Professional Documents
Culture Documents
2004 Ptests 4 PDF
2004 Ptests 4 PDF
_______________________________________________________________________________
EXAMINATION
FOR
THE MICHIGAN CERTIFICATE
OF
PROFICIENCY IN ENGLISH
Rodney A Coules
a. way
*b. road
c. travel
d. superhighway
VOCABULARY: Choose the word that most appropriately completes the sentence.
The first things we study in school are very _____.
a. sturdy
b. shifty
c. trusty
*d. elementary
READING : Read the passage, then answer the questions following it according to the information
given in the passage.
While I was getting ready to go to town one morning last week, my wife handed me a
little piece of red cloth and asked me if I would have time during the day to buy her
two yards of cloth like that.
The person telling the story is.
a. a married lady
b. an unmarried lady
*c. a married man
d. an unmarried man
ANATOLIA COLLEGE
LANGUAGE & TESTING OFFICE
P. O. BOX 21021, PYLEA
555 10 THESSALONIKI
Email: alto@ac.anatolia.edu.gr
Practice Test 1
GRAMMAR
1. We have _____ time to get ready, so wed
better hurry.
a. a little
b. little
c. some
d. few
6.
a.
b.
c.
d.
a.
b.
c.
d.
wouldnt make
hadnt made
didnt make
wouldnt have made
CLOZE
A new, $25-million facility in Dallas
opened its (11) in September as the (12)
comprehensive history museum dedicated to
American women. The Womens Museum: An
Institute for the Future, in association (13) the
Smithsonian Institution, aims to chronicle the
lives of 3,000 American women and explore
(14) contributions to history. It is a history
museum, (15) also a facility designed to inspire
young people, especially young women, says
executive director Candace OKeefe. In (16),
we are honoring the past, but shaping the
future.
A 35-(17)-high statue of a Venus-like
figure, called the Spirit of the Centennial,
greets (18) to the museum, (19) contains 70,000
square feet of exhibit space inside a 91-year-old
art deco building. The Smithsonian loaned (20)
half of the artifacts on display, including Amelia
Earharts flight suit, Althea Gibsons
Wimbledon trophy and Babe Didrikson's golf
clubs.
(11) a. gates
b. doors
c. floors
d. entrance
(12) a. initial
b. primary
c. prime
d. first
(13) a. together
b. after
c. with
d. to
(14) a. own
b. these
c. their
d. those
(15) a. but
b. however
c. so
d. although
(16) a. order
b. short
c. conclusion
d. respect
(17) a. feet
b. footing
c. footed
d. foot
(18) a. guests
b. viewers
c. onlookers
d. visitors
(19) a. which
b. that
c. where
d. wherein
(20) a. readily
b. justly
c. roughly
d. decidedly
VOCABULARY
21. After a(n) ____ search of the records, we
finally found what we were looking for.
a. exposed
b. asserted
c. exhaustive
d. uniform
a.
b.
c.
d.
inimitable
lofty
tranquil
appreciable
READING
One summer morning in that magical year 2004, a strange vessel should be seen picking its
way past the freighters anchored outside Piraeus harbor. Riding low in the water with a tapering,
barbed prow jutting skywards, it will be the first craft of its kind to have visited Athens in more
than 3,000 years.
Earlier this year, a team of naval historians and shipbuilding experts joined forces with the
Nautical Museum of Chania in Crete to launch an ambitious project to reconstruct a Minoan
galley of around 1500 BC and bring it under sail and oar to Athens just ahead of the 2004
Olympics.
If the plan had been for a Hellenistic or Roman ship, wrecks of which are a dime a dozen
throughout the Mediterranean, the enterprise would have been relatively simple. But experts regard
a Minoan wreck as the Holy Grail of underwater archaeology; not a single example has yet been
found. So considerable ingenuity will be required.
As there is nothing to copy, we will have to work very carefully on data from various
sources, such as ancient writings and original representations of ships, in combination with our own
scientific methodology, says project leader Apostolos Kourtis, an expert on ancient shipbuilding
who teaches naval history to Greek Navy cadets. This will be a full reconstruction of a Minoan
ship that is documented and faithful to what we know of the type.
In the first half of the second millennium BC 1,000 years before Homers epics
were written the Minoans established themselves as a leading maritime power in the eastern
Mediterranean, enjoying close relations with Egypt and the Near East. They are believed to have
reached as far west as Sicily, where legend has it that King Minos met an unpleasant death in a
bathtub.
