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Question ID:PT62 S4 Q8 Passage:Storytelling appears to be a universal aspect of both past and present cultures. Comparative study of traditional narratives from widely separated epochs and diverse cultures reveals common themes such as creation, tribal origin, mystical beings and quasi-historical figures, and common st...
PT62 S4 Q8
Question ID:PT62 S4 Q9 Passage:If a mother's first child is born before its due date, it is likely that her second child will be also. Jackie's second child was not born before its due date, so it is likely that Jackie's first child was not born before its due date either. Stem:The questionable reasoning in the argumen...
PT62 S4 Q9
Question ID:PT62 S4 Q10 Passage:Science journalist: Europa, a moon of Jupiter, is covered with ice. Data recently transmitted by a spacecraft strongly suggest that there are oceans of liquid water deep under the ice. Life as we know it could evolve only in the presence of liquid water. Hence, it is likely that at leas...
PT62 S4 Q10
Question ID:PT62 S4 Q11 Passage:A bacterial species will inevitably develop greater resistance within a few years to any antibiotics used against it, unless those antibiotics eliminate that species completely. However, no single antibiotic now on the market is powerful enough to eliminate bacterial species X completely...
PT62 S4 Q11
Question ID:PT62 S4 Q12 Passage:Political scientist: It is not uncommon for a politician to criticize his or her political opponents by claiming that their exposition of their ideas is muddled and incomprehensible. Such criticism, however, is never sincere. Political agendas promoted in a manner that cannot be underst...
PT62 S4 Q12
Question ID:PT62 S4 Q13 Passage:Many symptoms of mental illnesses are affected by organic factors such as a deficiency in a compound in the brain. What is surprising, however, is the tremendous variation among different countries in the incidence of these symptoms in people with mental illnesses. This variation establi...
PT62 S4 Q13
Question ID:PT62 S4 Q14 Passage:Politician: It has been proposed that the national parks in our country be managed by private companies rather than the government. A similar privatization of the telecommunications industry has benefited consumers by allowing competition among a variety of telephone companies to improve...
PT62 S4 Q14
Question ID:PT62 S4 Q15 Passage:Jewel collectors, fearing that their eyes will be deceived by a counterfeit, will not buy a diamond unless the dealer guarantees that it is genuine. But why should a counterfeit give any less aesthetic pleasure when the naked eye cannot distinguish it from a real diamond? Both jewels sho...
PT62 S4 Q15
Question ID:PT62 S4 Q16 Passage:All etching tools are either pin-tipped or bladed. While some bladed etching tools are used for engraving, some are not. On the other hand, all pin-tipped etching tools are used for engraving. Thus, there are more etching tools that are used for engraving than there are etching tools tha...
PT62 S4 Q16
Question ID:PT62 S4 Q17 Passage:A 24-year study of 1,500 adults showed that those subjects with a high intake of foods rich in beta-carotene were much less likely to die from cancer or heart disease than were those with a low intake of such foods. On the other hand, taking beta-carotene supplements for 12 years had no ...
PT62 S4 Q17
Question ID:PT62 S4 Q18 Passage:If there are sentient beings on planets outside our solar system, we will not be able to determine this anytime in the near future unless some of these beings are at least as intelligent as humans. We will not be able to send spacecraft to planets outside our solar system anytime in the ...
PT62 S4 Q18
Question ID:PT62 S4 Q19 Passage:Doctor: Medical researchers recently examined a large group of individuals who said that they had never experienced serious back pain. Half of the members of the group turned out to have bulging or slipped disks in their spines, conditions often blamed for serious back pain. Since these...
PT62 S4 Q19
Question ID:PT62 S4 Q20 Passage:Many workers who handled substance T in factories became seriously ill years later. We now know T caused at least some of their illnesses. Earlier ignorance of this connection does not absolve T's manufacturer of all responsibility. For had it investigated the safety of T before allowing...
PT62 S4 Q20
Question ID:PT62 S4 Q21 Passage:It is virtually certain that the government contract for building the new highway will be awarded to either Phoenix Contracting or Cartwright Company. I have just learned that the government has decided not to award the contract to Cartwright Company. It is therefore almost inevitable th...
PT62 S4 Q21
Question ID:PT62 S4 Q22 Passage:Researchers have found that children in large families‚ particularly the younger siblings‚ generally have fewer allergies than children in small families do. They hypothesize that exposure to germs during infancy makes people less likely to develop allergies. Stem:Which one of the follow...
