IELTS READING
RECENT ACTUAL TESTS
READING TEST 3
SECTION 2
You should spend about 20 minutes on
Questions 14-27, which are based on Reading Passage 2 below.
The history of salt
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A
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Salt is so
simple and plentiful that we almost take it for granted. In chemical terms,
salt is the combination "of a sodium ion with a chloride on, making it
one of the most basic molecules on earth. It is also one of the most
plentiful: it has been estimated that salt deposits under the state of
Kansas alone could supply the entire world's needs for the next 250,000
years.
|
B
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But salt is
also an essential element. Without it, life itself would be impossible
since the human body requires the mineral in order to function properly.
The concentration of sodium ions in the blood is directly related to the
regulation of safe body fluid levels. And while we are all familiar with
its many uses in cooking, we may not be aware that this element is used in
some 14,000 commercial applications. From manufacturing pulp and paper to
setting dyes in textiles and fabric, from producing soaps and detergents to
making our roads safe in winter, salt plays an essential part in our daily
lives.
|
C
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Salt has a
long and influential role in world history. From the dawn of civilization,
it has been a key factor in economic, religious, social and political
development In every comer of the world, it has been the subject of
superstition, folklore, and warfare, and has even been used as currency.
|
D
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As a precious
and portable commodity, salt has long been a cornerstone of economies throughout
history. In fact, researcher M.R. Bloch conjectured that civilization began
along the edges of the desert because of the natural surface deposits of
salt found there. Bloch also believed that the first war - likely fought
near the ancient city of Essalt on the Jordan River - could have been
fought over the city’s precious supplies of the mineral.
|
E
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In 2200 BC,
the Chinese emperor Hsia Yu levied one of the first known taxes. He taxed salt.
In Tibet, Marco Polo noted that tiny cakes of salt were pressed with images
of the Grand Khan to be used as coins and to this day among the nomads of
Ethiopia’s Danakil Plains it is still used as money. Greek slave traders
often bartered it for slaves, giving rise to the expression that someone
was "not worth his salt." Roman legionnaires were paid in salt -
a salarium, the Latin origin of the word "salary."
|
F
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Merchants in
12th-century Timbuktu-the gateway to the Sahara Desert and the seat of scholars
- valued this mineral as highly as books and gold. In France, Charles of
Anjou levied the "gabelle, a salt tax, in 1259 to finance his conquest
of the Kingdom of Naples. Outrage over the gabelle fueled the French
Revolution. Though the revolutionaries eliminated the tax shortly after
Louis XVI, the Republic of France
re-established the gabelle in the early 19th Century;
only in 1946 was it removed from the books.
|
G
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The Erie
Canal, an engineering marvel that connected the Great Lakes to New York’s Hudson
River in 1825, was called
"the ditch that salt built.” Salt tax revenues paid for half the cost
of construction of the canal. The British monarchy supported itself with
high salt taxes, leading to a bustling black market for the white crystal.
In 1785, the earl of Dundonald wrote that
every year in England, 10,000 people
were arrested for salt smuggling. And protesting against British rule in
1930, Mahatma Gandhi led a 200-mile march to the Arabian Ocean to collect
untaxed salt for India's poor.
|
H
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In religion
and culture, salt long held an important place with Greek worshippers consecrating
it in their rituals. Further, in Buddhist tradition, salt repels evil
spirits, which is why it is customary to throw it over your shoulder before
entering your house after a funeral: it scares off any evil spirits that
may be clinging to your back. Shinto religion also uses it to purify an
area. Before sumo wrestlers enter the ring for a match - which is in reality
an elaborate Shinto rite - a handful is thrown into the center to drive off
malevolent spirits
|
I
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In the
Southwest of the United States, the Pueblo worship the Salt Mother. Other
native tribes had significant restrictions on who was permitted to eat salt
Hopi legend holds that the angry Warrior Twins punished mankind by placing valuable
salt deposits far from civilization, requiring hard work and bravery to
harvest the precious mineral. Today, a gift of salt endures in India as a
potent symbol of good luck and a reference to Mahatma Gandhi’s liberation
of India.
|
J
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The effects
of salt deficiency are highlighted in times of war, when human bodies and national
economies are strained to their limits. Thousands of Napoleon’s troops died
during the French retreat from Moscow due to inadequate wound healing and
lowered resistance to disease - the results of salt deficiency.
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Questions 14-16
Choose THREE letters A-H.
Write your answers in boxes 14-16 on
your answer sheet.
NB Your answers may be given in any
order.
Which THREE statements are true of
salt?
A
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A number of cities take their name from the word salt.
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B
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Salt contributed to the French Revolution.
|
C
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The uses
of salt are countless.
|
D
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Salt has been produced in China for less than 2000 years.
|
E
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There are
many commercial applications for salt F Salt deposits in the state of Kansas
are vast.
|
G
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Salt has few industrial uses nowadays.
|
H
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Slaves
used salt as a currency.
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Questions 17-21
Complete the summary.
Choose NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the
passage for each answer. Write your answers in boxes 17-21 on your answer
sheet.
Salt is such
an 17________ that people would not be able to live without it. As well as its
uses in cooking, this basic mineral has thousands of business 18____________________
ranging from making paper to the manufacture of soap. Being a prized and
19__________________ it has played a major part in the economies of many
countries. As such, salt has not only led to war, but has also been used to
raise 20_____________ by governments in many parts of the world. There are
also many instances of its place in religion and culture, being used as a
means to get rid of evil 21________________ .
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Questions 22-27
Do the following statements agree with
the information in Reading Passage 2? In boxes 22-27 on your answer sheet
write
TRUE
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if the
statement agrees with the information
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FALSE
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if the
statement contradicts the information
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NOT GIVEN
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if there is no information
about the statement
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22
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It has been suggested that salt was responsible for the first war.
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23
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The first tax on salt was imposed by a Chinese emperor.
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24
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Salt is no
longer used as a form of currency.
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25
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Most of the money for the construction of the Erie Canal came from
salt taxes.
|
26
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Hopi
legend believes that salt deposits were placed far away from civilization
to penalize mankind.
|
27
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A lack of salt is connected with the deaths of some soldiers.
|
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