Ketik Soal ITP
Ketik Soal ITP
Ketik Soal ITP
16. While attempting to fly hers plane around the world in 1937,
A B C
Amelia Earhart mysteriously disappeard.
D
17. Richard Wright’s Uncle Tom’s Children, a collection of
short stories, were a critical success when it appeared in
A B C D
1938.
18. The principle on wich the boat called hydrofoil is designed is identically
A
to that demonstrated by an airplane wing
B
moving through air.
C D
19. Migrating butterflies can travel long distant over water.
A B C D
20. During a early period in the settelement of the western
A
United States, pioneers claimed parts of the wilderness by
B
marking trees to establish a boundary.
C D
21. All digital computers use binary, or two-valued, digits
A B
instead than decimal, or ten-valued, digits to represent and
C D
store data.
22. An ambassador serves as a nation’s highest-ranking
A B
diplomacy in another country.
C D
23. Early adolescence is a developmental phase consisting of
A B
rapid changes in behavior, psychological, and hormones.
C D
24. Knowledge from the frontiers of research genetic will
A B
increasingly pose difficult problems for policy makers and
C
for society in general.
D
25. Pictures called glass mosaics are made by setting small
A B
pieces of colors glass into fresh plaster.
C D
26. Approximately every nineteen month Venus and the Sun
A
reach their greatest angular separation in the solar system.
B C D
27. Anthropologists recently have found evidence that, centuries
A
ago, Inuits used to entering their subterranean homes
B
through tunnels, wich helped keep the cold out and the heat
C D
in.
28. The tree porcupine is found in wooded areas throughout
A B C
most from North America.
D
29. To date, only a small percentage of all glass manufactured
A
in the United States is recycled, but markets for recycled
B
glass that are growing steadily.
C D
30. The oceans are the major source of the atmospheric
A B C
moisture that is obtained through evaporator.
D
31. Only those insects with high developed, multisensed eye
A B
have good color vision.
C D
32. The Earth’s atmosphere functions much like a giant
A
greenhouse, admitting sunlight between outer space but
B C
preventing heat for escaping.
D
33. The almond tree wich produces the oldest species of nut and
A B
is the most widely grown of all nut trees.
C D
34. Fran Tannenbaum, a paleontology student doing summer
A
fieldwork, found a completely seventy-five-million-year-old
B C D
fossil egg near Chateau, Montana.
15
Lin
e
5
20
t known as Impressionism was first identified in 1874 when a group of artists,
estions 31-39 dissatisfied with the reception of their works by the academic art establishment of
their period, chose to hold a separate exhibition of their paintings.
T
Despite obvious differences in style, all of these painters were connected
h
by an ability to catch a moment and preserve it on canvas, and in their belief
e
in the importance of that moment. They readily accepted and made use of the
technological advances available to them, and in the end became recognized
a
as proponents of one of the most significant movements in the history of art, a
r
movement that produced an aesthetic revolution in art.
t
Several technological breakthroughs were responsible, to some degree, for
i
the creation and execution of the new Impressionist style. One of these was the
s
invention of a new brush that gave artists greater control. Another useful invention
t
was the collapsible tin tube. This easily reclosed container preserved the oil paint
i
in a stable condition without altering the color. It was a great improvement over
c
animal bladders, which had been used for centuries to hold oil paint. The new
tube was portable and made it possible for artists to work outside. This freedom
m
made it possible for Impressionist paintings to “capture the moment,” giving them
o
a feeling of immediacy.
v
e Another innovation was color. Nineteenth-century chemists had created a new
m palette of colors, derived from cola tar and other substances. These were first used by
e textile manufacturers and then adopted by artists. They included some of the
n brighter colors – new shades of blue, green, and yellow, whose tones gave the
Impressionist paintings their characteristic shimmering quality.
