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5. All science is ---- the fact that every natural


1. - 16.sorularda, cümlede boş bırakılan
event has a natural cause..
yerlere uygun düşen sözcük ya da ifadeyi
bulunuz.
A) come across

B) put through
1. In the Philippines, with its numerous scandals
and continuing power struggle, the public is C) carried on
frustrated, and economic ---- is in jeopardy..
D) based on

A) progress E) set off

B) decline 6. An important aspect of the application of


mathematics is that different ways of making
C) recession
mathematical sense of everyday questions -
D) depression --- different answers..

E) failure
A) keep up

2. The world’s forests provide many ---- B) bring over


benefits, such as prevention of soil erosion,
as well as commercially important timber.. C) lead to

D) show off
A) severe
E) find out
B) dependent
7. Twenty years ago, the study of aging ----
C) extinct
as somewhat misdirected, but now it ---- into
D) desperate an important science..

E) valuable
A) was regarded / has developed

3. In an aircraft, the cabin lights are dimmed B) had been regarded / would develop
during take-off and landing to help
passengers to ---- themselves to darkness in C) has been regarded / would be developing
the event of an emergency..
D) would have been regarded / had developed

A) modify E) was being regarded / has been developing

B) accustom 8. A theory ---- only when a hypothesis ----


by consistent results from many observations
C) resume
or experiment..
D) associate
A) may have been developed / was being
E) relate
supported

4. In cancer care, Britain still compares ---- with B) can be developed / has been supported
other similar countries in five-year survival
rates after diagnosis.. C) will be developed / was supported

D) has been developed / had been supported


A) vainly
E) had been developed / might have been
B) unfavourably supported

C) unreservedly

D) consciously

E) infrequently
9. From Antarctica to the Galapagos Islands, 14. The scheme has been ---- consideration for a
penguins find themselves threatened by long time now, but I doubt whether it will
human activity ---- overfishing, oil spills, and ever be put ---- effect..
global warming..

A) under / into
A) such as
B) within / through
B) much more
C) for / to
C) so much
D) in / off
D) the most
E) over / ever
E) much like
15. Sugar causes a decline in tissue elasticity
10. ---- the annual influx of tourists exceeds and function; ---- sugar you eat, ---- elasticity
Corsica’s population six times, tourism has and function you lose..
not destroyed the place..

A) the more / the more


A) As long as
B) not only / but also
B) Unless
C) either / or
C) Now that
D) nor / and
D) Because
E) as / as
E) Even though
16. Most milk-consuming countries have a local
11. Of all the medicines we have tested, this is dairy farming industry, and most producing
obviously ---- effective.. countries ---- significant subsidies and trade
barriers ---- domestic producers from foreign
competition..
A) much

B) more A) may maintain / being protected

C) the most B) is maintaining / protecting

D) a little C) maintained / protected

E) less D) has maintained / to be protected

E) maintain / to protect
12. The Hollywood studio system in film making,
which began ---- 1920 and flourished from the
early 1930s ---- the 1950s is unique in
Western culture..

A) throughout / into

B) around / through

C) by / until

D) within / over

E) along / till

13. ---- the terms of the forthcoming trade


agreement, Japan wins parity ---- the United
States..

A) Through / above

B) By / of

C) From / from

D) Under / with

E) After / over
21. V.
17. - 21.sorularda, aşağıdaki parçada
numaralanmış yerlere uygun düşen sözcük
ya da ifadeyi bulunuz. A) similarly

B) extraordinarily

People who (I)---- inmalaria-infested areas or who C) commonly


travel to them can take certain (II)----. Theycan use
long-lasting insecticide sprays in homes and out D) fairly
buildings, placescreens (III) ---- doors and windows,
E) particularly
use mosquito netting over their beds, andapply
mosquito repellents on their skin. They can (IV) ----
wear enoughclothing, (V) ---- after sundown, to
protect as much of the skin as possibleagainst
mosquito bites.

17. I.

A) reduce

B) live

C) discharge

D) expose

E) persist

18. II.

A) precautions

B) supplements

C) occurrences

D) setbacks

E) levels

19. III.

A) beyond

B) of

C) with

D) on

E) till

20. IV.

A) either

B) more than

C) also

D) as such

E) as well as
26. V.
22. - 26.sorularda, aşağıdaki parçada
numaralanmış yerlere uygun düşen sözcük
ya da ifadeyi bulunuz. A) subtract

B) allow

Scientists have been researchingviable alternatives to C) provide


petroleum ever since the “energy crisis” of the1970s.
Asa result, in recent years, the world market for wind D) repeat
turbines (I)---- by anaverage of 40 percent annually.
E) respect
Last year alone, wind-power productionworldwide (II)
---- by almost a third.(III) ---- wind plants you build,
thecheaper and more powerful you can make them. 27. - 36.sorularda, verilen cümleyi uygun
Turbine makers now (IV) ---- giantmachines that once şekilde tamamlayan ifadeyi bulunuz.
existed only in theory. Today one standard turbine
can (V)---- at least 1 megawatt of power, more than
double the amount produced 20years ago. This is
enough power for as many as 800 modern 27. Whenever I hear him speak, ----..
households.
A) I am impressed by his ability to convince

