Sentence
stringlengths
135
5.03k
Video Title
stringlengths
9
14
Question ID:PT79 S4 Q22 Passage:After a hepadnavirus inserts itself into a chromosome of an animal, fragments of the virus are passed on to all of that animal's descendants. A hepadnavirus fragment is present in a chromosome of the zebra finch and in precisely the same location in a corresponding chromosome of the dark...
PT79 S4 Q22
Question ID:PT79 S4 Q23 Passage:The diet of Heliothis subflexa caterpillars consists entirely of fruit from plants of the genus Physalis. These fruit do not contain linolenic acid, which is necessary to the growth and maturation of many insects other than H. subflexa. Linolenic acid in an insect's diet is also necessar...
PT79 S4 Q23
Question ID:PT79 S4 Q24 Passage:Politician: Democracy requires that there be no restrictions on the ability of citizens to share their ideas freely, without fear of reprisal. Therefore the right to have private conversations, unmonitored by the government, is essential to democracy. For a government to monitor conversa...
PT79 S4 Q24
Question ID:PT79 S4 Q25 Passage:One way to compare chess-playing programs is to compare how they perform with fixed time limits per move. Given any two computers with which a chess-playing program is compatible, and given fixed time limits per move, such a program will have a better chance of winning on the faster comp...
PT79 S4 Q25
Question ID:PT78 S1 Q1 Passage:Grecia: The survey that we are conducting needs to track employment status by age, so respondents should be asked to indicate their age.Hidalgo: We don't need results that provide employment status figures for every single age. So we should instead ask respondents merely to identify the a...
PT78 S1 Q1
Question ID:PT78 S1 Q2 Passage:In 1893, an excavation led by Wilhelm Dörpfeld uncovered an ancient city he believed to be Troy, the site of the war described in Homer's epic poem the Iliad. But that belief cannot be correct. In the Iliad, the Trojan War lasted ten years, but a city as small as the one uncovered by Dö...
PT78 S1 Q2
Question ID:PT78 S1 Q3 Passage:Flynn: Allowing people to collect large damage awards when they successfully sue corporations that produce dangerous products clearly benefits consumers, since the possibility of large awards gives corporations a strong incentive to reduce safety risks associated with their products.Garci...
PT78 S1 Q3
Question ID:PT78 S1 Q4 Passage:Monroe: Our organization's project has been a failure. Our stated goal was to reduce as much as possible the number of homes in the community that lack electricity. Now, at the project's conclusion, approximately 2,000 homes are still without electricity.Wilkerson: But before the project ...
PT78 S1 Q4
Question ID:PT78 S1 Q5 Passage:Researchers asked 100 fifty-year-olds and 100 twenty-year-olds whether they gave blood. Because nearly twice as many fifty-year-olds as twenty-year-olds reported that they sometimes gave blood, the researchers concluded that, on average, fifty-year-olds are more altruistic than twenty-yea...
PT78 S1 Q5
Question ID:PT78 S1 Q6 Passage:Mario: I see that the only rug store in Glendale has gone out of business. Evidently there's little demand for rugs in Glendale. So if you're planning to open a new business there, rugs would be one product to avoid.Renate: It's true that the store is gone, but its closing had little to d...
PT78 S1 Q6
Question ID:PT78 S1 Q7 Passage:Editorialist: The city council is considering increasing the amount of air traffic allowed at the airport beyond its original design capacity. Several council members say that this increase would not decrease safety as it would be accompanied by the purchase of the latest safety technolo...
PT78 S1 Q7
Question ID:PT78 S1 Q8 Passage:Philosopher: It has been argued that because particular moral codes differ between cultures, morality must be entirely a product of culture and cannot be grounded in some universal human nature. This argument is flawed. Research suggests that certain moral attitudes, such as disapproval o...
PT78 S1 Q8
Question ID:PT78 S1 Q9 Passage:In a recent field study of prairie plants, the more plant species a prairie plot had, the more vigorously the plants grew and the better the soil retained nutrients. Thus, having more plant species improves a prairie's ability to support plant life. Stem:The argument is most vulnerable to...
