IELTS Listening Test Practice 1 Questions
Listening test 1
Listening test clip
Section 1
Complete the form below, using NO MORE
THAN THREE WORDS AND/OR A NUMBER for each answer.
Travel Safe
INSURANCE PLC
Department: Motor Insurance
Client details:
Name Elisabeth 1…………………
Date of birth: 8.10.1975
Address: 2………………. (Street) Callington (town)
Policy number: 3………………..
Accident details:
Date: 4…………………
Time: Approx. 5………………….
Supporting evidence: 6………………………
Medical problems (if
any): 7………………Injuries
Listening Tip
In the IELTS Listening exam, you may be asked to label a map or plan.
In such questions, think of ways you can describe where places are before you
listen. You will need to think of vocabulary for directions, for example: on
the left, first right, along the road and vocabulary for places or
positions, such as opposite, next to, behind, or at the end of the street.
Questions 8-10
Label the diagram/plan below.
Write the correct letter, A-G,
next to questions 8-10.
Questions 11-14
Questions 15-17
8. Traffic
lights..........
9. Petrol
station..........
10. Blue van..........
Section 2
Complete
the sentences below, using NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS for
each answer.
11. Dormouse
numbers have fallen ………………… as well as in the UK.
12. Dormice
are about as heavy as two ……………….
13. You
are most likely to have seen a dormouse in a …………………….
14. In
the UK, dormice probably live in hedges and woods, and next to ……………………..
Label
the identification sheet below.
Write the correct letter A-E next to questions 15-17.
15. Opened by woodmice..........
16. Opened by voles..........
17. Opened by dormice..........
Questions 18-20
Complete
the summary below.
Us NO
MORE THAN ONE WORD in each space.
If you find nuts
opened by dormice 18 ……………… where you found them.
Put them into some kind of 19 ………………………… and 20
…………………….. Them (name and address). Post them to Action for
Wildlife.
Section 3
Questions 21-26
Which company website has the following
features?
Write the correct letter A, B or C in
boxes 21-26 on your answer sheet.
A.
Hills
Cycles website
B.
Wheels
Unlimited website
C.
Both
websites
21. Bicycle catalogue..........
22. Price list..........
23. Bicycle accessories..........
24. Company history..........
25. Online ordering..........
26. Moving graphics..........
Questions 27-30
Choose the correct letter, A, B, or C.
27. According to the tutor, the basic criterion for evaluating the
websites should relate to
Appearance.
Ease of use.
Target
customers.
28. On the subject of timing, the tutor says
The students'
plan is appropriate.
The students'
presentation will be too long.
The students
can extend the presentation if necessary.
29. Sarah and Jack will share the work by
Speaking in
short turns.
Doing half the
presentation each.
Managing
different aspects.
30. The tutor advises Sarah and Jack not to
Talk too much.
Show
complicated lists.
Use a lot of
visuals.
Section 4
Questions 31-37
Answer the questions below.
Write NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS AND/OR
A NUMBER for each answer.
31. Which elephants stay together all their life?
32. What are elephant family groups known as?
33. When scientists tracked groups of elephants, which feature of
behaviour did they notice?
34. Which sense do elephants probably use to communicate over long
distances?
35. What did American scientists do with a recording of elephant
calls?
36. What did the elephants in the experiment rush to find?
37. What were scientists unable to do with the recording they had
made?
Listening Tip
If you cannot choose
between two answers for one question, write them both down for now. One might
be the answer to a later question, then you will know you cannot choose it
twice.
Questions 38-40
What does the lecturer say about each type of
elephant call?
Choose your answers from the box, and write
the letters A-H next to questions 38-40.
A.
cannot
be heard by humans at all
B.
is
usually accompanied by a leg movement
C.
begins
and ends at the same pitch
D.
is
usually accompanied by a nod of the head
E.
continuously
increases in pitch
F.
is
repeated over a long period
G. continually fluctuates in volume
38. Greeting..........
39. Contact call..........
40. Summons to move on..........
Please scroll down to last to answers
LISTENING 1 SCRIPT
SECTION 1
Assistant 1:
Rawlings Insurance.
Good morning. Can I help you?
Elisabeth:
Oh, hello. I'm ringing
to report an accident.
Assistant 1:
A car accident?
Elisabeth:
Yes.
Assistant 1:
Just hold the line a
moment, please. I'm putting you through to our motor insurance department.
Assistant 2:
Hello?
Elisabeth:
Hello.
Assistant 2:
I understand you want
to report an accident?
