Bên cạnh PHÂN TÍCH ĐỀ THI THẬT TASK 2 (dạng advantages & disadvantages) Some students work while studying. Discuss the advantages and disadvantages of this trend and give your opinion?NGÀY 04/8/2020 IELTS WRITING GENERAL MÁY TÍNH (kèm bài được sửa hs đi thi), IELTS TUTOR cũng cung cấp 🔥The future never dies?: Đề thi thật IELTS READING (IELTS Reading Recent Actual Test) - Kèm đáp án + Giải thích từ vựng
I. Kiến thức liên quan
II. The future never dies?: Đề thi thật IELTS READING (IELTS Reading Recent Actual Test) - Kèm đáp án + Giải thích từ vựng
The Future Never Dies
The prospects for humanity and for the world as a whole are somewhere between glorious and dire. It is hard to be much more precise.
A
By ‘glorious’, I mean that our descendants – all who are born on this Earth – could live very comfortably and securely, and could continue to do so for as long as the Earth can support life, which should be for a very long time indeed. We should at least be thinking in terms of the next million years. Furthermore, our descendants could continue to enjoy the company of other species – establishing a much better relationship with them than we have now. Other animals need not live in constant fear of us. Many of those fellow species now seem bound to become extinct, but a significant proportion could and should continue to live alongside us. Such a future may seem ideal, and so it is. Yet I do not believe it is fanciful. There is nothing in the physical fabric of the Earth or in our own biology to suggest that this is not possible.
B
‘Dire’ means that we human beings could be in deep trouble within the next few centuries, living but also dying in large numbers in political terror and from starvation, while huge numbers of our fellow creatures would simply disappear, leaving only the ones that we find convenient – chickens, cattle – or that we can’t shake off, like flies and mice. I’m taking it to be self-evident that glory is preferable.
C
Our future is not entirely in our own hands because the Earth has its own rules, is part of the solar system and is neither stable nor innately safe. Other planets in the solar system are quite beyond habitation, because their temperature is far too high or too low to be endured, and ours, too, in principle could tip either way. Even relatively unspectacular changes in the atmosphere could do the trick. The core of the Earth is hot, which in many ways is good for living creatures, but every now and again, the molten rock bursts through volcanoes on the surface.
Among the biggest volcanic eruptions in recent memory was Mount St Helens, in the USA, which threw out a cubic kilometre of ash – fortunately, in an area where very few people live. In 1815, Tambora (in present-day Indonesia) expelled so much ash into the upper atmosphere that climatic effects seriously harmed food production around the world for season after season. Entire civilisations have been destroyed by volcanoes.
D
Yet nothing we have so far experienced shows what volcanoes can really do. Yellowstone National Park in the USA occupies the caldera (the crater formed when a volcano collapses) of an exceedingly ancient volcano of extraordinary magnitude. Modern surveys show that its centre is now rising. Sometime in the next 200 million years, Yellowstone could erupt again, and when it does, the whole world will be transformed. Yellowstone could erupt tomorrow. But there’s a very good chance that it will give us another million years, and that surely is enough to be going on with. It seems sensible to assume that this will be the case.
E
The universe at large is dangerous, too: in particular, we share the sky with vast numbers of asteroids, and now and again, they come into our planet’s atmosphere. An asteroid the size of a small island, hitting the Earth at 15,000 kilometres an hour (a relatively modest speed by the standards of heavenly bodies), would strike the ocean bed like a rock in a puddle, send a tidal wave around the world as high as a small mountain and as fast as a jumbo jet, and propel us into an ice age that could last for centuries.
There are plans to head off such disasters (including rockets to push approaching asteroids into new trajectories), but in truth, it’s down to luck.
F
On the other hand, the archaeological and fossil evidence shows that no truly devastating asteroid has struck since the one that seems to have accounted for the extinction of the dinosaurs 65 million years ago. So again, there seems no immediate reason for despair. The Earth is indeed an uncertain place, in an uncertain universe, but with average luck, it should do us well enough. If the world does become inhospitable in the next few thousand or million years, then it will probably be our own fault. In short, despite the underlying uncertainty, our own future and that of our fellow creatures are very much in our own hands.>> Form đăng kí giải đề thi thật IELTS 4 kĩ năng kèm bài giải bộ đề 100 đề PART 2 IELTS SPEAKING quý đang thi (update hàng tuần) từ IELTS TUTOR
G
Given average luck on the geological and the cosmic scale, the difference between glory and disaster will be made and is being made by politics. Certain kinds of political systems and strategies would predispose us to long-term survival (and indeed to comfort and security and the pleasure of being alive), while others would take us more and more frenetically towards collapse.
The broad point is, though, that we need to look at ourselves – humanity – and at the world in general in a quite new light. Our material problems are fundamentally those of biology. We need to think, and we need our politicians to think, biologically. Do that, and take the ideas seriously, and we are in with a chance. Ignore biology and we and our fellow creatures haven’t a hope.
II. Questions
1. Questions 14-19
Do the following statements reflect the claims of the writer in Reading Passage 2?
