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Đề thi Toefl tháng 1 - 19991. (A) He wants to go early to avoid a traffic jam. (B) He wants to leave the theater before the movie is over. (C) He doesn't know the way to the theater. (D) He doesn't usually get up at 7:00. 2. (A) Walk around the corner to the next block. (B) Take a taxi to the hotel. (C) Telephone the hotel for directions. (D) Wait in the candy store.
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9-1 99年 1月 TOFEL听力
A
1. (A) He wants to go early to avoid a traffic jam.
(B) He wants to leave the theater before the movie is over.
(C) He doesn't know the way to the theater.
(D) He doesn't usually get up at 7:00.
2. (A) Walk around the corner to the next block.
(B) Take a taxi to the hotel.
(C) Telephone the hotel for directions.
(D) Wait in the candy store.
3. (A) Borrow her book.
(B) Check the classroom again.
(C) Buy a new book.
(D) Ask about the book at the information desk..
4. (A) Linda didn't like it.
(B) Bill lost it.
(C) It was very expensive.
(D) It was very small.
5. (A) Take later classes.
(B) Discuss the problem with her professor.
(C) Come to campus by a different route.
(D) Live closer to campus.
6. (A) She often goes to the beach.
(B) She got a weekend job at the beach.
(C) She misses the trips to the beach she used to take.
(D) Her home is near the beach.
7. (A) Continue to read.
(B) Meet the woman at the library.
(C) Make some coffee.
(D) Go out with some friends.
8. (A) What she can do to help the man.
(B) How long the man has had allergies.
(C) What is causing the man's problem.
(D) What the man just said.
9. (A) He already has plans for Saturday night.
(B) The woman should decide where to cat Saturday.
(C) The woman should ask her brother for a suggestion.
(D) He will make a reservation at the restaurant.
10. (A) She'll drop the man off on the way to work.
(B) The man can ride downtown with her.
(C) The man will have to leave earlier than usual.
(D) She can't give the man a ride.
11. (A) Her backhand is almost perfect.
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(B) The time the man spent practicing has helped him.
(C) The man's mother wanted him to practice.
(D) Her mother is a good tennis coach.
12. (A) Her brother was not accepted into law school.
(B) She doesn't want to be a criminal lawyer.
(C) She has decided not to go to law school.
(D) She doesn't plan to work in her brother's law firm.
13. (A) The man will probably receive a scholarship.
(B) She can't give the man a ride to the dean's office.
(C) She can lend the man a sweater.
(D) The man isn't dressed appropriately for the interview.
14. (A) Buy a car from the woman.
(B) Help the woman paint her car.
(C) Buy a new car.
(D) Look for a less expensive car.
15. (A) She's upset that she missed the television program.
(B) She doesn't think the television program was funny.
(C) She doesn't like talking about television programs.
(D) She watched the television program at a friend's house.
16. (A) Cleaning the pants will take longer than usual.
(B) The man can have his pants at the end of the day.
(C) She doesn't think the stain can be removed.
(D) The man should go to a different location.
17. (A) She is going to try to be more persuasive.
(B) She'll accept the committee's proposal.
(C) She thinks the committee will accept the proposal.
(D) She'll revise the proposal before she talks to the committee.
18. (A) It's new.
(B) It's dull.
(C) It's not clean.
(D) It has a broken handle.
19. (A) Meet her in the auditorium.
(B) Schedule the meeting for a different time.
(C) Reserve a large room for the meeting.
(D) Cancel the meeting.
20. (A) The man may have left the paper in the phone book.
(B) The man should call Laura for her address.
(C) Laura's house is not difficult to find.
(D) Laura's address probably appears in the telephone directory.
21. (A) He doesn't believe the weather forecast.
(B) He doesn't like humid weather.
(C) He just bought an air conditioner.
(D) He can fix the woman's air conditioner.
22. (A) The man should sleep more.
(B) The man should get some exercise.
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(C) It's important to finish the report now.
