Return to site

🔥Songs of ourselves Answers with location - Đề luyện tập IELTS READING- Làm bài online format computer-based, kèm đáp án, dịch & giải thích từ vựng - cấu trúc ngữ pháp khó

April 1, 2026

IELTS TUTOR cung cấp Đề luyện tập IELTS READING (IELTS Reading Practice Test) - Làm bài online format computer-based, kèm đáp án, dịch & giải thích từ vựng - cấu trúc ngữ pháp khó & GIẢI ĐÁP ÁN VỚI LOCATION

I. Kiến thức liên quan

II. Làm bài online (kéo xuống cuối bài blog để xem giải thích từ vựng & cấu trúc cụ thể hơn)

📩 MN AI CHƯA CÓ ĐÁP ÁN FORECAST QUÝ MỚI PART 1-2-3 NHẮN ZL 0905834420 IELTS TUTOR GỬI FREE HẾT NHA

III. Songs of ourselves​: Đề luyện tập IELTS READING (IELTS Reading Practice Test)

Passage 3

Songs of ourselves

Section A

Music is one of the human species's relatively few universal abilities. Without formal training, any individual, from Stone Age tribesmen to suburban teenagers, has the ability to recognize music and, in some fashion, to make it. Why this should be so is a mystery. After all, music isn't necessary for getting through the day, and if it aids in reproduction, it does so only in highly indirect ways. Language, by contrast, is also everywhere but for reasons that are more obvious. With language, you and the members of your tribe can organize a migration across Africa, build reed boats and cross the seas, and communicate at night even when you can't see each other. In all its technological extravagance, modern culture springs directly from the human talent for manipulating symbols and syntax. Scientists have always been intrigued by the connection between music and language. Yet over the years, words and melody have acquired a vastly different status in the lab and the seminar room. While language has long been considered essential to unlocking the mechanisms of human intelligence, music is generally treated as an evolutionary frippery, mere auditory cheesecake, as the Harvard cognitive scientist Steven Pinker puts it.>> 🔥 Form đăng kí giải đề thi thật IELTS 4 kĩ năng kèm bài giải bộ đề 100 đề PART 2 IELTS SPEAKING quý đang thi (update hàng tuần) từ IELTS TUTOR

Section B

But thanks to a decade-long wave of neuroscience research, that tune is changing. A flurry of recent publications suggests that language and music may equally be able to tell us who we are and where we're from – not just emotionally, but biologically. And in an article in the August 6 issue of the journal Neuroscience, David Schwartz, Catherine Howe, and Dale Purves of Duke University argued that the sounds of music and the sounds of language are intricately connected. To grasp the originality of this idea, it's necessary to realize two things about how music has traditionally been understood. First, musicologists have emphasized that while each culture stamps a special identity onto its music, music itself has some universal qualities. For example, in virtually all cultures, the sound is divided into some or all of the 12 intervals that make up the chromatic scale – the scale represented by the keys on a piano. Second, these intervals are not equally distributed across cultures. Some musical systems, such as those of Indonesia or India, use intervals differently than the Western classical tradition does. The question, then, is why human cultures around the world would independently develop musical systems that share certain features yet differ in others. >> 🔥 Form đăng kí giải đề thi thật IELTS 4 kĩ năng kèm bài giải bộ đề 100 đề PART 2 IELTS SPEAKING quý đang thi (update hàng tuần) từ IELTS TUTOR

Section C

The Duke researchers proposed an answer that is startling in its simplicity. They suggested that the intervals we hear in music are not arbitrary inventions but rather reflections of the intervals we hear in speech. To test this hypothesis, they analysed hundreds of recordings of English, Mandarin, and other languages, measuring the frequencies of sound waves produced by speakers. They discovered that the distribution of tonal intervals in speech closely matched the distribution of intervals used in the musical scales of the corresponding cultures. In other words, the music of a culture appears to be shaped by the characteristic sound patterns of its language. English, for example, tends to use intervals of between two and five semitones in everyday speech, and these are precisely the intervals that predominate in Western music. Mandarin, with its complex tonal inflections, shows a different distribution, mirrored in traditional Chinese music.

Section D

This connection between speech and music may explain why music evokes such powerful emotional responses. If music is built from the same acoustic building blocks as language, it may tap into neural circuits that evolved to process emotional cues in speech. A rising pitch, whether in speech or song, can signal excitement or urgency; a falling pitch can convey resignation or sadness. By exaggerating and patterning these natural speech contours, music creates a heightened emotional experience. This theory also accounts for the fact that instrumental music, without words, can still move us deeply. The emotional content is carried not by lyrics but by the musical intervals themselves, which mimic the expressive patterns of the human voice.