31. What did the group of 33. The word “readily” in line 7 is closest
Impressionist artists do in 1874? in meaning to
(A) They radically changed their style (A) purposely
of painting. (B) cautiously
(B) They held their own (C) cleverly
exhibition. (D) eagerly
(C) They adopted new
techniques and 34. According to the passage,
technologies. Impressionism is regarded
(D) They refused to paint anything historically as
that year. (A) a significant, revolutionary movement
(B) an innovative yet minor style
32. The word “it” in line 6 refers to (C) an unenlightened, radical phase
(A) style (D) a traditional form of nineteenth-
(B) moment century painting
(C) ability
(D) canvas
35. In line 15 the word “It” refers to
(A) container
(B) condition
(C) oil paint
(D) color
Questions 40-50
Radiocarbon dating and tree-ring dating, in combination, have provided
a very powerful tool to establish a time spectrum for more recent dates in the
past. The initial idea for dating by tree rings can be traced back to 1811.
Lin
Modern scientific tree-ring dating, dendrochronology, stems from pioneering
e
work in early 1900’s.
5
Usually, but not always, trees produce one ring each year. This ring is
formed by the cambium, which lies between the old wood and the bark. In
spring, wood cells with large lumens are manufactured, but in summer and
autumn, the cells become smaller and more thick-walled until with the onset of
winter the production of a new cell stops. The same process is repeated the
10
following year. In this way a year’s growth (annual ring) is imprinted as new
wood. The demarcation line between summer and autumn wood of the previous
year, with its characteristic small cells, and the spring wood of the year
following, with its large cells, enables annual rings to be counted relatively
easily.
15 Growth rings, however, are not always the same thickness. They vary for several
reasons. Environmental factors rigidly control the degree of growth of an annual
ring or determine whether, in fact, an annual ring appears at all in any particular
year. Thus in a specific locale or, more accurately, a specific climatic province,
tree-ring counts will reflect climatic conditions and variations due to inequalities
20 of climate from year to year. In years with abnormal drought, for example,
narrow rings are produced and sometimes no ring at all. In this way a fossil
record is imprinted for as long as the wood remains intact. From this pattern a
historical template can be constructed to correlate one set of growth rings in one
tree with a set of growth rings in another tree or piece of timber.
25 Another important factor is that tree-ring growth varies with age of the tree.
As the tree matures, the rings become narrower, and this results in the central
rings being wider than those on the outer part of the tree.
40. What does the passage mainly discuss?
(A) The effect of drought on
tree-ring growth 45. The word “They” in line 15
(B) The history of dating trees refers to
(C) The problems of tree-ring (A) large cells
dating (B) growth rings
(D) The formation of growth (C) several reasons
rings in trees (D) environmental factors
41. The word “stems” in line 4 is 46. According to the passage, the
closest in meaning to production of rings from year
(A) distinguishes to year in any given tree is
(B) recovers (A) random
(C) derives (B) predetermined
(D) returns (C) variable
(D) accelerated
42. The approximate age of a tree can
be determined by 47. The word “reflect” in line 19 is
(A) counting the rings closest in meaning to
(B) analyzing the structure of (A) indicate
the cells (B) affect
(C) examining the cambium (C) confuse
(D) measuring the width of (D) limit
the rings
48. A narrow growth ring between
43. The word “onset” in line 9 is two wide growth rings would
closest in meaning to probably indicate
(A) beginning (A) an unusually warm winter
(B) coldness (B) the death of an old tree
(C) difficulty (C) unfavorable climatic
(D) darkness conditions during a single
year
44. The word “enables” in line 14 is (D) wood cells that had grown
closest in meaning to to be very large
(A) combines
(B) forces 49. Which of the following terms is
(C) encourages defined in the passage?
(D) allows (A) dendrochronology (line 4)
(B) lumens (line 8)
(C) drought (line 20)
(D) template (line 23)
50. The phrase “this pattern”
in line 22 refers to
(A) the change of seasons
(B) different climates in different places
(C) the destruction of
trees and forests
(D) variation in the thickness of
tree rings
1. No spectacle in the universe is
than an exploding star. 5. position of the planet
(A)impressive Earth in relation to the Sun
(B) as impressive is always changing a little
(C) more impressive bit.
