
Our system will evaluate the answer based on this AI-generated description.
The image presents a bar chart depicting the number of jobs in tourism-related industries in a UK city from 1989 to 2009, with separate bars for restaurants, hotels, sport and leisure, and travel and tours for each year. The chart records figures for the years 1989, 1994, 1999, 2004, and 2009. The values for 1989 are as follows: restaurants with approximately 700 jobs, hotels with about 500, sports and leisure with roughly 200, and travel and tours with slightly over 100 jobs. In 1994, the job numbers increase in all sectors with restaurants at approximately 800, hotels around 600, sport and leisure at nearly 500, and travel and tours just above 300. 1999 sees a further rise: restaurants surpassing 900, hotels around 850, sport and leisure close to 750, and travel and tours at 500. In 2004, there is a mixed trend with restaurants reaching almost 1700, hotels over 700, sport and leisure around 850, but travel and tours declines to approximately 400. The final year, 2009, shows a decrease across all industries except for travel and tours which recover to around 600 jobs, while restaurants drop to just over 1400, hotels to 750, and sport and leisure to roughly 550. All trends are illustrated by multiple bars on the y-axis, rising from zero to a maximum of 1800 jobs, with each bar corresponding to a respective industry in the tourism sector.
Given the complexity of the image, the above description may not be entirely accurate.
Skyrocket your IELTS band score by 1-2 points in under a month with our premium plan!
Note: Both the topic and the answer were created by one of our users.
The bar graph illustrates the number of occupations in industries related to tourism in a city in the United Kingdom from 1989 to 2009, featuring various statistics in fields such as restaurants, hotels, sport and leisure, travel and tours.
The values for 1989 are as followed: restaurants with around 1100 jobs, hotels with approximately 1000 jobs, while hotel and leisure and travel and tours have fewer jobs, around 900 and 800, respectively. In 1994, there was a considerable rise in the number of jobs offered in restaurants and hotels – both rocketed to around 1400. At the same time, jobs in travel and tours also go up to over 1000 jobs, whilst occupations in sport and leisure drop to less than 800 jobs.
Just five years later, the statics show some surprising changes yet again, with restaurants and hotels experience some shifts. More unexpectedly, sports and leisure rise into over 1000 jobs, and travel and tours with 900 jobs.
In 2004, there is an astonishing trend with restaurants peaking 1600 jobs, while jobs in hotels, sports and leisure, and travel and tours has some decline. Finally, in 2009, the graph shows a decline for every field – with restaurants to roughly 1300, hotels to more than 1000, sport and leisure into 700 and travel and tours stopping at 400 – the lowest in all the fields and years before.
Word Count: 229