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Question ID:PT38 S3 Q23 Passage:One of the greatest challenges facing medical students today, apart from absorbing volumes of technical information and learning habits of scientific thought, is that of remaining empathetic to the needs of patients in the face of all this rigorous training. Requiring students to immerse...
PT38 S3 Q23
Question ID:PT38 S3 Q24 Passage:One of the greatest challenges facing medical students today, apart from absorbing volumes of technical information and learning habits of scientific thought, is that of remaining empathetic to the needs of patients in the face of all this rigorous training. Requiring students to immerse...
PT38 S3 Q24
Question ID:PT38 S3 Q25 Passage:One of the greatest challenges facing medical students today, apart from absorbing volumes of technical information and learning habits of scientific thought, is that of remaining empathetic to the needs of patients in the face of all this rigorous training. Requiring students to immerse...
PT38 S3 Q25
Question ID:PT38 S3 Q26 Passage:One of the greatest challenges facing medical students today, apart from absorbing volumes of technical information and learning habits of scientific thought, is that of remaining empathetic to the needs of patients in the face of all this rigorous training. Requiring students to immerse...
PT38 S3 Q26
Question ID:PT38 S3 Q27 Passage:One of the greatest challenges facing medical students today, apart from absorbing volumes of technical information and learning habits of scientific thought, is that of remaining empathetic to the needs of patients in the face of all this rigorous training. Requiring students to immerse...
PT38 S3 Q27
Question ID:PT38 S4 Q1 Passage:Ms. Smith: I am upset that my son's entire class lost two days of recess because some of the children were throwing raisins in the cafeteria. He was not throwing raisins, and it was clear to everyone just who the culprits were.Principal: I'm sorry you're upset, Ms. Smith, but your son's s...
PT38 S4 Q1
Question ID:PT38 S4 Q2 Passage:Ms. Smith: I am upset that my son's entire class lost two days of recess because some of the children were throwing raisins in the cafeteria. He was not throwing raisins, and it was clear to everyone just who the culprits were.Principal: I'm sorry you're upset, Ms. Smith, but your son's s...
PT38 S4 Q2
Question ID:PT38 S4 Q3 Passage:Journalist: Obviously, though some animals are purely carnivorous, none would survive without plants. But the dependence is mutual. Many plant species would never have come to be had there been no animals to pollinate, fertilize, and broadcast their seeds. Also, plants' photosynthetic act...
PT38 S4 Q3
Question ID:PT38 S4 Q4 Passage:The government-owned gas company has begun selling stoves and other gas appliances to create a larger market for its gas. Merchants who sell such products complain that the competition will hurt their businesses. That may well be; however, the government-owned gas company is within its ri...
PT38 S4 Q4
Question ID:PT38 S4 Q5 Passage:Toxicologist: A survey of oil-refinery workers who work with MBTE, an ingredient currently used in some smog-reducing gasolines, found an alarming incidence of complaints about headaches, fatigue, and shortness of breath. Since gasoline containing MBTE will soon be widely used, we can exp...
PT38 S4 Q5
Question ID:PT38 S4 Q6 Passage:In any field, experience is required for a proficient person to become an expert. Through experience, a proficient person gradually develops a repertory of model situations that allows an immediate, intuitive response to each new situation. This is the hallmark of expertise, and for this ...
PT38 S4 Q6
Question ID:PT38 S4 Q7 Passage:When drivers are deprived of sleep there are definite behavioral changes, such as slower responses to stimuli and a reduced ability to concentrate, but people's self-awareness of these changes is poor. Most drivers think they can tell when they are about to fall asleep, but they cannot. S...
PT38 S4 Q7
Question ID:PT38 S4 Q8 Passage:Politician: My opponent says our zoning laws too strongly promote suburban single-family dwellings and should be changed to encourage other forms of housing like apartment buildings. Yet he lives in a house in the country. His lifestyle contradicts his own argument, which should therefore...
PT38 S4 Q8
Question ID:PT38 S4 Q9 Passage:Consumers are deeply concerned about the quantity of plastic packaging on the market and have spurred manufacturers to find ways to recycle plastic materials. Despite their efforts, however, only 6.5 percent of plastic is now being recycled, as compared to 33 percent of container glass. S...
PT38 S4 Q9
Question ID:PT38 S4 Q10 Passage:Technological progress makes economic growth and widespread prosperity possible; it also makes a worker's particular skills less crucial to production. Yet workers' satisfaction in their work depends on their believing that their work is difficult and requires uncommon skills. Clearly, t...