PT78 S1 Q9
Question ID:PT78 S1 Q10 Passage:Anthropologist: In an experiment, two groups of undergraduates were taught how to create one of the types of stone tools that the Neanderthals made in prehistoric times. One group was taught using both demonstrations and elaborate verbal explanations, whereas the other group learned by s...
PT78 S1 Q10
Question ID:PT78 S1 Q11 Passage:Modest amounts of exercise can produce a dramatic improvement in cardiovascular health. One should exercise most days of the week, but one need only do the equivalent of half an hour of brisk walking on those days to obtain cardiovascular health benefits. More vigorous exercise is more e...
PT78 S1 Q11
Question ID:PT78 S1 Q12 Passage:Sartore is a better movie reviewer than Kelly. A movie review should help readers determine whether or not they are apt to enjoy the movie, and a person who is likely to enjoy a particular movie is much more likely to realize this by reading a review by Sartore than a review by Kelly, ev...
PT78 S1 Q12
Question ID:PT78 S1 Q13 Passage:Specially bred aquarium fish with brilliant coloration and unusual body shapes may be popular with connoisseurs, but they are inferior to ordinary fish. Hampered by their elaborate tails or strangely shaped fins, the specially bred fish cannot reach food as quickly as can the ordinary fi...
PT78 S1 Q13
Question ID:PT78 S1 Q14 Passage:Ethicist: The general principle‚ if one ought to do something then one can do it‚ does not always hold true. This may be seen by considering an example. Suppose someone promises to meet a friend at a certain time, but‚ because of an unforeseen traffic jam‚ it is impossible to do so. St...
PT78 S1 Q14
Question ID:PT78 S1 Q15 Passage:The production of leather and fur for clothing is labor intensive, which means that these materials have tended to be expensive. But as fashion has moved away from these materials, their prices have dropped, while prices of some materials that require less labor in their production and a...
PT78 S1 Q15
Question ID:PT78 S1 Q16 Passage:In most of this forest, the expected outbreak of tree-eating tussock moths should not be countered. After all, the moth is beneficial where suppression of forest fires, for example, has left the forest unnaturally crowded with immature trees, and _______. Stem:The conclusion of the argum...
PT78 S1 Q16
Question ID:PT78 S1 Q17 Passage:In order to relieve traffic congestion, the city of Gastner built a new highway linking several of the city‚ s suburbs to the downtown area. However, the average commute time for workers in downtown Gastner increased after the new highway opened. Stem:Which one of the following, if true,...
PT78 S1 Q17
Question ID:PT78 S1 Q18 Passage:Office worker: I have two equally important projects that remain undone. The first one is late already, and if I devote time to finishing it, then I won't have time to finish the second one before its deadline. Admittedly, there's no guarantee that I can finish the second project on time...
PT78 S1 Q18
Question ID:PT78 S1 Q19 Passage:Science teacher: An abstract knowledge of science is very seldom useful for the decisions that adults typically make in their daily lives. But the skills taught in secondary school should be useful for making such decisions. Therefore, secondary school science courses should teach studen...
PT78 S1 Q19
Question ID:PT78 S1 Q20 Passage:Lyle: Admittedly, modernizing the language of premodern plays lessens their aesthetic quality, but such modernizing remains valuable for teaching history, since it makes the plays accessible to students who would otherwise never enjoy them.Carl: But such modernizing prevents students f...
PT78 S1 Q20
Question ID:PT78 S1 Q21 Passage:Most kinds of soil contain clay, and virtually every kind of soil contains either sand or organic material, or both. Therefore, there must be some kinds of soil that contain both clay and sand and some that contain both clay and organic material. Stem:The pattern of flawed reasoning in w...
PT78 S1 Q21
Question ID:PT78 S1 Q22 Passage:In 2005, an environmental group conducted a study measuring the levels of toxic chemicals in the bodies of eleven volunteers. Scientifically valid inferences could not be drawn from the study because of the small sample size, but the results were interesting nonetheless. Among the subjec...
