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GRE考试试题(一)

2010-07-30 来源:互联网 作者:第一考试网

GRE考试试题(一) #

SECTION 1

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Time - 30 minutes #

38 Questions #

Directions: Each sentence below has one or two blanks, each blank indicating that

#

something has been omitted. Beneath the sentence are five lettered words or sets

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of words. Choose the word or set of words for each blank that best fits the meaning

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of the sentence as a whole.

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1. Nonviolent demonstrations often create such ten- sions that a community that has #

constantly refused to ------- its injustices is forced to correct them: the injustices #

can no longer be -------.

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(A) acknowledge..ignored

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(B) decrease..verified

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(C) tolerate..accepted #

(D) address..eliminated #

(E) explain..discussed #

2. Since 1813 reaction to Jane Austen’s novels has oscillated between ------- #

and condescension; but in general later writers have esteemed her works more highly than

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did most of her literary -------.

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(A) dismissal..admirers #

(B) adoration. .contemporaries #

(C) disapprpval..readers #

(D) indifference..followers

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(E) approbation..precursors

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3. There are, as yet, no vegetation types or ecosystems whose study has been -------

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to the extent that they no longer ------- ecologists.

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(A) perfected..hinder

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(B) exhausted..interest

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(C) prolonged..require

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(D) prevented..challenge

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(E) delayed..benefit

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4. Under ethical guidelines recently adopted by the National lnstitutes of Health,

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human genes are to be manipulated only to correct diseases for which ------- #

treatments are unsatisfactory.

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(A)similar

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(B)most #

(C)dangerous

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(D) uncommon #

(E) alternative #

5. It was her view that the country’s problems had been ------- by foreign technocrats, #

so that to invite them to come back would be counterproductive. #

(A)foreseen

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(B)attacked

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(C)ascertained

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(D) exacerbated #

(E) analyzed

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6. Winsor McCay, the cartoonist, could draw with incredible -------: his comic strip

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about Little Nemo was characterized by marvelous draftsmanship and sequencing.

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(A)sincerity #

(B)efficiency #

(C)virtuosity

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(D) rapidity

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(E) energy #

7. The actual ------- of Wilson’s position was always ------- by his refusal to

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compromise after having initially agreed to negotiate a settlement.

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(A) outcome..foreshadowed

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(B) logic..enhanced #

(C) rigidity..betrayed

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(D) uncertainty..alleviated #

(E) cowardice..highlighted

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Directions: In each of the foiiowing questions, a related pair of words or phrases

#

is followed by five lettered pairs of words or phrases. Select the lettered pair that #

best expresses a relationship similar to that expressed in the original pair. #

8. SEDATTVE : DROWSlNESS ::

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(A) epidemic : contagiousness #

(B) vaccine : virus

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(C) laxative : drug #

(D) anestheiic : numbness #

(E) therapy : psychosis

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9.LAWYER:COURTROOM:: #

(A) participant : team

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(B) commuter : train #

(C) gladiator : arena #

(D) senator : caucus #

(E) patient : ward

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10. CURIOSITY : KNOW ::

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(A) temptation : conquer

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(B) starvation : eat

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(C) wanderlust : travel #

(D) humor : laugh

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(E) survival : live

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11. FRUGAL : MISERLY :: #

(A) confident : arrogant

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(B) courageouss : pugnacious #

(C) famous : aggressive #

(D) rash : foolhardy #

(E) quiet : timid #

12. ANTIDOTE : POISON :: #

(A) cure : recovery #

(B) narcotic : sleep #

(C) stimulant : relapse

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(D) tonic : lethargy #

(E) resuscitation : breathing #

13. STYGIAN.: DARK :: #

(A) abysmal : low

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(B) cogent : contentious

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(C) fortuitous.: accidental

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(D) reckless : threatening #

(E) cataclysmic : doomed #

14. WORSHIP : SACRIFICE ::

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(A) generation : pyre #

(B) burial : mortuary #

(C) weapon : centurion

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(D) massacre : invasion #

(E) prediction : augury

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15. EVANESCENT : l)ISAPPEAR :

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(A) tlansparent : penetrate #

(B) onerous : struggle

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(C) feckless : succeed

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(D) illusory : exist

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(E) pliant : yield #

16. UPBRAlD : REPROACH ::

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(A) dote : like #

(B) lal: : stray

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(C) vex : please

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(D) earn : desire #

(E) recast : explain #

Directions: Each passage in this group is followed by questions based on its content. #

After reading a passage, choose the best answer to each question. Answer all questions #

following a passage on the basis of what is stated or implied in that passage.