PT38 S4 Q10
Question ID:PT38 S4 Q11 Passage:Environmentalist: The complex ecosystem of the North American prairie has largely been destroyed to produce cattle feed. But the prairie ecosystem once supported 30 to 70 million bison, whereas North American agriculture now supports about 50 million cattle. Since bison yield as much mea...
PT38 S4 Q11
Question ID:PT38 S4 Q12 Passage: Stem:Item removed from scoring. Correct Answer Choice:Choice A: Choice B: Choice C: Choice D: Choice E:
PT38 S4 Q12
Question ID:PT38 S4 Q13 Passage:A recent study reveals that television advertising does not significantly affect children's preferences for breakfast cereals. The study compared two groups of children. One group had watched no television, and the other group had watched average amounts of television and its advertising...
PT38 S4 Q13
Question ID:PT38 S4 Q14 Passage:Reducing speed limits neither saves lives nor protects the environment. This is because the more slowly a car is driven, the more time it spends on the road spewing exhaust into the air and running the risk of colliding with other vehicles. Stem:The argument's reasoning is flawed because...
PT38 S4 Q14
Question ID:PT38 S4 Q15 Passage:Loggerhead turtles live and breed in distinct groups, of which some are in the Pacific Ocean and some are in the Atlantic. New evidence suggests that juvenile Pacific loggerheads that feed near the Baja peninsula hatch in Japanese waters 10,000 kilometers away. Ninety-five percent of the...
PT38 S4 Q15
Question ID:PT38 S4 Q16 Passage:People who do not believe that others distrust them are confident in their own abilities, so people who tend to trust others think of a difficult task as a challenge rather than a threat, since this is precisely how people who are confident in their own abilities regard such tasks. Stem:...
PT38 S4 Q16
Question ID:PT38 S4 Q17 Passage:Mullen has proposed to raise taxes on the rich, who made so much money during the past decade. Yet Mullen's tax records show heavy investment in business during that time and large profits; so Mullen's proposal does not deserve our consideration. Stem:The flawed reasoning in the argument...
PT38 S4 Q17
Question ID:PT38 S4 Q18 Passage:Anders: The physical structure of the brain plays an important role in thinking. So researchers developing "thinking machines"‚ computers that can make decisions based on both common sense and factual knowledge‚ should closely model those machines on the structure of the brain.Yang: Impo...
PT38 S4 Q18
Question ID:PT38 S4 Q19 Passage:Anders: The physical structure of the brain plays an important role in thinking. So researchers developing "thinking machines"‚ computers that can make decisions based on both common sense and factual knowledge‚ should closely model those machines on the structure of the brain.Yang: Impo...
PT38 S4 Q19
Question ID:PT38 S4 Q20 Passage:Shy adolescents often devote themselves totally to a hobby to help distract them from the loneliness brought on by their shyness. Sometimes they are able to become friends with others who share their hobby. But if they lose interest in that hobby, their loneliness may be exacerbated. So ...
PT38 S4 Q20
Question ID:PT38 S4 Q21 Passage:Political scientist: As a political system, democracy does not promote political freedom. There are historical examples of democracies that ultimately resulted in some of the most oppressive societies. Likewise, there have been enlightened despotisms and oligarchies that have provided a ...
PT38 S4 Q21
Question ID:PT38 S4 Q22 Passage:In humans, ingested protein is broken down into amino acids, all of which must compete to enter the brain. Subsequent ingestion of sugars leads to the production of insulin, a hormone that breaks down the sugars and also rids the bloodstream of residual amino acids, except for tryptophan...
PT38 S4 Q22
Question ID:PT38 S4 Q23 Passage:If an act of civil disobedience‚ willfully breaking a specific law in order to bring about legal reform‚ is done out of self-interest alone and not out of a concern for others, it cannot be justified. But one is justified in performing an act of civil disobedience if one's conscience req...
PT38 S4 Q23
Question ID:PT38 S4 Q24 Passage:Most land-dwelling vertebrates have rotating limbs terminating in digits, a characteristic useful for land movement. Biologists who assume that this characteristic evolved only after animals abandoned aquatic environments must consider the Acanthostega, a newly discovered ancestor of all...
