You are on page 1of 20

SESION 2

Practice Test E – Structure

1. Portland, Maine, is the poet 5. Many gases, including the nitrogen


Henry Wadsworth Longfellow spent and oxygen in air, color or
his early years. odor.

(A) where (A) have no


(B) it where (B) which have no
(C) where is (C) not having
(D) which is where (D) they do not have

2. As consumers' response to 6. The American Academy of Poets,


traditional advertising techniques the 1930's, provides financial
declines, businesses are beginning assistance to support working poets.
new methods of reaching
customers. (A) when it was founded
(B) was founded
(A) the development that (C) which was founded in
(B) it developing (D) was founded in
(C) develop
(D) to develop
7. During the Pleistocene glacial periods
portions of the Earth where plant and
3. The knee is most other joints animal life flourished, making it
in the body because it cannot twist possible for people to
without injury. subsist.

(A) more likely to be damaged than (A) the


(B) likely to be more than damaged (B) it was
(C) more than likely to be damaged (C) there were
(D) to be damaged more than likely (D) have there been

4. The quince is an attractive shrub or 8. The photographs of Carrie Mae


small tree closely related to Weems, in which she often makes
the apple and pear trees. her family members , are an
affectionate and incisive
(A) is representation of the African
(B) that is American experience.
(C) that it is
(D) is that which (A) are her subjects
(B) her subjects
(C) are subjects
(D) which her subjects
9. Hubble's law states that the greater 13. Scientists believe the first inhabitants
the distance between any two of the Americas arrived by crossing
galaxies , is their relative the land bridge that connected
speed of separation. Siberia and more than I 0,000
years ago.
(A) the greatest
(B) the greater (A) this is Alaska now
(C) greater than (B) Alaska is now
(D) as great as (C) is now Alaska
(D) what is now Alaska

10. The onion is characterized by an


edible bulb composed of leaves rich 14. Fibers of hair and wool are not
in sugar and a pungent oil, the continuous and must normally be
vegetable's strong taste. spun into thread woven into
textile fabrics.
(A) which the source of
(B) that the source is (A) as are they
(C) the source of (B) when to be
(D) of the source is (C) that they are
(D) If they are to be

11. A regional writer with a gift for dialect,


her fiction with the eccentric, 15. Margaret Brent, because of her skill
comic, but vital inhabitants of rural in managing estates , became
Mississippi. largest landholders in colonial
Maryland.
(A) and Eudora Welty is peopling
(B) Eudora Welty peoples (A) what the
(C) because Eudora Welty peoples (B) one of the
(D) Eudora Welty, to people (C) who the
(D) the one that

12. Relative humidity is the amount of


water vapor the air contains at a
certain temperature with the
amount it could hold at that
temperature.

(A) to compare
(B) compared
(C) comparing
(D) compares
Practice Test E – Written Expression

16. The Armory Show, held in New York in 1913, was a important exhibition of
modern European art.

17. Ripe fruit is often stored in a place who contains much carbon dioxide so
that the fruit will not decay too rapidly.

18. In 1852 Massachusetts passed a law requiring all children from four to
eighteen years of old to attend school.

19. The main purpose of classifying animals is to show the most probable
evolutionary relationship of the different species to each another.

20. Matthew C. Perry, a United States naval commander, gained fame not in war
and through diplomacy

21. One of the most impressive collections of nineteenth-century European


paintings in the United States can be found t o the Philadelphia Museum of Art.

22. Three of every four migrating water birds in North America visits the Gulf of
Mexico's winter wetlands.

23. Charleston, West Virginia, was named for Charles Clendenin who son George
acquired land at the junction of tile Elk and Kanawha rivers in 1787.

24. Financier Andrew Mellon donated most of his magnificent art collection to the
National Gallery of Art, where it is now locating.
25. Soil temperatures in Death Valley, California, near the Nevada border,
have been known to reach 90 of degrees Celsius.

26. When the Sun, Moon, and Earth are alignment and the Moon crosses the
Earth's orbital plane, a solar eclipse occurs .

27. Mary Cassatt's paintings of mothers and children are known for its fine linear
rhythm, simple modelings, and harmonies of clear color.

