Our system will evaluate the answer based on this AI-generated description.
The image comprises two line graphs detailing the trends of specific boys' and girls' names from 1925 to 2000, measured in per thousand. The boys' names chart shows 'Daniel' peaking near 11 per thousand in 1950 and maintaining this until a slight increase near 14 per thousand by 2000; 'Oliver' starts at less than 1 per thousand in 1925, peaks at 6 per thousand around 1955, and remains minimal past 1975; 'Alexander' rises sharply from zero per thousand in 1975 to 12 per thousand by 2000. The girls' names chart depicts 'Sophia' starting below 1 per thousand in 1925, maintaining minimal until sharply rising to 9 per thousand by 2000; 'Isabella' shows a similar minimal trend until 1975, then surges to 10 per thousand by 2000; 'Emily' begins minimal until around 1950 and gradually rises to approximately 9 per thousand by 2000.
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 graphs illustrate the tendencies with the most popular tree names for a boy and for a girl in the UK. Overall, occupancy of each name except Daniel reached a peak in 2000 with 10 times per thousand.
To begin with, Daniel and Oliver had a significant growth for 5 inches in the end of the first half of twentieth century. Whereas, Alexander rose up in 1000% between 1975 and 2000. Moreover, the name Oliver experienced a fluctuated tendency with a deep fall after 1950, but it was the best jump compared with other names in the last quarter.
As for girl’s names, parents did not choose such names as Sophia and Isabella before 1975. However, in 2000 parent’s choice for these names significantly increased to 10 names per thousand. Furthermore, Emily already marked an increasing trend since 1950, with the same peak as Sophia and Isabella in the year 2000.
To summarize, despite the fact that every given name had an own tendency, every name reached a peak in the number of choices per thousand in 2000
Word Count: 178