PT78 S1 Q22
Question ID:PT78 S1 Q23 Passage:A spy fails by being caught, and it is normally only through being caught that spies reveal their methods. The successful spy is never caught. So the available data are skewed: One can learn a lot about what makes a spy fail but very little about what makes a spy succeed. Stem:Which one ...
PT78 S1 Q23
Question ID:PT78 S1 Q24 Passage:Families with underage children make up much of the population, but because only adults can vote, lawmakers in democracies pay too little attention to the interests of these families. To remedy this, parents should be given additional votes to cast on behalf of their underage children. F...
PT78 S1 Q24
Question ID:PT78 S1 Q25 Passage:Critic: The Gazette-Standard newspaper recently increased its editorial staff to avoid factual errors. But this clearly is not working. Compared to its biggest competitor, the Gazette-Standard currently runs significantly more corrections acknowledging factual errors. Stem:Which one of t...
PT78 S1 Q25
Question ID:PT78 S2 Q1 Passage:Seven workers‚ Quinn, Ruiz, Smith, Taylor, Verma, Wells, and Xue‚ are being considered for a special project. Exactly three of the workers will be selected to be project members, and exactly one of these project members will be the project leader. The selection is subject to the following...
PT78 S2 Q1
Question ID:PT78 S2 Q2 Passage:Seven workers‚ Quinn, Ruiz, Smith, Taylor, Verma, Wells, and Xue‚ are being considered for a special project. Exactly three of the workers will be selected to be project members, and exactly one of these project members will be the project leader. The selection is subject to the following...
PT78 S2 Q2
Question ID:PT78 S2 Q3 Passage:Seven workers‚ Quinn, Ruiz, Smith, Taylor, Verma, Wells, and Xue‚ are being considered for a special project. Exactly three of the workers will be selected to be project members, and exactly one of these project members will be the project leader. The selection is subject to the following...
PT78 S2 Q3
Question ID:PT78 S2 Q4 Passage:Seven workers‚ Quinn, Ruiz, Smith, Taylor, Verma, Wells, and Xue‚ are being considered for a special project. Exactly three of the workers will be selected to be project members, and exactly one of these project members will be the project leader. The selection is subject to the following...
PT78 S2 Q4
Question ID:PT78 S2 Q5 Passage:Seven workers‚ Quinn, Ruiz, Smith, Taylor, Verma, Wells, and Xue‚ are being considered for a special project. Exactly three of the workers will be selected to be project members, and exactly one of these project members will be the project leader. The selection is subject to the following...
PT78 S2 Q5
Question ID:PT78 S2 Q6 Passage:Four students will be assigned to a history project in which they will search archives from the years 1921, 1922, 1923, and 1924. Each of the four years will have exactly one student assigned to it. Six students‚ Louis, Mollie, Onyx, Ryan, Tiffany, and Yoshio‚ are available for this proje...
PT78 S2 Q6
Question ID:PT78 S2 Q7 Passage:Four students will be assigned to a history project in which they will search archives from the years 1921, 1922, 1923, and 1924. Each of the four years will have exactly one student assigned to it. Six students‚ Louis, Mollie, Onyx, Ryan, Tiffany, and Yoshio‚ are available for this proje...
PT78 S2 Q7
Question ID:PT78 S2 Q8 Passage:Four students will be assigned to a history project in which they will search archives from the years 1921, 1922, 1923, and 1924. Each of the four years will have exactly one student assigned to it. Six students‚ Louis, Mollie, Onyx, Ryan, Tiffany, and Yoshio‚ are available for this proje...
PT78 S2 Q8
Question ID:PT78 S2 Q9 Passage:Four students will be assigned to a history project in which they will search archives from the years 1921, 1922, 1923, and 1924. Each of the four years will have exactly one student assigned to it. Six students‚ Louis, Mollie, Onyx, Ryan, Tiffany, and Yoshio‚ are available for this proje...