In boxes 14-19 on your answer sheet write:
- YES if the statement is true
- NO if the statement is false
- NOT GIVEN if the information is not given in the passage
14. It seems predictable that some species will disappear.
15. The nature of the Earth and human biology make it impossible for human beings to survive another million years.
16. An eruption by Yellowstone is likely to be more destructive than previous volcanic eruptions.
17. There is a greater chance of the Earth being hit by small asteroids than large ones.
18. If the world becomes uninhabitable, it is most likely to be as a result of a natural disaster.
19. Politicians currently in power seem unlikely to change their way of thinking.
2. Questions 20-25
Complete the summary below.
Choose NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the passage for each answer.
Write your answers in boxes 20-25 on your answer sheet.
The Earth could become uninhabitable, like other planets, through a major change in the 20. ....................... Volcanic eruptions of 21. ....................... can lead to shortages of 22. ....................... in a wide area. An asteroid hitting the Earth could create a 23. ....................... that would result in a new 24. ....................... Plans are being made to use 25. ....................... to deflect asteroids heading for the Earth.
3. Question 26
Choose the correct letter A, B, C, or D.
Write your answer in box 26 on your answer sheet.
26. What is the writer’s purpose in Reading Passage 2?
- A. to propose a new theory about the causes of natural disasters
- B. to prove that generally held beliefs about the future are all mistaken
- C. to present a range of opinions currently held by scientists
- D. to argue the need for a general change in behavior
III. Giải thích từ vựng The future never dies?: Đề thi thật IELTS READING (IELTS Reading Recent Actual Test) - Kèm đáp án + Giải thích từ vựng
1. Prospects
- Meaning: Triển vọng, khả năng tương lai.
- IELTS TUTOR xét ví dụ từ bài đọc: "The prospects for humanity and for the world as a whole are somewhere between glorious and dire."
2. Glorious
- Meaning: Rực rỡ, huy hoàng, đáng ngưỡng mộ.
- IELTS TUTOR xét ví dụ từ bài đọc: "By ‘glorious’, I mean that our descendants... could live very comfortably and securely."
3. Dire
- Meaning: Tồi tệ, khắc nghiệt, cực kỳ nghiêm trọng.
- IELTS TUTOR xét ví dụ từ bài đọc: "‘Dire’ means that we human beings could be in deep trouble..."
4. Innately
- Meaning: Về bản chất, vốn dĩ.
- IELTS TUTOR xét ví dụ từ bài đọc: "The Earth... is neither stable nor innately safe."
5. Caldera
- Meaning: Miệng núi lửa (hình thành khi núi lửa sụp đổ).
- IELTS TUTOR xét ví dụ từ bài đọc: "Yellowstone National Park... occupies the caldera of an exceedingly ancient volcano."
6. Eruption
- Meaning: Sự phun trào.
- IELTS TUTOR xét ví dụ từ bài đọc: "Among the biggest volcanic eruptions in recent memory was Mount St Helens."
7. Catastrophic
- Meaning: Thảm khốc, tàn khốc.
- IELTS TUTOR xét ví dụ từ bài đọc: "Entire civilizations have been destroyed by catastrophic volcanic eruptions."
8. Tidal wave
- Meaning: Sóng thần, sóng lớn.
- IELTS TUTOR xét ví dụ từ bài đọc: "Send a tidal wave around the world as high as a small mountain."
9. Trajectory
- Meaning: Quỹ đạo, đường đi.
- IELTS TUTOR xét ví dụ từ bài đọc: "Including rockets to push approaching asteroids into new trajectories."
10. Inhospitable
- Meaning: Khắc nghiệt, không thể sống được.
- IELTS TUTOR xét ví dụ từ bài đọc: "If the world does become inhospitable... then it will probably be our own fault."
11. Archaeological
- Meaning: Thuộc về khảo cổ học.
- IELTS TUTOR xét ví dụ từ bài đọc: "The archaeological and the fossil evidence shows..."
12. Extinction
- Meaning: Sự tuyệt chủng.
- IELTS TUTOR xét ví dụ từ bài đọc: "...the one that seems to have accounted for the extinction of the dinosaurs 65 million years ago."
13. Cosmic
- Meaning: Thuộc về vũ trụ.
- IELTS TUTOR xét ví dụ từ bài đọc: "Given average luck on the geological and the cosmic scale..."
14. Frenetically
- Meaning: Điên cuồng, vội vã.
- IELTS TUTOR xét ví dụ từ bài đọc: "...more and more frenetically towards collapse."
15. Material problems
- Meaning: Vấn đề vật chất.
- IELTS TUTOR xét ví dụ từ bài đọc: "Our material problems are fundamentally those of biology."
IV. Đáp án The future never dies?: Đề thi thật IELTS READING (IELTS Reading Recent Actual Test)
14. YES 15. NO 16. YES 17. NOT GIVEN 18. NO 19. NOT GIVEN 20. temperature 21. (molten) rock / ash 22. food 23. tidal wave 24. ice age 25. rockets 26. D
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