Latest PTE Real Exam Questions
PTE Bank analysts team is committed to offer the latest 100% real PTE exam question bank to you. We are constantly collecting new questions to ensure you are always equipped with up-to-dated questions and model answers. Practicing these questions would not only benefit you in exam preparation but also help you to anticipate what will be tested.
- Gomble National Park
The audio, which includes more than 1,000 separate data files, was captured in the early 1970s by the late Hetty van de Rijt. She recorded the various screams, barks, and how calls made by a group of chimps, including 17 youngsters, living in the Gombe National Park in Tanzania.
- Ozone
And total of five ozone ascents were taken at Bharati station (Indian mission) Antarctica from April to June 2016. As a stratospheric temperatures reduced to -82.24 ℃ on 20th June 2016 indicating the formation of stratospheric clouds, leading scientists at Bharati station feared that Montreal Accord has not succeeded to control the emission of ozone-depleting gases in the atmosphere.
- Dynamics
How quickly this occurs depends on the dynamics of fertility, mortality and overseas migration. While a moderate pace of demographic change allows for gradual adjustment of the economy and policies to the changing population demographics, rapid changes are more difficult to manage. As a result, governments and society as a whole may need to take actions to address these issues.
- Sleep Behavior
Sleep behavior is also known as sleep disorder. People with sleep disorder often talk or walk in their sleep. They are not aware of what they are talking about or where are they going. There isn’t any serious effects on body in general but it may connected to the mental health. People with childhood traumas, unspeakable problem or depression are the ones with different sleep behaviour. There isn’t any specific cure of it yet as its a short time disorder that heals with time. If its not leaving the person and hurting in someway the person should see the doctor immediately.

- Love of Reading
Many parents want their children to grow up with a love of reading. However, recent research has shown that children nowadays spend far more of their time using their phones or computers than reading books. Of course, technology brings children many advantages, but books are as important as computers. For instance, when children read storybooks, they imagine the characters and practise their language skills, too.
Many British schools run an event called World Book Day. This event aims to promote reading to pupils using various fun activities. Some pupils come to school in costumes inspired by their favourite book. Other schools organise World Book Day activities where pupils create music, art or plays about books.
But it’s also important for children to read at home, too. At the moment, very few parents spend time reading with their children regularly. Unfortunately, this means that these children are missing an opportunity to develop the reading habit at an early age.
- Novel Device
A novel invention for helping farmers to dry out hay more quickly has won a University of Glasgow graduate a prestigious design award. Gavin Armstrong, 23, from Kippen, Stirlingshire scooped the Glasgow 1999 Design Medal for his design for a swath inverter— a device for flipping over a hay crop to help dry out the damp underside. Dry hay is an essential farmyard food source for sheep and cows. Gavin came up with the design as part of his Product Design Engineering degree course, run in conjunction with Glasgow School of Art. He built a working prototype of the device which is powered and towed by a tractor and uses a pair of parallel belts to invert the swath. The rollers are driven from one hydraulic motor and are geared so as to spin at the same speed and in opposite directions ensuring that the touching inner two faces of the belt that perform the inversion move rearwards at the same speed.
- Dark Energy
The rest of the universe appears to be made of a mysterious, invisible substance called dark matter 25% and a force that repels gravity known as dark energy 70%. Scientists have not yet observed dark matter directly. It doesn’t interact with baryonic matter; it’s completely invisible to light and other forms of electromagnetic radiation, making dark matter impossible to detect with current instruments. But scientists are confident it exists because of the gravitational effects, it appears to have on galaxies and galaxy clusters.
- Biology Application
- Internet
- Network of Transportation in Paris
- Youth Communities
- The Definition of Good Idea
- Food Crisis
- Motivation (Version 2)
- Climate Prediction
- Persuasive Essay
- 6 new question
- 2 new question
- 2 updates
- 7 new questions & 3 updates

