Section Two: Structure and Written Expression
Section Two: Structure and Written Expression
Section Two: Structure and Written Expression
1. Geothermal energy is a potentially inexhaustible energy source ______been tapped by humans for
centuries but, until recent years, only on a small scale.
(A) has it
(B) has
(C) that has
(D) that it has
2. The importance of the hand, and more generally of the body, in children's acquisition
of arithmetic_____.
(A) can hardly be exaggerated
(B) hardly exaggerated can be
(C) can be exaggerate hardly
3. ______ is present in the body in greater amounts than any other mineral.
(A) Calcium
(B) There is calcium
(C) Calcium, which
(D) It is calcium
4. _______ the evidence is inconclusive, it is thought that at least some seals have an echolocation
system akin to that of bats, porpoises, and shrews.
(A) Rather
(B) Despite
(C) Although
(D) Why
5. The total mass of all asteroids in the solar system is much less ______ mass of Earth's Moon.
(A) than that is the
(B) than the
(C) the
(D) is the
7. ______main processes involved in virtually all manufacturing: extraction, assembly, and alteration.
(A) There are three
(B) Three
(C) The three
9. Salamanders are sometime confused with lizards, but unlike lizards ________no scales or claws.
(A) that they have
(B) to have
(C) they have
(D) are having
10. The province of Alberta lies along three of the major North American flyways Used by birds
_______between their winter and summer homes.
11. Astronomers estimate ______called the Pleiades in the constellation Taurus is 415 light-
years away from Earth.
(A) that a loose cluster of stars
12. Pearl Sydenstricker Buck, _____ the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1938, is Best known for her
novels about China.
(A) won
(B) winner of
(C) to win
(D) who the winner of
13. Stage producers Klaw and Erlanger were the first to eliminate arguments among leading
performers _______in order of appearance, instead of prominence.
(A) of whom list the program
(B) the program listing
(C) for them the program listed
14. During the decades after the United States Civil War, a host of technical advances made possible
______and uniformity of railroad service.
(A) a new integration
15. Forests stabilize _____and retain precipitation, thereby helping to prevent erosion and regulate the
flow of streams.
(A) to the soil
(B) the soil
16. Modern societies are such complex that they could not exist without
A B C
17. Altitude, climate, temperature, and the length of the growing season both
A B C
determine Where plants will grow.
D
18. The bathyscaphe, a free-moving vessel designed for underwater exploration,
A
A B
C D
velocity is the relationship between the vehicle's mass and the amount
B C
D
21.There were once only eight major lakes or reservoirs in Texas, but today there are over 180, many
A B C
built to storing water against periodic droughts.
D
22. All harmonized music that is not contrapuntal depends from the relationship
A B
of chords, which are either consonant or dissonant.
C D
23. Expressionist drama often shows the influence of modern psychology by reflecting the
A B C
frustrations inner of the dramatist.
D
24. It is the number, kind, and arrange of teeth that determine whether a mammal
A B C
is classified as a carnivore not the food that the animal actually eats.
D
25. The sea otter is well adapted at its marine existence, with ears and nostrils
A B C
that can be closed under water.
D
26. Petroleum, which currently makes up about four-tenths of the world's energy
A
production, supplies more commercial energy than any another source.
B C D
D
28. Through experiments with marine organisms, marine biologists can increase
A B
our knowledge of human reproductive and development as well as our understanding
C D
of the nervous system.
29. When swollen by melting snow or heavy rain, some rivers routinely overflow
A B C
its banks.
D
30. In 1884 Belva Lockwood, a lawyer who had appeared before the Supreme Court,
A B
became the first woman was nominated for President of the United States.
C D
31. The taller of all animals, a full-grown giraffe may be eighteen feet or more high.
A B C
D 32. Physicists have known since the early nineteenth century that all
A B
matter is made up of tiny extremely particles called atoms.
C D
33. Rain is slight acidic even in unpolluted air, because carbon dioxide
A B
in the atmosphere and other natural acid-forming gases dissolve in the
C D
water.
34. In a stock company, a troupe of actors performs in
A
a particular theater, presenting plays from its repertory of prepare
B C D
productions.
35. Established in 1860, the Government Printing Office prints and binds
A B
C D
B C
of humans and their culture.
D
37. The one-fluid theory of electricity was proposing by
A B
A
and does not adhere the Limits of conventional form.