PT62 S4 Q22
Question ID:PT62 S4 Q23 Passage:Film preservation requires transferring old movies from their original material‚ unstable, deteriorating nitrate film‚ to stable acetate film. But this is a time-consuming, expensive process, and there is no way to transfer all currently deteriorating nitrate films to acetate before they...
PT62 S4 Q23
Question ID:PT62 S4 Q24 Passage:In a recent study of arthritis, researchers tried but failed to find any correlation between pain intensity and any of those features of the weather‚ humidity, temperature swings, barometric pressure‚ usually cited by arthritis sufferers as the cause of their increased pain. Those arthri...
PT62 S4 Q24
Question ID:PT62 S4 Q25 Passage:Cities with healthy economies typically have plenty of job openings. Cities with high-technology businesses also tend to have healthy economies, so those in search of jobs should move to a city with high-technology businesses. Stem:The reasoning in which one of the following is most simi...
PT62 S4 Q25
Question ID:PT62 S4 Q26 Passage:Sociologist: A recent study of 5,000 individuals found, on the basis of a physical exam, that more than 25 percent of people older than 65 were malnourished, though only 12 percent of the people in this age group fell below government poverty standards. In contrast, a greater percentage...
PT62 S4 Q26
Question ID:PT61 S1 Q1 Passage:The Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR), approved by the United Nations General Assembly in 1948, was the first international treaty to expressly affirm universal respect for human rights. Prior to 1948 no truly international standard of humanitarian beliefs existed. Although Art...
PT61 S1 Q1
Question ID:PT61 S1 Q2 Passage:The Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR), approved by the United Nations General Assembly in 1948, was the first international treaty to expressly affirm universal respect for human rights. Prior to 1948 no truly international standard of humanitarian beliefs existed. Although Art...
PT61 S1 Q2
Question ID:PT61 S1 Q3 Passage:The Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR), approved by the United Nations General Assembly in 1948, was the first international treaty to expressly affirm universal respect for human rights. Prior to 1948 no truly international standard of humanitarian beliefs existed. Although Art...
PT61 S1 Q3
Question ID:PT61 S1 Q4 Passage:The Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR), approved by the United Nations General Assembly in 1948, was the first international treaty to expressly affirm universal respect for human rights. Prior to 1948 no truly international standard of humanitarian beliefs existed. Although Art...
PT61 S1 Q4
Question ID:PT61 S1 Q5 Passage:The Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR), approved by the United Nations General Assembly in 1948, was the first international treaty to expressly affirm universal respect for human rights. Prior to 1948 no truly international standard of humanitarian beliefs existed. Although Art...
PT61 S1 Q5
Question ID:PT61 S1 Q6 Passage:The Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR), approved by the United Nations General Assembly in 1948, was the first international treaty to expressly affirm universal respect for human rights. Prior to 1948 no truly international standard of humanitarian beliefs existed. Although Art...
PT61 S1 Q6
Question ID:PT61 S1 Q7 Passage:It is commonly assumed that even if some forgeries have aesthetic merit, no forgery has as much as an original by the imitated artist would. Yet even the most prominent art specialists can be duped by a talented artist turned forger into mistaking an almost perfect forgery for an original...
PT61 S1 Q7
Question ID:PT61 S1 Q8 Passage:It is commonly assumed that even if some forgeries have aesthetic merit, no forgery has as much as an original by the imitated artist would. Yet even the most prominent art specialists can be duped by a talented artist turned forger into mistaking an almost perfect forgery for an original...
PT61 S1 Q8
Question ID:PT61 S1 Q9 Passage:It is commonly assumed that even if some forgeries have aesthetic merit, no forgery has as much as an original by the imitated artist would. Yet even the most prominent art specialists can be duped by a talented artist turned forger into mistaking an almost perfect forgery for an original...
PT61 S1 Q9
Question ID:PT61 S1 Q10 Passage:It is commonly assumed that even if some forgeries have aesthetic merit, no forgery has as much as an original by the imitated artist would. Yet even the most prominent art specialists can be duped by a talented artist turned forger into mistaking an almost perfect forgery for an origina...
PT61 S1 Q10
Question ID:PT61 S1 Q11 Passage:It is commonly assumed that even if some forgeries have aesthetic merit, no forgery has as much as an original by the imitated artist would. Yet even the most prominent art specialists can be duped by a talented artist turned forger into mistaking an almost perfect forgery for an origina...