(D) The man needs to concentrate harder.
23. (A) He doubts the woman will like the novel.
(B) He hasn't started reading the novel yet.
(C) He enjoyed reading the novel.
(D) He'll lend the woman the novel after he has read it.
24. (A) He is pleased the exhibit has closed.
(B) He has already seen the exhibit.
(C) He is disappointed the exhibit has closed.
(D) He already knew the exhibit had closed.
25. (A) Remove George from the committee immediately.
(B) Warn George that his attendance problem is serious.
(C) Offer to help George during the meeting.
(D) Telephone George to see if he's coming to the meeting.
26. (A) He'll pay the woman earlier.
(B) He was Able to sell the tickets for the woman.
(C) He doesn't mind buying the tickets.
(D) He hopes to see the woman on Friday.
27. (A) Where the manager is.
(B) Where she will be working this month.
(C) Where she can find the work schedule.
(D) Where the man heard the news.
28. (A) She needs help finding a place to live.
(B) There aren't enough rooms available in the dormitories.
(C) She can't afford to live on campus.
(D) She doesn't want to live in university housing.
29. (A) She would like to see the film again.
(B) She has seen the movie more than once.
(C) She thinks the movie lasted a long time.
(D) She thinks the movie was a waste of time.
30. (A) They didn't get wet.
(B) They're late for the concert.
(C) They prefer to dress casually.
(D) They're really looking forward to the concert.
31. (A) How to care for precious metals.
(B) A standard unit for measuring weight.
(C) The value of precious metals.
(D) Using the metric system.
32. (A) To check the accuracy of scales.
(B) To calculate the density of other metals.
(C) To observe changes in the atmosphere.
(D) To measure amounts of rainfall.
33. (A) Someone spilled water on it.
(B) Someone lost it.
(C) It was made of low quality metal.
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(D) The standard for measuring had changed.
34. (A) It is a small amount to pay for so much precious metal.
(B) It is difficult to judge the value of such an object.
(C) It is reasonable for an object with such an important function.
(D) It is too high for such a light weight.
35. (A) He is unable to attend her class.
(B) He wants to deliver something to her office.
(C) He wants to hand in a late assignment.
(D) He wants to drop her course.
36. (A) Find out about a course.
(B) See an adviser.
(C) Drop off a paper.
(D) Go to a meeting.
37. (A) Paint a landscape.
(B) Give an oral report.
(C) Take a final exam.
(D) Buy several books.
38. (A) Come to her office before her meeting.
(B) Change his major.
(C) Meet with her tomorrow.
(D) Discuss the class with his roommate.
39. (A) Traditional European architecture.
(B) Techniques for building log cabins.
(C) The history of log structures.
(D) How to build a home by yourself.
40. (A) Their small size.
(B) Their rustic dirt floors.
(C) Their walls of rounded logs.
(D) Their sliding board windows.
41. (A) They liked the look of log homes.
(B) They had easy access to logs.
(C) They were unfamiliar with other building materials.
(D) They wanted to break away from European traditions.
42. (A) They could easily build the log houses themselves.
(B) They could construct the houses from kits.
(C) They liked the cozy atmosphere of the log interior.
(D) They wanted homes that could be transported.
43. (A) It was built by the Canadians.
(B) It was built to facilitate trade.
(C) The path for the road was extremely difficult to clear.
(D) Hostilities between Canada and the United States caused construction delays.
44. (A) Maine was less influenced by the French government.
(B) Maine had better employment opportunities.
(C) Maine was politically stable.
(D) Marine had a better climate.
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45. (A) The area was economically unified.
(B) The authorities were unable to enforce law and order.
(C) The two governments fought for control of the area.
(D) Most of the people living there spoke only French.
46. (A) The latest practices of accurate mapmaking.
(B) The impact of epidemics on mass migration.
(C) The advantages of establishing international trade agreements.
(D) The technology used to locate the Old Canada Road.
47. (A) Watch a slide show about trees.
(B) Learn how to prevent Dutch elm disease.