PT78 S2 Q9
Question ID:PT78 S2 Q10 Passage:Four students will be assigned to a history project in which they will search archives from the years 1921, 1922, 1923, and 1924. Each of the four years will have exactly one student assigned to it. Six students‚ Louis, Mollie, Onyx, Ryan, Tiffany, and Yoshio‚ are available for this proj...
PT78 S2 Q10
Question ID:PT78 S2 Q11 Passage:Four students will be assigned to a history project in which they will search archives from the years 1921, 1922, 1923, and 1924. Each of the four years will have exactly one student assigned to it. Six students‚ Louis, Mollie, Onyx, Ryan, Tiffany, and Yoshio‚ are available for this proj...
PT78 S2 Q11
Question ID:PT78 S2 Q12 Passage:During the weeklong grand opening of a new antique shop, the antique dealer will auction exactly one antique per day for six consecutive days‚ June 1st through June 6th. The antiques to be auctioned are: a harmonica, a lamp, a mirror, a sundial, a table, and a vase. The following conditi...
PT78 S2 Q12
Question ID:PT78 S2 Q13 Passage:During the weeklong grand opening of a new antique shop, the antique dealer will auction exactly one antique per day for six consecutive days‚ June 1st through June 6th. The antiques to be auctioned are: a harmonica, a lamp, a mirror, a sundial, a table, and a vase. The following conditi...
PT78 S2 Q13
Question ID:PT78 S2 Q14 Passage:During the weeklong grand opening of a new antique shop, the antique dealer will auction exactly one antique per day for six consecutive days‚ June 1st through June 6th. The antiques to be auctioned are: a harmonica, a lamp, a mirror, a sundial, a table, and a vase. The following conditi...
PT78 S2 Q14
Question ID:PT78 S2 Q15 Passage:During the weeklong grand opening of a new antique shop, the antique dealer will auction exactly one antique per day for six consecutive days‚ June 1st through June 6th. The antiques to be auctioned are: a harmonica, a lamp, a mirror, a sundial, a table, and a vase. The following conditi...
PT78 S2 Q15
Question ID:PT78 S2 Q16 Passage:During the weeklong grand opening of a new antique shop, the antique dealer will auction exactly one antique per day for six consecutive days‚ June 1st through June 6th. The antiques to be auctioned are: a harmonica, a lamp, a mirror, a sundial, a table, and a vase. The following conditi...
PT78 S2 Q16
Question ID:PT78 S2 Q17 Passage:During the weeklong grand opening of a new antique shop, the antique dealer will auction exactly one antique per day for six consecutive days‚ June 1st through June 6th. The antiques to be auctioned are: a harmonica, a lamp, a mirror, a sundial, a table, and a vase. The following conditi...
PT78 S2 Q17
Question ID:PT78 S2 Q18 Passage:A chorus director is planning to audition exactly six singers: Kammer, Lugo, Trillo, Waite, Yoshida, and Zinn. Kammer's audition and Lugo's audition will be recorded; the other four will not be. The six auditions are to take place one after the other on a single day, in accordance with t...
PT78 S2 Q18
Question ID:PT78 S2 Q19 Passage:A chorus director is planning to audition exactly six singers: Kammer, Lugo, Trillo, Waite, Yoshida, and Zinn. Kammer's audition and Lugo's audition will be recorded; the other four will not be. The six auditions are to take place one after the other on a single day, in accordance with t...
PT78 S2 Q19
Question ID:PT78 S2 Q20 Passage:A chorus director is planning to audition exactly six singers: Kammer, Lugo, Trillo, Waite, Yoshida, and Zinn. Kammer's audition and Lugo's audition will be recorded; the other four will not be. The six auditions are to take place one after the other on a single day, in accordance with t...
