IELTS Listening Practices with Instant Answers and Short Explanations, or Timing in Chapters + An effective way to improve IELTS listening skills + Enrich learners' English Vocabulary with Short Stories and Conversation Videos
*** OUTSTANDING FEATURES: _ Clear voices and questions _ Beautiful pictures _ Show Instant Answers or in Chapters _ Special design for smartphone-screens _ Full-HD videos
*** Classified according to Question Types: 1. Multiple Choice 2. Map, Plan, and Diagram 3. Form, Note, Table, Flow-chart, and Summary 4. Matching 5. Sentence Completion 6. Short Answer
*** Separated to Four Sections (Parts): + Section 1 + Section 2 + Section 3 + Section 4
*** English Vocabulary: - Short Stories - Short Conversations
--- (Original Channel Name: "English Listening and Vocabulary")
The second syllable of "garden" is pronounced very slightly. Maybe, that is the reason. Listening the sound from this link would be helpful. Thank you. dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/garden
There is a button named "show transcript" in the web browser. Click on that, the transcript will be shown on the right panel. If you can not find that button, please google it. Thank you.
Hi. Nouns following "every" and "any" are in simple forms because they are uncountable. This link shows some examples of "every." Thank you. dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/every
I think the most correct answer is "any time after 5:30 p.m." However, it is too long to meet the answer's requirement. I believe "after 5:30 p.m." is good, but in terms of grammar, it misses something (in speaking, it's fine, but in writing, it seems too short). Because this is the test, our answers must meet the test's answers; although all answers (in some cases) are fine. It's not fair, but it is. No worry. It's hard to get full marks, but we try to pass a specific level (6.0 for example) and accept some misses, errors, or mistakes. Thanks.
I have two questions not related to the audio. If there is a point that requires plural like "temperatures", will it be wrong to just write "temperature"? Is listening or reading case sensitive? I mean "Ahmed" is the same as "ahmed"
Hi. It relies on grammar of the context (words around the answer). For example, if the subject is a plural noun, the following verb must be plural form and vice versa. For proper names, the first letter must be capital; the same if a word is the first part of a sentence. Please review grammar rules for these. Sometimes, answers differ from what you hear. Thank.