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2017雅思筆試真題+答案(大陸卷+亞太卷)

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2月11日雅思筆試回憶+答案(大陸卷+亞太卷)

大陸卷聽力

2017雅思筆試真題+答案(大陸卷+亞太卷)

Section 1:

1. cash

2. 4 days

3. caravan

4. sailing

5. museum

6. White Mountain

7. snow boarding

8. cakes

9. car

10. map

Section 2:

11. 134

12. annual report

13. trade journals

14. a bkkoshop

15. 1.95 pounds

16. 4 weeks

17. 12

18. 6

19. Electric Card

20. Tuesday & Friday

Section 3:

21. B. the selective course will be full very soon

22. C. the mathematics

23. A. useful

24. A. to consult of the students about the teaching quality

25. C. variable

26. A. how they have to register the course

27. E

28. D

29. A

30. C

Section 4:

31. C. surprising

32. C. they do not provide real language

33. B. lack of reasoning ability and don’t know the next idea

34. A. thinking based on experience

35. A. smell

36. land marks

37. human

38. good eyesight

39. machines or robots

40. they do well

大陸卷閱讀

P1:新型超市

The Innovation of Grocery Stores

A At the beginning of the 20th century,grocery stores in the United States were full-service.A customer would ask a clerk behind the counter for specific itemand the clerk would package the items, which werelimited to dry goods. If they want to save some time, they have to ask adelivery boy or by themselves to send the note of what they want to buy to the grocery story first and then goto pay for the goods later. Thesegrocery stores usually carried only one brand of each good. There were earlychain stores, such as the A&P Stores, but these were all entirelyfull-service and very time-consuming.

B In 1885, a Virginia boy named Clarence Saunders began working part-time as aclerk in a grocery store when he was 14 years old, and quit school when theshopkeeper offered him Ml time work with room and board. Later he worked in anAlabama coke plant and in a Tennessee sawmill before he returned to the grocerybusiness. By 1900, when he was nineteen years old, he was earning $30 a monthas a salesman for a wholesale grocer. During his years working in the grocery stores, he found that it was very inconvenient and inefficient forpeople to buy things because more than a century ago, long before there werecomputers, shopping was done quite differently than it is today. Entering astore, the customer would approach the counter (or wait for a clerk to becomeavailable) and place an order, either verbally or, as was often the case forboys running errands, in the form of a note or list. While the customer waited,the clerk would move behind the counter and throughout the store, select theitems

on the list—some form shelves so high that long-handledgrasping device

had to be used—and bring them back to the counter to be tallied and baggedor boxed. The process might beexpedited by the customer calling or sending

in the order beforehand, or by the order being handled by a delivery boy on abike, but otherwise it did not vary greatly. Saunders, a flamboyant andinnovative man, noticed that this method resulted in wasted time and expense,so he came up with an unheard-of solution that would revolutionize the entiregrocery industry: he developed a way for shoppers to serve themselves.

C So in 1902 he moved to Memphis where he developed his concept to form agrocery wholesale cooperative and a full-service grocery store. For his new“cafeteria grocery”, Saunders divided his grocery into three distinct areas:

1) A front “lobby” forming an entrance and exit and checkouts at the front.

2) A sales department, which was specially designed to allow customers to roamthe aisles and select their own groceries. Removing unnecessary clerks,creating elaborate aisle displays, and rearranging the store to force customersto view all of the merchandise and over the shelving and cabinets units ofsales department were “galleries” where supervisors were allowed to keep an eyeon the customers while not disturbing them. 3) And another section of his storeis the room only allowed for the clerks which was called the “stockroom” or“storage room” where large refrigerators were situated to keep fresh productsfrom being perishable. The new format allowed multiple customers to shop at thesame time, and led to the previously unknown phenomenon of impulse gh this format of grocery market was drastically different from itscompetitors, the style became the standard for the modern grocery store andlater supermarket.

D On September 6, 1916,Saunders launched the self-service revolution in theUSA by opening the first self-servicePiggly Wiggly store, at 79 Jefferson Street in Memphis,Tennessee, with its characteristic turnstile at the entrance. Customers paidcash and selected their own goods from the shelves. It was unlike any othergrocery store of that time. Inside a Piggly Wiggly, shoppers were not at themercy of shop clerks. They were free to roam the store, check out themerchandise and get what they needed with their own two hands and feet. Priceson items at Piggly Wiggly were clearly marked. No one pressured customers tobuy milk or pickles. Andthe biggest benefit atthe Piggly Wiggly wasthat shoppers saved money. Self-service was a positive all around. “It’s goodfor both the consumer and retailer because it cuts costs,” noted George y, a professor at the University of New Haven and director of the Centerfor International Industry Competitiveness. “If you looked at the way grocerystores were run previous to Piggly Wiggly and Alpha Beta, what you find is thatthere was atremendous amount of labor involved,and labor is a major expense.” Piggly Wiggly cut the fat.

E Piggly Wiggly and the self-service concept took off. Saunders opened ninestores in the Memphis area within the first year of business. Consumersembraced the efficiency, the simplicity and most of all the lower food ders soonpatented his self-service concept, and began franchising Piggly Wigglystores. Thanks to the benefits of self-service and franchising, PigglyWigglyballooned to nearly 1,300 stores by 1923. Piggly Wiggly sold $100million—worth $1.3 billion today—in groceries, making it the third-biggest grocery retailer in thenation. The company’s stock was even listed on the New York Stock Exchange,doubling from late 1922 to March 1923. Saunders had his hands all over PigglyWiggly. He was instrumental in the design and layout of his stores. He eveninvented the turnstile.

