Our system will evaluate the answer based on this AI-generated description.
The image presents a line graph titled "Comparison of car theft" with the x-axis showing years from 1990-1999 and the y-axis showing thefts per 100,000 vehicles from 0-25. Four countries are compared: Great Britain (grey line), Sweden (line with diamonds), France (line with squares), Canada (line with triangles). Great Britain's data shows a range from 18-21 thefts, maintaining relatively consistent. Sweden starts at 6 and rises steadily to 12. France decreases from around 11 to 7. Canada begins at approximately 8, experiences a peak near 10, and drops back to 8 by 1999. No specific data points are labeled on the graph's lines.
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 line graph compares the number of cars stolen per 1000 vehicles in four different countries from 1990 to 1999. Overall, we can see that car thefts higher in Great Britain then in other three countries for the whole time frame.
Firstly, car thefts in Sweden, France and Canada were very similar for the first five years (since 1990 to 1995) and both of them were between 5 and 10 per thousand. The general trend for France and Canada was the same, the number of stolen vehicles was a decline, and in 1999 both of counties had around 6. However, Sweden had an upward trend, in 1995 thefts per 1000 vehicles were approximately 8, and in 1999 just under 15.
On the other hand, car thefts in Great Britain started in 18 per thousand, which much higher than in other countries. After that we can see fluctuate for the next six years, where, in 1996 we can see peak of thefts. And then the trend fall slowly to 17 per thousand.
Word Count: 171