31. Why is the project to reconstruct a Minoan galley described as an ambitious one?
a. The voyage from Chania to Athens has never been undertaken.
b. There is very little time in which to complete the project.
c. Propelling a vessel by sail and oar has never been attempted before.
d. There are no wrecks of similar vessels to be used as a model.
32. What do we learn about wrecks belonging to the Hellenistic and Roman periods?
a. The plans for building them were simple.
b. They are fairly easy to locate throughout the Mediterranean.
c. They were used in the search for the Holy Grail.
d. Considerable ingenuity was used in their construction.
33. Which of the following will not be used in the reconstruction of the Minoan galley?
a. Writings from ancient times
b. Original depictions of ships
c. Parts of wrecks that have been found
d. The ingenuity of those involved in the construction
34. Which of the following expressions best describes what the project leader and his team will
have to do?
a. to go on what little they have
b. to strike while the iron is hot
c. to pick up steam
d. to pick up the pieces
35. Being a maritime power, the Minoans were known for their
a. agricultural advances.
b. military conquests.
c. architectural expertise.
d. naval accomplishments.
6
Practice Test 2
GRAMMAR
1. Jane said she had _____ things to do on her
way to the airport.
a.
b.
c.
d.
few
little
a few
much
a.
b.
c.
d.
CLOZE
Its nearly impossible to predict the exact
arrival of El Nio, the warming of surface
waters off South America that (11) havoc on
weather patterns worldwide. Scientists have (12)
on a network of buoys, computer models, and
satellite observations but these do more to
mark El Nios arrival (13) to anticipate it.
Now, however, new research has uncovered a
signal that predates the warming Pacific (14) a
full two months, (15) governments around the
world time to prepare for the chaos (16) come.
Researchers at the University of
Maryland, Baltimore County, and NASAs
Goddard Space Flight Center (17) through 21
years of global weather records to find the (18).
Their findings show that (19) the two strongest
El Nios, the 1982-1983 and 1997-1998 events,
(20) was a sudden drop in rainfall near
Indonesia. The researchers caution that the
droughts only come before the most powerful El
Nios.
(11) a. results
b. brings
c. delivers
d. wreaks
(12) a. taken
b. worked
c. relied
d. placed
(13) a. more
b. than
c. but
d. and
(14) a. over
b. before
c. by
d. from
(15) a. giving
b. setting
c. fixing
d. determining
(16) a. to
b. might
c. may
d. will
(17) a. swept
b. combed
c. uncovered
d. researched
(18) a. truth
b. reason
c. cause
d. signal
(19) a. before
b. prior
c. after
d. with
(20) a. it
b. just
c. there
d. suddenly
VOCABULARY
21. Finding himself in such a _____
position, he decided to proceed with
extreme caution.
a. precarious
b. prevalent
c. perplexed
d. prestigious
a.
b.
c.
d.
a.
b.
c.
d.
stance
plea
bond
breed
reputable
ominous
cordial
contagious
a.
b.
c.
d.
undiluted
dehydrated
outstretched
unprecedented
indignant
indulgent
indifferent
inhibited
READING
Alzheimers patients face a grim future: increasingly clouded judgment, declining attention
span, and memory loss. Several drugs temporarily improve brain function, but none has been able to
slow the diseases progress. But two recent studies suggest new ways to attack this devastating
disease.
Scientists at Irvine, California-based Neo Therapeutics have produced a drug that stimulates
premature cells in the brain to multiply and mature into the cells responsible for memory. In animal
studies, one dose boosted brain cell numbers by 32 percent. In small-scale human studies,
researchers found that memory, attention span, and judgment improved significantly. The drug will
begin final human testing later this year, and results are expected by 2003.
In another study, researchers at Harvard Medical School cleared mice bred to develop
Alzheimers of the characteristic plaques that form in the brain by injecting proteins designed to
attack the plaques. Because the technique required drilling holes into the skull, it is unlikely to lead
directly to treatment. However, the experiment is the first to show that plaque formation can be
reversed.
31. Which of the following is not given as a symptom of Alzheimers?
a. reduced ability to pay attention
b. an inability to remember
c. an inability to judge clearly
d. a grim future
32. With the use of various drugs, experts have managed
a. to achieve short-term improvement in the way the patients brains work.
b. to devastate Alzheimers disease.
c. to accelerate the progress of the disease.
d. to protect the brain from other attacks.
