Exam tip
Throughout the exam, you need to make sure you rely on the information in the passages, not on your own ideas. This is especially important with this type of question: never be tempted to reflect your own opinion, always con sider only what is in the text.
Questions 1-12
Read the following passage. Do the statements agree with the views of the writer? Write:
YES if the statement agree s with the views of the writer
NO if the statement contradicts what the writer thinks
NOT GIVEN if it is impossible to know what the writer's point of view is
1. Another name for the East-West trading route is 'silk road'.
(popularly known as the silk road)
2. Zhang Qian is admired by Chinese schoolchildren.
(this is likely, but not stated in
the text)
3. Zhang Qian was a Chinese adventurer.
(Zhang Qian, the Chinese ambassador adventurer)
4. At least one German used the silk road in the 19th century.
(this is likely, but we do not
know that the person who used the name
first also used the road)
5. Silk was the main material to be traded on this route .
(this is likely because of its
name, but the text does not say it is the
main material)
6. The silk road was used for trade in natural materials, man-made materials and animals.
(examples are given of natural
materials, e.g. gems; man-made materials,
e.g. glass, and animals: livestock is mentioned)
7. We know that Zhang Qian was the first person to use the silk road.
(the text says that he was the first
Chinese person to do so, but that it is not
certain that others did not go hundreds of
years earlier, e.g. the Romans)
8. The Romans may well have use d the silk road.
(may well expresses a probability, but
not absolute certainty)
9. The reports about a 'stone tower' provide evidence that the Romans used the silk road.
(the writer suggests that this is not
evidence as its exact location remains
uncertain and that the truth about the tower
is unknown: Whatever the truth about the
Stone Tower may be . . .)
10. Kashgar is a welcoming city.
(The city would have been a
welcome sight for travellers, and they would
probably have been welcome because they
were doing trade, but none of this is said in
the text)
11. People who go in the Taklaman desert never come back out.
(this is what the name
suggests, but this is just a name, and not
necessarily a fact)
12. The journey fromWest to East was so long and difficult that the travellers probably did not go all the way to China.
(It is unlikely that in these earlier times
traders or travellers would have continued
further eastwards from Kashgar, . . . there still
would have remained eight hundred miles
of a dangerous journey before they would
have found the first true signs of Chinese
civilization.)
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