IELTS Writing Task 1 Sentences

  • IELTS Writing Task 1 Sample Sentences
  • It is noticeable that for both types of household with children, a higher than average proportion were living in poverty at this time.
  • It drops rapidly to 32% up to the third decade of life, and then increses in late adulthood up to about 44%.
  • Throughout the century, the largest quantity of water was used for agricultural Purposes, and this increased dramatically from about 500 km³ to around 3,000 km³ in the year 2000.
  • However, in some countries, the number of landlines is higher than the number of mobile phones. One
  •  Water used in the industrial and domestic sectors also increased, but consumption was minimal until mid-century.
  • Janakpur has the smallest system. It only has 11 kilometres of route, which is more than 30 times less than that of London.
  • Older people were generally less likely to be poor, though once again the trend favoured eldery couples (only 4%) rather than single eldery people (6%).
  • This means that a huge amount of water is used in agriculture in Brazil, and this is reflected in the figures for water consumption per person: 359 m³ compared with only 8 m³ in the Congo.
  • Excluding Wednesday and Thursday, the lunch and dinner sales from October 7-11 rose gradually until the end of the business week.
  • Of the 10,000 children that were interviewed, all the boys and girls stated that they enjoyed watching TV or videos in their spare time.
  • These numbers are reflective of a restaurant that is located in a business/financial district where business hours are Monday through Friday.
  • Of the three areas mentioned, Notting Hill is the most expensive with weekly rents starting at £375 (salary approximately f 100,000) and rising to £738 per week for a 3-bedroom property.
  • If this pattern continues, eventually the number of meals that families eat at fast food restaurants could double the number of meals they eat at sit-down restaurants.
  • Alternatively, Fulham is the cheapest area shown with rents ranging from £215 per week for a one bedroom property to £600 per week for a 3-bedroom property
  • Although details have yet to be finalised, the principle is that the five floors will be connected by two vertical passenger lifts on either side of the tower.
  • A similar pattern is also noted on job security. With regards to money, 69% to 70% on both age group said it is essential.
  • Ships are a clean form of transport and produce about the same amount of CO2 per passenger kilometre as trains do.
  • Starting with Music Choice websites; 40,000 people went on this new site on first-day. Half of them backed out the next day.
  • It is clear from the data given that there are some significant differences in spending habits within Europe.
  • Dinner sales, which generated at least $1,000 to $1,500 more a day than lunch sales, also remained steady during the week. Just like the lunch sales, the dinner sales peak on Friday and dipped down for the weekend.
  • In Contrast to this Pop Parade net sites were visited by 120,000 music lovers on day one.
  • In the begining of the next week both gained remarkable recovery after a few fluctuations for 8th and 9th day having 40,000 and 50,000 visiters respectively.
  • Couples generally tended to be better off, with lower poverty levels for couples without children (7%) than those with children (12%).
  • This was then followed by the opening of the railway systems in Tokyo, Washington DC and Kyoto.
  • In terms of the size of the railway systems, London, for certain, has the largest underground railway systems.
  • In 1980, fam¬ilies ate slightly more frequently at sit-down restaurants.
  • Nearly a third of EU transport funds are spent on railways.
  • The lunch and dinner sales during the week peaked on Friday and then dipper down as the weekend set in.
  • For males, the figures were lower but showed a similar trend throughout the epidemic.
  • Female illiteracy was much higher relatively in each area except Latin America/Caribbean where it was only slightly higher.
  • Italy has twice as many mobile phones as landlines, with 88 mobiles per hundred people compared to 45 for landlines.
  • Mobile phone use is low in Canada, with fewer than 40 phones per 100 people. Denmark is also unusual because it has slightly more landlines than mobile phones.
  • Females also outnumber males by level, with almost double the number of men at Higher Diploma level .
  • Only at Diploma level does the number of men slightly exceed that of women.
  • Italys spending on personal stereos is only marginally greater than that of France, while spending on toys is equal between the two.
  •  Next came central heating ownership, rising from 37% of households in 1972 to 64% in 1983.