B C D
A B C
muscle weakness common.
Questions 1-9
Glass fibers have a long history. The Egyptians made coarse fibers by 1600 B.C., and fibers
survive as decorations on Egyptian pottery dating back to 1375 B c. During the Renaissance
(fifteenth and sixteenth centuries A.D.), glassmakers from Venice used glass Line fibers to
decorate the surfaces of plain glass vessels. However, glassmakers guarded their
(5) secrets so carefully that no one wrote about glass fiber production until the early
seventeenth century.
The eighteenth century brought the invention of "spun glass" fibers. Rene-Antoine
de Reaumur, a French scientist, tried to make artificial feathers from glass. He made
fibers by rotating a wheel through a pool of molten glass, pulling threads of glass
where the hot
(10) thick liquid stuck to the wheel. His fibers were short and fragile, but he predicted
that spun glass fibers as thin as spider silk would be flexible and could be woven into
fabric. By the start of the nineteenth century, glassmakers learned how to make
longer, stronger fibers by pulling them from molten glass with a hot glass tube.
Inventors wound the cooling end of the thread around a yarn reel, then turned the reel
rapidly to pull more fiber
(15) from the molten glass. Wandering tradespeople began to spin glass fibers at fairs, making
decorations and ornaments as novelties for collectors, but this material was of little
practical use; the fibers were brittle, ragged, and no longer than ten feet, the circumference
of the largest reels. By the mid-1870's, however, the best glass fibers were finer than silk
and could be woven into fabrics or assembled into imitation ostrich feathers to decorate
(20) hats. Cloth of white spun glass resembled silver; fibers drawn from yellow-orange
glass looked golden.
Glass fibers were little more than a novelty until the 1930's, when their thermal and
electrical insulating properties were appreciated and methods for producing continuous
filaments were developed. In the modern manufacturing process, liquid glass is fed
(25) directly from a glass-melting furnace into a bushing, a receptacle pierced with hundreds
of fine nozzles, from which the liquid issues in fine streams. As they solidify, the streams
of glass are gathered into a single strand and wound onto a reel.
(D) weak
(B) decorations
(C) ornaments
(D) novelties for collectors
(C) hairy
(D) shiny
(D) increased
Questions 10-19
(5) The ever-watchful plover can detect a possible threat at a considerable distance. When
she does, the nesting bird moves inconspicuously off the nest to a spot well away from
eggs or chicks. At this point she may use one of several ploys. One technique involves
first moving quietly toward an approaching animal and then setting off noisily through
the grass or brush in a low, crouching run away from the nest, while emitting rodent like
(10) squeaks. The effect mimics a scurrying mouse or vole, and the behavior rivets the
attention of the type of predators that would also be interested in eggs and chicks.
Another deception begins with quiet movement to an exposed and visible location well
away from the nest. Once there, the bird pretends to incubate a brood. When the predator
approaches, the parent flees, leaving the false nest to be searched. The direction in which
(15) the plover "escapes" is such that if the predator chooses to follow, it will be led still
further away from the true nest.
The plover's most famous stratagem is the broken-wing display, actually a continuum
(20) bird appears to be attempting escape along an irregular route that indicates panic. In the
most extreme version of the display, the bird flaps one wing in an apparent attempt to
take to the air, flops over helplessly, struggles back to its feet, runs away a short distance,
seemingly attempts once more to take off, flops over again as the "useless" wing fails to
provide any lift, and so on. Few predators fail to pursue such obviously vulnerable prey.
Needless to say, each short run between "flight attempts" is directed away from the nest.
(D) at first
12. Which of the following is mentioned
in the passage about plovers?
(A) Their eggs and chicks are difficult to
find.
(D) explaining
(B) notice
(C) defend
(D) chase
Questions 20-28
Line phenomenon, dating back in the United States about 150 years, and in the Western world
(5) as a whole not over 300 years at most. Even in this current era of large scale, intensive
research and development, the interrelationships involved in this process are frequently
misunderstood. Until the coming of the Industrial Revolution, science and technology
evolved for the most part independently of each other. Then as industrialization became
increasingly complicated, the craft techniques of preindustrial society gradually gave way
(15) Nevertheless, by the middle of the nineteenth century, the rapid expansion of scientific
knowledge and of public awareness-if not understanding-of it had created a belief that
the advance of science would in some unspecified manner automatically generate
economic benefits. The widespread and usually uncritical acceptance of this thesis led in
turn to the assumption that the application of science to industrial purposes was a linear
process, starting
(20) with fundamental science, then proceeding to applied science or technology, and
through them to industrial use. This is probably the most common pattern, but it is not
invariable. New areas of science have been opened up and fundamental discoveries made
as a result of attempts to solve a specific technical or economic problem. Conversely,
scientists who mainly do basic research also serve as consultants on projects that apply
research in practical ways.