(D)the most impressive (A)The
(B)That the
2. The Allegheny and (C)It was the
Monongahela rivers in (D)There was a
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, to
form the Ohio River. 6. Systems of phonetic
(A)meet writing are at
(B)meeting transcribing accurately any
(C) for meeting sequence of speech sounds.
(D)which meet (A)the aim
(B)aimed
3. The horns of a rhinoceros (C)who aims
continue throughout its (D)by aiming
entire lifetime.
(A)it grows 7. In photosynthesis,
(B) to grow through which green plants
(C) they grow manufacture food, energy from
(D)grow direct sunlight is trapped by a
substance called chlorophyll.
4. Mathematics helps (A)that the process
meteorologists to predict the (B)is a process
weather more accurately, to (C)the process
calculate the speed of storms, (D)in which the process
and
(A)for the wind to blow 8. and hard, ivory may be
determines carved with great delicacy into
(B)causes the wind blowing intricate patterns.
to determine (A)Because of its density
(C)to determine what causes (B)Because it is dense
the wind to blow (C)May be dense
(D)determine the wind’s (D)Its density
blowing
9. A solar eclipse occurs when the 12. Lillian Wald’s lies in the
Moon is between the Sun and field of public health
the Earth, shadow of the nursing.
Moon moves across the face of (A)contribution was most
the Earth. distinctive
(A)and the (B)whose most distinctive
(B)and it is the contribution
(C)that the (C)most contributions are
(D)that it is the distinctive
(D)most distinctive
10. The spectacularly beautiful contribution
and sultry voice of Lena Horne
made her 13. Fine rubies of flaws are
(A)being a nationally extremely rare and command
celebrated vocalist high prices.
(B)a vocalist was (A)free
nationally celebrated (B) are free
(C)as nationally celebrated (C) which free
vocalist (D)when are they free
(D)a nationally celebrated
vocalist 14. In some parts of the world,
not only a form of
11. The existence of very long entertainment, but it is also a
channels into the deep- means of communication.
sea floor of the Atlantic and (A)whistling
Pacific oceans has been well (B) is whistling
documented. (C) that whistling is
(A)are cut (D)why is whistling
(B)cuts
(C)to cut 15. Invented in the 1780’s,
(D)cutting threshing machines enabled
farmers to process grain
they could by hand.
(A)than much faster
(B) much than faster
(C) much faster than
(D)faster than much
16. Patients they suffer from common arthritis can be treated using heat, physical
A B C D
therapy, and aspirin.
17. Forests contain more than merely tree; they also include smaller plants,
A B
such as mosses, shrubs, and wild flowers.
C D
19. The modern racing bicycle is carefully engineered for safety, lightness,
and A B C
reliable.
D
20. On 1954 the United States Supreme Court ruled on the case of Brown v.
A B
Board of Education, declaring segregated education unconstitutional.
C D
21. Because glass objects are fragile, least have survived from ancient
civilizations. A B C D
22. An important effect that criticism can have on contemporary poets is the
A B
assurance that there is a growing interest their work.
C D
23. Music festivals, which date back as far as the mid-seventeenth century, have
A
increased significantly in popular within the past few decades.
B C D
24. Human skin is a complex, sensitive organ that serves many functions
necessary A B C
for the maintain of life.
D
25. Space photography and advanced measurement technology, including a
A B
laser reflector placed on the Moon, have possible made extremely precise
C D
measurements of the surfaces of the Earth.
26. The scale of the demographic change that are now occurring and that are
A
projected for the near future is unprecedented in human history.
B C D
27. The paintings of artist Abraham Rattner are noted for their brilliant color, rich
A B C
texture, and symbolic.
D
28. Between the high and low tidemarks of marine coasts existing abundant and
A B
varied plant and animal
life. C D
29. The total amount of water in the world’s ecological system has remained the
A B
same than throughout the ages.
C D
30. Butterflies and moths comprise the Lepidoptera order of insects find
A B
throughout most of the world.