PT78 S2 Q20
Question ID:PT78 S2 Q21 Passage:A chorus director is planning to audition exactly six singers: Kammer, Lugo, Trillo, Waite, Yoshida, and Zinn. Kammer's audition and Lugo's audition will be recorded; the other four will not be. The six auditions are to take place one after the other on a single day, in accordance with t...
PT78 S2 Q21
Question ID:PT78 S2 Q22 Passage:A chorus director is planning to audition exactly six singers: Kammer, Lugo, Trillo, Waite, Yoshida, and Zinn. Kammer's audition and Lugo's audition will be recorded; the other four will not be. The six auditions are to take place one after the other on a single day, in accordance with t...
PT78 S2 Q22
Question ID:PT78 S2 Q23 Passage:A chorus director is planning to audition exactly six singers: Kammer, Lugo, Trillo, Waite, Yoshida, and Zinn. Kammer's audition and Lugo's audition will be recorded; the other four will not be. The six auditions are to take place one after the other on a single day, in accordance with t...
PT78 S2 Q23
Question ID:PT78 S3 Q1 Passage:A nonprofit organization concerned with a social issue sent out a fund-raising letter to 5,000 people. The letter was accompanied by a survey soliciting recipients' opinions. Of the 300 respondents, 283 indicated in the survey that they agreed with the organization's position on the socia...
PT78 S3 Q1
Question ID:PT78 S3 Q2 Passage:An unstable climate was probably a major cause of the fall of the Roman empire. Tree-ring analysis shows that Europe's climate underwent extreme fluctuations between 250 A.D. and 550 A.D., a period that encompasses Rome‚ s decline and fall. This highly variable climate surely hurt food pr...
PT78 S3 Q2
Question ID:PT78 S3 Q3 Passage:Sales manager: Having spent my entire career in sales, most of that time as a sales manager for a large computer company, I know that natural superstar salespeople are rare. But many salespeople can perform like superstars if they have a good manager. Therefore, companies should _______. ...
PT78 S3 Q3
Question ID:PT78 S3 Q4 Passage:According to economists, people's tendency to purchase a given commodity is inversely proportional to its price. When new techniques produced cheaper steel, more steel was purchased. Nevertheless, once machine-produced lace became available, at much lower prices than the handcrafted varie...
PT78 S3 Q4
Question ID:PT78 S3 Q5 Passage:Resident: Data indicates that 30 percent of the houses in our town have inadequate site drainage and 30 percent have structural defects that could make them unsafe. Hence, at least 60 percent of our town's houses have some kind of problem that threatens their integrity. Stem:The reasoning...
PT78 S3 Q5
Question ID:PT78 S3 Q6 Passage:The decisions that one makes can profoundly affect one's life years later. So one should not regret the missed opportunities of youth, for had one decided instead to seize one of these opportunities, one would not have some of the close personal relationships one currently has. And everyo...
PT78 S3 Q6
Question ID:PT78 S3 Q7 Passage:The Kuna, a people native to several Panamanian islands, generally have a low incidence of high blood pressure. But Kuna who have moved to the Panamanian mainland do not have a low incidence of high blood pressure. Kuna who live on the islands, unlike those who live on the mainland, typic...
PT78 S3 Q7
Question ID:PT78 S3 Q8 Passage:Numerous studies suggest that when scientific evidence is presented in a trial, jurors regard that evidence as more credible than they would if they had encountered the same evidence outside of the courtroom context. Legal theorists have hypothesized that this effect is primarily due to t...
PT78 S3 Q8
Question ID:PT78 S3 Q9 Passage:Organized word-of-mouth marketing campaigns are driven by product boosters who extol a product to friends and acquaintances. A study found that these campaigns are more successful when the product booster openly admits to being part of an organized marketing campaign. This is surprising b...
PT78 S3 Q9
Question ID:PT78 S3 Q10 Passage:Consultant: If Whalley sticks with her current platform in the upcoming election, then she will lose to her opponent by a few percentage points among voters under 50, while beating him by a bigger percentage among voters 50 and over. Therefore, sticking with her current platform will all...