(C) Study the history of the campus buildings and grounds.
(D) Look at examples of trees on campus.
48. (A) History.
(B) Physical education.
(C) Botany.
(D) Architecture.
49. (A) Its leaves are yellow.
(B) Its leaves are lopsided.
(C) It is very tall.
(D) It is not an angiosperm.
50. (A) It has grown too tall for its designated space.
(B) It may be diseased.
(C) Its branches are being broken off.
(D) It no longer hears from.
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99 年 1 月 TOFEL语法
B
1. Among the first plants to grow on the land regions of the Earth _____, which in prehistoric
times grew to immense size
(A) were horsetail rushes
(B) horsetail rushes
(C) horsetail rushes were
(D) and horsetail rushes
2. Unlike fossil fuels, which can be used only once, wind and solar power _____of energy.
(A) for renewable sources
(B) the sources are renewable
(C) are renewable sources
(D) renewable sources
3. _____ that the first cheese was probably made more than 4,000 years ago by nomadic tribes
in Asia.
(A) The belief
(B) Although they believe
(C) It is believed
(D) Believing
4. Today _____ of the Earth live on a very small percentage of the Earth's land surface.
(A) about two-thirds populated
(B) the population is about two-thirds
(C) about two-thirds of the population
(D) of about two-thirds the population is
5. It was in the year 1792 _____
(A) THAT THE New York Stock Exchange was founded
(B) founding the New York Stock Exchange
(C) which year the New York Stock Exchange was founded
(D) the New York Stock Exchange founded
6. Many small birds use new sites for each nesting,_____ large birds often reuse the same nest.
(A) by
(B) how
(C) within
(D) whereas
7. Plateaus are often referred to as tablelands _____ essentially flat-topped and stand
conspicuously above an adjacent land area.
(A) because are
(B) because they are
(C) because of their
(D) which because they are
8. Although many contemporary craft objects are not _____, they generally have their roots in
function.
(A) function
(B) functionally
(C) as function
(D) functional
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9. _____ hearing aid was a tube called the ear trumpet, a flared tube held up to the ear.
(A) First
(B) When the first
(C) It was the first
(D) The first
10. Most leaves are coated with a waterproof _____, or cuticle.
(A) that the covering
(B) and is covering
(C) covering
(D) by covering
11. The first glass factory _____ the North American continent was started in Jamestown,
Virginia, in 1607.
(A) established on
(B) being established
(C) was established on
(D) that established it
12. _____ in the desert is mainly due to the limited supply of desert water.
(A) Plants are widely spaced
(B) The spacing of plants is wide
(C) Plants to be spaced widely
(D) The wide spacing of plants
13. In addition to painting highly acclaimed portraits, Mary Cassatt was _____ to several major
art collectors.
(A) to advise
(B) an adviser
(C) advised
(D) advising
14. Springwater is _____ clean., since it has been filtered through permeable rocks, but all spring
water contains some dissolved minerals.
(A) generally fair
(B) generally fairly
(C) in general fair
(D) general and fair
15. All eels spawn in the sea, the eggs hatching into transparent, ribbonlike larvae _____,
feeding until they metamorphose into small eels.
(A) that drift about
(B) drift about
(C) about drifting
(D) drift about them
16. Citrus fruits thrive in quite very tropical climates.
A B C D
17. Carson McCullers was fame for her novels about life in the small towns of the
A
B C D
southern United States.
18. Because the atmosphere of Mars is so thin. Wind velocities of several hundred
A B
C
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kilometers per hour are required to raised dust particles during dust storms.
D
19. Lumbering. The remove of timber from the forest, is a major industry in the
A B
C D
Northwest region of North America.
20. The asphalt deposits of La Brea Tar Pit in California have yielded fossils of
A
B
numerous animal of the Pleistocene epoch, including the giant ground sloth.
C
D
21. Located in the center of the continental United States and known for its endless
A B
wheat fields, Kansas is one of the nation's leading agriculturally states.
