Sesion 2 Practice Test D - Structure
Sesion 2 Practice Test D - Structure
Sesion 2 Practice Test D - Structure
(A) begin
4. that managers commit in problem solving is (B) began
jumping to a conclusion about the cause of a given (C) beginning
problem. (D) is begun
(A) to whom
(B) of which
(C) who
(D) which
9. Mahalia Jackson, combined powerful vitality with 13. Following the guidelines for speaking and voting
great dignity, was one of the best-known gospel singers established by the book Robert's Rules of Order,
in the United States. during meetings.
(A) such materials that 14. Indigo is a vat color, -—— called because it does not
(B) materials as such dissolve in water.
(C) such materials as
(D) such materials (A) which it
(B) it is
(C) but
11. Outside the bright primary rainbow, much fainter (D) so
secondary rainbow may be visible.
(A) so 15. Associated with the Denishawn company from 1916 until
(B) a 1923, Martha Graham developed a powerful, ------- that
(C) since was integral to the foundations of modern dance.
(D) still
(A) expressively stylish
(B) a style expressive
12. Any critic, teacher, librarian, or poet who hopes to (C) stylishly expressive
broaden poetry's audience faces the difficult challenge of (D) expressive style
persuading skeptical readers .
16. According to most psychological studies, body language expresses a speaker's emotions and
attitudes, and it also tends to affect the emotions and attitudes of the listen.
17. The dachshund is a hardy, alert dog with a well sense of smell.
18. Quasars, faint celestial objec ts resembling stars, are perhaps the most distant objects know.
19. The importance of environmental stimuli in the development of coordination between sensory input
and motor response varies lo species t o species.
20. A smile can be observed, described, and reliably identify ; it can also be elicited and manipulated
under experimental conditions.
21. A musical genius , John Cage is noted for his highly unconventional ideas, and he respected for his
unusual compositions and performances .
22. Chocolate is prepared by a complexity process of cleaning, blending, and roasting cocoa beans,
which must be ground and mixed with sugar.
23. Several million points on t he human body registers either cold, heat, pain, or touch.
24. In the 1800's store owners sold everything from a needle to a plow, trust everyone, and never took
inventory.
25. Although they reflect a strong social conscience, Arthur Miller's stage works are typical more
concerned with individuals than with systems.
26. While highly prized for symbolizing good luck, the four-leaf clover is rarity found in nature.
27. An involuntary reflex, an yawn is almost impossible to slop once the mouth muscles begin the
stretching action.
28. Elected to serve in the United States House of Representatives in 1968, Shirley Chisholm was known
for advocacy the interests of the urban poor.
29. A mirage is an atmospheric optical illusion in what an observer sees a nonexistent body of water or an
image of some object.
30. Turquoise, which found in microscopic crystals, is opaque with a waxy luster, varying in color from
greenish gray to sky blue.
31. Homo erectus is the name commonly given into the primate species from which humans are believed
to have evolved.
32. Today modern textile mills can manufacture as much fabrics in a few seconds as it once took workers
weeks to produce by hand.
33. The Hopi, the westernmost tribe of Pueblo Indians, have traditionally lived large multilevel structures
clustered in towns .
34. Exploration of the Solar System is continuing, and at the present rate of progress all the planets will
have been contacted within the near 50 years.
35. Since their appearance on farms in the United Stales between 1913 and 1920, trucks have
changed patterns of production and market of farm products.
36. Antique collecting became a significant pastime in the 1800's when old object began to
be appreciated for their beauty as well as for their historical importance.
37. American painter Georgia 0’Keeffe is well known as her large paintings of flowers in which single
blossoms are presented as if in close-up.
38. Despite television is the dominant entertainment medium for United States households, Garrison
Keillor’s Saturday night radio show of folk songs and stories is heard by millions of people.
39. The work which the poet Emma Lazarus is best known is “The New Colossus ,” which is
inscribed on the pedestal of the Statue of Liberty.
40. In the New England colonies, Chippendale designs were adapted to locally tastes, and beautiful
furniture resulted.
Practice Test
D–
Answers
Question 1- 9
In the 1500's when the Spanish moved into what later was to become the
southwestern United States, they encountered the ancestors of the modern-day Pueblo,
Hopi, and Zuni peoples. These ancestors, known variously as the Basket Makers, the
Line Anasazi, or the Ancient Ones, had lived in the area for at least 2,000 years. They were
(5) an advanced agricultural people who used irrigation to help grow their crops.
The Anasazi lived in houses constructed of adobe and wood. Anasazi houses were
originally built in pits and were entered from the roof. But around the year 700 A.D.,
the Anasazi began to build their homes above ground and join them together into
rambling multistoried complexes, which the Spanish called pueblos or villages.
Separate subterranean rooms in these pueblos – known as kivas or chapels – were set
(10) aside for religious ceremonials. Each kiva had a fire pit and a hole that was believed to
lead to the underworld. The largest pueblos had five stories and more than 800 rooms.
The Anasazi family was matrilinear; that is, descent was traced through the female.