PT61 S1 Q11
Question ID:PT61 S1 Q12 Passage:It is commonly assumed that even if some forgeries have aesthetic merit, no forgery has as much as an original by the imitated artist would. Yet even the most prominent art specialists can be duped by a talented artist turned forger into mistaking an almost perfect forgery for an origina...
PT61 S1 Q12
Question ID:PT61 S1 Q13 Passage:It is commonly assumed that even if some forgeries have aesthetic merit, no forgery has as much as an original by the imitated artist would. Yet even the most prominent art specialists can be duped by a talented artist turned forger into mistaking an almost perfect forgery for an origina...
PT61 S1 Q13
Question ID:PT61 S1 Q14 Passage:Passage AOne function of language is to influence others' behavior by changing what they know, believe, or desire. For humans engaged in conversation, the perception of another's mental state is perhaps the most common vocalization stimulus.While animal vocalizations may have evolved bec...
PT61 S1 Q14
Question ID:PT61 S1 Q15 Passage:Passage AOne function of language is to influence others' behavior by changing what they know, believe, or desire. For humans engaged in conversation, the perception of another's mental state is perhaps the most common vocalization stimulus.While animal vocalizations may have evolved bec...
PT61 S1 Q15
Question ID:PT61 S1 Q16 Passage:Passage AOne function of language is to influence others' behavior by changing what they know, believe, or desire. For humans engaged in conversation, the perception of another's mental state is perhaps the most common vocalization stimulus.While animal vocalizations may have evolved bec...
PT61 S1 Q16
Question ID:PT61 S1 Q17 Passage:Passage AOne function of language is to influence others' behavior by changing what they know, believe, or desire. For humans engaged in conversation, the perception of another's mental state is perhaps the most common vocalization stimulus.While animal vocalizations may have evolved bec...
PT61 S1 Q17
Question ID:PT61 S1 Q18 Passage:Passage AOne function of language is to influence others' behavior by changing what they know, believe, or desire. For humans engaged in conversation, the perception of another's mental state is perhaps the most common vocalization stimulus.While animal vocalizations may have evolved bec...
PT61 S1 Q18
Question ID:PT61 S1 Q19 Passage:Passage AOne function of language is to influence others' behavior by changing what they know, believe, or desire. For humans engaged in conversation, the perception of another's mental state is perhaps the most common vocalization stimulus.While animal vocalizations may have evolved bec...
PT61 S1 Q19
Question ID:PT61 S1 Q20 Passage:In contrast to the mainstream of U.S. historiography during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, African American historians of the period, such as George Washington Williams and W. E. B. DuBois, adopted a transnational perspective. This was true for several reasons, not th...
PT61 S1 Q20
Question ID:PT61 S1 Q21 Passage:In contrast to the mainstream of U.S. historiography during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, African American historians of the period, such as George Washington Williams and W. E. B. DuBois, adopted a transnational perspective. This was true for several reasons, not th...
PT61 S1 Q21
Question ID:PT61 S1 Q22 Passage:In contrast to the mainstream of U.S. historiography during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, African American historians of the period, such as George Washington Williams and W. E. B. DuBois, adopted a transnational perspective. This was true for several reasons, not th...
PT61 S1 Q22
Question ID:PT61 S1 Q23 Passage:In contrast to the mainstream of U.S. historiography during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, African American historians of the period, such as George Washington Williams and W. E. B. DuBois, adopted a transnational perspective. This was true for several reasons, not th...
PT61 S1 Q23
Question ID:PT61 S1 Q24 Passage:In contrast to the mainstream of U.S. historiography during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, African American historians of the period, such as George Washington Williams and W. E. B. DuBois, adopted a transnational perspective. This was true for several reasons, not th...
PT61 S1 Q24
Question ID:PT61 S1 Q25 Passage:In contrast to the mainstream of U.S. historiography during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, African American historians of the period, such as George Washington Williams and W. E. B. DuBois, adopted a transnational perspective. This was true for several reasons, not th...
PT61 S1 Q25
Question ID:PT61 S1 Q26 Passage:In contrast to the mainstream of U.S. historiography during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, African American historians of the period, such as George Washington Williams and W. E. B. DuBois, adopted a transnational perspective. This was true for several reasons, not th...