33. The drug produced by scientists at Neo Therapeutics
a. has so far shown satisfactory results when tested on animals and human beings.
b. can only be used on animals.
c. has never been used on human beings.
d. has proved to be only 32 percent successful.
34. The mice used in the study by researchers at Harvard Medical School
a. developed Alzheimers naturally.
b. developed the plaques after being injected with proteins.
c. responded favorably to the therapy they were subjected to.
d. began attacking the plaques after they were injected.
35. Why do the researchers at Harvard Medical School have reason to be happy with their findings?
a. They have found an acceptable way to drill holes in the skull.
b. Their findings will probably lead directly to a treatment for Alzheimers.
c. They have shown that the formation of plaques in the brain need not be something
permanent.
d. They have developed a technique for preventing the development of Alzheimers in
people.
10
Practice Test 3
GRAMMAR
1. Jack came into a _____ sum of money when 6. _____ he was expected to win the election,
his grandfather died.
he lost by a big margin.
a. considerable
a. Despite
b. considerably
b. However
c. considerate
c. Even
d. consideration
d. Although
a.
b.
c.
d.
which is
that it is
which it is
that is
a.
b.
c.
d.
is announcing
announced
will be announced
to be announced
11
CLOZE
The average traffic light is obsolete. Set to
a fixed timing pattern, (11) cannot respond to
actual traffic conditions. Soon that (12) change.
Computer-coordinated signals, developed by PB
Farradyne, a Rockville, Maryland, engineering
firm, (13) recently tested in a 12-block area just
northwest of the Chicago Loop. Using video
cameras mounted on streetlights, the signals
monitored traffic passing (14) the intersections.
As approaching vehicles were detected, digital
data were transmitted to computers in each
traffic signal. (15) the volume of cars increased
in a particular direction, the signals allowed
more green time. The information from each
computer in the grid was also sent to a central
computing network, (16) coordinated and
controlled signal changes for the (17) area.
That way, you dont find yourself getting a
green light at one intersection (18) to be stopped
by a red light at the next one, says Farhad
Pooran, a PB Farradyne engineer directing the
project. The companys analysis predicts delays
could be (19) by 6 to 8 percent. In a nearcapacity situation, that can (20) the difference
between gridlock and free-flowing traffic, says
Pooran.
12
(11) a. which
b. that
c. but
d. it
(12) a. have
b. pattern
c. will
d. make
(13) a. was
b. they
c. have
d. were
(14) a. through
b. by
c. around
d. away
(15) a. When
b. So
c. Just
d. Before
(16) a. where
b. which
c. that
d. whose
(17) a. utter
b. absolute
c. entire
d. total
(18) a. and
b. but
c. not
d. only
(19) a. severed
b. trimmed
c. gouged
d. plucked
(20) a. cause
b. result
c. mean
d. avoid
VOCABULARY
21. The employee was _____ after the court
ruled that shed been wrongfully
dismissed.
a. thawed
b. differentiated
c. collaborated
d. reinstated
a.
b.
c.
d.
a.
b.
c.
d.
a.
b.
c.
d.
a.
b.
c.
d.
delusion
deficiency
distraction
deluge
raise
arouse
rise
arise
temptation
vengeance
manifestation
imposition
apprehended
banished
enforced
provoked
13
READING
Maypoles, onionskins, cats eyes did you know they are different varieties of glass
marbles? Maypoles have white threads or colored swirls on or just beneath the marbles surface;
onionskins are solidly colored (most often white or yellow) with colored swirls or dots; and cats
eyes are clear glass with a colored swirl inside.
Marbles have been used as game pieces since the time of ancient Rome. Through the
centuries, theyve been made from stone, flint, baked clay, and sometimes real marble. Handmade
glass marbles were made in Italy during the Renaissance; they became popular in Europe and
America in the mid-1800s, after the invention of a tool called marble scissors helped produce them
faster. The first machines for the manufacture of glass marbles were introduced in Germany and the
U.S. in 1890.
During the manufacturing process, glass is melted in a furnace and then poured downward
in channels, forming the base color of the marble. Additional colors of glass are added to the first
stream if inserts are desired, as in a cats eye. As the glass descends and begins to solidify, it is cut
into small cubes. The cubes are dropped through a funnel onto moving rollers that cool and round
off the glass pieces into finished marbles.
Making glass marbles by hand is a more creative and complex process. Heated glass rods
are pulled to collect a ball-shaped gather at the end. Different colors of molten glass are smoothed
in. Shaping rods called punties are attached to each side of the gather so it can be manipulated over
a flame to create swirls and designs. The gather is placed into a mold (usually made of graphite) to
perfect the shape and cool into the finished marble.