PT38 S4 Q24
Question ID:PT38 S4 Q25 Passage:One reason why European music has had such a strong influence throughout the world, and why it is a sophisticated achievement, is that over time the original function of the music‚ whether ritual, dance, or worship‚ gradually became an aspect of its style, not its defining force. Dance m...
PT38 S4 Q25
Question ID:PT38 S4 Q26 Passage:Tony: A short story is little more than a novelist's sketch pad. Only novels have narrative structures that allow writers to depict human lives accurately by portraying characters whose personalities gradually develop through life experience.Raoul: Life consists not of a linear process o...
PT38 S4 Q26
Question ID:PT37 S1 Q1 Passage:The jury trial is one of the handful of democratic institutions that allow individual citizens, rather than the government, to make important societal decisions. A crucial component of the jury trial, at least in serious criminal cases, is the rule that verdicts be unanimous among the jur...
PT37 S1 Q1
Question ID:PT37 S1 Q2 Passage:The jury trial is one of the handful of democratic institutions that allow individual citizens, rather than the government, to make important societal decisions. A crucial component of the jury trial, at least in serious criminal cases, is the rule that verdicts be unanimous among the jur...
PT37 S1 Q2
Question ID:PT37 S1 Q3 Passage:The jury trial is one of the handful of democratic institutions that allow individual citizens, rather than the government, to make important societal decisions. A crucial component of the jury trial, at least in serious criminal cases, is the rule that verdicts be unanimous among the jur...
PT37 S1 Q3
Question ID:PT37 S1 Q4 Passage:The jury trial is one of the handful of democratic institutions that allow individual citizens, rather than the government, to make important societal decisions. A crucial component of the jury trial, at least in serious criminal cases, is the rule that verdicts be unanimous among the jur...
PT37 S1 Q4
Question ID:PT37 S1 Q5 Passage:The jury trial is one of the handful of democratic institutions that allow individual citizens, rather than the government, to make important societal decisions. A crucial component of the jury trial, at least in serious criminal cases, is the rule that verdicts be unanimous among the jur...
PT37 S1 Q5
Question ID:PT37 S1 Q6 Passage:The jury trial is one of the handful of democratic institutions that allow individual citizens, rather than the government, to make important societal decisions. A crucial component of the jury trial, at least in serious criminal cases, is the rule that verdicts be unanimous among the jur...
PT37 S1 Q6
Question ID:PT37 S1 Q7 Passage:The jury trial is one of the handful of democratic institutions that allow individual citizens, rather than the government, to make important societal decisions. A crucial component of the jury trial, at least in serious criminal cases, is the rule that verdicts be unanimous among the jur...
PT37 S1 Q7
Question ID:PT37 S1 Q8 Passage:Spurred by the discovery that a substance containing uranium emitted radiation, Marie Curie began studying radioactivity in 1897. She first tested gold and copper for radiation but found none. She then tested pitchblende, a mineral that was known to contain uranium, and discovered that it...
PT37 S1 Q8
Question ID:PT37 S1 Q9 Passage:Spurred by the discovery that a substance containing uranium emitted radiation, Marie Curie began studying radioactivity in 1897. She first tested gold and copper for radiation but found none. She then tested pitchblende, a mineral that was known to contain uranium, and discovered that it...
PT37 S1 Q9
Question ID:PT37 S1 Q10 Passage:Spurred by the discovery that a substance containing uranium emitted radiation, Marie Curie began studying radioactivity in 1897. She first tested gold and copper for radiation but found none. She then tested pitchblende, a mineral that was known to contain uranium, and discovered that i...
PT37 S1 Q10
Question ID:PT37 S1 Q11 Passage:Spurred by the discovery that a substance containing uranium emitted radiation, Marie Curie began studying radioactivity in 1897. She first tested gold and copper for radiation but found none. She then tested pitchblende, a mineral that was known to contain uranium, and discovered that i...
PT37 S1 Q11
Question ID:PT37 S1 Q12 Passage:Spurred by the discovery that a substance containing uranium emitted radiation, Marie Curie began studying radioactivity in 1897. She first tested gold and copper for radiation but found none. She then tested pitchblende, a mineral that was known to contain uranium, and discovered that i...
PT37 S1 Q12
Question ID:PT37 S1 Q13 Passage:Spurred by the discovery that a substance containing uranium emitted radiation, Marie Curie began studying radioactivity in 1897. She first tested gold and copper for radiation but found none. She then tested pitchblende, a mineral that was known to contain uranium, and discovered that i...