PT61 S1 Q26
Question ID:PT61 S1 Q27 Passage:In contrast to the mainstream of U.S. historiography during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, African American historians of the period, such as George Washington Williams and W. E. B. DuBois, adopted a transnational perspective. This was true for several reasons, not th...
PT61 S1 Q27
Question ID:PT61 S2 Q1 Passage:Mary to Jamal: You acknowledge that as the legitimate owner of this business I have the legal right to sell it whenever I wish. But also you claim that because loyal employees will suffer if I sell it, I therefore have no right to do so. Obviously, your statements taken together are absu...
PT61 S2 Q1
Question ID:PT61 S2 Q2 Passage:Since there is no survival value in an animal's having an organ that is able to function when all its other organs have broken down to such a degree that the animal dies, it is a result of the efficiency of natural selection that no organ is likely to evolve in such a way that it greatly ...
PT61 S2 Q2
Question ID:PT61 S2 Q3 Passage:Commentator: If a political administration is both economically successful and successful at protecting individual liberties, then it is an overall success. Even an administration that fails to care for the environment may succeed overall if it protects individual liberties. So far, the p...
PT61 S2 Q3
Question ID:PT61 S2 Q4 Passage:The legislature is considering a proposed bill that would prohibit fishing in Eagle Bay. Despite widespread concern over the economic effect this ban would have on the local fishing industry, the bill should be enacted. The bay has one of the highest water pollution levels in the nation, ...
PT61 S2 Q4
Question ID:PT61 S2 Q5 Passage:Vandenburg: This art museum is not adhering to its purpose. Its founders intended it to devote as much attention to contemporary art as to the art of earlier periods, but its collection of contemporary art is far smaller than its other collections.Simpson: The relatively small size of t...
PT61 S2 Q5
Question ID:PT61 S2 Q6 Passage:Over the last five years, every new major alternative-energy initiative that initially was promised government funding has since seen that funding severely curtailed. In no such case has the government come even close to providing the level of funds initially earmarked for these projects....
PT61 S2 Q6
Question ID:PT61 S2 Q7 Passage:Talbert: Chess is beneficial for school-age children. It is enjoyable, encourages foresight and logical thinking, and discourages carelessness, inattention, and impulsiveness. In short, it promotes mental maturity.Sklar: My objection to teaching chess to children is that it diverts ment...
PT61 S2 Q7
Question ID:PT61 S2 Q8 Passage:Marcia: Not all vegetarian diets lead to nutritional deficiencies. Research shows that vegetarians can obtain a full complement of proteins and minerals from nonanimal foods.Theodora: You are wrong in claiming that vegetarianism cannot lead to nutritional deficiencies. If most people be...
PT61 S2 Q8
Question ID:PT61 S2 Q9 Passage:Musicologist: Classification of a musical instrument depends on the mechanical action through which it produces music. So the piano is properly called a percussion instrument, not a stringed instrument. Even though the vibration of the piano's strings is what makes its sound, the strings...
PT61 S2 Q9
Question ID:PT61 S2 Q10 Passage:In a vast ocean region, phosphorus levels have doubled in the past few decades due to agricultural runoff pouring out of a large river nearby. The phosphorus stimulates the growth of plankton near the ocean surface. Decaying plankton fall to the ocean floor, where bacteria devour them, c...
PT61 S2 Q10
Question ID:PT61 S2 Q11 Passage:Psychologists observing a shopping mall parking lot found that, on average, drivers spent 39 seconds leaving a parking space when another car was quietly waiting to enter it, 51 seconds if the driver of the waiting car honked impatiently, but only 32 seconds leaving a space when no one w...
PT61 S2 Q11
Question ID:PT61 S2 Q12 Passage:Shark teeth are among the most common vertebrate fossils; yet fossilized shark skeletons are much less common‚ indeed, comparatively rare among fossilized vertebrate skeletons. Stem:Which one of the following, if true, most helps to resolve the apparent paradox described above? Correct A...
PT61 S2 Q12
Question ID:PT61 S2 Q13 Passage:Critic: Photographers, by deciding which subjects to depict and how to depict them, express their own worldviews in their photographs, however realistically those photographs may represent reality. Thus, photographs are interpretations of reality. Stem:The argument's conclusion is prope...
PT61 S2 Q13
Question ID:PT61 S2 Q14 Passage:Geologists recently discovered marks that closely resemble worm tracks in a piece of sandstone. These marks were made more than half a billion years earlier than the earliest known traces of multicellular animal life. Therefore, the marks are probably the traces of geological processes r...