B) it reminded me of my father
22. I.
C) there was a great deal of truth in what he said
A) would have grown
D) we remember similar experiences
B) will grow
E) his opponent objected to the interruption
C) will have grown
28. ----, but he always avoided Italy on principle..
D) has grown

E) would grow A) Eugène Delacroix, the famous French painter,


was born in 1798
23. II.
B) In his early life, the French painter Delacroix
seemed to be interested in diplomacy
A) decided
C) Delacroix, the nineteenth-century French
B) remained painter, travelled a good deal

C) fluctuated D) The work of the French painter Delacroix


strongly influenced the Impressionist painters
D) produced
E) Delacroix was one of the most prolific of
E) increased painters

24. III. 29. Since all countries need to trade, ----..

A) The more A) isolation from other societies may bring some


advantages
B) As much
B) France and Germany have highly
C) How much interdependent economies

D) As few C) too much economic dependence causes a


country to be affected by events in other
E) The little countries

D) today, Bhutan is one example of economic


25. IV.
near-independence

A) had produced E) no country has complete economic


independence from other countries
B) are producing

C) would produce

D) having produced

E) would have to produce


30. ---- so he agreed to write the foreword for it.. 34. Mary phoned to give me the good news ----..

A) I shall do my best to persuade him A) however unlikely it would have been

B) This won’t be one of my best books B) which none of us are expecting

C) He still hasn’t read the book C) just as I was leaving the house

D) I wish you’d recommended the book to him D) even if her sisters are going to be unreasonably
jealous
E) He thought the idea behind the book was
brilliant E) until the whole family knew every detail

31. If the balance of nature is disturbed, ----.. 35. One really ought to visit Singapore soon, ----..

A) there has obviously been great cause for A) before all signs of its past have disappeared
concern
B) if the old and the new still existed side by side
B) the result may be a number of possibly
unforeseen effects C) that many of its buildings have already been
restored
C) this would usually have been the result of
man’s interference D) until the Orchid Garden was reopened

D) the extinction of one species has left another E) as there was excellent seafood to be found in
species without a natural predator its many restaurants

E) the struggle to exist has continued


36. After take-off, the pilot of an aircraft is often
given a course to steer ----..
32. All opposition to the project vanished ----..

A) though the air traffic control officer will still be


A) as soon as everyone realized how much money using field glasses
they could earn through it
B) whether the weather conditions were suitable
B) after financial support has finally been or not
promised
C) since he will be watched by direct visual means
C) which has attracted so much attention from the control tower unless there is fog

D) if it seemed likely that it wouldn\'’t take up too D) until a specific reporting point or height is
much time reached

E) as more and more people are starting to work E) so long as the landing gear retracts correctly
on it in their free time

33. A job interview is a chance for you to find out


----..

A) since first impressions are of great importance

B) as if you really were the one they were looking


for

C) if you are going to prepare some relevant


questions

D) whether you and the job are right for each


other

E) so long as you are able to relax


39. Osmanlı imparatorluğu döneminde,
37. - 42.sorularda, verilen İngilizce cümleye
Selanik şehrinde ilk futbol maçını
anlamca en yakın Türkçe cümleyi, Türkçe düzenleyenler, İngiliz tütün ve pamuk
cümleye anlamca en yakın İngilizce cümleyi tüccarlarıydı..
bulunuz.

A) It was during the period of the Ottoman Empire


that the first football match in the city of
37. Ortaçağ haritaları Hollanda‘nın neredeyse Salonika was organized by British tobacco and
yarısını su altında gösterir, ama o zamandan cotton traders.
beri denizden geniş alanlar kazanılmıştır. .
B) It was British tobacco and cotton traders who
organized the first football match in the city of
A) In medieval maps nearly half of the Salonika during the period of the Ottoman
Netherlands is under water, but since then the Empire.
sea has withdrawn from large areas.
C) The first football match to be organized by
B) Large areas of what is now the Netherlands British tobacco and cotton traders was in the
have often been claimed from the sea, but in city of Salonika during the period of the
medieval maps they were under water. Ottoman Empire.

C) Nearly half of the Netherlands does not exist on D) British tobacco and cotton traders held their
medieval maps but later large areas were first football match in Salonika during the time
recovered from the sea. of the Ottoman Empire.