The sacred objects of the family were under the control of the oldest female, but the
actual ceremonies were conducted by her brother, or son. Women owned the rooms in
(15) the pueblo and the crops, once they were harvested. While still growing, crops
belonged to the men, who, in contrast to most other Native American groups, planted
them. The women made baskets and pottery; the men wove textile and crafted
turquoise jewelry.
Each village had two chiefs. The village chief dealt with land disputes and
(20) religious affairs. The war chief led the men in fighting during occasional conflicts that
broke out with neighboring villages and directed the men in community building
projects. The cohesive political and social organization of the Anasazi made it almost
impossible for other groups to conquer them.
4. Who would have been most likely 8. According to the passage, what
to control the sacred objects of an made it almost impossible for
Anasazi family? other groups to conquer the
Anasazi ?
(A) A twenty-year-old man
(B) A twenty-year-old woman (A) The political and social
(C) A forty-year-old man organization of the Anasazi
(D) A forty-year-old woman (B) The military tactics employed by
the Anasazi
(C) The Anasazi's agricultural
5. The word "they" in line 16 refers to technology
(D) The natural barriers surrounding
(A) women Anasazi village
(B) crops
(C) rooms
(D) pueblos 9. The passage supports which of the
following generalizations?
Barbed wire, first patented in the United States in 1867, played an important part in
the development of American farming, as it enabled the settlers to make effective
fencing to enclose their land and keep cattle away from their crops. This had a
Line considerable effect on cattle ranching, since the herds no longer had unrestricted use of
(5) the plains for grazing, and the fencing led to conflict between the farmers and the cattle
ranchers.
Before barbed wire came into general use, fencing was often made from serrated
wire, which was unsatisfactory because it broke easily when under strain, and could
snap in cold weather due to contraction. The first practical machine for producing
(10) barbed wire was invented in 1874 by an Illinois farmer, and between then and the end
of the century about 400 types of barbed wire were devised, of which only about a
dozen were ever put to practical use.
Modern barbed wire is made from mild steel, high-tensile steel, or aluminum. Mild
steel and aluminum barbed wire have two strands twisted together to form a cable that
(15) is stronger than single-strand wire and less affected by temperature changes. Single-
strand wire, round or oval, is made from high-tensile steel with the barbs crimped or
welded on. The steel wires used are galvanized – coated with zinc to make them
rustproof. The two wires that make up the line wire or cable are fed separately into a
machine at one end. They leave it at the other end twisted together and barbed.The
(20) wire to make the barbs is fed into the machine from the sides and cut to length by
knives that cut diagonally through the wire to produce a sharp point. This process
continues automatically, and the finished barbed wire is wound onto reels, usually
made of wire, in lengths of 400 meters or in weights of up to 50 kilograms.
A variation of barbed wire is also used for military purposes. It is formed into long
coils or entanglements called concertina wire.
10. What is the main topic of the 11. The word "unrestricted" in line 4 is
passage? closest in meaning to
(A) put
(B) eaten
(C) bitten
(D) nourished (C)
Under certain circumstances, the human body must cope with gases at greater-than-
normal atmospheric pressure. For example, gas pressures increase rapidly during a dive
made with scuba gear because the breathing equipment allows divers to stay
Line underwater longer and dive deeper. The pressure exerted on the human body increases
(5) by 1 atmosphere for every 10 meters of depth in seawater, so that at 30 meters in
seawater a diver is exposed to a pressure of about 4 atmospheres. The pressure of the
gases being breathed must equal the external pressure applied to the body; otherwise
breathing is very difficult. Therefore all of the gases in the air breathed by a scuba
diver at 40 meters are present at five times their usual pressure. Nitrogen, which
composes 80 percent of the air we breathe, usually causes a balmy feeling of
(10) well-being at this pressure. At a depth of 5 atmospheres, nitrogen causes symptoms
resembling alcohol intoxication, known as nitrogen narcosis. Nitrogen narcosis
apparently results from a direct effect on the brain of the large amounts of nitrogen
dissolved in the blood. Deep dives are less dangerous if helium is substituted for
nitrogen, because under these pressures helium does not exert a similar narcotic effect.
(15) As a scuba diver descends, the pressure of nitrogen in the lungs increases. Nitrogen
then diffuses from the lungs to the blood, and from the blood to body tissues. The
reverse occurs when the diver surfaces; the nitrogen pressure in the lungs falls and the
nitrogen diffuses from the tissues into the blood, and from the blood into the lungs. If
the return to the surface is too rapid, nitrogen in the tissues and blood cannot diffuse out
(20) rapidly enough and nitrogen bubbles are formed. They can cause severe pains,
particularly around the joints.
Another complication may result if the breath is held during ascent. During ascent
from a depth of 10 meters, the volume of air in the lungs will double because the air
pressure at the surface is only half of what it was at 10 meters. This change in volume
(25) may cause the lungs to distend and even rupture. This condition is called air embolism.
To avoid this event, a diver must ascend slowly, never at a rate exceeding the rise of the
exhaled air bubbles, and must exhale during ascent.