31. Which of the following marbles would appear to incorporate the least color?
a. white onionskins
b. yellow onionskins
c. cats eyes
d. maypoles
32. Marbles owe their increased popularity in Europe and the U.S. around the mid-19th century to
a. the availability of better equipment for use in their manufacture.
b. the quality of the handmade glass marbles of the Renaissance.
c. the introduction of the first machines for the manufacture of glass marbles.
d. improvements in the materials used in their manufacture.
33. Which of the following correctly identifies some of the steps followed in the manufacture of
glass marbles?
a. cutting glass into cubes melting glass adding melted glass of other colors
b. melting glass adding melted glass of other colors cutting the semi-solid glass into
cubes
c. cutting glass into cubes passing cubes over rollers heating cubes and rounding off
d. mixing colored glass cubes melting glass cubes rolling cubes into marbles
34. What is the purpose of the punties or shaping rods used in the manufacture of handmade
marbles?
a. to pull the glass rods into the gather
b. to smooth in the colored molten glass
c. to place the gather into a mold
d. to facilitate the handling of the gather
35. What role does the graphite mold play in the manufacture of handmade marbles?
a. It gives the marble its final shape and allows it to cool.
b. It fixes the design of the marble.
c. It prevents the marble from damage.
d. It is the final ingredient of the marble.
14
Practice Test 4
GRAMMAR
1. Elizabeth was suspended from school for
two days, _____ shocked her parents.
a. that
b. which it
c. what
d. which
a.
b.
c.
d.
a.
b.
c.
d.
15
priceless
pricey
priced
pricing
CLOZE
tzi the 5,300-year-old ice man (11)
from an Alpine glacier in 1991 is finally
spilling his guts. A recent analysis of his
intestinal contents raises questions about the
assumption that he froze to death after getting
caught in a(n) (12) autumn snowstorm. Klaus
Oeggl, a paleoethnobotanist at Austrias
University of Innsbruck, discovered that food
extracted from tzis colon (13) intact pollen
grains from the hop hornbeam tree, (14) flowers
in the spring and lives only at (15) altitudes.
(16) pollen degrades quickly in air, tzi must
have died in the spring or (17) summer. In
addition, analysis of his skin indicates that the
ice mans body (18) in a pool of water for
several weeks before it was frozen.
The new evidence is forcing researchers
to reopen the case of how tzis corpse (19) up
in the mountains. Some have even speculated
that he was dragged up for some sort of
Neolithic sacrificial ritual, but Oeggl wont go
that (20). All we can tell is that 12 hours before
he died he was in the valley bottom where hop
hornbeam grows. He came up to the place of his
death within one day.
(11) a. dredged
b. excavated
c. extricated
d. ejected
(12) a. immediate
b. sudden
c. swift
d. brief
(13) a. included
b. intermingled
c. involved
d. surrounded
(14) a. that
b. with
c. which
d. but
(15) a. little
b. level
c. low
d. small
(16) a. When
b. Despite
c. While
d. Since
(17) a. late
b. during
c. early
d. even
(18) a. laid
b. lay
c. lied
d. lain
(19) a. drew
b. found
c. ended
d. concluded
(20) a. far
b. way
16
c. belief
d. speculation
VOCABULARY
a.
b.
c.
d.
a.
b.
c.
d.
17
abort
abate
aspire
abolish
absorbent
vivid
lustrous
moist
READING
Our species has been around for only 200,000 years or so. But where did modern humans
come from? Did Homo sapiens evolve a number of times in Africa, Europe, and Asia from earlier
humans such as Homo erectus, who first ventured out of Africa nearly 2 million years ago? Or did
our species arise only once, in Africa, and spread from there to become Earths dominant life form?
Evidence has been accumulating that the out of Africa hypothesis is correct. Now comes
the strongest blow yet against the multiregional theory: A computer analysis of DNA from dozens
of people around the world suggests that we all descended from a common ancestor who lived in
Africa between 40,000 and 80,000 years ago.
Researchers studied sequences of DNA from mitochondria, tiny energy-producing structures
in each cell. Mitochondrial DNA, abbreviated mtDNA, is separate from the DNA in the cell
nucleus, where most of our genes are situated. mtDNA is also inherited differently, passed to
children only from their mother. Studying mtDNA is therefore a unique way of tracking relatedness
through the maternal line. mtDNA can also be used as a kind of clock for estimating how long ago
lineages split from each other.
