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Inspiration for the themes in Inuit art is intimately tied to personal experience of the
Canadian Arctic land and its animals, camp and family life, hunting , spirituality, and mythology.
In telling the story of their people through this wide array subject, inuits artists have created an
almost encyclopedic visual catalog of traditional (and to a lesser extent transitional and modern)
Inuit culture.
Animals play a vital role in the everyday lives of Inuit, and only in the past few decades
has the people’s absolute dependence on them lessened. Not too long ago, procuring food and
other necessities depended solely on successful hunts, which in turn depended upon proper
preparation and luck, in addition to the strict observance of taboos and respect for the sosul of the
prey. As a consequence, animals constitute the prime inspiration for many Inuit artists,
particularly in sculpture.
Based on years of observing and tracking prey, Inuit wildlife art shows a keen awareness
of the physical characteristics, habits, and seasonal changes in animals. Some artists display a
high degree of naturalistic detail, but others prefer to exaggerate certain physical attributes for
effect. In general, while most inuit artists strive for a realistic presentation, they seem more
concerned with capturing the essence of an animal’s spirit.
Animals may be portrayed singly, in small groups, or in scenes that involve both hunter
and prey. Pictorial arts often show the chase, while sculptures focus more on the final
confrontation of hunter and prey, often with considerable drama. The hunter may be human or
one of the great Arctic predators such as the polar bear, owl, hawk, or wolt.
Scenes of everyday life, which include camp scenes, games entertainment, are common
to all forms of Inuit art, and activities sre far more prevalent than modern aspects of Inuit
community life. Camp-related themes mostly potray woman engaged in domestic contests
involve both individuals and the community, and drum dancing is a form of entertainment that
also has conciderable spiritual significance.
3. According to the first paragraph, which of the following is a true description of Inuit art?
a. It presents a nearly complete picture of Inuit life
b. It covers one aspect of Inuit life thoroughly
c. It focuses mainly on scenes of Inuit camp and family life
d. It is the main way Inuit myths are passed from one generation to another
5. According to the second paragraph, which of the following is most likely to be the
subject of an Inuit sculpture?
a. Observance of taboos
b. Inuit life in the past few decades
c. Preparation for a hunt
d. An animal
8. According to the third paragraph which of the following is the primary concern of most
Inuit artists?
a. Depicting seasonal changes in animals
b. Demonstrating accurate naturalistic detail
c. Exaggerating physical characteristics for dramatic effect
d. Revealing the essence of their subject’s spirit
9. According to the fifth paragraph, which of the following types of activities would be
LEAST likely to be represented in Inuit art?
a. Woman sewing clothes
b. Modern activities
c. Community games
d. Drum dancing
6. It can be inferred from the second paragraph that by accidentally spilling grains near
their campsites, early humans most likely learned
a. How to cultivate crops
b. That grains could be used as a food source
c. How to increase their crop yields
d. How to combine seeds to create a superior type of grain
9. It can be inferred that the cultivated crop plant becomes ‘’more and more dependent
on the humans who cultivate it” (line 33-34)
a. Its stalk needs to be strengthened
b. It needs to be protected from cold
c. It needs to be planted on grasslands
The principal difference between urban growth in Europe and in the American colonies was the
slow evolution of cities in the former and their rapid growth in the latter. In Europe they grew
over a period of centuries from town economies to their present urban structure. In North
America, they started as wilderness communities and developed to mature urbanisms in little
more than a century.
In the early colonial day in North America, small cities sprang up along the Atlantic Coastline,
mostly in what is now New America, United States and in the lower Saint Lawrence valley in
Canada. This was natural because these areas were nearest England and France, particularly
England, from which most capital goods (assets such as equipment) and many consumer goods
were imported merchandising establishments were, accordingly, advantageously located in port
cities from where goods could be readily distributed to interior settlement. Here, too, were the
favoured locations for processing raw materials prior to export. Boston, Philadelphia, New York,
Montreal, and other cities flourished, and, as the colonies grew, these cities increased in
importance.
This was less true in the colonial South, where life centred on large farms, known as plantations,
rather than around towns, as was the case in the areas further north along the Atlantic coastline.
The local isolation and the economic self – sufficiency of the plantations were antagonistic to the
development of the towns. The plantations maintained their independence because they were
located on navigable streams and each had a wharf accessible to the small shipping of that day.
In fact, one of the strongest factors in the selection of plantation land was the desire to have it
front on a water highway.
