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IELTS Reading Matching Sentence Endings Example 8

IELTS Reading Matching Sentence Endings Example 8

Emigration to the US

A. American history has been largely the story of migrations. That of the hundred years or so between the Battle of Waterloo and the outbreak of the First World War must certainly be reckoned the largest peaceful migration in recorded history; probably the largest of any kind, ever. Only the French seemed to be substantially immune to the virus. Otherwise, all caught it, and all travelled. English, Irish, Welsh, Scots, Germans, Scandinavians, Spaniards, Italians, Poles, Greeks, Jews, Portuguese, Dutch, Hungarians, Czechs, Croats, Slovenes, Serbs, Slovaks, Ukrainians, Lithuanians, Russians, Basques. There were general and particular causes. Bad times pushed, good times pulled American factories were usually clamoring for workers): small wonder that the peoples moved. Particular reasons were just as important as these general ones. For example between 1845 and 1848 land suffered the terrible potato famine. A million people died of starvation or disease, a million more emigrated (1846-51). Matters were not much better when the Great Famine was over: it was followed by lesser ones, and the basic weaknesses of the Irish economy made the outlook hopeless anyway. Mass emigration was a natural resort, at first to America, then, in the twentieth century, increasingly, to England and Scotland. Emigration was encouraged in me. Irish case as in many others, by letters sent home and by remittances of money. The first adventurers thus helped to pay the expenses of their successors. Political reasons could sometimes drive Europeans across the Atlantic too. In 1848 some thousands of Germans fled the failure of the liberal revolution of that year (but many thousands emigrated for purely economic reasons).

B. If such external stimuli faltered, American enterprise was more than willing to fill the gap. The high cost of labour had been a constant in American history since the first settlements; now, as the Industrial Revolution made itself felt, the need for workers was greater than ever. The supply of Americans was too small to meet the demand: while times were good on the family farm, as they were on the whole until the 1880s, or while there was new land to be taken up in the West, the drift out of agriculture (which was becoming a permanent feature of America, as of all industrialized, society) would not be large enough to fill the factories. So employers looked for the hands they needed in Europe, whether skilled, like Cornish miners, or unskilled, like Irish navvies. Then, the transcontinental railroads badly needed settlers on their Western land grants, as well as labourers: they could not make regular profits until the lands their tracks crossed were regularly producing crops that needed carrying to market.

Questions 1-4

Complete each sentence with the correct ending A-H from the box below. 

Write the correct letter A-H in boxes 1-4 on your answer sheet.

  1. The end of the potato famine in Ireland
  2. People who had emigrated from Ireland
  3. Movement off the land in the US
  4. The arrival of railroad companies in the West of the US 
  1. people reluctant to move elsewhere.
  2. resulted in a need for more agricultural workers.
  3. provided evidence of the advantages of emigration.
  4. created a false impression of the advantages of moving elsewhere.
  5. did little to improve the position of much of the population.
  6. took a long time to have any real effect.
  7. failed to satisfy employment requirements.
  8. created a surplus of people, who had emigrated.

Answers

  1. did little to improve the position of much of the population.
  2. provided evidence of the advantages of emigration.
  3. failed to satisfy employment requirements.
  4. resulted in a need for more agricultural workers.

Explanation

For the first question, the answer is in the first para, 9th line; “Particular reasons were just as important as these general ones. For example between 1845 and 1848 land suffered the terrible potato famine. A million people died of starvation or disease, a million more emigrated (1846-51). Matters were not much better when the Great Famine was over: it was followed by lesser ones, and the basic weaknesses of the Irish economy made the outlook hopeless anyway.”

The second answer is in the first para,  16th line; “Irish case as in many others, by letters sent home and by remittances of money.”

The third answer can be found in the second para, 3rd line; “The supply of Americans was too small to meet the demand: while times were good on the family farm, as they were on the whole until the 1880s, or while there was new land to be taken up in the West, the drift out of agriculture (which was becoming a permanent feature of America, as of all industrialized, society) would not be large enough to fill the factories.”

The fourth answer is in the second para, 9th line; “Then, the transcontinental railroads badly needed settlers on their Western land grants, as well as labourers: they could not make regular profits until the lands their tracks crossed were regularly producing crops that needed carrying to market.”

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