PT61 S2 Q14
Question ID:PT61 S2 Q15 Passage:Often a type of organ or body structure is the only physically feasible means of accomplishing a given task, so it should be unsurprising if, like eyes or wings, that type of organ or body structure evolves at different times in a number of completely unrelated species. After all, whatev...
PT61 S2 Q15
Question ID:PT61 S2 Q16 Passage:Engineer: Thermophotovoltaic generators are devices that convert heat into electricity. The process of manufacturing steel produces huge amounts of heat that currently go to waste. So if steel-manufacturing plants could feed the heat they produce into thermophotovoltaic generators, they...
PT61 S2 Q16
Question ID:PT61 S2 Q17 Passage:Herbalist: While standard antibiotics typically have just one active ingredient, herbal antibacterial remedies typically contain several. Thus, such herbal remedies are more likely to retain their effectiveness against new, resistant strains of bacteria than are standard antibiotics. Fo...
PT61 S2 Q17
Question ID:PT61 S2 Q18 Passage:To find out how barn owls learn how to determine the direction from which sounds originate, scientists put distorting lenses over the eyes of young barn owls before the owls first opened their eyes. The owls with these lenses behaved as if objects making sounds were farther to the right...
PT61 S2 Q18
Question ID:PT61 S2 Q19 Passage:As often now as in the past, newspaper journalists use direct or indirect quotation to report unsupported or false claims made by newsmakers. However, journalists are becoming less likely to openly challenge the veracity of such claims within their articles. Stem:Each of the following, i...
PT61 S2 Q19
Question ID:PT61 S2 Q20 Passage:When people show signs of having a heart attack an electrocardiograph (EKG) is often used to diagnose their condition. In a study, a computer program for EKG diagnosis of heart attacks was pitted against a very experienced, highly skilled cardiologist. The program correctly diagnosed a s...
PT61 S2 Q20
Question ID:PT61 S2 Q21 Passage:A government study indicates that raising speed limits to reflect the actual average speeds of traffic on level, straight stretches of high-speed roadways reduces the accident rate. Since the actual average speed for level, straight stretches of high-speed roadways tends to be 120 kilome...
PT61 S2 Q21
Question ID:PT61 S2 Q22 Passage:Psychiatrist: In treating first-year students at this university, I have noticed that those reporting the highest levels of spending on recreation score at about the same level on standard screening instruments for anxiety and depression as those reporting the lowest levels of spending ...
PT61 S2 Q22
Question ID:PT61 S2 Q23 Passage:Every brick house on River Street has a front yard. Most of the houses on River Street that have front yards also have two stories. So most of the brick houses on River Street have two stories. Stem:Which one of the following is most appropriate as an analogy demonstrating that the rea...
PT61 S2 Q23
Question ID:PT61 S2 Q24 Passage:Historian: It is unlikely that someone would see history as the working out of moral themes unless he or she held clear and unambiguous moral beliefs. However, one's inclination to morally judge human behavior decreases as one's knowledge of history increases. Consequently, the more his...
PT61 S2 Q24
Question ID:PT61 S2 Q25 Passage:A recent poll revealed that most students at our university prefer that the university, which is searching for a new president, hire someone who has extensive experience as a university president. However, in the very same poll, the person most students chose from among a list of leading...
PT61 S2 Q25
Question ID:PT61 S3 Q1 Passage:Exactly six workers‚ Faith, Gus, Hannah, Juan, Kenneth, and Lisa‚ will travel to a business convention in two cars‚ car 1 and car 2. Each car must carry at least two of the workers, one of whom will be assigned to drive. For the entire trip, the workers will comply with an assignment that...
PT61 S3 Q1
Question ID:PT61 S3 Q2 Passage:Exactly six workers‚ Faith, Gus, Hannah, Juan, Kenneth, and Lisa‚ will travel to a business convention in two cars‚ car 1 and car 2. Each car must carry at least two of the workers, one of whom will be assigned to drive. For the entire trip, the workers will comply with an assignment that...
PT61 S3 Q2
Question ID:PT61 S3 Q3 Passage:Exactly six workers‚ Faith, Gus, Hannah, Juan, Kenneth, and Lisa‚ will travel to a business convention in two cars‚ car 1 and car 2. Each car must carry at least two of the workers, one of whom will be assigned to drive. For the entire trip, the workers will comply with an assignment that...