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lt has been known for many decades that the appear-来源:第一考试网

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ance of sunspots is roughly periodic, with an average

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cycle of eleven years. Moreover, the incidence of solar#p#分页标题#e# #

flares and the flux of solar cosmic rays, ultraviolet radia- #

tion, and x-radiation all vary directly with the sunspot (5) #

cycle. But after more than a century of investigation. the #

relation of these and other phenomena, known collec- #

tively as the solar-activity cycle, to terrescrial weather

#

and climate remains unclear. For example. the sunspot #

cycle and the allied rnagnetic-polarity cycle have been (10)

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linked to periodicities discerned in records of such vari- #

ables as rainhll. temperature, and winds. lnvariably,

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however, the relation is weak. and commonly ofdubious

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statistical significance.

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Effects of solar variability over longer terms have also (15)

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been sought. The absence of recorded sunspot activity in

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the notes kept by European observers in the late seven-

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teenth and early eighteenth centuries has led some schol- #

ars to postulate a brief cessation of sunspot activity at

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that time (a period called the Maunder minimum). The (20) #

Maunder minimum has been linked to a span of unusual

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cold in Europe extending from the sixteenth to the early #

nineteenth centuries. The reality of the Maunder mini-

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mum has yet to be established, however, especially since #

the records that Chinese naked-eye observers of solar (25)

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activity made at that time appear to contradict it. Scien- #

tists have also sought evidence of long-term solar period-

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icities by examining indirect climatological data, such as #

fossil recoras of the thickness of ancient tree rings. These #

studies, however, failed to link unequivocally terrestrial(30) #

climate and the solar-activity cycle, or even to contirm

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the cycle’s past existenue.

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If consistPn! and re!iab!e geo!sgigal~-arek-xologieal #

evidence tracing the solar-activity cycle in the distant #

past could be found, it might also resolve an important(35)

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issue in solar physics: how to model solar activity. Cur- #

rently, chere are two models of solar activity. The tirst

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supposes that the Sun’s internal motions (caused by #

rotation and convection) interact with its large-scale #

magnetic field to produce a dynamo. a device in which(40) #

mechanical energy is converted into the energy of a mag-

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netic field. ln short. the Sun’s large-scale magnetic field

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is taken to be self-sustaining, so that the solar-activity

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cycle it drives would be maintained with little overall #

changc for perhaps billions of years. The alternative(45)

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exp)anarion supposes that the Sun’s large-sca)e magnetic

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field is a remnant of the field the Sun acquired when it

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formed, and is not sustained against decay. In this #

model. the solar mechanism dependent on the Sun’s

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magnetiC field runs down more quickly. Thus, the char-(50)

#

acteristics of the solar-activity cycle uvuld be expected to

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change over a long period of time. Modern solar obser-

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vations span too short a time to reveal whether present #

cyclical solar aCtivity is a long-lived feature of the Sun, #

or merely a transient phenomenon. #

17. The author focuses primarily on

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(A) presenting two competing scientific theories concerning solar #

activity and evaluating geological evidence often cited to support them

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(B) giving a brief overview of some recent scientifrc developments

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in s’olar physics and assessing their impact on future climatological research #

(C) discussing the difficulties involved in linkinl: ter- restrial #

phenomena with solar activity and indicating how resolving that issue

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could have an impact on our understanding of solar physics #

(D) pointing out the futility of a certain line of sci- entific inquiry

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into the terrestrial effects of solar activity and recommendine ita

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aban- donment in favor of purely physics-oriented research #

(E) outlinine the specific reasons why a problem in solar physics has #

not yet been solved and faulting the overly theoretical approach of modern

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physicists.

