首页 > 经验 > 2025年2月雅思考试阅读预测,Reading passage 2

2025年2月雅思考试阅读预测,Reading passage 2

刘燕 2025-02-13 10:06:36

2025年2月雅思考试纸笔共有3个场次,分别是2月8日、2月15日、2月22日。下文羊驼小编整理了2月雅思考试阅读第二篇文章预测题目/题型以及答案(reading passage 2),供考生们复习参考。

2025年2月雅思考试阅读预测,Reading passage 2

READING PASSAGE 2

You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 14-26 which are based on Reading Passage 2 below.

Wealth in A Cold Climate

A

Dr William Masters was reading a book about mosquitoes when inspiration struck. “There was this anecdote about the great yellow fever epidemic that hit Philadelphia in 1793,” Masters recalls. “This epidemic decimated the city until the first frost came.” The inclement weather froze out the insects, allowing Philadelphia to recover.

B

If weather could be the key to a city’s fortunes, Masters thought, then why not to the historical fortunes of nations? And could frost lie at the heart of one of the most enduring economic mysteries of all — why are almost all the wealthy, industrialised nations to be found at latitudes above 40 degrees? After two years of research, he thinks that he has found a piece of the puzzle. Masters, an agricultural economist from Purdue University in Indiana, and Margaret McMillan at Tufts University, Boston, show that annual frosts are among the factors that distinguish rich nations from poor ones. Their study is published this month in the Journal of Economic Growth. The pair speculates that cold snaps have two main benefits — they freeze pests that would otherwise destroy crops, and also freeze organisms, such as mosquitoes, that carry disease. The result is agricultural abundance a big workforce.

C

The academics took two sets of information. The first was average income for countries, the second climate data from the University of East Anglia. They found a curious tally between the sets. Countries having five or more frosty days a month are uniformly rich; those with fewer than five are impoverished. The authors speculate that the five-day figure is important; it could be the minimum time needed to kill pests in the soil. Masters says: “For example, Finland is a small country that is growing quickly, but Bolivia is a small country that isn’t growing at all. Perhaps climate has something to do with that.” In fact, limited frosts bring huge benefits to farmers. The chills kill insects or render them inactive; cold weather slows the break-up of plant and animal material in the soil, allowing it to become richer; and frosts ensure a build-up of moisture in the ground for spring, reducing dependence on seasonal rains. There are exceptions to the “cold equals rich” argument. There are well-heeled tropical countries such as Hong Kong and Singapore (both city-states, Masters notes), a result of their superior trading positions. Likewise, not all European countries axe moneyed — in the former communist colonies, economic potential was crushed by politics.

D

Masters stresses that climate will never be the overriding factor 一 the wealth of nations is too complicated to be attributable to just one factor. Climate, he feels, somehow combines with other factors — such as the presence of institutions, including governments, and access to trading routes — to determine whether a country will do well. Traditionally, Masters says, economists thought that institutions had the biggest effect on the economy, because they brought order to a country in the form of, for example, laws and property rights. With order, so the thinking went, came affluence. “But there are some problems that even countries with institutions have not been able to get around,” he says. “My feeling is that, as countries get richer, they get better institutions. And the accumulation of wealth and improvement in governing institutions are both helped by a favourable environment, including climate.”

E

This does not mean, he insists, that tropical countries are beyond economic help and destined to remain penniless. Instead, richer countries should change the way in which foreign aid is given. Instead of aid being geared towards improving governance, it should be spent on technology to improve agriculture and to combat disease. Masters cites one example: “There are regions in India that have been provided with irrigation — agricultural productivity has gone up and there has been an improvement in health.” Supplying vaccines against tropical diseases and developing crop varieties that can grow in the tropics would break the poverty cycle.

F

Other minds have applied themselves to the split between poor and rich nations, citing anthropological, climatic and zoological reasons for why temperate nations are the most affluent. In 350BC, Aristotle observed that “those who live in a cold climate… are full of spirit”. Jared Diamond, from the University of California at Los Angeles, pointed out in his book Guns, Germs and Steel that Eurasia is broadly aligned east-west, while Africa and the Americas are aligned north-south. So, in Europe, crops can spread quickly across latitudes because climates are similar. One of the first domesticated crops, einkorn wheat, spread quickly from the Middle East into Europe; it took twice as long for corn to spread from Mexico to what is now the eastern United States. This easy movement along similar latitudes in Eurasia would also have meant a faster dissemination of other technologies such as the wheel and writing, Diamond speculates. The region also boasted domesticated livestock, which could provide meat, wool and motive power in the fields. Blessed with such natural advantages, Eurasia was bound to take off economically.

