IELTS Speaking Part 1 – Chủ đề Language and Communication

CTH Edu tổng hợp câu hỏi thường gặp và gợi ý một số câu trả lời cho chủ đề Ngôn ngữ và Giao tiếp – Language and Communication cho bài thi IELTS Speaking Part 1.

Câu hỏi thường gặp

1. Theo Speaking for IELTS

  • What’s your mother tongue?
  • What other languages do you speak?
  • What do you think is the best way to keep in touch with friends?
  • Do people keep in touch differently now compared to fifty years ago?

2. Theo IELTS Liz

Dictionaries

  • Do you often use a dictionary?
  • What do you use dictionaries for?
  • What kinds of dictionaries do you think are most useful?
  • Do you think dictionaries are useful for learning a language?
  • What kind of information can you find in a dictionary?

Gợi ý câu trả lời

  • What’s your mother tongue?

My mother tongue is Portuguese. Irs predominantly spoken in Brazil but also in other parts of the world, such as Portugal and Africa.

  • What other languages do you speak?

Although I grew up in Brazil, I can also speak Italian because my mother and one set of
grandparents are Italian and I grew up hearing the language all around me. I’m really proud to be bilingual and I’d like my children to be bilingual too.

  • What do you think is the best way to keep in touch with friends?

It depends how far you are from your friends. If you are geographically close, you should
meet up face-to-face. Long-distance communication can cause misunderstandings and
resentments to build up – when you write, you only have the words on the page, not body
language or tone of voice.

  • Do people keep in touch differently now compared to fifty years ago?

Well, of course, people use the Internet now and mobile phones. I’m quite young but
even when I was a teenager nobody in my friendship circle had a mobile. Now it’s seen as
indispensible and you would feel left out if you didn’t have one. But as I said before, I think it’s better to meet up with friends than to communicate using technology. There’s much to be said for communicating in so-called old-fashioned ways.