C D
31. The planet Neptune has two known satellites: one about the size with Earth’s
A B C D
Moon, the other much smaller.
32. Harry Truman’s victory over Thomas Dewey was one of the biggest surprise in
A B C
the political history of the United States.
D
33. The narwhal resembles like other whales, but it has a long, spiral tusk
growing A B C
from its head.
D
In exchange for best known for her roles in such silently films as The Birth of a
requ A B C D
irin Nation and Broken Blossoms.
g
the 36. Oraibi, Arizona, built by the Hopi Indians during 1100’s, is
m probably the oldest A
disc
lose B
the continuous inhabited settlement in the United States.
wor C D
king
s 37.It may take several hundred years to build
their inch of topsoil. A B C
inve D
ntio
ns, 38. Known for power, speed, and maneuverability, the goshawk has short
A wings
A
B and a long tail, enabling them to dodge branches in pursuit of prey.
patents B C D
give
inventor 39. Lubrication is essential in machinery because if the moving part of a
s machine
tempora A B
ry, come into direct contact with each other, friction interferes with motion.
legally C D
monopo
lies. 40. One basic principle of international air law recognize a country’s
C complete
A B
35. sovereignty over the airspace above its territory.
C D
Questions 1-9
Calvin Coolidge was President of the United States during the triumphant
reign of prosperity that made the twenties “golden,” and this prosperity had very
real roots. Although there had been a brief but sharp postwar depression in 1920
Lin
and 1921, American industry made a quick recovery. Largely responsible for the
e
industrial boom that followed was the introduction of new products into
5
American life. For example, on the eve of the First World War, only half a million
automobiles were being produced annually, but during the twenties production
reached nearly five million units per year. Furthermore, the new auto industry
created demands on older industries for products such as rubber, copper, glass,
steel, and fabrics. It called for the building of paved roads across the nation
10
and brought about the tremendous expansion of the oil and gasoline refining
industries, along with the construction of thousands of gasoline stations, which
broke out like a rash of measles over the countryside. Basic industries expanded
as well – coal, steel, machine tools, clothing, and, most dramatically of all, the
new electric power industry.
15 For the first time, average citizens were buying cars, radios (another new and
booming industry), refrigerators, and a host of other new consumer products.
The poor seemed to be getting richer, and certainly the rich were getting richer.
For the well-to-do, the business civilization of the twenties seemed to promise all
that could be expected “this side of paradise,” as F. Scott Fitzgerald titled one of
20 his most popular novels. But paradise in the twenties had two sides. On the far
side of paradise during the golden decade lived the majority of American
farmers.
1. According to the passage, 3. The phrase “called for” in line 10
when did the United States is closest in meaning to
experience a brief depression? (A)named
(A)In the late nineteenth (B)required
century (C)described
(B) Before the First World War (D)considered
(C) During the First World War
(D)In the early 1920’s 4. According to the passage,
the growth in automobile
2. The word “boom” in line 5 production caused an increase in
is closest in meaning to the demand for
(A)noise (A)rubber
(B) strike (B)mass produced clothing
(C)expansion (C)electric power
(D)market (D)radios
5. According to the passage, all
of the following were 6. The word “host” in line 17
relatively new in the 1920’s is closest in meaning to
EXCEPT (A)entertainer
(A)steel (B) representative sample
(B)radios (C) business investment
(C)automobiles (D)large number
(D)refrigerators
7. It can be inferred from the
passage that the characters in
the novel This Side of
Paradise are
(A)wealthy people
(B) industrious farmers
(C) creative writers
(D)average citizens
Lin 15
e
5
20
includes references to flight. From ancient winged deities to a score of myths,
Questions 20- themes of flight occur repeatedly.