G

John Gallup and Jeffrey Sachs, two US economists, have also pointed out striking correlations between the geographical location of countries and their wealth. They note that tropical countries between 23.45 degrees north and south of the equator are nearly all poor. In an article for the Harvard International Review, they concluded that “development surely seems to favour the temperate-zone economies, especially those in the northern hemisphere, and those that have managed to avoid both socialism and the ravages of war”. But Masters cautions against geographical determinism, the idea that tropical countries are beyond hope: “Human health and agriculture can be made better through scientific and technological research,” he says, “so we shouldn’t be writing off these countries. Take Singapore: without air conditioning, it wouldn’t be rich.”

Questions 14-20

The reading passage has seven paragraphs, A-G.

Choose the correct heading for paragraphs A-G from the list below.

Write the correct number, i-x, in boxes 14-20 on your answer sheet.

List of Headings

i     The positive correlation between climate and wealth

ii     Other factors besides climate that influence wealth

iii     Inspiration from reading a book

iv     Other researchers’ results do not rule out exceptional cases

v     different attributes between Eurasia and Africa

vi     Low temperature benefits people and crops

vii     The importance of institution in traditional views.

viii     The spread of crops in Europe, Asia and other places

ix     The best way to use aid

x     confusions and exceptional

14    Paragraph A

15    Paragraph B

16    Paragraph C

17    Paragraph D

18    Paragraph E

19    Paragraph F

20    Paragraph G

Questions 21-26

Complete the following summary of the paragraphs of Reading Passage

Using NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the Reading Passage for each answer.

Write your answers in boxes 21-26 on your answer sheet.

Dr William Master read a book saying that a (an) 21………………….. which struck an American city of years ago was terminated by a cold frost. And academics found that there is a connection between climate and country’s wealthy as in the rich but small country of 22…………………..; Yet besides excellent surroundings and climate, one country still need to improve both their 23………………….. to achieve long prosperity,

Thanks to resembling weather condition across latitude in the continent of 24………………….. ’crops such as 25…………………… is bound to spread faster than from South America to the North. Other researchers also noted that even though geographical factors are important, a tropical country such as 26………………….. still became rich due to scientific advancement.

2月阅读预测题参考答案:

14. iii    15. vi    16. i    17. ii    18. ix    19. v    20. iv    21. (yellow-fever epidemic)

22. Finland    23. Governing institutions    24. Europe    25. einkorn Wheat    26. Singapore

相关文章

雅思阅读的小技巧

本文详细阐述了雅思阅读的小技巧,包括浏览全文把握结构、识别关键词准确理解、运用排除法、合理分配时间以及熟悉题型特点等内容,旨在帮助考生更高效地应对雅思阅读考试。
雅思阅读
04-24
雅思阅读的小技巧

雅思阅读技巧小故事

本文通过一个小故事介绍了雅思阅读中的几个关键技巧:熟悉题型、抓住主旨、略读与精读结合、善用同义词以及模拟真实场景。通过对这些技巧的分析,帮助考生更好地应对雅思阅读部分的挑战。
雅思阅读
04-23
雅思阅读技巧小故事

雅思阅读考试小技巧

本文从熟悉题型与时间管理、提高阅读速度与效率、注重关键词与逻辑关系、先易后难合理分配精力、多做真题总结经验五个方面详细介绍了雅思阅读考试中的小技巧,旨在帮助考生更高效地备考并取得理想成绩。
雅思阅读
04-23
雅思阅读考试小技巧

雅思阅读理解小技巧

本文介绍了雅思阅读理解的小技巧,包括略读、扫读、分析长难句、选择合适的做题顺序以及合理分配时间等方面的内容,旨在帮助考生提高雅思阅读成绩。
雅思阅读
04-22
雅思阅读理解小技巧

雅思练习阅读小技巧

本文从熟悉题型与时间管理、提高阅读速度与理解力、加强词汇积累与背景知识、培养逻辑思维与推理能力以及总结经验与调整心态五个方面详细阐述了雅思阅读练习的小技巧,旨在帮助考生更好地应对雅思阅读考试。
雅思阅读
04-22
雅思练习阅读小技巧
Baidu
米兰官方公众号下载安装