PT61 S3 Q3
Question ID:PT61 S3 Q4 Passage:Exactly six workers‚ Faith, Gus, Hannah, Juan, Kenneth, and Lisa‚ will travel to a business convention in two cars‚ car 1 and car 2. Each car must carry at least two of the workers, one of whom will be assigned to drive. For the entire trip, the workers will comply with an assignment that...
PT61 S3 Q4
Question ID:PT61 S3 Q5 Passage:Exactly six workers‚ Faith, Gus, Hannah, Juan, Kenneth, and Lisa‚ will travel to a business convention in two cars‚ car 1 and car 2. Each car must carry at least two of the workers, one of whom will be assigned to drive. For the entire trip, the workers will comply with an assignment that...
PT61 S3 Q5
Question ID:PT61 S3 Q6 Passage:An archaeologist has six ancient artifacts‚ a figurine, a headdress, a jar, a necklace, a plaque, and a tureen‚ no two of which are the same age. She will order them from first (oldest) to sixth (most recent). The following has already been determined:The figurine is older than both the j...
PT61 S3 Q6
Question ID:PT61 S3 Q7 Passage:An archaeologist has six ancient artifacts‚ a figurine, a headdress, a jar, a necklace, a plaque, and a tureen‚ no two of which are the same age. She will order them from first (oldest) to sixth (most recent). The following has already been determined:The figurine is older than both the j...
PT61 S3 Q7
Question ID:PT61 S3 Q8 Passage:An archaeologist has six ancient artifacts‚ a figurine, a headdress, a jar, a necklace, a plaque, and a tureen‚ no two of which are the same age. She will order them from first (oldest) to sixth (most recent). The following has already been determined:The figurine is older than both the j...
PT61 S3 Q8
Question ID:PT61 S3 Q9 Passage:An archaeologist has six ancient artifacts‚ a figurine, a headdress, a jar, a necklace, a plaque, and a tureen‚ no two of which are the same age. She will order them from first (oldest) to sixth (most recent). The following has already been determined:The figurine is older than both the j...
PT61 S3 Q9
Question ID:PT61 S3 Q10 Passage:An archaeologist has six ancient artifacts‚ a figurine, a headdress, a jar, a necklace, a plaque, and a tureen‚ no two of which are the same age. She will order them from first (oldest) to sixth (most recent). The following has already been determined:The figurine is older than both the ...
PT61 S3 Q10
Question ID:PT61 S3 Q11 Passage:An archaeologist has six ancient artifacts‚ a figurine, a headdress, a jar, a necklace, a plaque, and a tureen‚ no two of which are the same age. She will order them from first (oldest) to sixth (most recent). The following has already been determined:The figurine is older than both the ...
PT61 S3 Q11
Question ID:PT61 S3 Q12 Passage:The coach of a women's track team must determine which four of five runners‚ Quinn, Ramirez, Smith, Terrell, and Uzoma‚ will run in the four races of an upcoming track meet. Each of the four runners chosen will run in exactly one of the four races‚ the first, second, third, or fourth. Th...
PT61 S3 Q12
Question ID:PT61 S3 Q13 Passage:The coach of a women's track team must determine which four of five runners‚ Quinn, Ramirez, Smith, Terrell, and Uzoma‚ will run in the four races of an upcoming track meet. Each of the four runners chosen will run in exactly one of the four races‚ the first, second, third, or fourth. Th...
PT61 S3 Q13
Question ID:PT61 S3 Q14 Passage:The coach of a women's track team must determine which four of five runners‚ Quinn, Ramirez, Smith, Terrell, and Uzoma‚ will run in the four races of an upcoming track meet. Each of the four runners chosen will run in exactly one of the four races‚ the first, second, third, or fourth. Th...
PT61 S3 Q14
Question ID:PT61 S3 Q15 Passage:The coach of a women's track team must determine which four of five runners‚ Quinn, Ramirez, Smith, Terrell, and Uzoma‚ will run in the four races of an upcoming track meet. Each of the four runners chosen will run in exactly one of the four races‚ the first, second, third, or fourth. Th...
PT61 S3 Q15
Question ID:PT61 S3 Q16 Passage:The coach of a women's track team must determine which four of five runners‚ Quinn, Ramirez, Smith, Terrell, and Uzoma‚ will run in the four races of an upcoming track meet. Each of the four runners chosen will run in exactly one of the four races‚ the first, second, third, or fourth. Th...
