Making every drop count IELTS words
Cambridge IELTS-7 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 7 section 1, reading 2 I have noted the words in the academic reading part “Making every drop count ” 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.
Making every drop count ELTS words
Entwine | to twist something together or around something/ |
Manipulate | to control something or someone to your advantage, often unfairly or dishonestly/
to control something using the hands/ to treat a part of the body, using the hands to push back bones into the correct position and put pressure on muscles |
Expand | to increase in size, number, or importance, or to make something increase in this way/
to increase something in size, number, or importance |
Dam | a wall built across a river that stops the river’s flow and collects the water, especially to make a reservoir (= an artificial lake) that provides water for an area |
Aqueduct | a structure for carrying water across land, especially one like a high bridge with many arches that carries pipes or a canal across a valley |
Pipe | a tube inside which liquid or gas flows from one place to another |
Sewer | a large pipe, usually underground, that is used for carrying waste water and human waste away from buildings to a plaartificialsincerece where they can be safely got rid of |
Occupant | a person who lives or works in a room or building/
a person who is in a car, room, seat, place, or position |
Unprecedented | never having happened or existed in the past |
Monumental | Very big |
Irrigation | to supply land with water so that crops and plants will grow |
Hydropower | hydroelectric power (= the production of electricity by the force of fast moving water) |
Pace | the speed at which someone or something moves, or with which something happens or changes/
the ability of a football player or team to move quickly with the ball |
Artificial | made by people, often as a copy of something natural/
not sincere |
Spin/spun/spun | to (cause to) turn around and around, especially fast/
If your head or the room spins, you feel as if it is turning around and around, and you cannot balance |
Progress | movement to an improved or more developed state, or to a forward position/
happening or being done now |
Suffer | to experience physical or mental pain |
Reiterate | to say something again, once or several times |
Sanitation | the systems for taking dirty water and other waste products away from buildings in order to protect people’s health |
Jeopardising | to put something such as a plan or system in danger of being harmed or damaged |
Compensation | money that is paid to someone in exchange for something that has been lost or damaged or for some problem |
Reservoir | a place for storing liquid, especially a natural or artificial lake providing water for a city or other area /
A large supply of something |
Withdrawal | when you take money out of a bank account/
the process or action of a military force moving out of an area/ the act or process of taking something away so that it is no longer available, or of someone stopping being involved in an activity |
Thrive | to grow, develop, or be successful |
Degrade | to cause people to feel that they or other people have no value and do not have the respect or good opinion of others |
Replenish | to fill something up again |
Outset | The beginning |
Provision | the act of providing something/
supplies of food and other necessary things/ a statement within an agreement or a law that a particular thing must happen or be done, especially before another can happen or be done |
Priority | something that is very important and must be dealt with before other things |
Ensure | to make something certain to happen |
Insfrastructure | the basic systems and services, such as transport and power supplies, that a country or organization uses in order to work effectively |
Resort | a place where many people go for rest, sport, or another stated purpose/
the fact that you have to do something because there is no other way of achieving something |
Nevertheless | despite what has just been said or referred to |
Preventable | able to be prevented |
Diminish | to reduce or be reduced in size or importance |
Aquifer | a layer of rock, sand, or earth that contains water or allows water to pass through it |
Remarkable | unusual or special and therefore surprising and worth mentioning/
unusual and surprising |
Tenfold | ten times as big or as much: |
Quadrupled | Four times as big or as much: |
Conserve | to keep and protect something from damage, change, or waste/ |
Inflation | a general, continuous increase in prices: |
Specification | a detailed description of how something should be done, made, etc |
Warrant | to make a particular activity necessary |
Click for number 7, section 1, part 1: “Let’s go bats”
Click for number 7, section 1, part 3: “Educating psyche ”
Click for all published IELTS study words to here
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