Short Answer Question Mastery

Extract exact factual details from everyday monologues and master Section 2.

💬 What are Short Answer Questions?

You must listen to the recording and write a short, precise answer in each blank space provided. Sometimes, you may be asked to list TWO or more things for a single topic.

🎓 Where do they appear?

They can appear in any section but are particularly common in Section 2. This is usually a monologue set in an everyday social context, like a welcome talk or a guided tour.

The 7-Step Survival Strategy

Use your brief preparation time to read the questions, predict vocabulary, and prepare your spelling.

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1. The Word Count Trap

Read the instructions carefully! The limit could be NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS AND/OR A NUMBER, or ONLY ONE WORD. If you write more than the limit, you get a zero.

Always double-check the limit before the audio begins.
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2. Answer Order

The answers will come in the exact same order in the recording as they are listed on your page. Let the numbered flow guide your listening.

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3. Predict the Answers

Read the question and figure out the type of information required. Are you listening for a name, date, time, phone number, address, or price?

“What time does the farm park open?” -> A Time
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4. Prepare for Paraphrasing

Underline the keywords in the question and anticipate synonyms. The speaker will not read your question word-for-word.

If the question asks for “planned improvements”, listen for “scheduled upgrades” or “future changes”.
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5. Problematic Vocabulary

Be highly prepared to accurately write down tricky data points: Times, Numbers, Prices, Dates, and spelled-out Letters (like names and addresses).

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6. Watch Out for Distractors

Examiners will mention a fact, then immediately correct it to test your attention. Listen for reversal words like but, however, wait, or no.

“Entrance was £6.50 until May 1st when it increased to £6.70.” (Answer: £6.70)
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7. Guess and Move On

Never leave a blank space. If you miss an answer, take a guess based on context and move to the next question immediately so you don’t fall behind the audio track.

10 Quick Strategy Challenges

Click to reveal how you should analyze these common Short Answer scenarios.

1. The limit is “NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS”. The audio says “the local library”. What should you write?
You can write “local library” or “the library”. Writing all three words (“the local library”) will be marked wrong!
2. The question asks: “Name TWO improvements…”. Should you write them both on the same line?
Usually, the test will provide two separate question numbers (e.g., 4 and 5) for each improvement. Write one answer per number.
3. Audio: “We used to open at 9 AM, but now we open at 10 AM.” Question: “What time does it open?”
Answer: 10 AM. The speaker used the past time (9 AM) as a distractor before correcting it with “but now”.
4. The question asks for the “most popular attractions”. The audio says “the birds of prey are a firm favourite”. What is the synonym here?
“Firm favourite” is the paraphrase used for “most popular”. The answer is “birds of prey”.
5. The question asks for a price. The symbol ‘£’ is already printed on the question paper. The audio says “six pounds fifty”. What do you write?
Just write “6.50”. Do not write the pound sign again or the word “pounds” if the symbol is already provided.
6. You miss Question 3 completely, and the speaker is already talking about Question 4. What should you do?
Guess a logical answer for Q3 immediately and focus 100% of your attention on catching Q4. Never look backwards while the audio is playing!
7. True or False: The answers for Short Answer questions will jump around randomly in the audio track.
False. Short Answer questions ALWAYS appear in chronological order in the audio. Let the numbers guide you.
8. The limit is “ONE WORD ONLY”. The audio says “You get a completely free ticket”. What do you write?
Answer: ticket (or ‘free’ depending on the exact phrasing of the question). You must drop unnecessary adjectives to fit the limit.
9. The question asks for a date. The audio says “The first of May”. How should you format your answer?
“1 May” or “1st May” are both perfect and count as one number and one word.
10. What is the most common context for a Section 2 monologue?
A single speaker talking about an everyday social situation, such as a guided tour, a welcome speech, or an induction talk for new students.

Short Answer Practice Tests

Put your strategies to the ultimate test with these full IELTS Listening Short Answer tasks.

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