larva, pupa, and adult. According to this graph, the first step is
eggs. According to this graph, the second step is from eggs to larva in 4-6 days. You can see from this
graph that the third step is from larva to pupa in 12 - 14 days. You can also see from this graph that the
next step is from pupa to adult in 3 - 6 days. The final step is from adult to eggs in 7-10 days. In
conclusion, the process will repeat.
(APEUni Website / App DI #389)
92. Temperature&CO2
Answer:
The graph shows the temperature and CO2 for the last 400000 years. As we can see from the graph,
for temperature, the highest one can be found in 5 in every 100 thousand years. Moreover, the lowest
one can be found in minus 15 in the same interval. In addition, for the carbon dioxide level, it is range
from 200 to 300. Most important, the highest CO2 level can be found at present, which is nearly 400. In
conclusion, the CO2 level and temperature follow a similar pattern.
(APEUni Website / App DI #388)
Answer:
The graph shows the major transportation modes in the past from 1500 to 2000. As we can see from
the graph, from 1500 to 1850, the transportation relies on horses carriage and bicycle, etc with the
average speed is 15mph. After 1850, people traveled by locomotive in average speed at 75mph, followed
by automobile become the major transportation in modern society. In conclusion, 500 years time
experience the changes in major transportation modes.
(APEUni Website / App DI #387)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the length of fish. The items include 1 year, 3 years, 8 years
and more than 15 years. According to this graph, in 1 year, the length of fish is around 16cm. and that of
3 years is longer, which is around 20cm. You can see from this graph that the highest length of fish is in
more than 15 years, which is around 50cm You can also see from this graph that the second biggest
length of fish is in 8 years, around 30cm. In conclusion, this graph is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #371)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the library plan. Data of different areas are displayed on the
map. According to this graph, the elevator is located near the men's toilet. According to this graph, the
largest areas of the library are room 4 and room 3. You can see from this graph that the functions of
the rooms are different. In conclusion, this graph is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #391)
Answer:
This line graph is about radio and television audiences in the UK from October to December in 1992,
depending on the time of the day or night, measured in percentage of UK population over four years old.
0% of the UK population watch TV at 6:00 am in the morning but there are 8% of people listening to the
radio at this time of the day. The peak time of watching television is at 8:00 pm in the evening when
about 50% of UK population watch TV, while the peak time of listening to radio occurs at 8:00 am in the
morning when about 30% of UK population listen to the radio. In conclusion, this graph contains much
logical information.
(APEUni Website / App DI #431)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about reasons for no longer attending school. The items include
male and female. The data of the completed study, obtained employment, illness and so on are
displayed. According to this graph, for the female, the highest value is the completed study, which is
65%. On the contrary, the lowest value is illness, which is 5%. For the male, you can see from this graph
that the largest proportion is 60%. You can also see from this graph that the smallest proportion is 3%.
In conclusion, the completed study is the most popular reasons for both male and female.
(APEUni Website / App DI #352)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about London's Fleet Street Then and Today. This is a very
beautiful picture, and it shows a number of things. According to this graph, in the central area, there is a
carriage; the colour of it is black. You can see from this graph that, in the right area, there is a bus; the
colour of it is red. You can see from this graph that, in the background, there is a temple, the colour of
it is white. The weather is sunny. The sky is blue and clear. In conclusion, this picture is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #346)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about economic inactivity through the generation. The items
include birth cohorts, average work expectancy at age 15 years, and average inactivity. According to this
graph, in average work expectancy at age 15 years, the value of the 1901 Federation is around 44.2. And
in average work expectancy at age 15 years, the value of 1925-1946 war is around 42.6, which is lower.
You can see from this graph that the highest value is in average life expectancy, which is around 70.6.
You can also see from this graph that the lowest value is on average inactivity, which is around 9.4. In
conclusion, 2004-2025 Gen Z has the highest average life expectancy.
(APEUni Website / App DI #343)
Answer:
The picture shows us out of sight, out of mind. According to the picture, we can see the continent-sized
cortex of plastic waste is blighting the Pacific. Specifically. There are two rubbish soups, the eastern
garbage patch which is next to Japan and the western garbage patch which is next to the Hawaii, The
north pacific gyre currents are running differently in two different patches. Apart from that, the
translucent soup of degrading plastic waste is as deep as 10 meters and the north pacific gyre currents
keep soup in constant movement. We can also see the section of garbage patch is in color red. In
conclusion, the picture indicates that we need to take environmental problems seriously.
(APEUni Website / App DI #342)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about Australian Population Density. Data of different areas are
displayed on the map. According to this graph, Melbourne and Sydney are the most populated city in
Australia. In comparison, the smallest population is in the middle of Australia. You can see from this
graph that Queensland will become the third largest populated city in Australia. In conclusion, this graph
is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #336)
Answer:
The following graph gives information of the iron age hut. According to this graph, this is a cross
section of an ancient hut, which is triangular in shape. In the middle of the graph, you can see a pillar
supporting the sloping rafters. And the roofs are covered by reed thatch. In the hut, you can see ashes
and seats below the ground level. On the ground level, you can see the turf wall. In conclusion, this graph
is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #334)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the proportion of the Eatwell plate. The items include fruit
and vegetables, bread&rice, food&drinks and so on. According to this graph, the proportion of fruit and
vegetables is around 35%, and that of milk and dairy food is lower, which is around 18%. You can see
from this graph that the highest proportion is fruit and vegetables, which is around 35%. You can also
see from this graph that the lowest proportion is food and drinks high in fat/sugar, which is around 8%.
In conclusion, fruit and vegetables have the highest proportion of the Eatwell plate.
(APEUni Website / App DI #331)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about how to download music from Tesco Extra. It shows how the
process is done. The steps include search, purchase, download and play. According to this graph, the
first step is to search for the music you like online. According to this graph, the second step is to
purchase it through the website. You can see from this graph that the third step is to download the
music on digital devices, such as laptops and phones. The final step is to enjoy the songs after finishing
all these steps In conclusion, the process will repeat.
(APEUni Website / App DI #324)
105. Temperature&Precipitation
Answer:
This graph presents the relationship between temperature and precipitation throughout the year from
January to December. The temperature is represented in an orange line and measured in degree Celsius.
It starts at about 26oC in January and gradually increases. A maximum is reached in October at about
0.oC. It concludes at about 4 oC in December. The precipitation is represented in blue bars and
measured in mm. The maximum occurs in May at 110mm, and the minimum occurs in February at about
70mm. In conclusion, this graph gives very detailed information.
(APEUni Website / App DI #322)
106. Population&Consumption
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the population and consumption level worldwide. You can
see from this graph that the value of middle income in 2004 is 2.3 thousand million, including Russia and
Mexico. You can see from this graph that the value of high income in 1960 is 0.7 thousand million,
including the United States and Japan, which is the lowest. You can see from this graph that the value of
low income in 2004 is 3 thousand million, including India, which is the highest. You can see from this
graph that China and Indonesia joined the middle income world in 1990s. In conclusion, this graph is very
informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #321)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about poverty rates by age and by gender in 2012, measured in
percentage. In the age group of 65 and older, the poverty rate of the female is 11% while that of the
male is 6.6%. In the age group of 18 to 64, the poverty rate of the female is 15.4% and that of the male
is 11.9%. In the age group under 18, the poverty rate is much higher than other groups, with female
22.3% and male 21.3%. This graph is sourced from the US Census Bureau, current population Survey,
2013 Annual Social and Economic Supplement. In conclusion, this graph gives very thorough information.
(APEUni Website / App DI #195)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the ratio between pupil and teacher in primary schools in
January of 1997, measured in percentage. It can be seen that only 2% of the schools have a ratio of less
than 16, and only 1% have a ratio of 16. Then the percentage gradually increases as the pupil-teacher
ratio increases. A maximum occurs when the pupil-teacher ratio is 24. 14% of the schools have this
ratio. After that, as the ratio increases, the percentage decreases and concludes at about 6% when the
ratio is over 27. In conclusion, this graph shows very impressive information.
(APEUni Website / App DI #174)
Answer:
The picture gives information about different arm bones. As we can see from the picture, the human has
the largest upper arm bone. Following that, birds and bats have the longest lower arm bone and they are
almost the similar length. .After that the bats have the longest metacarpals, however, the seal limb has
the longest fingers. In conclusion, different body structure has different kinds of bones.
(APEUni Website / App DI #348)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the world’s water distribution. It can be seen that 97.5% of
the world’s water is salt water and only 2.5% is freshwater. In the freshwater sector, glaciers and
permanent snow occupy the largest proportion at 68.7%, followed by which groundwater occupies
30.06% of the fresh water. Ground ice and permafrost takes 0.86% of fresh water and other resources
take 1.22% of fresh water. In the other sector, lakes occupy the majority of the proportion at 0.26%. In
conclusion, this image gives very thorough information about the world’s water distribution.
(APEUni Website / App DI #23)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the average number of annual hospital visits per capita
among Glasgow residents. The horizontal axis is years, ranging from1960 to 2010. According to this
graph, in the year of 1960, the value is around 2.5. And according to this graph, in the year of 1970, the
value is around 2. The highest value is around 3, which is in 2010. On the contrary, the lowest value is
around 2, which is in 1970. In conclusion, if this trend continues, the average number of annual hospital
visits will keep increasing in the future.
(APEUni Website / App DI #22)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about consumer confidence. The horizontal axis is years, ranging
from 1990 to 2008. According to this graph, in 1990, the value is around 85, and that of 1996 is lower,
which is around 70. According to this graph, the highest value is around 105, which is in 2002.
According to this graph, the lowest value is around 65, which is in 2008. In conclusion, this graph is very
informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #299)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the double population. The horizontal axis is years, ranging
from 1700 to 2000. According to this graph, in 1715, the years to double is around 544, and that of 1804
is lower, which is around 304. According to this graph, the highest value of years to double is around
544, which is in 1700. According to this graph, the lowest value of years to double is around 47, which is
in 1999. In conclusion, this graph is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #283)
Answer:
This graph reveals the information about sunrise and sunset times over the year, recording the first days
and the fifteenth days of the months from January to December. It is clear that the sunrise time
represented in blue is early in January and December, and gradually becomes the latest in June. In
contrast, the sunset time represented in pink is the latest in January and December, while it is the
earliest in June. It can be observed that the times of the sunrise and sunset are exactly the opposite, and
the shapes of the trends of both sunrise and sunset times show an “S” shape. In conclusion, this graph
gives very interesting information about sunrise and sunset times.
(APEUni Website / App DI #276)
Answer:
The following line charts give information about world income distribution over the population. According
to the upper line chart, in nineteen seventy the world population is three point seven billions, and those
spending less than one dollar per day accounts for thirty-eight percent, one point four billions. We see
in nineteen ninety the world population is five point three billions, and the poor to the left of the poverty
line accounts for twenty-six percent, one point four billions. In conclusion, the poor decrease from
nineteen seventy to nineteen ninety.
(APEUni Website / App DI #274)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the proportion of pet expenditure in the US. The items
include vet care and wellbeing, food and litter, pet purchase and so on. According to this graph, the
proportion of vet care and wellbeing is around 47%, and that of food and litter is lower, which is around
41%. You can see from this graph that the highest proportion is vet care and wellbeing, which is around
47%. You can also see from this graph that the lowest proportion is the pet purchase, which is around
2%. In conclusion, vet care and wellbeing have the highest proportion of pet expenditure in the US.
(APEUni Website / App DI #403)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about ancient Egypt trading. It shows how the process is done.
The steps include import goods and export goods. According to this graph, the first step is to import
cedar oil and timber from Lebanon. According to this graph, the second step is to import copper,
precious stones and gold from Nubia. You can see from this graph that the third step is to import slaves
and animals from Africa. You can also see from this graph that the next step is to import horses, fruit,
and honey from other countries. The final step is to exports linen, tools, bread and weapons to other
countries. In conclusion, this graph is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #268)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the Begining of the flow chart for the quiz. It shows how the
process is done. The steps include clicking to start the quiz, clicking to go to the next question and click
true. According to this graph, the first step is to click to start the quiz. Followed by that, the second step
is to go to question 1. You can see from this graph that the third step is to click false or true. You can
also see from this graph that the next step is to click to the next question. The final step is to go to
question 2. In conclusion, this graph is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #256)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about radar detection. It shows how the process is done. The
steps include snow, ice sheet, and ice melting. According to this graph, the first step is the snow
formation. According to this graph, the second step is that the ice sheet becomes melting. You can see
from this graph that the third step is the grounding line. You can also see from this graph that the next
step is the ice shelf melts from the bottom up. The final step is to measure water depth and to predict
future sea level rise. In conclusion, this graph is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #253)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about power transmission. It shows how the process is done. The
steps include coal, power station, transformer, substation. According to this graph, the first step is
mining. According to this graph, the second step is to send to the power station. You can see from this
graph that the third step is to use national transmission lines. You can also see from this graph that the
next step is to send to the substation. The final step is to send to houses, shops, and other buildings. In
conclusion, this graph is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #249)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the arctic food chain. It shows how the process is done.
The steps include algae, diatoms, and copepods and so on. According to this graph, the first step is that
diatoms eat algae. According to this graph, the second step is that copepods eat diatoms. You can see
from this graph that the third step is that arctic cod eat copepods. You can also see from this graph
that the next step is that ringed seals eat arctic cods. According to this graph, the next step is that
polar bears eat ringed seals. The final step is that algae absorb excrement. In conclusion, the process
will repeat.
(APEUni Website / App DI #236)
Answer:
This graph shows the government expenditure in different sectors of education. It is shown on the graph
that $11 billion are invested in education in total. At the top of the pyramid, we can see higher education
in which $1.8 billion are invested, followed by which vocational educational training and schools get $2
billion and $3-4 billion respectively. At the bottom of the pyramid, we can see the early childhood in
which $0.8-1.4 billion are invested. It can be seen that schools get the highest investment while early
childhood gets the least. In conclusion, this graph gives very interesting information.
(APEUni Website / App DI #235)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about food price vs oil price. The items include oil price, food
price index, and years. The horizontal axis is years, ranging from 2000 to 2009. According to this graph,
in 2000, the value of the oil price is around 40, and that of the food price index is lower, which is around
20. According to this graph, the highest value of oil price is around 140, which is in 2008. According to
this graph, the lowest value of the food price index is around 20, which is in 2001. In conclusion, this
graph is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #234)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about pencil length. The items include New Jersey, Chicago, and
Michigan. According to this graph, in Chicago, the length of the pencil is around 46.750. And that of
New Jersey is higher, which is around 50.680. You can see from this graph that the highest length of
the pencil is in New Jersey, which is 50.680. You can also see from this graph that the lowest length of
the pencil is Virginia, which is around 18.950. In conclusion, New Jersey has the highest length of the
pencil.
(APEUni Website / App DI #233)
125. S&P
Answer:
The following graph gives information about S&P/ASX 200, a sharemarket index. You can see from this
graph that the value of ten is around zero, the lowest. You can see from this graph that the value of
eleven is around three thousand four hundred ninety, which is higher. You can see from this graph that
the value of eleven thirty is around three thousand five hundred, which is the highest. You can see from
this graph that the value of twelve fifteen is around three thousand four hundred ninety-two, which is the
third peak. In conclusion, this graph is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #230)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the proportion of deforestation reasons. The items include
cattle ranching, small-scale agriculture, other and so on. According to this graph, the proportion of
cattle ranching is around 65%, and that of small-scale agriculture is lower, which is around 20%. You
can see from this graph that the highest proportion is cattle ranching, which is around 65%. You can
also see from this graph that the lowest proportion is the other, which is around 1%. In conclusion, cattle
ranching has the highest proportion of deforestation reasons.
(APEUni Website / App DI #226)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about Switzerland Language. Data of different areas are displayed
on the map. The items include German, Italian, French, Romansch. According to this graph, the largest
areas of language is German, which is in the center of Switzerland. In comparison, the smallest areas of
language are Romansch, which in the east of Switzerland. In conclusion, using German is much larger
than that of using Romansch.
(APEUni Website / App DI #225)
Answer:
The graph gives information about how to use a plastic bottle as a bird feeder. According to the picture,
it is clear that on the first stage, there is a water bottle with two pencils in it, which is brown and blue,
respectively, and the bottle is full of food. After that, on the second stage, the two pencils are replaced
with two spoons, which are made of wood. In conclusion, the little bird standing on the spoon can get
food from the bottle, and we can see the caps of two bottles have different colors, namely blue and
white.
(APEUni Website / App DI #224)
Answer:
The graph shows different eclipse. When we look at the left-hand side of the picture, we can see the
sun. In the middle of the picture, we can see the moon, which is on the moon’s orbit. On the right of the
picture, there is the Earth, which orbits around the sun. As we can see in the graph when the sun, moon,
and Earth parallel each other. we can see the shade of moon called penumbra creating the partial
eclipse. we also can see the middle of a shade called umbra, which means that there is a total eclipse. In
conclusion, this graph shows the formation of different eclipses.
(APEUni Website / App DI #223)
Answer:
The graph shows a different part of the tree. When we look at the top of the picture, we can see the
crown of the tree, which includes leaves on top, a twig in the middle, and branches at the bottom in the
crown. Followed by the crown we can see a trunk, which connects the roots in the soil. Finally, the crown
of the tree shares a similar size with roots so that they provide a lot of information to scientists. In
conclusion, this picture demonstrates the structure of trees.
(APEUni Website / App DI #222)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the evidence of tree growth rings. This is a very beautiful
picture, and it shows a number of things. According to this graph, in the central area, there is a tree
ring; the colour of it is brown. You can see from this graph that, in the right area, there is a saw; the
colour of it is black. You can see from this graph that, in the background, there are grasses, the colour
of those is green. The weather is sunny. The sky is blue and clear. In conclusion, this picture is very
informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #219)
Answer:
This picture shows the pyramid of food required by human bodies. At the bottom of the pyramid, we can
see water, which is the most essential to human bodies. Above water, on the second layer of the
pyramid, we can see whole grain foods such as rice, cakes, and biscuits. Above the whole grain foods
level, there is a fruits and vegetable level . We can see grapes, oranges, and apples in the fruit section,
and broccoli, potatoes, and carrots in the vegetable section. Above the fruits and vegetables, we can see
milk products and fish, poultry and eggs. At the top of the pyramid, there is a sugar and salt level. In
conclusion, all the levels in the pyramid are important for human bodies.
(APEUni Website / App DI #215)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about unemployment rates by age and qualification. The items
include age, year, and percentage. The horizontal axis is years, ranging from 1992 to 2010. According to
this graph, in 1992, the value of age from 16 to 17 is around 30, and that of age from 18-20 is lower,
which is around 20. According to this graph, the highest value of age from 16 to 17 is around 50, which
is in 2010. According to this graph, the lowest value of age from 18 to 20 is around 15, which is in 2004.
In conclusion, this graph is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #208)
134. Happiness
Answer:
The following graph gives information about what determines happiness. The items include the genetic
set point, intentional activities, and life circumstances. According to this graph, the proportion of genetic
set point is around 50%, and that of intentional activities is lower, which is around 40%. You can see
from this graph that the highest proportion is the genetic set point, which is around 50%. You can also
see from this graph that the lowest proportion is life circumstances, which is around 10%. In conclusion,
this graph is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #203)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about water wheels with different rotational directions. On the left,
we can see a water wheel, which is rotating anticlockwise. On the right, we can see another water wheel,
which is rotating clockwise. According to this graph, the water wheels are both overshot ones, with a
flume overhead, through which water flows down on the wheels. And we can see tail races lying below
the water wheels, in which water falling down from the wheels flow away. In conclusion, the graph is
informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #199)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about internet population. The items include Germany, UK and
France. You can see from this graph that the value of US is around 160 millions. You can see from this
graph that the value of Japan is around 60 millions, which is lower. You can see from this graph that the
value of China is around 180 millions, which is the highest. You can see from this graph that the value of
Netherlands is around 10 millions, which is the lowest. In conclusion, this graph is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #181)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the age distribution in the UK from 1911 to 2011. When we
look at the age of 65 and over, the percentage has increased from 5% in 1911 to 15% in 2011. In
contrast, the age below 14 has decreased from 30% to 20% over the same period. At the same time,
people age between 15-64 has remained stable at around 70% throughout the years. In conclusion, it
can be expected that the UK is undergoing an aging population from 1911 to 2011.
(APEUni Website / App DI #180)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the US fruit and vegetable consumption trends from 1970 to
2010 in pounds per person per year. For vegetable consumption, it has remained stable at 330 from
1970 to 1980, after that it climbed drastically to 425 in 2000, which is the highest, before dropping down
to 400 in 2010. When we look at the fruit consumption, it increased gradually from 230 in 1970 to 280
in 2000, which is the highest, and then it also declined to 250 until the end of the period. In conclusion,
vegetable consumption is much larger than fruit consumption throughout the period.
(APEUni Website / App DI #177)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about how solar yard lights work. It shows how the process is
done. The steps include the glass cover, the solar cells, and the battery. According to this graph, the
first step is the glass cover. According to this graph, the second step is solar cells. You can see from
this graph that the third step is photoresistor. You can also see from this graph that the next step is the
battery. According to this graph, the next step is the controller board. According to this graph, the next
step is LED. The final step is the lamp cover. In conclusion, this graph is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #173)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about annual per capita meat consumption from 1961 to 2009,
measured in kilograms, in different countries including USA, China, and Liberia. USA, which is shown in
blue, starts at 90 kg in 1961 and concludes at 120kg in 2009. China, which is shown in red, starts at 5kg
in 1961 and then increases rapidly and concludes at a maximum of 60kg in 2009. However, for Liberia,
India, and Ethiopia which are shown in green, orange and grey, the meat consumption remains relatively
stable throughout the years. In conclusion, this graph gives impressive information about meat
consumption.
(APEUni Website / App DI #168)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about baby sleep hours. The items include age, nighttime sleep,
daytime sleep, and total sleep. You can see from this graph that, in one month, the value of daytime
sleep is around seven hours with three naps. You can see from this graph that, in six months, the value
of nighttime sleep is around ten hours, which is higher. You can see from this graph that, in one month,
the value of total sleep is around fifteen point five hours,which is the highest. You can also see from
this graph that, in eighteen months, the value of daytime sleep is around one point two five hours with
one nap, which is the lowest. In conclusion, this graph is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #166)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the percentage of students proficient in a foreign language
in different countries, including China, India, and Russia, categorized by males and females. India has the
highest percentage of both male and female students proficient in a foreign language, at 56% and 69%
respectively. In contrast, China has the lowest percentage of both female and male students proficient in
a foreign language, at 33% and 15% respectively. In Thailand, the percentages of male and female
students proficient in a foreign language are 30% and 27% respectively. In conclusion, this graph
provides interesting information.
(APEUni Website / App DI #164)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about how houseflies work, that is, the life cycle of a fly. It starts
with eggs which are laid by an adult fly, and then the eggs become 1st larva stage. In this stage, the
larva is relatively small. Then the cycle goes to the 2nd larval stage where the larva grows larger but the
color remains relatively constant. When it comes to the 3rd larva stage, the larva becomes much larger
and the color starts to become darker. After that, the cycle reaches the pupa stage where the larva is
covered with dark skin. The pupa becomes an adult fly eventually which can lay eggs again and let the
process continues. In conclusion, this image gives a vivid illustration of the life cycle of a fly.
Answer:
The following graph gives information about Joe’s fruit stand sales of different types of fruits measured
in average sales per day, and the percentage is also shown on the graph. It is clear from the graph that
oranges represented in orange have the highest sales at 37.8% and about 550 sales per day. Followed
by oranges, bananas in yellow and grapes in purple occupy 19.3% and 25.9% of the sales respectively.
Limes represented in green has an average sales of 140 sales per day and apple represented in red
occupies the least proportion of the sales at 7.5%. In conclusion, this graph illustrates very important
information.
(APEUni Website / App DI #132)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the information about temperature measured in degree
Celsius throughout the week, from Sunday to Saturday. It is represented in the yellow line. It starts at
25oC on Sunday and increases to a maximum throughout the week of 28oC on Monday, followed by a
decrease to 26oC on Tuesday. The temperature keeps decreasing to 22oC on Wednesday and reaches
a minimum of 19oC on Thursday. The temperature starts to increase again to 23oC on Friday and
concludes at 27oC on Saturday. In conclusion, these line graphs give very detailed information about the
Answer:
The following graph gives information about income distribution in 1970. The items include china, usa,
and the number of people. The horizontal axis is incomes, ranging from 100 to 100000. According to this
graph, in China, the largest number of people is in 1000, and that of the USA is lower, which is around 0.
According to this graph, the highest number of people in China, which is in 1000. According to this
graph, the highest number of people in the USA, which is in 10000. In conclusion, this graph is very
informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #121)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the taxi service workflow. There are two ways that
customers can make a booking. The first way is to make a booking by phone so that an operator can
make the booking directly. The other way is to make an online booking. The booking will be received by
the workstation desktop. The bookings from both pathways will be sent to taxi service server so that taxi
drivers will be sent out for the bookings. The types of taxi include cars, vans, and trucks. In conclusion,
this flow diagram gives detailed information about the taxi booking.
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the percentage of the population in urban areas in 1950,
2007 and 2030. As we can see the largest proportion goes to North America, which increased from 64%
in 1950 to 79% in 2007 and ends at 87% in 2030. For the second largest amount, it is Latin America
which increased dramatically from 42% to 84% over the same years. However, Africa has taken up the
smallest amount which also climbed up from 15% to 51% impressively. In conclusion, the world’s total
urban population has significantly increased from 29 % in 1950 to 49% in 2007 and is expected to
continue the increase to 60% in 2030.
(APEUni Website / App DI #114)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the total population of Thoralby from 1870 to 2010. The
information is shown in a blue line. It starts at about 275 in 1870, followed by a decrease to a minimum
of about 100 in 1950. During the increase, there are some fluctuations. After 1950, there is a huge
increase to a maximum of 325 in 1970. After that, the population decreases rapidly again to about 150 in
1990. The population remains relatively constant after that and concludes at about 150 in 2010. In
conclusion, this graph gives very detailed information about the population in Thoralby.
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the most used technology. The items include the number of
users. computer, and telephone. According to this graph, on the computer, the number of users is
around 4. and that of TV is higher, which is around 6. You can see from this graph that the highest
number of users is in telephone, which is around 8. You can also see from this graph that the lowest
value of users is Webcam, which is around 1. In conclusion, the telephone has the highest number of
users.
(APEUni Website / App DI #107)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the number of internets users. The items include cities,
numbers. According to this graph, in Greece, the number of internets users is around 7. and that of
Spain is higher, which is around 10. You can see from this graph that the highest number of internets
users is in Sweden, which is around 44. You can also see from this graph that the lowest number of
internet users in Greece, which is around 7. In conclusion, Sweden has the highest number of internet
users.
(APEUni Website / App DI #102)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the population structure of France and India in percentage.
As we can see from the graph, the largest population in France is occupied by age 30-35, which is 4%
in males and 5% in females. In contrast, the smallest amount is taken up by age above 85, which is 0.5%
in males and 2% in females. When we look at India one, age 0-5 has taken up the largest amount, which
is 7% in males and 6.5% in females. On the other hand, age 65-70 has made up the smallest amount,
which is 1% in males and 1.5% in females. In summary, France and India have totally different population
structures but with nearly balanced male and female populations.
(APEUni Website / App DI #101)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the changes in the number of London underground station
passengers in one day from 6:00 to 22:00, in terms of a number of people. We can see from the graph
that at 6:00, there are only 100 passengers and the number increases to a maximum of 400 passengers
at about 8:00. Followed by that there is a decrease and keeps relatively stable at about 300 passengers
from 12:00 to 14:00. Then the number continues to decrease to a minimum of 100 passengers at 16:00,
followed by which the number increases again. It concludes at about 100 passengers at 22:00. In
conclusion, this graph presents very impressive information.
Answer:
The following graph gives information about Dubai Gold Sales. The horizontal axis is the month, ranging
from January to December. According to this graph, in January, the value is around 200, and that of
February is higher, which is around 210. According to this graph, the highest value is around 300, which
is in March. According to this graph, the lowest value is around 100, which is in July and September. In
conclusion, this graph is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #92)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about air temperature. Data of different areas are displayed on the
map. According to this graph, the highest temperature areas are in African and South America. In
comparison, the lowest temperature areas are in the Arctic and the South Pole. You can see from this
graph that the moderate temperature areas are in China and Europe. In conclusion, this graph is very
informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #87)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about fish shoal. This is a very beautiful picture, and it shows a
number of things. According to this graph, In the morning, the number of fish is relatively small but more
predatory. You can see from this graph that, in the evening, the number of fish is relatively large but less
predatory. The sea is blue and clear. In conclusion, this picture is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #214)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the school map. In this map, we can see there are two
hydrant exits. For the one located on the top left corner, students from the photography lab and
micromachining lab and officers, as well as the 1295 room, can follow this route to evacuate. For the
other one, students and faculty staffs from room 1292 research deposition furnaces and room 1286
research photo geography lab, mechanical room, and microelectronics lab can go for this route to the
stairs for an exit, which is located on the bottom left corner. In conclusion, the picture gives us clear
information about the two hydrant exits for evacuation.
(APEUni Website / App DI #192)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about life expectancy at birth by sex. The items include years,
males, and females. The horizontal axis is the year, ranging from 1888 to 2013. According to this graph,
in 1888, the value of males is around 45, and that of the females is higher, which is around 50.
According to this graph, the highest value of males is 75, which is in 2013. According to this graph, the
lowest value of females is around 50, which is in 1888. In conclusion, the female has the highest life
expectancy at birth.
(APEUni Website / App DI #84)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the number of articles published per year by male and
female university professors. The items include years, male, and female. The horizontal axis is the year,
ranging from 2006 to 2012. .According to this graph, in 2006, the number of articles published by the
male is around 3000, and that of the female is lower, which is around1000. According to this graph, the
highest value of male is around 3200, which is in 2009. According to this graph, the lowest value of
female is 1000, which is in 2006. In conclusion, the male has the highest number of articles published by
university professors.
(APEUni Website / App DI #81)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the number of arrests per year for using illegal drugs from
1991 to 2005. It starts at 10 arrests in 1991 and increases to about 23 arrests in 1993, followed by a
much steeper increase to about 60 arrests in 1995 and remains constant until 1997. The number
decreases after that to 40 arrests in 1999 but then increases again to a maximum of 70 arrests in 2000.
The number remains relatively stable in the last three years and concludes at 40 arrests in 2005. In
conclusion, this graph gives an interesting trend.
(APEUni Website / App DI #75)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the rankings of Australia among 194 nations. The items
include the position in the world, literacy, and life expectancy. According to this graph, in GNP, the
ranking of GNP is around 19, and that of Literacy is higher, which is around 1. You can see from this
graph that the highest ranking of Australia is in Literacy, which is 1. You can also see from this graph
that the lowest ranking of Austalia is GNP, which is 19. In conclusion, Literacy has the highest ranking in
Australia.
(APEUni Website / App DI #65)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the proportion of composition of the Sun. The items include
hydrogen, helium and carbon. According to this graph, the proportion of hydrogen is around 60%, and
that of Helium is lower, which is around 16%. You can see from this graph that the highest proportion is
hydrogen, which is around 60%. You can also see from this graph that the lowest proportion is carbon,
nitrogen and silicon which are less than 1 %. In conclusion, hydrogen has the highest proportion.
(APEUni Website / App DI #62)
163. Sprouting
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the process of how the seeds can grow into a tree. The
first step is about a seed, it is buried under the ground. The second step is about a seedling, which
means the seed can grow after some time and the roots underground will begin to extend. The next step
is about a small tree, which means there is a leave growing out of the seed and the roots underground
becoming further extended. Finally, the last step is about the tree, more leaves are grown from the
stems and roots underground extend deeper and deeper. In conclusion, the whole process contains 4
steps and it is an easy process to see the mature tree from a small seed.
(APEUni Website / App DI #48)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the population from Jan to June in bears, dolphins, and
whales. When we look at the population of bears, it has increased sharply from 10 in January to 180 in
June. In contrast in terms of dolphins, the population declined dramatically from 150 to 10 over the same
period. When it comes to the whales, the number remained relatively stable at around 90 with the same
fluctuations. In conclusion, there is much difference in the population changes for the three animals.
(APEUni Website / App DI #47)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about proportion of languages. The items include Latin, French,
Germanic languages, Derived from proper names and so on. According to this graph, the proportion of
Latin is around 29%, and that of Germanic languages is lower, which is around 26%. You can see from
this graph that the highest proportion are Latin and French, which are around 29%. You can also see
from this graph that the lowest proportion is Derived from proper names, which is around 4%. In
conclusion, Latin and French have the highest proportion of languages.
(APEUni Website / App DI #46)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about two national flags. In the first national flag, from the top to
the bottom, the colors are green, white and black; there is also a red rectangle on the left-hand side. In
the second national flag, the color composition is the same. However, from the top to the bottom; the
colors are red, white and black, with a green triangle on the left-hand side. In conclusion, the two
national flags are quite similar in color while they are still different in shapes and composition.
(APEUni Website / App DI #43)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about out of sight, out of mind. According to the picture, we can
see the continent-sized cortex of plastic waste is blighting the Pacific. Specifically, there are two
rubbish soups, the eastern garbage patch which is next to Japan and the western garbage patch which
is next to Hawaii, the north pacific gyre currents are running differently in two different patches. Apart
from that, the translucent soup of degrading plastic waste is as deep as 10 meters and the north pacific
gyre currents keep soup in constant movement. We can also see the section of the garbage patch is in
color red. In conclusion, the picture indicates that we need to take environmental problems seriously.
(APEUni Website / App DI #41)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about depression probability. As we can see from the age of 16 to
45, the depression probability has increased dramatically from 0.002 to 0.02, and people who are
middle-aged have the highest probability of depression. Following that the depression rate begins to
decline to around 0.007 as the age grows older and ends at around 0.006 when they are 70 years old. In
conclusion, as young people are growing older they are more likely to get depression, especially in their
middle ages.
(APEUni Website / App DI #37)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about earth crust. This is a very beautiful picture, and it shows a
number of things. According to this graph, the first layer is the atmosphere. Followed by that, the
second layer is the crust. You can see from this graph that the third layer is the mantle. You can also
see from this graph that the next layer is the outer core. The final layer is the inner core. In conclusion,
this graph is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #31)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about electricity generation in China by type from 1994 to 2004.
For the conventional thermal, it has increased from 600 in 1994 to 1500 in 2004 gradually. When we
look at the hydroelectric, it remained relatively stable at around 100 throughout the period. For the total
generation, it has increased dramatically from 900 to 2000 from 1994 to 2004. To sum up, conventional
thermal still occupies the largest part of electricity generation in China.
(APEUni Website / App DI #26)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about adult literacy by region from 2000-2004. As we can see
the largest amount can be found in Latin America and the Caribbean, which is 89% in females and 91%
in males. Following that Asia has the second largest rate, which is 73% in females and 86% in males.
However, we can find the smallest amount in sub-Saharan Africa, which is 53% in females and 79% in
males. In conclusion, males have a larger adult literacy rate than males in all the regions.
(APEUni Website / App DI #25)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about Virus Replication. It shows how the process is done. The
steps include adsorption, entry, replication, assembly, release, According to this graph, the first step is
adsorption. According to this graph, the second step is the entry. You can see from this graph that the
third step is replication. You can also see from this graph that the next step is assembly. According to
this graph, The final step is to release. In conclusion, this graph is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #19)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about simple circuit with light. This is a very beautiful picture, and
it shows a number of things. According to this graph, at the central area, there is a battery; the colour of
it is black and yellow. You can see from this graph that, at the left area, there is a bulb; the colour of it
is white. You can see from this graph that, there is a line connecting the bulb and the battery. The
electricity flows from the negative pole to the positive pole. In conclusion, this picture is very
informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #16)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the core. According to the picture, we can see from the
inside to the outside, there is an inner core, which is 800 miles, 1300 kilometers. Following that, it’s the
outer core, which is 1400 miles, 2250 kilometers. And then it’s the mantle, which is 1800 miles, 2900
kilometers. The most outside one is the crust, which is 5-25 miles, 8-40 kilometers. In conclusion, the
core has a very complex structure.
(APEUni Website / App DI #8)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the height of trees. The items include hemlock, cedar,
spruce, douglas fir. According to this graph, in Hemlock, the value of height is around 130 feet, and that
of Cedar is higher, which is around 200 feet. You can see from this graph that the highest value of
height is in Douglas Fir, which is around 280 feet. In conclusion, Douglas Fir has the highest number.
(APEUni Website / App DI #7)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the housing structure. When we enter the house from the
entrance, on the left-hand side we can see a small kitchen with a stove in it and on the right-hand side
there is a small toilet and a place for a shower. Going deeper into the house, we can find the main
bedroom which is on the left corner with a double bed and a desk in it, and the living room is on the
right corner with spacious room, a long lounge, and some sofas. In conclusion, it is a very comfortable
house to live in.
(APEUni Website / App DI #45)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about water channels and how they can be formed. From the first
picture, we can see that there is a meander and along the meander, there are lots of trees, there is also
a neck in between the meander. However, when we move to the next stage, the sand becomes
deposited in the river and finally, it becomes silt around the river neck, therefore there is a new channel
formed and a new oxbow lake begins to run in this way. In conclusion, the formation of the oxbow lake
requires water and sand forces to shape its channels.
(APEUni Website / App DI #36)
178. BMI
Answer:
The following graph gives information about Aim for a healthy weight: BMI chart for adults. The graph
shows the information about body mass index. The height is between 140 centimeters to 200
centimeters, and the weight is between 30 kilograms to 150 kilograms. It is clear that obese occupies
the largest percentage, above BMI 30; followed by overweight, normally occupies the area between BMI
30 and BMI 25; then the healthy weight range, between BMI 25 and BMI 18.5. Finally it is underweight
below BMI 18.5. In conclusion, this graph summarizes information about body mass.