When the United States became an independent nation in 1776, it did not have a single city as
large as 50,000 inhabitants, but by 1820 it had a city of more than 10,000 people, and by 1880 it
had recorded a city of over one million. It was not until 1823, after the mechanization of the
spinning had weaving industries that cities started drawing young people away from farms. Such
migration was particularly rapid following the Civil War (1861 – 1865).
3. The passage compares early European and North American cities on the basis of which of
the following?
a. Their economic success
b. They type of merchandise they exported.
c. Their ability to distribute goods to interior settlements
d. The pace of their development
5. According to the passage, early colonial cities were established along the Atlantic
coastline of North America due to:
a. An abundance of natural resources
b. Financial support from colonial governments
c. Proximity to parts of Europe
d. A favourable climate
6. The passage indicates that during colonial times, the Atlantic coastline cities prepared
which of the following for shipment to Europe?
a. Manufacturing equipment
b. Capital goods
c. Consumer goods
d. Raw materials
7. According to the passage, all of the following aspects of the plantation system influenced
the growth of southern cities EXCEPT the:
a. Location of the plantations
b. Access of plantation owners to shipping
c. Relationships between plantation residents and city residents
d. Economic self – sufficiency of the plantation
8. It can be inferred from the passage that, in comparison with northern cities, most southern
cities were:
a. more prosperous
b. smaller
c. less economically self-sufficient
d. tied less closely to England than to France
11. The passage mentions the period following the Civil War (line 28 – 29) because it was a
time of:
a. Significant obstacles to industrial growth
b. Decreased dependence on foreign trade
c. Increased numbers of people leaving employment on farms
d. Increased migration from northern states to southern states
Although management principles have been implemented since ancient times,
most management scholars trace the beginning of modern management thought back to
the early 1900s, beginning with the pioneering work of Frederick Taylor (1856-1915)
Taylor was the first person to study work scientifically. He is most famous for introducing
(5)techniques of time and motion study, differential piece rate systems, and for systematically
specializing the work of operating employees and managers. Along with other pioneers
such as Frank and Lillian Gilbreth, Taylor set the stage, labeling his philosophy and
methods “scientific management’. At that time, his philosophy, which was concerned with
productivity, but which was often misinterpreted as promoting worker interests at the
(10)expense of management, was in marked contrast to the prevailing industrial norms of
worker exploitation.
The time and motion study concepts were popularized by Frank and Lillian Gilbreth.
The Gilbreths had 12 children. By analyzing his children’s dishwashing and bedmaking
chores, this pioneer efficiency expert, Frank Gilbreth, hit on principles whereby workers
(15)could eliminate waste motion. He was memorialized by two of his children in their 1949
book called “Cheaper by the Dozen”.
The Gilbreth methods included using stop watches to time worker movements and
special tools (cameras and special clocks) to monitor and study worker performance, and
also involved identification of “therbligs” (Gilbreth spelled backwards) – basic motions
(20)used in production jobs. Many of these motions and accompanying times have been used
to determine how long it should take a skilled worker to perform a given job. In this way an
industrial engineer can get a handle on the approximate time it should take to produce a
product or provide a service. However, use of work analysis in this way is unlikely to lead
to useful results unless all five work dimensions are considered: physical, psychological,
social, cultural, and power.
5. According to the passage, Frank Gilbreth discovered how workers could eliminate waste
motion by
a. using special tools such as cameras and clocks
b. using stop watches
c. applying scientific management principles
d. watching his children do their chores
6. The basic motions used in production jobs were given which one of following names by
Frank Gilbreth?
a. Dimensions
b. Gilreths
c. Therbligs
d. Monitors
7. According to the passage, the time it takes a skilled worker to perform the motion of a
given job can be measured by using:
a. stop watches
b. all five work dimension
c. special tools
d. therbligs
9. Where in the passage does the author comment that the principles of scientific
management were often misunderstood?
a. Lines 1-5
b. Lines 6-10
c. Lines 11-15
d. Lines 16-20
American reaction against imported books for children set in after the War of 1812 with the
British. A wave of nationalism permeated everything, and the self-conscious new nation found
foreign writings (particularly those from the British monarchy) unsuitable for the children of a
democratic republic, a slate of self-governing, equal citizens. Publishers of children's books
began to encourage American writers to write for American children. When they responded, the
pattern established by Maria Edgeworth was at hand, attractive to most of them for both its
rationalism and its high moral tone. Early in the 1820's, stories of willful children learning to
obey, of careless children learning to take care, of selfish children learning to "tire for others,"
started to flow from American presses, successfully achieving Edgeworth's tone, though rarely
her lively style. Imitative as they were, these early American stories wee quite distinguishable
from their British counterparts.