D) Medieval maps show that large areas of the E) The first football match to be held in Salonika
Netherlands used to be under the sea, but they was during the time of the Ottoman Empire and
have since been reclaimed. was organized by British tobacco and cotton
traders.
E) Medieval maps show nearly half of the
Netherlands under water, but since then large
areas have been claimed from the sea. 40. Contrary to popular belief, it is not Earth’s
magnetic field that shields people on the
ground from cosmic rays, but rather the bulk
38. 1 Mayıs 2004'te on yeni ülkenin Avrupa of the atmosphere..
Birliği'ne girişi Demir Perde ile zorla
bölünmüş bir kıtanın bir araya gelişini
simgelemektedir.. A) Yeryüzündeki insanları kozmik ışınlardan
atmosferin değil daha çok yerkürenin manyetik
alanının koruduğu, yaygın bir yanlış inançtır.
A) The entrance, on1 May 2004, of ten new
countries to the European Union symbolizes the B) Halkın inandığından farklı olarak, yeryüzündeki
coming together of a continent forced apart by insanları yalnız atmosferin kalınlığı değil
the Iron Curtain. yerkürenin manyetik alanı da kozmik ışınlardan
korumaktadır.
B) Ten new countries joined European Union on
1May 2004 symbolizing the reunion of a C) Yaygın inancın tersine, yerküre kozmik
continent forced apart by the Iron Curtain. ışınlardan kendi manyetik alanından çok
atmosferin kalınlığı sayesinde
C) On 1 May 2004, when ten new countries korunabilmektedir.
entered the European Union, the forced division
of a continent by the Iron Curtain symbolically D) Yaygın inancın tersine, yeryüzündeki insanları
came to an end. kozmik ışınlardan koruyan, yerkürenin
manyetik alanı değil daha çok atmosferin
D) The entrance of ten new countries to the kalınlığıdır.
European Union on 1 May 2004 can also be
regarded as symbolizing the reunion of a E) Yeryüzünü çevreleyen kalın atmosferin yanı sıra
continent forced apart by the Iron Curtain. yerin manyetik alanının da insanları kozmik
ışınlardan koruduğuna yaygın olarak
E) With the entrance of ten new countries to the inanılmaktadır.
European Union on 1 May 2004, the symbolic
division of a continent by the Iron Curtain was
finally broken.
41. In the last century, much attention was given
to the language of literature and the
question of whether there was in fact a
separate literary language..

A) Geçen yüzyılda, edebiyat dili çok ilgi çekmiş ve


gerçekte apayrı bir edebî dil olup olmadığı
sorusu üzerinde önemle durulmuştur

B) Geçen yüzyılda, edebiyat dili çok ilgi çekmiş ve


apayrı bir edebî dil olup olmadığı sorusu hep
tartışılmıştır.

C) Geçen yüzyılda, edebiyat diline ve gerçekte


ayrı bir edebî dil olup olmadığı sorusuna çok ilgi
gösterilmiştir.

D) Edebiyat dilinin ne olduğu ve apayrı bir edebî


dilin gerçekten var olup olmadığı sorusu, geçen
yüzyılda çok ilgi çekmiştir.

E) Edebiyat dili geçen yüzyılda çok tartışılmıştır ve


gerçekte ayrı bir edebî dilin olup olmadığı
sorusu ele alınmıştır.

42. Owing to infertility treatments, the


percentage of twin births in the US has
nearly doubled in the past 20 years. .

A) Son 20 yılda sayısı ikiye katlanan kısırlık


tedavileri nedeniyle, ABD’de ikiz doğum oranı
çok arttı.

B) ABD’de kısırlık tedavisinde son 20 yılda görülen


artış, ikiz doğum oranını iki kattan fazla
yükseltti.

C) Kısırlık tedavilerindeki hemen hemen 20 yıl


süren artış, ABD’de ikiz doğum oranının ikiye
katlanmasına neden oldu.

D) Kısırlık tedavilerinden dolayı, ABD’de ikiz


doğum oranı son 20 yılda hemen hemen ikiye
katlandı.

E) ABD’de giderek yaygınlaşan kısırlık tedavileri,


son 20 yılda ikiz doğum oranının ikiye
katlanmasına neden oldu.
45. The passage points out that the best
43. - 46.soruları aşağıdaki parçaya göre
conditions for diversity of bacteria species -
cevaplayınız. ---..

A) so far seem to exist in soil having a neutral pH


Despite bacteria’s presence in all parts of the planet,
their diversity in the world’s soils is poorly B) were found in the Peruvian Amazon region
understood. To better understand what makes the
organisms thrive, Duke University researchers C) have not yet been discovered
trekked far and wide to collect a few centimetres of
D) have now been fully researched
dirt as samples from 98 locations across North and
South America, then analyzed each sample for E) are found in a few centimetres of dirt
genetic variation. To their surprise, the strongest
predictor of high diversity was neutral pH. The acidic
soil of the Peruvian Amazon, for example, harboured 46. It is clear from the passage that the
researchers from Duke University ----..
far fewer bacterial species than did the neutral dirt of
the arid American Southwest. “There are a lot of
variables that didn’t turn out to be very important, A) do not plan to do any more research into
”says the researcher Robert Jackson, who adds that a bacterial diversity
more complete search for different habitats might
B) were more interested in the American
turn up other stimulators of diversity, such as carbon
Southwest than in the Amazon basin
abundance.
C) have largely focused on the types of bacteria
found in acidic soil
43. According to the passage, scientists were D) have carried out their fieldwork to throw light
surprised that ----.. upon the causes of bacterial diversity