28. Plants synthesize carbohydrates from water and carbon dioxide with the aid of
energy is derived from sunlight .

29. The best American popular music balances a powerful emotions of youth with
tenderness, grace, and wit.

30. In the nineteenth century, women used quilts to inscribe their responses to
social, economic, and politic s issues.

31. Fossils in 500-inillion-year-old rocks demonstrate that life forms in the


Cambrian period were mostly marine animals capability of secreting calcium to
form shells.

32. Rainbows in the shape of c omplete circles are sometimes seen from airplanes
because they are not cutting off by the horizon.

33. Hot at the equator causes the air to expand, rise, and flow toward the poles.
34. Although research has been ongoing sinc e 1930, the existenc e of ESP –
perception and communication without the us e of sight, hear, taste, touch, or
smell – is still disputed.

35. As many as 50 percent of the income from motion pictures produced in the
United States comes from marketing the films abroad.

36. Sleep is controlled by the brain and associated by characteristic breathing


rhythms.

37. The walls around the city of Quebec , which was originally a fort military ,
still stand, making Quebec the only walled city in North America.

38. The manufacture of automobile was extremely expensive until assembly-line


techniques made them cheaper to produce

39. The ballad is characterized by informal diction, by a narrative largely


dependent on action and dialogue, by thematic intense, and by stress on
repetition.

40. Eleanor Roosevelt set the standard against which the wives of all United States
Presidents since have evaluated.
Practice Test E – Answers

Question Number Answer Level of Difficulty Answered Correctly


1 A Easy 91%
2 D Easy 86%
3 A Easy 82%
4 B Easy 78%
5 A Easy 81%
6 C Medium 77%
7 C Medium 68%
8 B Medium 71%
9 B Medium 60%
10 C Medium 59%
11 B Difficult 54%
12 B Difficult 49%
13 D Easy 42%
14 D Easy 41%
15 B Easy 98%
16 B Easy 85%
17 C Easy 94%
18 D Easy 87%
19 D Easy 84%
20 C Easy 80%
21 D Easy 81%
22 C Easy 82%
23 B Medium 75%
24 D Medium 71%
25 D Medium 78%
26 B Medium 71%
27 B Medium 68%
28 C Medium 71%
29 B Medium 63%
30 D Medium 65%
31 D Medium 61%
32 C Medium 59%
33 A Medium 58%
34 D Difficult 55%
35 A Difficult 51%
36 C Difficult 45%
37 B Difficult 45%
38 A Difficult 40%
39 C Difficult 26%
40 D Medium 62%
SESION 3
Practice Test E – Reading

Question 1- 7

Hotels were among the earliest facilities that bound the United States together. They
were both creatures and creators of communities , as well symptoms of the frenetic
quest for community. Even in the first part of the nineteenth century, Americans were
Line already forming the habit of gathering from all corners of the nation for both public and
(5) private, business and pleasure, purposes. Conventions were the new occasions, and
hotels were distinctively American facilities making conventions possible. The first
national convention of a major party to choose a candidate for President (that of the
National Republican party, which met on December 12, 1831, and nominated Henry
Clay for President) was held in Baltimore, at a hotel that was then reputed to be the
(10) best in the country. The presence in Baltimore of Barnum's City Hotel, a six-story
building with two hundred apartments, helps explain why many other early national
political conventions were held there.
In the longer run, American hotels made other national conventions not only
possible but pleasant and convivial. The growing custom of regularly assembling from
(15) afar the representatives of all kinds of groups – not only for political conventions, but
also for commercial, professional, learned, and avocations ones – in turn supported
the multiplying hotels. By the mid-twentieth century, conventions accounted for over a
third of the yearly room occupancy of all hotels in the nation; about eighteen thousand
different conventions were held annually with a total attendance of about ten million
(20) persons.
Nineteenth-century American hotelkeepers, who were no Ionger the genial,
deferential "hosts" of the eighteenth-century European inn, became leading citizens.
Holding a large stake in the community, they exercised power to make it prosper. As
owners or managers of the local "palace of the public,” they were makers and shapers
(25) of a principal community attraction. Travelers from abroad were mildly shocked by this
high social position.

