Yes/No/Not Given Listening Traps: How IELTS Tests Your Judgment

Judgment questions · Scope traps · May 2026

Direct answer

Yes/No/Not Given (Y/N/NG) items test whether a statement matches what the speaker actually said—not what sounds logical. Yes means the statement agrees with the recording; No means it contradicts; Not Given means the audio neither confirms nor denies it. The costliest traps: treating paraphrases as proof (Yes when only similar), inferring unstated conclusions (Yes instead of NG), and missing embedded negation (No misread as Yes). Under one-time audio, these errors cluster and cap Listening at Band 6.

What Y/N/NG demands in Listening

Judgment questions require epistemic matching: does the statement's truth value match the speaker's claim? Unlike gap-fill, vocabulary overlap is a distractor—examiners shift scope, degree, time, or agent while keeping topic words familiar.

Yes trap Keywords match but the speaker never agreed with the full statement
No trap Negation buried in a long clause— you hear the topic, miss the reversal
NG trap You infer a reasonable conclusion the audio never stated

Three trap patterns that repeat every test

Trap patternWhat you doCorrect logic
Paraphrase overreachChoose Yes because words feel similarYes only if meaning fully aligns
Implied vs statedChoose Yes from logicNot Given unless explicitly said
Scope shiftIgnore "all/some/never" qualifiersMatch exact scope in audio

These overlap with understanding Listening but missing answers—comprehension without verification.

Why one-time audio multiplies errors

You cannot re-listen in the real test. Anxiety pushes fast "Yes" guesses when you recognize topic words. Pressure mistakes and brain fog convert small judgment slips into three wrong answers in one section.

Framework: answer Y/N/NG with proof, not vibe

1. Underline the claim verb

Circle "all," "never," "caused," "will"—these decide No vs NG vs Yes.

2. Three-second NG rule

If you cannot point to words that prove Yes or No, choose Not Given.

3. Transcript post-mortem

Once per practice set: mark exact phrases that justify each answer, then redo audio-only.

4. Separate Listening from Reading habits

Reading allows re-scan; Listening does not—train verification speed under audio.

Key takeaways

  • Y/N/NG = match stated meaning, not topic familiarity or logic.
  • No needs contradiction; Not Given means unaddressed in the audio.
  • Paraphrase, inference, and scope shifts are the three core traps.
  • Practice proof-marking on transcripts, then test under one-play audio.

FAQ

No requires a clear contradiction with what was said. Not Given means the recording neither confirms nor denies the statement.
You match topic words and infer a conclusion the speaker never stated. Default to NG when explicit proof is missing.
Underline proof in the transcript once, then repeat the set with audio only—no second listen, mirroring test conditions.

Find which Listening trap type costs you most bands.

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