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18. Which of th.e following statements about the two models of solar

#

activity. as they are described in lines 37-55, is accurate?

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(A) In both modgls cyclical solar activity is regarded as a long-lived

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feature of the Sun, persisting with little change over billions of years.

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(B) Tn both models the solar-activity cycle is hypothesized as being

#

dependent on the large-scale solar magnetic field. #

(C) Tn one model the Sun’s magnetic fieid is thought to play a role in

#

causing solar activ- ity, whereas in the other model it is not.

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(D) In one model solar activity is presumed to be unrelated to terrestrial #

phenomena. whereas in the other model solar activity is thought to have #

observable effects on the Earth.#p#分页标题#e#

#

(E) In one model cycles of solar activity with peri- odicities longer than #

a few decades are con- sidered to be impossible, whereas in the other model

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such cycles are predicted.

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19. According to the passage, late seventeenth- and early eighteenth-century

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Chinese records are impor- tant for which of the following reasons? #

(A) They suggest that the data on which the Maunder minimum was predicated #

were incorrect. #

(B) They syggest that the Maunder minimum can- not be related to climate. #

(C) Thcy suggest that the Maunder minimum might be \-’alid only for Europe. #

(D) They establish the existence of a span of unusu- ally cold weather #

worldwide at the time of the Maunder minimum.

#

(E) They establish that solar activity at the tirne of the Maunder minimum #

did not significantly vary from its present pattern. #

20. The author implies which of the followine about currently available

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geological and archaeoloeical evidence concerning the solar-activity cycle?

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(A) It best supports the model of solar activity described in lines 37-45.

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(B) It best supports the model of solar activity described in lines 45-52. #

(C) It is insufficient to confirtn either model of solar activity described

#

in the third paragraph. #

(D) It contradicts both models of solar activity as they are presented in

#

the third paragraph. #

(E) It disproves the theory that terrestrial weather and solar activitv are #

linked in some way.

#

21. Tt can be inferred from the passage that the argu- ment in favor of the #

model described in lines 37- 45 would be strengthened if which of the following

#

were found ta he tme? #

(A) Episodes of intense volcanic eruptions in the distant past occurred in

#

cycles having very long periodicities. #

(B) At the present time the global level of thunder- storm activity increases #

and decreases in cycles with periodicities of approximately 11 years.

#

(C) In the distant past cyclical climatic changes had periodicities of longer #

than 200 years. #

(D) In the last century the length of the sunspot cycle has been known to

#

vary by as much as 2 years from its average periodicity of 11 years.

#

(E) Hundreds of millions of years ago, solar- activity cycles displayed the #

same periodicities as do present-day solap-activity cycles. #

22. lt can be inferred from the passage that Chinese observations of the Sun #

during the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries

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(A) are ambiguous because most sunspots cannot be seen with the naked eye #

(B) probably were made under the same weather conditions as those made in Europe

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(C) are more reliable than European observations . made during this period #

(D) record some sunspot activity during this period #

(E) have been employed by scientists seeking to argue that a change in solar #

activity occurred during this period. #

23. It can be inferred from the passage that studies attempting to use tree-ring #

thickness to locate possi- ble links between solar periodicity and terrestrial #

climate are based on which of the following assump- tions? #

(A) The solar-activity cycle existed in its present form during the time period #

in which the tree rings erew. #

(B) The biological mechanisms causing tree growth are unaffected by short-term #

weather pat- terns. #

(C) Average tree-ring thickness varies from species to species. #

(D) Tree-ring thicknesses reflecr changes in terres- trial climate.

#

(E) Both terrestrial climate and the solar-activity cycle randomly af~ct tree-ring

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thickness.

