Our system will evaluate the answer based on this AI-generated description.
The image depicts a line graph from 1971 to 2007 illustrating percentages for "One Car," "No Car," "Two Cars," and "Three or More Cars." In 1971, "One Car" is at 44%, "No Car" at 43%, "Two Cars" at 7%, and "Three or More Cars" at 2%. By 1979, the percentages are "One Car" 43%, "No Car" 36%, "Two Cars" 15%, and "Three or More Cars" 3%. In 1983, "One Car" reaches 44%, "No Car" 30%, "Two Cars" 18%, and "Three or More Cars" 4%. By 1991, figures show "One Car" at 38%, "No Car" at 30%, "Two Cars" at 23%, and "Three or More Cars" at 5%. The 1999 data reveals "One Car" at 35%, "No Car" at 28%, "Two Cars" at 26%, "Three or More Cars" at 8%. In 2007, "One Car" is at 34%, "No Car" at 25%, "Two Cars" at 27%, and "Three or More Cars" at 7%.
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 graph presents the proportion of car ownership per household in Britain between 1971 and 2007.
Overall, there was a significant rise in car ownership. The percentage of households with two cars rose, meanwhile, the percentage of households without a car fell. In addition, the proportion of one-car households remained stable over the 36-year period with minor fluctuations.
In 1971, car ownership was not common since approximately 44% of households had a car and about 7% of households owned two cars. On the other hand, households with three or more cars accounted for around 2%.
After the 1970s, the total level of car ownership experienced a sharp increase. The figures show that the proportion of households without a car reached a low point at just approximately 25% in 2007. In contrast, the number of households with two cars rose to 26% in the same year. Moreover, households that owned three or more cars increased by around 6%.
Word Count: 157