Elisabeth:
Yes. My car's been
damaged - someone came out in front of me ...
Assistant 2:
Could I just check a few
personal details before we go any further?
Assistant:
Oh yes, sorry.
Assistant 2:
Your name, first of
all.
Elisabeth:
It's ELISABETH Ricard.
Assistant 2:
Is that R-I-K-A-R-D?
Elisabeth:
It's spelt with a C
not a K.
Assistant 2:
Oh, OK ... And your
date of birth please?
Elisabeth:
It's the eighth of
October, 1975.
Assistant 2:
... And lastly, I just
need to check your address.
Elisabeth:
Oh, actually I moved
house last month so the street name's different. It's 60 Forest Road. I think
you've got 22 Ash Avenue on your records?
Assistant 2:
I have. So, I'll just
make a note of that ... That's fine ... And is that in the same town still?
Callington?
Elisabeth:
That's right.
Assistant 2:
Right, now ... do you
have your insurance policy in front of you?
Elisabeth:
Yes, I do.
Assistant 2:
Can you give me the
policy number please? It's at the top.
Elisabeth:
Oh yes.
Five-oh-nine-two-four?
Assistant 2:
It's in a box - it
should start with letters ...
Elisabeth:
Oh, C-Z- double
eight-oh-nine?
Assistant 2:
That's the one. And
now I want to ask you about the accident itself. Is that OK?
Elisabeth:
Yes, that's fine.
Assistant 2:
First of all, did it
happen today?
Elisabeth:
No, it happened
yesterday evening, but by the time I got home it was late, so I didn't call.
Assistant 2:
That's not a problem.
So ... let's see ... today's the thirteenth of September, so it happened on the
twelfth. Is that right?
Elisabeth:
It is.
Assistant 2:
Do you know
approximately what time the accident occurred?
Elisabeth: Er
... oh dear ... I wasn't wearing a watch, and I was a bit shocked. But I'd say
it was between 8.15 and 8.45.
Assistant 2:
That's OK. I'll just
record that it happened at about 8.30. It doesn't matter exactly ... And I
don't suppose you've got any supporting evidence have you? I mean witness
statements, that kind of thing?
Elisabeth:
I don't have witness
statements I'm afraid, but I've got a police report. They came and measured up
and checked the marks on the road. But unfortunately nobody else was around at
the time of the accident.
Assistant 2:
Any hospital report?
Elisabeth:
No.
Assistant 2:
So I take it you don't
have any medical problems then? Any injuries?
Elisabeth:
Only minor ones. It
was mainly the car that got damaged luckily.
Assistant 2:
Absolutely. But we do
recommend that you have a check up anyway. Within twenty-four hours if
possible.
Elisabeth:
Yes, OK. I'll make an
appointment today.
Assistant 2:
Fine. And now, can you
tell me what happened exactly? I'm going to make a few notes.
Elisabeth:
I was driving home
from the swimming pool and ...
Assistant 2:
I don't know
Callington at all, so could you describe it for me? Where did the accident
happen?
Elisabeth: On
the road between New Town and Callington. I was driving from New Town, heading
towards Callington, and ...
Assistant 2:
OK, just let me draw
the road layout ... Right. OK?
Elisabeth:
When you leave New
Town there's a sharp bend in the road and then there's a railway bridge.
Assistant 2:
OK.
Elisabeth:
And then about half a
kilometre further on there's a crossroads with traffic lights. And I was just
in between the two when it happened. I wasn't going very fast, in fact I
definitely ...
Assistant 2:
So you'd already gone
over the bridge?
Elisabeth:
Yes. And I'd passed
the park - that's on the right hand side. And I was just approaching the petrol
station ...
Assistant 2:
Where's that then?
Elisabeth:
It's a bit further
along, on the opposite side.
Assistant 2:
So, on your near side
then?
Elisabeth:
Yes. As I was
approaching it I saw a blue van coming towards me. The driver had stopped in
the middle of the road.
Assistant 2:
Was he indicating?
Elisabeth:
Yes. He was waiting to
turn into the petrol station. But then at the last minute he decided to turn
right in front of me. He must have thought he had enough time, but I had to
swerve to avoid him. And I came off the road and landed in a ditch on the
opposite side.
Assistant 2:
Mmm. I don't suppose
he stopped did he?
Elisabeth:
Oh yes. He came over
to see if I was OK, but he tried to say it was my fault. And there wasn't...
