“A neuroscientist reveals how to think differently” IELTS words
Cambridge IELTS-9 academic reading part high level words. If your target score 6.5 and higher, you should know these words.
There are lots of IELTS exam methods and tactics to get a high score is available. However, if you have a lack of information, they only help up to a point. Based on this topic, I made my IELTS preparation with complete my information on the upper level (B2-C1-C2) vocabularies and tried taking note of frequently used words. I thought it would be good to learn. IELTS There is a lot of non-ordinary words in the academic reading exam, and many of them are used to create a mess. However, when you examine all tests with a different view, you will see that there are many words used again and again. Extra vocabularies will help you to understand to reading part more efficiently.
Cambridge IELTS preparation series book 9 section 2, reading 3 I have noted the words in the academic reading part “A neuroscientist reveals how to think differently ” Again, maybe all of these are not exactly the necessary words for the exam, but I think people should take a look. Because if you have to get a good score, you should know something good.
The order of the words is relative to the order in which the reading is used. Descriptions are also given in the Cambridge dictionary. Here is the reading unknown words.
A neuroscientist reveals how to think differently IELTS words
Reveal | to make known or show something that is surprising or that was previously secret |
Trace | to find someone or something that was lost |
Competitor | a person, team, or company that is competing against others |
İconoclast | a person who strongly opposes generally accepted beliefs and traditions |
Perception | a belief or opinion, often held by many people and based on how things seem |
Utilize | to use something in an effective way |
Matter | a situation or subject that is being dealt with or considered |
Constraint | something that controls what you do by keeping you within particular limits |
Drumbeat | (the sound of) a single hit on a drum |
Impede | to make it more difficult for something to happen or more difficult for someone to do something |
Impediment | something that makes progress, movement, or achieving something difficult or impossible |
Interpret | ] to decide what the intended meaning of something is |
Interpretation | an explanation or opinion of what something means: |
Shortcut | a route that leads from one place to another and is quicker and more direct than the usual route |
Rumbling | a sign of anger or disagreement |
Plague | to cause worry, pain, or difficulty to someone or something over a period of time: |
Curse | to use a word or an expression that is not polite and shows that you are very angry: |
Conjecture | a guess about something based on how it seems and not on proof |
Likelihood | the chance that something will happen |
Novelty | the quality of being new and unusual / something that has not been experienced before and so is interesting / a cheap unusual object such as a small toy, often given as a present |
Release | to give freedom or free movement to someone or something |
Expose | to remove what is covering something so that it can be seen |
Exposure | the fact of experiencing something or being affected by it because of being in a particular situation or place |
Embrace | to accept something enthusiastically |
Uncertainty | a situation in which something is not known, or something that is not known or certain |
Ridicule | unkind words or actions that make someone or something look stupid |
Trivial | having little value or importance |
Afflicts | If a problem or illness afflicts a person or thing, they suffer from it |
Cognition | the use of conscious mental processes |
İntertwined | twisted together or closely connected so as to be difficult to separate |
Alienation | to cause someone or a group of people to stop supporting and agreeing with you |
Asset | a useful or valuable quality, skill, or person |
Distinctive | Something that is distinctive is easy to recognize because it is different from other things |
Contradict | (of people) to say the opposite of what someone else has said, or (of one fact or statement) to be so different from another fact or statement that one of them must be wrong |
Click for number 9. section 2, part 2: Venüs in transit
Click for number 9, section 3, part 1: Attitudes to language
Click for all published IELTS study words to here
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