E) had difficulty in trekking during their search


A) they had to trek to so many different areas to
conduct their research into bacterial species
diversity

B) carbon abundance was revealed to be the most


important predictor of diversity of bacterial
species

C) bacteria is present in all parts of the planet

D) the arid American Southwest is home to many


more species of bacteria than the lush Peruvian
Amazon

E) they would have to perform more complete


research in the future

44. It is understood from the passage that


further research must be carried out ----..

A) because the previous research was not


conducted properly

B) in order to find other indicators of diversity in


bacterial species

C) so that all the bacterial species of North and


South America can be identified

D) to determine exactly the genetic variations of


bacterial species

E) so that scientists can increase the diversity of


bacterial species
49. As one understands from the passage, Sir
47. - 50.soruları aşağıdaki parçaya göre
William Jones ----..
cevaplayınız.

A) made fundamental changes in the judicial


system of eighteenth-century India
In 1786 Sir William Jones, a British judge serving in
India, made a discovery that transformed knowledge B) was a professional linguist and spent his time
about prehistory and began the formal study of in India by the study of Sanskrit
historical linguistics. Turning his spare time towards
the study of Sanskrit, the ancient language from C) rejected the view that the European Celtic
which the predominant languages of the South Asian languages derived from a common source
subcontinent derive, Jones discovered that Sanskrit
D) studied Sanskrit only when he was free from his
shares features of grammar and vocabulary with Latin judicial responsibilities
and ancient Greek to an extent inexplicable by sheer
coincidence. His interest further aroused, he then E) was very interested in the prehistory of India
examined the early Germanic language called'Gothic', and made several discoveries
the ancient Celtic languages of Europe, and Old
Persian, and found that they, too, exhibited marked 50. According to the passage, the beginnings of
similarities to Sanskrit. He concluded that all these historical linguistics ----..
languages must have evolved from a common but
now-extinct linguistic source. In the early nineteenth
A) were marked by the discovery in the
century, both this ancient language and the later
eighteenth century that the languages of the
languages that derived from it, were labelled' Indo- South Asian subcontinent had evolved from
European, ' reflecting their wide distribution from Sanskrit
India and Ireland.
B) can be dated back to the early nineteenth
century when the term “Indo-European” was
introduced
47. One can conclude from the passage that
Gothic----.. C) are traced back to the work of Sir William Jones
in the eighteenth century
A) originally derived from Latin and had the same D) have always been controversial, since Sir
grammatical features William Jones’s theory about the Indo-European
languages was based on a false assumption
B) had no relationship whatsoever with Sanskrit
and other languages E) were confined only to Jones’s study of Sanskrit
and did not include his study of the other Indo-
C) was an old language which was spoken European languages
throughout Europe, including Ireland

D) was the only language in which Sir William


Jones took a special interest

E) was the language spoken by early Germanic


peoples

48. It is pointed out in the passage that Sanskrit


----..

A) is the only language which is widely spoken


among the peoples of South Asia

B) and other Indo-European languages are closely


related with each other

C) was first studied by Sir William Jones in the


eighteenth century

D) was the most ancient language from which


Latin and Greek have evolved

E) has a grammatical structure which is entirely


different from that of Old Persian
52. As is clear from the passage, Keynes ----..
51. - 54.soruları aşağıdaki parçaya göre
cevaplayınız.72. - 75.sorularda, boş
bırakılan yere, parçada anlam bütünlüğünü A) differed little from his contemporaries in his
sağlamak için getirilebilecek cümleyi economic theories
bulunuz.
B) had much trust in the free market, which he
believed had a positive impact on the economy
of the 1930s
During the economic depression that affected the
whole Western world in the 1930s, with its mass C) did not think that the economic depression of
unemployment, poverty and other social ills, the 1930s was serious enough to justify
government interference
governments, for the most part, did nothing. The
accepted wisdom was that, given time, the free D) firmly believed that government intervention in
market would solve its own problems and that the management of the economy could be
government interference would only make things necessary
worse. John Maynard Keynes, the British economist
who challenged this belief, argued that it was the E) argued that economic prosperity should not be
proper responsibility of governments to prevent both the prime aim of any government
booms and recessions in order to maintain gradual
economic growth and permanent full employment. He 53. It is pointed out in the passage that, due to
maintained that this could be done by manipulating the economic depression in the West in the
taxation, credit and public expenditure. If the 1930s, ----..
economy was growing too fast, then money and,
therefore, demand could be taken out of the economy A) most governments curbed public expenditure
by higher taxes, lower government spending and by and changed their system of taxation
making it harder to borrow money. If there was
recession and growing unemployment, then the B) there was unemployment on a very large scale
government could put money into the economy
C) the increasing demand for goods had to be
through lower taxes, higher public expenditure and
prevented through harsh economic policies
easier credit. Thus, demand could be encouraged. If,
as a result, there was money in people’s pockets, D) many governments introduced a series of
then more would be spent on goods and more people measures to solve social problems
would be needed to make the goods to fulfil the extra
demand, and this would reduce unemployment. E) it was almost impossible for people to borrow
money