C
D
22. An intrinsic part of the sound structure of poet, the repetition of a consonant
A B
sound or sounds, may also be exhibited in prose.
C D
23. People feel uncomfortable when the humidity rises over 60 percent because
A
B
perspiration cannot evaporate quickly enough for the body to rid themselves of excess heat.
C
D
24. While infancy, the period from birth until the age of two. A child grows to
A B
approximately half of his or her adult height.
C D
25. The Pulitzer Prizes ate annual awards for excellence in United States journalism,
A B
C
literature, and musical.
D
26. Judgments made in a criminal cases can usually be appealed to a higher count
A B
which can either overturn or uphold a lower court ruling.
C D
27. Science fiction is any fiction dealing with the future or with so imaginative
A
B
subjects as interstellar travel, life on other planets, or time travel.
C
D
28. The wingspread of various species of bats range from over five feet to less than two inches.
A B C
D
29. The harmonica's tones are made by the vibrations of the feeds created by the
A
B
blowing and suction to the player.
C D
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30. The constitution of 1897, under which Delaware is now governed , is fourth
A
B C
constitution in the history of the state.
D
31. Because most photographic filters work by subtract portions of visible light from
A B C
the subject, they decrease the intensity of light that reaches the film.
D
32. In a vacuum discharge tube at ordinary voltages and currents, neon glows
A
reddish-orange and is the mostly intense of all the rare gases.
B C D
33. Although E.E. Cummings studied art in Paris, but his writings attracted much
A B
C
more interest than his paintings.
D
34. Because material organic decays slowly in peat, the remains of prehistoric
A B
animals are often found in the depths of peat hogs.
C D
35. Usually an atom having one, two, or three electrons in its valence band readily
A
B
contributes electrons to and receive electrons from neighboring atoms.
C
D
36. A symbol of freedom, the Statue of Liberty represents a woman has just escaped
A
B
from the chains of slavery, which lie at her feet.
C D
37. The southwestern portion of the United States is a land of little rain , and parts of
A
B
it are too dry that they are called deserts.
C D
38. Seneca chief Corn-planter helped arrange treaties between many United States
A
settler and Native American tribes in western Pennsylvania after the American
B C
D
Revolutionary War.
39. Mercury is so much close to the Sun that it is usually invisible in the glare of the Sun's rays.
A B C
D
40. Pollen can be transferred by the wind or by birds that comes into contact with flowers. A
B C D
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99 年 1 月 TOFEL 阅读
C
Question1-12
The Native Americans of northern California were highly skilled at basketry, using the reeds,
grasses, bards, and roots they found around them to fashion articles of all sorts and sizes - not
only trays, containers, and cooking pots, but hats, boats, fish traps, baby carriers, and
ceremonial objects.
Of all these experts, none excelled the Pomo - a group who lived on or near the coast during
the 1800's, and whose descendants continue to live in parts of the same region to the same region
to this day. They made baskets three feet in diameter and others no bigger than a thimble. The
Pomo people were masters of decoration. Some of their baskets were completely covered with
shell pendants; others with feathers that made the baskets' surfaces as soft as the breasts of birds.
Moreover, the Pomo people made use of more weaving techniques than did their neighbors. Most
groups made all their basketwork by twining - the twisting of a flexible horizontal material, called
a weft, around stiffer vertical strands of material, the warp. Others depended primarily on coiling -
a process in which a continuous coil of stiff material is held in the desired shape with tight
wrapping of flexible strands. Only the Pomo people used both processes with equal case and
frequency. In addition, they made use of four distinct variations on the basic twining process,
often employing more than one of them in a single article.
Although a wide variety of materials was available, the Pomo people used only a few. The warp
was always made of willow, and the most commonly used welt was sedge root, a woody fiber that
could easily be separated into strands no thicker than a thread. For color, the Pomo people used
the bark of redbud for their twined work and dyed bullrush root for black in coiled work. Though
other materials were sometimes used, these four were the staples in their finest basketry.