SECTION 2
Presenter: Good
morning, and welcome to our weekly programme about countryside matters. With me
today I have Jacky Lamerton. Jacky works for the nature organization Action for
Wildlife, and she's appealing for volunteers for a project she's organizing, so
if you think you might be willing to help please listen carefully. Jacky ...
Lecturer: Thank
you. Yes ... as you've just heard, I represent a charity called Action for
Wildlife, which works to protect plants and animals. And I'm here today to talk
about a project to save a type of mouse known as a dormouse. We can still find
the dormouse in this area, but in the last few decades the number of dormice
has seriously declined, not just in this country but across the world. There
are several reasons for this - loss of habitat, climate change, competition for
food - and this area of the UK is now regarded as one of the last strongholds.
So naturally, we want to help the creature to survive here as much as we can.
The aim of the first stage of our project is simply to identify
specific locations where dormice are still to be found, and estimate the number
we have here. So I'll just tell you a little bit about the creature, in case
you don't already know. The dormouse is a very attractive, very small mammal -
it only weighs about the same as a couple of pound coins. It's bright golden in
colour, and it has a thick furry tail and big black eyes. Now, you've probably
all seen a picture of a dormouse, but you're very unlikely to have seen a real
one because they're strictly nocturnal. Also, they hibernate from October to
April, so it's not around at all for about half the year.
So where is the dormouse to be found? Well, dormice need to be
near a variety of trees and plants, so they can be sure of a continuous supply
of food throughout the spring and summer. They feed on flowers, pollen, fruit,
insects, ripe nuts - things that are available in turn as the summer
progresses. Here in the UK the dormouse is most likely to live in places like
hedgerows, or woods, or at the edges of farmland.
So how do we find out exactly where dormice are? Well, as
they're hard to spot, as I said, we have to use indirect methods. Instead of
trying to see dormice themselves, we look for evidence of dormouse activity.
Dormice eat hazelnuts, so we'll be looking for the shells that dormice have
opened to get at the nut inside.
A lot of wildlife species eat hazelnuts - it's not just dormice.
But it's usually possible to tell which particular animal has opened a nut by
looking at the marks on the shells. So now, for those of you who would like to
help us carry out this survey, let me tell you exactly what to do. You'll need
to get an identification sheet like this from us, then you should spend time
looking for hazelnut shells in the bottom of hedgerows, or on the ground in
woodlands.
If you find one, use the identification sheet to try and
establish what kind of creature has opened it. You'll see from the pictures on
the sheet that different creatures do it in different ways. For example, you'll
see that insects make a small hole in the shell, less than 2 millimetres
across. Then there's another type of mouse called a woodmouse. Woodmice make a
hole in the shell too, but they leave parallel tooth marks on the inner rim of
the shell, as well as rough scratches on the surface. Thirdly there are little
mammals called voles. These creatures don't leave any marks on the surface, but
they leave tooth marks on the inner rim of the hole. And these marks are neat
and parallel. So they're fairly easy to identify. Then there are squirrels and
birds. They both open the nuts, leaving half shells that have got jagged edges.
And finally we have our dormice. They make a hole in the shell that has a
smooth inner edge. And the tooth marks it leaves are on the surface, at an
angle to the hole. And these are the ones we're looking for of course.
Firstly, if you do find any nuts which you think have been
opened by dormice you need to record their location as precisely as possible.
You can use the grid references on a map, or you can sketch your own map, but
if you do, be sure to include landmarks or road names. It's very important that
we know exactly where the shells came from. Then put the nut shells in a small
container. Any kind will do - a film box or a match box - anything that
prevents them from being crushed in the post. And then finally, give them a
label - just your name and contact details - and send them to Action for
Wildlife. When we receive them an expert will look at the shells to confirm
your identification. The address to send them to is ...
SECTION 3
Tutor:
Hello you two, have a
seat ... OK? So, you're going to tell me about the presentation you're
preparing for next week's marketing seminar, right?
Jack:
That's right. We've
drafted this plan for you to look at ...
Tutor:
OK, thanks. Perhaps
you could just talk me through it, could you? Sarah, do you want to begin?
Sarah:
Yes. Well, we're going
to compare the websites of two bicycle companies ...
Tutor:
Right ... And they're
called Hills Cycles and Wheels Unlimited?
Sarah:
Yes. And first of all,
we've compared the content of each site, and the presentation. Then we've done
an evaluation of each one.
Tutor:
OK... And did you find
much difference between the two websites? Jack?
Jack:
Quite a bit, yes.