Few servants appeared in them, and if class distinctions had by no means disappeared, there was
much democratic insistence on the worthiness of every level of birth and work. The characters of
children in this fiction were serious, conscientious, self -reflective, and independent-testimony to
the continuing influence of the earlier American moralistic tradition in children's books.
1. What does the passage mainly discuss?
a. The career of Maria Edgeworth as an author of children's books
b. The development of children's literature in the United States
c. Successful publishers of children's books in Britain and North America
d. Basic dierences between British and American
2. The publisher John Newbery is principally known for which of the following reasons?
a. He produced and sold books written by Maria Edgeworth.
b. He had more inuence on children American children's literature than any other
publisher
c. He published books aimed at amusing children rather than instructing them.
d. He was commercially minded and cheerful.
7. By the end of the eighteenth century, the publishers of children’s looks in the United
States were most concerned about which of the following?
a. Attracting children with entertaining stories that provided lessons of correct behavior
b. Publishing literature consisting of exciting stories that would appeal to both
children and adults
c. Expanding markets for books in both Britain and the United States
d. Reprinting ctional books from earlier in the century
The peopling of the Pacific Islands has been described as the greatest feat of maritime
colonization in human history. Contrary to the conclusions of Thor Heyerdahl's Kon-Tiki
expedition of 1946, the evidence of plant dispersal, archaeology, linguistics, and genetics now
shows quite conclusively that the Pacific Islands were not populated from tile east by South
Americans who drifted on balsa-wood rafts and the prevailing wind and current, but from the
west, by groups from mainland Asia who gradually spread from island to island out into the
Pacific. The process began over 40,000 years ago and reached Easter Island the most isolated
place on Earth-about 1.500 years ago. It ended about 1,000 years ago, when people first settled in
Hawaii and New Zealand.
Simply surviving those ocean crossings of indeterminate length, in open canoes, to arrive on the
shores of uninhabited and hitherto unknown islands, was a formidable achievement. But having
found an oasis of land in a watery wilderness, crossed its reef, and landed, on its shores, the
survivors then faced a series of pressing problems for which solutions had to be found quickly if
the small group was to become a vigorous, self- sustaining island population.
2. Why does the author mention New population of the Pacific York City in line 5?
(A) To emphasize how small the population of the Pacific Islands is
(B) To emphasize the extreme distances between the Pacific Islands and other regions
(C) To note the economic ties of the Pacific Islands to other regions
(D) To note the lack of urban environments on the Pacific Islands
5. Which of the following is NOT mentioned as evidence used to determine the origins of
Pacific Islands people?
(A) Oral histories
(B) Plant dispersal
(C) Linguistics
(D) Archaeology
6. According to the-passage, where did the original inhabitants of the Pacific Islands come
from?
(A) South America
(B) Hawaii
(C) New Zealand
(D) Asia
Similarly, the hieroglyphic writing of the Egyptians remained a mystery until French troops
unearthed the famous Rosetta stone in the late eighteenth century. The stone carried the same
message written in ancient Greek, Egyptian hieroglyphs, and Egyptian hieratic, a simplified form
of hieroglyphs. The Rosetta stone thwarted scholars' efforts for several decades until the early
nineteenth century when several key hieroglyphic phrases were decoded using the Greek
inscriptions. Unfortunately, we have no Old European Rosetta stone to chart correspondences
between Old European script and the languages that replaced it.
Tim incursions of Indo-European tribes into Old Europe from the late fifth to the early third
millennia B.C. caused a linguistic and cultural discontinuity. These incursions disrupted the Old
European sedentary farming lifestyle that had existed for 3,000 years As the Indo-Europeans
encroached on Old Europe from the east, the continent underwent upheavals. These severely
affected the Balkans, where the Old European cultures abundantly employed script. The Old
European way of life deteriorated rapidly, although pockets of Old European culture remained
for several millennia, ~ new peoples spoke completely different languages belonging to the Indo-
European linguistic family. The Old European language or languages, and the script used to
write them, declined and eventually vanished.
1. What does the passage mainly discuss?
(A) Reasons for the failure to understand the written records of Old European
culture
(B) Influences on the development of Old European script
(C) Similarities between Old European script and other ancient writing systems
(D) Events leading to the discovery of Old European script
3. According to the passage, scholars were able to decipher cuneiform script with the help
of
(A) the Sumerian, Akkadian, and Babylonian languages
(B) Old Persian
(C) tablets written in Old European
(D) a language spoken in eighteenth century Iran
7. According to the passage, which of the following is true of the Rosetta stone?
(A) It was found by scholars trying to decode ancient languages.