1. The word "bound" in line 1 is closest 2. The National Republican party is


in meaning to mentioned in line 8 as an example
of a group
(A) led
(B) protected (A) from Baltimore
(C) tied (B) of learned people
(D) strengthened (C) owning a hotel
(D) holding a convention
3. The word "assembling" in line 14 is 6. It can be inferred from the passage
closest in meaning to that early hotelkeepers in the United
States were
(A) announcing
(B) motivating (A) active politicians
(C) gathering (B) European immigrants
(D) contracting (C) professional builders
(D) influential citizens

4. The word "ones" in line 16 refers to


7. Which of the following statements
(A) hotels about early American hotels is NOT
(B) conventions mentioned in the passage?
(C) kinds
(D) representatives (A) Travelers from abroad did not
enjoy staying in them.
(B) Conventions were held in them.
5. The word "it" in line 23 refers to (C) People used them for both
business and pleasure.
(A) European inn (D) They were important to the
(B) host community
(C) community
(D) public
Questions 8-17

Beads were probably the first durable ornaments humans possessed, and the
intimate relationship they had with their owners is reflected in the fact that beads are
Line among the most common items found in ancient archaeological sites. In the past, as
today, men, women, and children adorned themselves with beads. In some cultures
(5) still, certain beads are often worn from birth until death, and then are buried with their
owners for the afterlife. Abrasion due to daily wear alters the surface features of beads,
and if they are buried for long, the effects of corrosion can further change their
appearance. Thus, interest is imparted to the bead both by use and the effects of time.
Besides their wearability, either as jewelry or incorporated into articles of attire,
(10) beads possess the desirable characteristics of every collectible: they are durable,
portable, available in infinite variety, and often valuable in their original cultural
context as well as in today's market. Pleasing to look at and touch, beads come in
shapes, colors, and materials that almost compel one to handle them and to sort them.
Beads are miniature bundles of secrets waiting to be revealed: their history,
(15) manufacture, cultural context, economic role, and ornamental use are all points of
information one hopes to unravel. Even the most mundane beads may have traveled
great distances and been exposed to many human experiences. The bead researcher
must gather information from many diverse fields. In addition to having to be a
generalist while specializing in what may seem to be a narrow field, the researcher is
(20) faced with the problem of primary materials that have little or no documentation. Many
ancient beads that are of ethnographic interest have often been separated from their
original cultural context.
The special attractions of beads contribute to the uniqueness of bead research. While
often regarded as the "small change of civi lizations,” beads are a part of every culture,
(25) and they can often be used to date archaeological sites and to designate the degree of
mercantile, technological, and cultural sophistication.

8. What is the main subject of the 10. The word "attire" in line 9 is Closest
passage? in meaning to

(A) Materials used in making beads (A) ritual


(B) How beads are made (B) importance
(C) The reasons for studying beads (C) clothing
(D) Different types of beads (D) history

9. The word "adorned" in line 4 is 11. All of the following are given as
closest in meaning to characteristics of collectible objects
EXCEPT
(A) protected
(B) decorated (A) durability
(C) purchased (B) portability
(D) enjoyed (C) value
(D) scarcity
12. According to the passage, all of 15. It is difficult to trace the history of
the following are factors that make certain ancient beads because they
people want to touch beads
EXCEPT the (A) are small in size
(B) have been buried underground
(A) shape (C) have been moved from their
(B) color original locations
(C) material (D) are frequently lost
(D) odor

16. Knowledge of the history of some


13. The word "unravel" in line 16 is beads may be useful in the studies
closest in meaning to done by which of the following?