If the basketry materials used by the Pomo people were limited, the designs were amazingly
varied. Every Pomo basketmaker knew how to produce from fifteen to twenty distict patterns that
could be combined in a number of different ways.
1. What best distinguished Pomo baskets from baskets of other groups?
(A) The range of sizes, shapes, and designs
(B) The unusual geometric
(C) The absence of decoration
(D) The rare materials used
2. The word "fashion" in line 2 is closest in meaning to
(A) maintain
(B) organize
(C) trade
(D) create
3. The Pomo people used each of the following materials to decorate baskets EXCEPT
(A) shells
(B) feathers
(C) leaves
(D) bark
4. What is the author's main point in the second paragraph?
(A) The neighbors of the Pomo people tried to improve on the Pomo basket weaving techniques.
(B) The Pomo people were the most skilled basket weavers in their region.
(C) The Pomo people learned their basket weaving techniques from other Native Americans.
(D) The Pomo baskets have been handed down for generations.
5. The word "others " in line 9 refers to
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(A) masters
(B) baskets
(C) pendants
(D) surfaces
6. According to the passage is a
(A) tool for separating sedge root
(B) process used for coloring baskets
(C) pliable maternal woven around the warp
(D) pattern used to decorate baskets
7. According to the passage, what did the Pomo people use as the warp in their baskets?
(A) Bullrush
(B) willow
(C) Sedge
(D) Redbud
8. The word "article" in line 17 is close in meaning to
(A) decoration
(B) shape
(C) design
(D) object
9. According to the passage. The relationship between redbud and twining is most similar to the
relationship between
(A) bullrush and coiling
(B) weft and warp
(C) willow and feathers
(D) sedge and weaving
10. The word "staples" in line 23 is closest in meaning to
(A) combinations
(B) limitations
(C) accessories
(D) basic elements
11. The word "distinct" in lime 26 is closest in meaning to
(A) systematic
(B) beautiful
(C) different
(D) compatible
12. Which of the following statements about Pomo baskets can be best inferred from the passage?
(A) Baskets produced by other Native Americans were less varied in design than those of the
Pomo people.
(B) Baskets produced by Pomo weavers were primarily for ceremonial purposes.
(C) There was a very limited number of basketmaking materials available to the Pomo people.
(D) The basketmaking production of the Pomo people has increased over the years.
Questions 13-20
Any rock that has cooled and solidified from a molten state is an igneous rock. Therefore, if the
Earth began as a superheated sphere in space, all the rocks making up its crust may well have
been igneous and thus the ancestors of all other rocks. Even today, approximately 95 percent of
the entire crust is igneous. Periodically, molten material wells out of the Earth's interior to invade
the surface layers or to flow onto the surface itself. This material cools into a wide variety of
igneous rocks. In the molten state, it is called magma as it pushes into the crust and lava when it
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runs out onto the surface.
All magma consists basically of a variety of silicate minerals (high in silicon-oxygen
compounds), but the chemical composition of any given flow may differ radically from that of
any other. The resulting igneous rocks will reflect these differences. Igneous rocks also vary in
texture as well as chemistry. Granite, for instance, is a coarse-grained igneous rock whose
individual mineral crystals have formed to a size easily seen by the naked eye. A slow rate of
cooling has allowed the crystals to reach this size. Normally, slow cooling occurs when the crust
is invaded by magma that remains buried well below the surface. Granite may be found on the
surface of the contemporary landscape, but from its coarse texture we know that it must have
formed through slow cooling at a great depth and later been laid bare by erosion. Igneous rocks
with this coarse-grained texture that formed at depth are called plutonic.
On the other hand, if the same magma flows onto the surface and is quickly cooled by the
atmosphere, the resulting rock will be fine-grained and appear quite different from granite,
although the chemical composition will be identical. This kind of rock is called rhyolite. The most
finely grained igneous rock is volcanic glass or obsidian, which has no crystals. Some researchers
believe this is because of rapid cooling; others believe it is because of a lack of water vapor and
other gases in the lava. The black obsidian cliffs of Yellowstone National Park are the result of a
lava flow of basalt running head on into a glacier. Some of the glacier melted on contact, but
suddenly there also appeared a huge black mass of glassy stone.