(APEUni Website / App DI #3)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about the solar system. This is a very beautiful picture, and it
shows a number of things. According to this graph, the largest planet is Jupiter; the colour of it is brown.
You can see from this graph that, the second largest planet is Saturn; the colour of it is brown. And the
smallest planet is Mercury, followed by Mars, Earth, Venus, Neptune, Uranus. In conclusion, this picture is
very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #1)
Answer:
At the upper left area, there is a keyboard, the color of it is black, and there are hands which parallel
with each other, which is right. At the lower left area, there is a hand which parallels with the keyboard.
And it is the right gesture. At the upper right area, there are two hands which are twisted against each
other.,and it is wrong. The second picture in the right area, 2 hands are the point in the opposite
direction, which are wrong. The third picture at the right area, there is a hand forming an angle with the
keyboard. At the lower right area, there is a hand whose wrist forming a right angle. In conclusion, this
graph is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App DI #2)
181. Moon&Fish
Answer:
The following graph gives information about lunar and fish. As we can see for the first quarter moon, the
fish are located at the bottom of the sea. When entering into the next stage, fish begin to move
upwards and are located in the middle part of the sea. Next, when it comes to the full moon, the fish are
distributed all over the sea. Finally, for the last quarter moon period, the fish are located near the
surface of the sea. In conclusion, the picture shows that lunar and fish are closely related to each other.
(APEUni Website / App DI #17)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about global warming predictions. Light color represents low
temperature increase and dark color represents high temperature increase. From the map, we can see
that the highest temperature increase can be found in North America, which is 6-8 degrees. Following
that, the second highest temperature increase can be found in Africa and Europe, which is around 3-5
degrees. And the lowest temperature increase can be found in Australia and North America, which is
around 1-3 degrees. In conclusion, the world is going to have global warming as predicted.
(APEUni Website / App DI #11)
Answer:
The following graph gives information about how an apple seed can become an apple tree. It shows how
the process is done. The steps include apple seeds, an apple tree, a flower, and so on. According to this
graph, the first step is apple seeds. According to this graph, the second step is to sprout. You can see
from this graph that the third step is the apple tree. Then the next step is the flower. Finally, we can get
green and big apples from the apple tree. In conclusion, the process will repeat.
(APEUni Website / App DI #178)
Retell Lecture
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3. Education (Incomplete)
Points: A picture about education, similarly as shown here. Keyword: education, skills, potential.
(APEUni Website / App RL #239)
Points: A video about automation by a male professor, with a lot of data on the slides, starting and
ending with black screens. Lots of data are presented orally by him. With development of scientific
technologies, there is a prediction that in future about forty percent of people will not get a job and be
replaced by machines. But professionals will enjoy very stable jobs.
(APEUni Website / App RL #423)
build camps and those camps were always laid out in a very geometric plan along a grid, usually square
or rectangular.
(APEUni Website / App RL #347)
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strategies for helping the millions of households across the country that are currently unable to pay their
energy bills.
(APEUni Website / App RL #340)
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mission suggested that Mars once had a large scale of water coverage on the surface at some earlier
stages of existence.
(APEUni Website / App RL #73)
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“leading from behind”; more often, however, top leaders have been quite visible in their exercise of
power. Women (as well as some men) have provided casual, low-key leadership behind the scenes. But
this pattern has been changing, as more women have taken up opportunities for visible, authoritative
leadership.
(APEUni Website / App RL #305)
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cars. People can drive and go everywhere more comfortably. ... go to Scotland。 It changed the way we
live and the way we educate because we can go to school by car. ... improve individual mobility ... be
more wealthy.
(APEUni Website / App RL #291)
we're trying to unravel which sources are actually contributing to the clouds. The clouds are incredibly
important players in climate change in that they reflect the light back to space, and so they're keeping
things much, much cooler than they would be if they weren't there. They also play a huge role in regional
weather. So we're actually starting to see shifts where having more pollution input into the clouds is
affecting weather patterns, and in particular it's actually reducing the amount of precipitation, so we're
starting to see drought in areas with super high levels of air pollution.
(APEUni Website / App RL #249)
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you have to create the right process to have people engaged in innovation process. Third, you need to
find the right problem to work on. Human beings can survive and prosper largely depending on the
creativity they have. If you identify and assess the creativity of a finished product, it is taken as a proxy
for the creativity of the person who produced such a product. Therefore, a creative product should be
surprising, original, beautiful and useful. People should have factors necessary for genius, ability, and
right mindset. You should improve to imitate and change insight look from new perspectives, innovatively
create something with imagination to expand conceptual spaces.
(APEUni Website / App RL #280)
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percentage in the US is now 13% and is expected to be 23% by 2030. The situation is more severe in
Japan and Italy. And Germany follows, whose percentage of people over sixty-five years old is expected
to be twenty-five percent by 2030. Ageing problem is related to industrialization.
(APEUni Website / App RL #257)
I think with our linguistic training we also get all this invisible training to be authorities, to be the people
who know. It is part of that process that you come out as a world authority on your chosen subject. But
when we move into working with communities, we have to recognise that the communities have to be
the authority in their language. Actually, a woman in the class I'm teaching at Sydney at the moment, a
career woman, expressed this very nicely, although she was talking about something else, she was
distinguishing expertise from authority. And certainly linguists, because of our training we do, have
expertise in certain very narrow areas of language, but we don't have the authority over what to do with
that knowledge or what to do with other knowledge that the community produces. I guess for me the
bottom line is languages are lost because of the dominance of one people over another. That's not
rocket science, it's not hard to work that out. But then what that means is if in working with language
revival we continue to hold the authority, we actually haven't done anything towards undoing how
languages are lost in the first place, so in a sense the languages are still lost if the authority is still lost.
(APEUni Website / App RL #247)
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only one left. The future of everything we have accomplished since our intelligence evolved will depend
on the wisdom of our actions over the next few years. Like all creatures, humans have made their way in
the world so far by trial and error; unlike other creatures, we have a presence so colossal that error is a
luxury we can no longer afford. The world has grown too small to forgive us any big mistakes.
(APEUni Website / App RL #235)
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tiny particle. But there’s good news, reducing black carbon may be the fastest way to slow global
warming. Buy time for the Arctic. Yes even more so than changing a light bulb. Since black carbon only
stays in the atmosphere for a couple of weeks, reducing it will produce results immediately. Of course,
reducing soot alone won’t solve global warming, but solving our soot problem now will help buy time for
the Arctic and allow us to deal with the bigger problem of carbon dioxide. We have the cleaner
industries, cook stoves, and diesel now we have to use them. In developed nations, we’ve significantly
reduced our black carbon, but we still have much more to do. We need to tighten our standards at home
and invest in cleaner technologies in developing nations. In a world going on seven billion people, you
might feel rather little yourself. But if you urge the US government and the European Union to take the
lead on black carbon reduction, you can make a big difference.
(APEUni Website / App RL #223)
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include human rights, environmental, improving health, or development work. An NGO’s level of operation
indicates the scale at which an organization works, such as local, regional, national, or international.
Sample Answer: This lecture mainly talks about the non-governmental organization. NGOs may be
funded by governments, foundations, businesses or private persons. The number of NGOs in the US is
1.5 million and India has around 2 million in 2009. It is difficult to define NGO as the activities are highly
diverse, some may have charitable status while others maybe registered for tax exemption.
(APEUni Website / App RL #175)
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transportation help them travel long distance. It’s important to do……Diversity contributes a lot to the
market and its culture.
(APEUni Website / App RL #195)
and of course it wasn’t discovered until much later on. Now these regions are opposite in many ways
other than just their names and their location on the globe, and so if we look at the arctic first of all, and
the Arctic is actually ocean surrounded by land, and so you can see here this is the UK down here and
this kind of Russia and then American Canada around here, and so there is a bit of land cover in our ice
on the top in the Arctic, which is Greenland here and Macie all this area here. Surprisingly a lot of
people don’t realize that this isn’t actually land. The north pole isn’t on land. It’s just one big ocean.
(APEUni Website / App RL #157)
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are similarly timid. Researchers had trios of sticklebacks with known personalities play follow the leader.
The fish were placed in a tank that had some plastic plants at one end and some food hidden at the
other. In some of the groups, a bold fish and a shy fish acted as leaders, while another shy fish followed.
And in other groups, it was a bold fish that did the following. The researchers recorded whether the
follower sallied forth more frequently with the fish that was behaviorally similar or the one that was
different. What they found is that shy fish were more likely to emerge from undercover when an equally
wary fellow was already out there. Bold follower fish did not seem to care which leader they followed. Of
course, no matter which fish a stickleback chose to stick with, the bold fish did lead more expeditions
over the course of the experiment than their more retiring friends. That's because the bold fish initiated
more trips, regardless of who might be tailing them. The researchers write that "when offered a choice
of leaders, sticklebacks prefer to follow individuals whose personality matches their own, but bolder
individuals may, nevertheless, be able to impose their leadership, even among shy followers, simply
through greater effort."
(APEUni Website / App RL #153)
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just to kind of characterize the general pattern of structural variation in eight human genomes. so shown
here are different human chromosomes for from African, and for from non-African the distinctions really
aren't that important, but what I'm showing you here, is the presence of insertions deletions and
inversions as red as blue red and green and so each line here represents a different human genome that
has been analyzed looking for structural variation of events greater than 5,000 base pairs in size, so a
couple things you can maybe get from. this is you can see that there's a lot of genetic variation out
there , that is above the level of single base pair change and most of the events that you're seeing here
are essentially inherited , but we now know based on studying roughly about 2,000 human genomes, but
there's a significant fraction of very large events often hundreds of KB in size that are either individually
specific or specific to specific families , so this is kind of changing our view of the dynamic nature of
the human genome.
(APEUni Website / App RL #129)
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App to listen.
what's inside your body, so to look inside and see things that you couldn't see without this device. And
you'll recognize some parts of the image, you can see the ribcage here, the bones you can see the heart
is the large bright object down here. If you, have good eyesight from the distance, you can see the
vessels leading out of the heart and into the lungs, and the lungs are darker spaces within the ribcage.
(APEUni Website / App RL #143)
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App to listen.
Art's president.
(APEUni Website / App RL #90)
There're audio records available for this question. Search by the question number at APEUni Website /
App to listen.
App to listen.
wildlife, and wildlife conservation society is urging them not to on the grounds that it’s a wilderness
refuge. We use to that debate. What I’m saying is that in the developing world there’s a third axis and
it’s a complex one.
(APEUni Website / App RL #60)
There're audio records available for this question. Search by the question number at APEUni Website /
App to listen.
3. Points:
Answer: (APEUni Website / App ASQ #1681) (Incomplete)
4. What is the weather condition related with heavy rain and strong wind occurring in the western Pacific
or Indian Ocean?
Answer: Typhoon (APEUni Website / App ASQ #1680) (Audio Available)
5. What is the other form of water other than gas and solid?
Answer: Liquid / fluid (APEUni Website / App ASQ #1679) (Audio Available)
6. What is the word for objects that can be easily moved from one place to another?
Answer: Portable (APEUni Website / App ASQ #1678) (Audio Available)
7. Points:
Answer: (APEUni Website / App ASQ #1677) (Incomplete)
9. What do we call an amount of money that is taken off the usual cost of something?
Answer: Discount / reduction (APEUni Website / App ASQ #1676) (Audio Available)
10. What is the generic term for gold, silver and copper?
Answer: Metal (APEUni Website / App ASQ #1675) (Audio Available)
20. What do you call the hair that grows above your eyes?
Answer: Eyebrow (APEUni Website / App ASQ #1665) (Audio Available)
21. What is the famous canal linking the Mediterranean Sea with the Indian Ocean?
Answer: Suez (APEUni Website / App ASQ #305) (Audio Available)
22. Points:
Answer: (APEUni Website / App ASQ #225) (Incomplete)
23. What is the generic term for a person who once had the same title as you have now?
Answer: Predecessor (APEUni Website / App ASQ #1664) (Audio Available)
25. What do we call the musical instrument which has six strings?
Answer: Guitar (APEUni Website / App ASQ #1662) (Audio Available)
26. What do we call the phase in a trial in which both parties interrogate each other?
Answer: Cross examination (APEUni Website / App ASQ #1660) (Audio Available)
29. If a driver drives the car, what does a pilot do to the plane?
Answer: Fly / flies (APEUni Website / App ASQ #1654) (Audio Available)
32. What is the straight line between the center of a circle and any point on its outer edge?
Answer: Radius (APEUni Website / App ASQ #1649) (Audio Available)
34. What do we call the weather conditions like rain, hail, etc.?
Answer: Precipitation (APEUni Website / App ASQ #1646) (Audio Available)
37. What do we call a vehicle equipped for carrying the injured or sick?
Answer: Ambulance (APEUni Website / App ASQ #1530) (Audio Available)
38. What object has three legs and can support a camera?
Answer: Tripod (APEUni Website / App ASQ #1526) (Audio Available)
42. What word do we use to describe an accident or a disease which causes death?
Answer: Fatal / deadly / lethal (APEUni Website / App ASQ #1488) (Audio Available)
43. What do you call the medicine that is used against headache?
Answer: Pain killer / painkiller (APEUni Website / App ASQ #363) (Audio Available)
44. What is the fourth basic mathematical operation, addition, subtraction, multiplication and?
Answer: Division (APEUni Website / App ASQ #1468) (Audio Available)
47. What is a text that you send to your friends to invite them to a party?
Answer: Invitation (APEUni Website / App ASQ #1455) (Audio Available)
53. What do we call the people who move from one country to another country, usually for work or a
better life?
Answer: Migrants (APEUni Website / App ASQ #1192) (Audio Available)
54. What is a person called whose job is to write news for newspapers?
Answer: Journalist (APEUni Website / App ASQ #1191) (Audio Available)
56. What do we call the line between a sunset and the sea?
Answer: Sea-sky-line / horizon (APEUni Website / App ASQ #90) (Audio Available)
58. When we say someone is doing the B.A. in history or literature in the university, what does B.A. stand
for?
Answer: Bachelor of arts (APEUni Website / App ASQ #986) (Audio Available)
59. When you bake a cake, what do you put the cake into?
Answer: Oven (APEUni Website / App ASQ #980) (Audio Available)
60. What is the barrier that can prevent floods from damaging our home?
Answer: Dam (APEUni Website / App ASQ #979) (Audio Available)
62. What includes everything in the world such as stars and planets?
Answer: Universe / cosmos (APEUni Website / App ASQ #977) (Audio Available)
67. What’s the calendar that follows the movement of the moon?
Answer: Lunar calendar (APEUni Website / App ASQ #956) (Audio Available)
68. What do we call a person who leaves college before finishing the studies?
Answer: Dropout (APEUni Website / App ASQ #952) (Audio Available)
69. What do we call a political institution or body that is responsible for a country?
Answer: Government (APEUni Website / App ASQ #949) (Audio Available)
71. What do we call a short piece of writing containing the main ideas in a document?
Answer: Abstract / summary (APEUni Website / App ASQ #923) (Audio Available)
74. What do we call a person whose job is cutting up and selling meat?
Answer: Butcher (APEUni Website / App ASQ #920) (Audio Available)
75. What is the room in which you keep things when you don't need them?
Answer: Storeroom (APEUni Website / App ASQ #904) (Audio Available)
80. Where do passengers stand waiting for a train in the railway station?
Answer: Platform (APEUni Website / App ASQ #229) (Audio Available)
Answer: lessee / tenant (APEUni Website / App ASQ #866) (Audio Available)
87. What do we use to get to the third floor when the elevator is broken?
Answer: stairs (APEUni Website / App ASQ #852) (Audio Available)
92. What instrument would you use when you want to weigh something up?
Answer: scale (APEUni Website / App ASQ #829) (Audio Available)
93. What is the storyline or the series of scenes of novels, movies, short stories or plays?
Answer: plot (APEUni Website / App ASQ #828) (Audio Available)
95. We call numbers like one, three, five odd numbers, then what do we call numbers like two, four, six?
Answer: even (APEUni Website / App ASQ #816) (Audio Available)
99. What do we call the action of a ball that immediately moves upwards from the ground after hitting
it?
Answer: bounce / bouncing (APEUni Website / App ASQ #804) (Audio Available)
101. What do we call three children born at the same time to the same mother?
Answer: triplets (APEUni Website / App ASQ #801) (Audio Available)
103. We call a person used to using the right hand a right-hander, and what do we call a person if the
left hand?
Answer: left-hander (APEUni Website / App ASQ #791) (Audio Available)
104. What do we call a photo of a person's face taken from the side?
Answer: profile (APEUni Website / App ASQ #790) (Audio Available)
106. What do we call the selling and transporting of goods to another country?
Answer: export / exportation (APEUni Website / App ASQ #778) (Audio Available)
108. In sport, what do we call the cloths that we wear and end above the knee?
Answer: Shorts (APEUni Website / App ASQ #776) (Audio Available)
113. Points: What do we call a long narrow piece of land almost completely surrounded by water?
Answer: peninsula (APEUni Website / App ASQ #746) (Incomplete)
114. What do you call a statue or a building that is dedicated in memory of someone?
Answer: Monument / memorial (APEUni Website / App ASQ #740) (Audio Available)
116. Points: There are three eggs, what is the location of the special egg?
Answer: on the right (there is a picture including three eggs: the left two have eggshells while the right
one does not (APEUni Website / App ASQ #735) (Incomplete)
119. What is the heading at the top of an article or page in a newspaper or magazine?
Answer: headline (APEUni Website / App ASQ #731) (Audio Available)
129. What do we call the treatment in which people use needles to ease others' pain?
Answer: acupuncture (APEUni Website / App ASQ #717) (Audio Available)
130. If a building is one thousand meters high, from where do we measure the height?
Answer: sea level (APEUni Website / App ASQ #228) (Audio Available)
135. What do you call a word formed from the first letters of other words?
Answer: acronym (APEUni Website / App ASQ #708) (Audio Available)
Answer: counterfeit money / fake note (APEUni Website / App ASQ #705) (Audio Available)
138. What do we call a machine which carries people from one floor to another in a high building?
Answer: lift / lyft / elevator (APEUni Website / App ASQ #251) (Audio Available)
141. What do we call the building that doctors and nurses work in?
Answer: hospital / clinic (APEUni Website / App ASQ #222) (Audio Available)
142. What is the boat that carries people from one side of a river to the other?
Answer: ferry (APEUni Website / App ASQ #692) (Audio Available)
143. What do you call the buildings of a university or college and the land around them?
Answer: campus (APEUni Website / App ASQ #689) (Audio Available)
146. What clothing do people wear, such as students or nurses, to show that they belong to the same
organizations?
Answer: uniform (APEUni Website / App ASQ #679) (Audio Available)
147. What do we call the subject that studies weather and temperature?
Answer: meteorology / climatology (APEUni Website / App ASQ #669) (Audio Available)
153. When trains or cars need to go through a mountain, where do they enter the mountain?
157. What do we call a person's move to a more important job or rank in a company?
Answer: promotion (APEUni Website / App ASQ #603) (Audio Available)
158. Which one in the four seasons has the lowest temperature?
Answer: winter (APEUni Website / App ASQ #602) (Audio Available)
160. Whose job is making and repairing wooden objects and structures?
Answer: carpenter (APEUni Website / App ASQ #587) (Audio Available)
162. Jack is having a presentation on Wednesday. Today is Tuesday. When will Jack have his speech,
today, tomorrow or next week?
Answer: tomorrow (APEUni Website / App ASQ #580) (Audio Available)
171. What thing do postgraduate students have that undergraduate students don’t?
Answer: bachelor degree (APEUni Website / App ASQ #563) (Audio Available)
173. What is the process where the color becomes lighter and lighter when exposed to sunlight for a
long time?
Answer: fade (APEUni Website / App ASQ #559) (Audio Available)
177. What is a word or expression that has the same or nearly the same meaning as another in the same
language?
Answer: synonym (APEUni Website / App ASQ #364) (Audio Available)
178. What do we call the pen that receive its ink from its reservoir?
Answer: fountain pen (APEUni Website / App ASQ #552) (Audio Available)
179. Apart from coffee and hot chocolate, what beverages also contain caffeine?
Answer: Tea / coke / cocoa (APEUni Website / App ASQ #547) (Audio Available)
180. What is the musical instrument which has both pedals and strings?
Answer: harp / piano (APEUni Website / App ASQ #546) (Audio Available)
183. What do you throw underwater to keep ships staying on rivers or oceans without drifting away?
Answer: anchor (APEUni Website / App ASQ #542) (Audio Available)
184. How do you call the movements that the babies move by using hands and legs?
Answer: Crawling / crawl (APEUni Website / App ASQ #541) (Audio Available)
188. What instrument would scientists use to examine very small life forms?
Answer: microscope (APEUni Website / App ASQ #532) (Audio Available)
191. What do we call the person who plays musical instruments as a job?
Answer: musician (APEUni Website / App ASQ #527) (Audio Available)
196. Tomorrow’s lecture has been cancelled. If today is Tuesday, then on which day is the lecture
cancelled?
Answer: wednesday (APEUni Website / App ASQ #512) (Audio Available)
198. How do you call the doctor who treats sick animals?
Answer: vet / veterinarian (APEUni Website / App ASQ #508) (Audio Available)
199. What do we call the legal document that states how people's property should be allocated after
their deaths?
Answer: testament / will (APEUni Website / App ASQ #505) (Audio Available)
201. What do you call the government where the power is concentrated in the hands of one person?
Answer: autocracy / dictatorship (APEUni Website / App ASQ #503) (Audio Available)
203. When you have the PRIMARY, the SECONDARY, what do you have next?
Answer: tertiary (APEUni Website / App ASQ #497) (Audio Available)
204. What is the place you share bedroom with your classmates?
Answer: dormitory (APEUni Website / App ASQ #494) (Audio Available)
206. What do you need to submit for completing a degree in the university?
Answer: dissertation / thesis (APEUni Website / App ASQ #234) (Audio Available)
207. When a person’s blood alcohol level is higher than the standard range, what activity can’t the
person do?
Answer: driving (APEUni Website / App ASQ #490) (Audio Available)
208. How do we call the car that uses two types of fuels?
Answer: hybrid (APEUni Website / App ASQ #298) (Audio Available)
214. What do we call the northernmost and southernmost parts of the earth?
Answer: Pole / poles (APEUni Website / App ASQ #482) (Audio Available)
216. How do you call the two siblings born by a mother at the same time?
Answer: twins (APEUni Website / App ASQ #291) (Audio Available)
217. If you want to read tragedies or comedies, what kind of book do you read?
Answer: fiction books / novels (APEUni Website / App ASQ #477) (Audio Available)
219. How do we call that animals and plants preserved in the rocks?
Answer: fossil (APEUni Website / App ASQ #469) (Audio Available)
221. How do you describe the money that citizens must contribute to the government for public use?
Answer: tax / taxes (APEUni Website / App ASQ #452) (Audio Available)
222. How would you describe an animal that no longer exist on the earth?
Answer: extinct (APEUni Website / App ASQ #454) (Audio Available)
224. What are the people who study history and historical evidence?
Answer: historian (APEUni Website / App ASQ #649) (Audio Available)
227. What is the force that happens between the relative motion when objects are rubbed against each
other?
Answer: friction (APEUni Website / App ASQ #620) (Audio Available)
232. In mathematics and arithmetic, there are addition, multiplication, division. What's the other one?
Answer: subtraction (APEUni Website / App ASQ #462) (Audio Available)
234. Which literary genre describes all details of a famous person's life?
Answer: Biography / autobiography (APEUni Website / App ASQ #457) (Audio Available)
236. What are the people who study ancient bones or plants in rocks?
Answer: paleontologists / paleontologist / archaeologists / archaeologist (APEUni Website / App ASQ
#646) (Audio Available)
238. If you want to find the map of U.S., what type of book should you use?
Answer: atlas (APEUni Website / App ASQ #451) (Audio Available)
242. Which continent do China, India, Korea and Japan locate in?
Answer: Asia (APEUni Website / App ASQ #440) (Audio Available)
243. Before airplanes were invented, how did people travel from America to Europe?
Answer: by ship (APEUni Website / App ASQ #438) (Audio Available)
247. If you invented something, what can you apply for to prevent others copying your invention?
Answer: patent (APEUni Website / App ASQ #434) (Explanation) (Audio Available)
248. How do you describe the type of magazine that is published four times a year?
Answer: quarterly (APEUni Website / App ASQ #289) (Audio Available)
249. When something has increased by triple, how many times does it increase?
Answer: three times (APEUni Website / App ASQ #432) (Audio Available)
253. Oral English is different from academic English. Which is the best term to describe academic
English: tolerant or rigorous?
Answer: rigorous (APEUni Website / App ASQ #424) (Audio Available)
259. How many hemispheres does the equator divide earth into?
Answer: Two (APEUni Website / App ASQ #404) (Audio Available)
263. How do you call a student that has finished his first year?
Answer: sophomore (APEUni Website / App ASQ #145) (Audio Available)
266. What do we call a festival which is held every four years gathering people together as a sporting
event?
Answer: the olympic games (APEUni Website / App ASQ #396) (Audio Available)
267. What is the feature that guitars and violins have in common?
Answer: string / strings (APEUni Website / App ASQ #393) (Audio Available)
269. What type of shape has four right corners, four lines that are equal in length?
Answer: square (APEUni Website / App ASQ #384) (Audio Available)
270. If a couple have a pair of children, how many children do they have?
Answer: two (APEUni Website / App ASQ #378) (Audio Available)
279. What is the name of the student who has not completed his course?
Answer: undergraduate student (APEUni Website / App ASQ #350) (Audio Available)
281. In the library, which books we are not allowed to bring them out with ourselves?
Answer: closed reserve book / closed reserve books (APEUni Website / App ASQ #347)
(Audio Available)
283. What kind of dictionary provides synonyms, antonyms and related words?
Answer: thesaurus (APEUni Website / App ASQ #344) (Audio Available)
287. How do you call the pointing device that is connected to the computer?
Answer: mouse (APEUni Website / App ASQ #330) (Audio Available)
288. What is the thing you touch when you play the guitar?
Answer: strings / string (APEUni Website / App ASQ #329) (Audio Available)
290. What do we call the animals with white ivory and long trunk?
Answer: elephant / elephants (APEUni Website / App ASQ #325) (Audio Available)
296. If a button has come off a shirt, what would someone most likely use to put it back on?
Answer: needle / thread (APEUni Website / App ASQ #300) (Audio Available)
301. Some calendars begin the week on Sunday, what is the other day which commonly starts a week?
Answer: monday (APEUni Website / App ASQ #270) (Audio Available)
302. What do we call the piece of paper that proves you have bought an item?
Answer: Receipt (APEUni Website / App ASQ #304) (Audio Available)
303. How many years does it typically take to finish undergraduate study?
Answer: three years / four years (APEUni Website / App ASQ #267) (Audio Available)
305. What is the name of the field of study that studies the human mind and behavior?
Answer: psychology (APEUni Website / App ASQ #262) (Audio Available)
306. Which of the following is not a means of transportation: by plane, by public transportation or car
model?
Answer: car model (APEUni Website / App ASQ #259) (Audio Available)
307. Where would you expect to find equipment like microscopes, a Bunsen burner, beaker and petri
dish?
Answer: laboratory (APEUni Website / App ASQ #243) (Audio Available)
308. A manufacturing process releases poisonous gases. What is the most important safety measure for
workers at this plant⼀ensuring good ventilation, or appropriate footwear?
Answer: Ensuring good ventilation (APEUni Website / App ASQ #233) (Audio Available)
309. What is the name of the instrument used to measure variations in temperature?
Answer: thermometer (APEUni Website / App ASQ #220) (Audio Available)
310. What is the joint called where your hand is connected to your arm?
Answer: wrist / wrists (APEUni Website / App ASQ #212) (Audio Available)
312. What is the most important document you would have to show if you would to hire a car?
Answer: driver's license / driving license (APEUni Website / App ASQ #205) (Audio Available)
313. What do you call a specialist who repairs leaking water pipes?
Answer: plumber (APEUni Website / App ASQ #204) (Audio Available)
315. What we call it when the moon completely blocks out the light from the sun?
Answer: a solar eclipse / an eclipse (APEUni Website / App ASQ #198) (Audio Available)
317. What is the job of someone that looks after your teeth and gums?
Answer: dentist / surgeon dentist (APEUni Website / App ASQ #171) (Audio Available)
318. What plan shows how much money is available and how it will be spent?
Answer: budget (APEUni Website / App ASQ #168) (Audio Available)
319. What do you call the number of people living in a specific area?
Answer: population (APEUni Website / App ASQ #165) (Audio Available)
320. What is it called when two or more people are speaking to each other?
Answer: conversation / chat (APEUni Website / App ASQ #163) (Audio Available)
322. What kind of book is written by a person about their own life?
Answer: autobiography (APEUni Website / App ASQ #152) (Audio Available)
325. On what geographical location would someone be living if their country is surrounded by water on all
sides?
Answer: Island (APEUni Website / App ASQ #191) (Audio Available)
326. What do we call the things of 88 keys covered by colors white and black?
Answer: Pianos / piano (APEUni Website / App ASQ #322) (Audio Available)
328. What key mineral makes sea water different from fresh water?
Answer: Salt (APEUni Website / App ASQ #235) (Audio Available)
329. Who would you consult to treat a fear of crowded places, a philosopher or a psychologist?
Answer: psychologist (APEUni Website / App ASQ #140) (Audio Available)
331. In the animal kingdom, is the purpose of camouflage to attract a mate, to find food or to hide?
Answer: hide (APEUni Website / App ASQ #131) (Audio Available)
332. What special document do most people need to carry when they travel between countries?
Answer: passport (APEUni Website / App ASQ #130) (Audio Available)
333. What kind of equipment is used to protect motorbike riders' brains from injury?
Answer: helmet (APEUni Website / App ASQ #89) (Audio Available)
336. What is the term used for the life history of a person written by himself?
Answer: autobiography / memoir (APEUni Website / App ASQ #65) (Audio Available)
338. If something such as fabric or medicine is artificially made, not natural, what do we say it is?
Answer: Synthetic / artificial (APEUni Website / App ASQ #28) (Audio Available)
340. What do you call the alphabetical list at the end of a textbook that tells you where to find specific
information?
Answer: index / reference (APEUni Website / App ASQ #25) (Audio Available)
341. What do we call a company or organization that gives money to a sports or arts event in exchange
for advertising?
Answer: sponsor / patron / supporter (APEUni Website / App ASQ #24) (Audio Available)
342. Which short TV program or a part of TV program tell whether it will be sunny or rainy tomorrow?
Answer: weather forecast / weather report (APEUni Website / App ASQ #19) (Audio Available)
343. What is the word for a building or room where art exhibitions are held?
Answer: art gallery / art museum (APEUni Website / App ASQ #14) (Audio Available)
344. At what ceremony do students receive their degree or diploma at the end of their period of study?
Answer: graduation / commencement (APEUni Website / App ASQ #8) (Audio Available)
345. What is it that you wear on your wrist and that tells you time?
Answer: wrist watch / watch (APEUni Website / App ASQ #5) (Audio Available)
346. A business doesn't want to make a loss - what does it want to make?
Answer: Profit / profits (APEUni Website / App ASQ #107) (Audio Available)
349. Would a supermarket, a cafe, or a book store probably have the widest range of products available?
Answer: A supermarket (APEUni Website / App ASQ #118) (Audio Available)
353. What do we call the organs in our chest that we use to breathe?
Answer: Lungs / lung (APEUni Website / App ASQ #41) (Audio Available)
354. If telescopes are used to locate distant objects, what instrument is employed to magnify minuscule
objects?
Answer: Microscope / microscopes (APEUni Website / App ASQ #111) (Audio Available)
B. Writing
Summarize Written Text
1. Carbon (Incomplete)
Points:
(APEUni Website / App SWT #418)
5. Telescope (Incomplete)
Points:
(APEUni Website / App SWT #414)
6. Women in University
Original:
If women are so far ahead of men, why are they so far behind? Reports from both sides of the Atlantic
show that female students dominate university courses, yet women still do not make it to the top. A
report on inequality in the UK said last week that girls had better educational results than boys at 16,
went to university in greater numbers and achieved better degrees once they got there. "More women
now have higher education qualifications than men in every age group up to age 44," the report said. In
the US, 57 per cent of college graduates in 2006-07 were women. Women form the majority of all
graduates under 45. Yet few women make it to the boards of companies in either country. In the UK, the
proportion of women on FTSE 100 boards rose fractionally from 11.7 per cent to 12.2 per cent last year,
according to the Cranfield University School of Management, but that was only because of a fall in the
size of the boards. In the US, women accounted for 15.2 per cent of board seats on Fortune 500
companies, according to Catalyst, the research organization, which said the numbers had barely budged
for five years. The hopeful way of looking at this is that the rising generation of female graduates has
yet to reach director age. Give it 10 years and they will dominate boards as they do universities. If that
were true, however, we would surely see the number of women director numbers moving up by now. The
first year that women college graduates outnumbered men in the US was 1982. These graduates must be
entering their 50s – prime director age.
Answer:
More women now have higher education qualifications than men in every age group up to age 44, and
women form the majority of all graduates under 45, which means that we would surely see the number
of women director numbers moving up by now, so the younger generation of women is thriving in the
workplace; there was still a large pay gap.
7. Levels of Crime
Original:
The British Crime Survey (BCS) provides an important source of information about levels of crime, public
attitudes to crime and other related issues. The results play an important role in informing Home Office
policy. The BCS measures the amount of crime in England and Wales by asking people about crimes
they have experienced in the last year. This includes crimes not reported to the police, so it is an
important alternative to police records. Victims do not report crime for various reasons, and without the
BCS there would be no official source of information on these unreported crimes. Because members of
the public are asked directly about their experiences, the survey also provides a consistent measure of
crime that is unaffected by the extent to which crimes are reported to the police, or by changes in the
criteria used by the police when recording crime. The survey also helps to identify those most at risk of
different types of crime, and this helps in the planning of crime prevention programs. The BCS also
examines people's attitudes to crime, such as how much they fear crime and what measures they take
to avoid it. The survey also covers attitudes to the Criminal Justice System (CJS), including the police
and the courts, and has also been successful at developing special measures to estimate the extent of
domestic violence, stalking and sexual victimization, which are probably the least reported to the police,
but among the most serious of crimes in their impact on victims.
Answer:
The British Crime Survey provides an important source of information, and the survey also provides a
consistent measure of crime that is unaffected, which means that the survey also helps to identify those
most at risk of different types of crime, so the BCS also examines people's attitudes to crime; the
survey also covers attitudes to the Criminal Justice System.
(APEUni Website / App SWT #411)
8. Human Traits
Original:
The age-old question of whether human traits are determined by nature or nurture has been answered, a
team of researchers say. Their conclusion? It’s a draw. By collating almost every twin study across the
world from the past 50 years, researchers determined that the average variation for human traits and
disease is 49 percent due to genetic factors and 51 percent due to environmental factors. University of
Queensland researcher Beben Benyamin from the Queensland Brain Institute collaborated with
researchers at VU University of Amsterdam to collate 2,748 studies involving more than 14.5 million pairs
of twins. “Twin studies have been conducted for more than 50 years but there is still some debate in
terms of how much the variation is due to genetic or environmental factors,” Benyamin said. He said the
study showed the conversation should move away from nature versus nurture, instead looking at how the
two work together. “Both are important sources of variation between individuals,” he said. While the
studies averaged an almost even split between nature and nurture, there was wide variation within the
17,800 separate traits and diseases examined by the studies. For example, the risk for bipolar disorder
was found to be 68 percent due to genetics and only 32 percent due to environmental factors. Weight
maintenance was 63 percent due to genetics and 37 percent due to environmental factors. In contrast,
risk for eating disorders was found to be 40 percent genetic and 60 percent environmental, whereas the
risk for mental and behavioral disorders due to use of alcohol was 41 percent genetic and 59 percent
environmental. Benyamin said in psychiatric, ophthalmological and skeletal traits, genetic factors were a
larger influence than environmental factors. But for social values and attitudes it was the other way
around.
Answer:
The average variation for human traits and disease is 49 percent due to genetic factors and 51 percent
due to environmental factors, and both are important sources of variation between individuals, which
means that in psychiatric, ophthalmological and skeletal traits, genetic factors were a larger influence
than environmental factors, but for social values and attitudes it was the other way around.
(APEUni Website / App SWT #405)
9. Brain Wave
Original:
We can't see it, but brains hum with electrical activity. Brain waves created by the coordinated firing of
huge collections of nerve cells pinball around the brain. The waves can ricochet from the front of the
brain to the back, or from deep structures all the way to the scalp and then back again. Called neuronal
oscillations, these signals are known to accompany certain mental states. Quiet alpha waves ripple
soothingly across the brains of meditating monks. Beta waves rise and fall during intense conversational
turns. Fast gamma waves accompany sharp insights. Sluggish delta rhythms lull deep sleepers, while
dreamers shift into slightly quicker theta rhythms. Researchers have long argued over whether these
waves have purposes, and what those purposes might be. Some scientists see waves as inevitable but
useless by-products of the signals that really matter — messages sent by individual nerve cells. Waves
are simply a consequence of collective neural behavior, and nothing more, that view holds. But a growing
body of evidence suggests just the opposite: instead of by-products of important signals, brain waves
are key to how the brain operates, routing information among far-flung brain regions that need to work
together. MIT’s Earl Miller is among the neuroscientists amassing evidence that waves are an essential
part of how the brain operates. Brain oscillations deftly route information in a way that allows the brain
to choose which signals in the world to pay attention to and which to ignore, his recent studies suggest.
