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Friday, 28 October 2016

Eight mistakes people make while giving IELTS exam

Do you know more than half of the students score below 7 bands in their International English Language Testing System? While applying for immigration or foreign universities, aspirants are too fussed with all the other processing, that they end up paying zero attention to their IELTS Exam, ending up with low scores and eventually, not getting accepted. Here are the main reasons behind it, The toughest part of giving your IELTS Exam comes in the ‘Listening’ part of it. The reason? You will only get one chance to hear the question. If you miss out listening to even one word of the question, the whole context of the question changes and you end up lost. Writing is also a very tough aspect of IELTS. The required standard doesn’t fit with majority of aspirants and they end up with 7 bands or below. While reading, some aspirants face the trouble of pronunciation. A word that is not pronounced correctly leads to loss of marks. Some aspirants of IELTS face difficulty when attempting the writing test, wasting space and running out of world limit without answering correctly. Time limit is a major issue. As someone well said, time wasted is time lost. Most students end up running out of time and that affects their grades. Another problem with most students is that they take the test for granted. Taking IELTS too lightly has never been a good omen. Students also enter the exam without basic knowledge of the test format, which ends up confusing them and gives the result in lower bands.

Wednesday, 26 October 2016

IS militants kill 30 in central Afghanistan: officials

Killings underscore unravelling security in Afghanistan.

Warriors connected to the activist Islamic State (IS) gathering stole and killed around 30 regular citizens, including kids, in focal Afghanistan, authorities said Wednesday, raising worries about the gathering's extending nearness past its eastern fortress. The killings happened late Tuesday north of Firoz Koh, the capital of Ghor area, with the nearby government calling it a reprisal assault after a neighborhood IS authority was killed. IS, which controls region crosswise over Syria and Iraq and is making enduring advances in Afghanistan, has so far not authoritatively asserted duty regarding the assault. "Our security strengths with the assistance of local people directed an operation and killed a Daesh (IS) leader yesterday. Daesh contenders consequently kidnapped around 30 villagers, for the most part shepherds," Ghor Governor Nasir Khazeh told AFP. "Their dead bodies were found by nearby individuals early today." Abdul Hameed Nateqi, a Ghor commonplace chamber part, gave a comparable record to AFP, including that the attackers were self-broadcasted supporters of IS. The killings underscore unwinding security in Afghanistan as the resurgent Taliban proceed with a push into urban focuses 15 years after they were toppled from power. IS warriors have been attempting to extend their nearness in Afghanistan, winning over sympathizers, enrolling adherents and testing the Taliban all alone turf, basically in the nation's east. In March Afghan President Ashraf Ghani declared that the aggressors had been crushed after neighborhood security strengths asserted triumph in a months-in length operation against the gathering. Be that as it may, IS aggressors have kept on propelling lethal strikes in the nation. The most recent obliterating assault in Ghor speaks to a noteworthy heightening for IS, which so far has to a great extent been limited toward the eastern territory of Nangarhar where it is infamous for mercilessness including decapitations. The Afghan government is right now amidst an operation sponsored by Nato airstrikes against IS in the territory. Nato as of late said the gathering's impact was winding down as it consistently lost domain, with warriors to a great extent limited to a few regions in Nangarhar from around nine in January. "At this moment we see them (IS) extremely centered around attempting to set up their caliphate... inside Afghanistan," John Nicholson, the top US and Nato leader in the nation, told correspondents on Sunday. "Obviously with our Afghan accomplices we have possessed the capacity to lessen that region essentially and deliver overwhelming setbacks on them." In July, IS activists asserted duty regarding twin blasts that tore through hordes of Shia Hazaras in Kabul, slaughtering no less than 85 individuals and injuring more than 400 others. The bombings denoted the deadliest single assault in Kabul since the Taliban were removed from power in a 2001 US-drove attack. The killings started a torrential slide of worldwide judgment, with the United Nations marking the immediate attack on regular citizens an "atrocity". The Taliban, who are amidst their yearly summer hostile and are more intense than IS, have so far not formally remarked on the Ghor killings. The aggressor assemble, which has ventured up across the nation strikes on the Western-supported government, is not for the most part known to dispatch assaults specifically focusing on regular people.