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1. A gifted scientist, Newton _____ some of the most fundamental laws in the history of science.

A. keeps discovering
B. who discovered
C. the discoverer of
D. discovered

2. In ____, the team has begun to show some form again and has won some big games.
A. few weeks
B. few past weeks
C. the past few weeks
D. a few week since

3. ____, the outermost layer of skin, is about as thick as a sheet of paper over most of the skin.
A. It is the epidermis
B. In the epidermis
C. The epidermis
D. The epidermis is

4. Marmots spend their time foraging among meadow plants and flowers or ____ on rocky cliffs.
A. Gets sun
B. Sunning
C. The sun
D. Sunny

5. The greenhouse effect occurs _____ heat radiated from the Sun.
A. When does the Earth’s atmosphere trap
B. Does the Earth’s atmosphere trap
C. When the Earth’s atmosphere traps
D. The Earth’s atmosphere traps

6. The police were greatly outnumbered by rioters, _______ ran into the hundreds.
A. whose figures
B. those figures
C. that its figures
D. its figures that
7. ____ is that a chicken stands up to lay its eggs.
A. Because many people don’t realize
B. Many people don’t realize
C. What many people don’t realize
D. It is that many people don’t realize

8. Not until Edward Jenner developed the first anti-smallpox serum in 1796 ___ against this terrible disease.
A. it was protected
B. protection was
C. protection was given
D. was there protection

9. Elephants scratch themselves with sticks ____.


A. holding in their trunks
B. in their trunks holding
C. hold in their trunks
D. held in their trunks.

10. The tenants were asked to throw all recyclable trash into __________.
A. the green big plastic bag
B. the big plastic green bag
C. the big green plastic bag
D. the green plastic big bag

PASSAGE ONE (questions 1-2)


Most of the ice on the Earth, close to 90 percent of it, is covering the surface of the continent Antarctica. It
does not snow very much in Antarctica, but whatever snow does fall remains and grows deeper and deeper. In some
areas of Antarctica, the ice has perhaps been around for as much as a million years and now is more than two miles
deep.

1. The main idea of the passage is that 2. The best title for the passage is
(A) The Earth is a cold planet (A) Snowfall in Antarctica
(B) Most of the Earth’s ice is found in (B) The Icy Earth
Antarctica (C) The Cold, Cold Snow
(C) It snows more in Antarctica than in any (D) The Causes of Antarctica’s Ice Pack
other place on Earth
(D) Antarctica is only two miles wide but is
90 percent ice

PASSAGE TWO (questions 3-4)


In the first half of the nineteenth century, a New York newspaper, the New York Sun, successfully carried out a
hoax on the American public. Because of this trick, readership of the paper rose substantially.
On August 25, 1835, the Sun published reports that some wonderful new discoveries had been made on the
moon. The article described strange, never-before-seen animals and temples covered in shining jewels. Many members
of the American public were fooled by the story, even some prominent members of the scientific community.
The effect of the false story on sales of the paper was dramatic. Paper sales increased considerably as people
eagerly searched out details of the new discoveries. Later, the newspaper company announced that it had not been trying
to trick the public; instead, the company explained the moon stories as a type of literary satire.
3 Which of the following best states the topic 4.The main point of the passage is that
of the passage? (A) the New York Sun was one of the earliest
(A) A nineteenth-century discovery on the American Newspapers
moon (B) the Sun increased sales when it tricked the
(B) The New York Sun public with a false story
(C) A hoax and its effect (C) a newspaper achieved success by writing
(D) The success of a newspaper about the moon
(D) in 1835 some amazing new discoveries
were made about the moon
PASSAGE THREE (questions 1-2)
Many parts of the Southwestern United States would become deserts again without the waters of the Colorado
River. A system of thousands of miles of canals, hundreds of miles of tunnels and aqueducts, and numerous dams and
reservoirs bring Colorado River water to the area. The Imperial Valley in Southern California is an example of such a
place; it is a vast and productive agricultural area that was once a desert. Today, 2,000 miles of canals irrigate the fertile
land and keep it productive.
1.Which of the following is mentioned in the 2.According to the passage, the Imperial Valley
passage as a way that Colorado River water (A) is a desert today
gets to the Southwest? (B) is located in Colorado
(A) By truck (C) produces a lot of agricultural goods
(B) In bottles (D) does not require irrigation
(C) In wells
(D) Through canals

PASSAGE FOUR (questions 3-7)


The plane with the largest wingspan ever built was nicknamed the Spruce Goose. The wingspan of the Spruce
Goose was 320 feet (almost 100 meters), and the plane weighed 200 tons. It was so big that it needed eight engines to
power it.
The plane was designed by Howard Hughes in response to a U.S. government request for a plane that was able
to carry a large cargo for the war effort. It was made of wood because wood is a less critical material in wartime than
metal.
The plane was so difficult to build that it never really got used. It was flown one time only, by Hughes himself,
on November 2, 1947; during that flight it traveled a distance of less than one mile over the Los Angeles Harbor, but it
did fly. Today, the Spruce Goose is on exhibit for the public to see in Long Beach, California.