The new study, led by Ulf Gyllensten of the University of Uppsala in Sweden, has been
widely hailed because it is the largest to date, and because it looked at the complete mtDNA
sequence instead of partial sequences. It also fits with archaeological and paleontological evidence
showing that some modern humans first left Africa and settled in the Middle East around the same
time.
31. The multiregional theory supports the belief that
a. we all come from one species that originated in Africa.
b. several species of modern humans developed in different parts of the planet.
c. our species underwent several evolutions in various parts of the planet.
d. Homo sapiens developed into a number of different species.
32. Recent findings suggest that
a. the multiregional theory is based on stronger evidence.
b. supporters of the out of Africa hypothesis are justified in what they maintain.
c. more evidence needs to be accumulated.
d. computer analysis of DNA is only valid for the period of 40,000 to 80,000 years ago.
33. The computer analysis of DNA conducted by researchers points to the possibility that
a. we are descended from dozens of people around the world.
b. our species has not been on earth for 200,000 years or so as previously believed.
c. we have come down from a common ancestor.
d. we are not Earths dominant life form.
34. Which of the following statements about mtDNA does not agree with what is said in the text?
a. mtDNA uses up available body energy.
b. mtDNA cannot be inherited from the father.
c. mtDNA is to be found in each cell.
d. mtDNA is inherited by children from their mother.
35. Support for the findings of the study led by Ulf Gyllensten is based on all but one of the
following. Identify which one is not given as a reason.
a. A study of this scale has never before been conducted.
b. The study was thorough.
c. The study was conducted entirely among people living in Africa.
d. The conclusions it arrives at are supported by other scientific fields.
18
Practice Test 5
GRAMMAR
1. Providing _____ by this Friday, you may
borrow my bike.
a. you return it
b. you returned it
c. you have to return it
d. you returning it
a.
b.
c.
d.
a.
b.
c.
d.
a.
b.
c.
d.
19
to travel
you to travel
for traveling
in traveling
matching
to match
for matching
that it matches
CLOZE
The connection between Cretans and
the Maori of new Zealand stretches much
further back into history than the heroic
battles they fought ( 1 ) on Greek soil in
World War II. Indeed, in the kafeneios and
sidestreets of Chania, grizzled war veterans
( 2 ) still be heard telling tales of the ancient
links between the two ( 3 ). The most popular
story ( 4 ) something like this: Many Cretans
joined the army of Alexander the Great and
marched with him to the East in the 4th
century BC. On the evidence of woodcarving
techniques
to
be
observed
in
certain
centuries
wearying
(
of
their
inland
life,
20
1. a. together
b. with
c. for
d. against
2. a. must
b. can
c. should
d. are
3. a. countries
b. persons
c. wars
d. peoples
4. a. tells
b. relates
c. goes
d. recounts
5. a. weird
b. uncanny
c. bizarre
d. eerie
6. a. fair
b. wide
c. odd
d. even
7. a. after
b. before
c. since
d. later
8. a. where
b. when
c. then
d. after
9. a. final
b. due
c. eventual
d. consequent
10.a. ancestors
b. predecessors
c. successors
d. descendants
VOCABULARY
21. A(n) _____ political situation has been
created by the Presidents decision to
resign.
a. erroneous
b. durable
c. random
d. unstable
a.
b.
c.
d.
a.
b.
c.
d.
a.
b.
c.
d.
a.
b.
c.
d.
elegance
demeanor
rapport
vestige
21
successive
progressive
extensive
conclusive
repealed
installed
shuffled
stacked
ornamented
vigorous
malicious
intriguing
READING
A solution to one of the most vexing problems for environmental scientists and engineers
the removal of toxic metals from soil may be in one of the simplest plants: a fern. Researchers
from the University of Florida in Gainesville have discovered an ordinary fern with an
extraordinary appetite for arsenic. The brake fern, Pteris vittata, not only tolerates the presence of
arsenic, it actually soaks up and accumulates the carcinogenic heavy metal. Evidence suggests that
the plant may even fare better in soils with arsenic. The University of Florida research team
measured arsenic in brake ferns at concentrations 200 times the levels of the contaminated soils in
which they were growing. In that example, the concentration of arsenic in the soil was 38.9 parts
per million (ppm), and the fern fronds had 7,526 ppm. In greenhouse tests, the concentrations of
arsenic in the fronds were as high as 22,630 ppm or 2.3 percent. Surprisingly, the researchers
discovered that the brake fern accumulates arsenic even when growing in soils with normal
background concentrations of arsenic less than 1 ppm. For example, a plant growing on the
University of Florida campus in soil with 0.47 ppm of arsenic contained 136 ppm of arsenic. This
concentration surpasses the U.S. Environmental Protection Agencys 5 ppm threshold for
classification as an industrial hazardous waste.