PT61 S3 Q16
Question ID:PT61 S3 Q17 Passage:The coach of a women's track team must determine which four of five runners‚ Quinn, Ramirez, Smith, Terrell, and Uzoma‚ will run in the four races of an upcoming track meet. Each of the four runners chosen will run in exactly one of the four races‚ the first, second, third, or fourth. Th...
PT61 S3 Q17
Question ID:PT61 S3 Q18 Passage:From the 1st through the 7th of next month, seven nurses‚ Farnham, Griseldi, Heany, Juarez, Khan, Lightfoot, and Moreau‚ will each conduct one information session at a community center. Each nurse's session will fall on a different day. The nurses' schedule is governed by the following c...
PT61 S3 Q18
Question ID:PT61 S3 Q19 Passage:From the 1st through the 7th of next month, seven nurses‚ Farnham, Griseldi, Heany, Juarez, Khan, Lightfoot, and Moreau‚ will each conduct one information session at a community center. Each nurse's session will fall on a different day. The nurses' schedule is governed by the following c...
PT61 S3 Q19
Question ID:PT61 S3 Q20 Passage:From the 1st through the 7th of next month, seven nurses‚ Farnham, Griseldi, Heany, Juarez, Khan, Lightfoot, and Moreau‚ will each conduct one information session at a community center. Each nurse's session will fall on a different day. The nurses' schedule is governed by the following c...
PT61 S3 Q20
Question ID:PT61 S3 Q21 Passage:From the 1st through the 7th of next month, seven nurses‚ Farnham, Griseldi, Heany, Juarez, Khan, Lightfoot, and Moreau‚ will each conduct one information session at a community center. Each nurse's session will fall on a different day. The nurses' schedule is governed by the following c...
PT61 S3 Q21
Question ID:PT61 S3 Q22 Passage:From the 1st through the 7th of next month, seven nurses‚ Farnham, Griseldi, Heany, Juarez, Khan, Lightfoot, and Moreau‚ will each conduct one information session at a community center. Each nurse's session will fall on a different day. The nurses' schedule is governed by the following c...
PT61 S3 Q22
Question ID:PT61 S3 Q23 Passage:From the 1st through the 7th of next month, seven nurses‚ Farnham, Griseldi, Heany, Juarez, Khan, Lightfoot, and Moreau‚ will each conduct one information session at a community center. Each nurse's session will fall on a different day. The nurses' schedule is governed by the following c...
PT61 S3 Q23
Question ID:PT61 S4 Q1 Passage:Among Trinidadian guppies, males with large spots are more attractive to females than are males with small spots, who consequently are presented with less frequent mating opportunities. Yet guppies with small spots are more likely to avoid detection by predators, so in waters where predat...
PT61 S4 Q1
Question ID:PT61 S4 Q2 Passage:Programmer: We computer programmers at Mytheco are demanding raises to make our average salary comparable with that of the technical writers here who receive, on average, 20 percent more in salary and benefits than we do. This pay difference is unfair and intolerable.Mytheco executive: ...
PT61 S4 Q2
Question ID:PT61 S4 Q3 Passage:Cable TV stations have advantages that enable them to attract many more advertisers than broadcast networks attract. For example, cable stations are able to target particular audiences with 24-hour news, sports, or movies, whereas broadcast networks must offer a variety of programming. Ca...
PT61 S4 Q3
Question ID:PT61 S4 Q4 Passage:In polluted industrial English cities during the Industrial Revolution, two plant diseases‚ black spot, which infects roses, and tar spot, which infects sycamore trees‚ disappeared. It is likely that air pollution eradicated these diseases. Stem:Which one of the following, if true, most s...
PT61 S4 Q4
Question ID:PT61 S4 Q5 Passage:Many scholars are puzzled about who created the seventeenth-century abridgment of Shakespeare's Hamlet contained in the First Quarto. Two facts about the work shed light on this question. First, the person who undertook the abridgment clearly did not possess a copy of Hamlet. Second, the ...
PT61 S4 Q5
Question ID:PT61 S4 Q6 Passage:Musicologist: Many critics complain of the disproportion between text and music in Handel's da capo arias. These texts are generally quite short and often repeated well beyond what is needed for literal understanding. Yet such criticism is refuted by noting that repetition serves a vital...
PT61 S4 Q6