Answer:
Brains hum with electrical activity, and these signals are known to accompany certain mental states,
which means that brain waves are key to how the brain operates, routing information among far-flung
brain regions that need to work together, so brain oscillations deftly route information in a way that
allows the brain to choose which signals in the world to pay attention to and which to ignore.
(APEUni Website / App SWT #324)
and freshwater for reuse. Human settlements develop in harmony with the natural water cycle and the
ecosystems that support it, with measures in place that reduce vulnerability and improve resilience to
water-related disasters. Integrated approaches to water resources development, management and use
and to human rights are the norm. Water is governed in a participatory way that draws on the full
potential of women and men as professionals and citizens, guided by a number of able and
knowledgeable organizations, within a just and transparent institutional framework.
Answer:
Water is at the core of sustainable development, and water contributes to improvements in social well-
being and inclusive growth, affecting the livelihoods of billions, which means that in a sustainable world
that is achievable in the near future, water and related resources are managed in support of human well-
being and ecosystem integrity in a robust economy, so water is duly valued in all its forms.
(APEUni Website / App SWT #317)
Answer:
Our Department has led research into straw as a low-impact building material and the BM TRADA’s Q-
Mark certification guarantees a straw building’s energy efficiency, fire safety, durability and weather-
resilience as the technology combines the lowest carbon footprint and the best operational CO²
performance, which enables the innovative straw walls to provide insulation and reduce fuel bills.
(APEUni Website / App SWT #225)
Original:
The National Oceanography Center (NOC) is engaged in research into the potential risks and benefits of
exploiting deep-sea mineral resources, some of which are essential for low-carbon technology, as well
as using ocean robots to estimate the environmental impact of these potential deep-sea mining
activities. Late last year the NOC led an expedition on the RRS James Cook that found enough of the
scarce element Tellurium present in the crust of a submerged volcano that, if it were all to be used in
the production of solar PV panels, could provide two-thirds of the UK's annual electricity supply.
Recently, the NOC also led an international study demonstrating deep-sea nodule mining will cause
long-lasting damage to deep-sea life, lasting at least for decades. These nodules are potato-sized
rocks containing high levels of metals, including copper, manganese and nickel. They grow very slowly on
the sea-bed, over millions of years. Although no commercial operations exist to extract these resources,
many are planned. Professor Edward Hill, Executive Director at the NOC commented, "By 2050 there will
be nine billion people on earth and attention is increasingly turning to the ocean, particularly the deep
ocean, for food, clean supplies of energy and strategic minerals. The NOC is undertaking research
related to many aspects and perspectives involved in exploiting ocean resources. This research is aimed
at informing with sound scientific evidence the decisions that will need to be taken in the future, as
people increasingly turn to the oceans to address some of society's greatest challenges."
Answer:
The National Oceanography Center (NOC) is engaged in research into the potential risks and benefits of
exploiting deep-sea mineral resources, and NOC also led an international study demonstrating deep-sea
nodule mining will cause long-lasting damage to deep-sea life, so it aimed at informing that decisions
need to be taken as people increasingly turn to the oceans to address some of society's greatest
challenges.
(APEUni Website / App SWT #190)
Answer:
Despite education technology, which must be at the service of teaching, having repeated the cycle of
hype and flop, schools around the world are using new software to "personalize" learning, helping
hundreds of millions of children stuck in dismal classes, but alternatives of the conventional model of
schooling failed to teach as many children as efficiently, with classrooms, hierarchical year-groups,
standardized curriculums and fixed timetables being still the norm for most of the world's schoolchildren.
(APEUni Website / App SWT #169)
Answer:
People who cultivate a positive mind-set perform better in the face of challenge, which is called
"happiness advantage”, supported by strong evidence of directional causality between life satisfaction
and successful business outcomes, and another common misconception is that our genetics, our
environment, or a combination of the two determines how happy we are, despite the fact that one's
general sense of well-being is surprisingly malleable.
(APEUni Website / App SWT #110)
Answer:
Within the professions, where many professions have a formalized system of ethical practices, ethical
principles become so ingrained that practitioners rarely have to think about adhering to the ethic, a set
of moral obligations defining right and wrong, and scientific ethics, deeply integrated into the way
scientists work, calls for honesty and integrity in all stages of scientific practice, which guides the
practice, with the ethical principles relating to the production of unbiased scientific knowledge.
(APEUni Website / App SWT #109)
these geographic patterns. Alexander von Humboldt, in the early 1800s, observed that widely separated
regions have structurally and functionally similar vegetation if their climates are similar. Alphonse de
Candolle hypothesized that latitudinal zones of tropical, temperate, and arctic vegetation are caused by
temperature and in 1874 proposed formal vegetation zones with associated temperature limits.
Answer:
The origin of ecology, the study of interactions of organisms among themselves and with their
environment, and climatology, the study of the physical state of the atmosphere, is attributed to Aristotle
and Theophrastus, but their modern beginnings trace back to natural history and plant geography, with
naturalists and geographers saw changes in vegetation while exploring new regions and laying the
foundation for ecology and climatology as they sought explanations for these geographic patterns.
(APEUni Website / App SWT #99)
Answer:
Greenland sharks, which are believed to be the vertebrate animals and mammals with the longest living
and one of the largest sharks, are classified as data deficient, which means that people don't know
enough to protect them from over-fishing, pollution or climate change, so an international team of
scientists is set to go to Arctic to investigate the Greenland shark longevity mystery.
(APEUni Website / App SWT #168)
problem.
Answer:
In the process of negotiation, compromise is a basic negotiation state in which both parties give up
something and get something else in order to reach an agreement that is acceptable to both, but
negotiation cannot resolve all the conflict if one party is unwilling to resolve the problem.
(APEUni Website / App SWT #162)
Answer:
Tim- Berners-Lee, the inventor of the world wide web, is a revolutionary scientist who has altered the
way people think as well as the way they live, believing the internet can foster human understanding and
even world peace, because an individual now have the same access to information as the elite; there is
not much time to sit back and reflect because society will never be the same.
(APEUni Website / App SWT #154)
Answer:
There is an expected increase in demand for various alternative resources, but people should ensure
natural world can still work well to earn the future well-being because the world population rises.
(APEUni Website / App SWT #123)
cutting back on food waste, thanks to a Knowledge Transfer Partnership (KTP) with the University of
Leeds. The idea behind the KTP was for the University, using Asda’s customer insight data, to apply its
research to identify, investigate and implement ways of helping customers to reduce their food waste.
This was one of the first times that a major retailer had tried to deliver large-scale sustainability
changes, with the two year project seen as a way for Asda to position themselves as true innovators in
this area. The campaign focused on providing customers with advice on everything from food storage
and labelling, to creative recipes for leftovers. Meanwhile, in-store events encouraged customers to
make changes in their own. They will make changes to how they deal with food waste in their own
homes, leading to an average saving of 57 pounds per customer, as well as a reduction in waste. A key
aspect of a KTP is that an associate is employed by the University to work in the firm and help deliver
the desired outcomes of the KTP. As a part of the collaboration with Asda, Laura Babbs was given the
task of driving forward the sustainability changes in the retailer. As a result of the success of her work,
Laura eventually became a permanent member of the team at Asda.
Answer:
Asda has become the first food retailer in the country to measure how much customers can save by
cutting back on food waste, with a campaign focusing on providing customers with advice on everything
from food storage and labelling, to creative recipes for leftovers, and with in-store events encouraging
customers to make changes in their own, and an associate is employed by the University to work in the
firm.
(APEUni Website / App SWT #101)
Answer:
Nutrition science is a very young science, and someday the field may produce definitive answers to the
nutritional questions that concern us, but it knows a lot less about nutrition than you would expect
because it only got started less than two hundred years ago and is today approximately where surgery
was in the year 1650.
(APEUni Website / App SWT #92)
people as much as possible, we often think that people around us are less aware. This illusion occurs
because, while we are fully aware of our own impressions and speculations about other people, we have
no idea about what those other people are thinking unless they choose to share with us, something that
rarely happens except in exceptional circumstances. To better understand what is happening, it is
important to consider the groundbreaking research by Amos Tversky and Daniel Kahneman on cognitive
biases. When people make judgments about other people in social situations, they often depend on
specific biases such as the availability heuristic, i.e., that we attach more significance to thoughts that
come to mind easily. This is why we consider thoughts about other people as being more important than
thoughts about inanimate objects. And so, as we look around us, we tend to focus our thoughts on the
people we see and what they happen to be doing. Which is why people-watching can be so addictive.
What adds to the sense that we are relatively invisible to others is that people tend to be as discreet as
possible about their people-watching. Just because other people aren't sharing their observations with
us, it's easy to pretend that they are not as observant as we are. Of course, people may share their
people-watching observations with anyone they happen to be with but, for the most part, that only
applies to something remarkable enough to comment on. For most of us, what we are seeing tends to
be extremely private and not to be shared with others.
Answer:
The invisibility cloak illusion stems from the belief that we are much more socially observant than the
people around us, which means while we watch and wonder about other people as much as possible, we
often think they are less aware, and occurs because, while we are fully aware of our own impressions
and speculations about other people, we have no idea about what those other people are thinking.
(APEUni Website / App SWT #90)
Answer:
Reviewing your work by reading it aloud can help to identify the woolliest areas, including cluttering a
sentence with too many complicated words, which can prevent its meaning from being understood
because direct words enable you to control what you are saying, and your sentences might be the most
grammatically perfect while a colloquial style is an inappropriate tone for an essay and style can be
jarring if your vocabulary is too formal or ambitious.
(APEUni Website / App SWT #88)
Answer:
Biomimicry is a new science that studies nature's best ideas and then imitates these designs and
processes to solve human problems, whose core idea is that nature has already solved many of the
problems we are grappling with, with animals, plants, and microbes being the consummate engineers,
and the more our world looks and functions like the natural world, the more likely we are to endure on
this home.
(APEUni Website / App SWT #87)
Answer:
Fish are being killed and prevented from reaching maturity, by the litter of plastic particles finding their
way into the world's oceans, as some young fish have been found to prefer tiny particles of plastic to
their natural food, effectively starving them before they can reproduce, which has been thought for
several years to be a peril for fish, with the impact of these materials hard to measure, despite being a
growing source of concern.
(APEUni Website / App SWT #86)
Answer:
Despite discussion about compulsory voting, in which proponents advocate the importance of
participation across all societal segments and opponents argue a right of abstention is more important,
compulsory voting is commonly used around the world, including several European democracies,
Australia, and most Latin American countries, and the mechanics and effects can be assessed by
evaluating results from these countries.
(APEUni Website / App SWT #75)
course. But the reader actively participates in the conjuring of the reality the book’s author is attempting
to depict. Moreover, the parts of the human brain that are central to the reasoning process are
continually activated by the very act of reading printed words: Words are composed of abstract symbols
—letters—that have no intrinsic meaning themselves until they are strung together into recognizable
sequences. Television, by contrast, presents to its viewers a much more fully formed representation of
reality—without requiring the creative collaboration that words have always demanded.
Answer:
The news marketplace of ideas dominated by television is so different from the one that emerged in the
world dominated by the printing press, because the quality of vividness experienced by television viewers
is different from that by readers, and the simulation of reality accomplished in the television medium is
much more compelling and vivid compared with the representation of reality conveyed by printed words.
(APEUni Website / App SWT #74)
Answer:
The face, battered by centuries of weathering and vandalism, like a Sufi zealot disfiguring it “to remedy
some religious errors”, with pieces of its carved stone beard and a royal cobra emblem form its
headdress found in the early 19th century, and at some point painted red, was once decked out in gaudy
comic book, and in 1817, a Genoese adventurer, attempted to dig out the Sphinx with the statue freed
from the sand.
(APEUni Website / App SWT #67)
treatment progressed, the different substances uncovered were analyzed. Grease from human handling,
a coating of carnauba wax from the early 1800s and printer's 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.
Answer:
Since the Rosetta Stone was discovered in 1799, the carved characters that covered its surface were
quickly copied, which leaves the surface of the Stone accumulated many layers of material left over from
these activities, despite attempts to remove any residue, so when the work of the Cracking Codes
exhibition at The British Museum in 1999 commenced to remove all but the original, ancient material the
stone was black with white lettering.
(APEUni Website / App SWT #69)
Answer:
Although written language, which is an ancient technology for storing and retrieving information has
engaged in improving literacy of reading and writing, it is already becoming obsolete, which indicates a
positive step in the evolution of human technology and it carries great potential for a total positive
redesign of education.
(APEUni Website / App SWT #84)
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 bio-fuel, 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
worldwide 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.
Answer:
While people can charge their plug-in vehicles overnight before driving, they can plug vehicles into
sockets allowing the power to flow from your car's batteries to the electricity grid, and an engine driving
a generator will supply alternative power, which means more people will drive plug-in vehicles in the
future because the world’s almost total dependence on petroleum-based fuels for transport is
unsustainable.
(APEUni Website / App SWT #56)
Answer:
The three major challenges facing humanity in our time are food, all of which is produced by plants as a
source of energy production, energy, a source of whose production plants are, and environmental
degradation, and they are intimately involved in climate change and a major factor in a variety of
environmental concerns, with none independent of each other, so plant research is instrumental in
addressing all of these problems and moving into the future.】
(APEUni Website / App SWT #55)
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.
Answer:
Prejudice against too-good employees is pervasive as employees who consider themselves overqualified
exhibit higher levels of discontent and declining to hire overqualified workers is perfectly legal, but the
growing pool of too-good applicants is a great opportunity for managers because overqualified workers
tend to perform better than other employees, and empowerment can mitigate any dissatisfaction they
may feel.
(APEUni Website / App SWT #50)
Answer:
Because teaching online uses the internet as the primary means of communication, teachers don’t have
to be someplace to teach and they can hold “office hours” on weekends or at night after dinner; online
learning offers more freedom for students as they can search for courses using the Web, scouring their
institution or even the world for programs, classes, and instructors that fit their needs.
(APEUni Website / App SWT #48)
Original:
A plunging oil price has dragged UK inflation to zero over recent months. But analysts say the fall in
retail prices cannot solely be attributed to oil. Discount retailers continue to steal market share from
established industry giants, taking an increased chunk of both food and non-food markets. And, as retail
analyst Nick Bubb notes, “the big supermarkets have had to respond to this by bringing down their own
‘rip off’ prices”. The result is a sector-wide fall in prices paid at the till. The growth of online retailers
has also brought prices down, in part due to the ease with which customers can compare prices and
purchase goods elsewhere if they find an item cheaper on a competitor’s site. Retailers are also reluctant
to offer different prices in their physical and online stores, according to retail analyst Richard Hyman,
which means shops are forced to cut prices on the high street. An ever-expanding range of shops is also
to blame, according to Mr. Hyman. “Overcapacity is the biggest of the issues affecting prices,” he says.
“In the last 10 years, online alone has added the equivalent of 110m square feet of trading space —
that’s roughly equal to 65 additional Westfield London shopping malls. An increase in supply of retailers,
with no increase in demand, has left the industry massively oversupplied.”
Answer:
While analysts say the fall in retail prices cannot just be attributed to the plunging oil price, discount
retailers continue to steal market share from established industry giants, and the growth of online
retailers and the increase in supply of retailers are both to blame.
(APEUni Website / App SWT #47)
Answer:
While Malaysia is one of the most pleasant countries to visit in Southeast Asia, it is also launching its
biggest-ever tourism campaign to lure more visitors this year, and people can visit lots of places, such
as the Petronas Twin Tower in Kuala Lumper, the limestone temple Batu Caves, the Sipadan island in
Sabah, the Mount Kinabalu as well as Malacca.
Answer:
House mice can be used as ideal biomarkers of human settlement to add to what is already known
through archaeological data and answer important questions where there is a lack of artifacts, which has
been supported by the research conducted by Searle of Australian mice and the DNA matching of
ancient mouse and modern mouse in the Viking study.
(APEUni Website / App SWT #35)
was ideal for the drilling of geothermal wells, reaching depths of around 3000 m, where temperatures
get up to 342°C, far higher than the usual temperature of 90°C at this depth. Water in the surrounding
rocks is converted to steam by the heat. The steam can be used to drive turbines and produce
electricity.
Answer:
With the increasing energy demands in East Africa and the current unreliable energy source, Kenya has
already adopted a geothermal energy as an alternative source and hopes to increase its supply in the
future, which is mainly generated from the thinnest continental crust on Earth where the water is
converted into steam that can be either used as a direct heat source or drive electricity production.
(APEUni Website / App SWT #30)
Answer:
Although electric cars were actually more popular than cars with an internal combustion engine as they
were more comfortable to ride in, they declined because cars fuelled by petrol increased in importance, ;
however because of economic reasons and environmental motivations, nowadays there is renewed
interest in electricity as a means of powering road vehicles.
(APEUni Website / App SWT #26)
exercise and most surgical techniques, whose nature makes them resistant to being tested in double
blind conditions. It seems strange that an account of evidence should make priori judgments that certain
claims can never be supported by ‘best evidence’. It would be different if the claims at issue were
pseudoscientific – untestable. But so far as treatments with large effects go, the claim that they are
effective is highly testable and intuitively they should receive greater support from the evidence than do
claims about treatments with moderate effects.
Answer:
While double blind is a virtue of clinical trials because it rules out the potential confounding influences of
patients and physician beliefs, viewing double blind trial as necessarily superior is problematic because it
leads to the paradox that effective experimental treatments will not be supportable by the best evidence,
but claims treatments are effective is highly testable and intuitively they should receive greater support
from the evidence than do claims about treatments with moderate effects.
(APEUni Website / App SWT #24)
Answer:
Although many people say it is not a good idea to pay your child for work around the home, it can
provide an understanding of how a business works and give them a chance to experience the things they
can do with money because children can spend the money or understand saving and investing, so that
they can learn about the power of compound interest.
(APEUni Website / App SWT #15)
being and economic burden. It’s essential that we find better ways to manage the condition in future.”
As a result, researchers are designing new artificial lenses that can be placed into a capsular bag that
stays open, instead of shrink-wrapping closed, which currently occurs. It is believed that, through the
new approach, fluid in the eye can flow around the artificial lens, therefore diluting and washing away
the cell-signaling molecules that encourage cell re-growth.
Answer:
Complications following cataract surgery are the world’s leading cause of blindness because it will cause
secondary cataract which will become even greater in terms of patients’ wellbeing and economic burden
as life expectancy increases, but researchers are designing new artificial lenses that are proved to be
able to prevent complications following cataract surgery.
(APEUni Website / App SWT #14)
Answer:
In its periodic quest for culinary identity, Australia automatically looks to its indigenous ingredients, the
foods that are native to this country, notwithstanding the lack of justification for the premise that
national dishes are founded on ingredients native to the country and the reality that Australians do not
eat indigenous foods in significant quantities, and indigenous foods are less relevant to Australian
identity today than lamb and passionfruit, both initially imported and now naturalized.
(APEUni Website / App SWT #10)
landings at Gallipoli, the discovery of gold in 1851, the disastrous Premiers' Plan designed to cope with
the Great Depression, to name just a few. Taken together, our contributors show that narrative
approaches to Australian history are not as simple as might be imagined. There is of course the issue of
what should be included and what should not be - what, after all, makes a moment or an event
sufficiently important to be included in an official narrative? Just as importantly, the moments and events
that are included in narrative histories are open to multiple interpretations. We hope this collection will
provide an important reminder to those wanting to impose a universal history curriculum for our
schoolchildren, and indeed a lesson to all Australians wishing to understand their nation's past. History is
never simple or straightforward, and it always resists attempts to make it so.
Answer:
While a moment is remembered as embodying a fundamental shift in Australia’s strategic alliance away
from Britain towards the US, there are many other important events which our contributors examine,
which suggests our contributors show that narrative approaches to Australian history are not as simple
as might be imagined, and the moments and events that are included in narrative histories are open to
multiple interpretations.
(APEUni Website / App SWT #8)
Answer:
While major athletic events are striving to neutralize their carbon footprint as part of a world-wide
climate network, they are also the latest participants to join the network and are particularly important
for inspiring further global action on the environment; organizers will put an estimated $1.75 billion into
energy conservation and renewable energy, which will be dedicated to improving transport infrastructure
and offsetting greenhouse gas emissions.
(APEUni Website / App SWT #1)
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.
Answer:
While American English is a dialect with an army because the United States is the most powerful nation
on the earth and such power brings with it influence, America’s political influence is extended through
American popular culture which also results in an expansion of its language, and the international
prominence of American English is associated with the quick development of communications
technology, which suggests American English is the most influential and powerful variety of English.
(APEUni Website / App SWT #6)
Answer:
According to the Hookham's found, there is a dramatic increase in the proportion of female purchasers
of novels and purchases of novels authored by females, and also, these female aristocrats and gentry
have accounts under their own names, and more disposal income and leisure time certainly account for
the significant increase, thus more female were able to participate in the male-dominated world of
politics.
(APEUni Website / App SWT #34)
Answer:
While Upper Paleolithic people were hunter-gathers who lived exclusively from what they could find in
nature without practicing either agriculture or herding, they did not live deep inside caves but rather
close to the foot of cliffs and hunted with spears, the bow and arrow, which suggest their living ways are
known through the remains of meals scattered around their hearths, with many tools and weapons and
the debris left over from their making.
(APEUni Website / App SWT #51)
way which, according to the government, will give "a more robust statistical measure".
Answer:
There are several reasons that contribute to a rise in crime rate including that businesses do not report
crimes against themselves for fear of lowering their public image, that citizens have no incentive to tell
police if they become victims, a new policing policy, the enactment of a new range of offenses or the
possibility of committing old offenses in a new way, and the way that criminal statistics are compiled by
the Home Office.
(APEUni Website / App SWT #21)
Write Essay
1. Replaced Textbooks
Question:
Do you think textbooks should be replaced by online resources and technological innovations?
(APEUni Website / App WE #139)
2. Overcrowding
Question:
As the urban population grows, traffic is heavy and public areas such as parking lots are packed. What
solutions do you think can address such problems?
(APEUni Website / App WE #369)
3. Nature or Nurture
Question:
Scientists have been debating the impact of nature and nurture on people’s personality and behavior.
Nature brings you inborn skills and nurture helps you obtain skills by practices. Which one do you think
has a greater influence?
(APEUni Website / App WE #368)
4. Hyper Competition
Question:
Some people claim that competition improves the quality of our private and professional lives. Others
believe that hyper competition is bad for society in general. What is your opinion?
(APEUni Website / App WE #367)
5. Financial Learning
Question:
As dealing with money is such an important skill, all children should be taught financial management at
school. Do you agree with it or not?
(APEUni Website / App WE #366)
6. Salary on Achievements
Question:
Pay-for-performance is a trend for teachers. Some people agree that it is an incentive for teachers to
link students' achievements to teachers' salaries, while others disagree. What is your opinion about
paying teachers of student achievement?
(APEUni Website / App WE #365)
8. Workplace Exercise
Question:
Exercise is essential for health, and exercise in the workplace makes employees less absent from work.
All employers should provide exercise facilities in the workplace. What is your opinion?
(APEUni Website / App WE #327)
9. Success
Question:
Some people feel that success lies in achieving professional and economic targets, while others say that
success lies in spending quality time with family and friends. What is your opinion?
(APEUni Website / App WE #363)
13. Over-competitive
Question:
What are the advantages and the disadvantages of being over-competitive to individuals and society?
(APEUni Website / App WE #167)
Question:
It is harder for children living in the 21st century than that in the past. How far do you agree with this
statement? Give your opinions.
(APEUni Website / App WE #173)
companion for lonely people. To what extent do you agree with this? Explain it with your own experience.
(APEUni Website / App WE #160)
Question:
Exams are commonly used in most schools and universities. Some people think exams should be
replaced by other forms of assessment. Do you agree or disagree?
(APEUni Website / App WE #148)
39. Concentration
Question:
Some people argue that young people should concentrate on study or work, but some people think it is
better to put energy in activities designed to broaden their experience, such as international travel and
volunteering. Discuss with examples or cases.
(APEUni Website / App WE #113)
44. Journalist
Question:
Being a journalist is one of the most difficult jobs in the world. To what extent, you agree with it?
(APEUni Website / App WE #93)
Question:
With the increase of digital information available online, the role of the library has become obsolete.
Universities should only procure the new materials rather than constantly update textbooks. Discuss both
the advantages and disadvantages of this position and give your own point of view.
(APEUni Website / App WE #86)
49. Teenagers
Question:
Teenagers should receive lessons on principles of personal finance, such as investing and debt. To what
extent do you agree with this statement?
(APEUni Website / App WE #70)
52. Television
Question:
Nowadays television has become an essential part of life. It is a medium for disseminating news and
information, and for some it acts as a companion. What is your opinion about this?
(APEUni Website / App WE #38)
53. Emigration
Question:
Many people choose to emigrate to other countries. What are the advantages and disadvantages of
living in a foreign country? Discuss with your own experience.
(APEUni Website / App WE #33)
Question:
Many education systems assess students using formal written examinations. Those kinds of exams are a
valid method. To what extent do you agree or disagree? Give examples with your own experience.
(APEUni Website / App WE #17)
Question:
As cities expand, governments should look forwards to creating better networks of public transport
available for everyone rather than building more roads for vehicle owning population. To what extent do
you agree or disagree?Give some examples or experience to support your opinion.
(APEUni Website / App WE #5)
C. Reading
Fill in the Blanks (Reading & Writing)
1. New Material (Incomplete)
Points: About the cooperation between a scientific research institute and Samsung. ... new (result /
method / conclusion) was published in academic periodicals. ... academic and industrial (researchers /
people / areas) ... the method that has been studied for years ... The new material can lower costs in
production. ... (whereby / whereas ) the performance of the material ... The material is (comparable /
preferable / compatible) with ... industrial product.
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #902)
Options:
1) cater, enlist, enrol, establish
2) practice, vocation, code, revision
3) concern, level, effect, bother
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #898)
8. Activity (Incomplete)
Points: Many (applications) were submitted ... the lady was (pleased) ... to this activity. Some money
could enable her to (attend) further activities ... she was confident to complete the writing of some
(chapters).
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #895)
Options:
1) explanations, debates, excuses, examples
2) function, use, stabilize, maintain
3) rough, rampant, incompetent, irresponsible
4) counting, understanding, correcting, valuing
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #892)
In a functioning society, crime prevention is part of everyday life. While prevention can be all-pervasive
at the grassroots, it is oddly neglected in mass media and political discourses. When politicians, talkback
radio hosts and newspaper editorialists pontificate about crime and possible remedies , it is
comparatively rare for them to mention prevention. Overwhelmingly, emphasis is on policing, sentencing
and other 'law and order' responses .
Options:
1) promote, respect, protect, enhance
2) part of, a form of, relation to, addition to
3) succeeded, has succeeded, succeed, was succeeded
4) which, it, what, as
5) recipes, remedies, comedies, commodities
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #891)
Options:
1) either, thus, otherwise, likely
2) result, prelude, degree, delegation
3) cheaper, newer, all, novel
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #888)
Options:
1) have called, calling, call, has called
2) rarely, cynically, nearing, virtually
3) end, contrary, whole, top
4) pretentious, presumptuous, ambitious, avid
5) enacted, installed, empowered, ingrained
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #887)
Options:
1) at least, fewer than, at most, less than
2) both, alike, like, otherwise
3) On the top, In spite, in the middle, in terms
4) akin to, preferred, used to, have yet to
5) stand for, take care, look after, sit about
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #886)
Options:
1) falls, depends, focuses, pelts
2) pass, cover, deposit, brochure
3) security, economic, scale, health
4) view, aim, public, category
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #881)
Options:
1) curb, harvest, support, cultivate
2) seemingly, specifically, demandingly, surprisingly
3) appear, double, countdown, unravel
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #880)
causes, the huge extinction that ended the age of the dinosaur left gaps in the ecosystem that were
subsequently filled by mammals and birds, allowing them to evolve rapidly.
Options:
1) existence, continuous, extent, expectation
2) went, to go, going, go
3) However, Because, Although, Unless
4) relative, open, additional, focused
5) irregular, gradual, spiritual, affirmative
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #878)
Options:
1) to, or, and, with
2) not being, should have not been, has not been, was not
3) consecutively, primarily, hardly, solely
4) subscribed, documented, described, prescribed
5) versed, referred, transverse, corrupted
6) Since, Because, That, While
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #877)
Options:
1) spontaneously, increasingly, contemporarily, mechanically
2) juggled, opted, balanced, altered
3) destruction, embodiment, vanity, execution
4) pride, measures, effects, allowance
5) submitting, citing, reviewing, proving
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #876)
Options:
1) commodities, choices, records, improvements
2) record, meet, choose, satisfies
3) as, whether, nor, not
4) series, range, rate, wisdom
5) actions, activities, breaches, binge
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #874)
Options:
1) discourse, epoch, dialect, acquaintance
2) deviation, besmirch, consent, ideas
3) mandatory, linguistic, legitimate, customary
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #871)
coastal regions of tropic and temperate zones, as these are areas of high rates of human population
growth and settlement. Light pollution is a threat for many species that inhabit these locations,
particularly those whose ecology or behavior depends , in some way , on natural cycles of light and dark.
Artificial light is known to have detrimental effects on the ecology of sea turtles, particularly at the
hatchling stage when they emerge from nests on natal beaches and head towards the sea. Under natural
conditions, turtles hatch predominantly at night (although some early morning and late afternoon
emergence occurs) and show an innate and well-directed orientation to the water, relying mostly on light
cues that attract them toward the brighter horizon above the sea surface. Artificial lighting on beaches is
strongly attractive to hatchlings and can cause them to move away from the sea and interfere with their
ability to orient in a constant direction. Ultimately, this disorientation due to light pollution can lead to
death of hatchlings from exhaustion, dehydration and predation .
Options:
1) exceptionally, absolutely, completely, rarely
2) in no way, in some way, by the way, in some ways
3) imposing, figuring, relying, pouring
4) them to move, it to move, which to move, that to move
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #869)
Options:
1) as long as, in order to, in spite of, as well as
2) whole, all, full, every
3) related with, together with, because of, according to
4) percentage, performance, role, belief
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #866)
Options:
1) of, about, to, for
2) summoned, observed, displayed, banned
3) statistically, barely, overwhelmingly, roughly
4) demeaning, intruding, maintaining, mourning
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #864)
Options:
1) dimensions, cases, brief, extent
2) prowess, plot, phenomenon, roundabout
3) encumbers, enhances, levels, crumples
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #862)
Options:
1) for the time being, at the same time, as ever, in good time
2) exposing, exploring, enumerating, explaining
3) ample, adult, adulthood, abundant
4) enrichment, development, adornment, adoration
5) both, few, whole, either
6) impact, impress, impair, impose
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #861)
Options:
1) detriment, solstice, enforcement, commissary
2) straggled, prompted, equated, grappled
3) challenges, hankered, allows, compelled
4) comparison, penmanship, quotient, creativity
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #514)
Options:
1) not, yet, none, both
2) opposes, remains, plots, mutates
3) variety, variation, ventilation, vibration
4) near, from, with, in
5) diverge from, add to, prevent from, form on
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #444)
the struggle for survival unless the animal also has the right behavior to go with it. Evolution shapes a
living creature’s size and color, and it also shapes an animal’s actions and behavioral patterns. The
most automatic behaviors are instinctive or in-built. In other words, the creatures can perform the
actions without having to learn what to do it by trial and error.
Options:
1) agreeable, enchanting, ordinary, appalling
2) struggle, march, game, campaign
3) shapes, pieces, features, aspects
4) dangerous, automatic, difficult, ascetic
5) attempt, doing, trial, tasting
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #442)
Options:
1) link, possibility, oddness, polarity
2) notwithstanding, ever, whereby, despite
3) indolence, evanescence, existence, transience
4) into, beyond, within, by
5) prophecy, observation, preference, stipulation
6) sufficient, proficient, efficient, scant
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #158)
countries will no longer be able to feed their people. Others, further from the equator, will still have
enough food for themselves, but none to spare .
Options:
1) prediction, predictability, predicted, predicts
2) purely, evenly, disproportionately, firmly
3) commits, directs, allows, addresses
4) spare, dispense, apply, span
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #438)
Options:
1) hijack, describe, sharpen, conserve
2) watching, waggling, snoring, staring
3) has evaporated, evaporates, evaporate, evaporating
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #435)
Options:
1) increase, increasingly, increasing, increased
2) struggled, struggling, struggles, used to struggle
3) combinations, combines, combining, combine
4) Instead, Of course, No wonder, For example
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #432)
Disadvantage in early childhood poses multiple risks to children's development. Factors such as low
socioeconomic status, long-term unemployment of parents, and social isolation may have
lasting impacts on a child's chance of reaching their full potential. Whilst not eliminating disadvantage,
preschool education can help to lessen the effects of these risk factors and can provide children with a
better start to school. However, some of these factors may also be barriers to preschool attendance for
groups that would benefit most from preschool education. In Australia, the early years of children's
education is the responsibility of many government and non-government agencies and it occurs in a
range of settings. Preschool is aimed at children around four years of age to prepare them for
compulsory schooling from the age of six years. In most states and territories, children can start full-
time schooling at five years of age, when they enrol in a kindergarten or preparatory year. In 2001, just
over half of five-year olds (57%) were at school with about a third (34%) attending preschool. While in
some states and territories children can commence preschool before they turn four, participation rates
for three-year olds are much lower than four-year olds (24% compared with 56% for four-year olds in
2001). The preschool participation rate of four-year olds in 2001 (56%) was similar to the rate in 1991
(58%).
Options:
1) impressions, impacts, affects, variations
2) lessen, hold, hoist, enlarge
3) barriers, roundabouts, accesses, assessments
4) undo, fix, tie, prepare
5) commence, alter, delay, escape
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #429)
50. Superintelligence
A superintelligence is any intellect that vastly outperforms the best human brains in practically every
field, including scientific creativity, general wisdom, and social skills. This definition leaves open how the
superintelligence is implemented : it could be in a digital computer, an ensemble of networked
computers, cultured cortical tissue, or something else. On this definition, Deep Blue is not a
superintelligence, since it is only smart within one narrow domain (chess), and even there it is not vastly
superior to the best humans. Entities such as corporations or the scientific community are not
superintelligences either. Although they can perform a number of intellectual feats of which no individual
human is capable, they are not sufficiently integrated to count as intellects, and there are many fields in
which they perform much worse than single humans. For example, you cannot have a real-time
conversation with the scientific community.
Options:
1) has implemented, is implemented, implements, implementing
2) against, to, for, by
3) barely, sufficiently, vaguely, sparsely
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #427)
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 onto 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'.
Options:
1) However, Whereas, Whichever, Wherever
2) subject to, related with, apart from, based on
3) in fact, as whole, in common, in the same terms
4) apart from, further afield, along with, out of
5) Thus, So, Therefore, But
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #421)
Options:
1) expectation, entitlement, expression, exchange
2) means, questions, stipulates, answers
3) redundancy, mission, credit, reflection
4) enriches, shows, allows, puts
5) hassle, excuse, capacity, evidence
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #407)
Options:
1) relative, closely, thus, relatively
2) dominance, proportion, strength, balance
3) figured, changed, distributed, added
4) largely, mainly, barely, evenly
5) conclusions, roundabouts, preferences, conditions
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #408)
Many people today think of culture in the way that it was thought of in Europe during the 18th and early
19th centuries. This concept of culture reflected inequalities within European societies and their colonies
around the world. This understanding of culture equates culture with civilization and contrasts both with
nature or non-civilization. According to this understanding of culture, some countries are more civilized
than others, and some people are more cultured than others. Anything that doesn’t fit into this category
is labeled as chaos or anarchy. From this perspective, culture is closely tied to cultivation, which is the
progressive refinement of human behavior . In practice, culture referred to elite goods and activities such
as haute cuisine, high fashion or haute couture, museum-caliber art and classical music. The word
cultured referred to people who knew about and took part in these activities. For example, someone who
used culture in this sense might argue that classical music is more refined than music by working-class
people, such as jazz or the indigenous music traditions of aboriginal peoples .
Options:
1) classification, concept, renovation, identity
2) cut, dismiss, fit, solve
3) blessing, curse, habit, behavior
4) argue, doubt, pretend, reveal
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #402)
Options:
1) borders, expressions, characteristics, shapes
2) frame, subordinate, planet, comet
3) members, astronomers, parties, makers
4) denounce, detect, deflect, determine
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #395)
Options:
1) of, in, above, on
2) fall, fallen, fell, falls
3) Along with, Although, Overall, However
4) consider, considered, considering, to consider
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #389)
Options:
1) rearranged, exchanged, conserved, converted
2) index, element, choice, factor
3) accounting, percentage, aggregation, division
4) comprised, uneven, neglected, augmented
5) productive, interactive, distinctive, collective
6) beneficial, immediate, moderate, modest
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #388)
Options:
1) tolerate, determine, fabricate, fancy
2) comparing, begetting, balancing, offsetting
3) consign, design, exchange, prepare
4) addition, shape, content, value
5) explained, enlarged, overrated, noted
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #386)
Options:
1) catalogue, calculation, formation, figuration
2) popularity, popular, singularity, resilience
3) emergence, descent, havoc, omniscience
4) observed, observe, had observed, were observed
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #363)
force called gravity. and is ... (theory) ... proposed by Newton. Isaac Newton, over 300 years ago a
scientist, (explained) this invisible force of gravity.
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #303)
Options:
1) principle, idea, difficulty, concept
2) people, beholder, builder, audience
3) smell, complexion, smirk, binge
4) culturally, physically, economically, individually
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #74)
Options:
1) can, do, did, does
2) across, to, through, with
3) Then, Instead, Because, Otherwise
4) followed, follows, follow, following
5) theory, principal, rule, principle
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #3)
Students at the University of Leicester have recently whizzed up a storm of eco-friendly smoothies. This
comes as part of a week of events aimed at promoting environmental initiatives on campus. A range of
events and activities were organized by the University Environment Team and the Students Union to
encourage students to waste less, recycle more , travel sustainably and save energy to contribute to the
University s target of cutting its carbon footprint by 60% by the year 2020. The highlight of the week
was a cycle-powered smoothie maker. Students rescued fruit from Leicester market which
would otherwise have been thrown away and salvaged it to create delicious smoothies.' No electricity
was used as the fruit was whizzed up in a blender attached to the back of a bike pedaled by enthusiastic
student volunteers.