The brake ferns appetite for arsenic, remarkable in the light of the fact that arsenic is often
used as an herbicide, may prove to be useful in cleaning up arsenic-contaminated industrial, mining,
or agricultural sites. The strategy would be to grow the fern at a toxic site and harvest the fronds and
stems for transportation to an appropriate waste facility.
The brake fern is one among some 400 plants known to accumulate toxins. It has the
potential to be an important player in the growing phytoremediation industry, which uses plants
and trees to clean up toxic waste sites.
31. We learn from the text that the removal of toxic metals from the earth
a. has never concerned environmental scientists and engineers.
b. is not seen to present many difficulties.
c. has been a matter of concern to environmental scientists and engineers for some time.
d. is a matter which can easily be dealt with.
32. The brake fern may be the answer to the problem of removing toxic metals from the soil as it
a. breaks arsenic down into harmless substances.
b. is not resistant to the presence of arsenic.
c. absorbs and stores high levels of arsenic.
d. accumulates in areas where carcinogenic heavy metals are present in the soil.
33. The research done by the Univ. of Florida team showed that the brake ferns they examined
a. had accumulated 200 times the level of arsenic contained in the soil in which they were
growing.
b. had reduced the concentration of arsenic in the soil in which they were growing by 200
times.
c. showed positive results only after being examined 200 times.
d. were 200 times more successful in absorbing arsenic than ferns used in greenhouse tests.
34. The brake ferns appetite for arsenic is described as remarkable because
a. it is active in accumulating arsenic only when there is light present.
b. it never used to accumulate arsenic in the past.
c. it will be used to clear all current agricultural sites which are contaminated with arsenic.
d. arsenic is a regular constituent of preparations used in killing unwanted plants.
35. If the brake fern is eventually used in cleaning up arsenic-contaminated industrial, mining, or
agricultural sites,
a. parts of the plant will then be removed for destruction elsewhere.
b. the entire plant will be removed for destruction elsewhere.
c. the entire plant will be destroyed at the toxic site.
d. parts of the plant will be destroyed at the toxic site.
22
ANSWER KEY
Practice Test 1
1. b
2. b
3. b
4. c
5. a
6. d
7. d
8. a
9. b
10.c
11.b
12.d
13.c
14.c
15.a
16.b
17.d
18.d
19.a
20.c
21.c
22.d
23.a
24.b
25.b
26.d
27.a
28.d
29.b
30.c
31.d
32.b
33.c
34.a
35.d
Practice Test 2
1. c
2. b
3. a
4. b
5. b
6. a
7. c
8. c
9. d
10.d
11.d
12.c
13.b
14.c
15.a
16.a
17.b
18.d
19.a
20.c
21.a
22.c
23.a
24.d
25.b
26.d
27.c
28.a
29.a
30.b
31.d
32.a
33.a
34.c
35.c
Practice test 3
1. a
2. a
3. b
4. a
5. c
6. d
7. b
8. d
9. c
10.b
11.d
12.c
13.d
14.a
15.a
16.b
17.c
18.d
19.b
20.c
21.d
22.c
23.c
24.b
25.a
26.b
27.d
28.a
29.b
30.c
31.c
32.a
33.b
34.d
35.a
Practice Test 4
1. d
2. d
3. a
4. c
5. b
6. b
7. b
8. a
9. b
10.c
11.b
12.b
13.a
14.c
15.c
16.d
17.c
18.b
19.c
20.a
21.a
22.b
23.b
24.d
25.c
26.a
27.b
28.c
29.d
30.b
31.c
32.b
33.c
34.a
35.c
Practice test 5
1. a
2. b
3. b
4. c
5. b
6. a
7. d
8. d
9. b
10.c
11.a
12.b
13.d
14.c
15.b
16.a
17.d
18.a
19.b
20.d
21.d
22.c
23.d
24.c
25.b
26.a
27.a
28.c
29.c
30.b
31.c
32.c
33.a
34.d
35.a
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
I would like to express my gratitude to Rena Pappas, who located all the texts used in the
preparation of these tests.
Rodney A Coules
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