Sentence stringlengths 135 5.03k | Video Title stringlengths 9 14 |
|---|---|
Question ID:PT30 S3 Q14 Passage:Tragic dramas written in Greece during the fifth century B.C. engender considerable scholarly debate over the relative influence of individual autonomy and the power of the gods on the drama's action. One early scholar, B. Snell, argues that Aeschylus, for example, develops in his traged... | PT30 S3 Q14 |
Question ID:PT30 S3 Q15 Passage:Philosopher Denise Meyerson views the Critical Legal Studies (CLS) movement as seeking to debunk orthodox legal theory by exposing its contradictions. However, Meyerson argues that CLS proponents tend to see contradictions where none exist, and that CLS overrates the threat that conflict... | PT30 S3 Q15 |
Question ID:PT30 S3 Q16 Passage:Philosopher Denise Meyerson views the Critical Legal Studies (CLS) movement as seeking to debunk orthodox legal theory by exposing its contradictions. However, Meyerson argues that CLS proponents tend to see contradictions where none exist, and that CLS overrates the threat that conflict... | PT30 S3 Q16 |
Question ID:PT30 S3 Q17 Passage:Philosopher Denise Meyerson views the Critical Legal Studies (CLS) movement as seeking to debunk orthodox legal theory by exposing its contradictions. However, Meyerson argues that CLS proponents tend to see contradictions where none exist, and that CLS overrates the threat that conflict... | PT30 S3 Q17 |
Question ID:PT30 S3 Q18 Passage:Philosopher Denise Meyerson views the Critical Legal Studies (CLS) movement as seeking to debunk orthodox legal theory by exposing its contradictions. However, Meyerson argues that CLS proponents tend to see contradictions where none exist, and that CLS overrates the threat that conflict... | PT30 S3 Q18 |
Question ID:PT30 S3 Q19 Passage:Philosopher Denise Meyerson views the Critical Legal Studies (CLS) movement as seeking to debunk orthodox legal theory by exposing its contradictions. However, Meyerson argues that CLS proponents tend to see contradictions where none exist, and that CLS overrates the threat that conflict... | PT30 S3 Q19 |
Question ID:PT30 S3 Q20 Passage:Philosopher Denise Meyerson views the Critical Legal Studies (CLS) movement as seeking to debunk orthodox legal theory by exposing its contradictions. However, Meyerson argues that CLS proponents tend to see contradictions where none exist, and that CLS overrates the threat that conflict... | PT30 S3 Q20 |
Question ID:PT30 S3 Q21 Passage:Philosopher Denise Meyerson views the Critical Legal Studies (CLS) movement as seeking to debunk orthodox legal theory by exposing its contradictions. However, Meyerson argues that CLS proponents tend to see contradictions where none exist, and that CLS overrates the threat that conflict... | PT30 S3 Q21 |
Question ID:PT30 S3 Q22 Passage:While historians once propagated the myth that Africans who were brought to the New World as slaves contributed little of value but their labor, a recent study by Amelia Wallace Vernon helps to dispel this notion by showing that Africans introduced rice and the methods of cultivating it ... | PT30 S3 Q22 |
Question ID:PT30 S3 Q23 Passage:While historians once propagated the myth that Africans who were brought to the New World as slaves contributed little of value but their labor, a recent study by Amelia Wallace Vernon helps to dispel this notion by showing that Africans introduced rice and the methods of cultivating it ... | PT30 S3 Q23 |
Question ID:PT30 S3 Q24 Passage:While historians once propagated the myth that Africans who were brought to the New World as slaves contributed little of value but their labor, a recent study by Amelia Wallace Vernon helps to dispel this notion by showing that Africans introduced rice and the methods of cultivating it ... | PT30 S3 Q24 |
Question ID:PT30 S3 Q25 Passage:While historians once propagated the myth that Africans who were brought to the New World as slaves contributed little of value but their labor, a recent study by Amelia Wallace Vernon helps to dispel this notion by showing that Africans introduced rice and the methods of cultivating it ... | PT30 S3 Q25 |
Question ID:PT30 S3 Q26 Passage:While historians once propagated the myth that Africans who were brought to the New World as slaves contributed little of value but their labor, a recent study by Amelia Wallace Vernon helps to dispel this notion by showing that Africans introduced rice and the methods of cultivating it ... | PT30 S3 Q26 |
Question ID:PT30 S3 Q27 Passage:While historians once propagated the myth that Africans who were brought to the New World as slaves contributed little of value but their labor, a recent study by Amelia Wallace Vernon helps to dispel this notion by showing that Africans introduced rice and the methods of cultivating it ... | PT30 S3 Q27 |