Options:
1) off, on, in, at
2) few, many, more, less
3) throughout, by, through, about
4) ever, also, otherwise, never
5) No, The, None, Nonetheless
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #289)
Options:
1) developing, delivering, covering, deterring
2) can, wish, deny, doubt
3) referred, came, supposed, conferred
4) only, roughly, randomly, never
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #284)
Options:
1) different parts, these origins, further afield, specific sources
2) as well, so, how, thus
3) few loads, improper intakes, relative levels, large volumes
4) spans, proportions, scales, techniques
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #283)
Options:
1) Even, Whereas, Whether, Therefore
2) claimed, concluded, speculated, asked
3) instead, because, in spite, together
4) likely, involved, agreeable, susceptible
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #281)
Options:
1) pattern, shape, texture, iridescence
2) challenged, circled, tested, cursed
3) surprisingly, perfectly, roughly, narrowly
4) threatened, described, trained, persuaded
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #268)
periodic chart, no list of elements. To the alchemists the universe was not made of leptons, bosons,
gluons, and quarks. Instead it was made of substances, and one substance-say, walnut oil-could be just
as pure as another-say, silver-even though modern scientists would say one is heterogeneous and the
other homogeneous. Without knowledge of atomic structures, how would it be possible to tell elements
from compounds?
Options:
1) universe, metallurgy, material, spirit
2) all, completed, pure, wholesome
3) affidavits, laws, scientists, medicines
4) proper, necessary, capable, possible
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #115)
Options:
1) benefits, configurations, flaws, patterns
2) scores, expectations, additions, scales
3) fellow, sibling, companion, cohort
4) with, on, at, within
5) multiply, channel, reflect, deceive
6) transformed, confounded, revealed, conformed
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #261)
Options:
1) facet, dominance, deficit, paradox
2) many, twice, few, as
3) respect, addition, part, connection
4) time, rate, cost, coverage
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #260)
Options:
1) on, without, through, over
2) proportion, rate, age, cost
3) junction, inferiority, importance, structure
4) syntax, supremacy, authority, atheist
5) fire, clerk, offender, talent
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #259)
80. Cheating
Although not written about extensively, a few individuals have considered the concept and act of
cheating in history as well as contemporary culture. J. Barton Bowyer writes that cheating 'is the
advantageous distortion of perceived reality. The advantage falls to the cheater because the cheated
person misperceives what is assumed to be the real world'. The cheater is taking advantage of a person,
a situation, or both . Cheating also involves 'distortion of perceived reality' or what others call
'deception'. Deception can involve hiding the 'true' reality or 'showing' reality in a way intended to
deceive others.
Options:
1) journal, tale, life, history
2) misperceives, deceives, perceives, receives
3) none, both, neither, either
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #258)
81. Symbiosis
Symbiosis is a general term for interspecific interactions in which two species live together in a long-
term, intimate association. In everyday life, we sometimes use the term symbiosis to mean a relationship
that benefits both parties. However, in ecologist-speak, symbiosis is a broader concept and can
include close , lasting relationships with a variety of positive or negative effects on the participants.
Options:
1) disembarking, intractable, interspecific, homogeneous
2) suspectable, dense, intimate, sparse
3) resembles, separates, hampers, benefits
4) spiritual, complete, imaginary, close
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #255)
Options:
1) strategies, positions, structures, budgets
2) along, long, seldom, never
3) expected, mentioned, likely, forbidden
4) rudimentary, narrow, laborious, spacious
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #252)
83. Stressors
Research has suggested that major stressors in our lives are life changes , for example, moving house,
marriage or relationship breakdown. Work-related factors, including unemployment and boredom, are
also common causes of stress. Differences in personality may also play a part.
Options:
1) collections, expectations, appearances, changes
2) have included, including, include, included
3) conferences, courses, causes, pressure
4) act, play, list, give
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #251)
Options:
1) processes, procedure, developments, methods
2) confiscated, eliminated, add, remove
3) required, compulsory, essential, obligatory
4) occurs, happen, made, come
5) refined, over, end, finished
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #247)
Options:
1) determined, interactive, claimed, acceptable
2) unification, uniting, unity, unit
3) much, ever, so, very
4) earliest, first, last, latest
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #243)
Options:
1) opens, closes, appears, equals
2) On, During, Since, When
3) stationed, looked, marveled, laughed
4) separates, connects, channels, differentiates
5) aquatic, vehicular, airborne, watertight
6) denial, symbol, technique, yield
7) since, until, along, within
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #237)
divorce or separation. These changes in living arrangements and family characteristics are the outcome
of various demographic and social trends, such as declining fertility, increased rates of divorce and
longer life expectancy .
Options:
1) traditionally, respectively, tradition, traditionary
2) thought, throughout, thorough, though
3) lonely, lone, alone, full
4) devotions, commitments, characters, characteristics
5) quality, expectancy, donation, expiration
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #231)
Options:
1) variation, promotion, downturn, reduction
2) an era, the course, a tally, the year
3) calculation, bias, ratio, rate
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #226)
90. PIE
No matter whether you speak English or Urdu, Waloon or Waziri, Portuguese or Persian, the roots of
your language are the same. Proto-Indo-European (PIE) is the mother tongue _ shared by several
hundred contemporary languages, as well as many now extinct, and spoken by people who lived from
about 6,000 to 3,500 BC on the steppes to the north of the Caspian Sea. They left no written texts
and although historical linguists have, since the 19th century, painstakingly reconstructed the language
from daughter languages, the question of how it actually sounded was assumed to be permanently out
of reach. Now, researchers at the Universities of Cambridge and Oxford have developed a sound-based
method to move back through the family tree of languages that stem from PIE. They can simulate how
certain words would have sounded when they were spoken 8,000 years ago. Remarkably, at the heart of
the technology is the statistics of shape. 'Sounds have shape,' explains Professor John Aston, from
Cambridge's Statistical Laboratory. 'As a word is uttered it vibrates air, and the shape of this soundwave
can be measured and turned into a series of numbers. Once we have these stats, and the stats of
another spoken word, we can start asking how similar they are and what it would take to shift from one
to another.'
Options:
1) where, which, what, who
2) despite, until, however, although
3) would have sounded, would sound, have sounded, sound
4) cost, heart, end, moment
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #218)
Options:
1) ironically, impressively, immediately, imaginatively
2) sleep, wait, walk, time
3) quantity, case, span, consumption
4) slump, heave, slumber, perform
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #215)
92. Drones
Antarctic plants can be important indicators of subtle changes in environmental conditions, including
climate change. Traditional ground-based assessments of vegetation health are, however, not ideal in
Antarctica, as they can destroy the vegetation and are physically demanding in the harsh weather
conditions. Co-author Professor Sharon Robinson from UOW’s School of Biological Sciences said the
study found drone-based monitoring of vegetation health produced similar results to traditional
techniques, but with much greater efficiency and with no damage to the vegetation. “Drones are a
powerful tool for monitoring fragile Antarctic vegetation,” Professor Robinson said. “They could be used
to provide timely warnings about specific environmental stress events, as well as monitoring the longer-
term impacts of climate change. “These methods could also be adapted to monitor the health of other
small-stature, patchy plant communities, including in alpine or desert regions.” The researchers found
that drones equipped with sensors were able to detect vegetation health indicators more accurately than
satellite imagery. Mosses are one of the key Antarctic vegetation types that need to be monitored.
However, they tend to occur in patches among rocks, ice and soil, making it important that the imagery
used to assess their health is as accurate and spatially detailed as possible.
Options:
1) demanding, demand, demanded, having demanded
2) except, as well as, despite, as long as
3) toppled, equipped, assessed, equipping
4) made, to make, making, make
Options:
1) invitation, promotion, training, career
2) figures, gadgets, fashions, genres
3) gists, sets, tickets, aisles
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #203)
Options:
1) forged, consigned, renewed, scooped
2) suggestion, prediction, situation, device
3) coordinate, accordance, conjunction, contrast
4) denying, supposing, imposing, ensuring
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #194)
Options:
1) values, immortality, expectation, wellbeing
2) chronic, contraindicated, untouched, detectable
3) excludes, recommends, denotes, defies
4) relatively, absolutely, preferably, namely
5) charge, obtain, weigh, estimate
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #190)
Options:
1) expenditure, exhaustion, costing, exclusion
2) gratification, excitement, temptation, obsession
3) simple, complex, effortless, laborious
4) prefer, Enjoy, interest, like
5) knowledge, idea, motivation, taste
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #189)
98. Kashmiri
Two decades ago, Kashmiri houseboat-owners rubbed their hands every spring at the prospect of the
annual influx of tourists . From May to October, the hyacinth-choked waters of Dal Lake saw flotillas of
vividly painted Shikaras carrying Indian families, boho westerners, young travellers and wide-eyed
Japanese. Carpet-sellers honed their skills, as did purveyors of anything remotely embroidered while the
house boats initiated by the British Raj provided unusual accommodation. Then, in 1989, separatist and
Islamist militancy attacked and everything changed. Hindus and countless Kashmiri business people
bolted, at least 35,000 people were killed in a decade, the lake stagnated, and the houseboats rotted.
Any foreigners venturing there risked their lives , proved in 1995 when five young Europeans were
kidnapped and murdered.
Options:
1) volunteers, watchdogs, employees, tourists
2) waters, connection, atmosphere, volume
3) enacted, registered, honed, wasted
4) fell, enacted, followed, attacked
5) credits, insurances, lives, contributions
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #187)
guzzling ‐ the first two solidly in place, the other two ramping up. But the British state now goes further:
it acts in favor of sexual and racial minorities. In the case of gay men and women this means
progressively removing the legal disadvantages under which they have lived, and ensuring that society as
a whole observes the new order.
Options:
1) tolerate, believe, overlook, misunderstand
2) effects, contents, appearances, causes
3) educate, breach, divide, muster
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #186)
100. Ikebana
More than simply putting flowers in a container ,Ikebana is a disciplined art form in which nature and
humanity are brought together. Contrary to the idea of a particolored or multicolored arrangement of
blossoms, Ikebana often emphasizes other areas of the plant , such as its stems and leaves, and puts
emphasis on shape, line, and form. Though Ikebana is an expression of creativity, certain rules govern its
form. The artist's intention is shown through a piece's color combinations, natural shapes, graceful lines,
and the implied meaning of the arrangement.
Options:
1) shape, way, container, fashion
2) restricted, random, disciplined, fleeting
3) garden, arrangement, duplication, augmentation
4) flora, plant, organism, fauna
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #178)
101. Healthcare
In the fast-changing world of modern healthcare, the job of a doctor is more like the job of chief
executive. The people who run hospitals and physicians' practices don't just need to know medicine .
They must also be able to balance budgets, motivate a large and diverse staff and make difficult
marketing and legal decisions .
Options:
1) dosage, techniques, treatments, medicine
2) gang, staff, employment, mass
3) decisions, reactions, recommendations, actions
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #174)
Options:
1) wealthier, older, healthier, bigger
2) while, although, so, because
3) odd, uneven, ubiquitous, sporadic
4) whether, which, what, when
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #172)
Options:
1) however, thus, therefore, nevertheless
2) widely, slightly, badly, strongly
3) preferences, similarities, divergences, comparisons
4) pressures, factors, appearances, reasons
5) instead of, rather than, together with, other than
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #171)
Options:
1) plan, level, journey, line
2) are, have, become, became
3) stories, secrets, views, imaginations
4) distort, discuss, charge, determine
5) draw, predict, dictate, save
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #170)
rate of about 2 percent. What this means is that even without any change in the relative shares of
fossil-based and fossil-free sources in the world's energy mix, we could have 2 percent annual
economic growth without increasing carbon emissions from energy use. Of course that is not enough
to address climate change and we need more economic growth than that. It is nonetheless a stunning
number, which refutes the claim by some environmentalists that permanent economic growth is
fundamentally incompatible with finite physical resources.
Options:
1) plenty, money, value, worth
2) relevant, related, communal, relative
3) outline, address, point, highlight
4) thus, thereby, also, nonetheless
5) over, with, within, by
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #168)
Options:
1) subject to, compared with, across from, referred to
2) experiment, modification, consumption, observation
3) includes, including, included, had included
4) at all, supreme, everywhere, far and wide
5) By no means, In such cases, In this time, In this way
6) as long as, as if, as a result of, as in
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #153)
108. Psychology
Psychology as a subject of study has largely developed in the West since the late nineteenth century.
During this period there has been an emphasis on scientific thinking. Because of this, there have been
many scientific studies in psychology which explore different aspects of human nature. These include
studies into how biology (physical factors) influences human experience, how people use
their senses (touch, taste, smell, sight and hearing) to get to know the world, how people develop, why
people behave in certain ways, how memory works, how people develop language, how people
understand and think about the world, what motivates people, why people have emotions and how
personality develops. These scientific investigations all contribute to an understanding of human nature.
What do we mean by the practical applications of these studies? An understanding of psychology is
useful in many different areas in life, such as education, the workplace, social services and medicine.
This means that people who have knowledge of psychology can use or apply that knowledge in areas
such as the ones listed above.
Options:
1) emphasis, emphases, emphasize, emphasizing
2) exceed, excel, separate, explore
3) brains, skins, minds, senses
4) assumptions, correlations, investigations, stimulations
5) ideology, empowerment, understanding, equivalence
6) register, classify, use, learn
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #152)
Options:
1) in, of, on, off
2) publishing, has published, published, be publishing
3) occasionally, necessarily, previously, currently
4) causes, consequences, elements, factors
5) However, Thus, So, Instead
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #151)
Options:
1) evanescent, eternal, erupting, evolving
2) interests, proportions, appearances, durations
3) flopping, increasing, fluctuating, declining
4) predicts, suggests, examines, counts
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #148)
Options:
1) helps, stops, aids, gives
2) have, doing, do, are
3) make, put, leave, cut
4) Thus, However, Yet, Also
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #145)
Options:
1) warning, wondering, believing, defying
2) intelligent, excitable, grateful, purposeful
3) wantonly, logically, extensively, thoroughly
4) behave, prepare, apply, substitute
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #142)
Options:
1) collectively, individually, previously, pretentiously
2) introduces, deceives, reveals, conceives
3) derive, segregate, recover, prevent
4) visually, commonly, surprisingly, spiritually
5) dislocated, estimated, placed, dismounted
6) Well, Badly, Expectedly, Attentively
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #132)
Options:
1) complimentary, complex, compensatory, compendious
2) compilation, organization, eccentricity, metabolism
3) evaluations, functions, intentions, attentions
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #126)
Options:
1) However, Then, Subsequently, Consistently
2) renewed, renewable, renewing, renew
3) discriminations, similarities, boundaries, differentiations
4) simultaneous, spontaneous, resulting, derivative
5) have promised, promising, promises, would have promised
6) phase out, pull together, be widely recognized, be narrowly reduced
7) dispersion, focus, heart, center
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #125)
look; the eyes lowered in an attitude of introspection; the head cocked at an inquisitive or coquettish
angle: or the profile presented in sharp outline, emanating power of the severity like an emperor's
bust embossed on a Roman coin.
Options:
1) surmount, deplete, supplant, use
2) everlasting, endurable, luminous, advertising
3) least, few, yet, less
4) attitude, altitude, magnitude, analogue
5) expressions, exceptions, expectations, experiences
6) encircled, embodied, embossed, encrypted
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #119)
117. Radioactivity
Radioactivity was discovered in 1896 by the French physicist, Antoine Henri Becquerel. He left an
unexposed photographic plate in the dark near a sample of a uranium salt. When the plate
was developed it was found to be fogged , just as if it had been exposed to light, which was caused by
a form of radiation from the uranium. The term radioactivity was coined by Marie Curie and her husband
Pierre Curie. They worked together and showed that radioactivity was an atomic property not a chemical
change. The discovery of radioactivity won the Curies and Ekcquerel the Nobel Prize for Physics in
1903.
Options:
1) developed, unraveled, overlapped, transmitted
2) transparent, corrugated, fogged, clarified
3) concocted, coined, created, designed
4) fabrication, invention, discharge, discovery
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #93)
Options:
1) healthy, wealthy, humble, hungry
2) has it covered, makes covering, have covered, does it covering
3) taking, taken, have taken, were taking
4) idle, fun, kidding, exchange
5) enact, encourage, entitle, allow
6) win, upgrade, benefit, proceed
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #91)
119. Electrons
The electrons that orbit closest to the nucleus are strongly attracted. They are called bound electrons.
The electrons that are farther away from the pull of nucleus can be forced out of their orbits. These are
called free electrons. Free electrons can move from one atom to another. This movement is known as
electron flow. Electricity is the movement or flow of electrons from one atom to another. A condition of
imbalance is necessary to have a movement of electrons. In a normal atom, the positively charged
nucleus balances the negatively charged electrons. This holds them in orbit. If an atom loses electrons, it
becomes positive in charge. It attracts more electrons in order to get its balance. A conductor is
any material that allows a good electron flow and conducts electricity. A good conductor must be made
of atoms that give off free electrons easily. Also, the atoms must be close enough to each other so that
the free electron orbits overlap . Ignition systems use copper and aluminium wires to conduct electricity.
They allow good electron flow.
Options:
1) least, strongly, weakly, unexpectedly
2) superstition, judgement, condition, presumption
3) varied, normal, strange, singular
4) metal, molecule, chemical, material
5) collapse, diverge, appear, overlap
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #71)
Options:
1) reasons, possibilities, fractions, factors
2) durations, structures, distributions, patterns
3) benevolent, important, additional, luxurious
4) ecological, immune, medical, psychological
5) discharge, identify, dismiss, tout
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #69)
121. Retirement
For a start, we need to change our concept of 'retirement', and we need to change mind-sets arising
from earlier government policy which, in the face of high unemployment levels, encouraged mature
workers to take early retirement. Today, government encourages them to delay their retirement. We now
need to think of retirement as a phased process, where mature age workers gradually reduce their hours,
and where they have considerable flexibility in how they combine their work and non work time. We also
need to recognise the broader change that is occurring in how people work, learn, and live. Increasingly
we are moving away from a linear relationship between education, training, work, and retirement, as
people move in and out of jobs, careers, caregiving, study, and leisure. Employers of choice remove
the barriers between the different segments of people's lives, by creating flexible conditions of work and
a range of leave entitlements. They take an individualised approach to workforce planning and
development so that the needs of employers and employees can be met simultaneously . This approach
supports the different transitions that occur across the life course - for example, school to work,
becoming a parent, becoming responsible for the care of older relatives, and moving from work to
retirement.
Options:
1) contempt, confrontation, concept, conclusion
2) delay, replay, relay, drag
3) radically, disruptively, abruptly, gradually
4) hinges, barriers, nexus, bans
5) condescendingly, simultaneously, hypocritically, spontaneously
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #57)
Options:
1) why, how, what, whether
2) from, to, of, on
3) as, in, for, to
4) Meanwhile, Moreover, Thus, However
5) higher, lower, rather, other
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #56)
scribes, carefully duplicating what they read. Then we had carbon paper. Then photocopiers. Then
printers. Then the requirement for physical copy reduced. An entire stream of labour appeared and
disappeared as technology advanced. We freed ourselves of one kind of work; we just replaced
it with another.
Options:
1) Fewer, More, Less, Many
2) extension, possibility, extend, extent
3) once, some, one, a
4) with, as, for, by
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #51)
Options:
1) well, better, best, thereby
2) its use of, its using of, using of, accordance with
3) beget, do, adapt, take
4) eventually, consequently, particularly, spontaneously
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #48)
Options:
1) for, more, much, few
2) within, about, through, against
3) which, that, what, whether
4) away, out, up, off
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #43)
and successful machines and processes. The latest theories inspired greater invention, and more
technology encouraged theoretical scientists to make further discoveries in medicine, biology,
mechanics, physics, and chemistry. By 1800, the new machines had brought revolutionary changes to the
workplace, transportation and communications, and eventually to the home. Some of these inventions
simply made it easier to produce things on a large scale such as textile machines and
foundries, which produced large quantities of cloth and metal objects quickly and cheaply. But some
inventions brought completely new possibilities such as the first batteries, steamboats, and locomotives.
It would take decades for some of these inventions to make a big impact on the world. Yet their
creation, and the sheer amount of imagination and risk-taking involved, marked the beginning of a
modern, global, technologically based economy of the kind that we live in today.
Options:
1) are, have, were, had
2) those, which, that, what
3) brought, necessitated, enforced, took
4) Notwithstanding, As, Whether, Yet
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #37)
Options:
1) would work, had worked, has worked, has yet to work
2) analyzed, approved, reasoned, examined
3) inadvertently, heavily, stingily, expensively
4) started, set, ran, began
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #34)
Options:
1) achieved, denoted, glutted, afforded
2) developing, evaluating, recruiting, alerting
3) what, this, which, it
4) guiding, reassuring, heralding, concluding
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #32)
Options:
1) demonstration, definition, dimension, depression
2) views, exception, expectation, conclusion
3) substance, phenomenon, philosophy, explanation
4) tandem, powder, conjugation, power
5) interests, efforts, achievements, detestation
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #24)
131. Sydney
Sydney is becoming effective in making the best of its limited available unconstrained land. Sydney is
suitable for integrating suitable business, office, residential, retail and other development in accessible
locations so as to maximise public transport patronage and encourage walking and cycling. Also this city
can reduce the consumption of land for housing and associated urban development on the urban fringe.
For the proposed mixed business, mixed use and business park areas, there was no employment data
available for comparable areas. It is also concluded that lack of housing supply will affect affordability in
Sydney.
Options:
1) patron, patronizing, patronize, patrons, patronage
2) consumption, consumed, consume, consuming, consumable
3) comparison, compared, compare, comparing, comparable
4) affording, afford, affordable, afforded, affordability
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #22)
Options:
1) recover, respect, reconstruct, reduce
2) little, much, more, few
3) lean, cut, intrude, get
4) conveying, combination, collecting, converging
5) tune, thumb, tone, note
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #18)
Options:
1) concerned, conflicted, concentrated, corresponded
2) capability, environment, sustainability, deniability
3) disciplines, course, principals, functions
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #117)
Options:
1) leads in, raises up, sets off, goes on
2) Till now, Nevertheless, However, After all
3) have featured, had featured, featuring, features
4) endows, makes, glosses, sheers
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #111)
revision when you feel like it, you probably won't do much revision! You need a revision timetable, so you
don't keep putting it off .
Options:
1) may, never, do, hardly
2) effort, afford, affect, effect
3) support, concerns, attitudes, health
4) stopping, putting it off, giving it up, putting out
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #110)
Options:
1) However, Nevertheless, In fact, Therefore
2) Another, Others, It, Also
3) views, reviews, overviews, supervisions
4) teachers, students, performers, drivers
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #100)
Options:
1) drives, makes, motivate, activate
2) limited, unlimited, numerous, mysterious
3) take, spend, cost, save
4) parts, elements, units, components
5) improved, created, performed, changed
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #90)
The environmental impact of the global textile industry is hard to overstate. One-third of the water used
worldwide is spent fashioning fabrics. For every ton of cloth produced , 200 tons of water is polluted
with chemicals and heavy metals. An estimated 1 trillion kilowatt-hours of electricity powers the factories
that card and comb, spin and weave, and cut and stitch materials into everything from T-shirts to
towels, leaving behind mountains of solid waste and a massive carbon footprint. 'Where the industry is
today is not really sustainable for the long term,' says Shreyaskar Chaudhary, chief executive of Pratibha
Syntex, a textile manufacturer based outside Indore, India. With something of an “if you build it, they will
come” attitude, Mr.Chaudhary has steered Pratibha toward the leading edge of eco-friendly textile
production. Under his direction, Pratibha began making clothes with organic cotton in 1999. Initially, the
company couldn't find enough organic farms growing cotton in central India to supply its factories. To
meet production demands, Chaudhary's team had to convince conventional cotton farmers to change
their growing methods. Pratibha provided seeds, cultivation instruction, and a guarantee of fair-trade
prices for their crops. Today, Pratibha has a network of 28,000 organic cotton growers across the
central states of Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, and Orissa.
Options:
1) produced, has produced, producing, is produced
2) moving, leaving, processing, looking into
3) against, over, toward, behind
4) have supplied, supplying, to supply, is supplied
5) their, some, mine, them
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #87)
Options:
1) ideas, thoughts, observations, researches
2) act, importance, art, emphasis
3) decisiveness, patience, confidence, courage
4) journey, mindset, prototype, answer
5) rationale, rule, principle, logic
6) blinded, attracted, allured, deceived
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #83)
discovered that music seemed to become more important in what is called the ‘pharaonic’ period of their
history. This was the time when the Egyptian dynasties of the pharaohs were established (around 3100
BCE) and music was found in many parts of everyday Egyptian life.
Options:
1) role, game, response, situation
2) need, require, confirm, study
3) predicted, seemed, like, thought
4) period, people, place, race
5) result, range, time, group
6) contributed, established, constructed, raised
7) found at, found, found from, found in
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #98)
Options:
1) being created, to be created, creating, been created
2) as if, in part, just as, relative
3) evenly, rarely, simply, equally
4) up, across, between, down
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #80)
142. Wind
The world’s atmosphere is forever on the move. Wind is air in motion. Sometimes air moves slowly,
giving a gentle breeze. At other times it moves rapidly, creating gales and hurricanes. Gentle or fierce,
wind always starts in the same way. As the sun moves through the sky, it heats up some parts of the sea
and land more than others. The air above these hot spots is warmed, becomes lighter than the
surrounding air, and begins to rise. Elsewhere, cool air sinks, because it is heavier . Winds blow because
air squeezed out by sinking, cold air is sucked in under rising, warm air. Winds will blow wherever there
is a difference in air temperature and pressure, always flowing from high to low pressure. Some winds
blow in one place, and have a local name - North America’s chinook and France's mistral. Others are
part of a huge circulation pattern that sends winds over the entire globe.
Options:
1) Gentle, Wild, Chill, Aloud
2) cold, hot, cool, warm
3) heavier, deeper, larger, colder
4) convergence, diversity, discretion, difference
5) entire, all, total, wholesome
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #79)
143. Rudman
Rudman looks at how a poor understanding of Maths has led historians to false conclusions about the
Mathematical sophistication of early societies. Rudman's final observation-that ancient
Greece enjoyed unrivaled progress in the subject while failing to teach it at school-leads to
a radical punchline:Mathematics could be better learnt after we leave school.
Options:
1) marked, enjoyed, reviewed, expected
2) waiting, hesitating, hoping, failing
3) radical, rational, radish, radius
4) enter, graduate, leave, go
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #62)
Options:
1) offer, provide, give, take
2) elect, choose, identify, recognize
3) few, many, majority, most
4) enjoy, hesitate, want, choose
5) standards, factors, rules, criteria
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #68)
145. UNEP
Equitable and sustainable management of water resources is a major global challenge. About one third
of the world’s population lives in countries with moderate to high water stress,
with disproportionately high impacts on the poor. With respect to the current projected human
population growth, industrial development and the expansion of irrigated agriculture in the next two
years, water demand is expected to rise to levels that will make the task of providing water for
human sustenance more difficult. Since its establishment, the United Nations Environment Programme
(UNEP) has worked to promote sustainable water resources management practices
through collaborative approaches at the national, regional and global levels. After more than 30 years,
water resources management continues to be a strong pillar of UNEP’s work. UNEP is actively
participating in addressing water issues together with partner UN agencies , other organizations and
donors; they facilitate and catalyze water resource assessments in various developing countries;
implement projects that assist countries in developing integrated water resource management plans;
create awareness of innovative alternative technologies and assist the development, implementation and
enforcement of water resource management policies, laws and regulations.
Options:
1) proportionately, disproportionately, largely, scarcely
2) reactionary, current, few, past
3) substitute, sustenance, substance, sustains
4) united, cooperation, collaborative, collaborating
5) sectors, agencies, companies, businesses
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #66)
Options:
1) differ, difference, different, same
2) tremendous, evolutionary, unrivaled, enormous
3) evolution, development, growth, maturity
4) a few, little, a little, few
5) On, In, For, With
6) Although, Despite, However, Even
7) for, as, in, on
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #84)
Options:
1) anticipation, substitution, participation, definition
2) available, related, consumable, useful
3) recognition, discrimination, resolution, recreation
4) scholarship, relationship, worship, employment
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #99)
proposed that the key to understanding the origin of music is nestled snugly in the loving bond between
mother and child. In a lecture at the University of Melbourne, Richard Parncutt, an Australian-born
professor of systematic musicology, endorsed the idea that music originally spawned from ' motherese'
-- the playful voices mothers adopt when speaking to infants and toddlers. As the theory goes,
increased human brain sizes caused by evolutionary changes occurring between one and 2,000,000
years ago resulted in earlier births, more fragile infants and a critical need for stronger relationships
between mothers and their newborn babies. According to Parncutt, who is based at the University of
Graz in Austria, ' motherese' arose as a way to strengthen this maternal bond and to help ensure an
infant's survival.
Options:
1) means, convinces, shows, reflects
2) freelance, best, unanimous, leading
3) adapt, adopt, sing, forge
4) clinical, chronic, critical, fallow
5) confirm, improve, ensure, enquire
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #742)
Options:
1) transcendent, separative, distinctive, transitional
2) notable, irreversible, acceptable, possible
3) isolated, suffered, excluded, separated
4) be approached, be approaching, approaching, approach
5) likelihood, respectability, overestimation, discrimination
6) too, yet, neither, either
7) sources, consequences, reasons, orientations
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #737)
150. Conservancy
To qualify as a conservancy, a committee must define the conservancy' s boundary, elect
a representative conservancy committee, negotiate a legal constitution, prove the committee's ability
to manage funds, and produce an acceptable plan for equitable distribution of wildlife-related benefits.
Once approved, registered conservancies acquire the rights to a sustainable wildlife quota , set by the
ministry.
Options:
1) information, representative, parliamentary, management
2) attract, freeze, borrow, manage
3) moral, equitable, equal, stable
4) integrity, agreement, rights, tools
5) limit, segment, quota, quotation
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #739)
Options:
1) Without, Despite, As, With
2) excited, here, up, fit
3) wide, hard, deep, common
4) can, won't, don't, cannot
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #738)
Options:
1) guilty, capability, culpability, reliability
2) persecution, prosecution, execution, inspection
3) combined, characterized, chosen, concluded
4) method, exemplify, instance, reason
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #734)
streets designed for pedestrians and bicycles will be more pleasant than walking through those designed
for the automobile. Street-front retail and commercial establishments will prosper from the large volume
of foot traffic drawn to an environment enhanced by trees, appropriately designed 'street furniture' (
street lights, bicycle racks, benches, and the like) and other people. Rents and property costs will be
lowered as land for off-street parking is no longer required or needed.
Options:
1) reliability, sustainability, sustain, sustainable
2) reduced, enhance, seduced, reducing
3) apart, within, among, away
4) start, inject, control, prosper
5) smaller, longer, most, best
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #733)
154. APS
The APS supports the development of an Australian curriculum for psychological science. The APS
Division of Psychological Research, Education and Training, in consultation with teacher and curriculum
representatives from every State and Territory in Australia, develops a proposed framework for senior
secondary school studies in psychological science. This framework is modeled on the current senior
science curricula that were developed and published by the Australian Curriculum, Assessment and
Reporting Authority. The APS hopes that this framework will facilitate a dialogue between educators and
their local curriculum authority, with the aim of working towards a more consistent approach to the
teaching of psychological science at secondary school level and optimizing the preparation for students
going on to undergraduate psychology studies at university, as well as the effective use of psychological
principles in everyday life.
Options:
1) criticism, consultation, consolation, condolence
2) is developed, develops, had been developing, developed
3) has modeled, to model, is modeled, modeled
4) fertilize, facilitate, fascinate, conduct
5) conjunctive, constituent, consistent, consequent
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #730)
155. Computer
The purpose of this paper is to consider the claim, often made, that computer simulation exercises
provide an excellent source of speaking practice. In so doing I shall first consider the properties of
computer simulations from a theoretical point of view , then describe the experience of using a
particular simulation with a general EFL class. On the basis of this experience, and of some very
straightforward pedagogical considerations, I shall argue that the claim is justified, subject to a very
important caveat: computer simulations can form the basis of excellent speaking exercises, provided you
do not expect the computer to do all the work. Put in another way, many computer simulations
only attain their full potential as language exercises if they are integrated into a larger, planned, teacher-
managed activity.
Options:
1) shape or form, state of mind, point of view, status quo
2) used, being used, using, having been used
3) subject, reject, expect, inject
4) obtain, attain, retain, remain
5) separated, included, participated, integrated
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #728)
Options:
1) contributes, rotates, involves, requires
2) rear, slander, equip, have
3) means, study, researches, device
4) but, though, unless, therefore
5) commute, residence, life, health
6) researching, attracting, analyzing, exploiting
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #724)
157. Bones
Bones also protect the organs in our bodies. The skull protects the brain and forms the shape of the
face. The spinal cord, a pathway for messages between the brain and the body, is protected by the
backbone, or spinal column. The ribs form a cage that shelters the heart and lungs, and the pelvis helps
protect the bladder, part of the intestines, and in women, the reproductive organs. Bones are made up of
a framework of a protein called collagen , with a mineral called calcium phosphate that makes the
framework hard and strong. Bones store calcium and release some into the bloodstream when it's
needed by other parts of the body. The amounts of certain vitamins and minerals that you eat, especially
vitamin D and calcium, directly affect how much calcium is stored in the bones. Joints are
where two bones meet. They make the skeleton flexible — without them, movement would be impossible.
Joints allow our bodies to move in many ways. Some joints open and close like a hinge (such as knees
and elbows), whereas others allow for more complicated movement — a shoulder or hip joint, for
example, allows for backward, forward, sideways, and rotating movement. Joints are classified by their
range of movement: Immovable, or fibrous, joints don't move. The dome of the skull, for example, is
made of bony plates, which move slightly during birth and then fuse together as the skull finishes
growing. Between the edges of these plates are links, or joints, of fibrous tissue. Fibrous joints also hold
the teeth in the jawbone. Partially movable, or cartilaginous, joints move a little. They are linked by
cartilage, as in the spine. Each of the vertebrae in the spine moves in relation to the one above and
below it, and together these movements give the spine its flexibility. Freely movable, or synovial
(pronounced: sih-NO-vee-ul), joints move in many directions. The main joints of the body — such as
those found at the hip, shoulders, elbows, knees, wrists, and ankles — are freely movable. They are filled
with synovial fluid, which acts as a lubricant to help the joints move easily. Three kinds of freely movable
joints play a big part in voluntary movement: Hinge joints allow movement in one direction, as seen in the
knees and elbows. Pivot joints allow a rotating or twisting motion, like that of the head moving from side
to side. Ball-and-socket joints allow the greatest freedom of movement. The hips and shoulders have
this type of joint, in which the round end of a long bone fits into the hollow of another bone.
Options:
1) a, that, our, the
2) that, which, one, two
3) whole, entire, individual, main
4) All, Two, One, Three
5) with, to, during, of
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #723)
Options:
1) separate, collaborate, participate, cooperative
2) overlapped, overload, overlap, folded
3) enhanced, released, revealed, deluded
4) workshop, library, laboratory, basement
5) adventure, movement, advent, approach
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #722)
life expectancy isn't shared across the whole population though, being lower in Tasmania and the
Northern Territory, and for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.
Options:
1) rather, more, none, better
2) density, volume, progress, surface
3) that, as, while, which
4) lightly, slightly, slowly, dramatically
5) at, in, for, above
6) the most, most, a majority, a few
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #721)
Options:
1) that, as, so, whereas
2) has intended, intends, is intending, is intended
3) develops, has developed, have developed, developed
4) to, for, from, as
5) contribution, contributed, contributing, contribute
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #720)
Options:
1) distinct, transparent, oblivious, rare
2) few, several, much, many
3) hindered, embedded, enabled, facilitated
4) suggesting, demanding, telling, proposing
Options:
1) for, above, in, despite
2) composite, compound, complex, manifold
3) activities, matters, actions, routines
4) one, first, any, primary
5) certain, few, uncountable, dependent
6) species, class, types, categories
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #717)
163. Maya
The Classic era of Mayan civilisation came to an end around 900 AD. Why this happened is unclear; the
cities were probably over-farming the land, so that a period of drought led to famine. Recent
geological research supports this, as there appears to have been a 200-year drought around this time.
Options:
1) community, society, civilisation, class
2) time, period, range, phase
3) research, test, examination, exploitation
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #716)
164. Snails
Snails are not traditionally known for quick thinking, but new research shows they can make complex
decisions using just two brain cells in findings that could help engineers design more efficient robots.
Scientists at the University of Sussex attached electrodes to the heads of freshwater snails as they
searched for lettuce. They found that just one cell was used by the mollusc to tell if it was hungry or not,
while another let it know when food was present. Foodsearching is an example of goal-directed
behavior, during which an animal must integrate information about both its external environment and
internal state while using as little energy as possible. Lead researcher Professor George Kemenes, say
"This will eventually help us design the' brain' of robots based on the principle of using
the fewest possible components necessary to perform complex tasks." What goes on in our brains when
we make complex behavioral decisions and carry them out is poorly understood." Our study reveals for
the first time how just two neurons can create a mechanism in an animal's brain which drives and
optimizes complex decision-making tasks.