PT37 S1 Q13
Question ID:PT37 S1 Q14 Passage:Published in 1952, Invisible Man featured a protagonist whose activities enabled the novel's author, Ralph Ellison, to explore and to blend themes specifically tied to the history and plight of African Americans with themes, also explored by many European writers with whose works Ellison...
PT37 S1 Q14
Question ID:PT37 S1 Q15 Passage:Published in 1952, Invisible Man featured a protagonist whose activities enabled the novel's author, Ralph Ellison, to explore and to blend themes specifically tied to the history and plight of African Americans with themes, also explored by many European writers with whose works Ellison...
PT37 S1 Q15
Question ID:PT37 S1 Q16 Passage:Published in 1952, Invisible Man featured a protagonist whose activities enabled the novel's author, Ralph Ellison, to explore and to blend themes specifically tied to the history and plight of African Americans with themes, also explored by many European writers with whose works Ellison...
PT37 S1 Q16
Question ID:PT37 S1 Q17 Passage:Published in 1952, Invisible Man featured a protagonist whose activities enabled the novel's author, Ralph Ellison, to explore and to blend themes specifically tied to the history and plight of African Americans with themes, also explored by many European writers with whose works Ellison...
PT37 S1 Q17
Question ID:PT37 S1 Q18 Passage:Published in 1952, Invisible Man featured a protagonist whose activities enabled the novel's author, Ralph Ellison, to explore and to blend themes specifically tied to the history and plight of African Americans with themes, also explored by many European writers with whose works Ellison...
PT37 S1 Q18
Question ID:PT37 S1 Q19 Passage:Published in 1952, Invisible Man featured a protagonist whose activities enabled the novel's author, Ralph Ellison, to explore and to blend themes specifically tied to the history and plight of African Americans with themes, also explored by many European writers with whose works Ellison...
PT37 S1 Q19
Question ID:PT37 S1 Q20 Passage:Published in 1952, Invisible Man featured a protagonist whose activities enabled the novel's author, Ralph Ellison, to explore and to blend themes specifically tied to the history and plight of African Americans with themes, also explored by many European writers with whose works Ellison...
PT37 S1 Q20
Question ID:PT37 S1 Q21 Passage:Published in 1952, Invisible Man featured a protagonist whose activities enabled the novel's author, Ralph Ellison, to explore and to blend themes specifically tied to the history and plight of African Americans with themes, also explored by many European writers with whose works Ellison...
PT37 S1 Q21
Question ID:PT37 S1 Q22 Passage:Recent investigations into the psychology of decision making have sparked interest among scholars seeking to understand why governments sometimes take gambles that appear theoretically unjustifiable on the basis of expected costs and benefits. Researchers have demonstrated some significa...
PT37 S1 Q22
Question ID:PT37 S1 Q23 Passage:Recent investigations into the psychology of decision making have sparked interest among scholars seeking to understand why governments sometimes take gambles that appear theoretically unjustifiable on the basis of expected costs and benefits. Researchers have demonstrated some significa...
PT37 S1 Q23
Question ID:PT37 S1 Q24 Passage:Recent investigations into the psychology of decision making have sparked interest among scholars seeking to understand why governments sometimes take gambles that appear theoretically unjustifiable on the basis of expected costs and benefits. Researchers have demonstrated some significa...
PT37 S1 Q24
Question ID:PT37 S1 Q25 Passage:Recent investigations into the psychology of decision making have sparked interest among scholars seeking to understand why governments sometimes take gambles that appear theoretically unjustifiable on the basis of expected costs and benefits. Researchers have demonstrated some significa...
PT37 S1 Q25
Question ID:PT37 S1 Q26 Passage:Recent investigations into the psychology of decision making have sparked interest among scholars seeking to understand why governments sometimes take gambles that appear theoretically unjustifiable on the basis of expected costs and benefits. Researchers have demonstrated some significa...
PT37 S1 Q26
Question ID:PT37 S2 Q1 Passage:Company president: Grievance procedures should allow the grievant and the respondent to select a mediator who will attempt to work out a resolution. Grievances are costly and mediation could help to resolve many of them. However, beginning mediation fairly late in the process, as our hum...