F However Saunders was forced into bankruptcy in 1923 after a dramatic spatwith the New York Stock Exchange and he went on to create the “ClarenceSaunders sole-owner-of-my-name” chain, which went into bankruptcy.

G Until the time of his death in October 1953, Saunders was developing plansfor another automatic store system called the Foodelectric. But the store,which was to be located two blocks from the firstPiggly Wiggly store, never his name was well-remembered along with the name Piggly Wiggly.

Questions 1-5

.................................................................................

The reading Passage has seven paragraphs A-G.

Which paragraph contains the following information?

Write the correct letter A-G, in boxes 1-5 on your answer sheet.

NB You may use any letter more than once.

1 How Clarence Saunders’ new idea had been carried out.

2 Introducing the modes and patterns of groceries before his age.

3 Clarence Saunders declared bankruptcy a few years later .

4 Descriptions of Clarence Saunders’ new conception.

5 The booming development of his business.

Questions 6-10

...............................................................................

Answer the questions below.

Write ONLY ONE WORD AND/OR A NUMBERfrom the passage for each answer.

6 When Clarence Saunders was an adolescent, he took a job as a in a

grocery store.

7 In the new innovation of grocery store, most of the clerks’ work before was

done by

8 In Saunders’ new grocery store, the section where customers finish the

payment was called

9 Another area in his store which behind the public area was called the ,

where only internal staff could access.

10 At where customers were under surveillance.

Questions 11-13

..............................................................................

Choose the correct letter, A, B, C or D.

Write your answers in boxes 11-13 on your answer sheet.

11 Why did Clarence Saunders want to propel the innovation of grocery stores athis

age?

A Because he was an enthusiastic and creative man.

B Because his boss wanted to reform the grocery industry.

C Because he wanted to develop its efficiency and make great profit as well.

D Because he worried about the future competition from the industry.

12 What happened to ClarenceSaunders’ firststore of Piggly Wiggly?

A Customers complained about its impracticality and inconvenience.

B It enjoyed a great business and was updated in the first twelve months.

C It expanded to more than a thousand franchised stores during the first year.

D Saunders were required to have his new idea patented and open morestores.

13 What left to Clarence Saunders after his death in 1953?

A A fully automatic store system opened soon near his first store.

B The name of his store the Piggly Wiggly was very popular at that time.

C His name was usually connected with his famous shop the Piggly Wiggly in

the following several years.

D His name was painted together with the name of his famous store.

答案:

1 .D

2.A

3.F

4.C

5.E

6. clerk 原文 B 段首句

7. customers/shoppers 原文 D 段第 5 行開始(之前由店員 clerk 滿商

場跑,取貨物的活 B 段有講,現在顧客自己幹了。shopper were not

at the mercy of clerks 顧客完全不依賴店員)

8. lobby原文 C 段第 4 行

9. stockroom 原文 C 段第 12 行(題目要求 ONLY ONEWORD,所以不

選 storge room)

10. galleries 原文 C 段第 9 行

11. C 原文 B 段倒數三行開始

12. B 原文 E段第一行開始

13. C 原文 G 段最後一行

P2:

1. TRUE

2. NOT GIVEN

3. FALSE

4. FLASE

5. TRUE

6. NOT GIVEN

Summary: sheets, cables, melting, 2.5%, tank, rolls, floating, carrying

P3爲新題,答案暫無

大陸卷寫作

A類小作文柱圖

大作文In modern society, ambition is more and more important. How important is ambition for being successful in life ? Is ambition a positive or negative characteristic?

大作文7分範文

In contemporary settings, people attach overwhelming significance to ambition and aspiration because it could stimulate their potential and help them win success. the importance of ambition can not be doubted but it generates both positive and negative influences.

it is irrefutable that ambition is of great importance for young people's further development. to be more specific, with ambition can be source of motivation to stimulate young learners to explore their potential and overcome difficulties on their way to success. a classical example is some leaders or scientists , who make contribution to the world due to the ambition they have when they are young. By contrast, young adults without ambition tend to easily abandon their study or work because of unpredicted difficulties. because there is no enough motivation to stimulate them to study hard.

In terms of its influence, ambition is beneficial to explore young adults initiative and potential to learn New knowledge and skills. they can make full use of every opportunity to enhance their employabiliy and interpersonal skills with the inspiration of their inner ver, sometimes those who fail to realize their ambition tend to generate negative emotional response because their efforts and talents can not be recognized. these negative emotion response does damage to their confidence and psychological wellbeing.

In conclusion, it is undeniable that ambition is of boundless benefits to a teenagers' growth, but young adults should learn to adjust their expectations and ensure their wellbeing and growth can not be negatively influenced.

7分範文由北雁南飛老師提供,老師微信:alice2009420

亞太卷聽力

Section 1,回憶暫無

Section 2,回憶暫無

Section 3:

21. cities

22. commercial

23. engine

24. safety

25. higher seats

26. dangerous/harmful

27. weight

28. roll over

29. farmers

30. insurance

Section4:

31. high absent rate

32. Students felt hard to recall

33. lecturer do not want change

34. need a long time to adapt a new system

35. B. survey done on a regular basis

36. B. 34%

37. A. use real-experience

38. B. sentence completion

39. C. more pause without activities

40. under different subjects

亞太卷閱讀

亞太卷:

P1回憶暫無

P2:London Swaying Footbridge

14. A

15. D

16. E

17. G

18. winds

19. pedestrians

20. horizontal forces

21. vibration

22. motion

23. Imperial College

24. normal forward vibration

25. Arup engineers

26. design assumptions