Question ID:PT30 S4 Q1 Passage:A government ought to protect and encourage free speech, because free speech is an activity that is conducive to a healthy nation and thus is in the best interest of its people. Stem:The main conclusion above follows logically if which one of the following is assumed? Correct Answer Choic... | PT30 S4 Q1 |
Question ID:PT30 S4 Q2 Passage:The current theory about earthquakes holds that they are caused by adjoining plates of rock sliding past each other; the plates are pressed together until powerful forces overcome the resistance. As plausible as this may sound, at least one thing remains mysterious on this theory. The ove... | PT30 S4 Q2 |
Question ID:PT30 S4 Q3 Passage:Legal theorist: It is unreasonable to incarcerate anyone for any other reason than that he or she is a serious threat to the property or lives of other people. The breaking of a law does not justify incarceration, for lawbreaking proceeds either from ignorance of the law or of the effects... | PT30 S4 Q3 |
Question ID:PT30 S4 Q4 Passage:A certain gene can be stimulated by chemicals in cigarette smoke, causing lung cells to metabolize the chemicals in a way that makes the cells cancerous. Yet smokers in whom this gene is not stimulated have as high a risk of developing lung cancer from smoking as other smokers do. Stem:If... | PT30 S4 Q4 |
Question ID:PT30 S4 Q5 Passage:In a poll of eligible voters conducted on the eve of a mayoral election, more of those polled stated that they favored Panitch than stated that they favored any other candidate. Despite this result, another candidate, Yeung, defeated Panitch by a comfortable margin. Stem:Each of the follo... | PT30 S4 Q5 |
Question ID:PT30 S4 Q6 Passage:Commissioner: Budget forecasters project a revenue shortfall of a billion dollars in the coming fiscal year. Since there is no feasible way to increase the available funds, our only choice is to decrease expenditures. The plan before you outlines feasible cuts that would yield savings of ... | PT30 S4 Q6 |
Question ID:PT30 S4 Q7 Passage:Critic: Emily Dickinson's poetry demonstrates that meaning cannot reside entirely within a poem itself, but is always the unique result of an interaction between a reader's system of beliefs and the poem; and, of course, any two readers from different cultures or eras have radically diffe... | PT30 S4 Q7 |
Question ID:PT30 S4 Q8 Passage:Archaeologist: The fact that the ancient Egyptians and the Maya both built pyramids is often taken as evidence of a historical link between Old- and New-World civilizations that is earlier than any yet documented. But while these buildings are similar to each other, there are important di... | PT30 S4 Q8 |
Question ID:PT30 S4 Q9 Passage:Manuscripts written by first-time authors generally do not get serious attention by publishers except when these authors happen to be celebrities. My manuscript is unlikely to be taken seriously by publishers for I am a first-time author who is not a celebrity. Stem:The structure of which... | PT30 S4 Q9 |
Question ID:PT30 S4 Q10 Passage:Twelve healthy volunteers with the Apo-A-IV-1 gene and twelve healthy volunteers who instead have the Apo-A-IV-2 gene each consumed a standard diet supplemented daily by a high-cholesterol food. A high level of cholesterol in the blood is associated with an increased risk of heart diseas... | PT30 S4 Q10 |
Question ID:PT30 S4 Q11 Passage:High school students who feel that they are not succeeding in school often drop out before graduating and go to work. Last year, however, the city's high school dropout rate was significantly lower than the previous year's rate. This is encouraging evidence that the program instituted tw... | PT30 S4 Q11 |
Question ID:PT30 S4 Q12 Passage:The television show Henry was not widely watched until it was scheduled for Tuesday evenings immediately after That's Life, the most popular show on television. During the year after the move, Henry was consistently one of the ten most-watched shows on television. Since Henry's recent mo... | PT30 S4 Q12 |
Question ID:PT30 S4 Q13 Passage:Joseph: My encyclopedia says that the mathematician Pierre de Fermat died in 1665 without leaving behind any written proof for a theorem that he claimed nonetheless to have proved. Probably this alleged theorem simply cannot be proved, since‚ as the article points out‚ no one else has be... | PT30 S4 Q13 |
Question ID:PT30 S4 Q14 Passage:Joseph: My encyclopedia says that the mathematician Pierre de Fermat died in 1665 without leaving behind any written proof for a theorem that he claimed nonetheless to have proved. Probably this alleged theorem simply cannot be proved, since‚ as the article points out‚ no one else has be... | PT30 S4 Q14 |