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The common belief of some linguists that each

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language is a perfect vehicle for the thoughts of the #

nation speaking it is in some ways the exact counterpart第一考试网整理

#

of the conviction of the Manchester school of economics #

that supply and demand will regulate everything for the(5)

#

best. Just as economists were blind to the numerous #

cases in which the law of supply and demand left actual

#

wants unsatisfied, so also many linguists are deaf to #

those instances in which the very nature of a ianguage

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calls forth misunderstandings in everyday conversation,(10) #

and in which, consequently, a word has to be modified

#

or defined in order to present the idea intended by the

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speaker: "He took his stick,no, not John’s, but his #

own." No language is perfec’t, and if we admit this truth,

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we must also admit that it is not unreasonable to investi-(15) #

gate the relative merits of different languages or of

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different details in languages.

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24. The primary purpose ofthe passage is to #

(A) analyze an interesting feature of the English language #

(B) refute a belief held by some linguists

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(C) show that economic theory is relevant to linguistic study#p#分页标题#e#

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(D) iilustrate the confusion that can result from the improper use of

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language #

(E) suggest a way in which languages can be made more nearly perfect.

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25. The misunderstanding presented by the author in lines 13-14 is similar #

to which of the following?

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I. X uses the word "you" to refer to a group, but Y thinks that X is referring

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to one person only.

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II. X mistakenly uses the word "anomaly" to refer to a typical example,.but Y

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knows that "anomaly" means "exception". #

III. X uses the word "bachelor" to mean "unmarried man:’ but Y mistakenly thinks

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that bachelor means "unmarried woman."

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(A) I only

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(B) II only #

(C) III only

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(D) I and II only #

(E) IIand IIIonly #

26. In presenting the argument, theauthor does all of the following EXCEPT #

(A) give an example #

(B) draw a conclusion #

(C) make a generalization #

(D) make a comparison

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(E) present a paradox

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27. Which of the following contributes to the misunder- standing described #

by the author in lines 13-14 ?

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(A) It is unclear whom the speaker of the sentence is addressing.

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(B) It is unclear to whom the word "his" refers the first time it is used.

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(C) It is unclear to whom the word "his" refers the second time it is used.

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(D) The meaning of "took" is ambiguous.

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(E) It is unclear to whom "He" refers.

#

Directions: Each question below consists of a word printed in capital letters, #

followed by five lettered words or phrases. Choose the lettered word or phrase

#

that is most nearly opposite in meaning to the word in capital letters. Slnce

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some of the questions require you to distinguish fine siiadtj of meanirlg, be #

sun tc, consider aii the choices before deciding which one is best.

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28. FALLACY: (A) personal philosophy #

(B) imaginative idea #

(C) unconfirmed theory

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(D) tentative opinion #

(E)valid argument

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29. DIVULGE:

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(A) keep secret

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(B) evaluate by oneself #

(C) refine #

(D) restore

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(E) copy

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30. BOYCOTT: #

(A) extort

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(B) underwrite #

(C)underbid #

(D)stipulate

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(E)patronize

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31. ADULTERATION: #

(A) consternation #

(B) purification

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(C) normalization

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(D) approximation

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(E) rejuvenation #

32. DEPOSlTlON: #

(A) process ofcongealing #

(B) process ofdistilling #

(C) process of eroding

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(D) process of evolving

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(E) proeess of condensing #

33. ENERVATE:

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(A) recuperate #

(B) resurrect

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(C)renovate

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(D)gather

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(E)strengthen

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34. LOQUACIOUS: #

(A) tranquil #

(B) skeptical

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(C)morose

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(D)taciturn

#

(E)witty #

35. REPINE: #

(A) intensify #

(B)excuse

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(C)expressjoy #

(D)feelsure

#

(E)rushforward #

36. VENERATION: #

(A) derision #

(B) blame #

(C) avoidance

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(D) ostracism . #

(E) defiance #

37. UNDERMINE:

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(A)submerge

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(B) public #

(C) satisfatory #

(D) trustworthy #

(E) sophisticated

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38. UNDERMINE: #

(A) submerge #

(B) supersede . #

(C) overhaul

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(D) undergird

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(E) intersperse.第一考试网整理 #

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