Options:
1) findings, results, recommendations, decisions
2) because, although, but, as
3) that, if, neither, how
4) through, about, during, to
5) least, less, fewest, fewer
6) shall, should, can, ought
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #715)
Options:
1) scared, cranky, worried, curious
2) ruptures, indications, values, structures
3) enlarge, expect, deal, experience
4) satisfied, persuaded, reassured, convinced
5) crippled, lost, disabled, dented
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #714)
166. SpaceX
SpaceX's Falcon 9 rocket lifted off from Cape Canaveral, Florida, on Friday at 1845 GMT (1445 EDT),
reaching orbit 9 minutes later. The rocket lofted an uncrewed mockup of SpaceX's Dragon capsule,
which is designed to one-day carry both crew and cargo to orbit. 'This has been a good day for SpaceX
and a promising development for the US human space flight program,' said Robyn Ringuette of SpaceX
in a webcast of the launch. In a teleconference with the media on Thursday, SpaceX's CEO, Paypal co-
founder Elon Musk, said he would consider the flight 100 percent successful if it reached orbit . ' Even if
we prove out just that the first stage functions correctly, I'd still say that's a good day for a test,' he said.
' It's a great day if both stages work correctly.' SpaceX hopes to win a NASA contract to launch
astronauts to the International Space Station using the Falcon 9. US government space shuttles, which
currently make these trips, are scheduled to be retired for safety reasons at the end of 2010.
Options:
1) replication, mockup, setting, base
2) promising, hopefully, rapid, encouraging
3) track, orbit, circulation, trajectory
4) award, contract, case, bid
5) ceased, fixed, removed, retired
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #713)
selected .They cannot put in everything: choices have to be made. Choices must similarly be made about
which aspects of the past should be formally taught to the next generation in the shape of school history
lessons. So, for example ,when a national school curriculum for England and Wales was first discussed
at the end of the 1980s, the history curriculum was the subject of considerable public and
media interest . Politicians argued about it; people wrote letters to the press about it; the Prime Minister
of the time, Margaret Thatcher, intervened in the debate. Let us think first about the question of content.
There were two main camps on this issue: those who thought the history of Britain should take pride
of place , and those who favored what was referred to as 'world history'.
Options:
1) be selected, have selected, been selected, select
2) nevertheless, shall we say, for example, likewise
3) realization, knowledge, interest, tastes
4) had intervened, intervened, was intervened, did intervene
5) location, place, culture, opportunity
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #708)
168. Scientists
Scientists make observations, have assumptions and do experiments . After these have been done, he
got his results . Then there are a lot of data from scientists. The scientists around the world have
a picture of world.
Options:
1) thinking, hyperbole, principles, assumptions
2) experiments, essays, assignments, thesis
3) proofs, evidence, numbers, results
4) digits, static, figure, data
5) look, idea, view, picture
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #705)
Options:
1) sound, expressive, erratic, soundly
2) periodically, successfully, hardly, barely
3) effect, influence, gained, diverge
4) Regardless, Despite, As, Unless
5) probabilities, factors, particles, forms
6) reinforced, suitable, lucky, linking
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #699)
governance, public policy, public administration, national security, border control and commerce ensure
that students receive a broad and current education in the range of issues which are covered under the
label of politics and international relations and commerce. In addition to acquiring
specialist knowledge and competencies in Politics and International Relations and Commerce, students
will graduate with a range of generic skills such as critical thinking, enhanced communication abilities,
problem solving and strong capacities to work with others. They will also develop ethically based and
socially responsible attitudes and behaviors.
Options:
1) workings, understanding, handing, agency
2) whole, confined, narrow, broad
3) order, according, addition, term
4) information, experience, knowledge, intelligence
5) responsible, accountability, responsibility, liable
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #642)
Options:
1) not until, until, impossible, till
2) there will have been, there may be, there had been, there being
3) should become, must become, is becoming, will become
4) is opened to, is opening up, is opened up, is opening to
5) were not possible, was not possible, could be possible, can be possible
6) squeeze, bring, muddle, stow
7) in, off, on, over
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #698)
172. Siblings
No two siblings are the same, not even identical twins. Parents often puzzle about why their children are
so different from one another. They' ll say, I brought them up all the same. They forget that
what determines our behaviour isn't what happens to us but how we interpret what happens to us, and
no two people ever see anything in exactly the same way.
Options:
1) alike, same as, identical, fraternal
2) confuse, guess, puzzle, inquiry
3) raised, brought, grew, fed
4) cause, determines, leads, limits
5) interpret, interrupt, interact, introduce
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #695)
173. Business
One distinguishing feature of business is its economic character. In the world of business, we interact
with each other not as family members, friends, or neighbors, but as buyers and sellers ,employers and
employees, and the like. Trading, for example, is often accompanied by hard bargaining, in which both
sides conceal their full hand and perhaps engage in some bluffing. And a skilled salesperson is
well- versed in the art of arousing a customer' s attention (sometimes by a bit of puffery) to clinch the
sale. Still, there is an "ethics of trading" that prohibits the use of false or deceptive claims and tricks
such as "bait-and-switch" advertising.
Options:
1) sellers, solicitors, tellers, traders
2) accompanied, customized, complimented, accomplished
3) engage, thrive, flourish, conduct
4) informed, staffed, known, versed
5) deal, motivate, make, clinch
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #692)
174. Delegation
The process of delegation comprises the decision to delegate , the briefing, and the follow-up. At each
of these points, anticipate the potential problems. When you delegate, you are not delegating the right to
perform an action ,you are delegating the right to make decisions. It is important to be flexible ,as the
person to whom you delegate may have a better and faster way of completing a job than
you. Overall responsibility for a delegated task remains with you. It is helpful to others if you can
provide constructive feedback on their performance.
Options:
1) scatter, propose, prepare, delegate
2) account, answer, arise, anticipate
3) a plan, an action, an innovator, a manner
4) selective, feasible, flexible, fixed
5) Overlapping, Overestimated, Overall, Overarching
6) rewarding, advantageous, constructive, serviceable
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #690)
175. Crime
Crime is an integral part of everyday life. It is a prominent feature in the news and is a popular subject
for fictional portrayal. Most students commencing legal studies will have some experience of crime,
whether directly, as a victim of crime or indirectly through exposure to media coverage. This means that
most offenses covered on the syllabus, such as murder, theft and rape will be familiar terms. This tends
to give students the impression that they know more about criminal law than they do about other
subjects on the syllabus. This can be a real disadvantage in terms of the academic study of criminal law
because it tends to lead students to rely on preconceived notion of the nature and scope of the offenses
and to reach instinctive, but often legally inaccurate, conclusions. It is absolutely essential to success in
criminal law that you put aside any prior knowledge of the offenses and focus on the principles of law
derived from statutes and cases. By doing this, you will soon appreciate just how much difference there
is between everyday conceptions of crime and its actuality.
Options:
1) feature, point, aspect, fuss
2) covering, covered, are covered, has covered
3) in spite of, in front of, in terms of, by comparison with
4) inevitable, responsible, essential, important
5) For, Despite, By, Without
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #689)
Options:
1) conformations, discriminations, abhorrences, degrees
2) claim, achieve, devise, meet
3) definitions, factors, advantages, defaults
4) they, them, those, that
5) obey, accelerate, test, pursue
6) Due to, Thus, Besides, Since
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #687)
177. Language
Language comes so naturally to us that it is easy to forget what a strange and miraculous gift it is. All
over the world members of our species fashion their breath into hisses and hums and squeaks and pops
and listen to others do the same .We do this, of course, not only because we like the sounds but
because details of the sounds contain information about the intentions of the person making them. We,
humans, are fitted with a means of sharing our ideas, in all their unfathomable vastness. When we listen
to speech, we can be led to think thoughts that have never been thought before and that never would
have occurred to us on our own.
Options:
1) genre, category, group, species
2) same, so, liking, correspondence
3) intentions, interventions, determinations, attempts
4) rendering, loading, turning, sharing
5) appeared, occurred, risen, opened
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #686)
178. Film
Film is where art meets commerce. As Orson Welles said:"A painter just needs a brush and the writer
just needs a pen, but the producer needs an army." And an army needs money. A producer is just like an
entrepreneur, and we raise money to make films. First, we need to find an original idea or a book or a
play and purchase the rights, then we need money to develop that idea, often not a reasonably small
sum. Besides , to commission a writer for the screenplay isn't something you would want to gamble your
own money on, so you find a partner. We are lucky here in the UK, as we have Film 4, BBC Films and the
UK Film Council, all of which are good places to develop an idea. Producing in Britain is very different to
producing in America or even Europe because the economic dynamic is different.
Options:
1) As, Likely, Unlike, Despite
2) raise, arise, rise, raze
3) Nevertheless, Or, Besides, Thus
4) them, that, those, which
5) until, even, unless, ever
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #683)
Options:
1) element, exertion, evidence, explanation
2) cultivating, early, formative, established
3) disputed, irregular, nether, settled
4) admittance, tranquility, allegiance, prestige
5) adjoining, adhering, having, declaring
6) delineated, divided, circled, deposited
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #682)
180. Allergies
What are allergies? Allergies are abnormal immune system reactions to things that are typically harmless
to most people. When you're allergic to something, your immune system mistakenly believes that this
substance is harmful to your body. Substances that cause allergic reactions- such as certain foods,
dust, plant pollen, or medicines- are known as allergens. In an attempt to protect the body, the immune
system produces IgE antibodies to that allergen. Those antibodies then cause certain cells in the body
to release chemicals into the bloodstream, one of which is histamine (pronounced: HIS-tuh-meen). The
histamine then acts on the eyes, nose, throat, lungs, skin, or gastrointestinal tract and causes the
symptoms of the allergic reaction. Future exposure to that same allergen will trigger
this antibody response again. This means that every time you come into contact with that allergen, you'll
have some form of allergy symptoms.
Options:
1) mistakenly, misleadingly, involuntarily, unprovokedly
2) protect, strengthen, equip, hedge
3) dissolve, thicken, release, crystallize
4) focuses, targets, reacts, acts
5) antigen, counter, antibody, psychological
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #680)
181. Classic
One of the most important things to remember is that "classic" does not necessarily translate to
"favorite" or "bestselling". Literature is instead considered classic when it has stood the test of time and
it stands the test of time when the artistic quality it expresses - be it an expression of life, truth, beauty,
or anything about the universal human condition - continues to be relevant and continues to inspire
emotional responses, no matter the period in which the work was written . Indeed, classic literature is
considered as such regardless of book sales or public popularity. That said, classic
literature usually merits lasting recognition - from critics and other people in a position to influence such
decisions - and has a universal appeal. And, while effective use of language as well as technical
excellence - is a must, not everything that is well-written or is characterized by technical achievement or
critical acclaim will automatically be considered a classic. Conversely, works that have not been
acknowledged or received positively by the writer's contemporaries or critics can still be considered as
classics.
Options:
1) quality, facade, bid, clime
2) written, writing, write, to write
3) regardless, lacking, devoid, careless
4) exclusively, usually, merely, consequently
5) imposingly, positively, efficiently, arguably
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #679)
182. Leadership
Leadership is all about being granted permission by others to lead their thinking. It is a bestowed moral
authority that gives the right to organize and direct the efforts of others. But moral authority does not
come from simply managing people effectively or communicating better or being able to motivate. It
comes from many sources , including being authentic and genuine, having integrity, and showing a real
and deep understanding of the business in question. All these factors build confidence. Leaders lose
moral authority for three reasons: they behave unethically , they become plagued by self-doubt and lose
their conviction, or they are blinded by power, lose self-awareness and thus lose connection with those
they lead as the context around them changes. Having said all this, it has to be assumed that if someone
becomes a leader, at some point they understood the difference between right and wrong. It is up to
them to abide by a moral code and up to us to ensure that the moment we suspect they do not, we fire
them or vote them out.
Options:
1) foundations, derivatives, outcomes, sources
2) origins, functions, elements, factors
3) falsely, outrageously, eternally, unethically
4) contempt, confirmation, connection, convection
5) abide, remain, stand, conform
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #678)
183. Artists
In the US, artists in the mid-1950s began to create a bridge to Pop. Strongly influenced by Dada and
its emphasis on appropriation and everyday objects, artists increasingly worked with collage , consumer
products, and a healthy dose of irony. Jasper Johns reimagined iconic imagery like the American flag;
Robert Rauschenberg employed silk-screen printings and found objects; and Larry Rivers used images
of mass-produced goods. All three are considered American forerunners of Pop.
Options:
1) bridge, distribution, cap, finale
2) emphasis, point, pressure, strength
3) collage, cost, disintegration, leash
4) reimagined, recalled, recycled, reviewed
5) forerunners, proponents, funders, founders
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #676)
Options:
1) attention, weight, accumulation, denotation
2) subsequences, consequences, successors, successions
3) conflicted, diverged, converged, diversified
4) disappeared, disclosed, dipped, dissipated
5) consumption, waste, misuse, splash
6) strike, kill, pounce, simulate
Options:
1) lie, place, stand, locate
2) invented, viewed, designed, discovered
3) noticeable, respectable, notable, visible
4) determination, constitution, system, group
5) planned, estimated, charted, counted
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #673)
186. Dictatorship
Dictatorship is not a modern concept. Two thousand years ago, during the period of the Roman
Republic, exceptional powers were sometimes given by the Senate to individual dictators such as Sulla
and Julius Caesar. The intention was that the dictatorship would be temporary and that it would make
it possible to take swift and effective action to deal with an emergency. There is some disagreement as
how the term should be applied today. Should it be used in its original form to describe the temporary
exercise of emergency powers? Or can it now be applied in a much broader sense as common usage
suggests?
Options:
1) exclusive, individual, inclusive, special
2) significance, intention, effort, meaning
3) patient, urgent, immediate, possible
4) agreement, treatment, treaty, disagreement
5) applied, corresponded, avoided, responded
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #669)
187. Zika
Zika is more pernicious than public health officials anticipated. At present, it is circulating in more than
50 countries. And as of mid-May, seven countries or territories have reported cases of microcephaly or
other serious birth defects linked to the virus, which is transmitted by mosquito bite, blood transfusion or
sexual contact with an infected human. It can also be passed from mother to fetus during pregnancy.
Despite Zika's vast range over almost 70 years, there is little genetic difference among the various
strains, according to an analysis by researchers at the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston.
For example, the strain currently in the Americas and another previously detected in French Polynesia are
practically indistinguishable from each other (group in white box). If the virus has changed so little over
time, why is it rearing its ugly head now? Scientists are not sure yet, but new experimental work in
mosquitoes suggests that the virus was capable of causing detrimental health effects and outbreaks all
along. Therefore, it is unlikely mutations enabled new abilities. Instead, public health officials probably did
not understand Zika's potential because the virus circulated mostly in remote locations until recently.
Options:
1) transmitted, had been transmitted, was transmitted, is transmitted
2) range, extent, number, domain
3) identical, indistinguishable, odd, different
4) shaping, pressing, causing, making
5) is circulated, circulates, are circulated, circulated
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #666)
Options:
1) overturned the fascinating image, have its modern impression, had its 18th century roots, came to
an abrupt halt
2) fuses a 5km width of, incorporates a 5km length of, expands a lot of, adds a finishing touch to
3) gives a useful understanding, afford some information, allows a good understanding, offers a
powerful insight
4) conventional woods and stuff, outdated roadside scenery, traditional landscape and forests, old-
fashioned countryside
5) big crowds, large communities, extensive collections, customized groups
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #665)
189. DNA
DNA is a molecule that does two things. First, it acts as the familial material, which is passed down from
generation to generation. Second, it directs, to a considerable extent, the construction of our bodies,
telling our cells what kinds of molecules to make and guiding our development from a single-celled
zygote to a fully formed adult. These two things are of course connected . The DNA sequences that
construct the best bodies are more likely to get passed down to the next generation because well-
constructed bodies are more likely to survive and thus to reproduce. This is Darwin's theory of natural
selection stated in the language of DNA.
Options:
1) acquired, familial, nutritional, metabolic
2) establishing, guiding, pushing, determining
3) supplanted, connected, paralleled, required
4) thus, yet, namely, nevertheless
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #662)
Options:
1) expanded, changed, flowed, extended
2) halted, heaved, described, started
3) cared, invented, developed, betrayed
4) produced, stipulated, arrived, gathered
5) forced, disrupted, adopted, adapted
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #616)
Options:
1) would have, have had, has, has had
2) significant, significance, significantly, signify
3) correspondence, economy, accordance, economist
4) ratio, addition, interest, adaption
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #647)
192. Tutankhamun
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 crews 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.
Options:
1) chaos, permanence, ecstasy, tranquillity, franchise
2) showed, founded, discovered, dismantled, accounted
3) accomplished, complimented, accompanied, affected, afflicted
4) commuted, transmitted, transported, convoy, conflated
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #639)
193. Viper
The horned desert viper's ability to hunt at night has always puzzled biologists. Though it lies with
its head buried in the sand, it can strike with great precision as soon as prey appears. Now, Young and
physicists Leo van Hemmen and Paul Friedel at the Technical University of Munich in Germany have
developed a model of the snake’s auditory system to explain how the snake 'hears' its prey without really
having the ears for it. Although the vipers have internal ears that can hear frequencies between 200 and
1000 hertz, it is not the sound of the mouse scurrying about that they are detecting. 'The snakes don't
have external eardrums ,' says van Hemmen. So unless the mouse wears boots and starts stamping, the
snake won’t hear it.'
Options:
1) hand, head, chest, feet
2) applications, system, appliance, tools
3) eyeballs, eardrums, eyes, hearings
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #637)
Options:
1) singular, equal, disproportionate, improper
2) sustainability, living, maintenance, sustenance
3) conflict, collaboration, association, merging
4) agencies, cooperates, partners, companies
5) regard, speculation, consideration, level
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #627)
for which I had waited for (another) one and half hour. No wonder we all hoped to go home straight
away.
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #617)
196. Generosity
Americans approached a record level of generosity last year. Of the $260.28bn given to charity in 2005,
76.5 percent of it came from individual donors . These people gave across the range of nonprofit bodies,
from museums to hospitals to religious organizations, with a heavy emphasis on disaster relief after the
Asian tsunami and US hurricanes. In total, Americans gave away 2.2 per cent of their household income
in 2005, slightly above the 40-year average of 2.1 per cent.
Options:
1) donors, accounts, businessmen, honors
2) analysis, imagination, emphasis, hypothesis
3) sovereignty, coverage, average, indebtedness
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #614)
Options:
1) outdoors, view, outside, scene
2) board, boat, ship, aboard
3) slight, growing, disappearing, growth
4) were become, turn, become, became
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #611)
Options:
1) punish, teach, encourage, lure
2) offer, exclusion, prepare, pre-requisite
3) rather than, instead, hardly, no longer
4) professionals, winners, leaders, teachers
5) bell, belt, management, protect
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #602)
199. Folklore
Folklore, a modern term for the body of traditional customs, superstitions, stories, dances, and songs
that have been adopted and maintained within a given community by processes of repetition is not
reliant on the written word. Along with folk songs and folktales, this broad category of cultural forms
embraces all kinds of legends, riddles, jokes, proverbs, games, charms, omens, spells, and rituals,
especially those of pre-literate societies or social classes. Those forms of verbal expression that are
handed on from one generation or locality to the next by word of mouth are said to constitute an
oral tradition .
Options:
1) activity, achievement, symbol, body
2) family, community, organization, immunity
3) experience, category, experiment, use
4) development, transmission, word, transition
5) tone, condition, prediction, tradition
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #601)
200. Zero-gravity
Researchers already know that spending long periods of time in a zero-gravity environment —such as
that inside the International Space Station (ISS) — results in loss of bone density and damage to the
body’s muscles . That’s partly why stays aboard the ISS are restricted at six months. And now, a number
of NASA astronauts are reporting that their 20/20 vision faded after spending time in space, with many
needing glasses once they returned to Earth.
Options:
1) planet, weather, climate, environment
2) enhancement, damage, gain, recovery
3) muscles, flexibility, development, action
4) allowed, excessive, timed, restricted
5) voices, smelling, vision, hearing
6) disappeared, fatigued, faded, strengthened
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #606)
Options:
1) After, Prior, Last, Before
2) campus, place, camp, college
3) projected, processed, pronounced, progressed
4) leaving, hiring, entering, having
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #590)
One city will start to attract the majority of public or private investment. This could be due
to natural advantage or political decisions. This in turn will stimulate further investment due to the
multiplier effect and significant rural-to-urban migration. The investment in this city will be at
the expense of other cities.
Options:
1) majority, minority, density, quality
2) fetal, natural, birth, neutral
3) push, operate, stimulate, give
4) significant, rather, not, so
5) experience, expanse, expense, exercise
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #589)
Options:
1) change, appeal, exhaustion, plateau
2) assumed, clarified, paid, represented
3) without, automatically, with, particularly
4) access, inaccessible, accessibility, accessible
5) produced, carried, remembered, introduced
6) expenses, expenditure, profit, revenue
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #580)
204. Anesthetics
Before effective anaesthetics, surgery was very crude and very painful. Before 1800, alcohol and opium
had little success in easing pain during operations. Laughing gas was used in 1844 in dentistry in the
USA, but failed to ease all pain and patients remained conscious. Ether (used from 1846) made patients
totally unconscious and lasted a long time. However, it could make patients cough during operations and
sick afterwards. It was highly flammable and was transported in heavy glass bottles. Chloroform (used
from 1847) was very effective with few side effects. However, it was difficult to get the dose right and
could kill some people because of the effect on their heart. An inhaler helped to regulate the dosage.
Options:
1) little, a little, few, a few
2) contained, retained, remained, released
3) has transported, was transported, had transported, have transported
4) rather than, because of, but, due
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #612)
206. Hairstyles
With their punk hairstyles and bright colors, marmosets and tamarins are among the most attractive
primates on earth. These fast-moving, lightweight animals live in the rainforests of South America. Their
small size makes it easy for them to dart about the trees, catching insects and small animals such as
lizards, frogs, and snails. Marmosets have another unusual food source - they use their chisel-like
incisor teeth to dig into tree bark and lap up the gummy sap that seeps out, leaving telltale, oval-shaped
holes in the branches when they have finished. But as vast tracts of rainforest are cleared for plantations
and cattle ranches, marmosets and tamarins are in serious danger of extinction.
Options:
1) brings, makes, takes, claims
2) originality, provenience, source, origin
3) grasses, branches, trees, roots
4) fatal, endangered, safe, danger
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #630)
207. Dog
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.
Options:
1) sequential, excessive, selective, genetic
2) dismissed, disabled, pathologies, diseases
3) little, offspring, puppy, litter
4) Hence, Moreover, Although, However
5) expected, unusual, optimal, ideal
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #585)
- especially when compared with managerial, manufacturing, and service jobs. Most sales
representatives work independently and outside the immediate presence of their sales managers.
Therefore, some form of goals needs to be in place to help motivate and guide their performance. Sales
personnel are not the only professionals with performance goals or quotas. Health care professionals
operating in clinics have daily, weekly, and monthly goals in terms of patient visits. Service personnel are
assigned a number of service calls they must perform during a set time period. Production workers in
manufacturing have output goals. So, why are achieving sales goals or quotas such a big deal? The
answer to this question can be found by examining how a firm's other departments are affected by how
well the company's salespeople achieve their performance goals. The success of the business hinges
on the successful sales of its products and services. Consider all the planning, the financial, production
and marketing efforts that go into producing what the sales force sells. Everyone depends on the sales
force to sell the company's products and services and they eagerly anticipate knowing things are going.
Options:
1) comparing, compared, having compared, compare
2) helping confuse and mislead, to help motivate and guide, help motivating and guiding, help
confuse and mislead
3) have displayed, must perform, are reforming, can take
4) leads to, hinges on, contributes to, results in
5) producing what, consuming as, protecting that, purchasing which
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #618)
209. Herbal
A herbal is a book of plants, describing their appearance, their properties and how they may be used for
preparing ointments and medicines. The medical use of plants is recorded on fragments of papyrus and
clay tablets from ancient Egypt, Samaria and China that date back 5,000 years but document traditions
far older still. Over 700 herbal remedies were detailed in the Papyrus Ebers, an Egyptian text written in
1500 BC. Around 65 BC, a Greek physician called Dioscorides wrote a herbal that was translated into
Latin and Arabic. Known as ‘De materia medica’, it became the most influential work on medicinal plants
in both Christian and Islamic worlds until the late 17th century. An illustrated manuscript copy of the text
made in Constantinople (modern-day Istanbul) survives from the sixth century. The first printed herbals
date from the dawn of European printing in the 1480s. They provided valuable information for
apothecaries, whose job was to make the pills and potions prescribed by physicians. In the next century,
landmark herbals were produced in England by William Turner, considered to be the father of British
botany, and John Gerard, whose illustrations would inspire the floral fabric, wallpaper and tile designs of
William Morris four centuries later.
Options:
1) registered, recorded, memorized, discovered
2) moved, interpreted, translated, removed
3) preserves, revives, suffers, survives
4) instructed, pointed, prescribed, determined
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #622)
a more complex selling environment. Many organizations are facing escalating costs and a growth in
customer power, which makes it necessary to allocate resources more strategically. The sales function
can provide critical customer and market knowledge to help inform both innovation and marketing.
However, the authors say that within the industry there is still uncertainty about the shape a future sales
team should take, how it should be managed, and how it fits into their organization's business model.
Options:
1) predicts, stipulates, addresses, circumscribes
2) demanding, aggressive, friendly, needy
3) which, this, that, where
4) that, there, which, this
5) applies, segregates, fits, develops
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #581)
211. Settlement
Over the last ten thousand years there seem to have been two separate and conflicting building
sentiments throughout the history of towns and cities. One is the desire to start again, for a variety of
reasons: an earthquake or a tidal wave may have demolished the settlement, or fire destroyed it, or the
new city marks a new political beginning. The other can be likened to the effect of a magnet: established
settlements attract people, who tend to come whether or not there is any planning for their arrival. The
clash between these two sentiments is evident in every established city unless its development has been
almost completely accidental or is lost in history. Incidentally, many settlements have been planned from
the beginning but, for a variety of reasons, no settlement followed the plan. A good example is
Currowan, on the Clyde River in New South Wales, which was surveyed in the second half of the 19th
century, in expectation that people would come to establish agriculture and a small port. But no one
came.
Options:
1) It, What, One, That
2) highlights, starts, marks, protrudes
3) hesitate, dislike, turn, tend
4) whereas, whatever, if, unless
5) has been surveyed, had surveyed, be surveyed, was surveyed
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #579)
Options:
1) compensates, relies, reduces, spurs
2) reducing, lowering, improving, degrading
3) controlling, diminishing, denying, regulating
4) liable, strong, powerful, reliable
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #575)
Options:
1) period, upturn, downtown, downturn
2) diverse, ubiquitous, complete, popular
3) Demonstrating, Asking, Complaining, Explaining
4) part, branch, division, sector
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #578)
Options:
1) create, conduct, produce, generate
2) gases, strain, affect, steam
3) pressure, limit, stress, press
4) separate, each, single, respectively
5) unreasonable, unrealistic, unreliable, unrivaled
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #574)
215. Pollination
According to a research conducted by Cambridge University, flowers can find their own ways to attract
insects to help them pollinate. Flowers will release an irresistible smell. A scientist and her colleagues did
an experiment in which they use fake flowers to attract bees and insects. In their experiments, they freed
many bumblebees from their origins repeatedly and got the same results.
Options:
1) strange, wired, irresistible, uncomfortable
2) friends, children, colleagues, relatives
3) dens, destinations, origins, tastes
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #571)
Options:
1) very, whole, only, total
2) for, while, but, so
3) those, their, other, all
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #559)
Options:
1) filing, claiming, winning, getting
2) constables, contenders, cooperators, contestants
3) dedicated, contributed, devoted, attributed
4) rectified, ratified, realized, recognized
5) importance, pressure, incumbency, ignorance
6) available, reliable, quality, disputable
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #554)
If after years of Spanish classes, some people still find it impossible to understand some native
speakers, they should not worry. This does not necessarily mean the lessons were wasted. Millions of
Spanish speakers use neither standard Latin American Spanish nor Castilian, which predominate in US
schools. The confusion is partly political - the Spanish-speaking world is very diverse. Spanish is the
language of 19 separate countries and Puerto Rico. This means that there is no one standard dialect.
The most common Spanish dialect taught in the US is standard Latin American. It is sometimes called
"Highland" Spanish since it is generally spoken in the mountainous areas of Latin America. While each
country retains its own accents and has some unique vocabulary, residents of countries such as Mexico,
Colombia, Peru, and Bolivia generally speak Latin American Spanish, especially in urban centers. This
dialect is noted for its pronunciation of each letter and its strong "r" sounds. This Spanish was spoken in
Spain in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries and was brought to the Americas by the early colonists.
However, the Spanish of Madrid and of northern Spain, called Castilian, developed characteristics that
never reached the New World. These include the pronunciation of "ci" and "ce" as "th." In Madrid,
"gracias" (thank you) becomes "gratheas" (as opposed to "gras-see-as" in Latin America). Another
difference is the use of the word "vosotros" (you all, or you guys) as the informal form of "ustedes" in
Spain. Castilian sounds to Latin Americans much like British English sounds to US residents.
Options:
1) usually, only, particularly, necessarily
2) evolve, proceed, precede, predominate
3) mountainous, coastal, rocky, hidden
4) accents, actions, authority, thoughts
5) elucidation, remembering, pronunciation, collection
6) normality, characteristics, problems, distinguishes
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #551)
219. Pinker
In a sequence of bestsellers, including The Language Instinct and How the Mind Works, Pinker has
argued the swathes of our mental, social and emotional lives may have originated as evolutionary
adaptations, well suited to the lives our ancestors eked out on the Pleistocene savannah. Sometimes it
seems as if nothing is immune from being explained this way. Road rage, adultery, marriage, altruism,
our tendency to reward senior executives with corner offices on the top floor, and the smaller number of
women who become mechanical engineers—all may have their roots in natural selection, Pinker claims.
The controversial implications are obvious: that men and women might differ in their inborn abilities at
performing certain tasks, for example, or that parenting may have little influence on personality.
Options:
1) regarded, described, assimilated, originated
2) prohibited, convinced, immune, protected
3) needs, roots, demands, values
4) differ, complicate, indulge, interested
5) more, some, small, little
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #544)
220. Impressionist
Impressionism was a nineteenth century art movement that began as a loose association of Paris-based
artists who started publicly exhibiting their art in the 1860s. Characteristics of Impressionist painting
include visible brush strokes, light colors, open composition, emphasis on light in its changing qualities
(often accentuating the effects of the passage of time), ordinary subject matter, and unusual visual
angles. The name of the movement is derived from Claude Monet's Impression, Sunrise (Impression,
soleil levant). Critic Louis Leroy inadvertently coined the term in a satiric review published in Le
Charivari. Radicals in their time, early Impressionists broke the rules of academic painting. They began by
giving colors, freely brushed, primacy over line, drawing inspiration from the work of painters such as
Eugene Delacroix. They also took the act of painting out of the studio and into the world. Previously, not
only still-lives and portraits, but also landscapes had been painted indoors, but the Impressionists found
that they could capture the momentary and transient effects of sunlight by painting air (in plain air).
Options:
1) emphasized, emphasis, emphatic,, emphasize
2) deriving, have derived, derive, is derived
3) inspiration, inspiring, inspired, inspire
4) act, actor, action, active
5) capture, carry, conduct, culminate
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #547)
Options:
1) food, meal, snack, diet
2) total, entire, whole, all
3) thinking, treatment, food, supplement
4) about, on, by, out
5) down, up, close, open
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #570)
Options:
1) talk, interact, play, influence
2) react, related, reimburse, relevant
3) simulate, stimulate, strike, stipulate
4) nervous, shamed, awkward, harmful
5) gifts, occasions, presents, treasures
6) harmful, thoughtful, painful, colorful
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #572)
Options:
1) merchants, metabolism, mechanisms, machinery
2) sequence, flow, array, direction
3) extent, export, express, expose
4) detection, domination, illustration, determination
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #7)
Options:
1) accommodation, combination, abbreviation, motivation
2) factors, generators, ideas, settings
3) include, including, includes, included
4) congestion, configuration, concoction, conjunction
5) intercept, intercede, interact, intersperse
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #5)
older. Now a study has found a new, but related, factor in maintaining a sharp mind—the space in which
we live. Researchers recruited almost 1,300 senior citizens, none of whom showed any signs of clinical
dementia at the start of the study. The participants had their cognitive function tested annually for up to
eight years. And they also described their living space. For example, maybe they mostly hung around
their bedroom. Perhaps they spent time in the yard. Or frequently traveled. By the end of the study, 180
people had Alzheimers. And those whose life-space narrowed in on their immediate home were almost
twice as likely to develop the condition as those who ventured out. The homebound folks also had
an increased risk of other cognitive impairments and a faster rate of cognitive decline. The research was
published in the American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry. The study's lead investigator, Bryan James of
the Rush University Medical Center in Chicago, suggests that, "Perhaps life space is an indicator of how
much we are actively engaging and challenging our cognitive abilities ."
Options:
1) plagues, life-space, trails, manes
2) distension, condition, kitten, imperfection
3) repeat, screech, increased, elite
4) suggests, consents, questionnaires, neath
5) actively, gymnastically, candidly, underhandedly
6) antipathies, densities, abilities, affinities
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #396)
Options:
1) Wirelesses, Fineness, Hypoglycaemics, Scientists
2) allergic, strophic, neurotoxic, histrionic
3) harmless, mollusks, commons, augments
4) exulted, content, published, demist
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #423)
the hiding place. And that avoidance is key: the animals' ability to remember the unpleasant shock and
avoid it is consistent with the ability to feel and remember pain. If the behavior was merely a reflex, the
critters would continue to visit the shelter. The study is in the Journal of Experimental Biology. [Also see
Nicola Stead, Painful Feelings in Crabs] The situation is likely the same with lobsters. So before you
break out the bibs and melted butter, it might be nice to put your future dinner on a little anesthetic ice.
Options:
1) massaged, clapped, splurged, disinterred
2) breech, believed, beast, fricasseed
3) previously, tediously, irremediably, immediately
4) twitchiest, shittiest, percipient, experienced
5) carnivorously, treacherously, eventually, cryptography
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #263)
Options:
1) thankfully, diversity, scantily, audacity
2) different, coincident, impressionist, inconsiderate
3) holler, propaganda, pastor, coauthor
4) separate, subjugate, waved, wage
5) pageants, maestros, microbes, sidestrokes
6) biogas, rainforests, land, rangeland
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #55)
land, 11 times more water and six times more fertilizer than the average of the other categories of
livestock. Cattle ranching also creates five times more greenhouse gas emissions. The researchers hope
this data will help consumers make informed choices and policy makers create systems that can reduce
the environmental costs of what we eat.
Options:
1) spiritual, economic, environmental, material
2) exemplify, squander, discover, purchase
3) production, corruption, consumption, inventory
4) conjectures, manufacture, emissions, purification
5) agricultural, impalpable, ungrammatical, terminal
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #25)
Options:
1) dykes, personalize, classifies, exercise
2) almshouse, turnarounds, compounds, foxhounds
3) excellency, merely, faerie, sedentary
4) groaned, feel-good, inchoate, loaned
5) wager, exchanger, behavior, regulator
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #129)
Options:
1) heritage, asset, appearance, prestige
2) statistics, standards, authorities, records
3) senses, characteristics, aspects, directions
4) experienced, expected, compensated, estimated
5) associated, favourable, comprehensive, irrevocable
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #12)
232. Cloth-making
About 10,000 years ago, people learned how to make cloth. Wool, cotton, flax, or hemp was first spun
into a thin thread using a spindle. The thread was then woven into a fabric. The earliest weaving
machines probably consisted of little more than a pair of sticks that held a set of parallel threads, called
the warp, while the cross-thread, called the weft, was inserted. Later machines called looms had rods
that separated the threads to allow the weft to be inserted more easily . A piece of wood, called the
shuttle, holding a spool of thread, was passed between the separated threads. The basic principles of
spinning and weaving have stayed the same until the present day, though during the industrial revolution
of the 18th century many ways were found of automating the processes. With new machines such as the
spinning mule, many threads could be spun at the same time, and, with the help of devices like the flying
shuttle, broad pieces of cloth could be woven at great speed.
Options:
1) doubtless, probably, possible, possibility
2) precise, accuracy, easily, accurate
3) role, principles, foundation, criteria
4) automating, slower, faster, existing
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #9)
233. Longevity
People are living longer and this longevity is good news for sales teams. It results in a much
more precise customer base for them to work from. Why we are living longer is not the issue for
anyone involved in drawing up plans to market a product. What they focus on is the fact that there are
now more age groups to target, which means that a sales pitch can be re-worked a number of times to
more exactly fit each one. For example, rather than referring simply to 'adults', there are now 'starting
adults', 'young adults' and 'established adults'. Similarly ,markets no longer talk about 'children', but tend
to refer to a fuller range of categories that includes 'kids', 'tweens', 'pre-teens' and 'teenagers'. We now
have a very diverse population in terms of age, and that can only be a bonus for business.
Options:
1) usual, precise, right, honest
2) mixed, concerned, involved, linked
3) while, by, even when, rather than
4) Even, While, Similarly, Really
5) favour, bonus, promise, desire
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #4)
234. Climate
Climate is the word we use for weather over a long period of time. The desert has a dry climate because
there is very little rain. The UK has a ‘temperate climate’, which means winters are, overall, mild
and, summers generally, don’t get too hot.