Question ID:PT30 S4 Q15 Passage:It is not good for a university to have class sizes that are very large or very small, or to have professors with teaching loads that are very light or very heavy. After all, crowded classes and overworked faculty cripple the institution's ability to recruit and retain both qualified stu... | PT30 S4 Q15 |
Question ID:PT30 S4 Q16 Passage:Sales manager: The highest priority should be given to the needs of the sales department, because without successful sales the company as a whole would fail.Shipping manager: There are several departments other than sales that also must function successfully for the company to succeed. I... | PT30 S4 Q16 |
Question ID:PT30 S4 Q17 Passage:Researchers have found that people who drink five or more cups of coffee a day have a risk of heart disease 2.5 times the average after corrections are made for age and smoking habits. Members of the research team say that, on the basis of their findings, they now limit their own daily c... | PT30 S4 Q17 |
Question ID:PT30 S4 Q18 Passage:People who have political power tend to see new technologies as a means of extending or protecting their power, whereas they generally see new ethical arguments and ideas as a threat to it. Therefore, technical ingenuity usually brings benefits to those who have this ingenuity, whereas e... | PT30 S4 Q18 |
Question ID:PT30 S4 Q19 Passage:Birds need so much food energy to maintain their body temperatures that some of them spend most of their time eating. But a comparison of a bird of a seed-eating species to a bird of a nectar-eating species that has the same overall energy requirement would surely show that the seed-eati... | PT30 S4 Q19 |
Question ID:PT30 S4 Q20 Passage:Consumer advocate: The introduction of a new drug into the marketplace should be contingent upon our having a good understanding of its social impact. However, the social impact of the newly marketed antihistamine is far from clear. It is obvious, then, that there should be a general red... | PT30 S4 Q20 |
Question ID:PT30 S4 Q21 Passage:Tina: For centuries oceans and human eccentricity have been linked in the literary and artistic imagination. Such linkage is probably due to the European Renaissance practice of using ships as asylums for the socially undesirable.Sergio: No. Oceans have always been viewed as mysterious a... | PT30 S4 Q21 |
Question ID:PT30 S4 Q22 Passage:In a recent study, a group of subjects had their normal daily caloric intake increased by 25 percent. This increase was entirely in the form of alcohol. Another group of similar subjects had alcohol replace nonalcoholic sources of 25 percent of their normal daily caloric intake. All subj... | PT30 S4 Q22 |
Question ID:PT30 S4 Q23 Passage:When investigators discovered that the director of a local charity had repeatedly overstated the number of people his charity had helped, the director accepted responsibility for the deception. However, the investigators claimed that journalists were as much to blame as the director was ... | PT30 S4 Q23 |
Question ID:PT30 S4 Q24 Passage:Telephone companies are promoting "voice mail" as an alternative to the answering machine. By recording messages from callers when a subscriber does not have access to his or her telephone, voice mail provides a service similar to that of an answering machine. The companies promoting thi... | PT30 S4 Q24 |
Question ID:PT30 S4 Q25 Passage:The judgment that an artist is great always rests on assessments of the work the artist has produced. A series of great works is the only indicator of greatness. Therefore, to say that an artist is great is just to summarize the quality of his or her known works, and the artist's greatne... | PT30 S4 Q25 |
Question ID:PT29 S1 Q1 Passage:Politician: The funding for the new nationwide health-awareness campaign should come from an increase in taxes on cigarettes. It is well established that cigarette smoking causes many serious health problems, and it is only reasonable that people whose unhealthful habits cause so many h... | PT29 S1 Q1 |
Question ID:PT29 S1 Q2 Passage:Politician: The funding for the new nationwide health-awareness campaign should come from an increase in taxes on cigarettes. It is well established that cigarette smoking causes many serious health problems, and it is only reasonable that people whose unhealthful habits cause so many h... | PT29 S1 Q2 |
Question ID:PT29 S1 Q3 Passage:There should be a greater use of gasohol. Gasohol is a mixture of alcohol and gasoline, and has a higher octane rating and fewer carbon monoxide emissions than straight gasoline. Burning gasohol adds no more carbon dioxide to the atmosphere than plants remove by photosynthesis. Stem:Eac... | PT29 S1 Q3 |