PT37 S2 Q1
Question ID:PT37 S2 Q2 Passage:The solidity of bridge piers built on pilings depends largely on how deep the pilings are driven. Prior to 1700, pilings were driven to "refusal," that is, to the point at which they refused to go any deeper. In a 1588 inquiry into the solidity of piers for Venice's Rialto Bridge, it wa...
PT37 S2 Q2
Question ID:PT37 S2 Q3 Passage:Joan got A's on all her homework assignments, so if she had gotten an A on her term paper, she could pass the course even without doing the class presentation. Unfortunately, she did not get an A on her term paper, so it is obvious that she will have to do the class presentation to pass t...
PT37 S2 Q3
Question ID:PT37 S2 Q4 Passage:Compared to us, people who lived a century ago had very few diversions to amuse them. Therefore, they likely read much more than we do today. Stem:Which one of the following statements, if true, most weakens the argument? Correct Answer Choice:BChoice A:Many of the books published a centu...
PT37 S2 Q4
Question ID:PT37 S2 Q5 Passage:Although consciousness seems to arise from physical processes, physical theories can explain only why physical systems have certain physical structures and how these systems perform various physical functions. Thus, no strictly physical theory can explain consciousness. Stem:The conclusio...
PT37 S2 Q5
Question ID:PT37 S2 Q6 Passage:Advertisement: At most jewelry stores, the person assessing the diamond is the person selling it, so you can see why an assessor might say that a diamond is of higher quality than it really is. But because all diamonds sold at Gem World are certified in writing, you're assured of a fair ...
PT37 S2 Q6
Question ID:PT37 S2 Q7 Passage:Newtonian physics dominated science for over two centuries. It found consistently successful application, becoming one of the most highly substantiated and accepted theories in the history of science. Nevertheless, Einstein's theories came to show the fundamental limits of Newtonian physi...
PT37 S2 Q7
Question ID:PT37 S2 Q8 Passage:Conscientiousness is high on most firms' list of traits they want in employees. Yet a recent study found that laid-off conscientious individuals are less likely to find jobs within five months than are their peers who shirked their workplace responsibilities. Stem:Each of the following, i...
PT37 S2 Q8
Question ID:PT37 S2 Q9 Passage:Psychologist: Although studies of young children have revealed important facts about the influence of the environment on language acquisition, it is clear that one cannot attribute such acquisition solely to environmental influences: innate mechanisms also play a role. So, the most rea...
PT37 S2 Q9
Question ID:PT37 S2 Q10 Passage:Mark: To convey an understanding of past events, a historian should try to capture what it was like to experience those events. For instance, a foot soldier in the Battle of Waterloo knew through direct experience what the battle was like, and it is this kind of knowledge that the hist...
PT37 S2 Q10
Question ID:PT37 S2 Q11 Passage:Mark: To convey an understanding of past events, a historian should try to capture what it was like to experience those events. For instance, a foot soldier in the Battle of Waterloo knew through direct experience what the battle was like, and it is this kind of knowledge that the hist...
PT37 S2 Q11
Question ID:PT37 S2 Q12 Passage:Rosen: One cannot prepare a good meal from bad food, produce good food from bad soil, maintain good soil without good farming, or have good farming without a culture that places value on the proper maintenance of all its natural resources so that needed supplies are always available. St...
PT37 S2 Q12
Question ID:PT37 S2 Q13 Passage:Adam: Marking road edges with reflecting posts gives drivers a clear view of the edges, thereby enabling them to drive more safely. Therefore, marking road edges with reflecting posts will decrease the annual number of road accidents.Aiesha: You seem to forget that drivers exceed the s...
PT37 S2 Q13
Question ID:PT37 S2 Q14 Passage:In response to office workers' worries about the health risks associated with using video display terminals (VDTs), researchers asked office workers to estimate both the amount of time they had spent using VDTs and how often they had suffered headaches over the previous year. According ...
PT37 S2 Q14
Question ID:PT37 S2 Q15 Passage:Literary critic: The meaning of a literary work is not fixed but fluid, and therefore a number of equally valid interpretations of it may be offered. Interpretations primarily involve imposing meaning on a literary work rather than discovering meaning in it, so interpretations need not ...
PT37 S2 Q15
Question ID:PT37 S2 Q16 Passage:Media consultant: Electronic media are bound to bring an end to the institution of the traditional school in our culture. This is because the emergence of the traditional school, characterized by a group of students gathered with a teacher in a classroom, was facilitated by the availab...