PT78 S3 Q10
Question ID:PT78 S3 Q11 Passage:From 1880 to 2000 Britain's economy grew fivefold, but emissions of carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas, were the same on a per capita basis in Britain in 2000 as they were in 1880. Stem:The claims made above are incompatible with which one of the following generalizations? Correct Answer C...
PT78 S3 Q11
Question ID:PT78 S3 Q12 Passage:Advertisement: When you need a will, consulting a lawyer is much more expensive than using do-it-yourself software. And you get a valid will either way. However, when you're ill, you aren't satisfied with simply getting some valid prescription or other; what you pay your doctor for is th...
PT78 S3 Q12
Question ID:PT78 S3 Q13 Passage:Pollution is a problem wherever there are people who are indifferent to their environment, and nature's balance is harmed wherever there is pollution. So wherever there are people who are indifferent to their environment, nature's balance is harmed. Stem:The reasoning in which one of the...
PT78 S3 Q13
Question ID:PT78 S3 Q14 Passage:Seventeenth-century proponents of the philosophical school of thought known as mechanism produced numerous arguments that sought to use the principles of mechanism to establish the superiority of monarchies over all other systems of government. This proliferation of arguments has been co...
PT78 S3 Q14
Question ID:PT78 S3 Q15 Passage:A good manager must understand people and be able to defuse tense situations. But anyone who is able to defuse tense situations must understand people. Since Ishiko is able to defuse tense situations, she must be a good manager. Stem:The reasoning in the argument is flawed in that it Cor...
PT78 S3 Q15
Question ID:PT78 S3 Q16 Passage:Babblers, a bird species, live in large cooperative groups. Each member attempts to defend the group by sounding a loud barklike call when it spots a predator, inciting the others to bark too. Babblers, however, are extremely well camouflaged and could usually feed safely, unnoticed by p...
PT78 S3 Q16
Question ID:PT78 S3 Q17 Passage:Photographs show an area of Europa, a moon of Jupiter, where the icy surface appears to have buckled as a result of turbulent water moving underneath. This photographic evidence indicates that there is a warm sea beneath Europa's icy surface. The presence of such a sea is thought by scie...
PT78 S3 Q17
Question ID:PT78 S3 Q18 Passage:For consumers, the most enjoyable emotional experience garnered from shopping is feeling lucky. Retailers use this fact to their advantage, but too often they resort to using advertised price cuts to promote their wares. Promotions of this sort might make bargain-minded consumers feel lu...
PT78 S3 Q18
Question ID:PT78 S3 Q19 Passage:Jurist: To ensure that a legal system remains just, it is important to guarantee that lawbreaking does not give lawbreakers an unfair advantage over law abiders. Thus, notwithstanding any other goals that criminal punishment may serve, it should certainly attempt to ensure that criminal ...
PT78 S3 Q19
Question ID:PT78 S3 Q20 Passage:The company president says that significant procedural changes were made before either she or Yeung was told about them. But, according to Grimes, the contract requires that either the company president or any lawyer in the company's legal department be told about proposed procedural cha...
PT78 S3 Q20
Question ID:PT78 S3 Q21 Passage:Journalist: People whose diets contain a relatively large amount of iron are significantly more likely to develop Parkinson's disease than are those whose diets contain less of this mineral. Limiting one's intake of meats, seafood, and other foods rich in iron should thus reduce one's ch...
PT78 S3 Q21
Question ID:PT78 S3 Q22 Passage:Riverdale's Modern Party Chairperson: Maples, the Modern Party candidate, would be a better mayor than his opponent, Tannett, who is a member of the Traditionalist Party. Every member of the Modern Party is better qualified to be mayor than is any member of the Traditionalist Party. Ste...
PT78 S3 Q22
Question ID:PT78 S3 Q23 Passage:Businessperson: Because the parking area directly in front of the building was closed for maintenance today, I was late to my meeting. If the maintenance had been done on a different day, I would have gotten to the meeting on time. After finding out that I could not park in that area it ...