Question ID:PT29 S1 Q4 Passage:Cats spend much of their time sleeping; they seem to awaken only to stretch and yawn. Yet they have a strong, agile musculature that most animals would have to exercise strenuously to acquire. Stem:Which one of the following, if true, most helps to resolve the apparent paradox described a... | PT29 S1 Q4 |
Question ID:PT29 S1 Q5 Passage:Barnes: The two newest employees at this company have salaries that are too high for the simple tasks normally assigned to new employees and duties that are too complex for inexperienced workers. Hence, the salaries and the complexity of the duties of these two newest employees should be... | PT29 S1 Q5 |
Question ID:PT29 S1 Q6 Passage:These days, drug companies and health professionals alike are focusing their attention on cholesterol in the blood. The more cholesterol we have in our blood, the higher the risk that we shall die of a heart attack. The issue is pertinent since heart disease kills more North Americans e... | PT29 S1 Q6 |
Question ID:PT29 S1 Q7 Passage:In Debbie's magic act, a volunteer supposedly selects a card in a random fashion, looks at it without showing it to her, and replaces it in the deck. After several shuffles, Debbie cuts the deck and supposedly reveals the same selected card. A skeptic conducted three trials. In the fir... | PT29 S1 Q7 |
Question ID:PT29 S1 Q8 Passage:Nutritionist: Many people claim that simple carbohydrates are a reasonable caloric replacement for the fatty foods forbidden to those on low-fat diets. This is now in doubt. New studies show that, for many people, a high intake of simple carbohydrates stimulates an overproduction of insu... | PT29 S1 Q8 |
Question ID:PT29 S1 Q9 Passage:Jean: Our navigational equipment sells for $1,100 and dominates the high end of the market, but more units are sold by our competitors in the $700 to $800 range. We should add a low-cost model, which would allow us to increase our overall sales while continuing to dominate the high end. ... | PT29 S1 Q9 |
Question ID:PT29 S1 Q10 Passage:The symptoms of hepatitis A appear no earlier than 60 days after a person has been infected. In a test of a hepatitis A vaccine, 50 people received the vaccine and 50 people received a harmless placebo. Although some people from each group eventually exhibited symptoms of hepatitis A, ... | PT29 S1 Q10 |
Question ID:PT29 S1 Q11 Passage:It is well known that many species adapt to their environment, but it is usually assumed that only the most highly evolved species alter their environment in ways that aid their own survival. However, this characteristic is actually quite common. Certain species of plankton, for exampl... | PT29 S1 Q11 |
Question ID:PT29 S1 Q12 Passage:It is well known that many species adapt to their environment, but it is usually assumed that only the most highly evolved species alter their environment in ways that aid their own survival. However, this characteristic is actually quite common. Certain species of plankton, for exampl... | PT29 S1 Q12 |
Question ID:PT29 S1 Q13 Passage:The top priority of the school administration should be student attendance. No matter how good the teachers, texts, and facilities are, none of these does any good if few students come to school. Stem:The pattern of reasoning in the argument above is LEAST similar to that in which one of... | PT29 S1 Q13 |
Question ID:PT29 S1 Q14 Passage:Prosecutor: Dr. Yuge has testified that, had the robbery occurred after 1:50 A.M., then, the moon having set at 1:45 A.M., it would have been too dark for Klein to recognize the perpetrator. But Yuge acknowledged that the moon was full enough to provide considerable light before it set.... | PT29 S1 Q14 |
Question ID:PT29 S1 Q15 Passage:Ordinary mountain sickness, a common condition among mountain climbers, and one from which most people can recover, is caused by the characteristic shortage of oxygen in the atmosphere at high altitudes. Cerebral edema, a rarer disruption of blood circulation in the brain that quickly b... | PT29 S1 Q15 |
Question ID:PT29 S1 Q16 Passage:We can learn about the living conditions of a vanished culture by examining its language. Thus, it is likely that the people who spoke Proto-Indo-European, the language from which all Indo-European languages descended, lived in a cold climate, isolated from ocean or sea, because Proto-In... | PT29 S1 Q16 |
Question ID:PT29 S1 Q17 Passage:Columnist: It is impossible for there to be real evidence that lax radiation standards that were once in effect at nuclear reactors actually contributed to the increase in cancer rates near such sites. The point is a familiar one: who can say if a particular case of cancer is due to ra... | PT29 S1 Q17 |