54. As it is stated in the passage, in the 1930s, -


51. According to the Keynesian argument
---..
summarized in the passage, in order to bring
down unemployment, ----..
A) all governments in the West carefully followed
the economic policies proposed by Keynes
A) new economic policies would be formulated by
the government, so that demand could be B) permanent full employment was achieved
curbed through an efficient implementation of free
market policies
B) governments would follow a policy of
nonintervention in the economy and allow the C) governments generally felt that the free market
problem to be solved through the free market was the only way of solving the problems of the
depression
C) the government had to make new loans
available for businesses at very high interest D) despite high unemployment, people had so
rates much money that the demand for goods could
not be controlled
D) the government would prefer to increase
taxation, so that people would spend less E) the British government gave Keynes full
responsibility to improve the economy
E) one of several measures to be introduced by
the government would be to encourage an
increase in public spending
57. As pointed out in the passage, the idea that
55. - 58.soruları aşağıdaki parçaya göre
mathematics and physics differ from each
cevaplayınız. other ----..

A) has often been queried and debated since


The most common view among scientists is that
Newton
mathematics and physics are quite different. Physics
describes the universe and depends on experiment B) is accepted by most scientists
and observation. The particular laws that govern our
universe, such as Newton’s laws of motion, must be C) has only recently been accepted by the
determined empirically and then asserted like axioms scientific community
that cannot be logically proved, merely
D) is evidence of a prevailing prejudice among
verified.Mathematics, on the other hand, is some how mathematicians and physicists
independent of the universe. Results and theorems,
such as the properties of the integers and real E) was originally put forward by Newton after he
numbers, do not depend in any way on the particular formulated his laws of motion
nature of reality in which we find
ourselves.Mathematical truths would be true in any 58. It is clear from the passage that any
universe. information physics reveals about our
universe cannot be valid ----..

55. It is suggested in the passage that, unlike A) as it is impossible for every scientist to agree to
mathematics, physics ----.. it

B) so long as it is not explained mathematically


A) makes much use of logic in order to reach a
conclusion C) since it is not always proved logically

B) formulates laws that need not be verified by D) unless it is confirmed through experiment and
experimentation observation

C) has undergone much development since E) because the methods used for verification are
Newton’s time often controversial

D) is essentially concerned with the world of


matter

E) states facts about the universe that are taken


for granted

56. We understand from the passage that, for


most scientists, ----..

A) logical reasoning is as essential as experiment


and observation in any scientific study

B) mathematics and physics are the two fields of


science which have similar scientific concerns
and are, hence, interdependent

C) mathematics, like physics, is also indispensable


for a scientific study of the universe

D) the Newtonian laws have completely altered


man’s perception of the universe

E) physics is essentially empirical, whereas


mathematics is not
60. We understand from the passage that, as
59. - 62.soruları aşağıdaki parçaya göre
part of an effort to prove the existence of ice
cevaplayınız. on the moon, NASA ----..

A) will make no use of high-resolution radio


In an attempt to settle the question of whether ice
telescopes
exists on the moon, NASA plans to launch the Lunar
Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) in 2008. Travelling in a B) is currently observing the moon from Earth
polar orbit only 50 kilometres above the moon’s
surface, the probe will focus a high-resolution neutron C) is planning to send one spacecraft to orbit the
sensor on the suspected ice deposits to determine moon and another to land there
their precise locations. But because the ice is
D) is going to send a landing craft that will rely
probably buried and mixed with lunar dirt, NASA will solely on solar power
also need to land a probe to dig up and analyze soil
samples. This mission, scheduled for 2011, is a E) has already sent a spacecraft there to take
challenging one because instruments operating in pictures
shadowed areas cannot use solar power. The craft
could land at a sunlit site and send a battery-powered 61. It is pointed out in the passage that, since
vehicle into a dark crater, but the batteries would there may be more ice on one part of the
quickly die. A radioisotope thermal generator could moon’s surface than on another, ----..
provide electricity using heat from plutonium decay,
but NASA is leaning against this option because it is
A) a battery-powered vehicle is an essential part
expensive and controversial.Another idea under of the probe
consideration is sending a probe that could hop from
place to place on the lunar surface by restarting its B) facilities which will examine the ice must be
landing rockets, lifting the craft to 100 metres above built near larger ice patches
its original landing site and moving it to another spot
in the crater basin to hunt for ice. Investigating more C) the search there for ice is expensive and
controversial
than one site is crucial because the ice may be
unevenly distributed. Yet another alternative would D) it is essential to test for ice in several different
be to fire ground penetrating instruments at several areas
places in the shadowed basin, either from a lander at
the crater’s rim or from an orbiting craft. E) it will not be possible to use the ice for future
space exploration