PT37 S2 Q16
Question ID:PT37 S2 Q17 Passage:A safety report indicates that, on average, traffic fatalities decline by about 7 percent in those areas in which strict laws requiring drivers and passengers to wear seat belts have been passed. In a certain city, seat belt laws have been in effect for two years, but the city's public s...
PT37 S2 Q17
Question ID:PT37 S2 Q18 Passage:Some critics of space exploration programs claim that they are too costly to be justified. Moreover, there is the very real risk of a debilitating explosion‚ most experts say something like a 1-in-70 chance per flight. Budgetary pressures to make the programs cheaper only serve to underm...
PT37 S2 Q18
Question ID:PT37 S2 Q19 Passage:Physician: Hatha yoga is a powerful tool for helping people quit smoking. In a clinical trial, those who practiced hatha yoga for 75 minutes once a week and received individual counseling reduced their smoking and cravings for tobacco as much as did those who went to traditional self-he...
PT37 S2 Q19
Question ID:PT37 S2 Q20 Passage:Antarctic seals dive to great depths and stay submerged for hours. They do not rely solely on oxygen held in their lungs, but also store extra oxygen in their blood. Indeed, some researchers hypothesize that for long dives these seals also store oxygenated blood in their spleens. Stem:E...
PT37 S2 Q20
Question ID:PT37 S2 Q21 Passage:The studies showing that increased consumption of fruits and vegetables may help decrease the incidence of some types of cancer do not distinguish between organically grown and nonorganically grown produce; they were conducted with produce at least some of which contained pesticide resid...
PT37 S2 Q21
Question ID:PT37 S2 Q22 Passage:Political theorist: Many people believe that the punishment of those who commit even the most heinous crimes should be mitigated to some extent if the crime was motivated by a sincere desire to achieve some larger good. Granted, some criminals with admirable motives deserve mitigated pu...
PT37 S2 Q22
Question ID:PT37 S2 Q23 Passage:Roxanne: To protect declining elephant herds from poachers seeking to obtain ivory, people concerned about such endangered species should buy no new ivory. The new ivory and old ivory markets are entirely independent, however, so purchasing antique ivory provides no incentive to poacher...
PT37 S2 Q23
Question ID:PT37 S2 Q24 Passage:Roxanne: To protect declining elephant herds from poachers seeking to obtain ivory, people concerned about such endangered species should buy no new ivory. The new ivory and old ivory markets are entirely independent, however, so purchasing antique ivory provides no incentive to poacher...
PT37 S2 Q24
Question ID:PT37 S2 Q25 Passage:In a car accident, air bags greatly reduce the risk of serious injury. However, statistics show that cars without air bags are less likely to be involved in accidents than are cars with air bags. Thus, cars with air bags are no safer than cars without air bags. Stem:The argument is most ...
PT37 S2 Q25
Question ID:PT37 S2 Q26 Passage:All known deposits of the mineral tanzanite are in Tanzania. Therefore, because Ashley collects only tanzanite stones, she is unlikely ever to collect a stone not originally from Tanzania. Stem:Which one of the following is most similar in its reasoning to the argument above? Correct Ans...
PT37 S2 Q26
Question ID:PT37 S3 Q1 Passage:A school has exactly four dormitories that are to be fully occupied‚ Richards, Tuscarora, Veblen, and Wisteria‚ each consisting entirely of a North wing and a South wing. The following rules govern assignment of students to dormitory wings:Each wing is assigned only male students or only...
PT37 S3 Q1
Question ID:PT37 S3 Q2 Passage:A school has exactly four dormitories that are to be fully occupied‚ Richards, Tuscarora, Veblen, and Wisteria‚ each consisting entirely of a North wing and a South wing. The following rules govern assignment of students to dormitory wings:Each wing is assigned only male students or only...
PT37 S3 Q2
Question ID:PT37 S3 Q3 Passage:A school has exactly four dormitories that are to be fully occupied‚ Richards, Tuscarora, Veblen, and Wisteria‚ each consisting entirely of a North wing and a South wing. The following rules govern assignment of students to dormitory wings:Each wing is assigned only male students or only...
PT37 S3 Q3
Question ID:PT37 S3 Q4 Passage:A school has exactly four dormitories that are to be fully occupied‚ Richards, Tuscarora, Veblen, and Wisteria‚ each consisting entirely of a North wing and a South wing. The following rules govern assignment of students to dormitory wings:Each wing is assigned only male students or only...