Question ID:PT29 S1 Q18 Passage:Some planning committee members‚ those representing the construction industry‚ have significant financial interests in the committee's decisions. No one who is on the planning committee lives in the suburbs, although many of them work there. Stem:If the statements above are true, which o... | PT29 S1 Q18 |
Question ID:PT29 S1 Q19 Passage:Arbitrator: The shipping manager admits that he decided to close the old facility on October 14 and to schedule the new facility's opening for October 17, the following Monday. But he also claims that he is not responsible for the business that was lost due to the new facility's failing... | PT29 S1 Q19 |
Question ID:PT29 S1 Q20 Passage:The price of a full-fare coach ticket from Toronto to Dallas on Breezeway Airlines is the same today as it was a year ago, if inflation is taken into account by calculating prices in constant dollars. However, today 90 percent of the Toronto-to-Dallas coach tickets that Breezeway sells ... | PT29 S1 Q20 |
Question ID:PT29 S1 Q21 Passage:Editorial: The government claims that the country's nuclear power plants are entirely safe and hence that the public's fear of nuclear accidents at these plants is groundless. The government also contends that its recent action to limit the nuclear industry's financial liability in the... | PT29 S1 Q21 |
Question ID:PT29 S1 Q22 Passage:Editorial: The government claims that the country's nuclear power plants are entirely safe and hence that the public's fear of nuclear accidents at these plants is groundless. The government also contends that its recent action to limit the nuclear industry's financial liability in the... | PT29 S1 Q22 |
Question ID:PT29 S1 Q23 Passage:Linda says that, as a scientist, she knows that no scientist appreciates poetry. And, since most scientists are logical, at least some of the people who appreciate poetry are illogical. Stem:Which one of the following is most parallel in its reasoning to the flawed reasoning above? Corre... | PT29 S1 Q23 |
Question ID:PT29 S1 Q24 Passage:Automobile-emission standards are enforced through annual inspection. At those inspections cars are tested while idling; that is, standing still with their engines running. Testing devices measure the levels of various pollutants as exhaust gases leave the tail pipe. Stem:Which one of ... | PT29 S1 Q24 |
Question ID:PT29 S1 Q25 Passage:The indigenous people of Tasmania are clearly related to the indigenous people of Australia, but were separated from them when the land bridge between Australia and Tasmania disappeared approximately 10,000 years ago. Two thousand years after the disappearance of the land bridge, howeve... | PT29 S1 Q25 |
Question ID:PT29 S2 Q1 Passage:For some years before the outbreak of World War I, a number of painters in different European countries developed works of art that some have described as prophetic: paintings that by challenging viewers' habitual ways of perceiving the world of the present are thus said to anticipate a f... | PT29 S2 Q1 |
Question ID:PT29 S2 Q2 Passage:For some years before the outbreak of World War I, a number of painters in different European countries developed works of art that some have described as prophetic: paintings that by challenging viewers' habitual ways of perceiving the world of the present are thus said to anticipate a f... | PT29 S2 Q2 |
Question ID:PT29 S2 Q3 Passage:For some years before the outbreak of World War I, a number of painters in different European countries developed works of art that some have described as prophetic: paintings that by challenging viewers' habitual ways of perceiving the world of the present are thus said to anticipate a f... | PT29 S2 Q3 |
Question ID:PT29 S2 Q4 Passage:For some years before the outbreak of World War I, a number of painters in different European countries developed works of art that some have described as prophetic: paintings that by challenging viewers' habitual ways of perceiving the world of the present are thus said to anticipate a f... | PT29 S2 Q4 |
Question ID:PT29 S2 Q5 Passage:For some years before the outbreak of World War I, a number of painters in different European countries developed works of art that some have described as prophetic: paintings that by challenging viewers' habitual ways of perceiving the world of the present are thus said to anticipate a f... | PT29 S2 Q5 |
Question ID:PT29 S2 Q6 Passage:For some years before the outbreak of World War I, a number of painters in different European countries developed works of art that some have described as prophetic: paintings that by challenging viewers' habitual ways of perceiving the world of the present are thus said to anticipate a f... | PT29 S2 Q6 |
Question ID:PT29 S2 Q7 Passage:For some years before the outbreak of World War I, a number of painters in different European countries developed works of art that some have described as prophetic: paintings that by challenging viewers' habitual ways of perceiving the world of the present are thus said to anticipate a f... | PT29 S2 Q7 |