13. In the first paragraph, the author mentions that
(A) the Earth began as a molten mass
(B) a thin layer of magma flows beneath the Earth's crust
(C) the minerals found in igneous rock are very common
(D) igneous rock is continually being formed
14.The word "invade" in line 5 is closest in meaning to
(A) move into
(B) neutralize
(C) cover
(D) deposit
15.The word "contemporary" in line 17 is closest in meaning to
(A) vast
(B) natural
(C) existing
(D) uneven
16. The word "it" in line 17 refers to
(A) granite
(B) surface
(C) landscape
(D) texture
17. Granite that has been found above ground has been
(A) pushed up from below the crust by magma
(B) produced during a volcanic explosion
(C) gradually exposed due to erosion
(D) pushed up by the natural shifting of the Earth
18. Which of the following is produced when magma cools rapidly?
(A) Granite
(B) Plutonic rock
(C) Rhyolite
(D) Mineral crystals
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19. The word "finely" in line 23 is closest in meaning to
(A) minutely
(B) loosely
(C) sensitively
(D) purely
20. Which of the following is another name for volcanic glass?
(A) Plutonic rock
(B) Crystal
(C) Lava
(D) Obsidian
Questions 21-33
Although only 1 person in 20 in the Colonial period lived in a city, the cities had a
disproportionate influence on the development of North America. They were at the cutting edge
of social change. It was in the cities that the elements that can be associated with modern
capitalism first appeared - the use of money and commercial paper in place of barter, open
competition in place of social deference and hierarchy, with an attendant rise in social disorder,
and the appearance of factories using coat or water power in place of independent craftspeople
working with hand tools. "The cities predicted the future," wrote historian Gary.B.Nash , "even
though they were but overgrown villages compared to the great urban centers of Europe, the
Middle East and China."
Except for Boston, whose population stabilized at about 16,000 in 1760, cities grew by
exponential leaps through the eighteenth century. In the fifteen years prior to the outbreak of the
War for independence in 1775, more than 200,000 immigrants arrived on North American shores
This meant that a population the size of Boston was arriving every year, and most of it flowed into
the port cities in the Northeast. Philadelphia's population nearly doubted in those years, reaching
about 30,000 in 1774, New York grew at almost the same rate, reaching about 25,000 by 1775.
The quality of the hinterland dictated the pace of growth of the cities. The land surrounding
Boston had always been poor farm country, and by the mid-eighteenth century it was virtually
stripped of its timber. The available farmland was occupied, there was little in the region beyond
the city to attract immigrants. New York and Philadelphia, by contrast, served a rich and fertile
hinterland laced with navigable watercourses. Scots, Irish, and Germans landed in these cities and
followed the rivers inland. The regions around the cities of New York and Philadelphia became
the breadbaskets of North America, sending grain not only to other colonies but also to England
and southern Europe, where crippling droughts in the late 1760's created a whole new market.
21. Which of the following aspects of North America in the eighteenth century does the passage
mainly discuss?
(A) The effects of war on the growth of cities
(B) The growth and influence of cities
(C) The decline of farming in areas surrounding cities
(D) The causes of immigration to cities
22. Why does the author say that "the cities had a disproportionate influence on the development
of North America "lines1-2"?
(A) The influence of the cities was mostly negative
(B) The populations of the cities were small, but their influence was great.
(C) The cities were growing at a great rate.