62. We see from the passage that the main


59. It is clear from the passage that ----..
problem of landing a probe on the moon to
test for ice in shadowed areas is ----..
A) firing ground-penetrating instruments at the
moon could upset the balance of its surface
A) that the public is not interested in the project
B) there are several options for producing a probe
B) the hard, rocky surface of the moon
that could work in the shadowed areas of the
moon C) lack of government funding for the project
C) NASA will use plutonium decay to provide D) the extremely cold temperatures the probe
power for its newest landing probe
would have to work in
D) the spacecraft that NASA wants to send to the
E) that it would not be able to use solar power
moon will probably never actually be
manufactured

E) NASA plans only to send a probe to orbit the


moon, not to land on it
64. Winston : What does the term ―global village
63. - 67.sorularda, karşılıklı konuşmanın
really mean? Stanley : Oh, well, it is
boş bırakılan kısmını tamamlayabilecek essentially related to the global flow of
ifadeyi bulunuz. information. Winston : ---- Stanley : Alright, I
will try. Beginning in the 1990s, increasingly
sophisticated computers have brought people
into instant communication over the internet
63. Mary : Recently I have been reading Jean- with each other across continents in new
Jacques Rousseau‘s political treatise The cultural and political settings, and this has
Social Contract, published in 1762. In his had a great impact on the everyday lives of
political views, he was certainly more radical men and women around the world..
than most of his contemporaries.
Susan : Yes, he was, indeed. For instance, he
was probably the first person in his time to A) In other words, are you suggesting that
talk about popular sovereignty and advances in electronic technologies have
democracy. provided new worldwide platforms and
Mary : ---- connections for commercial interests?
Susan : Because of his radical views as such,
he caused a great deal of controversy in B) Do you mean the wide-ranging effects of
eighteenth-century France.. information technologies on political struggles
around the globe?

A) His famous novel Emile tells the story of how a C) Are you saying that electronic systems and
young man learns virtue and freedom. devices designed to create, store and share
information have become more powerful and
B) I didn‘t know that he was better known for his accessible?
writing on education and moral virtue.
D) Are you claiming that embattled ethnic
C) We know that Enlightenment thinkers minorities have found worldwide audiences
considered education key to human progress. through on-line campaign sites?

D) The Social Contract was the least understood of E) What does that exactly mean? Can you be
his works, wasn‘t it? more specific?

E) Obviously, he believed that legitimate authority


arose from the people alone. 65. Philip : I see that you are reading Homer‘s
great epic The Iliad? By the way, have you
ever heard about Heinrich Schliemann?
Edward : Yes, I have. He was an amateur
German archaeologist, who lived in the
nineteenth century.
Philip : ----
Edward : How come? I wonder what details in
The Iliad must have led him to such a
discovery..

A) As an amateur archaeologist, many of


Schliemann‘s perceptions of Bronze Age
Greece were mistaken and superficial.

B) What else? Let me tell you the most intriguing


thing about him. By using The Iliad as his
guide, he found the site of Troy near the coast
of northwest Anatolia.

C) Since the ancient Greeks treasured many


legends about their heroic and distant past,
Homer‘s epics appealed to them a great deal.

D) Actually, Schliemann was right in believing that


the legendary king Agamemnon was buried
with a gold mask.

E) In Homer‘s epics, it is the Mycenaean


civilization of Bronze Age Greece that is
represented, but this civilization came to an
end around the end of the twelfth century B.C.
66. Kevin:- In Asia, it seems, incomes are going
68. - 71.sorularda, verilen cümleye anlamca
up but this is having an adverse effect on the
health of the people. Sandra: - Yes. I've read en yakın cümleyi bulunuz.
that article. Sad, isn't it? Kevin: - ---- Sandra:
- No. It's that too, of course. But the shift
from agricultural to urban economies is also
aggravating the problem.. 68. The Malaysian make of car should be king of
the roads there, owing to the steep tariffs
imposed on imported cars; but this is not the
A) It certainly is. But I can\'t say I\'m surprised. case..