Wheels Unlimited has a lot more pages, for a start ... Both companies show
their catalogue - I mean pictures of different models of bike, with
specifications.
Tutor:
And prices?
Jack:
Yes, they're there
too, although they list them in different ways - Hills Cycles have got them
next to the pictures and Wheels Unlimited show them on a separate page.
Sarah:
But Wheels Unlimited
advertises lots of other products connected with bikes - like helmets, and
clothing, and tools.
Jack:
Yes, all kinds of
things.
Tutor:
And Hills Cycles?
Sarah:
No. They only show the
bikes themselves.
Tutor:
OK. Well ... is there
anything on the Hills Cycles website that Wheels Unlimited doesn't have?
Jack:
Not really.
Sarah:
Yes there is - it's
got a little photo of the original shop, and a paragraph about the history of
the company - it's family owned.
Jack:
Oh yes, I forgot about
that.
Tutor:
Right ... That's the content
then. And you compared the functions of the two websites, did you?
Jack:
Yes. Hills Cycles
doesn't have any facility for online ordering. You have to ring up to order
something, that's the only way you can do it.
Sarah:
Well no, you can send
off for a paper catalogue with an order form.
Jack:
Oh yes, I suppose so.
But with Wheels Unlimited you can order online or in the conventional ways.
Sarah:
That's right.
Tutor:
Fine. OK. And what
about the presentation? Did you find any particular differences there? Or
similarities? What about visuals?
Jack:
As I said, both the
sites have got pictures, and they're both quite attractive, but Wheels
Unlimited hasn't got any moving graphics.
Sarah:
Yes. Hills Cycles has
got an animated cartoon at the top of the Home Page.
Tutor:
Right. Well, it looks
as if you've got plenty to talk about.
Sarah:
There are other things
too, but those are the main things we noticed.
Tutor: OK, well you'd better
stick to the most obvious differences, because you've only got ten minutes for
the whole presentation, haven't you? And you said you're going to evaluate each
site as well, didn't you? How are you going to do that? I mean what criteria
will you use?
Sarah:
We thought we'd use
three criteria: how attractive each website is, how userfriendly it is, and how
closely it targets its potential customers. Do you think that's OK?
Tutor:
Sounds fine. But I'd
look at the criteria in a different order if I were you. Because really you've
got to look at attractiveness and user-friendliness in relation to the people
the website is aiming at. So, I'd deal with that criterion first if I were you.
Sarah:
Right.
Tutor:
What about the timing?
Have you thought of that? Ten minutes is very short you know.
Jack:
Yes. We tried it out.
Sarah:
Several times!
Jack:
And we've decided to
spend four minutes comparing the two sites, then three minutes evaluating them,
and leave three minutes for questions. That's not really enough, but ...
Tutor:
Well it sounds about
right to me. You've got ten minutes altogether and you have got to stick to
that limit. It's good practice, and at least the audience won't have time to
get bored! What visuals are you going to use?
Jack: We're going to use
Powerpoint and a flip chart as well.
Sarah:
So we can show two
things at once. For example, we're going to start by showing the Home Pages of
each website, and we're going to put up a list of key features on the flip
chart at the same time.
Tutor:
OK. And it's a joint
presentation, so have you decided how you're going to share the work?
Jack:
Yes. First we thought
we'd keep taking it in turns to speak - Sarah would say a bit, then I'd take
over, and so on. Then we thought we'd just divide it into two equal parts and
do one part each. But it was all too complicated. So Sarah's going to do all
the talking, and I'm going to manage the visuals. And hope we can coordinate
properly!
Sarah:
It's the only way we
can fit everything in.
Tutor:
Well, good. You've
obviously worked hard and you've been very careful with the details. Only one
thing I would say: make sure that you keep your visuals simple. I mean, if
you're showing a list of key features, for example, you should make it as brief
as possible. Just use bullet points and simple phrases, even single words. Your
audience won't have much reading time. It's a classic mistake with seminar
presentations to present so much information that the audience can't process it
quickly enough, and they stop listening to what you're saying. OK?
Jack:
Yes. Right. OK.
Tutor: And now let's talk about...
SECTON 4
Lecturer: In
today's lecture I'm going to continue the theme of animal communication, and
I'm going to describe some of the latest research into the largest of all land
animals. And that is the elephant, of course.
Let me begin by briefly outlining the structure of elephant
society. Elephants live in layered societies. The basic family unit is formed
of small groups of adult females, who are related to each other, and their
young of both sexes. Now the females remain in their families for life, they're
highly social, but male elephants leave their families at about fourteen years
of age. They travel alone or congregate in small, loose groups with other
males, occasionally joining a family on a temporary basis. When males are ready
to mate they wander widely, searching for receptive females.