29 There were undoubtedly sporadic attempts to achieve human flight, probably in
V imitation of birds. The first credible mention of such efforts appeared in a book
irt written in 1250, which referred to an ornithopter, a winged machine strapped
ua to a person’s arms. Based on the flapping motion of a bird’s wings, an ornithopter
lly would require a good deal of muscular energy from the arms of its human operator.
ev Since this was not a practical source of mechanical power, it could not fly.
er With the age-old problem of suitable power sources impeding early
y experiments, the first person to leave the surface of the Earth did so in the
ep eighteenth century in a balloon. The first balloons were buoyed into and kept up
oc in the air with air itself – hot air. The Montgolfier brothers had observed that
h warm air rose, and reasoned that if they could capture it in a lightweight bag, the
of bag would rise along with anything attached to it. They experimented with
hu several small linen bags lined with paper to help retain the hot air. The first free
m flight in a balloon was made in 1783, a 25-minute journey totaling 8 kilometers.
an Practical heavier-than-air flight evolved from fixed-wing aircraft in the form of
ci gliders, which are motorless aircraft that are launched from high places. Gliding
vil itself dated from the year 1000, when a Benedictine monk reportedly launched
iza himself from a tower and flew more than 400 meters. However, structural
tio and stability problems seemed to frustrate gliding enthusiasts until the early
n nineteenth century. With the addition of propellers and engines in the early
twentieth century, airplanes at last became a reality.
20. What does the passage the ornithopter?
mainly discuss? (A)It was poorly constructed.
(A)Early drawings of (B)It could only hold one
flying machines person.
(B)The history of flight (C)It had to be launched
(C)The various problems from a high place.
with ornithopters (D)It required more strength
(D)References to flight in than a human could
ancient myths provide.
21. The word “sporadic” in 23. The word “it” in line 8 refers
line 3 is closest in meaning to
to (A)source
(A)scientific (B)motion
(B)successful (C)ornithopter
(C)occasional (D)power
(D)courageous
22. According to the passage,
what was the problem with
imitating the flight
24. The word “buoyed” in line of birds.
11 is closest in (C)The evolution of
meaning to flight has been a
(A)collapsed steady, consistent
(B)designed process.
(C)attempted (D)Flying enthusiasts
(D)raised still prefer gliders
to balloons.
25. The word “it” in line 13
refers to
(A)balloon 28. Where in the passage does the
author mention an historical
(B)warm air
account of early attempts at
(C)lightweight bag flight?
(D)paper (A)Lines 4-6
26. What can be inferred (B)Lines 9-11
about gliders that
(C)Lines 17-18
were made before
the nineteenth (D)Lines 22-23
century?
(A)They could not 29. The passage probably
be easily continues with a
transported. discussion of
(B)They relied on (A)the dangers of ballooning
hot air to lift (B)the development of
them off of the airplanes
ground. (C)similarities between early
(C)They were not and modern gliders
well designed. (D)attempts to improve the
(D)They remained ornithopter
airborne for
long periods of
time.
27. Which of the following
statements is
supported by the
passage?
(A)Humans have
always had a
fascination with
flying.
(B)The success of
human flight
depended on
Questions 30-39
The Comstock Lode in Nevada was the scene of one of the biggest silver
mining booms in the history of the opening up of the North American West. It was
discovered in 1859, but productivity did not reach its peak until the 1870’s when
Lin many large silver deposits were discovered. A large number of mines are scattered
e along the five-kilometer length of the lode, which is basically a mineralized fault
5 zone, separating geologically young andesite and dacite lavas from older rocks.
The lode forms a flattish sheet, inclined at about 40 degrees to the horizontal,
and reaches a maximum thickness of 120 meters and a depth of 1,000 meters,
although most of the richest ore was found well above this level.
As in so many of the world’s mines, the mining operations on the Comstock
10 Lode were severely hampered by water flooding into the workings. At Comstock,
though, the problems were particularly acute, since the water was extremely hot,
reaching 64 degrees Celsius in some places. Geologically, the presence of such
large volumes of hot water was immensely significant, since it implied that
beneath the Comstock Lode there was still a large mass of hot igneous rock that
15 might be producing more mineralization. For a long while this near-scalding water
made it impossible to mine much below the 1,000-meter level, and many miners
were killed by it, either directly by falling into the water or indirectly through the
effects of overexertion in the very high temperatures of the mine galleries.