(A) communicate (A) Anthropologist


(B) transport (B) Agricultural experts
(C) improve (C) Medical researchers
(D) discover (D) Economists

14. The word "mundane" in line 16 is 17. Where in the passage does the
closest in meaning to author describe why the appearance
beads may change?
(A) carved
(B) beautiful (A) Lines 3-4
(C) ordinary (B) Lines 6-8
(D) heavy (C) Lines 12-13
(D) Lines 20-22
Questions 18-31

In the world of birds, bill design is a prime example of evolutionary fine-tuning.


Shorebirds such as oystercatchers use their bills to pry open the tightly sealed shells of
their prey; hummingbirds have stiletto-like bills to probe the deepest nectar-bearing
Line flowers; and kiwis smell out earthworms thanks to nostrils located at the tip of their
(5) beaks. But few birds are more intimately tied to their source of sustenance than are
crossbills. Two species of these finches, named for the way the upper and lower parts
of their bills cross, rather than meet in the middle, reside in the evergreen forests of
North America and feed on the seeds held within the cones of coniferous trees.
The efficiency of the bill is evident when a crossbill locates a cone. Using a lateral
(10) motion of its lower mandible, the bird separates two overlapping scales on the cone and
exposes the seed. The crossed mandibles enable the bird to exert a powerful biting
force at the bill tips, which is critical for maneuvering them between the scales and
spreading the scales apart. Next, the crossbill snakes its long tongue into the gap and
draws out the seed. Using the combined action of the bill and tongue, the bird cracks
(15) open and discards the woody seed covering and swallows the nutritious inner kernel.
This whole process takes but a few seconds and is repeated hundreds of times a day.
The bills of different crossbill species and subspecies vary – some are stout and
deep, others more slender and shallow. As a rule, large-billed crossbills are better at
securing seeds from large cones, while small-billed crossbills are more deft at
(20) removing the seeds from small, thin-scaled cones. Moreover, the degree to which cones
are naturally slightly open or tightly closed helps determine which bill design is the
best.
One anomaly is the subspecies of red crossbill known as the Newfoundland
crossbill. This bird has a large, robust bill, yet most of Newfoundland's conifers have
small cones, the same kind of cones that the slender-billed white-wings rely on.

18. What does the passage mainly 19. Which of the following statements
discuss? best represents the type of
“evolutionary fine-tuning"
(A) The importance of conifers in mentioned in line 1?
evergreen forests
(B) The efficiency of the bill of the (A) Different shapes of bills have
crossbill evolved depending on the
(C) The variety of food available in available food supply.
a forest (B) White-wing crossbars have
(D) The different techniques birds evolved from red crossbills.
use to obtain food (C) Newfoundland's conifers have
evolved small cones.
(D) Several subspecies of crossbills
have evolved from two species.
20. Why does the author mention 22. Which of the following most closely
oystercatchers, hummingbirds, resembles the bird described in lines
and kiwis in lines 2-4? 6-8?

(A) They are examples of birds that (A)


live in the forest.
(B) Their beaks are similar to the
beak of the crossbill.
(C) They illustrate the relationship
between bill design and food (B)
supply.
(D) They are closely related to the
crossbill.

(C)
21. Crossbills are a type of

(A) shorebird
(B) hummingbird
(D)
(C) kiwi
(D) finch
23. The word "which" in line 12 refers to 29. In what way is the Newfoundland
crossbill an anomaly?
(A) seed
(B) bird (A) It is larger than the other
(C) force crossbill species.
(D) bill (B) It uses a different technique to
obtain food.
(C) The size of its bill does not fit
24. The word "gap" in line 13 is the size of its food source.
closest in meaning to (D) It does not live in evergreen
forests.
(A) opening
(B) flower
(C) mouth 30. The final paragraph of the passage will
(D) tree probably continue with a discussion of

(A) other species of forest birds


25. The word "discards" in line 15 is (B) the fragile ecosystem of
closest in meaning to Newfoundland
(C) what mammals live in the forests
(A) eats (B) of North America
breaks (C) (D) how the Newfoundland crossbill
finds out
survives with a large bill
(D) gets rid of

31. Where in the passage does the author


26. The word "others" in line 18 refers to describe how a crossbill removed a
seed from its cone?
(A) bills
(B) species
(A) The first paragraph
(C) seeds
(B) The second paragraph
(D) cones
(C) The third paragraph
(D) The fourth paragraph
27. The word "deft" in line 19 is
closest in meaning to