PT78 S3 Q23
Question ID:PT78 S3 Q24 Passage:For a work to be rightly thought of as world literature, it must be received and interpreted within the writer's own national tradition and within external national traditions. A work counts as being interpreted within a national tradition if authors from that tradition use the work in a...
PT78 S3 Q24
Question ID:PT78 S3 Q25 Passage:At Morris University this semester, most of the sociology majors are taking Introduction to Social Psychology, but most of the psychology majors are not. Hence, there must be more sociology majors than psychology majors enrolled in the class. Stem:The flawed pattern of reasoning in the a...
PT78 S3 Q25
Question ID:PT78 S3 Q26 Passage:Film director: Although the production costs of my latest film are very high, there is little risk that the film studio will not recover these costs. Even if the film is unpopular, much of the money is being spent to develop innovative special-effects technology that could be used in fut...
PT78 S3 Q26
Question ID:PT78 S4 Q1 Passage:Passage AJury nullification occurs when the jury acquits the defendant in a criminal case in disregard of the judge's instructions and contrary to the jury's findings of fact. Sometimes a jury's nullification decision is based on mercy for the defendant, sometimes on dislike for the victi...
PT78 S4 Q1
Question ID:PT78 S4 Q2 Passage:Passage AJury nullification occurs when the jury acquits the defendant in a criminal case in disregard of the judge's instructions and contrary to the jury's findings of fact. Sometimes a jury's nullification decision is based on mercy for the defendant, sometimes on dislike for the victi...
PT78 S4 Q2
Question ID:PT78 S4 Q3 Passage:Passage AJury nullification occurs when the jury acquits the defendant in a criminal case in disregard of the judge's instructions and contrary to the jury's findings of fact. Sometimes a jury's nullification decision is based on mercy for the defendant, sometimes on dislike for the victi...
PT78 S4 Q3
Question ID:PT78 S4 Q4 Passage:Passage AJury nullification occurs when the jury acquits the defendant in a criminal case in disregard of the judge's instructions and contrary to the jury's findings of fact. Sometimes a jury's nullification decision is based on mercy for the defendant, sometimes on dislike for the victi...
PT78 S4 Q4
Question ID:PT78 S4 Q5 Passage:Passage AJury nullification occurs when the jury acquits the defendant in a criminal case in disregard of the judge's instructions and contrary to the jury's findings of fact. Sometimes a jury's nullification decision is based on mercy for the defendant, sometimes on dislike for the victi...
PT78 S4 Q5
Question ID:PT78 S4 Q6 Passage:Passage AJury nullification occurs when the jury acquits the defendant in a criminal case in disregard of the judge's instructions and contrary to the jury's findings of fact. Sometimes a jury's nullification decision is based on mercy for the defendant, sometimes on dislike for the victi...
PT78 S4 Q6
Question ID:PT78 S4 Q7 Passage:Most sociohistorical interpretations of art view a body of work as the production of a class, generally a dominant or governing class, imposing its ideals. For example, Richard Taruskin writes in his Oxford History of Western Music that one of the defining characteristics of "high art" is...
PT78 S4 Q7
Question ID:PT78 S4 Q8 Passage:Most sociohistorical interpretations of art view a body of work as the production of a class, generally a dominant or governing class, imposing its ideals. For example, Richard Taruskin writes in his Oxford History of Western Music that one of the defining characteristics of "high art" is...
PT78 S4 Q8
Question ID:PT78 S4 Q9 Passage:Most sociohistorical interpretations of art view a body of work as the production of a class, generally a dominant or governing class, imposing its ideals. For example, Richard Taruskin writes in his Oxford History of Western Music that one of the defining characteristics of "high art" is...
PT78 S4 Q9
Question ID:PT78 S4 Q10 Passage:Most sociohistorical interpretations of art view a body of work as the production of a class, generally a dominant or governing class, imposing its ideals. For example, Richard Taruskin writes in his Oxford History of Western Music that one of the defining characteristics of "high art" i...