Question ID:PT29 S2 Q8 Passage:Tribal communities in North America believe that their traditional languages are valuable resources that must be maintained. However, these traditional languages can fall into disuse when some of the effects of the majority culture on tribal life serve as barriers between a community and ... | PT29 S2 Q8 |
Question ID:PT29 S2 Q9 Passage:Tribal communities in North America believe that their traditional languages are valuable resources that must be maintained. However, these traditional languages can fall into disuse when some of the effects of the majority culture on tribal life serve as barriers between a community and ... | PT29 S2 Q9 |
Question ID:PT29 S2 Q10 Passage:Tribal communities in North America believe that their traditional languages are valuable resources that must be maintained. However, these traditional languages can fall into disuse when some of the effects of the majority culture on tribal life serve as barriers between a community and... | PT29 S2 Q10 |
Question ID:PT29 S2 Q11 Passage:Tribal communities in North America believe that their traditional languages are valuable resources that must be maintained. However, these traditional languages can fall into disuse when some of the effects of the majority culture on tribal life serve as barriers between a community and... | PT29 S2 Q11 |
Question ID:PT29 S2 Q12 Passage:Tribal communities in North America believe that their traditional languages are valuable resources that must be maintained. However, these traditional languages can fall into disuse when some of the effects of the majority culture on tribal life serve as barriers between a community and... | PT29 S2 Q12 |
Question ID:PT29 S2 Q13 Passage:Tribal communities in North America believe that their traditional languages are valuable resources that must be maintained. However, these traditional languages can fall into disuse when some of the effects of the majority culture on tribal life serve as barriers between a community and... | PT29 S2 Q13 |
Question ID:PT29 S2 Q14 Passage:Tribal communities in North America believe that their traditional languages are valuable resources that must be maintained. However, these traditional languages can fall into disuse when some of the effects of the majority culture on tribal life serve as barriers between a community and... | PT29 S2 Q14 |
Question ID:PT29 S2 Q15 Passage:Tribal communities in North America believe that their traditional languages are valuable resources that must be maintained. However, these traditional languages can fall into disuse when some of the effects of the majority culture on tribal life serve as barriers between a community and... | PT29 S2 Q15 |
Question ID:PT29 S2 Q16 Passage:Scientists have long known that the soft surface of the bill of the platypus is perforated with openings that contain sensitive nerve endings. Only recently, however, have biologists concluded on the basis of new evidence that the animal uses its bill to locate its prey while underwater,... | PT29 S2 Q16 |
Question ID:PT29 S2 Q17 Passage:Scientists have long known that the soft surface of the bill of the platypus is perforated with openings that contain sensitive nerve endings. Only recently, however, have biologists concluded on the basis of new evidence that the animal uses its bill to locate its prey while underwater,... | PT29 S2 Q17 |
Question ID:PT29 S2 Q18 Passage:Scientists have long known that the soft surface of the bill of the platypus is perforated with openings that contain sensitive nerve endings. Only recently, however, have biologists concluded on the basis of new evidence that the animal uses its bill to locate its prey while underwater,... | PT29 S2 Q18 |
Question ID:PT29 S2 Q19 Passage:Scientists have long known that the soft surface of the bill of the platypus is perforated with openings that contain sensitive nerve endings. Only recently, however, have biologists concluded on the basis of new evidence that the animal uses its bill to locate its prey while underwater,... | PT29 S2 Q19 |
Question ID:PT29 S2 Q20 Passage:Scientists have long known that the soft surface of the bill of the platypus is perforated with openings that contain sensitive nerve endings. Only recently, however, have biologists concluded on the basis of new evidence that the animal uses its bill to locate its prey while underwater,... | PT29 S2 Q20 |
Question ID:PT29 S2 Q21 Passage:Scientists have long known that the soft surface of the bill of the platypus is perforated with openings that contain sensitive nerve endings. Only recently, however, have biologists concluded on the basis of new evidence that the animal uses its bill to locate its prey while underwater,... | PT29 S2 Q21 |