B) It is indeed. And apparently it\'s not just that


people are eating more and eating unwisely. A) Malaysian-made cars are only preferable to
foreign makes because they are cheaper,
C) People think that eating well means eating though not much cheaper.
more meat and more fat.
B) Since foreign cars are so heavily taxed, home
D) It is. But the largest percentage of saturated fat produced makes are far more popular in
in the diet seemed to be coming from local Malaysia; this is only natural.
ethnic food.
C) Tariffs on imported cars In Malaysia are
E) Yes, indeed. The region presently has more prohibitive and this is why people buy home
than 60 million diabetes sufferers, and the produced models though they do not wish to.
number is going up.
D) One might expect the Malaysian make of car to
be the most popular make there as imported
67. James: I’ve heard that you’re selling your cars are so heavily taxed; but it is not so.
house. But it’s not really the best time for
selling your property. E) Surprisingly enough, foreign cars are just as
popular as Malaysian ones there even though
Arthur: ---- they are heavily taxed.

James: I suggest you not sell it. You could get


a bank loan instead, and I’ll be your 69. Coffee beans are second only to petroleum as
guarantor. the most traded commodity in the world..

Arthur: I’ve never thought of it; you’ve given A) Petroleum is the world\'s most traded
me a great idea. I really appreciate your commodity, and after that come coffee beans.
support..
B) Petroleum and coffee beans share the honour
of being the world\'s most traded commodities.
A) The broker in my quarter says a client has
already bought one at a reasonable price.
C) Coffee beans vie with petroleum as the world\'s
most sought-after commodity.
B) I’ve talked to several brokers in town, and they
say I’ll have no problem getting a mortgage.
D) Coffee beans are not the world\'s most sought-
after commodity.
C) I’ve already applied to the local bank for a loan
and I’m waiting for a reply.
E) Petroleum has superseded coffee beans as the
world\'s most traded commodity.
D) I know, but I have to do it, as I’ve got a large
debt and I need to repay it urgently.

E) Recently, a relative of mine has advised me to


buy a house in the country.
70. I don't believe she is particularly clever, but
72. - 75.sorularda, boş bırakılan yere,
she has a great deal of charm and people
tend to do what she wants.. parçada anlam bütünlüğünü sağlamak için
getirilebilecek cümleyi bulunuz.

A) Though she really is not very intelligent, she


has charm and people are always pleased to
accept her leadership. 72. Like many other activities, global health has
fashions. ---- Recently, though, the focus has
B) She may not be very bright, I personally don't shifted to malaria. This tropical disease kills
think she is; but she certainly has a winning a million people a year, most of them
way with people so they generally act in the children, and debilitates hundreds of millions
way she wants. more. That is why researchers are racing
against one another to be the first to devise
C) Her intelligence is no more than average, but an effective vaccine..
she makes up for this with charm, so she can
manipulate people easily.
A) However, not all developing countries are
D) It is as much her charm as her intelligence that struggling with health-related issues.
enables her to make people act in the way she
wants them to B) Before Jonas Salk came up with his polio
vaccine, many parents lived in fear of their
E) She doesn't need to be intelligent as she has children being struck down by the disease.
the gift of knowing-how to charm people so
that they act in the way she wants. C) In Eastern Europe, for example, there has been
much concern about illicit drug use since the
Cold War ended.
71. International conventions have long been
prohibiting the use of chemical weapons D) For the past couple of decades, AIDS has
during war, but how effective is this likely to captured both the imagination and the
be?. research dollars.

E) In contrast, tropical diseases have not always


A) If various international bodies agreed to a long-
received the attention they deserve from either
term ban on chemical warfare, couldn’t the ban
national governments or international
be put into effect?
organizations.
B) Can such international bodies be relied upon to
ban effectively and in the long-term the use of 73. The world's oldest cave paintings date back
chemical weapons in time of war? some 35, 000 years. They lie buried in the
side of a hill close to Verona in north Italy. -
C) For many years now, chemical warfare has ---. Now, new archaeological research is also
been banned by international agreement, but proving that the ancients were adept, not
can the ban be enforced? only at the visual arts, but also at the art of
sound..
D) How effective might the prohibition of chemical
warfare be if it had the backing of so many
international bodies? A) Stone Age ears must have appreciated the
'echo-chamber' properties of the sites
E) Over a period of very many years various
international agreements have been drawn up B) Archaeologists can use acoustics to study
to prohibit the use of chemical weapons in ancient sites in the following two ways
wartime, but they have hardly been effective,
have they? C) Similarly, the stones of Stonehenge in the
south of England have been found to have
sonic qualities