PT78 S4 Q10
Question ID:PT78 S4 Q11 Passage:Most sociohistorical interpretations of art view a body of work as the production of a class, generally a dominant or governing class, imposing its ideals. For example, Richard Taruskin writes in his Oxford History of Western Music that one of the defining characteristics of "high art" i...
PT78 S4 Q11
Question ID:PT78 S4 Q12 Passage:Most sociohistorical interpretations of art view a body of work as the production of a class, generally a dominant or governing class, imposing its ideals. For example, Richard Taruskin writes in his Oxford History of Western Music that one of the defining characteristics of "high art" i...
PT78 S4 Q12
Question ID:PT78 S4 Q13 Passage:Most sociohistorical interpretations of art view a body of work as the production of a class, generally a dominant or governing class, imposing its ideals. For example, Richard Taruskin writes in his Oxford History of Western Music that one of the defining characteristics of "high art" i...
PT78 S4 Q13
Question ID:PT78 S4 Q14 Passage:Most sociohistorical interpretations of art view a body of work as the production of a class, generally a dominant or governing class, imposing its ideals. For example, Richard Taruskin writes in his Oxford History of Western Music that one of the defining characteristics of "high art" i...
PT78 S4 Q14
Question ID:PT78 S4 Q15 Passage:Hundreds of clay tablets marked in cuneiform have been found in excavations of the Sumerian city of Uruk (in present-day Iraq). Though the tablets date from roughly 3000 B.C., the writing on them uses relatively few pictographs; instead, numerous abstract symbols are used. The sign for "...
PT78 S4 Q15
Question ID:PT78 S4 Q16 Passage:Hundreds of clay tablets marked in cuneiform have been found in excavations of the Sumerian city of Uruk (in present-day Iraq). Though the tablets date from roughly 3000 B.C., the writing on them uses relatively few pictographs; instead, numerous abstract symbols are used. The sign for "...
PT78 S4 Q16
Question ID:PT78 S4 Q17 Passage:Hundreds of clay tablets marked in cuneiform have been found in excavations of the Sumerian city of Uruk (in present-day Iraq). Though the tablets date from roughly 3000 B.C., the writing on them uses relatively few pictographs; instead, numerous abstract symbols are used. The sign for "...
PT78 S4 Q17
Question ID:PT78 S4 Q18 Passage:Hundreds of clay tablets marked in cuneiform have been found in excavations of the Sumerian city of Uruk (in present-day Iraq). Though the tablets date from roughly 3000 B.C., the writing on them uses relatively few pictographs; instead, numerous abstract symbols are used. The sign for "...
PT78 S4 Q18
Question ID:PT78 S4 Q19 Passage:Hundreds of clay tablets marked in cuneiform have been found in excavations of the Sumerian city of Uruk (in present-day Iraq). Though the tablets date from roughly 3000 B.C., the writing on them uses relatively few pictographs; instead, numerous abstract symbols are used. The sign for "...
PT78 S4 Q19
Question ID:PT78 S4 Q20 Passage:Hundreds of clay tablets marked in cuneiform have been found in excavations of the Sumerian city of Uruk (in present-day Iraq). Though the tablets date from roughly 3000 B.C., the writing on them uses relatively few pictographs; instead, numerous abstract symbols are used. The sign for "...
PT78 S4 Q20
Question ID:PT78 S4 Q21 Passage:Hundreds of clay tablets marked in cuneiform have been found in excavations of the Sumerian city of Uruk (in present-day Iraq). Though the tablets date from roughly 3000 B.C., the writing on them uses relatively few pictographs; instead, numerous abstract symbols are used. The sign for "...
PT78 S4 Q21
Question ID:PT78 S4 Q22 Passage:Hundreds of clay tablets marked in cuneiform have been found in excavations of the Sumerian city of Uruk (in present-day Iraq). Though the tablets date from roughly 3000 B.C., the writing on them uses relatively few pictographs; instead, numerous abstract symbols are used. The sign for "...
PT78 S4 Q22