(D) Most people pretended to live in cities
23. The phrase "in place of " in line 5 is closest in meaning to
(A) connected to
(B) in addition to
(C) because of
(D) instead of
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24. The word "attendant" in line 6 is closest in meaning to
(A) avoidable
(B) accompanying
(C) unwelcome
(D) unexpected
25. Which of the following is mentioned as an element of modern capitalism?
(A) Open competition
(B) Social deference
(C) Social hierarchy
(D) Independent craftspeople
26. It can be inferred that in comparison with North American cities, cities in Europe, the Middle
East, and China had
(A) large populations
(B) little independence
(C) frequent social disorder
(D) few power sources
27. The phrase "exponential leaps" in line 12 is closest in meaning to
(A) long wars
(B) new laws
(C) rapid increases
(D) exciting changes
28. The word "it" in line 15 refers to
(A) population
(B) size
(C) Boston
(D) Year
29. How many immigrants arrived in North America between 1760 and 1775?
(A) About 16,000
(B) About 25,000
(C) About 30,000
(D) More than 200,000
30. The word "dictated" in line 18 is closest in meaning to
(A) spoiled
(B) reduced
(C) determined
(D) divided
31. The word "virtually" in line20 is closest in meaning to
(A) usually
(B) hardly
(C) very quickly
(D) almost completely
32. The region surrounding New York and Philadelphia is contrasted with the region
surrounding Boston in terms of
(A) quality of farmland
(B) origin of immigrants
(C) opportunities for fishing
(D) type of grain grown
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33. Why does the author describe the regions around the cities of New York and Philadelphia as
"breadbaskets"?
(A) They produced grain especially for making bread.
(B) They stored large quantities of grain during periods of drought
(C) They supplied grain to other parts of North America and other countries.
(D) They consumed more grain than all the other regions of North America.
Questions 34-44
Researchers in the field of psychology have found that one of the best ways to make an
important decision, such as choosing a university to attend or a business to invest in, involves the
utilization of a decision worksheet. Psychologists who study optimization compare the actual
decisions made by people to theoretical ideal decisions to see how similar they are. Proponents of
the worksheet procedure believe that it will yield optimal, that is , the best decisions. Although
there are several variations on the exact format that worksheets can take, they are all similar in
their essential aspects. Worksheets require defining the problem in a clear and concise way and
then listing all possible solutions to the problem. Next, the pertinent considerations that will be
affected by each decision are listed, and the relative importance of each consideration or
consequence is determined. Each consideration is assigned a numerical value to reflect its relative
importance. A decision is mathematically calculated by adding these values together. The
alternative with the highest number of points emerges as the best decision.
Since most important problems are multifaceted, there are several alternatives to choose from,
each with unique advantages and disadvantages. One of the benefits of a pencil and paper
decision-making procedure is that it permits people to deal with more variables than their minds
can generally comprehend and remember. On the average, people can keep about seven ideas in
their minds at once. A worksheet can be especially useful when the decision involves a large
number of variables with complex relationships. A realistic example for many college students is
the question "What sill I do after graduation?" A graduate might seek a position that offers
specialized training, pursue an advanced degree, or travel abroad for a year.
A decision-making worksheet begins with a succinct statement of the problem that will also
help to narrow it. It is important to be clear about the distinction between long-range and
immediate goals because long-range goals often involve a different decision than short-range ones.
Focusing on long-range goals, a graduating student might revise the question above to "What will
I do after graduation that will lead to successful career?"
34. What does the passage mainly discuss?
(A) A tool to assist in making complex decisions.