D) They prove that art was already part of the way


of life for the early civilizations of the time

E) Indeed, some of the stalactites in these caves


issue bell-like notes when struck
74. Like language, music is a uniquely human
76. - 80.sorularda, cümleler sırasıyla
activity. Although music is often spoken of as
a kind of language, it is certainly not within okunduğunda parçanın anlam bütünlüğünü
the same space of possibilities as natural bozan cümleyi bulunuz.
human languages. Music communicates
something, perhaps emotional states. It is
sometimes symbolic; for instance, when the
Wedding Marchis played to symbolize 76. (I) Health and well-being are too complex to
weddings. ---- Therefore, it seems be simply a medical matter. (II) There is a
appropriate to treat music as a form of direct relationship between susceptibility and
communication, but not as a language in the disease: low susceptibility implies a high
technical sense.. resilience. (III) In various realms of the 'body-
mind', there are aspects of life that build us
up and break us down. (IV) If we are under
A) That is why composers aim at aesthetic strain in one realm, it may be possible to
pleasure while they compose their music. compensate by strengthening the others. (V)
For example, playing tennis reinforces the
B) The right hemisphere of the brain is involved in release of 'feel-good' chemicals that can
musical perception and in experienced offset the damaging effects of emotional
musicians the left hemisphere is also involved. stress..
C) Yet it shares few of the grammatical and
expressive possibilities found in all standard A) I
languages.
B) II
D) In the opera, for instance, music and language
combine. C) III

E) This shows that musical ability is largely based D) IV


on auditory and rhythmic processing.
E) V

75. The Africans who go abroad to work usually


send money back home to pay for their 77. (I) Reefs are under attack from all sides. (II)
relatives‘ medical care, education, and Coral reefs are one of the oldest and most
housing. Today, most African countries get diverse ecosystems on Earth. (III) Hurricanes
the largest part of their foreign exchange and tsunamis can cause injuries that take
earnings from such remittances. ---- Without decades for a reef to repair naturally. (IV)
this subsidy, Africa‘s dictators would have to Meanwhile, destructive fishing practices,
face the political consequences of an angry pollution, ships running aground and climate
population.. change pose an even more serious threat. (V)
A report issued by the UN Environment
Programme warned that 30 per cent of the
A) In Africa, foreign aid goes mostly to those world’s coral reefs are either already dead or
governments that have mismanaged their seriously damaged..
economies.

B) There are over three million Nigerians in the US A) I


and another one million in Britain.
B) II
C) From a quarter to almost 50% of university-
educated graduates from Ghana, Uganda, and C) III
Kenya leave their countries to work in the
West. D) IV

D) Ironically, African citizens abroad subsidize E) V


state corruption.

E) About three million middle-class Zimbabweans


have migrated to South Africa since 1999.
78. (I) Izmir owes its famously "special" 80. (I) Towards the end of the eighteenth
atmosphere to its turbulent history. (II) What century, a vast cultural movement began to
you see today has mostly risen from the sweep across Europe. (II) Within the
ashes of Ottoman Izmir and dates from 1922, Romantic movement, a group of composers
when a terrible fire swept across the city. (III) were inspired by new ideas about national
Before that, Izmir was known as "Smyrna" identity. (III) The movement, known as
and was the most Westernized and Romanticism, called into question many of
cosmopolitan of Turkish cities. (IV) the principles of the eighteenth-century
Nevertheless, famous citizens of ancient Enlightenment. (IV) In other words, the
Smyrna include the poet Homer, the founder Romantics began to question human reason
of Western literature, who lived before 700 and the uniformity of human nature. (V)
B.C. (V) It was a city where the Muslims, Moreover, they emphasized the diversity of
Christians and Jewish communities lived in humanity, and the importance of spontaneity,
harmony and got on well with each other.. creativity, emotion and passion..

A) I A) I

B) II B) II

C) III C) III

D) IV D) IV

E) V E) V

79. (I) The relationship between genes and


proteins was first proposed in 1909 when
English physician A. Garrod suggested that
genes dictate phenotypes through enzymes,
the proteins that catalyze chemical processes
in the cell. (II) The idea came from his
observations of inherited diseases. (III) He
hypothesized that an inherited disease
reflects a body’s inability to manufacture a
particular enzyme, and he referred to such
diseases as “inborn errors of metabolism”.
(IV) The function of a gene is to dictate the
production of a specific enzyme. (V) His
hypothesis was ahead of its time but
research conducted decades later by other
scientists proved him right..

A) I

B) II

C) III

D) IV

E) V
SORU CEVAP SORU CEVAP

1 A 41 C

2 E 42 D

3 B 43 D

4 B 44 B

5 D 45 A

6 C 46 D

7 A 47 E

8 B 48 B

9 A 49 D

10 E 50 C

11 C 51 E

12 B 52 D

13 D 53 B

14 A 54 C

15 A 55 D

16 E 56 E

17 B 57 B

18 A 58 D

19 D 59 B

20 C 60 C

21 E 61 D

22 D 62 E

23 E 63 E

24 A 64 E

25 B 65 B

26 C 66 B

27 A 67 D

28 C 68 D

29 E 69 A

30 E 70 B

31 B 71 C

32 A 72 D

33 D 73 D

34 C 74 C

35 A 75 D

36 D 76 B

37 E 77 B

38 A 78 D

39 B 79 D

40 D 80 B

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