Options:
1) estimate, predict, describe, use
2) is, are, has, be
3) what, these, that, which
4) summers, winter, desert, dessert
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #11)
Options:
1) across, almost, fully, all
2) residential, residing, resident, residence
3) base, dusty, ground, earthly
4) wandering, to wander, wandered, wander
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #13)
Options:
1) drawers, drew, draws, drawn
2) prolific, pedantic, perceptive, proactive
3) in part, at least, by contrast, actually
4) those, whom, them, whose
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #2)
Options:
1) was receiving, received, had received, is received
2) led, played, done, found
3) who, they, those, which
4) As a result of, Instead of, In addition to, Regarding
(APEUni Website / App FIBRW #1)
2. Dogs (Incomplete)
Points: A long text about the relation between dogs and owners. Previously dogs' personalities were
thought to be stable. But research shows that dogs will be more and more like their owners, and if a
dog's owner changes, the dog's behaviors will change.
(APEUni Website / App RMCM #123)
6. Jails (Incomplete)
Points: About prison with a lot of numbers, including the percentage of prisoners, what crimes they have
bee imprisoned for and how long they will be kept in.
(APEUni Website / App RMCM #88)
7. (Incomplete)
Points: 要点:关于新能源公交⻋electronic buses, 提到两个公司,公司1占有市场份额的60%。 government
购买这种bus to be environmentally friendly。 选项:A: 政府为了环保购买这种bus ;(答案) B: 公司1的
market share⼤于公司2 ;(答案)
(APEUni Website / App RMCM #87)
which declared the day after Wednesday 2nd to be Thursday 14th. Prior to that cataleptic September
evening, the official British calendar differed from that of continental Europe by eleven days—that is,
September 2 in London was September 13 in Paris, Lisbon, and Berlin. The discrepancy had sprung from
Britain's continued use of the Julian calendar, which had also been the official calendar of Europe from
its invention by Julius Caesar (after whom it was named) in 45 B.C. until the decree of Pope Gregory XIII
in 1582. Caesar's calendar, which consisted of eleven months of 30 or 31 days and a 28-day February
(extended to 29 days every fourth year), was actually quite accurate: it erred from the real solar calendar
by only 11.5 minutes a year. After centuries, though, even a small inaccuracy like this adds up. By the
sixteenth century, it had put the Julian calendar behind the solar one by 10 days. In Europe, in 1582,
Pope Gregory XIII ordered the advancement of the Julian calendar by 10 days and introduced a new
corrective device to curb further error: century years such as 1700 or 1800 would no longer be counted
as leap years, unless they were (like 1600 or 2000) divisible by 400.
Question:
What factors were involved in the disparity between the calendars of Britain and Europe in the 17th
century?
Options:
A) the provisions of the British Calendar Act of 1751
B) Britain's continued use of the Julian calendar
C) the accrual of very minor differences between the calendar used in Britain and real solar events
D) the failure to include years divisible by four as leap years
E) the decree of Pope Gregory XIII
F) revolutionary ideas which had emerged from the West Indies
G) Britain's use of a calendar consisting of twelve months rather than eleven
Answer:
B, C, E
(APEUni Website / App RMCM #52)
12. Decision
Original:
By the laws of probability, most decisions made under pressure should be flawed ones, yet psychologists
have found that people routinely make correct judgments most of the time, even with limited information.
One of Gladwell's surprising points is that we can actually learn how to make better snap judgments, in
the same way that we can learn logical, deliberative thinking. But first we have to accept the idea that
thinking long and hard about something does not always deliver us better results, and that the brain
actually evolved to make us think on our feet.
Question:
Which of the following does the passage tell us about decision making?
Options:
A) The brain is designed to enable quick decision making.
B) Quick decision making can be improved.
C) Quick decision making routinely leads to error.
D) To make correct decisions we require all relevant information.
E) Thinking things through thoroughly will lead to greater success.
Answer:
A, B
Re-order Paragraphs
1. Crab
Correct Order:
1) The last time you splurged on a live lobster for dinner, you might not have given any thought to how
much the little guy was going to suffer as he boiled to death.
2) Until recently many researchers believed the crustacean nervous system too primitive to process pain.
3) Scientists at Queen's University in Belfast now think that crustaceans may be more sensitive to pain
than previously thought.
4) And they found that crabs that experienced an electric shock when they hid under a safe, dark rock
would eventually learn to avoid the hiding place.
(APEUni Website / App RO #566)
2. Age (Incomplete)
Points: Four sentences about humans not animals. One of the sentences is 'we are/ were all age/ages.'
(APEUni Website / App RO #565)
3. Project (Incomplete)
Points: Sentence 1. A boss and his employees do a project. Sentence 2. If you are ... you will be invited
to an interview. Sentence 3. We will provide you ... Sentence 4. When the project is finished, you should
hand in a ...
(APEUni Website / App RO #564)
4. Darwin
Correct Order:
1) Charles Darwin was born on 12 February 1809 into a rich and powerful family.
2) His paternal grandfather was Erasmus Darwin, a famous scientist who came up with his own theory of
evolution, while his maternal grandfather was Josah Wedgwood, of pottery fame.
3) Despite this, for the first decades of his life Darwin failed to distinguish himself, first dropping out of
medical studies in Edinburgh because he hated the sight of blood, and subsequently entering Cambridge
to study for the profession of clergyman very much as second option.
4) Yet Darwin was gaining great skill as an amateur naturalist and it was this that allow him to seize the
opportunity presented when he was offered an unpaid position as scientist on board the Beacle, a naval
surveying ship bound for the farthest corners of the globe.
5) The five-year voyage was the making of Darwin, providing him with the wealth of observations of the
natural world that established him as one of the foremost scientists of his age and provided the raw
material for his revolutionary theory.
(APEUni Website / App RO #185)
5. Ada (Incomplete)
Points: Ada was the poet Byron's daughter. Many people waited to see if Ada had the potential same as
her father's. Her mother did not want the daughter to be a person like the father since Ada's birth. So
she only cultivated the daughter's interest on maths and science.
(APEUni Website / App RO #563)
6. Travel (Incomplete)
Points: Travel is luxury and ... Until now travel has been very expensive. With the development of
accommodation, travel has become convenient.
8. Agriculture (Incomplete)
Points: NRC(NEC?) ... agriculture ... technology ... ... institution released a publication about agriculture,
then researched technologies related to agriculture ...
(APEUni Website / App RO #560)
9. E-waste (Incomplete)
Points: Many electric appliances are mentioned, including digital gadgets and MP3 players. The e-waste
will be disposed. '2021' is mentioned.
(APEUni Website / App RO #559)
12. Meerkats
Correct Order:
1) Meerkats, a small group-living mongooses in southern Africa, have been so extensively studied and
filmed that we can follow individuals through their lives like characters in an animal soap opera.
2) The Kalahari Desert meerkats, Suricata Suricatta, have been followed over generations.
3) They are so habituated to humans that they will climb on and off weighing scales when a scientist
wants to weigh an animal.
4) It is remarkable that behavior, which at one time could only be observed by dedicated field workers, is
now readily available for all of us to see.
(APEUni Website / App RO #556)
4) The same material could be used for high performance gas sensing or for catalysis to break down
organic pollutants in water.
(APEUni Website / App RO #555)
15. Locomotion
Correct Order:
1) Researchers need to understand why different forms of locomotion evolved.
2) Long-held assumptions, such as the need for energy efficiency, have already been overturned.
3) For example, a mechanical ankle brace can improve the metabolic efficiency of human walking,
implying that walking is inefficient.
4) But variation of movement is important, too: such an ankle brace holds you back if you try to skip,
gallop or skitter.
5) Similarly, legged robots struggle to deploy different gaits, just as roboticists struggle to enumerate
them.
(APEUni Website / App RO #549)
16. Mandarin
Correct Order:
1) Mandarin is the most common language in the world as it is the official language of Mainland China,
Taiwan, and one of the official languages of Singapore.
2) Thus, Mandarin is commonly referred to as ‘Chinese’.
3) But in fact, it is just one of many Chinese languages.
4) Depending on the region, Chinese people also speak Wu, Hunanese, Jiangxinese, Hakka, Min, and
many other languages.
5) Even in one province, there can be multiple languages spoken. For example, in Fujian province, you
can hear Min, Fuzhounese, and Mandarin being spoken, each being very distinct from the other.
(APEUni Website / App RO #496)
17. Plato
Correct Order:
1) Although usually remembered today as a philosopher, Plato was also one of ancient Greece's most
important patrons of mathematics.
2) Inspired by Pythagoras, he founded his Academy in Athens in 387 BC, where he stressed mathematics
as a way of understanding more about reality.
3) In particular, he was convinced that geometry was the key to unlocking the secrets of the universe.
4) The sign above the Academy entrance read: 'Let no-one ignorant of geometry enter here'.
20. Poincaré
Correct Order:
1) Poincaré had an especially interesting view of scientific induction.
2) Laws, he said, are not direct generalizations of experience; they aren’t mere summaries of the points
on the graph.
3) Rather, the scientist declares the law to be some interpolated curve that is more or less smooth and
so will miss some of those points.
4) Thus a scientific theory is not directly falsifiable by the data of experience; instead, the falsification
process is more indirect.
(APEUni Website / App RO #377)
22. Photogrammetry
Correct Order:
1) Photogrammetry involves taking hundreds of photos of an object at slightly different angles and
‘stitching’ them together to create an interactive digital 3D model.
2) The process is already being used by the University of Aberdeen’s anatomy department to create
digital models of organs and other body parts to aid teaching and learning for young doctors.
3) Now the same technology is being used to create virtual replicas of artifacts within the University’s
museum’s collections, including an ancient Egyptian mummified cat, prehistoric skulls and ancient Greek
pottery.
4) These artifacts are rarely handled as they are so fragile.
5) Photogrammetry lets the public and students get to see them close-up and in very high detail.
(APEUni Website / App RO #374)
24. History
Correct Order:
1) The people and events of the past can only be understood when viewed within the larger context in
which they existed.
2) That is not possible when historical events or topics are isolated and extracted from the web of
historic time to serve some other curricular purpose.
3) The value of history also depends upon the chronological presentation of events through time.
4) It is only through a chronological survey that students can begin to understand the process of social
and cultural change, which is one of the principal purposes of history.
(APEUni Website / App RO #370)
35. Decline(下降)
Correct Order:
1) The decline in marriage rates and increase in divorce rates has led to a decrease in the proportion of
the population that is formally married.
2) In 1986, 60% of the population aged 15 years and over were married; by 2001 this proportion had
decreased to 55%.
3) Conversely the proportion of the population aged 15 years and over who were never married increased
36. 2100-2013
Correct Order:
1) By 2100, human-induced climate change threatens to raise temperatures by 2-4℃ and push up tide-
lines by 4-6m.
2) The government has promised to help counter this global trend by reducing UK carbon emissions by
80 percent from 1990 levels by 2050.
3) And with the second largest tidal range in the world, British marine energy could play an important
role in this shift.
4) But harnessing the power of the tides is not without consequence.
5) In 2013, plans to construct a 34 billion pounds barrage across the Severn estuary were rejected after
concerns were raised about its effect on local ecosystems.
(APEUni Website / App RO #263)
children's clothes as a promising sideline with which to extract more value from their main business.
2) For example, Jean Paul Gaultier, Chloe and John Galliano have all launched children's clothes lines.
3) But for France's Bonpoint, making kids' clothing is the main business.
4) Since Bonpoint was founded 40 years ago by clothes store owner Marie-France and Bernard Cohen,
children and babies have been at the centre of the brand's development.
(APEUni Website / App RO #254)
43. O'Keeffe
Correct Order:
1) O'Keeffe never formally recorded her theories about art.
2) She did, however, leave a long trail of interviews and letters that reveal how she approached her
painting practice—and the rituals, experiences, and environments that inspired her.
3) Correspondence with her husband, photographer Alfred Stieglitz, in particular, offers a raw, honest
glimpse into O'Keeffe's creative mind.
4) The two exchanged 25,000 pages of letters between 1915 and 1946, during which time she found her
voice as an artist: first, through her flower paintings, and later, through landscapes and surrealistic still
lifes inspired by her mountainous, skull-studded surroundings in New Mexico.
(APEUni Website / App RO #250)
actors are aware of their performance as they perform it, and how much they let the character 'take
over'.
2) She asked Dutch actors to rate their own emotions and the emotions of the characters they were
playing across a range of affective states (from disgust and anxiety to tenderness and pleasure).
3) She found that positive emotions were often felt by the actors as they played those character's
emotions.
4) However, the more negative the emotion of the character, the less likely the actor would report feeling
that emotion onstage
(APEUni Website / App RO #244)
3) Our body therefore protects the organ fiercely: The central nervous system polices particles traveling
through the bloodstream and invites only the safest into our cognitive chamber.
4) This selective process occurs due to a proactive boundary known as the blood-brain barrier.
5) The barrier serves a vital role, but is also poses a tremendous challenge for scientists developing
drugs to treat brain-based disorders.
(APEUni Website / App RO #236)
50. DRM
Correct Order:
1) Due to its ability to solve all main problems associated with digital goods, Digital Rights Management
is the favorite option used by companies to tackle piracy.
2) The aim of this article is to discuss the consequences of DRM for consumers, firms and society.
3) The rationales of DRM are discussed and the expected benefits for firms are presented.
4) In contrast, consumers are shown to be likely to see few benefits in DRM.
5) The article concludes with some public policy recommendations.
(APEUni Website / App RO #235)
51. Mink
Correct Order:
1) The American mink has been present in Iceland since the 1930's and despite heavy hunting since 1939
the species has become well established.
2) The ecosystem in Iceland is simpler than in other areas where mink are found; the only other
mammalian predator is the arctic fox.
3) Direct competition between these species appears to be minimal although the arctic fox will
sometimes chase mink and disturb them while foraging.
4) Iceland is therefore an ideal place to study undisturbed feeding behaviour and ecology of mink.
(APEUni Website / App RO #234)
53. E-waste
Correct Order:
1) The global market for electrical and electronic equipment continues to expand, while the lifespan of
many products becomes shorter.
2) The current global production of e-waste is estimated to be 20-25 million tonnes per year, with most
e-waste being produced in Europe, the United States and Australasia.
3) In Europe e-waste is increasing at three to five percent a year, almost three times faster than the
total waste stream.
4) Developing countries are also expected to triple their e-waste production over the next five years.
(APEUni Website / App RO #226)
56. Turkey(⼟⽿其)
Correct Order:
1) If you want to visit Mars, visit Turkey.
2) That's where you'll find lakes so salty that the only bugs able to live there are species that could
probably survive on Mars as well.
3) For that reason, microbiologists in Turkey have surveyed the array of species that inhabit the Acigol,
Salda and Yarisli lakes.
4) They're hopeful that studying some of them will yield useful insights into the kinds of biology that
could help microbes exist on Mars or other potentially habitable planets and moons.
(APEUni Website / App RO #222)
57. Nightinggale
Correct Order:
1) The data to be reported here come from a longitudinal study of the untutored acquisition of English as
a second language by a five-year-old Japanese girl whom we shall call Uguisu, nightingale in Japanese.
2) Her family came to the United States for a period of two years while her father was a visiting scholar
at Harvard, and they took residence in North Cambridge, a working-class neighborhood.
3) The children in that neighborhood were her primary source of language input.
4) Uguisu also attended public kindergarten for two hours every day, and later elementary school, but
with no tutoring in English syntax.
(APEUni Website / App RO #219)
60. Pidgin
Correct Order:
1) In some areas, the standard chosen may be a variety that originally had no native speakers in the
country.
2) For example, in Papua New Guinea, a lot of official business is conducted in Tok Pisin.
3) This language is now used by over a million people, but it began many years earlier as a kind of
'contact' language called a pidgin.
4) A pidgin is a variety of a language (e.g. English) that developed for some practical purpose, such as
trading, among groups of people who had a lot of contact, but who did not know each other' s
languages.
(APEUni Website / App RO #216)
62. Ants
Correct Order:
1) It's often said that ants can predict impending rain and respond by changing their behavior.
2) Some people say that if you see ants building their mounds higher, or building them from different
materials, this might signal the coming of rain.
3) But is there any scientific evidence to support this piece of folk wisdom?
4) The short answer is "no", although it is a difficult question to answer partly because of the sheer
diversity of ants - there are 13,000 named species on the planet!
(APEUni Website / App RO #205)
63. Predators(捕⻝者)
Correct Order:
1) Australia's native plants and animals adapted to life on an isolated continent over millions of years.
2) Since European settlement they have had to compete with a range of introduced animals for habitat,
food and shelter.
3) Some have also had to face new predators.
4) These new pressures have also caused a major impact on our country's soil and waterways and on its
native plants and animals.
(APEUni Website / App RO #199)
2) The study includes painting, sculpture, architecture, ceramics, furniture, and other decorative objects.
3) Art history is the history of different groups of people and their culture represented throughout their
artwork.
4) Art historians compare different time periods in art history.
5) As a term, art history (its product being history of art) encompasses several methods of studying the
visual arts; in common usage referring to works of art and architecture.
(APEUni Website / App RO #62)
68. Two-and-a-half(2.5升空⽓)
Correct Order:
1) To gauge optimism and pessimism, the researchers set up an experiment involving 22 calves.
2) Before they started the experiment, they trained the calves to understand which of their choices
would lead to a reward.
3) In the training, each calf entered a small pen and found a wall with five holes arranged in a horizontal
69. EU Fishing
Correct Order:
1) The European Union has two big fish problems.
2) One is that, partly as a result of its failure to manage them properly, its own fisheries can no longer
meet European demand.
3) The other is that its governments won't confront their fishing lobbies and decommission all the
surplus boats.
4) The EU has tried to solve both problems by sending its fishermen to West Africa. Since 1979 it has
struck agreements with the government of Senegal, granting our fleets access to its waters.
5) As a result, Senegal's marine ecosystem has started to go the same way as ours.
(APEUni Website / App RO #177)
case of ARCO that I shall discuss below), the company instead denies its responsibility or else seeks to
minimize the costs.
4) In either case, either the mine site and areas downstream of it remain toxic, thereby endangering
people, or else the U.S. federal government and the Montana state government (hence ultimately all
taxpayers) pay for the cleanup through the federal Superfund and a corresponding Montana state fund.
(APEUni Website / App RO #202)
73. Protein(蛋⽩质)
Correct Order:
1) Fibers suitable for clothing have been made for the first time from the wheat protein gluten.
2) The fibers are as strong and soft as wool and silk.
3) But they are up to 30 times cheaper.
4) Narenda Reddy and Yiqi Yang, who produced the fibers at the University of Nebraska in Lincoln, say
that because they are biodegradable they might be used in biomedical applications such as surgical
sutures.
(APEUni Website / App RO #197)
74. Be Objective(保持客观)
Correct Order:
1) Experts especially journalists, inevitably find it difficult to be objective because of their culture
background.
2) Journalists tried their best not to be biased.
3) However, including every aspect of an issue is as easy as calling for every candidate to participate in
presidential debate.
4) Some aspects are not included in the reporting.
(APEUni Website / App RO #173)
77. Wagonways
Correct Order:
1) Roads of rails called Wagonways were being used in Germany as early as 1550.
2) These primitive railed roads consisted of wooden rails over which horse-drawn wagons or carts
moved with greater ease than over dirt roads. Wagonways were the beginnings of modern railroads.
3) By 1776, iron had replaced the wood in the rails and wheels on the carts.
4) In 1789, Englishman, William Jessup designed the first wagons with flanged wheels.
5) The flange was a groove that allowed the wheels to better grip the rail, this was an important design
that carried over to later locomotives.
(APEUni Website / App RO #162)
79. Birds(⻦类是好是坏)
Correct Order:
1) According to experts, feeding birds is probably the most common way in which people interact with
wild animals today.
2) More than 50 million Americans engage in the practice, collectively undertaking an unwitting
experiment on a vast scale.
3) Is what we're doing good or bad for birds?
4) Recently, researchers at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology sought to answer this question, analyzing
nearly three decades' worth of data from a winter-long survey called Project Feeder Watch.
5) Preliminary results suggest the species visiting our feeders the most are faring exceptionally well in an
age when one-third of the continent's birds need urgent conservation.
(APEUni Website / App RO #214)
83. TV Program(电视节⽬)
Correct Order:
1) Recycling electronic waste such as old computers, TVs, and monitors is a daunting challenge
considering how much technology we all use today.
2) The challenge didn't deter IU students, who persuaded the IT Services department to launch its
Electronic Waste Collection Days program.
3) On numerous dates throughout the year, students, faculty, and staff can drop off their old equipment
to be completely recycled nothing ends up in a landfill.
4) Collection days netted more than 650,000 pounds of waste in 2010.
(APEUni Website / App RO #175)
4) However, not all of the infrared radiation makes it into space; some is absorbed by gases in the
atmosphere and is reradiated back to Earth's surface.
5) A greenhouse gas is one that absorbs infrared radiation and then reradiates some of this radiation
back to Earth.
(APEUni Website / App RO #129)
87. Advertisements
Correct Order:
1) Advertisements introduce us to new products or remind us of the existence of ones we already know
about.
2) Supposing you wanted to buy a washing machine, it is more than likely you would obtain details
regarding performance, price, etc., from an advertisement.
3) Lots of people pretend that they never read advertisements, but this claim may be seriously doubted.
4) It is hardly possible not to read advertisements these days.
(APEUni Website / App RO #98)
5) Specifically, green tea may prevent the oxidation of LDL cholesterol (the “bad” type), which, in turn,
can reduce the buildup of plaque in arteries, the researchers wrote.
(APEUni Website / App RO #57)
91. Pilot
Correct Order:
1) After finishing first in his pilot training class, Lindbergh took his first job as the chief pilot of an airmail
route operated by Robertson Aircraft Co. of Lambert Field in St. Louis, Missouri.
2) He flew the mail in a de Havilland DH-4 biplane to Springfield, Peoria and Chicago, Illinois.
3) During his tenure on the mail route, he was renowned for delivering the mail under any circumstances.
4) After a crash, he even salvaged stashes of mail from his burning aircraft and immediately phoned
Alexander Varney, Peoria's airport manager, to advise him to send a truck.
(APEUni Website / App RO #49)
out" idea.
3) Who could create a house for $300 and if it was possible, why hadn't it been done before?
4) Nonetheless, they closed their blog with a challenge: "We ask chief executives, governments, NGOs,
foundations: Are there any takers?"
(APEUni Website / App RO #41)
96. Sojourner
Correct Order:
1) More recent missions to Mars include the hugely successful Mars Pathfinder, which landed a small
‘rover’ called Sojourner on the surface to explore a region where there may once have been life.
2) Sojourner has now been effectively switched off, but lasted almost twelve times its expected lifetime.
3) Similarly the lander, which imaged several areas around the landing site (dubbed the Carl Sagan
Memorial site) and took atmospheric measurements, lasted a good deal longer than expected.
4) The only unfortunate thing to have arisen from the mission is the naming of the rocks at the landing
site (including everything from Scooby Doo to Darth Vader).
(APEUni Website / App RO #29)
97. Inuit
Correct Order:
1) Jean Briggs has worked with the Inuit of the Canadian Arctic and has described how, within these
communities, growing up is largely seen as a process of acquiring thought, reason and understanding
(known in Inuit as ihuma).
2) Young children don't possess these qualities and are easily angered, cry frequently and are incapable
of understanding the external difficulties facing the community, such as shortages of food.
3) Because they can’t be reasoned with, and don’t understand, parents treat them with a great deal of
tolerance and leniency.
4) It’s only when they are older and begin to acquire thought that parents attempt to teach them or
discipline them.
(APEUni Website / App RO #24)
98. Mission
Correct Order:
1) Early in 1938, Mario de Andrade, the municipal secretary of culture here, dispatched a four- member
Folklore Research Mission to the northeastern hinterlands of Brazil on a similar mission.
2) The intention was to record as much music as possible as quickly as possible, before encroaching
influences like radio and cinema began transforming the region’s distinctive culture.
3) They recorded whoever and whatever seemed to be interesting: piano carriers, cowboys, beggars,
voodoo priests, quarry workers, fishermen, dance troupes and even children at play.
4) But the Brazilian mission’s collection ended up languishing in vaults here.
(APEUni Website / App RO #15)
102. Motivation
Correct Order:
1) The job of a manager in the workplace is to get things done through the employees.
2) In order to do this , the manager should be able to motivate its employees.
3) However, this easier said than done.
4) Motivation practice and theory are difficult, complex subjects touching on several disciplines .
(APEUni Website / App RO #35)
Options:
therefore, participants, revisions, thus, another, either, reviews, performers
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #865)
2. Pidgins
Pidgins are languages that are born after contact between at least two languages. As many pidgins
developed during the period of empire and international trade, one of the language parents was
frequently a European language such as French or English, and the other language parent was the
language of the people with whom the Europeans were trading or whom they were colonizing. Usually
one of the languages provided the majority of vocabulary items and the other provided the grammatical
structure. When pidgins become learned as a mother tongue, they become known as creoles. I am not
going to discuss pidgins and creoles and contact languages as such in this book in any depth .
Options:
depth, bartering, trading, known, relation, fair, consonant, vocabulary
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #864)
3. English Language
With about one and a half billion non-native speakers, English has become the world's own language.
Such dominance has its downside, of course. There are now about 6,800 languages left in the world,
compared with perhaps twice that number back at the dawn of agriculture. Thanks in part to the rise of
über-languages, most importantly English, the remaining languages are now dying at the rate of about
one a fortnight. Want to learn Busuu, anyone? Then you'd better head to Cameroon fast, before one of
the language's last eight speakers kicks the bucket (as the Busuu-nese presumably doesn't say).
Options:
more, reign, relation, twice, part, rate, dominance, margin
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #863)
4. Evolution (Explanation)
In The Origin of Species, Darwin provided abundant evidence that life on Earth has evolved over time,
and he proposed natural selection as the primary mechanism for that change. He observed that
individuals differ in their inherited traits and that selection acts on such differences, leading
to evolutionary change. Although Darwin realized that variation in heritable traits is a prerequisite
for evolution , he did not know precisely how organisms pass heritable traits to their offspring. Just a
few years after Darwin published The Origin of Species, Gregor Mendel wrote a groundbreaking paper
on inheritance in pea plants. In that paper, Mendel proposed a model of inheritance in which organisms
transmit discrete heritable units (now called genes) to their offspring. Although Darwin did not know
about genes, Mendel’s paper set the stage for understanding the genetic differences on which evolution
is based .
Options:
form, growth, rough, differ, evolutionary, evolution
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #862)
6. Chemistry (Explanation)
Chemistry is a logical science. You can master the essential concepts in any order , but it’s probably
best to start from the top and work your way down, since many concepts build on understanding units,
conversion, and how atoms and molecules interact.
Options:
order, margin, top, essential, direction, roundabout
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #860)
8. Mail (Incomplete)
Points: A mail or fax is received, hand-written and sent to others. ... grammar ...
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #858)
9. Thesis (Incomplete)
Points: About thesis. Arguments are needed. Options: sober, slender.
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #857)
10. Electrons
The electrons that orbit closest to the nucleus are strongly attracted . They are called bound electrons.
The electrons that are farther away from the pull of nucleus can be forced out of their orbits . These are
called free electrons. Free electrons can move from one atom to another. This movement is known as
electron flow. Electricity is the movement or flow of electrons from one atom to another.
Options:
orbits, sustained, forced, attracted, disclosed, angles
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #856)
Points: A short text with just three blanks. Teeth are used to (cut) food ... ( ) ... in childhood we
(gradually) change teeth ...
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #855)
Options:
dangle, tramp, abruptly, spread, smoothly, cruise, sustained, conducted
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #845)
Options:
research, time, argument, civilization, period, urbanization
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #844)
point in their careers where they know they want to shake things up, but they don't know exactly what
they want to do with their professional lives," says Stacy Blackman, an MBA admissions consultant based
in Los Angeles. "If that's the case with you, look at other criteria : culture, teaching method, location, and
then pick a place that’s a good fit for you with a strong general management program. Super-defined
career goals don’t have to be a part of this process."
Options:
standards, except, hold, offer, choose, deprive, minority, want, majority, criteria
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #843)
Options:
monopolize, rating, value, presence, evaluate, abolish, process
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #841)
Options:
underachievement, phased, reversal, make, undergone, coincidence, deceit, recovery, hitch
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #679)
Options:
editorials, knowledge, analyzing, announce, project, using, content, reports
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #618)
Options:
end, main, revise, share, teem, downsize, mingle, bare
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #616)
Options:
involved, dreamed, discriminated, interpreted, forsook, system, series
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #615)
Options:
origin, communities, phase, brought, complex, hefty, paddle, dawn, keep, connections
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #610)
Options:
required, covering, achievement, sustainability, leading, repulsed, detail, history, declaration
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #598)
Mischel is the creator of the marshmallow test, one of the most famous experiments in the history of
psychology, which is often cited as evidence of the importance of self-control. In the original test, which
was administered at the Bing Nursery School, at Stanford, in the nineteen-sixties, Mischel's team would
present a child with a treat (marshmallows were just one option) and tell her that she could either eat the
one treat immediately or wait alone in the room for several minutes until the researcher returned, at
which point she could have two treats. The promised treats were always visible and the child knew that
all she had to do to stop the agonizing wait was ring a bell to call the experimenter back – although in
that case , she wouldn't get the second treat. The longer a child delayed gratification, Mischel found –
that is, the longer she was able to wait – the better she would fare later in life at numerous measures of
what we now call executive function. She would perform better academically, earn more money, and be
healthier and happier. She would also be more likely to avoid a number of negative outcomes, including
jail time, obesity, and drug use .
Options:
frequently, perform, immediately, achieve, case, topic
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #597)
Options:
skyrocketed, stylized, accused, framed, remained, grew, retrospected, recommended
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #596)
Options:
deliberate, random, bare, influenced, further, determine, hampered, measure
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #583)
Options:
via, towards, both, from, variation, differences, either, remains, tends
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #592)
Options:
concern, outbreaks, success, applications, production
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #579)
Options:
mimicking, logic, supportive, defensive, credible, repeating
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #576)
Options:
fame, category, appreciation, analysis, comparison, concepts, objectives
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #572)
Options:
curriculum, sonnet, cycle, should, bonnet, program, might, ceiling
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #571)
Options:
level, gratification, emphasize, taste, prefer, expenditure, laborious, expensive, meet
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #570)
Options:
manage, appropriate, exquisite, equitable, representative, legislative
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #564)
outside factors may be influential in determining both color preferences and the way that they are
expressed or suppressed. Current fashions in clothes and accessories, gender-stereotyping and peer-
group pressure may all play a significant part. Boys in particular may be reluctant to admit to any strong
preferences for colors other than those of favorite football teams, because color awareness may be
regarded by their peer-group as feminine.
Options:
widely, however, other than, therefore, factors, thoroughly, counters, rather than
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #552)
Options:
made up, resembling, considering, more, each, fell into, rather, combined
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #546)
Options:
same, unscientific, sickness, those, such, some, terrific, review
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #539)
Options:
need, period, showed, established, rank, seemed, history, space, role
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #486)
Options:
soared, concrete, distinguished, urban, whether, dense, whereas, emerged, native, overwhelming
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #480)
Options:
ratings, status, demands, collectors, artists, money
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #429)
Options:
rise, assemblies, changes, reigns, generate, engineer, executive
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #411)
Options:
addition, focus, background, low, differ, context, massive, reduction, contribute
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #408)
48. Marriage
Marriage is a big step in anyone's life and there is an argument to be made against getting married too
early. As any newlywed couple knows, there is a huge amount of financial pressure
associated with marriage. Firstly, the wedding reception and honeymoon cost you an arm and a leg. Then
there's the matter of home loans, rent and energy bills. If you're looking to start a family, your child's
education is another thing you need to save up for .Teenagers should probably find a proper job before
deciding to tie the knot .
Options:
tangle, for, cost, throughout, knot, with, in, against
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #463)
Options:
authority, traditional, earner, appreciated, protested, challenged
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #427)
Options:
leaving, supply, toward, off, designed, produced, lagging, fund
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #410)
economy -- the amount of energy it takes to produce one dollar's worth of income -- keeps falling, at a
rate of about 2 percent. What this means is that even without any change in the relative shares of
fossil-based and fossil-free sources in the world's energy mix, we could have 2 percent annual
economic growth without increasing carbon emissions from energy use. Of course that is not enough
to address climate change and we need more economic growth than that. It is nonetheless a stunning
number, which refutes the claim by some environmentalists that permanent economic growth is
fundamentally incompatible with finite physical resources.
Options:
nonetheless, address, irrelevant, index, merge, worth, relative, however, with, by
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #407)
Options:
interest, practice, fiasco, rate, infamous, payments, postage, monthly
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #404)
Options:
objects, current, limb, hunters, tail, engine
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #401)
Options:
forwent, up, never, caused, could, around
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #399)
57. Rudman
Rudman looks at how a poor understanding of Maths has led historians to false conclusions about the
Mathematical sophistication of early societies. Rudman's final observation-that ancient
Greece enjoyed unrivaled progress in the subject while failing to teach it at school-leads to
a radical punchline: Mathematics could be better learnt after we leave school.
Options:
rational, leave, radical, belittled, attend, enjoyed, failing, falling
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #395)
Options:
sign, circular, entire, engagement, partly, signal, arrangement, square
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #387)
Options:
sets, elements, status, career, figures
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #385)
Options:
relationship, efficient, roles, separation, shares, participation, recognition, available
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #377)
61. Chemistry
Chemistry is an extremely important topic in physiology. Most physiological processes occur as
the result of chemical changes that occur within the body. These changes include the influx/efflux of
ions across a neuron's membrane, causing a signal to pass from one end to the other. Other examples
include the storage of oxygen in the blood by a protein as it passes through the lungs
for usage throughout the body.
Options:
result, prerequisite, situation, signal, usage, storage
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #376)
62. Conservancy
To qualify as a conservancy, a committee must define the conservancy's boundary, elect
a representative conservancy committee, negotiate a legal constitution, prove the committee's ability
to manage funds, and produce an acceptable plan for equitable distribution of wildlife-related benefits.
Once approved, registered conservancies acquire the rights to a sustainable wildlife quota , set by the
ministry.
Options:
equitable, authoritative, representative, deposit, rights, quotation, infringements, quota, irresistible,
manage
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #366)
Options:
such as, according to, likely to, thanks to, exactly, rarely, probably
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #359)
Options:
characteristics, imagine, astronomers, pilots, detect, weight, planet
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #357)
Options:
profits, leadership, needs, decision, market, pleas
Options:
experiments, picture, process, results, measure, experiences, data
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #343)
68. Folklore
Folklore, a modern term for the body of traditional customs, superstitions, stories, dances, and songs
that have been adopted and maintained within a given community by processes of repetition is not
reliant on the written word . Along with folk songs and folktales, this broad category of cultural forms
embraces all kinds of legends, riddles, jokes, proverbs, games, charms, omens, spells, and rituals,
especially those of pre-literate societies or social classes. Those forms of verbal expression that are
handed on from one generation or locality to the next by word of mouth are said to constitute an
oral tradition .
Options:
book, regime, body, tradition, community, art, category, word
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #341)
Options:
guarantor, kingdom, tariff, shareholder, passage, owner
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #336)
70. Eutrophication
Eutrophication is a process when bodies of water accumulate to a high nutrient level due to extensive
fertilizer in the soil. The water becomes overly enriched with minerals and nutrients which induce
excessive growth of algae and other aquatic species which may deplete minerals in the water, thus
endanger other species.
Options:
reach, deplete, accumulate, destroy, maximize, enriched, inadvertent
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #332)
Options:
weigh, already, unwilling, fuss, account, seldom, shift
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #330)
Options:
direct, apply, engage, concentrate, practice
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #317)
Options:
appear, builds, mess, variety, like, entails, suggests, occurs
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #310)
74. Dance
Dance has played an important role in many musicals. In some cases , dance numbers are included as an
excuse to add to the color and spectacle of the show, but dance is more effective when it forms an
integral part of the plot . An early example is Richard Rodgers On Your Toes(1936) in which the story
about classical ballet meeting the world of jazz enabled dance to be introduced in a way that enhances ,
rather than interrupts the drama.
Options:
punctuates, plot, itineraries, judgement, enhances, cases
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #309)
Options:
arrangement, emergency, location, positions, borders, range, services, straightforward, connections, far-
reaching
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #308)
76. Coffee
Coffee is enjoyed by millions of people every day and the 'coffee experience' has become a staple of our
modern life and culture . While the current body of research related to the effects of
coffee consumption on human health has been contradictory, a study in the June issue of
Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety, which is published by the Institute of Food
Technologists (IFT), found that the potential benefits of moderate coffee drinking outweigh the risks in
adult consumers for the majority of major health outcomes considered.
Options:
costs, cult, consumption, cares, outcomes, expenditure, benefits, culture
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #307)
Options:
situations, member, assignments, attendance, roster, instructor, semester
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #306)
Options:
curiosity, solutions, oblivious, caution, functions, angles, consequences, obvious
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #304)
Options:
incompetent, function, provision, understanding, predicting, mixed, ignored, explanations, prerequisites
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #302)
80. Accounting
While accounting focuses on the day-to-day management of financial reports and records across the
business world, finance uses this same information to project future growth and to analyze expenditure
in order to strategize company finances. So finance degree students will likely be more interested in
financial strategy and control, while accounting degree students will be more focused on
professional principles and processes, used in order to manage numbers rather than influence them.
Options:
analyze, credits, exceptions, allegation, reports, principles, strategy, influence
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #300)
81. Concentration
Some students say that they need complete quiet to read and study. Others study best in a crowded,
noisy room because the noise actually helps them concentrate. Some students like quiet music
playing; others do not. The point is, you should know the level of noise that is optimal for your own
studying. However, one general rule for all students is that the television seems to be more of a
distraction than music or other background noise, so leave the TV off when you are reading or
studying. Also , don't let yourself become distracted by computer games, email, or Internet surfing.
