1. Read Aloud – PTE Test Recent Exam Memories
Medical Cannabis – PTE Read Aloud
– 10 January 2023 @Melbourne, Australia
According to a peer-reviewed study medical cannabis led to “a statistically significant improvement” in quality of life, employment status, and in the reduction of the number of medications in those with Tourette’s Syndrome, in addition to improving comorbidities.
Hybrid Rice – PTE Read Aloud
– 7 January 2023 @Brisbane, Australia
A new breed of rice that is a hybrid of an annual Asian rice and a perennial African rice could be a more sustainable option. The hybrid rice was able to produce grain for 8 consecutive harvests over four years at a yield comparable to the standard annual Asian rice, with much lower costs and labour.
Motivation to Fight – PTE Read Aloud
– 5 January 2023 @ Online
USA sexually ‘teased’ its troops in the First World War to make them fight harder. Believing that sexually satisfied men could not be easily motivated, the aim of this teasing was to generate unmet sexual desire, which the War Department could leverage as motivation to fight.
Baby Hearing – PTE Read Aloud
– 5 January 2023@ Xiamen, China
Most babies start developing their hearing while still in the womb, prompting some hopeful parents to play classical music to their pregnant bellies. Some research even suggests that infants are listening to adult speech as early as 10 weeks before birth, gathering the basic building blocks of their family’s native tongue.
2. Describe Image – PTE Test Recent Exam Memories
Wasted Food (5 January 2023 @Brisbane, Australia) – PTE Describe Image

European Headquarters (3 January 2023 @Online) – PTE Describe Image

Upper Arms (5 January 2023 @ Zhengzhou, China) – PTE Describe Image

3. Summarize Written Text – PTE Test Recent Exam Memories
Natural Language (5 January 2023 @ Adelaide, Australia) – PTE Summarize Written Text
When people start thinking about language, the first question which often occurs to them is this: is language natural to humans? – in the same way that grunting is natural to pigs, and barking comes naturally to dogs. Or is it just something we happen to have learned? – in the same way that dogs may learn to beg, or elephants may learn to waltz, or humans may learn to play the guitar. Clearly, in one sense, children ‘learn’ whatever language they are exposed to, be it Chinese, Nootka or English. So no one would deny that ‘learning’ is very important. But the crucial question is whether children are born with ‘blank sheets’ in their head as far as language is concerned – or whether humans are ‘programmed’ with an outline knowledge of the structure of languages in general. This question of whether language is partly due to nature or wholly due to learning or nurture is often referred to as the nature-nurture controversy, and has been discussed for centuries. For example, it was the topic of one of Plato’s dialogues, the Cratylus. Controversies which have been going on for literally ages tend to behave in a characteristic fashion. They lie dormant for a while, then break out fiercely. This particular issue resurfaced in linguistics in 1959 when the linguist Noam Chomsky wrote a devastating and witty review of Verbal Behavior, a book by the Harvard psychologist B.F. Skinner (Skinner 1957; Chomsky 1959). This book claimed to ‘explain’ language as a set of habits gradually built up over the years. According to Skinner, no complicated innate or mental mechanisms are needed. All that is necessary is the systematic observation of the events in the external world which prompt the speaker to utter sounds.
4. Summarize Spoken Text – PTE Test Recent Exam Memories
The Free Human Rights (5 January 2023 @ Perth, Australia) – PTE Summarize Spoken Text
In today’s lecture I’m going to talk about changes in air pollution since the middle of the last century and what has created these changes. So, um — by the 1950s, air pollution was very visible with frequent thick black fogs known as ‘smogs’ in many large cities around the world. The main source of this pollution was from factories and it caused severe health problems. For example, a particularly severe smog in London in 1952 caused over four thousand deaths. Obviously something had to be done and in 1956 a Clean Air Act was introduced in Britain. This addressed the pollution from factories and the smogs soon disappeared. However, as you know, these days air pollution is still a big issue. The main difference between now and the 1950s is that you can’t see it — it’s invisible. Also, the main source of pollution now is from cars and lorries, and although these don’t produce visible signs, this air pollution is still a significant risk to health. And one of the key factors in the rise of this type of pollution is that we have all become much more vehicle-dependent. There are far more cars and lorries, trains and planes than in the 1950s and this is now the main source of air pollution around the world.
Our PTE Prediction File is to record as much as of the official PTE question database, and with quality assurance measure we can guarantee a minimum of 70% similar questions of our question bank in the PTE exam.
Here are frequently asked PTE test memories and questions from the recent PTE exams (January 2023) with dates and locations.
More real PTE exam memory questions for January 2023?
Get start with signing up with PTE BANK!
Step 1: Register an account
Step 2: Choose your perfect PTE Exam Package
Step 3: Go to “My Account”, click on “download” to get PTE preparation materials