20. What does the passage mainly 21. The words "exposed to" in line 6
discuss? are closest in meaning to
23. The word "diffuses" in line 19 is 27. It can be inferred from the passage
closest in meaning to that which of the following presents
the greatest danger to a diver?
(A) yields
(B) starts (A) Pressurized helium
(C) surfaces (B) Nitrogen diffusion
(D) travels (C) Nitrogen bubbles
(D) An air embolism
(A) joins
(B) pains
(C) bubbles
(D) tissues
Questions 29-38
Each advance in microscopic technique has provided scientists with new perspective,
on the function of living organisms and the nature of matter itself. The invention of the
visible-light microscope late in the sixteenth century introduced a previously unknown realm
Line of single-celled plants and animals. In the twentieth century, electron microscopes
have provided direct views of viruses and minuscule surface structures. Now another
(5) type of microscope, one that utilizes X rays rather than light or electrons, offers a
different way of examining tiny details; it should extend human perception still farther
into the natural world.
The dream of building an X-ray microscope dates to 1895; its development, however,
was virtually halted in the 1940's because the development of the electron microscope
(10) was progressing rapidly. During the 1940's electron microscopes routinely achieved
resolution better than that possible with a visible-light micros cope, while the
performance of X-ray microscopes resisted improvement. In recent years, however,
interest in X-ray microscopes has revived, largely because of advances such as the
development of new sources of X-ray illumination. As a result, the brightness available
today is millions of times that of X-ray tubes, which, for most of the century, were the
(15) only available sources of soft X rays.
The new X-ray microscopes considerably improve on the resolution provided by
optical microscopes. They can also be used to map the distribution of certain chemical
elements. Some can form pictures in extremely short times; others hold the promise of
special capabilities such as three-dimensional imaging. Unlike conventional electron
(20) microscopy, X-ray microscopy enables specimens to be kept in air and in water, which
means that biological samples can be studied under conditions similar to their natural
state. The illumination used, so-called soft X rays in the wavelength range of twenty to
forty angstroms (an angstrom is one ten-billionth of a meter), is also sufficiently
penetrating to image intact biological cells in many cases. Because of the wavelength of
the X rays used, soft X-ray microscopes will never match the highest resolution possible
(25) with electron microscopes. Rather, their special properties will make possible investiga-
tions that will complement those performed with light - and electron-based instruments.
32. The word "it" in line 7 refers to 36. The word "Rather" in line 28 is
closest in meaning to
(A) a type of microscope
(B) human perception (A) significantly
(C) the natural world (B) preferably
(D) light (C) somewhat
(D) instead
Perhaps the most striking quality of satiric literature is its freshness, its originality of
perspective. Satire rarely offers original ideas. Instead, it presents the familiar in a new
form. Satirists do not offer the world new philosophies. What they do is look at
familiar conditions from a perspective that makes these conditions seem foolish,
Line harmful, or affected. Satire jars us out of complacence into a pleasantly shocked
(5) realization that many of the values we unquestioningly accept are false. Don Quixote
makes chivalry seem absurd; Brave New World ridicules the pretensions of science; A
Modest Proposal dramatizes starvation by advocating cannibalism. None of these ideas
is original. Chivalry was suspect before Cervantes, humanists objected to the claims of
pure science before Aldous Huxley, and people were aware of famine before Swift. It
was not the originality of the idea that made these satires popular. It was the manner of
(10) expression, the satiric method, that made them interesting and entertaining. Satires are
read because they are aesthetically satisfying works of art, not because they are morally
wholesome or ethically instructive. They are stimulating and refreshing because with
commonsense briskness they brush away illusions and secondhand opinions. With
spontaneous irreverence, satire rearranges perspectives, scrambles familiar objects into
incongruous juxtaposition, and speaks in a personal idiom instead of abstract platitude.
(15) Satire exists because there is need for it. It his lived because readers appreciate a
refreshing stimulus, an irreverent reminder that they live in a world of platitudinous
thinking, cheap moralizing, and foolish philosophy. Satire serves to prod people into an
awareness of truth, though rarely to any action on behalf of truth. Satire tends to
remind people that much of what they see, hear, and read in popular media is
sanctimonious, sentimental, and only partially true. Life resembles in only a slight
(20) degree the popular image of it. Soldiers rarely hold the ideals that movies attribute to
them, nor do ordinary citizens devote their lives to unselfish service of humanity.
Intelligent people know these things but tend to forget them when they do not hear them
expressed.
39. What does the passage mainly 40.The word "realization" in line 6 is
discuss? closest in meaning to
(A) informed about new scientific 50. Why does the author mention
developments “service of humanity" in line 25?
(B) exposed to original philosophies
when they are formulated (A) People need to be reminded to
(C) reminded that popular ideas are take action
often inaccurate (B) Readers appreciate knowing
(D) told how they call be of service about it
to their communities (C) It is an ideal that is rarely
achieved
(D) Popular media often distort
45. The word "refreshing" in line 19 is such stories.
closest ill meaning to