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IELTS Listening Test 2018 || DOWNLOAD PDF FILE || HD || With Answers || Original test ||

IELTS Listening Test 2018 || HD ||DOWNLOAD PDF FILE || With Answers || Original test || DOWNLOAD PDF FILE : http://www.mediafire.com/file/dwwt04c... go HD Note: This test is for practice only. IELTS listening test. This test will help you to improve your Listening skills. Write you answers on the rough paper and at end of the paper answer key will be shown, you can tally you answers and rate yourself Instructions to candidates In the actual test you will be given the following instructions: do not open this question paper until you are told to do so write your name and candidate number in the spaces at the top of this page listen to the instructions for each part of the paper carefully answer all the questions while you are listening, write your answers on the question paper you will have 10 minutes at the end of the test to copy your answers onto the separate answer sheet

New Reading passage 3 for IELTS practicce Test [Improving Patient Safety]

Improving Patient Safety Packaging One of the most prominent design issues in pharmacy is that of drag packaging and patient information leaflets (Pits). Many letters have appeared in The Journal's letters pages over the years from pharmacists dismayed at the designs of packaging that are “accidents waiting to happen”. Packaging design in the pharmaceutical industry is handled by either in-house teams or design agencies. Designs for over-the-counter medicines, where characteristics such as attractiveness and distinguish-ability are regarded as significant, are usually commissioned from design agencies. A marketing team will prepare a brief and the designers will come up with perhaps six or seven designs. These are whittled down to two or three that might be tested on a consumer group. In contrast, most designs for prescription-only products are created in-house. In some cases, this may simply involve applying a company’s house design (ie, logo, colour, font, etc). Th

New IELTS reading practice test 2 [How Well Do We Concentrate?]

READING PASSAGE 2   You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 14-26, which are based on Reading Passage 2 below. Do you read while listening to music? Do you like to watch TV while finishing your homework? People who have these kinds of habits are called multi-taskers. Multitaskers are able to complete two tasks at the same time by dividing their focus. However, Thomas Lehman, a researcher in Psychology, believes people never really do multiple things simultaneously. Maybe a person is reading while listening to music, but in reality, the brain can only focus on one task. Reading the words in a book will cause you to ignore some of the words of the music. When people think they are accomplishing two different tasks efficiently, what they are really doing is dividing their focus. While listening to music, people become less able to focus on their surroundings. For example, we all have experience of times when we talk with friends and they are not responding properly. Maybe t

Ielts reading practice test [What the Managers Really Do?]

  What the Managers Really Do? When students graduate and first enter the workforce, the most common choice is to find an entry-level position. This can be a job such as an unpaid internship, an assistant, a secretary, or a junior partner position. Traditionally, we start with simpler jobs and work our way up. Young professionals start out with a plan to become senior partners, associates, or even managers of a workplace. However, these promotions can be few and far between, leaving many young professionals unfamiliar with management experience. An important step is understanding the role and responsibilities of a person in a managing position. Managers are organisational members who are responsible for the work performance of other organisational members. Managers have formal authority to use organisational resources and to make decisions. Managers at different levels of the organisation engage in different amounts of time on the four managerial functions of planning, o

New IELTS Listening Practice Test 2018 || HD || With Answers || most imp...

New Vocabulary words for IELTS test

Vocabulary is an important part of English that helps you deal with all kinds of questions in objective as well as descriptive papers of various exams. You can learn new words daily and make your own sentences on the basis of the given word list. Here are a few words and phrases from articles published in a reputed Newspaper. 1. Grouse: (verb)  Meaning: to express dissatisfaction, pain, or resentment usually tiresomely Synonyms: beef, bellyache, bleat, carp, caterwaul, complain, crab, croak, fuss, gripe, grouch, growl, grumble, grump, holler, inveigh,murmur, mutter, nag, scream, squawk, squeal Antonyms: crow, delight, rejoice Usage: Fans have groused that the higher prices are unfair. 2. Devolve: (verb) Meaning: to become worse or of less value Synonyms: atrophy, crumble, decay, decline, degenerate, descend, deteriorate, ebb, regress, retrograde, rot, sink, worsen Antonyms: ameliorate, improve, meliorate Usage: A conversation that devolved into an argume

New Vocabulary words for IELTS test

Vocabulary is an important part of English that helps you deal with all kinds of questions in objective as well as descriptive papers of various exams. You can learn new words daily and make your own sentences on the basis of the given word list. Here are a few words and phrases from articles published in a reputed Newspaper. THE FILTHY AIR Controlling pollution is one of the most widely discussed topics in our country with (1) verbosity being inversely proportional to the actual work done. We are still not alive to the evil consequences of pollution even when the (2) pristine white Taj Mahal has turned brown; Ganga and Yamuna, the eternal rivers, have become overfed drains; and clean air has become a sweet memory. WHO has listed fourteen Indian cities, including Delhi, as the most polluted cities in the world, in terms of air quality. So far, the (3) damning WHO report has (4) elicited no outrage or even an official response. It appears that somehow, we have rationalized p

READING PASSAGE for IELTS practice Test series

Directions (1-10): Read the following passage carefully and answer the questions given below them. Certain words/phrases have been printed in bold to help you locate them while answering some of the questions. The hotline conversation between the Director Generals of Military Operations of India and Pakistan and their agreement “to undertake sincere measures to improve the existing situation ensuring peace and avoidance of hardships to the citizens”, and to “fully implement the ceasefire understanding of 2003 in letter and spirit forthwith” is a long-awaited development. The wording of the near-identical statements issued by India and Pakistan is the most promising heard from the bilateral front in the last two years, especially the recommitment to the 2003 ceasefire. It was the ceasefire that paved the way for the Vajpayee-Musharraf statement of 2004 and a dialogue that lasted until the Mumbai attacks. What Tuesday’s agreement may lead to is still uncertain. It is sufficient th

Sentence Improvement for IELTS practice test

Direction (1-15): Which of the following phrases (I), (II), and (III) given below each sentence should replace the phrase printed in bold letters to make the sentence grammatically correct without changing the meaning of the sentence? Choose the best option among the five given alternatives that reflect the correct use of phrase in the context of the grammatically correct sentence. If the sentence is correct as it is, mark (e) i.e., “No correction required” as the answer. Q1. The local administration claimed that protesters are to ignore orders banning their march, and became violent, indulging in arson and stone-pelting. (I) Protesters are ignoring orders banning their march (II) Protesters have to ignore orders banning their march (III) Protesters ignored orders banning their march (a) Only (I) (b) Only (II) (c) Only (III) (d) All of the above (e) No correction required Q2. Moreover, even after demonetization and implementation of the goods and services tax (GST),

Fill in the Blanks IELTS reading test series

Directions(1-15):In each of the following sentence, there are two blank spaces. Below each sentence, there are five options and each blank is to be filled with the same word given below to make the sentence correct. Fill up the sentences with the correct word. Q1. (I) Another smaller ............ lies to the east with a gateway also of the Roman period. (II) The chief ruin is a rectangular walled ..........., 238 ft. (a) door (b) vent (c) enclosure (d) asylum (e) cage Q2. (I) That opens up a whole new list of sub-topics, like was it just a ........... mugger or someone he knew? (II) The Nevada mines are mostly grouped around the city of Eureka, where the ore occurs in "pockets" disseminated at ........... through limestone. (a) methodical (b) specific (c) systematic (d) random (e) planned Q3. (I) He had to return it as promised, even knowing it was a ........... rule. (II) He felt the mother's demeanor suggested she was preparing a ...........