(A) hungry
(B) skilled
(C) tired
(D) pleasant

28. The word "robust" in line 24 is


closest in meaning to

(A) strong
(B) colorful
(C) unusual
(D) sharp
Questions 32-38

If you look closely at some of the early copies of the Declaration or Independence,
beyond the flourished signature of John Hancock and the other fifty-five men who
signed it, you will also find the name of one woman, Mary Katherine Goddard. It was
Line she, a Baltimore printer, who published the first official copies of the Declaration, the
(5) first copies that included the names of its signers and therefore heralded the support of
all thirteen colonies.
Mary Goddard first got into printing at the age of twenty-four when her brother
opened a printing shop in Providence, Rhode Island, in 1762. When he proceeded to
get into trouble with his partners and creditors. it was Mary Goddard and her mother
(10) who were left to run the shop. In 1765 they began publishing the Providence Gazette, a
weekly newspaper. Similar problems seemed to follow her brother as he opened
businesses in Philadelphia and again in Baltimore. Each time Ms. Goddard was
brought in to run the newspapers. After starting Baltimore's first newspaper, The
Maryland Journal, in 1773, her brother went broke trying to organize a colonial postal
service. While he was in debtor's prison, Mary Katherine Goddard's name appeared on
(15) the newspaper's masthead for the first time.
When the Continental Congress fled there from Philadelphia in 1776, it
commissioned Ms. Goddard to print the first official version of the Declaration of
Independence in January 1777. After printing the documents, she herself paid the post
(20) riders to deliver the Declaration throughout the colonies.
During the American Revolution, Mary Goddard continued to publish Baltimore's
only newspaper, which one historian claimed was "second to none among the
colonies." She was also the city's Postmaster from 1775 to 1789 – appointed by
Benjamin Franklin – and is considered to be the first woman to hold a federal position.

32. With which of the following 33. Mary Goddard's name appears on the
subjects is the passage mainly Declaration of Independence because
concerned?
(A) she helped write the original
(A) The accomplishment s of a document
female publisher (B) she published the document
(B) The weaknesses of the (C) she paid to have the document
newspaper industry printed
(C) The rights of a female publisher (D) her brother was in prison
(D) The publishing system in colonial
America
34. The word "heralded" in line 5 is closest 37. It can be inferred from the passage that
in meaning to Mary Goddard was

(A) influenced (A) an accomplished businesswoman


(B) announced (B) extremely wealthy
(C) rejected (C) a member of the Continental
(D) ignored congress
(D) a famous writer

35. According to the passage, Mary


Goddard first became involved in 38.
publishing when she The word "position" in line 24 is closest
in meaning to
(A) was appointed by Benjamin
Franklin (A) job
(B) signed the Declaration of (B) election
Independence (C) document
(C) took over her brother's printing (D) location
shop
(D) moved to Baltimore

36. The word "there" in line 17 refers to

(A) the colonies


(B) the print shop
(C) Baltimore
(D) Providence
Question 39-50

Galaxies are the major building blocks of the universe. A galaxy is a giant family of
many millions of stars, and it is held together by its own gravitat ional field. Most of the
material universe is organized into galaxies of stars, together with gas and dust.
Line There are three main types of galaxy: spiral, elliptical, and irregular. The Milky
(5) Way is a spiral galaxy: a flattish disc of star with two spiral arms emerging from its
central nucleus. About one-quarter of all galaxies have this shape. Spiral galaxies are
well supplied with the interstellar gas in which new stars form; as the rotating spiral
pattern sweeps around the galaxy it compresses gas and dust, triggering the formation
of bright young stars in its arms. The elliptical galaxies have a symmetrical elliptical or
(10) spheroidal shape with no obvious structure. Most of their member stars are very old
and since ellipticals are devoid of interstellar gas, no new stars are forming in them.
The biggest and brightest galaxies in the universe are ellipticals with masses of about
13
10 times that of the Sun; these giants may frequently be sources of strong radio
emission, in which case they are called radio galaxies. About two-thirds of all galaxies
(15) are elliptical. Irregular galaxies comprise about one-tenth of all galaxies and they come
in many subclasses.
Measurement in space is quite different from measurement on Earth. Some
terrestrial distances can be expressed as intervals of time: the time to fly from one
continent to another or the time it takes to drive to work, for example. By comparison
(20) with these familiar yardsticks, the distances to the galaxies are incomprehensibly large,
but they too are made more manageable by using a time calibration, in this case, the
distance that light travels in one year. On such a scale the nearest giant spiral galaxy,
the Andromeda galaxy, is two million light years away. The most distant luminous
objects seen by telescopes are probably ten thousand million light years away. Their
(25) light was already halfway here before the Earth even formed. The light from the nearby
Virgo galaxy set out when reptiles still dominated the animal world.

