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  • Hello, and welcome to Study English, IELTS Preparation. I'm Margot Politis.

  • Knowing how to compare and contrast is something you are likely to need for the IELTS Speaking

  • Test.

  • There are a number of grammatical structures that you can use to make comparisons and express

  • differences.

  • Listen to this candidate comparing and contrasting his teachers:

  • What differences in teaching styles have you experienced with different teachers?

  • Well, I think, you have to make a difference between a teacher's knowledge and personal

  • style. Some teachers, you know, are very knowledgeable and have a lot of experience and everything.

  • Both my history and science teachers knew their subjects really well, but my maths teacher,

  • who was much older - maybe that's why - just didn't have the skills to convey all that

  • to the students. If I were to compare all my classes, I would say his were the most

  • boring. My history teacher, on the other hand, he knew how to communicate to students and

  • his lessons were more enjoyable and we learnt faster.

  • He said that "both my history and science teachers knew their subjects".

  • He uses the word 'both' to say 'the two together'. They're similar in the way they know a lot

  • about their subjects. He then contrasts them to the maths teacher by using the word 'but'.

  • Listen:

  • Both my history and science teachers knew their subjects really well, but my maths teacher,

  • who was much older - maybe that's why - just didn't have the skills to convey all that

  • to the students.

  • To justify the contrast he compares the ages of the teachers. The maths teacher is much

  • older. Older is a comparative adjective. Someone who is 50 is older than someone who is 40.

  • 'Much older' is a way of saying the difference is larger - someone who is 80 is much older

  • than someone who is 40.

  • He also compares the teaching styles of his teachers:

  • If I were to compare all my classes, I would say his were the most boring.

  • This time he uses the superlative - the most boring, because he is comparing more than

  • 2 things. He does this using a conditional 'if' sentence which is a polite way of criticising

  • someone:

  • If I were to compare all my classes, I would say his were the most boring.

  • He goes on to talk about his history teacher. How does he show that he is comparing him

  • to the boring maths teacher? My history teacher, on the other hand, he

  • knew how to communicate to students and his lessons were more enjoyable and we learnt

  • faster.

  • He says 'on the other hand' to show that he is now talking about a different style of

  • teaching. And again he uses comparative forms - more enjoyable and faster - to express this

  • difference.

  • Now listen to another candidate responding to a question designed to encourage her to

  • compare and contrast:

  • Is it better to grow up in the city or in the countryside?

  • Well, I think that, mm, both places have their pros and cons. I've grown up in a city, and

  • I've lived in a city all my life. And sometimes when I see those families who have their kids

  • in the countryside I envy them, because they can run about, you know. They are free and

  • the environment is cleaner and safer, but then, on the other hand, you know, living

  • in a city gives you other, um, opportunities to socialise, have more contact with culture,

  • and better opportunities for education. So, I don't know. It's difficult to say. Both

  • things have advantages and disadvantages.

  • She begins by saying that "both places have their pros and cons". Saying 'both' means

  • she is referring to the city and the country. Pros and cons is an idiom meaning advantages

  • and disadvantages. Then she establishes that her point of view is that of a city person:

  • I've grown up in a city, and I've lived in a city all my life.

  • Then she says what the advantages - the pros - of living in the country are:

  • Sometimes when I see those families who have their kids in the countryside I envy them,

  • because they can run about, you know. They are free and the environment is cleaner and

  • safer.

  • The advantages are that in the country you can run about and be free. She also uses the

  • comparative adjectives 'cleaner' and 'safer' to describe the country compared to the city.

  • Often you use comparatives with 'than' a word that means 'in comparison with'.

  • The country is cleaner than the city.

  • She chooses to contrast with the word 'but' and talk about the advantages of living in

  • the city:

  • They are free and the environment is cleaner and safer, but then, on the other hand, you

  • know, living in a city gives you other, um, opportunities to socialise, have more contact

  • with culture, and better opportunities for education.

  • Like the previous candidate, she uses the phrase 'on the other hand' to show she is

  • talking about something different - the city.

  • And again she uses the language of comparison, this time the irregular comparative form of

  • good, 'better'. Listen again:

  • They are free and the environment is cleaner and safer, but then, on the other hand, you

  • know, living in a city gives you other, um, opportunities to socialise, have more contact

  • with culture, and better opportunities for education.

  • Now let's listen to the way she rounds off her comparison of city and country living:

  • So, I don't know. It's difficult to say. Both things have advantages and disadvantages.

  • She ends by saying both have advantages and disadvantages which means that one isn't better

  • than the other. You don't have to say that one thing is better than another if you don't

  • think so. The phrase for this is 'as good as'. She thinks that the country is as good

  • as the city.

  • The structures you use to compare things in the speaking test are assessed as grammatical

  • range and accuracy, one of the IELTS marking criteria. Other things that are assessed in

  • this area are the number of mistakes you make and the range of sentence types you use.

  • Don't be overly concerned about being perfectly correct all the time. Some mistakes will occur

  • in your speech.

  • It's good to review the rules for forming comparatives.

  • One syllable words have the -er comparative form: big, bigger

  • You need to memorise the forms for 2 syllable words because they can be either -er or have

  • 'more' before them: narrow, narrower

  • useful, more useful

  • Words of 3 syllables and longer have the 'more' form:

  • intelligent, more intelligent spectacular, more spectacular

  • You can emphasise the degree of difference and say 'much older'.

  • With 'more intelligent', you say 'much more intelligent' and with 'more spectacular',

  • you say 'much more spectacular'.

  • And don't forget to review irregular comparative adjectives like:

  • good, better bad, worse

  • far, further or farther

  • Whenever a question has a comparative adjective in it, you can be confident that you are expected

  • to reply with the language of comparison.

  • That's all for now. To find more information about grammatical range and accuracy in the

  • Speaking Test visit our Study English website. The address is: australianetwork.com/studyenglish.

  • Good luck with your studies. Bye.

Hello, and welcome to Study English, IELTS Preparation. I'm Margot Politis.

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A2 初級

學習英語--第三輯第11集:口語考試中的文法範圍。 (Study English - Series 3, Episode 11: Grammatical Range in the Speaking Test)

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    thomas 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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