  • The most obvious trend in the graph is that women have lower employment rates in most of the countries in the graph.
  • Meanwhile, France and Italy generally maintain middle positions, averaging approximately similar spending overall
  • The difference was even bigger in New Zealand, with 60 percent of women. Even in Switzerland and Iceland, slightly more men than women were in the job market.
  • The biggest change was in the United Kingdom, from 55 percent of men in 1995 to 73 percent over the ten years period.
  • While men had relatively higher employment rate throughout the period, more and more women appear to be entering the labour market.
  • Younger people seemed to, and are predicted to, be more active in movie going than their older counterparts.
  • To be specific, a larger percentage of people between the ages of 24 and 34 went to, and are expected to, go to the cinema than those in any other age group.
  • The most outstanding feature of the graph is female graduates outnumber males in all the colleges.
  • There are also big differences in the sizes of the colleges. Ras Al Khaimah has less than 300 students altogether, while Abu Dhabi has about 600 and Dubai has almost 1000
  • This lead is expected to continue with a 75% increase in production to 14.5 million bpd 2010.
  • In every case, British spending is considerably higher than that of other countries; only in the case of tennis racquets does another country, Italy, come close.
  • This is most evident in photographic film, where Germany spends much less than Britain.
  • However, for the next four months, sales declined steadily, reaching an annual low of 120 million dirhams in July.
  • Sales almost doubled, rising from 120 million dirhams in July to 210 million dirhams in August. This was followed by a drop in September, back to the July figure.
  • By 2000, the rate had fallen below three births per woman in Kuwait, Bahrain and the UAE, with a drop of over 25% in a decade in the UAE.
  • Accompanying this change in the choice of foods was an increase in the amount of fast food consumed.
  • In the same period, hamburger sales shot up by more than 500%, from 100g/week in 1970 to 500 grams in 1990.
  • Some areas remained relatively unchanged. Americans spent approximately the same amount of salary on petrol and furniture in both years.
  • The number of people using trains at first rose from just under 20% in 1960 to about 26% in 1980, but then fell back to about 23% in 2000.
  • There are also great differences in Internet use and availability.
  •  The UAE has by far the highest proportion of users, with more than one-third of its population using the Internet.
  • One unusual feature of the graph is that Internet use does not seem to be directly related to the number of computers.
  • It can be clearly seen that the amount of leisure time available varies considerably across the age groups and that people of different age levels have very different ways of spending their leisure time.
  • In both cases, teenagers and retired people spend around twice as much time as those who are at working age. ­­­
  • This situation had changed radically by 1995.
  • These figures can be contrasted with the amount of funding allocated for each disease.
  • We can see that the rate of smoking in men dropped throughout the whole period but was always at a higher level than the female figures.
  • Among those employed full-time, men on average had fifty hours of leisure, whereas women had approximately thirty-seven hours.
  • They tend to retire to bed around 1 a.m. and start their day at 7 a.m.
  • Typically, they will sleep from 10 p.m. and be awoken at 1 a.m. to comfort their babies for a couple of hours.
  • Health indicators, too, reflected overall levels of affluence in the four nations.
  • This suggests that richer societies are able to put more money into health care than poorer ones.
  • Canada and Japan both reported literacy rates of 99%, while Peru claimed 68%. Zaire, the least economically developed of the four countries, had a literacy rate of 34%.
  • Though acidity falls to about pH 4.75 within five minutes of consumption, it returns to above pH 5.5 in under fifteen minutes.
  • The two decades between 1975 and 1995 brought significant changes in the representation of women in Freedonia’s work force, according to the graphs.
  • Twenty years later, though the number of men remained unchanged, the number of women rose to 550 000.
  • A similar situation was seen in the wholesale and retail trade sector, where the number of women rose from about 550 000 in 1975 to almost 800 000 two decades later.
  • Women also made gains in both the finance/banking industries and in the defence-related public sector.
  • In defence, the number of men declined from 225 000 to 200 000, while the number of women rose from 25 000 to over 100 000.
  • The sales of games software also rose during this period, but less sharply.

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