Options:
leads, others, remain, leave, counterparts, Also, However, helps
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #298)
Options:
time, authority, demote, establish, concern, egregious, efficient, practice
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #295)
Options:
accumulated, inspired, early, irrelevant, closing, missing
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #292)
Options:
recruits, recommends, exploit, chronic, preferably, medicine, affordably, physical, obtain, wellbeing
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #291)
Options:
demand, forecast, communicative, complex, cost, furnish, greatly, collectively
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #289)
Options:
unwittingly, commonly, retrieve, section, arduously, rehabilitate, episode, scientifically
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #283)
87. Lithium
The lightest of any solid element, lithium has, until now, played a modest role in industry. Silvery in color,
and softer than lead, it has been used mainly as an alloy of aluminum, a base for automobile grease, and
in the production of glass and ceramics. It is so unstable that it is never found in its pure form in nature.
Lithium floats on water -- or, rather ,it skitters wildly about, trailing a vapor cloud of hydrogen, until it
dissolves.
Options:
rather, production, unstable, modest, unknown, even, intuition, until
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #282)
Options:
content, with, genuine, visual, explain, communicated, since, made-up, each
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #280)
Options:
processes, precision, skills, involve, humanity, participate, wills, community
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #279)
90. Trees
Trees, as ever, are or should be at the heart of all discussions on climate change. The changes in carbon
dioxide, in temperature, and in patterns of rainfall will each affect them in many ways, and each
parameter interacts with all the others, so between them, these three main variables present a
bewildering range of possibilities.
Options:
interacts, variables, discussions, chat, variations, notes
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #277)
Options:
proportions, stagnating, evolving, statistics, increasing, article, incidents, decreasing
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #275)
Options:
work, collaborated, designed, genres, actors, examples
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #272)
changes are fine as long as they're well and truly in the past. Paradoxically, we can be curious about
word origins and the stories behind the structure we find in our language, but we experience a queasy
distaste for any change that might be happening right under our noses. There is a certain lack of
consistency. There are even language critics who are convinced that English is dying, or if not dying at
least being progressively crippled through long years of mistreatment.
Options:
curious, crippled, convinced, experience, structure, expect, loss, lack, change
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #271)
Options:
charity, tenacity, skill, rouse, raised, recognize, beg, money, earned
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #270)
Options:
hour, as, second, more, slower, with, to, faster
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #269)
96. Investment
One city will start to attract the majority of public or private investment. This could be due
to natural advantage or political decisions. This, in turn, will stimulate further investment due to the
multiplier effect and significant rural-to-urban migration. The investment in this city will be at
the expense of other cities.
Options:
some, significant, fare, natural, stimulate, disguise, majority, expense, best, important
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #268)
97. Ozone
Clones of an Eastern cottonwood ( Populus deltoides) in the Bronx and other city spots grew to double
the biomass of clones planted outside small towns upstate or on Long Island, says Jillian Gregg, now of
the Environmental Protection Agency's western-ecology division in Corvallis, Ore. The growth gap comes
from ozone damage, she and her New York colleagues report. Ozone chemists have known
that concentrations may spike skyscraper high in city air, but during a full 24 hours, rural trees actually
get a higher cumulative ozone exposure from urban pollution that blows in and lingers. A series of new
experiments now shows that this hang-around ozone is the overwhelming factor in tree growth, the
researchers say in the July 10 Nature. "This study has profound importance in showing us most vividly
that rural areas pay the price for urban pollution," says Stephen P. Long of the University of Illinois at
Options:
pay, urban, oxygen, ozone, rural, gaps, spend, overwhelming, concentrations, planted, necessary,
protected
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #267)
98. Moth
Why are moths fatally attracted to the light? One solution is the old glib theory that the moths are trying
to use the flame to navigate. This explanation does not tell us, however , why it is that in many species
only males are thus attracted, and in a few, only females. What's more , if moths need to navigate, they
must be from a migrating species. Yet most of the time such moths are not migrating. Indeed most
species do not migrate at all and thus have no need of navigation.
Options:
What's more, One solution, less, This explanation, improvement, question, however, so, Yet
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #263)
Options:
costs, units, company, allowance, spends, amount, debt, collect, rent
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #175)
100. Revision
Timing is important for revision. Have you noticed that during the school day you get times when you
just don't care any longer? I don't mean the lessons you don't like, but the ones you find usually OK, but
on some occasions you just can't be bothered with it. You may have other things on your mind, be tired,
restless, or looking forward to what comes next. Whatever the reason, that particular lesson doesn't get
100 percent effort from you. The same is true of revision. Your mental and physical attitudes are
important. If you try to revise when you are tired or totally occupied with something else, your revision
will be inefficient and just about worthless. If you approach it feeling fresh, alert and happy, it will be so
much easier and you will learn more, faster. However, if you make no plans and just slip in a little bit of
revision when you feel like it, you probably won't do much revision! You need a revision timetable so you
don't keep putting it off .
Options:
may, getting it wrong, attitudes, putting it off, down, can, effort, health
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #261)
Options:
Options:
painting, bones, part, city, tools, examining, notches, weapons
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #253)
Options:
implements, linguistic, disclosure, speech, facts, discourse, tools, ideas
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #251)
Options:
thoughts, experience, optimizes, memory, strategies, polishes
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #250)
105. Fingerprint
Fingerprints can prove that a suspect was actually at the scene of a crime. As long as a human entered a
crime scene, there will be traces of DNA. DNA can help the police to identify an individual to crack a
case. An institute in London can help preserve DNA and be used to match with the samples taken from
the crime scenes.
Options:
retain, prove, preserve, determine, evidence, identify, samples
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #248)
106. Recruitment
Finding challenging or rewarding employment may mean retraining and moving from a stale or boring job
in order to find your passion and pursue it. The idea is to think long range and anticipate an active
lifestyle into later years --perhaps into one' s 80s or 90s. Being personally productive may now mean
anticipating retiring in stages. This might indicate going to an alternate plan should a current career end
by choice or economic chance.
Options:
passion, plan, rewarding, willing, direction, emotion
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #247)
Options:
decreasing, double, surprisingly, oppose, support, necessarily, people, acidification, human
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #246)
108. Donors
Americans approached a record level of generosity last year. Of the $260.28bn given to charity in 2005,
76.5% of it came from individual donors . These people gave across the range of non-profit bodies,
from museums to religious organizations , with a heavy emphasis on disaster relief after the Asian
tsunami and US hurricanes. In total, Americans gave away 2.2% of their household income in 2005,
slightly above 40-year average of 2.1 percent.
Options:
emphasis, all, indebtedness, average, organizations, companies, donors
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #244)
Options:
most, talkative, skill, celebrated, casual, reason, best
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #242)
Options:
demonstrated, separates, signifies, concerned, connected, democratizing, heralded, leapfrogging,
Options:
physically, difficulty, truth, prejudice, audience, smirk, wink, mentally
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #237)
112. Viper
The horned desert viper's ability to hunt at night always has puzzled biologists. Though it lies with
its head buried in the sand, it can strike with great precision as soon as prey appears. Now, Young and
physicists Leo van Hemmen and Paul Friedel at the Technical University of Munich in Germany have
developed a computer model of the snake's auditory system to explain how the snake "hears" its prey
without really having the ears for it. Although the vipers have internal ears that can hear frequencies
between 200 and 1000 hertz, it is not the sound of the mouse scurrying about that they are detecting. "
The snakes don't have external eardrums ," says van Hemmen. " So unless the mouse wears boots and
starts stamping, the snake won't hear it."
Options:
head, hearing, system, eardrums, ability
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #229)
Options:
stuff, decisions, staff, calculate, motivate, medicine, actions, pharmacy
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #227)
114. Space
Researchers already know that spending long periods of time in a zero-gravity environment ---- such
as that inside the International Space Station (ISS) --- results in loss of bone density and damage to
the body's muscles . That's partly why stays aboard the ISS are restricted at six months. And now, a
number of NASA astronauts are reporting that their 20/20 vision deteriorated after spending time in
space, with many needing glasses once they returned to Earth.
Options:
background, timed, environment, deteriorated, integrated, muscles, mass, restricted, ability, devastate,
damage
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #226)
Options:
sequential, utopian, population, comedy, society, unrealistic, childhood, educational
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #215)
Options:
emotional, confidential, personal, rational, confident, communal, pathological
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #209)
Options:
experiences, events, beliefs, origins, regions
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #205)
Options:
paintings, gets, masterpiece, muster, time, pull, comes, gallery
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #201)
119. Cheating
Although not written about extensively, a few individuals have considered the concept and act of
cheating in history as well as contemporary culture. Barton Bowyer writes that cheating "is the
advantageous distortion of perceived reality. The advantage falls to the cheater because the cheated
person misperceives what is assumed to be the real world". The cheater is taking advantage of a person,
a situation, or both . Cheating also involves the "distortion of perceived reality" or what others call
"deception". Deception can involve hiding the "true" reality or "showing" reality in a way intended to
deceive others.
Options:
both, history, later, life, perceives, misperceives
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #198)
120. Music
What is music? In one sense, this is an easy question . Even the least musical among us can recognize
pieces of music when we hear them and name a few canonical examples . We know there are different
kinds of music and, even if our knowledge of music is restricted, we know which kinds we like and which
kinds we do not.
Options:
volume, question, examples, knowledge, issue, classes
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #193)
Options:
derision, dispatches, division, cheerful, hopeful, emigres
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #188)
Options:
organization, complex, complete, ideas, functions, behaved
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #187)
Options:
media, confront, compare, pick, categorize, bridge, arranged, hit
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #186)
about 4, 300,000 cubic kilometers of freshwater to share out between most of the plants, animals &
people on the planet.
Options:
With, Within, Without, fine, fit, far, deep, may, cannot, can
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #155)
125. Anthropologists
It is commonly said by anthropologists that primitive man is less individual and more completely moulded
by his society than civilized man. This contains an element of truth. Simpler societies are more uniform ,
in the sense that they call for, and provide opportunities for, a far smaller diversity of individual skills and
occupations than the more complex and advanced societies. Increasing individualization in this sense is
a necessary product of modern advanced society, and runs through all its activities from top to bottom.
But it would be a serious error to set up an antithesis between this process of individualization and the
growing strength and cohesion of society.
Options:
less, larger, objective, society, element, uniform, advent, smaller, factor, individual, advanced, latest
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #151)
Options:
however, therefore, different, in common, similar, along with, But, So
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #150)
127. Climate
Climate is the word we use for weather over a long period of time. The desert has a dry climate,
because there is very little rain. The UK has a temperate climate, which means winters are, overall,
mild and summers, generally, don't get too hot.
Options:
is, are, describe, use, dry, wet, forecast, has, or, and
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #145)
128. Psychology
Psychology as a subject of study has largely developed in the West since the late nineteenth century.
During this period there has been an emphasis on scientific thinking. Because of this emphasis, there
have been many scientific studies in psychology which explore different aspects of human nature. These
include studies into how biology (physical factors) influence human experience, how people use
their senses (touch, taste, smell, sight and hearing) to get to know the world, how people develop, why
people behave in certain ways, how memory works, how people develop language, how
people understand and think about the world, what motivates people, why people have emotions and how
personality develops. These scientific investigations all contribute to an understanding of human nature.
Options:
explore, find, senses, feelings, understand, perform, behave, investigations, findings
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #144)
Options:
updated, new, consulting, agreement, notice, alarm, contract, enquiring
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #140)
Options:
crime, recidivist, possible, form, protect, pervasive, practice, maintain, unlimited
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #139)
Options:
huge, stretches, located, route, solar, sketches, concerning, largest, stellar
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #135)
and elderly spend their savings, overall consumption does not fall as people get richer.
Options:
consumption, among, only, against, income, spend, merely, pay
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #134)
Options:
aggressive, workforce, weakness, grudge, competitive, tend, graduates, advantage
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #113)
Options:
sense, virtually, vanished, contrast, remained, avid, avoidable, ingrained, instinct, contrary
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #112)
Options:
pivot, determine, assume, predict, secrets, seemed, became, journey
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #103)
population characteristics , Australia and New Zealand have much in common. Both countries have
minority indigenous populations, and during the latter half of the 20th century have seen a steady stream
of migrants from a variety of regions throughout the world. Both countries have experienced similar
declines in fertility since the high levels recorded during the baby boom, and alongside this have enjoyed
the benefits of continually improving life expectancy. One consequence of these trends is that both
countries are faced with an ageing population, and the associated challenge of providing appropriate
care and support for this growing group within the community.
Options:
heritage, associated, witness, limitation, characteristics, history, experienced, standards, tradition, shared
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #101)
137. Retirement
For a start, we need to change our concept of 'retirement', and we need to change mindsets arising
from earlier government policy which, in the face of high unemployment levels, encouraged mature
workers to take early retirement. Today, government encourages them to delay their retirement. We now
need to think of retirement as a phased process, where mature age workers gradually reduce their hours,
and where they have considerable flexibility in how they combine their work and non work time. We also
need to recognise the broader change that is occurring in how people work, learn, and live. Increasingly
we are moving away from a linear relationship between education, training, work, and retirement, as
people move in and out of jobs, careers, caregiving, study, and leisure. Employers of choice remove
the barriers between the different segments of people's lives, by creating flexible conditions of work and
a range of leave entitlements. They take an individualised approach to workforce planning and
development so that the needs of employers and employees can be met simultaneously . This approach
supports the different transitions that occur across the life course - for example, school to work,
becoming a parent, becoming responsible for the care of older relatives, and moving from work to
retirement.
Options:
mind, gradually, wait, barriers, concept, simultaneously, extend, suddenly, similarities, delay
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #94)
Options:
on, increases, employ, revised, conceal, decreases, recruit, exchanged, in, reveal, peaks, steal, stood,
advanced
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #93)
139. Cuteness
Cuteness in offspring is a potent protective mechanism that ensures survival for otherwise
completely dependent infants. Previous research has linked cuteness to early ethological ideas of a
"kindchenschema" (infant schema) where infant facial features serve as "innate releasing mechanisms"
for instinctual caregiving behaviours. We propose extending the concept of cuteness beyond visual
features to include positive infant sounds and smells. Evidence from behavioural and neuroimaging
studies links this extended concept of cuteness to simple "instinctual" behaviours and to caregiving,
protection and complex emotions. We review how cuteness supports key parental capacities by igniting
fast privileged neural activity followed by slower processing in large brain networks also involved in play,
empathy, and perhaps even higher-order moral emotions.
Options:
invalid, ensures, include, contain, dependent, instinctual, proper, supports, proves, deliberate,
guaranteed, potent
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #92)
140. Genius
Genius, in the popular conception, is inextricably tied up with precocity - doing something truly creative,
we're inclined to think, requires the freshness and exuberance and energy of youth. Orson Welles made
his masterpiece, "Citizen Kane," at twenty-five. Herman Melville wrote a book a year through his late
twenties, culminating, at age thirty-two, with "Moby-Dick." Mozart wrote his breakthrough Piano
Concerto No. 9 in E-Flat-Major at the age of twenty-one. In some creative forms, like lyric poetry,
the importance of precocity has hardened into an iron law. How old was T. S. Eliot when he wrote "The
Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock" ("I grow old ... I grow old")? Twenty-three. "Poets peak young,"
the creativity researcher James Kaufman maintains. Mihály Csíkszentmihályi, the author of "Flow,"
agrees: "The most creative lyric verse is believed to be that written by the young." According to the
Harvard psychologist Howard Gardner, a leading authority on creativity, "Lyric poetry is
a domain where talent is discovered early, burns brightly, and then peters out at an early age."
Options:
talent, industry, key, intellectual, domain, originality, creativity, icon, across, time, age, through,
importance, authority
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #83)
141. Planes
By 2025, government experts' say, America's skies will swarm with three times as many as planes, and
not just the kind of traffic flying today. There will be thousands of tiny jets, seating six or fewer, at
airliner altitudes , competing for space with remotely operated drones that need help avoiding mid-
air collisions , and with commercially operated rockets carrying satellites and tourists into space.
Options:
thousands, satellites, collisions, much, altitudes, many, times, time, least, piles, traffic, passengers
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #74)
142. Ikebana
More than simply putting flowers in a container , ikebana is a disciplined art form in which nature and
humanity are brought together. Contrary to the idea of a particolored or multicolored arrangement of
blossoms, ikebana often emphasizes other areas of the plant , such as its stems and leaves, and puts
emphasis on shape, line, and form. Though ikebana is an expression of creativity, certain rules govern its
form.
Options:
crevice, container, commitment, creature, arrangement, plant, expression, illusion
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #71)
143. Kashmiri
Two decades ago, Kashmiri houseboat-owners rubbed their hands every spring at the prospect of the
annual influx of tourists . From May to October, the hyacinth-choked waters of Dal Lake saw flotillas of
vividly painted Shikaras carrying Indian families, boho westerners, young travelers and wide-eyed
Japanese. Carpet-sellers honed their skills, as did purveyors of anything remotely embroidered while the
house boats initiated by the British Raj provided unusual accommodation. Then, in 1989, separatist and
Islamist militancy attacked and everything changed. Hindus and countless Kashmiri business people
bolted, at least 35,000 people were killed in a decade, the lake stagnated, and the houseboats rotted.
Any foreigners venturing there risked their lives , proved in 1995 when five young Europeans were
kidnapped and murdered.
Options:
attacked, competed, festivals, tourists, vocations, waters, lives
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #72)
144. Sportswomen
Sportswomen's records are important and need to be preserved. And if the paper records don't exist ,
we need to get out and start interviewing people, not to put too fine a point on it, while we still have
a chance . After all, if the records aren't kept in some form or another, then the stories are lost too.
Options:
appear, focus, admit, exist, opportunity, point, chance, lost, disappear
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #68)
Options:
motive, witnesses, fall, rise, problem, funding, factor, predicts
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #14)
An ice storm is a type of weather when cold rainfall comes down into the cold air and the water turned
into ice . Once there were more than 16,000 households which had a blackout during an ice storm as the
cables snapped with ice weighing on them.
Options:
weather, cold, icy, more, during, rather, climate, after, ice
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #80)
Options:
reached, arrived, spread, revealed, pictographic, vivid
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #183)
Options:
disqualifying, importance, obvious, coordination, distinctive, accepting, connection
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #180)
Options:
prey, beneficial, sell, invent, positive, show, present, read, find, pray, discover
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #96)
152. Volcanoes
Volcanoes blast more than 100 million tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere every year but the gas
is usually harmless . When a volcano erupts, carbon dioxide spreads out into the atmosphere and
isn't concentrated in one spot. But sometimes the gas gets trapped underground under enormous
pressure. If it escapes to the surface in a dense cloud , it can push out oxygen-rich air and become
deadly.
Options:
cloud, concentrated, dangerous, harmless, underground, aimed, air, harmful, atmosphere, collection, over,
fact
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #102)
153. DJIA
The Daw Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) reports the average stock price of large, publicly traded US
companies. It tends to reflect the state of the stock market as a whole. Though its name would lead you
to believe the DJIA is made up of only industrial companies, the DJIA in fact contains stocks across
many "industries," not all of which are industrial. The businesses represented include finance, food,
technology, retail, heavy equipment, oil, chemical, pharmaceutical, consumer goods, and entertainment.
Options:
lead, industrial, distort, reflect, average, expressed, represented
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #8)
Options:
declaration, blatant, rooted, associated, disturb, specific, levy
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #2)
155. Postmortem
The most common reason for carrying out a detailed medical examination of a dead person - a post-
mortem or autopsy - is when it is necessary to establish the cause of death. In some circumstances, a
doctor may be allowed to perform a post-mortem in pursuit of medical knowledge . The examination is
usually performed by a pathologist, and involves dissection of the body, and tests done on blood, tissues
and internal organs, but sometimes it is performed by a doctor.
Options:
defect, reason, means, establish, specimens, knowledge, involves
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #39)
156. Desert
Wind-blown grains of sand from dunes may carry far inland, covering fields and diverting streams. More
seriously, drifting sands can bury whole buildings and transform fertile land into desert. However, dunes
can be made more stable by the artificial planting of marram grass, a plant so robust that it can
find nourishment even in sand. The grass spreads over the surface of the dune, protecting it against
wind, while its roots bind the sand together.
Options:
summit, grains, fallow, fertile, surface, nourishment, clouds, planting
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #29)
Options:
single, understanding, field, individual, offers, necessary, wanted
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #27)
158. Microorganism
Although for centuries preparations derived from living matter were applied to wounds to
destroy infection ,the fact that a microorganism is capable of destroying one of another species was
not established until the latter half of the 19th century. When Pasteur noted the antagonistic effect of
other bacteria on the anthrax organism and pointed out that this action might be put to therapeutic use.
Options:
convinced, capable, infection, material, therapeutic, established, contamination, matter
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #16)
Options:
challenge, designing, progressively, spending, subcontinent, lifetime, category
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #12)
160. Reading
Reading is an active process, not a passive one. We always read within a specific context, and this
affects what we notice and what seems to matter. We always have a purpose in reading a text, and this
will shape how we approach it. Our purpose and background knowledge will also determine the
strategies we use to read the text.
Options:
predominate, specific, approach, digital, determine, passive, volume
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #11)
Options:
laboratory, discoveries, collaborate, destination, overlap, polish, vicious, involve
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #4)
Options:
uniform, impeachments, decisions, acceptance, regular, proposals
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #3)
163. Botswana
Although Botswana is rich in diamonds, it has high unemployment and stratified socioeconomic classes.
In 1999, the nation suffered its first budget deficit in 16 years because of a slump in the international
diamond market. Yet Botswana remains one of the wealthiest and most stable countries on the
African continent .
Options:
suffered, endure, while, continent, remains, enjoyed, because
(APEUni Website / App FIBR #1)
Question:
Where did the largest piece off from B-15 eventually go?
Options:
A) Seafloor
B) Antarctica
C) Chile
D) South Pacific
Answer:
B
(APEUni Website / App RMCS #165)
2. Social Scientists
Original:
Social scientists use particular methods to gather qualitative evidence, from observation to interview,
but they also use autobiographical accounts, journalism, and other documentary material to flesh out and
add meaning to statistics. As with reading numbers, reading textual evidence requires us to practice, to
set time aside to learn how to do it, and to understand the conventions of writing which operate in the
different forms of writing we encounter. One of the main problems with reading textual evidence,
though, is that, unlike the relationship most of us have with numbers where we may use them at a pretty
basic level, most of us are, if anything, over-familiar with words. When we want to understand their value
as social science evidence we need to forget how familiar we are with first person accounts and
everyday speech - for example, in newspapers, magazines, and books - and learn a different approach
to them. Social scientists use observation, interviews and even print journalism as evidence for the
claims they make. They may collect evidence through questionnaires with pre-set questions and by
open-ended interviews which allow respondents to speak for themselves. They may observe social
relations explicitly as social scientists or may participate themselves in a particular community to gain
'inside' information. Social scientists also draw on print journalism on occasion and may use the same
sources, for example official statistics, and the work of other social scientists to support their claims. We
need to remember, though, that journalists do not need to present the same rigorous referencing and
support for their claims as social scientists are required to do. Most importantly, newspaper and
magazine articles are written under commercial pressures; for example they must help to sell the
newspaper by being deliberately provocative, or by reflecting the dominant views of its readers.
Question:
According to this passage, what do social scientists use written sources to do?
Options:
A) Formulating questionnaires and interview questions.
B) Advising them on how to collect qualitative evidence.
C) Adding information to other data they have collected.
D) Change their understanding of numbers.
Answer:
C
(APEUni Website / App RMCS #115)
3. John Robertson
Original:
When he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University of Newcastle, even John Robertson himself
must surely have looked back in wonder at his astonishing rise to success. The year was 1910, and those
assembled were to hear not only of his generosity to the University, which enabled it to contribute to the
pioneering research into tropical diseases being carried out at that time, but also of his humanitarian
work in southern Africa, where he was ahead of his time in improving the working conditions of local
mine workers. To those who knew John in his youth, it will have come as no surprise to hear of his
success. He was now enjoying the rewards of the fierce determination, desire to succeed and
extraordinary ability to acquire knowledge, which they had noticed in the young man.
Question:
What does the reader of this text learn about John Robertson?
Options:
A) He was born in Africa.
B) His abilities were evident at a young age.
C) He studied medicine.
D) He completed his degree in 1910.
Answer:
B
(APEUni Website / App RMCS #114)
4. Lighthouse (Incomplete)
Points: 要点:欧洲国家有⼀航空公司收购⼀个灯塔改造成旅馆,很多国际旅客想体验,旅游⼈数增加。 选
项:航空公司拥有这个⼩旅馆。(答案)
(APEUni Website / App RMCS #106)
5. Language (Incomplete)
Points: If our language acts as a pair of glasses with tinted lenses, can we go one step further? Are
these lenses actually distorting? Does our language predispose us to a particular line of thinking and
warp our view of reality? Do the differences that exist between languages in their grammatical structure
or in their vocabulary actually control our patterns of thought? As some linguists have asked: How
different would Aristotle's logic have been if he had spoken Mandarin or Hopi? What is the main issue
which is concerning the writer? the reasons behind Aristotle's philosophy the way in which writers distort
reality the extent to which language influences thought the causes of differences between languages.
(APEUni Website / App RMCS #98)
6. Euripides (Incomplete)
Points: 要点:介绍古希腊剧作家欧⾥庇得斯 Euripides 问该作家的作品有什么特点?不再关注英雄式的主
题,更加注重平⺠的普通⽣活
(APEUni Website / App RMCS #97)
D. Listening
Summarize Spoken Text
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1. Cosmology (Incomplete)
Points: About cosmology, with 'maths and mathematics' mentioned.
(APEUni Website / App SST #643)
5. Singapore (Incomplete)
Points: About Singapore population and multiculturalism. .... an professor from the University of Chicago
... A lot of other professors are mentioned, too. A young man's voice, very fast with a British accent. 'city
future' is mentioned a few times. Key words: Glasgow, globalization, protect growth.
(APEUni Website / App SST #639)
Points: The invention of the music recorder helps preserve music, as painting preserves images. People
record music on a disk and can play it in phonographs again and again. This changed the state of music
and people can hardly imagine the way music education was conducted in the past. Nowadays people
can learn music. Music record is a form of existence of memory.
(APEUni Website / App SST #638)
have all become much more vehicle-dependent. There are far more cars and lorries, trains and planes
than in the 1950s and this is now the main source of air pollution around the world.
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understood and production processes are designed that can make use of less-skilled labor, production
will migrate to countries with less expensive labor.
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guide behavior is going to be consistent across all individuals. Now if we take a look at this in another
perspective, we can come up with a view of moral absolutism. In the area of moral absolutism, basically,
what we have is illustrated on the right-hand side of this slide, is a very firm and unyielding boundary
between what is right and what is wrong. And so, within moral absolutism, basically what you have are
these non-overridable principles. They must be followed. They must never be violated and there were no
exceptions. It is always right. It is always wrong. And nothing is subject to interpretation, and nothing is
dependent upon the situation.
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App to listen.
being scientists and engineers, developed techniques to basically move pieces of DNA from one
organism to another. And this was sort of done by physically cutting and pasting. Now we're moving
beyond that where we can write DNA so we're no longer limited to the pieces. We can cut from one and
put in another. We can chemically synthesize this DNA on a machine and put that into an organism. And
now we can even create new organisms completely from scratch. So if you imagine a cell that's
programed to make a useful compound, say, material or drug, then what you have is basically a micro-
scale manufacturing unit. It's basically a cellular factory. And the cool thing about cellular factory is that
when you want more factories, you love that cell grow and divide. So in in the lab, if we have one
bacteria, we put it in a flask. The next day we come in. We have millions, if not billions of bacteria.
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Original:
Most companies believe that competition drives employees to improve performance and motivate them.
Ranking among employees is widely used in large corporations, like Cisco, General Electric, because they
believe this can help improve productivity. Employees in those companies are ranked into levels by their
supervisors in every department, in which, employees in top ten percent are rewarded or promoted,
those in bottom ten percent are threw out, and thirty to fifty percent of them in the middle will have a
feeling of both fear and hope. But this is a common mistake. Competition makes employees, who are
under the threats of being laid off, losing incomes, or being publicly humiliated, full of fears even when
they are faced with simple tasks, and makes it impossible for inspiration and creation to happen.
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cream, or pastries, or other things that are sweet; candy of course, but there are other places where you
see it and you don’t necessarily expect it. As an example: peanut butter. Here’s a list of ingredients from
skippy peanut butter and you see that sugar is the second most common ingredient. You may know from
reading food labels that these ingredients in any food label are listed in order of how much there is in
the food itself, so sugar comes right after peanuts. Here’s another example, beef stew, you wouldn’t
necessarily expect to find sugar in beef stew but it’s there. Now it’s down the list of ingredients, it’s
actually toward the end, but if you look at the marketing of this and look at the can it says, there’s fresh
potatoes and carrots, but actually there’s more sugar in this than there is carrot.
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Answer:
This lecture mainly talks about Neolithic stones. Firstly, the speaker emphasizes the objects discovered
in Scotland, dating back 5,000 years, are probably the first examples of humans exploring the concept of
symmetry. Also, he mentions we do not actually know what they are for. Lastly, the speaker believes that
mathematicians create our mathematical objects for the joy and the beauty. In conclusion, this lecture is
very informative.
(APEUni Website / App SST #257)
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foragers returned to the hive, they stopped bees dancing. Scientists think the behavior warns dancers of
a dangerous source of nectar.
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they eat, so purchasing all items is not a good idea. Avoiding food waste efficiently along the supply
chain and in all our households can result in a win-win scenario. Halving food waste could help meet the
demand for nutrition of our growing population, and equally minimize the negative environmental effects
of agriculture.
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challenges, as some developing countries lack management and resources, and feel being excluded.
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considered two televisions to be a luxury, or even further back, one colour television. And you can make
a strong argument, for example, that Starbucks in China, right now, is a luxury purchase because of its
cost, because of how frequently it is purchased by many people. So, I think the long answer is a
complicated one, but the answer is, it depends who you talk to. I think in the business community what
we would say, is that there is a small cluster of more expensive brands which have a distinct strategy
that we would identify as being luxury brands. And they start with the Rolls Royce and the Tiffanys and
the Louis Vuittons of the world. And, I think that tends to be how we see them.
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60,000 to 70,000 years BP. In any event, this migration was achieved during the closing stages of the
Pleistocene epoch, when sea levels were typically much lower than they are today. Repeated episodes of
extended glaciation resulted in decreases of sea levels by some 100150 m. The continental coastline
therefore extended much further out into the Timor Sea than it does today, and Australia and New
Guinea formed a single landmass (known as Sahul), connected by an extensive land bridge across the
Arafura Sea, Gulf of Carpentaria and Torres Strait The ancestral Australian Aboriginal peoples were thus
long established and continued to develop, diversify and settle through much of the continent. As the
sea levels again rose at the terminus of the most recent glacial period some 10,000 years ago the
Australian continent once more became a separated landmass. However, the newly formed 150 km wide
Torres Strait with its chain of islands still provided the means for cultural contact and trade between
New Guinea and the northern Cape York Peninsula. During the 1970s and 1980s around 120,000
southern Asian refugees migrated to Australia. During that twenty years, Australia first began to adopt a
policy of what Minister of Immigration Al Grassby termed "multiculturalism". In 2004-05, Australia
accepted 123,000 new settlers, a 40% increase over the past 10 years. The largest number of
immigrants (40,000 in 200405) moved to Sydney. The majority of immigrants came from Asia, led by
China and India.
Answer:
This lecture mainly talks about the first inhabitants in Australia. Firstly, the speaker emphasizes the first
inhabitants in Australia were the ancestors of the present indigenous people. Also, he mentions that this
migration was achieved during the closing stages of the Pleistocene epoch. Lastly, the speaker believes
that the majority of immigrants came from Asia, led by China and India. In conclusion, this lecture is very
informative.
(APEUni Website / App SST #82)
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Answer:
This lecture mainly talks about Mars. Firstly, the speaker emphasizes that it is often referred to as a red
planet because of the iron oxide prevalent on its surface. Also, he mentions that the rotational period
and the season cycles of the Mars are similar of those of earth. Lastly, the speaker believes that Mars
once had a large scale of water coverage. In conclusion, this lecture is very informative.
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Answer:
This lecture mainly talks about happiness economics. Firstly, the speaker emphasizes that their
consistent pattern determines well-being across large samples of people. Also, she mentions that some
of these very basic things are remarkably consistent across the world. Lastly, the speaker believes that
the environment and equality, the nature's institution raging on living, and all kinds of other things affect
people's well-being. In conclusion, this lecture is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App SST #232)
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Answer:
This lecture mainly talks about the English language's history. Firstly, the speaker emphasizes English is
definitely not a pure language, which has borrowed from many languages. Also, she mentions we are not
only learning about language but we are learning about history, which are closely connected. Lastly, the
speaker believes borrowed words have been viewed differently throughout history. In conclusion, this
lecture is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App SST #223)
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Answer:
This lecture mainly talks about bees in decline. Firstly, the speaker emphasizes that these declines are
well-documented, supported by good, strong scientific evidence. Also, he mentions that the effects of
pollinator loss could be absolutely huge. Lastly, the speaker believes that awareness is being raised all
the time and people are taking actions. In conclusion, this lecture is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App SST #217)
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Original:
I would like to look at a recent survey conducted by Canadian researchers on diet. Total thirty-one
women volunteered in the survey. They've been told to participate in the exercise program without
changing their diet. After careful observation, the researchers actually found that some volunteers
experienced a body fat change after six months from the day they've started the experiment. The finding
further stated that some actually lost a significant amount of fat, which led to a decrease in body mass.
On the other hand, there were others who did not lose fat at all. So, I guess, the study concludes that
there must be two explanations. Those who did not lose weight must have eaten more. And another
factor is that it is because there are psychological reasons—not to believe in losing fat.
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Answer:
This lecture mainly talks about the transformation of the universe view. Firstly, the speaker emphasizes
that for thousands of years the universe and space has been thought to be fixed and unchangeable.
Also, he mentions that in the twentieth century there was no fixed stage of space as Einstein's theory.
Lastly, the space was in a dynamic change on the larger scale. In conclusion, this lecture is very
informative.
(APEUni Website / App SST #214)
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Once I deal with our things, got to be strong but soft. They have to be strong even when they're wet.
Bright but not tear, liquids, mixtures, not common things, but they need... they can't separate. You don't
want to shake before use, before you pour down in your washing machine.
(APEUni Website / App SST #211)
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Answer:
This lecture mainly talks about how people recognize human faces. Firstly, the speaker emphasizes how
we take visual information and transform it to allow us to recognize a face. Also, he mentions that face
recognition is a hard problem, and it is a clever thing we do. Lastly, the speaker believes that people
start to appreciate how well we can do face recognition. In conclusion, this lecture is very informative.
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body language. People accepted body language as well. The physical movement facilitates the
development of sign language, which popularly became hand words.
Answer:
This lecture mainly talks about abstraction, commonly known as description. Firstly, the speaker
emphasizes that these are symbolic language and body language. Also, she mentions that the origin of
symbolic system was developed when people try to communicate with each other. Lastly, the speaker
believes that the physical movement facilitates the development of sign language, which popularly
became hand words. In conclusion, this lecture is very informative.
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Answer:
This lecture mainly talks about wildlife as food. Firstly, the speaker emphasizes that in most of Africa, all
the humans rely on wildlife as the source of food. Also, he mentions that more than a billion of people
rely on fish as their primary source of animal protein. Lastly, the speaker believes that wildlife tourism is
the multiple billion dollars' industry. In conclusion, this lecture is very informative.
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book's really attempt to suggest why architecture works when it does and what might be going to be
wrong when it doesn't work.
Answer:
This lecture mainly talks about architecture's emotional impacts. Firstly, the speaker emphasizes that a
bad building has a serious impact for hundreds of years on the people around it. Also, he mentions that
no one knows what 'beautiful' is. Lastly, the speaker believes that the architecture works when it does
and might be going to be wrong when it doesn't work. In conclusion, this lecture is very informative.
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Answer:
This lecture mainly talks about the Industrial Revolution. Firstly, the speaker emphasizes it was the work
of some genius inventors who created machines used primarily in the textile industry. Also, he mentions
that that analysis has been really rejected greatly over the past years. Lastly, the speaker believes that
the rise of industrial production was very much tied to traditional forms of production. In conclusion, this
lecture is very informative.
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the past decades and continues to do so with a number of consequences that we will explore.
Answer:
This lecture mainly talks about the development of IT industry. Firstly, the speaker emphasizes that it is
really only 67 years old. Also, he mentions the rapid expansion in the power of computing and the rapid
fall of the cost of computing. Lastly, the speaker believes that that is what has guided the development
of software and information technology over the past decades. In conclusion, this lecture is very
informative.
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Answer:
According to the professor’s sociology research, the capacity of well-educated parents will remain in
their prosperous children because these children have sufficient educational capacity and support since
they were born. According to studies, the life chance of a child has been set by five years old, which is a
compelling and disturbing fact. The professor cannot find obvious ways to address this deep root of
inequality in society.
(APEUni Website / App SST #162)
Answer:
This lecture mainly talks about globalization. Firstly, the speaker emphasizes that we hear it all the time
on news broadcasts and in any type of public discussion. Also, he mentions that it is industries and
markets that globalize, not countries. Lastly, the speaker believes that it means the rise of
interconnectedness between countries and markets across the world. In conclusion, this lecture is very
informative.
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To be a successful entrepreneur, you should have good ideas, but the definition of a good idea varies
depending on whom you ask. A great idea should have several features. Firstly, the great idea should be
various and novel. Secondly, the great idea should be unique, which means no one has thought about it.
Thirdly, it is essential for great ideas to be transformative and productive. All ideas are essentially a
combination of other smaller ideas, but this doesn’t mean they can’t be unique. Merely copying doesn’t
make anything idiosyncratic, it’s the individuality that one puts in which makes a concept stand out.