(25) In sum, the science-technology-industry relationship may flow in several different ways,
and the particular channel it will follow depends on the individual situation. It may at times
even be multidirectional.
(B) realistically
(C) individually
(D) understandably
22. The word "intensive" in line 5 is
closest in meaning to
(A) decreased
(B) concentrated
(C) creative
(D) advanced
Questions 29-39
(5) Determined to portray life as it was, with fidelity to real life and accurate representation
without idealization, they studied local dialects, wrote stories which focused on life in
specific regions of the country, and emphasized the "true" relationships between people. In
doing so, they reflected broader trends in the society, such as industrialization,
evolutionary theory which emphasized the effect of the environment on humans, and the
(10) influence of science.
Realists such as Joel Chandler Harris and Ellen Glasgow depicted life in the South;
Hamlin Garland described life on the Great Plains; and Sarah One Jewett wrote about
everyday life in rural New England. Another realist, Bret Harte, achieved fame with
stories that portrayed local life in the California mining camps.
(15) Samuel Clemens, who adopted the pen name Mark Twain, became the country's most
outstanding realist author, observing life around him with a humorous and skeptical eye. In
his stories and novels, Twain drew on his own experiences and used dialect and common
speech instead of literary language, touching off a major change in American prose style.
Other writers became impatient even with realism. Pushing evolutionary theory to its
(20) limits, they wrote of a world in which a cruel and merciless environment
determined human fate. These writers, called naturalists, often focused on
economic hardship, studying people struggling with poverty, and other aspects of
urban and industrial life. Naturalists brought to their writing a passion for direct
and honest experience. Theodore Dreiser, the foremost naturalist writer, in novels
such as Sister Carrie, grimly
(25) portrayed a dark world in which human beings were tossed about by forces beyond
their understanding or control. Dreiser thought that writers should tell the truth about
human affairs, not fabricate romance, and Sister Carrie, he said, was "not intended as a
piece of literary craftsmanship, but was a picture of conditions."
(C) entered
(D) generalized
(B) described
(C) criticized
(D) classified
(D) leading
New York, Chicago, and Philadelphia. By 1930, it had ten giant metropolises. The
newer ones experienced remarkable growth, which reflected basic changes in the
economy. Line The population of Los Angeles (114,000 in 1900) rose spectacularly
in the early
(5) decades of the twentieth century, increasing a dramatic 1,400 percent from 1900 to 1930.
A number of circumstances contributed to the meteoric rise of Los Angeles. The
agricultural potential of the area was enormous if water for irrigation could be found,
and the city founders had the vision and dating to obtain it by constructing a 225-mile
aqueduct, completed in 1913, to tap the water of the Owens River. The city had a superb
(10) natural harbor, as well as excellent rail connections. The climate made it possible to shoot
motion pictures year-round; hence Hollywood. Hollywood not only supplied jobs; it
disseminated an image of the good life in Southern California on screens all across the
nation. The most important single industry powering the growth of Los Angeles, however,
was directly linked to the automobile. The demand for petroleum to fuel gasoline engines
(15) led to the opening of the Southern California oil fields, and made Los Angeles
North America's greatest refining center.
Los Angeles was a product of the auto age in another sense as well: its distinctive
spatial organization depended on widespread private ownership of automobiles. Los
Angeles was a decentralized metropolis, sprawling across the desert landscape over an
(20) area of 400 square miles. It was a city without a real center. The downtown business
district did not grow apace with the city as a whole, and the rapid transit system designed
to link the center with outlying areas withered away from disuse. Approximately 800,000
cars were registered in Los Angeles County in 1930, one per 2.7 residents. Some visitors
from the east coast were dismayed at the endless urban sprawl and dismissed Los
(25) Angeles as a mere collection of suburbs in search of a city. But the freedom and mobility
of a city built on wheels attracted floods of migrants to the city.
(D) methodical
(A) farming
(B) oil refining