The family unit, on the other hand, often contains three
generations, and it can remain stable for decades, or even centuries. Then ...
each family associates with between one and five other families, probably
consisting of their more distant relatives. Scientists call these groups of
families "bond groups", and bond groups belong, in turn, to even
larger groups, called clans.
So elephants have a complex social structure. And like other
social animals they have to be able to communicate. But what baffled early
naturalists was their ability to communicate over long distances. So they set
about researching this question.
In one experiment, scientists fitted groups of elephants with
radio-tracking collars. And what they observed about their behavior really
intrigued them. Because they found that there was some sort of co-ordination
between families. For example, two separate family groups might move in
parallel to each other, miles apart, and then change direction simultaneously,
either turning or moving towards each other. Now elephants have a keen sense of
smell which they use whenever they can. But smell alone couldn't account for
these synchronized movements, because the wind often carries odours in the
wrong direction. So, the scientists concluded that the elephants were using
their hearing instead, and attention then turned to the nature of elephant
calls.
In another experiment, scientists from Cornell University in
America went to Etosha National Park in Namibia, and they produced a recording
of calls made by a female elephant to potential mates. Then they broadcast it.
And they did this from a van which was parked more than half a mile from a
water hole where several bull elephants were drinking. And two of these looked
up, spread their ears wide, and then crunched through the bush towards the
loudspeakers. As you can imagine, the scientists may have been alarmed at this
point, but the elephants marched straight on, past them and their van, in search
of a female elephant. But the striking aspect of this experiment was that, when
they replayed their recording, neither the two scientists nor the rest of their
team, who were filming from a nearby tower, could hear it. And that's because
the sounds that they had replayed were below the lower threshold of human
hearing. In scientific terminology, the sounds are infrasonic.
Elephants can make these extremely low-pitched sounds because
although they have a larynx, or voice box, that is similar to those of all
other mammals, it's much larger. But what do the sounds ‘mean'? Scientists from
Pittsburgh Zoo in the USA have classified certain infrasonic calls, based on
when these occur and how other elephants react to them. They found, for
example, that when individual family members re-unite after separation, they
greet each other very enthusiastically, and the excitement increases with the
length of time that they've been separated. They trumpet and scream and touch
each other. They also use a greeting rumble. This starts at a low 18 Hertz -
Hertz is a measurement of sound pitch - crests at 25 Hertz, which is a level
just high enough to be audible to humans, and then falls back to 18 Hertz
again. In another example, an elephant attempting to locate its family uses the
contact call. This call has a relatively quiet, low tone, with a strong
overtone which is clearly audible to humans. Immediately after contact calling,
the elephant will lift and spread its ears, and rotate its head, as if
listening for the response. The contact answer is louder and more abrupt than
the greeting call, and it trails off at the end. Contact calls and answers can
last for hours, until the elephant successfully rejoins her family. A third
type of call seems to represent a summons to move on. At the end of a meal, one
member of a family moves to the edge of the group, typically lifts one leg and
flaps her ears. At the same time she emits a "let's go" rumble, which
arouses the family, and they start to move on. Finally, mating activity is associated
with yet another group of calls.
So, our understanding of elephant communication has increased
considerably in recent years. However, even with the use of radio tracking
collars it's technically difficult to document the functions of long-range communication.
So although scientists are aware that elephants may know the whereabouts, and
possibly the activities of other elephants that are several miles away, there
may be a lot of subtle, long-range interactions which are still not evident.
LISTENING 1 Answers
1. 1. RICARD
2.
60 FOREST ROAD
3.
CZ8809
4.
12.09
5.
8:30
6.
POLICE REPORT
7.
MINOR
8.
G
9.
C
10.
D
11.
ACROSS THE WORLD
12.
POUNDS COIN
13.
PICTURE
14.
FARMLAND
15.
E
16.
A
17.
B
18.
RECORD
19.
CONTAINER
20.
LABEL
21.
C
22.
C
23.
B
24.
A
25.
B
26.
A
27.
C
28.
A
29.
C
30.
B
31.
ADULT FEMALE
32.
BOND GROUPS
33.
CO-ORDINATION
34.
HEARING
35.
BROADCAST IT
36.
A FEMALE ELEPHANT
37.
HEAR IT
38.
C
39.
F
40.
B
Credits: https://www.english-exam.org/IELTS/
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