39. The word "major" in line 1 is closest in 41. The word "which" in line 7 refers to
meaning to
(A) dust
(A) intense (B) gas
(B) principal (C) pattern
(C) huge (D) galaxy
(D) unique

42. According to the passage, new stars


40. What does the second paragraph are formed in spiral galaxies due to
mainly discuss?
(A) an explosion of gas
(A) The Milky Way (B) the compression of gas and dust
(B) Major categories of galaxies (C) the combining of old stars
(C) How elliptical galaxies are formed (D) strong radio emissions
(D) Differences between irregular and
spiral galaxies
43. The word "symmetrical" in line 9 is 47. What percentage of galaxies is
closest in meaning to irregular?

(A) proportionally balanced (A) 10%


(B) commonly seen (B) 25%
(C) typically large (C) 50%
(D) steadily growing (D) 75%

44. The word "obvious" in line 10 is closest 48. The word "they" in line 21 refers to
in meaning to
(A) intervals
(A) discovered (B) yardsticks
(B) apparent (C) distances
(C) understood (D) galaxies
(D) simplistic

49. Why does the author mention the


45. According to the passage, which Virgo galaxy and the Andromeda
of the following is NOT true of galaxy in the third paragraph?
elliptical galaxies?
(A) To describe the effect that
(A) They are the largest galaxies. distance has on visibility
(B) They mostly contain old stars. (B) To compare the ages of two
(C) They contain a high amount of relatively young galaxies
interstellar gas. (C) To emphasize the vast distances
(D) They have a spherical shape. of the galaxies from Earth
(D) To explain why certain galaxies
cannot be seen by a telescope
46. Which of the following
characteristics of radio galaxies
is mentioned in the passage? 50. The word "dominated" in line 26
is closest in meaning to
(A) They are a type of elliptical galaxy.
(B) They are usually too small to be (A) threatened
seen with a telescope. (B) replaced
(C) They are closely related to (C) were developing in
irregular galaxies. (D) were prevalent in
(D) They are not as bright as spiral
galaxies.
Practice Test E – Answers

Question Number Answer Level of Difficulty Answered Correctly


1 C M 75%
2 D M 78%
3 C M 75%
4 B D 57%
5 C D 50%
6 D D 52%
7 A E 84%
8 C M 72%
9 B M 66%
10 C D 50%
11 D E 83%
12 D E 91%
13 D M 65%
14 C M 58%
15 C M 70%
16 A M 71%
17 B M 74%
18 B M 65%
19 A M 69%
20 C M 71%
21 D D 51%
22 B M 76%
23 C D 49%
24 A D 50%
25 D M 53%
26 A M 71%
27 B E 79%
28 A M 61%
29 C D 46%
30 D M 60%
31 B M 66%
32 A E 76%
33 B M 67%
34 B M 48%
35 C E 73%
36 C M 54%
37 A M 51%
38 A M 60%
39 B M 69%
40 B E 79%
41 B M 64%
42 B M 77%
43 A M 65%
44 B M 64%
45 C M 55%
46 A M 76%
47 A M 77%
48 C D 50%
49 C M 56%
50 D D 30%

You might also like