Constant innovation leaves no room for stagnation and thus, adds on to the basic idea, effectively
making it unique. Unique ideas are inspired by basic things, they are simply extensions of pre-existing
notions. And, an idea or a concept is unique only when it transcends its predecessor and serves its
purpose in a better and more precise way.
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Answer:
This lecture mainly talks about the prediction of cosmology. Firstly, the speaker emphasizes that the
universe did start in a big bang. Also, he mentions that the laws of physics that apply to tiny particles
also explain the big bang. Lastly, the speaker believes we got some ideas as good as those ideas we had
40 years ago about how big bang happened. In conclusion, this lecture is very informative.
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Original:
Low achievers are more likely to drop out of school. Some boys leave school early. And the main reason
is push and pull factors. The main reason of pull is that economy and market provide many job
opportunities for boys with mainly two destinations, shipping and traineeship. So dropping from school is
not absolutely bad for boys. But girls don’t have the same opportunities. Girls are less likely to leave
school because fewer jobs are available for them. The transmission is hard. So, for girls dropping from
school is completely bad, and if they do so, they can either get part-time jobs or just stay unemployed.
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Answer:
This lecture mainly talks about basic vocabulary. Firstly, the speaker emphasizes you look for notions
that are totally comparable and that occur everywhere in the world. Also, he mentions there are one
hundred or two hundred most universal notions in a human life, those that you call the basic vocabulary.
Lastly, the speaker believes you take related basic vocabularies and languages. In conclusion, this lecture
is very informative.
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Answer:
This lecture mainly talks about Rome. Firstly, the speaker emphasizes that the streets of the city of
Rome were not planned all at once. Also, she mentions that the Romans structured it in a methodical
way, based on military strategy. Lastly, the speaker believes that they would build camps, always laid out
in a very geometric plan along a grid square or rectangular. In conclusion, this lecture is very informative.
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cruel. But some imitating a Hollywood model of society, rather than the one which they inherit from their
local tradition background. OK?
Answer:
This lecture mainly talks about globalization. Firstly, the speaker emphasizes that we all live in a global
village with instant communications, by which we can share ideas. Also, he mentions that the world is
shrinking in terms of distance. Lastly, the speaker believes that detraditionalization means the erosion of
traditional values, conventional ways of doing things, and conventional moralities. In conclusion, this
lecture is very informative.
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Answer:
This lecture mainly talks about faults and the earth crust. Firstly, the speaker emphasizes that these
faults moving processes are due to earthquakes. Also, he mentions that the epicenter is the surface
projection of the focus of the earthquake. Lastly, the speaker believes that the focus down some depth
in the earth. In conclusion, this lecture is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App SST #107)
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Answer:
This lecture mainly talks about canned food. Firstly, the speaker emphasizes one of the things going on
during the Great Depression was the beginning of this sort of modern food technology ruling the way
Americans eat today. Also, he mentions refrigerators were becoming popular. Lastly, the speaker
believes few people could afford to buy them during the early years of the Great Depression. In
conclusion, this lecture is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App SST #120)
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Answer:
This lecture mainly talks about Indian peasant debt. Firstly, the speaker emphasizes that it is three
hundred thousand rupees of peasants who have no capital. Also, she mentions that it is coming from a
seed that is costing a hundred thousand to two hundred thousand rupees per kilogram. Lastly, the
speaker believes the seed companies that sell the pesticides are the major creditors. In conclusion, this
lecture is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App SST #101)
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Answer:
This lecture mainly talks about university competition. Firstly, the speaker emphasizes that universities
are in competition for the best students and staff. Also, he mentions that universities in English speaking
countries are exposed to more intensive competition than those elsewhere. Lastly, the speaker believes
that we are in competition for research contracts, from public and private sectors. In conclusion, this
lecture is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App SST #96)
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Answer:
This lecture mainly talks about bumble bees. Firstly, the speaker emphasizes that flower’s color can be a
signal of good quality nectar. Also, he mentions that bees also use color to get clues about a flower’s
temperature. Lastly, the speaker believes that some plants seem to be evolutionarily adapted to be
slightly warmer to attract bees. In conclusion, this lecture is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App SST #90)
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Answer:
This lecture mainly talks about babies' smiles. Firstly, the speaker emphasizes those smiles aren’t
spontaneous but strategic. Also, he mentions that when babies smile, they hope whoever they’re
interacting with to smile back, called sophisticated timing. Lastly, the speaker believes babies just want
their mother smiling at them. In conclusion, this lecture is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App SST #89)
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Answer:
This lecture mainly talks about global climate change effects. Firstly, the speaker emphasizes that
population growth outpaces agricultural production capacity, with predictably catastrophic results for
humanity. Also, she mentions that the three-part crisis scenario seems to be present. Lastly, the speaker
believes that eleven of the warmest years since instrumental records began have occurred in the past
twelve years. In conclusion, this lecture is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App SST #40)
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Answer:
This lecture mainly talks about the market economy. Firstly, the speaker emphasizes within most
developed countries, notions of pragmatism have succeeded in tempering the market economy. Also, he
mentions that the industrial revolution had a negative effect on people, particularly working classes.
Lastly, the speaker believes in the 20th century, we put regulations that composed better environmental
conditions. In conclusion, this lecture is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App SST #74)
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Answer:
This lecture mainly talks about DNA and RNA. Firstly, the speaker emphasizes the study of biology is
responsible for some of the most profound insights that humans have. Also, he mentions that all life on
earth is related similar to one to another, all based on cell. Lastly, the speaker believes the type of
molecule is used very similar to one and another. In conclusion, this lecture is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App SST #64)
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often described as a prosthesis, an artificial part of the body, part of you, making you who you are and
choosing your spectacles is therefore your major decision. Increasingly, people own two or more pairs
for different occasions or times of the day and there is a phrase for this in the industry, it is called
lifestyle dispensing. And it dates back to the 1950s. The idea is that you wear one type of spectacles in
the workplace and quite other at leisure or on the beach.
(APEUni Website / App SST #80)
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Answer:
This lecture mainly talks about student loan. Firstly, the speaker emphasizes she owes tens of thousands
of dollars in student loans which were piling up as she went through school. Also, she mentions she still
experience moments of sheer horror regarding my family's financial situation. Lastly, the speaker
believes if your job aspirations require a four-year degree, you should choose a college you can afford.
In conclusion, this lecture is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App SST #68)
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particularly MIT students I think to find receptors really quite remarkable kinds of devices.
Answer:
This lecture mainly talks about sound receptors. Firstly, the speaker emphasizes that these spiky things
can translate vibrational energy coming from your ear. Also, he mentions that an electrical signal goes
into your ear. Lastly, the speaker believes he invites some people wanting to learn more to find
receptors quite remarkable kinds of devices. In conclusion, this lecture is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App SST #35)
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Answer:
This lecture mainly talks about animal behaviors and human nature. Firstly, the speaker emphasizes that
there are some statements with assumptions that we are not animals. Also, he mentions the natural
conclusion must be we are not living things. Lastly, the speaker believes we can look into animals' eyes
and animal behaviors and find what made us. In conclusion, this lecture is very informative.
(APEUni Website / App SST #30)
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Answer:
Something comparable to today's newspapers began during the time of Julius Caesar, who set up the
posting of news-sheets in the busiest meeting places in Rome. These contained the latest news
concerning wars, sports, gossip, and so on. Scribes, who were often slaves, would act as news gatherers
for those not in Rome, and could even make enough money out of it to buy their freedom.
(APEUni Website / App SST #13)
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2. Complaints (Incomplete)
Points: Two students complain about their classes. A boy asks a girl how about her classes. She says
she does not major in science but she also suffer pressures with a lot of reading and essays to do.
Options: Two students in science complain about too much school work; A student says she has many
options but still has a lot of school work to do.
(APEUni Website / App LMCM #78)
3. Nano-gold (Incomplete)
Points: About nano-gold and micron-gold. Question: What is the difference... Options: If the practical
size changes, the matter's property changes.
(APEUni Website / App LMCM #81)
4. Sharks (Incomplete)
Points: 要点:视频题,⼀个⻘年(奥克兰的鲨⻥博⼠)介绍⾃⼰为什么要研究鲨⻥和学习相关知识。 鲨⻥的
种类实在是太多了,你看这⽚⽔域就有XXX,那⽚⽔域有XXX,这些都对⽣物链有重要的影响。 sharks at
risk。 提到fierce。 问题:这⼈刚开始研究鲨⻥时,觉得鲨⻥如何? 选项:amazing; at risk。
(APEUni Website / App LMCM #69)
1. LSE (Incomplete)
Points: About LSE. Blanks: (deployments), (existing), ( ... ), (objective), (slightly).
(APEUni Website / App FIBL #259)
2. Success (Incomplete)
Points: A conversation between two persons about what can be considered 'successful'. The answers
include 'achievements', 'compiling(not sure, sounding alike) ...
(APEUni Website / App FIBL #258)
3. UCLA (Incomplete)
Points: When I was graduated from UCLA ... peer ... weaken ... challenge ... satisfied ...
(APEUni Website / App FIBL #257)
5. (Incomplete)
Points: Blanks: intentional, individual, ... , instant(or instinct?).
(APEUni Website / App FIBL #255)
6. Shouxing (Incomplete)
Points: About Shouxing, which is referred to those who live long in Chinese. ... child star of ( ) ...
(APEUni Website / App FIBL #254)
7. Culture (Incomplete)
Points: 'blue' and 'green' are mentioned. ... ( ) red .... ... ( culture ) ...
(APEUni Website / App FIBL #253)
9. Advertisement (Incomplete)
Points: A female's voice sounds like an advertisement for a tourism spot, with a background music.
Blanks: bare, magical, unique, ...
(APEUni Website / App FIBL #251)
In this tutorial, we will show you how to find specific journal articles using the library catalog. The
university subscribes to over 18,000 journals across a variety of subjects, most of which are
available electronically to find a specific journal article using a library catalog. We need to search by the
journal name as individual article titles are not listed in the catalog.
(APEUni Website / App FIBL #242)
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move around the forest. I've been out to the forest and spent a year recording the different types of
locomotion they use, but we have no idea about the energetic cost of how they move around the forest
and the solutions that they find to problems of moving around the canopy. And what we're doing here is
using the park or athletes as an analogy for a large bodied ape moving around a
complex environment and getting them to move around in the course that we've made that they've never
seen before. And we're going to record their energetic expenditure while they're doing it.
(APEUni Website / App FIBL #236)
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body, the chemistry that's going on and how energy plays a role. And we've divided the course into four
sections and after each section there will be a mid-term. The first one is about matter .
(APEUni Website / App FIBL #217)
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Neanderthals did have the gene to detect the herbs’ bitter taste, the researchers speculate that the cave
dwellers were munching on them not as food—but to self-medicate. Not too far-fetched, they say,
because primates like chimps also use medicinal plants. Luckily for the scientists doing
this detective work, Neanderthals may have known a thing or two about medicine, but they didn’t get
regular check-ups at the dentist.
(APEUni Website / App FIBL #165)
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The electricity is often produced by burning fossil fuels, and the refrigerant gases also exacerbate
climate change. A more sustainable and, possibly, more romantic approach is to go with flowers certified
by outfits like VeriFlora, or even better, whatever flowers are in season locally. Of course, that’s not
much help for those of us in wintry climes. Maybe try writing a poem. Let’s see: Roses are red, violets
are blue…
(APEUni Website / App FIBL #148)
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doctors found out that almonds are good for you, a confection but it's good for you. The Almond Board
got a very aggressive promotion going on for almonds. They actually, I just heard recently, send out
sales reps to cardiologists at hospitals to promote the heart benefits of almonds. In a very good
promotion of almonds, and it's legitimate promotion because they are a healthy food.
(APEUni Website / App FIBL #134)
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with minimal damage to the environment, or in an environmentally compatible way, and it's meant to
cover both chemical processes and chemical products . The center was set up about seven or eight
years ago. And the idea was to provide a hub of activities that covered fundamental research work,
international collaboration, but also educational development on public understanding of the project as
well, and also networking so we network out to well over 1000 people around the globe.
(APEUni Website / App FIBL #119)
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rules, sound monetary policy, and by protecting our fellow citizens in periods when they are jobless. We
have to make way for the new entrepreneurial firms that will push us to frontiers of innovation.
(APEUni Website / App FIBL #105)
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legal and church documents that have survived from Elizabethan times. Naturally, there are many gaps in
this body of information, which tells us little about Shakespeare the man.
(APEUni Website / App FIBL #86)
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75. (Incomplete)
Points: 只记住了单词fragile, mutate, engine, necessarily
(APEUni Website / App FIBL #84)
excellent senior team, that team can keep the company running. when a CEO hire a poor senior team,
the CEO is up spending all of their time trying to do with the team, and not nearly enough time trying to
do with other elements of their job. The senior team can and often does develop the strategy for the
company, but ultimately it's always the CEO who has the final 'go-no-go' decision on strategy.
(APEUni Website / App FIBL #80)
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track, but the jams spread backward around the track, like a shockwave at a rate of about 20 kilometers
an hour. Real-life jams move backward at about the same speed.
(APEUni Website / App FIBL #71)
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1. Satellite (Incomplete)
Points: About satellite. Option 1: ... satellite positioning ... Option 2: It takes four satellites to accurately
locate ... Option 3: ... appeared in Ancient Rome thousands of years ago. Option 4: Nowadays
mathematicians are faced with difficult issues.
(APEUni Website / App HCS #114)
2. Ambassador (Incomplete)
Points: 要点:男声的说他是英国驻⽇本的ambassador,在⽇本很多年。 选项:politician; (答案)
businessman;(⼲扰项) teacher(⼲扰项)
(APEUni Website / App HCS #66)
Options:
A) Whether buildings are beautiful or not does not have any influence on people' lives. Beauty is a
clear definition which everyone knows.
B) London is a modern city, where there is no ugly buildings. All the supermarkets and streets are
very beautiful, because everyone who lives there knows what 'beautiful' is.
C) Ugly buildings can impact people who live around them, even for hundreds of year. Beautiful is a
very hard thing to define, as no one really knows what beautiful is.
Answer:
C
(APEUni Website / App HCS #61)
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water. We know that a combination of very cold temperatures and waves is necessary to make the
pancakes form in the first place. After these waves make it form, there's an entire spectrum - so a wide
collection of frequency waves that they would encounter, whether they be from wind shear or they'd be
from you know that the ocean long slow waves. The easiest way to study it is to look at each individual
range of frequencies one after another. Sort of gain a wider perspective on how the pancake ice
interacts with waves. The ultimate aim of our research is to better inform the meteorological modelers
of the world who are looking at Antarctica as well as the Arctic and some of the other cold regions of
the world. We're conducting work in the Sea-Ice-Wind-Wave-lnteraction facility here at UniMeIb. It was
designed by the head of our department Jason Monty. He had the foresight to use a modular design,
which means there are individual sections that are stacked together, so since we're built to the space
that we have in this lab right now. When we moved to Fishermans Bend we can extend our model and a
few more sections to make it much longer. And that will enable us to have longer runtimes, have more
developed waves as well as add some other possibilities of study.
Options:
A) Pancake ice is formed under deep sea, which only requires extremely cold temperature itself. The
aim of the research is mere scientific experiments, and does not have serve practical purposes.
B) Pancake ice exists in a warm river, which requires warm water, rain or snow. The aim of the
research is to forecast weather in those river regions.
C) Pancake ice is formed by extremely cold temperature and waves, which needs a wide collection of
frequency. The aim of the research is to give the meteorological modelers a better understanding of
this phenomenon through a special lab.
Answer:
C
(APEUni Website / App HCS #60)
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3. Timetable (Incomplete)
Points: A conversation between a boy and a girl. The boy complains that he has classes throughout the
five week days and has to go to lectures on Mondays. The girl says that's common. Options: Full
timetable (correct answer ).
(APEUni Website / App LMCS #85)
5. Newton (Incomplete)
Points: 要点:Newton由grandmother抚养⻓⼤。 问:为什么我们会对Newton得到这个奖项感到surprising。
选项:他还是bachelor degree阶段,他还没有取得学术上的成就; He is a small boy; He had a happy
childhood;(⼲扰项) Her mother can’t read and write(?) Her mother raised him. (⼲扰项)
(APEUni Website / App LMCS #74)
between the pole, ha tons and the colonists. The colonist captured her and brought her to jamestown.
While she was in jamestown. As a hostage, she freely converted to christianity and married john rolfe. As
we all know, this marriage brought the war to its end. What do you think? Was she a mediator or a spy?
I believe she was a spy, a spy who played a role as a mediator. One. What role did Pocahontas play
between the british colony and the native Americans?
Question:
What did the marriage between Pocahontas and John Rolfe do to the war between the British colony
and the Native Americans?
Options:
A) The marriage started a war.
B) The marriage brought freedom.
C) The marriage brought hatred.
D) The marriage ended the war.
Answer:
D
(APEUni Website / App LMCS #53)
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1. Sweat (Incomplete)
Points: About sweat mechanism and how it controls our body temperatures. Missing word: evaporates.
(APEUni Website / App SMW #129)
4. Eclipse (Incomplete)
Points: 关于⼈们⽤什么⽅法来观赏eclipse,最后⼀句话的倒数第⼆个单词是lunar(beep)。 选项:
eclipse;night;moon。
(APEUni Website / App SMW #66)
Options:
A) unchanged
B) narrowing
C) disapearing
D) widening
Answer:
D
(APEUni Website / App SMW #25)
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Original:
BioBonanza is a one-day-open-house festival. All of the researchers in the Department of Biology are
going to be showcasing their research so scholars (Answer: students) can come and see research,
interact with the researchers. And we want people to be able to interact and have fun of this event. As
soon as you walk in the doors, you'll see all sorts of activities, images (Answer: displays) of how a human
heart works. We'll have segments (Answer: sections) of spinal cord and brain. You'll get to be able to
see moths (Answer: butterflies) and all sorts of insects. You'll be able to try to catch some local insects
and we'll have activities like wandering (Answer: walking) through local plant gardens and seeing how
photosynthesis work.
(APEUni Website / App HIW #129)
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yourself in the store window, you straighten the part, not so bad you know, for a man of my age. The
guy in the store window who’s fooling around with mannequins he sees you and you see yourself. What
does that mean? A beam (Answer: stream) of photons from sunlight leaves your face, heads for the
store window – let’s consider one of them. It has a choice: it can go right through, so that the guy
behind the window can see you, or it can be reflected from the store window. Some actions (Answer:
fractions) of them are reflected, and some of them go through. What determines that? What determines
the future of that photon? And doubtless (Answer: countless) such examples teach us that it’s random,
that it’s a roll (Answer: throw) of the dice, and that’s where Einstein made his famous statement “God
plays dice with the universe.” That every instant of that single object, that quantum object we have
probability, we do not have certainty.
(APEUni Website / App HIW #71)
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41. The university offers a wide range of courses according to your commitments. #1993
(Audio Available)
42. I can't hand out my dissertation this week. #1974 (Audio Available)
43. His analysis study appears to be based on the false premise. #1975 (Audio Available)
44. One student representative will be selected from each class. #1970 (Audio Available)
45. Please note that the seminar has been cancelled now. #1962 (Audio Available)
46. We are committed to recruiting candidates from all backgrounds and identities. #1961
(Audio Available)
47. The instant availability of information has radically changed people's lives. #1908 (Audio Available)
48. Students must present a valid identification to enroll in this course. #1848 (Audio Available)
49. The topic next week on colonialism will be the nuclear disarmament. #1811 (Audio Available)
50. He was constantly looking for ways to bring industry and agriculture closer together. #1730
(Audio Available)
51. The university will seek a colossal renovation to the plain empty theater. #1727 (Audio Available)
52. Technological advancements are responsible for businesses' having to constantly change. #1149
(Audio Available)
53. Some people regarded it as care, while others regarded it as recklessness. #952 (Audio Available)
54. The speaker began the outlines before the presentation. #713 (Audio Available)
55. You can make an appointment to meet the librarian. #642 (Audio Available)
56. The study of nutrition is a growing field. #589 (Audio Available)
57. The study of physiology involves traditional sciences and social sciences. #462 (Audio Available)
58. Students will study the language literature in ancient Greece. #442 (Audio Available)
59. In language learning, a systematic method of organizing new categories is essential. #440
(Audio Available)
60. The earth's atmosphere is primarily composed of oxygen and nitrogen gases. #373
(Audio Available)
61. All the student union students can register their names to get that service. #321 (Audio Available)
62. Points: Many student do not know how to write an essay because .... #283 (Incomplete)
63. Practical experience is a vital part of legal training. #217 (Audio Available)
64. Easter Island is a small island in the southeastern Pacific Ocean. #216 (Audio Available)
65. The urban planner must ensure that the traffic flow is smooth. #116 (Audio Available)
66. The department will continue to offer three new scholarships next year. #10 (Audio Available)
67. Climate change is not a pure reason for the scientific research. #532 (Audio Available)
68. A demonstrated ability to write clear, correct and concise English is bigotry. #110 (Audio Available)
69. Technology has changed the media we both used and studied. #48 (Audio Available)
70. The posters are on display at the larger lecture theater. #36 (Audio Available)
71. Graduates from this course generally find jobs in insurance industry. #5 (Audio Available)
72. Carbon dioxide is the main source of greenhouse gases that cause climate change due to human
behaviors. #884 (Audio Available)
73. There is a widely believed perception that engineering is for boys. #1523 (Audio Available)
74. The untapped potential use of sunrays is phenomenal. #1485 (Audio Available)
75. Protective goggles must be worn in all the university's laboratories. #1362 (Audio Available)
76. Industries now bring more job opportunities than agriculture and fishing combined. #1465
(Audio Available)
77. Statistically speaking, the likelihood of this result is extremely low. #795 (Audio Available)
78. Students are advised that all the lectures today have been canceled. #1438 (Audio Available)
79. The department is organizing a trip to London in July. #1414 (Audio Available)
80. Close the door behind you when you leave the room. #1413 (Audio Available)
81. Foods containing overabundant calories supply little or no nutritional value. #1411 (Audio Available)
82. Assignments should be submitted to the department office before the deadline. #1369
(Audio Available)
83. A national collection center for students is currently being built. #1365 (Audio Available)
84. All industries consist of systems of inputs, processes, outputs and feedback. #1359
(Audio Available)
85. Scientists were unsure when the early man left Africa. #1329 (Audio Available)
86. The tutorial timetable can be found on the course website. #1326 (Audio Available)
87. Packaging is very important to attract intended buyers. #230 (Audio Available)
88. Members should make concentrated contributions to associated operating funds. #1303
(Audio Available)
89. Many experts think that the world climate is changing. #1302 (Audio Available)
90. Plants are the living things that can grow in land or in water. #1297 (Audio Available)
91. Artificial intelligence has made significant progress for the last few years. #1289 (Audio Available)
92. Industry experts will discuss job opportunities in an automated workforce. #1280 (Audio Available)
93. There have been long streams of extreme weather since human history. #1265 (Audio Available)
94. All the equipment must be returned to the laboratory by Wednesday. #1264 (Audio Available)
95. The content is to define the combination of math and philosophy. #1258 (Audio Available)
96. The digital revolution has changed the way we read. #1245 (Audio Available)
97. Mechanical engineering first became prominent during the Industrial Revolution. #1244
(Audio Available)
98. He wrote poetry and plays as well as scientific papers. #1238 (Audio Available)
99. The economic predictions turned out to be incorrect. #1231 (Audio Available)
100. The terms illness and disease are confusing despite clear differences. #1204 (Audio Available)
101. The degree is taught by using a mixture of lectures and seminars. #1174 (Audio Available)
102. The amount of time spent on configuration varies considerably. #1165 (Audio Available)
103. The deadline of this assignment is tomorrow. #1141 (Audio Available)
104. Many university lectures can now be viewed on the Internet. #1105 (Audio Available)
105. Nutrition plays a key role in athletic performance. #1101 (Audio Available)
106. When the roots of a plant failed, foliage suffers. #1092 (Audio Available)
107. A new collection of articles has been published. #1081 (Audio Available)
108. Measures must be taken to prevent unemployment rate from increasing. #1072 (Audio Available)
109. Calculators allow us to add numbers without making mistakes. #1071 (Audio Available)
110. The disease that was serious has now been eradicated. #1069 (Audio Available)
111. Imported packages are likely to be used in many computers. #1062 (Audio Available)
112. Your ideas are sophisticated in seminars and tutorials. #1061 (Audio Available)
113. Linguistics is the scientific study and analysis of language. #1060 (Audio Available)
114. All of your assignments should be submitted by next Tuesday. #1057 (Audio Available)
115. The history department is very active in research. #1055 (Audio Available)
116. The commissioner will apportion the funds among all the sovereignties. #1052 (Audio Available)
117. You will be tested via continuous assessment and examinations. #1045 (Audio Available)
118. Audition of the university choir will be on hold until the next week. #1039 (Audio Available)
119. Students must attend the safety course before entering the engineering workshop. #1035
(Audio Available)
120. The farmers need to adapt to the changes of the climate. #1034 (Audio Available)
121. The history course is assessed via three written assignments. #1028 (Audio Available)
122. Honey can be used as food and health product. #951 (Audio Available)
123. The course involves pure and applied mathematics. #933 (Audio Available)
124. Academic libraries across the world are steadily incorporating social media. #904
(Audio Available)
125. Many diseases on the list have been eradicated. #886 (Audio Available)
126. Trees benefit the city by absorbing water running off-road. #878 (Audio Available)
127. Neuroscience is a compound of completely separate parts. #860 (Audio Available)
128. The year when the ship of artifacts was wrecked interested historians. #858 (Audio Available)
129. Our study program equips students with central skills for university. #855 (Audio Available)
130. Americans have progressively defined the process of plant growth and reproductive development in
quantitative terms. #847 (Audio Available)
131. Speed is defined as how quickly an object or a person moves. #833 (Audio Available)
132. Tribes vied with each other to build up monolithic statues. #815 (Audio Available)
133. The stock market cracked and had repercussions throughout the world. #809 (Audio Available)
134. The castle was designed to intimidate both local people and the enemies. #806 (Audio Available)
135. International exchanges formed the important part of our study program. #799 (Audio Available)
136. Sugar is a compound which consists of carbon, oxygen, and hydrogen. #798 (Audio Available)
137. Journalism faces the crisis in the light of the digital revolution. #745 (Audio Available)
138. The student shop has a range of stationery. #738 (Audio Available)
139. Graphs and charts allowed data more easily to be understood. #731 (Audio Available)
140. We can all meet in the office after the lecture. #729 (Audio Available)
141. Late applications are not accepted under any circumstances. #1010 (Audio Available)
142. Students should leave their bags on the table by the door. #1008 (Audio Available)
143. The collapse of the housing market has triggered recessions throughout the world. #1005
(Audio Available)
144. Momentum is defined as the combination of mass and velocity. #1004 (Audio Available)
145. The north campus car park could be closed on Sunday. #1000 (Audio Available)
146. Your ideas are discussed depending on your seminar or tutorial. #980 (Audio Available)
147. The bus to London will leave ten minutes later than expected. #978 (Audio Available)
148. Archeologists discovered tools and artifacts in ancient tombs. #974 (Audio Available)
149. We need to answer security questions if we want to reset the password. #965 (Audio Available)
150. Salt is produced from the seawater or extracted from the ground. #996 (Audio Available)
151. They developed a unique approach to training their employees. #941 (Audio Available)
152. Students who want to attend the conference must register first. #922 (Audio Available)
153. We have sufficient ways to study in brain action. #882 (Audio Available)
154. Americans have progressively found the growth in quantitative terms. #842 (Audio Available)
155. The new media has transcended the traditional national boundaries. #885 (Audio Available)
156. We cannot consider an increase in price at this stage. #835 (Audio Available)
157. I thought it was thrown in a small meeting room. #764 (Audio Available)
158. Students find true or false questions harder than short answers. #763 (Audio Available)
159. We were able to contact a number of research subjects. #748 (Audio Available)
160. The history of the university is a long and interesting one. #735 (Audio Available)
161. The garden behind the university is open to the public in summer. #734 (Audio Available)
162. Make sure you choose a course that provides great career opportunities. #717 (Audio Available)
163. Astronauts are using light years to measure the distance in space. #712 (Audio Available)
164. Listening is the key to succeeding in this course. #710 (Audio Available)
165. Strong liner is used to measure distance and baseline. #702 (Audio Available)
166. A laptop has been found at the biology lab. #697 (Audio Available)
167. A group meeting will be held tomorrow in the library conference room. #688 (Audio Available)
168. Universities should invest in new technologies designed for learning. #675 (Audio Available)
169. Tutors should set a clear goal at the start of the class. #673 (Audio Available)
170. Time and distance are used to calculate speed. #660 (Audio Available)
171. Students who study overseas can significantly improve work chances. #641 (Audio Available)
172. Strangely, people are simultaneously impressed by and skeptical of statistics. #637
(Audio Available)
173. Research shows the exercising makes us feel better. #633 (Audio Available)
174. Protective clothing must always be worn in the laboratory. #631 (Audio Available)
175. Manufacturing now brings more people in than agriculture and fishing combined. #619
(Audio Available)
176. Growing population has posed a challenge to many governments. #610 (Audio Available)
177. Every student has a regular meeting with his or her personal tutor. #605 (Audio Available)
178. Economic development needs to be supported by the government. #603 (Audio Available)
179. Consumer confidence tends to increase as the economy expands. #599 (Audio Available)
180. You are able to contact a number of research subjects. #588 (Audio Available)
181. You need to hand in the essay next semester. #584 (Audio Available)
182. More graduate training is often needed after the university study is finished. #239
(Audio Available)
183. His appointment as Minister of Culture was seen as a demotion. #186 (Audio Available)
184. We study science to understand and appreciate the world around us. #559 (Audio Available)
185. We have not yet achieved equality in our society. #557 (Audio Available)
186. Water taps on the campus will discourage the frequent use of plastic bottles. #553
(Audio Available)
187. University fees are expected to increase next year. #551 (Audio Available)
188. Try to work with each other to build up a sense of cooperation and team spirit. #543
(Audio Available)
189. Traffic is the main cause of air pollution in many cities. #539 (Audio Available)
190. This morning's lecture on economic policy has been canceled. #527 (Audio Available)
191. There is a welcome party for all new students each term. #508 (Audio Available)
192. There is a pharmacy on campus near the bookstore. #507 (Audio Available)
193. There are some doubts about whether these events actually occurred. #503 (Audio Available)
194. The ways in which people communicate are constantly changing. #496 (Audio Available)
195. The vocabulary that has peculiar meanings is called jargon. #494 (Audio Available)
196. The time of the math lecture has been changed to ten thirty. #481 (Audio Available)
197. The thief visited homes of several people every day. #480 (Audio Available)
198. The synopsis contains the most important information. #471 (Audio Available)
199. The summer course was canceled due to insufficient re-enrollments. #468 (Audio Available)
200. The qualification will be assessed by using a conference criterion approach. #444
(Audio Available)
201. The professor took a year off to work on her book. #441 (Audio Available)
202. The nation achieved prosperity by opening its ports for trade. #427 (Audio Available)
203. The most popular courses still have a few places left. #424 (Audio Available)
204. The lecture tomorrow will discuss the educational policy in the United States. #416
(Audio Available)
205. The introduction is an important component of a good presentation. #410 (Audio Available)
206. The first assignment is due on the fourteenth of September. #404 (Audio Available)
207. The faculty staff are very approachable, helpful and extremely friendly. #399 (Audio Available)
208. The exam system has been upgraded due to professional exams. #395 (Audio Available)
209. The earth's atmosphere is mostly composed of nitrogen and oxygen. #385 (Audio Available)
210. The other book isn't thorough but it's more insightful. #435 (Audio Available)
211. Timetables for the new term will be available next week. #482 (Audio Available)
212. The marketing budget has doubled since the beginning of the year. #419 (Audio Available)
213. The plight of wildlife has been ignored by local developers. #439 (Audio Available)
214. The dance department stages elaborated performances each semester. #375 (Audio Available)
215. The course helps students to improve their pronunciation skills. #370 (Audio Available)
216. The campus tour will help you to get familiar with the teaching facilities. #358 (Audio Available)
217. The business plan seminar includes an internship with a local firm. #354 (Audio Available)
218. The book was supported by many faculty members. #352 (Audio Available)
219. The author's early works are less philosophical and more experimental. #350 (Audio Available)
220. The assessment of this course will begin next week. #347 (Audio Available)
221. The artists tied with the conservative politicians earned the roles of critics. #346 (Audio Available)
222. The article first introduces various interesting experiments. #336 (Audio Available)
223. The article considered the leisure habits of teenagers in rural areas or places. #335
(Audio Available)
224. The application process may take longer than expected. #332 (Audio Available)
225. The aerial photographs were promptly registered for thorough evaluation. #330 (Audio Available)
226. The ability to work with fellow students cannot be stressed enough. #328 (Audio Available)
227. Students who attempted to go to the conference must register now. #315 (Audio Available)
228. Students were instructed to submit their assignments by Friday. #313 (Audio Available)
229. Students are advised to use multiple methods for this project. #300 (Audio Available)
230. She began by giving an outline of the previous lecture. #284 (Audio Available)
231. Sea levels are expected to rise during the next century. #280 (Audio Available)
232. Scientists are always asking the government for more money. #277 (Audio Available)
233. Scientific beneficiary to space exploration is frequently questioned. #276 (Audio Available)
234. Remember, the prestigious section has strict eligibility criteria. #267 (Audio Available)
235. Radio is a popular form of entertainment throughout the world. #258 (Audio Available)
236. Please remember to bring a highlighter and your textbook to class next Thursday. #247
(Audio Available)
237. Please note, submission deadlines are only negotiable in exceptional circumstances. #246
(Audio Available)
238. Peer group pressure has a great effect on young people. #236 (Audio Available)
239. Packaging is very important to attract the attention of a buyer. #231 (Audio Available)
240. Our professor is hosting the business development conference. #227 (Audio Available)
241. Many birds migrate to warmer areas for the winter. #189 (Audio Available)
242. Making mistakes is fine, as long as you learn from it. #188 (Audio Available)
243. It is really a comprehensive program comprising both theory and practice. #170 (Audio Available)
244. It is important to make clear notes while you are reading. #169 (Audio Available)
245. It is absolutely vital that you acknowledge all your sources. #164 (Audio Available)
246. Important details from the argument are missing in the summary. #155 (Audio Available)
247. If you need additional help, please visit the university resources center. #153 (Audio Available)
248. If finance is a cause of concern, scholarships may be available. #150 (Audio Available)
249. I will come back to this in a moment. #147 (Audio Available)
250. Nurses can specialize in clinical work and management. #213 (Audio Available)
251. Student representatives will be visiting classes with voting forms. #299 (Audio Available)
252. He landed his job in a very prestigious law firm. #136 (Audio Available)
253. The archeologist's new discoveries stand out in previously overlooked foundations. #333
(Audio Available)
254. The theme of the instrumental work exhibits more of a demure, compositional style. #478
(Audio Available)
255. Students requiring an extension should apply sooner rather than later. #310 (Audio Available)
256. Some economists argue that the entire financial system is fatally flawed. #289 (Audio Available)
257. We have sophisticated ways to study in brain action. #558 (Audio Available)
258. Lectures are the oldest and the most formal teaching method at university. #179 (Audio Available)
259. Recession triggers creativity and high rates of entrepreneurship due to past experience. #262
(Audio Available)
260. Efforts are being made to reduce harmful emissions. #107 (Audio Available)
261. Education and training provide important skills for the labor force. #106 (Audio Available)
262. Daily practice can build confidence and improve skills. #97 (Audio Available)
263. Convincing evidence to support this theory is hard to obtain. #94 (Audio Available)
264. Consumer confidence has a direct influence on sales. #92 (Audio Available)
265. Conferences ought to be always scheduled two weeks in advance. #91 (Audio Available)
266. Competition for places in this course is fierce. #89 (Audio Available)
267. Clinical placement in nursing prepares students for professional practice. #86 (Audio Available)
268. Climate change is now an acceptable phenomenon among a group of reputable scientists. #85
(Audio Available)
269. Climate change is a fierce phenomenon concentrated by scientists. #84 (Audio Available)
270. Behind the barn, there is a flat cart drawn by mules. #70 (Audio Available)
271. Before submitting your dissertation, your advisor must approve your application. #69
(Audio Available)
272. Artists, other than politicians, played their own roles as critics of the culture. #61
(Audio Available)
273. And in that regard, as well as in other regards, it stands as an important contribution. #58
(Audio Available)
274. An ancient text may hold secrets which were lost centuries ago. #55 (Audio Available)
275. Although sustainable development is not easy, it is an unavoidable responsibility. #51
(Audio Available)
276. All the educational reforms have been inadequately implemented. #49 (Audio Available)
277. All students are expected to attend ten lab sessions per semester. #46 (Audio Available)
278. All of the assignments must be submitted in person to the faculty office. #43 (Audio Available)
279. Agenda items should be submitted by the end of the day. #38 (Audio Available)
280. Affordable housing is an important issue for all members of society. #37 (Audio Available)
281. A person's educational level is closely related to his economic background. #29 (Audio Available)
282. A number of students have volunteer jobs. #27 (Audio Available)
283. A good architectural structure should be usable, durable and beautiful. #22 (Audio Available)
284. A celebrated theory is still the source of great controversy. #20 (Audio Available)
285. Economic strength of early Roman Republic will be examined. #105 (Audio Available)
286. Every student has both the right and the ability to succeed. #115 (Audio Available)
287. All dissertations must be accompanied with a submission form. #40 (Audio Available)
288. Free campus tour runs daily during summer for prospective students. #16 (Audio Available)
289. Please confirm that you have received the textbook. #2 (Audio Available)
290. The artists and conservative politicians earn their rules of politics. #1 (Audio Available)
291. The results of the study underscore the discoveries from early detection. #7 (Audio Available)