Section E

Further research has supported and extended these findings. Neuroimaging studies show that listening to music activates many of the same brain regions involved in processing language, including Broca's area and Wernicke's area, long associated with speech production and comprehension. Music also engages the limbic system, the brain's emotional centre, explaining why a particular melody can trigger joy, sorrow, or nostalgia. Some researchers have even suggested that music and language evolved from a common ancestor, a kind of protolanguage that combined elements of both. In this view, the two abilities diverged over time but retained deep structural similarities.

Section F

The implications of this research extend beyond academic curiosity. If music is indeed rooted in the sounds of speech, it may have practical applications in education and therapy. Children with language disorders, such as dyslexia, sometimes show improvements after musical training, perhaps because music exercises the same neural pathways needed for processing speech. Stroke patients who have lost the ability to speak may retain the ability to sing, and music therapy can sometimes help them recover language function. For elderly people with dementia, familiar songs can unlock memories and emotions that words alone cannot reach. >> 🔥 Nhắn zalo 0905834420 join group zalo Hóng đề thi máy 4 skills để cập nhật đề thi thật 4 kĩ năng hằng ngày [Kèm giải & đề làm online]

Section G

None of this diminishes the uniqueness of music as an art form. Music is not merely language by another name; it has its own syntax, its own expressive possibilities, its own power to transcend cultural boundaries. But the research suggests that music is far more than "auditory cheesecake." It is woven into the fabric of human biology, shaped by the same evolutionary forces that gave us speech, and capable of revealing fundamental truths about who we are. As the Duke researchers conclude, the songs we sing may ultimately be songs of ourselves.

Questions 27–32

Reading Passage 3 has seven sections, A–G.
Which section contains the following information?
Write the correct letter, A–G, in boxes 27–32 on your answer sheet.

NB You may use any letter more than once.

  1. a reference to the traditional view that music is less important than language for understanding intelligence

  2. details of the method used by Duke University researchers to test their hypothesis

  3. examples of practical applications arising from the connection between music and speech

  4. the suggestion that music and language may share a common evolutionary origin

  5. an explanation of how music can evoke emotion through its resemblance to speech patterns

  6. the conclusion that music reflects the identity of its creators >> 🔥 IELTS TUTOR gợi ý tham khảo CẦN VIẾT & THU ÂM BAO NHIÊU BÀI ĐỂ ĐẠT 8.0 SPEAKING & 7.0 WRITING?

Questions 33–37

Complete the summary below.
Choose NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the passage for each answer.
Write your answers in boxes 33–37 on your answer sheet.

Music is a universal human ability, yet its purpose has been harder to explain than that of 33 __________, which clearly aids survival and communication. Traditionally, music has been dismissed by some scientists as evolutionary 34 __________. However, recent research suggests a deep connection between music and speech. David Schwartz and his colleagues proposed that the 35 __________ used in music are not arbitrary but reflect those found in speech. They analysed recordings of different languages and found that the distribution of tonal intervals in speech matched those in the musical scales of the corresponding 36 __________. This connection may explain why music evokes powerful emotional responses, as it mimics the expressive patterns of the 37 __________.

Questions 38–40

Choose the correct letter, A, B, C, or D.
Write your answers in boxes 38–40 on your answer sheet.

  1. What did the Duke University researchers discover about the relationship between music and language?
    A. Music and language evolved completely independently.
    B. The intervals used in music are arbitrary cultural inventions.
    C. The tonal intervals in speech correspond to those in music.
    D. All cultures use the same musical intervals regardless of language.

  2. According to the passage, why can instrumental music move us emotionally?
    A. It reminds us of songs we heard in childhood.
    B. It uses intervals that mimic the human voice.
    C. It follows strict mathematical rules.
    D. It is always accompanied by visual images.

  3. What practical benefit of music therapy is mentioned in the passage?
    A. It can help children improve their mathematical skills.
    B. It can assist stroke patients in recovering speech.
    C. It can prevent dementia in elderly people.
    D. It can cure language disorders completely.

IV. Dịch bài đọc Songs of ourselves

V. Giải thích từ vựng Songs of ourselves

VI. Giải thích cấu trúc ngữ pháp khó Songs of ourselves

VII. Đáp án Songs of ourselves

27. A

28. C

29. F

30. E

31. D

32. G

33. language

34. frippery

35. intervals

36. cultures

37. human voice

38. C

39. B

40. B
 

📩 MN AI CHƯA CÓ ĐÁP ÁN FORECAST QUÝ MỚI PART 1-2-3 NHẮN ZL 0905834420 IELTS TUTOR GỬI FREE HẾT NHA

Các khóa học IELTS online 1 kèm 1 - 100% cam kết đạt target 6.0 - 7.0 - 8.0 - Đảm bảo đầu ra - Thi không đạt, học lại FREE

>> Thành tích học sinh IELTS TUTOR với hàng ngàn feedback được cập nhật hàng ngày