No fewer than 53 miners died in one period of 22 months ending in May 1877.
20 To combat this it was decided to dig a six-kilometer-long tunnel to drain and
ventilate the upper parts of the mine workings. This tunnel, which became known
as the Sutro Tunnel, took many years of extremely hard work to complete, and
the succession of physical obstacles and financial crises that were successfully
overcome in its construction have become legendary, comparable in some ways
25 with the heroic engineering involved in the laying of the first transcontinental
railway across the United States.
30. The word “It” in line 2 refers to 32. Where in the passage does the
(A)Comstock Lode author describe a lode?
(B)history (A)Lines 4-6
(C)productivity (B)Lines 10-11
(D)peak (C)Lines 13-16
(D)Lines 21-22
31. The word “scattered” in line 4
is closest in meaning to 33. What is the main idea of the
(A)combined second paragraph?
(B)spread out (A)The Comstock Lode mines
(C)easily identified were the most successful in
(D)preserved North American history.
(B)The Comstock Lode mines
had severe problems 34. The word “hampered” in line 11
affecting their operation. is closest in meaning to
(C)The transcontinental (A)overwhelmed
railroad made mines (B)deepened
profitable. (C)prolonged
(D)Thousands of workers were (D)disrupted
employed in the
35. The word “acute” in line 12
Comstock Lode mines.
is closest in meaning to
(A)fiery
(B)unsolvable
(C) serious
(D)sensitive
Lin
e
5
10
15
20
heir powerful beaks to excavate nest holes in tree trunks, drilling first of all a neat
Questions 40- horizontal hole, then chiseling downward for a foot or so and there cutting out a
50 chamber. They frequently choose dead trees, no doubt because the rotting wood is
W softer to work than that of living trees. Such trees also are usually infected by
o bark beetles, which provide a rich food supply conveniently near at hand.
o The drumming noise made by the rapid blows of a woodpecker’s beak on a
d tree trunk is one of the most characteristic sounds of the forest. The birds do not
p produce it solely when they are feeding or excavating a nest. They beat tattoos
e on echoing timber for the same reason that other birds sing, to declare possession
c of a territory and to attract a mate. Each species has its own length of drumroll
k with its own characteristic interval between one burst and the next.
e Different species of the woodpecker family specialize in different foods.
r The green woodpecker, as well as taking bark-boring beetles, often descends to
s the ground to forage for ants. The wryneck is even more dependent upon ants.
It is not primarily a climber at all and lacks the stiff propping tail of other
a woodpeckers, but it does have the usual long sticky tongue, which it flicks into
l a nest of ants to bring out 150 of them at a time. The acorn woodpecker exploits
s its wood-boring skills by drilling neat holes in tree trunks, the diameter of
o which exactly accommodates acorns. It will cover a favored tree with several
hundred such holes and store several acorns in each of them, so accumulating a
u massive larder for the winter. An even more specialized group within the
s family, the sapsuckers, bore holes in tree trunks for a quite different purpose. They
e choose living trees of species that produce liberal flows of sap and drill
numerous small, squarish holes in them. The liquid that trickles out attracts
t insects that the sapsucker collects and then mixes with the sap to produce a
little sweetmeat.
40. What does the passage mainly (B)protect
discuss? (C)clean
(A)The sounds made by (D)investigate
different species of
birds 42. The word “that” in line 4 refers to
(B)The characteristics of one (A)hole
kind of bird (B)chamber
(C)The importance of insects (C)wood
as a food source for birds (D)supply
(D)The damage done to trees
43. It can be inferred from the
by one species of birds
passage that the different
41. The word “excavate” in line 1 species of woodpeckers can be
is closest in meaning to identified by the
(A)dig (A)melody of their song
(B)design of their nest
(C)pattern of the drumming 44. The word “interval” in line 12
noise they make is closest in meaning to
(D)size of their beak (A)note
(B)pause
(C)call
(D)tapping
42