(B) A comparison of actual decisions and ideal decisions
(C) Research on how people make decisions
(D) Differences between long-range and short-range decision making
35. The word "essential" in line 7 is closest in meaning to
(A) introductory
(B) changeable
(C) beneficial
(D) fundamental
36. The word "pertinent" in line 9 is closest in meaning to
(A) relevant
(B) preceding
(C) insightful
(D) responsive
37. Of the following steps, which occurs before the others in making a decision worksheet?
(A) Listing the consequences of each solution
(B) Calculating a numerical summary of each solution
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(C) Deciding which consequences are most important
(D) Writing down all possible solutions
38. According to decision-worksheet theory, an optimal decision is defined as one that
(A) has the fewest variables to consider
(B) uses the most decision worksheets
(C) has the most points assigned to it
(D) is agreed to by the greatest number of people
39. The author develops the discussion in paragraph I by means of
(A) describing a process
(B) classifying types of worksheets
(C) providing historical background
(D) explaining a theory
40. The author states that "On the average, people can keep about seven ideas in their minds at
once (lines 18-19) to explain that
(A) most decisions involve seven steps
(B) human mental capacity has limitations
(C) some people have difficulty making minor as well as major decisions
(D) people can learn to keep more than seven ideas in their minds with practice
41. The word "succinct "in line 24 is closest in meaning to
(A) creative
(B) satisfactory
(C) personal
(D) concise
42. Which of the following terms is defined in the passage?
(A) Proponents (line 5)
(B) Optimal (line 6)
(C) Variables (line 18)
(D) Long-range goals (line 26)
43. The word "it" in line 25 refers to
(A) worksheet
(B) problem
(C) distinction
(D) decision
44. The word "revise" in line 28 is closest in meaning to
(A) ask
(B) explain
(C) change
(D) predict
Questions 45-50
Elizabeth Hazen and Rachel Brown copatented one of the most widely acclaimed wonder drugs
of the post-Second World War years. Hazen and Brown's work was stimulated by the wartime
need to find a cure for the fungus infections that afflicted many military personnel. Scientists had
been feverishly searching for an antibiotic toxic enough to kill the fungi but safe enough for
human use, since, unfortunately, the new "wonder drugs" such as penicillin and streptomycin
killed the very bacteria in the body that controlled the fungi. It was to discover a fungicide
without that double effect that Brown, of New York State's Department of Health Laboratories at
Albany, and Hazen, senior microbiologist at the Department of Health in New York, began their
long-distance collaboration. Based upon Hazen's previous research at Columbia University, where
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she had built an impressive collection of fungus cultures, both were convinced that an antifungal
organism already existed in certain soils.
They divided the work. Hazen methodically screened and cultured scores of soil samples,
which she then sent to her partner, who prepared extracts, isolated and purified active agents, and
shipped them back to New York, where Hazen could study their biological properties. On a 1948
vacation, Hazen fortuitously collected a clump of soil from the edge of W.B. Nourse's cow pasture,
Hazen fortuitously collected a clump of soil from the edge of W.B. Nourse's cow pasture in
Fauquier County, Virginia, that, when tested, revealed the presence of the microorganisms. In
farm owner Nourse's honor. Hazen named it Streptomyces noursei, and within a year the two
scientists knew that the properties of their substance distinguished it from previously described
antibiotics. After further research they eventually reduced their substance to a fine, yellow powder,
which they first named "fungiciden." Then renamed "nystatin" (to honor the New York State
laboratory) when they learned the previous name was already in use. Of their major discovery,
Brown said lightly that it simply illustrated "how unpredictable consequences can come from
rather modest beginnings."
45. What is the main topic of the passage?
(A) The lives of Hazen and Brown.
(B) The development of a safe fungicide.
(C) The New York State Department of Health.
(D) The development of penicillin.
46. What can be inferred from the passage about penicillin?
(A) It effectively treats fungus infections.
(B) It was developed before nystatin.
(C) It was developed before the Second World War.
(D) One of its by-products is nystatin.
47. Why does the author mention Columbia University in lines 10 and 11?
(A) Hazen and Brown developed nystatin there.
(B) Brown was educated there.
(C) Hazen did research there.
(D) It awarded a prize to Hazen and Brown.
48. The word "both" in line 11 refers to
(A) Hazen and Brown
(B) penicillin and streptomycin
(C) the Department of Health laboratories at Albany and New York
(D) double effect
49. What substance did Brown and Hazen analyze?
(A) Dirt
(B) Streptomycin
(C) Bacteria
50. Who was W. B. Nourse?
(A) A microbiologist
(B) A teacher of Hazen's
(C) A collector of fungi
(D) A farmer
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