(B) It contains two versions of hieroglyphic script.
(C) Several of its inscriptions were decoded within a few months of its discovery.
(D) Most of its inscriptions have still not been decoded.
10. The author mentions the Balkans in the passage in order to explain why
(A) Indo-European languages were slow to spread in Old Europe
(B) the inhabitants of Old Europe were not able to prevent Indo-European incursions
(C) the use of the Old European script declined
(D) the Old European culture survived for a time after the Indo-European incursions
Lichens, probably the hardiest of all plants, live where virtually nothing else can---not just on
rugged mountain peaks but also on sunbaked desert rocks. They are usually the first life to
appear on a mountainside that has been scraped bare by an avalanche. Unlike other members of
the plant kingdom, lichens are actually a partnership between two plants. The framework of a
lichen is usually a network of minute hairlike fungus that anchors the plant. The other component
is an alga (similar to the green film of plant life that grows on stagnant pools) that is distributed
throughout the fungus. Being green plants, algae are capable of photosynthesis--that is, using
energy from the Sun to manufacture their own food. The fungi are believed to supply water,
minerals, and physical support to the partnership.
Lichens are famous for their ability to survive ~ water shortage. When water is scarce (as is often
the case on a mountain), lichens may become dormant and remain in that condition for prolonged
periods of time. Some lichens can even grow where there is no rain at all, surviving on only
occasional dew--the moisture that condenses on the surface of the plants at night. And unlike
most other plants, lichens are little affected by the strong ultraviolet rays in the mountains.
Lichens use little energy, for they grow slowly. Some grow so slowly and are so old that they are
called "time stains." You may find lichens that are centuries old; certain of these lichen colonies
have been established for an estimated 2,000 years. For decades, scientists wondered how the
offspring of an alga and a fungus got together to form a new lichen, it seemed unlikely that they
would just happen to encounter one another. It was finally discovered that in many cases the two
partners have never been separated. Stalklike "buds" that form on certain lichens are broken off
by the wind or by animals; these toll or are blown to a new location.
4. The author mentions "the green film of plant life that grows on stagnant pools" (lines 5-6)
in order to explain
(A) how the sun affects lichens
(B) why plants depend on water
(C) where fungi become algae
(D) what algae are
5. It can be inferred from the passage that lichens use less energy and grow more slowly
when
(A) the environment is polluted
(B) they are exposed to ultraviolet rays
(C) they are very old
(D) the supply of water is inadequate
There are two main hypotheses when it comes to explaining the emergence of modern humans.
The ‘Out of Africa’ theory holds that homo sapiens burst onto the scene as a new species around
150,000 to 200,000 years ago in Africa and subsequently replaced archaic humans such as the
Neandertals. The other model, known as multi-regional evolution or regional continuity, posits
far more ancient and diverse roots for our kind. Proponents of this view believe that homo
sapiens arose in Africa some 2 million years ago and evolved as a single species spread across
the Old World, with populations in different regions linked through genetic and cultural
exchange.
Of these two models, Out of Africa, which was originally developed based on fossil evidence,
and supported by much genetic research, has been favored by the majority of evolution scholars.
The vast majority of these genetic studies have focused on DNA from living populations, and
although some small progress has been made in recovering DNA from Neandertal that appears to
support multi-regionalism, the chance of recovering nuclear DNA from early human fossils is
quite slim at present. Fossils thus remain very much a part of the human origins debate.
Another means of gathering theoretical evidence is through bones. Examinations of early modern
human skulls from Central Europe and Australia dated to between 20,000 and 30,000 years old
have suggested that both groups apparently exhibit traits seen in their Middle Eastern and
African predecessors. But the early modern specimens from Central Europe also display
Neandertal traits, and the early modern Australians showed affinities to archaic Homo from
Indonesia. Meanwhile, the debate among paleoanthropologists continues, as supporters of the
two hypotheses challenge the evidence and conclusions of each other.
10. According to the passage, the multi-regional evolution model posits far more diverse
roots for our kind because
(a) Evidence from examinations of early modern human skulls has come from a number
of different parts of the world.
(b) DNA from Neandertal appears to support multi-regionalism
(c) Populations in different regions were linked through genetic and cultural
exchange
(d) This has been supported by fossil evidence