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Ielts reading tests part 7

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The book contains ten practice Reading Tests and a Key. Each Test contains three reading passages, which cover a variety of topics and give lots of practice for the range of question types used in the IELTS exam. All the articles in this publication except for two were specially commissioned. | IELTS Reding Teste Questions 22-24 Complete the sentences below. Use NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS from the passage for each blank space. Write your answers in Boxes 22 - 24 on your answer sheet. I 22. Lizards and dinosaurs are classified into two different superorders because of the difference in their Ì 11 23. In the Triassic period evolved into thecodonts for example lizards and snakes. ị 24. Dinosaur skulls differed from those of any other known animals because of the presence of vomers J j Questions 25-28 Ị Choose one phrase A H from the List of features to match with the Dinosaurs listed below. Write the appropriate ị letters A H ỉn Boxes 25-28 on your answer sheet. The information in the completed sentences should be an accurate summary of the points made by the writer. Ị NB. There are more phrases A-H than sentences so you will not need to use them all. You may use each phrase once only. i . . Dinosaurs ị 25. Dinosaurs differed from lizards because . 26. Saurischian and omithischian dinosaurs . i 27. Unlike therapods sauropodomorphs . I 28. Some dinosaurs used their tails to balance others . List of features A are both divided into two orders. B the former had a fully improved gait . C were not usually very heavy. D could walk or run on their back legs. E their hind limbs sprawled out to the side. F walked or ran on four legs rather than two. G both had a pelvic girdle comprising six bones. H did not always eat meat. Sam McCarter Judith Ash 59 IELTS Reading Tests Reading Passage 3 You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 29-40 which are based on Reading Passage 3 below. Doesn t that sound terribly yellow to you 1 can t say. I m colour blind was my flat-mate s response. And that was that for another twenty odd years when by chance I came across an article in a newspaper on research into synaesthesia at a London hospital. At last I understood my interpretation of the world through colour. Synaesthesia is the subjective sensation of a sense other than the one