PT37 S3 Q4
Question ID:PT37 S3 Q5 Passage:A school has exactly four dormitories that are to be fully occupied‚ Richards, Tuscarora, Veblen, and Wisteria‚ each consisting entirely of a North wing and a South wing. The following rules govern assignment of students to dormitory wings:Each wing is assigned only male students or only...
PT37 S3 Q5
Question ID:PT37 S3 Q6 Passage:In a single day, exactly seven trucks‚ S, T, U, W, X, Y, and Z‚ are the only arrivals at a warehouse. No truck arrives at the same time as any other truck, and no truck arrives more than once that day. Each truck is either green or red (but not both). The following conditions apply:No two...
PT37 S3 Q6
Question ID:PT37 S3 Q7 Passage:In a single day, exactly seven trucks‚ S, T, U, W, X, Y, and Z‚ are the only arrivals at a warehouse. No truck arrives at the same time as any other truck, and no truck arrives more than once that day. Each truck is either green or red (but not both). The following conditions apply:No two...
PT37 S3 Q7
Question ID:PT37 S3 Q8 Passage:In a single day, exactly seven trucks‚ S, T, U, W, X, Y, and Z‚ are the only arrivals at a warehouse. No truck arrives at the same time as any other truck, and no truck arrives more than once that day. Each truck is either green or red (but not both). The following conditions apply:No two...
PT37 S3 Q8
Question ID:PT37 S3 Q9 Passage:In a single day, exactly seven trucks‚ S, T, U, W, X, Y, and Z‚ are the only arrivals at a warehouse. No truck arrives at the same time as any other truck, and no truck arrives more than once that day. Each truck is either green or red (but not both). The following conditions apply:No two...
PT37 S3 Q9
Question ID:PT37 S3 Q10 Passage:In a single day, exactly seven trucks‚ S, T, U, W, X, Y, and Z‚ are the only arrivals at a warehouse. No truck arrives at the same time as any other truck, and no truck arrives more than once that day. Each truck is either green or red (but not both). The following conditions apply:No tw...
PT37 S3 Q10
Question ID:PT37 S3 Q11 Passage:In a single day, exactly seven trucks‚ S, T, U, W, X, Y, and Z‚ are the only arrivals at a warehouse. No truck arrives at the same time as any other truck, and no truck arrives more than once that day. Each truck is either green or red (but not both). The following conditions apply:No tw...
PT37 S3 Q11
Question ID:PT37 S3 Q12 Passage:A total of six books occupies three small shelves‚ one on the first shelf, two on the second shelf, and three on the third shelf. Two of the books are grammars‚ one of Farsi, the other of Hausa. Two others are linguistics monographs‚ one on phonology, the other on semantics. The remainin...
PT37 S3 Q12
Question ID:PT37 S3 Q13 Passage:A total of six books occupies three small shelves‚ one on the first shelf, two on the second shelf, and three on the third shelf. Two of the books are grammars‚ one of Farsi, the other of Hausa. Two others are linguistics monographs‚ one on phonology, the other on semantics. The remainin...
PT37 S3 Q13
Question ID:PT37 S3 Q14 Passage:A total of six books occupies three small shelves‚ one on the first shelf, two on the second shelf, and three on the third shelf. Two of the books are grammars‚ one of Farsi, the other of Hausa. Two others are linguistics monographs‚ one on phonology, the other on semantics. The remainin...
PT37 S3 Q14
Question ID:PT37 S3 Q15 Passage:A total of six books occupies three small shelves‚ one on the first shelf, two on the second shelf, and three on the third shelf. Two of the books are grammars‚ one of Farsi, the other of Hausa. Two others are linguistics monographs‚ one on phonology, the other on semantics. The remainin...
PT37 S3 Q15
Question ID:PT37 S3 Q16 Passage:A total of six books occupies three small shelves‚ one on the first shelf, two on the second shelf, and three on the third shelf. Two of the books are grammars‚ one of Farsi, the other of Hausa. Two others are linguistics monographs‚ one on phonology, the other on semantics. The remainin...
PT37 S3 Q16
Question ID:PT37 S3 Q17 Passage:A total of six books occupies three small shelves‚ one on the first shelf, two on the second shelf, and three on the third shelf. Two of the books are grammars‚ one of Farsi, the other of Hausa. Two others are linguistics monographs‚ one on phonology, the other on semantics. The remainin...
PT37 S3 Q17