3.Which of the following is true about the 6 According to the passage, when the Spruce
Spruce Goose? Goose flew,
(A) Each of its wings measures 100 meters. (A) it went only a short distance
(B) It weighs 200 pounds. (B) it fell into the Los Angeles Harbor
(C) It has eight wings to help it to fly. (C) it flew 100 miles
(D) It has a wingspan larger than the (D) it carried a large cargo
wingspan of any other plane.
7 The passage indicates that the Spruce Goose
4.The passage indicates that the plane was today
designed (A) flies regularly for the U.S. government
(A) as a cargo plane (B) is in the Los Angeles Harbor
(B) as a racing plane (C) is in storage
(C) to carry wood (D) can be seen by the public
(D) for exhibition

5.According to the passage, the Spruce Goose


is constructed from
(A) wood
(B) lightweight metal
(C) plastic
(D) steel

PASSAGE FIVE (question 1-2)


In the 1960s, as space travel was becoming a subject of much discussion, Pan American Airlines began
receiving some fairly unusual requests for flight information. People began making requests to be on the first flight that
Pan Am made to the Moon.
On a whim, Pan Am started a waiting list for the first flight to the Moon. Similar requests have come to Pan
Am over the years, and Pan Am has responded by adding the names of the requesters to the list.
Unfortunately for Pan Am, the original company is no longer in business, and it never got to the Moon.
However, when it went out of business, it had a waiting list of more than 90,000 names for its first lunar flight.

1. All of the following are mentioned about Pan 2. Which of the following is NOT true about
American Airlines, EXCEPT that Pan Am’s Moon flight?
(A) it started business in the 1960s (A) People asked Pan Am about its flights to
(B) it received requests for its first flight to the Moon.
the Moon (B) Pan Am kept a waiting list for its Moon
(C) it kept some people on a long waiting list flights.
(D) it went out of business (C) Pan Am never really made any Moon
flights.
(D) Pan Am’s waiting list had only a few
names on it.

PASSAGE SIX (questions 3-6)


The tunnel trees in Yosemite Valley are an amazing attraction to people who visit there. The tunnel trees are
huge trees, giant redwoods, which have had tunnels carved in them, and cars can actually drive through some of the
trees. The fact that the trees are large enough to have cars drive through them should give you some indication of just
how big the trees are.
There are currently two existing tunnel trees in Yosemite Valley. One of them is called the “Dead Giant.” This
is just the stump, or bottom part, of a much larger tree. The hole was cut through the base of the tree in 1878, and
stagecoaches used to drive through it. Today the Dead Giant still exists, but the stagecoaches do not. Passenger cars can
and do drive through the 10-foot-wide opening in the tree stump.
The other existing tunnel tree is the 230-foot high California Tree, which had a hole carved through it in 1895.
This tree is no longer open to the public, so it is not possible to take a car through it.
Unfortunately, a third tunnel tree no longer exists. The Wawona Tunnel Tree was a 2,100-year-old tree which
was carved in 1881. A terrible snowstorm in 1969 caused this ancient giant of a tree to fall.

3. Which of the following is NOT true about the 4. All of the following are stated about the
tunnel trees in Yosemite Valley? Dead Giant, EXCEPT that
(A) They are trees with holes cut in them. (A) it is still a tunnel tree today
(B) They are giant redwoods. (B) it is just the stump of a tree
(C) Three tunnel trees currently exist. (C) it was cut less than a century ago
(D) Cars have driven through some of them. (D) it has a 10-foot opening
5. Which of the following is NOT true about the 6. All of the following are true about the
California Tree? Wawona Tunnel Tree, EXCEPT that
(A) Its tunnel still exists. (A) it does not exist anymore
(B) Its tunnel is 230 feet high. (B) the tree lived for more than 2,000 years
(C) Its tunnel was cut in 1895. (C) the tunnel tree was destroyed in a
(D) Cars are not allowed to go through it. snowstorm
(D) the tunnel was destroyed in 1881

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