Question ID:PT29 S2 Q22 Passage:Until about 1970, anyone who wanted to write a comprehensive history of medieval English law as it actually affected women would have found a dearth of published books or articles concerned with specific legal topics relating to women and derived from extensive research in actual court r... | PT29 S2 Q22 |
Question ID:PT29 S2 Q23 Passage:Until about 1970, anyone who wanted to write a comprehensive history of medieval English law as it actually affected women would have found a dearth of published books or articles concerned with specific legal topics relating to women and derived from extensive research in actual court r... | PT29 S2 Q23 |
Question ID:PT29 S2 Q24 Passage:Until about 1970, anyone who wanted to write a comprehensive history of medieval English law as it actually affected women would have found a dearth of published books or articles concerned with specific legal topics relating to women and derived from extensive research in actual court r... | PT29 S2 Q24 |
Question ID:PT29 S2 Q25 Passage:Until about 1970, anyone who wanted to write a comprehensive history of medieval English law as it actually affected women would have found a dearth of published books or articles concerned with specific legal topics relating to women and derived from extensive research in actual court r... | PT29 S2 Q25 |
Question ID:PT29 S2 Q26 Passage:Until about 1970, anyone who wanted to write a comprehensive history of medieval English law as it actually affected women would have found a dearth of published books or articles concerned with specific legal topics relating to women and derived from extensive research in actual court r... | PT29 S2 Q26 |
Question ID:PT29 S2 Q27 Passage:Until about 1970, anyone who wanted to write a comprehensive history of medieval English law as it actually affected women would have found a dearth of published books or articles concerned with specific legal topics relating to women and derived from extensive research in actual court r... | PT29 S2 Q27 |
Question ID:PT29 S3 Q1 Passage:On a Tuesday, an accountant has exactly seven bills‚ numbered 1 through 7‚ to pay by Thursday of the same week. The accountant will pay each bill only once according to the following rules:Either three or four of the seven bills must be paid on Wednesday, the rest on Thursday.Bill 1 cann... | PT29 S3 Q1 |
Question ID:PT29 S3 Q2 Passage:On a Tuesday, an accountant has exactly seven bills‚ numbered 1 through 7‚ to pay by Thursday of the same week. The accountant will pay each bill only once according to the following rules:Either three or four of the seven bills must be paid on Wednesday, the rest on Thursday.Bill 1 cann... | PT29 S3 Q2 |
Question ID:PT29 S3 Q3 Passage:On a Tuesday, an accountant has exactly seven bills‚ numbered 1 through 7‚ to pay by Thursday of the same week. The accountant will pay each bill only once according to the following rules:Either three or four of the seven bills must be paid on Wednesday, the rest on Thursday.Bill 1 cann... | PT29 S3 Q3 |
Question ID:PT29 S3 Q4 Passage:On a Tuesday, an accountant has exactly seven bills‚ numbered 1 through 7‚ to pay by Thursday of the same week. The accountant will pay each bill only once according to the following rules:Either three or four of the seven bills must be paid on Wednesday, the rest on Thursday.Bill 1 cann... | PT29 S3 Q4 |
Question ID:PT29 S3 Q5 Passage:On a Tuesday, an accountant has exactly seven bills‚ numbered 1 through 7‚ to pay by Thursday of the same week. The accountant will pay each bill only once according to the following rules:Either three or four of the seven bills must be paid on Wednesday, the rest on Thursday.Bill 1 cann... | PT29 S3 Q5 |
Question ID:PT29 S3 Q6 Passage:On a Tuesday, an accountant has exactly seven bills‚ numbered 1 through 7‚ to pay by Thursday of the same week. The accountant will pay each bill only once according to the following rules:Either three or four of the seven bills must be paid on Wednesday, the rest on Thursday.Bill 1 cann... | PT29 S3 Q6 |
Question ID:PT29 S3 Q7 Passage:Two mannequins‚ 1 and 2‚ will be dressed for display in outfits chosen from ten articles of clothing. Each article is in exactly one of three colors: navy, red, or yellow. There are three hats‚ one in each color; three jackets‚ one in each color; three skirts‚ one in each color; and on... | PT29 S3 Q7 |
Question ID:PT29 S3 Q8 Passage:Two mannequins‚ 1 and 2‚ will be dressed for display in outfits chosen from ten articles of clothing. Each article is in exactly one of three colors: navy, red, or yellow. There are three hats‚ one in each color; three jackets‚ one in each color; three skirts‚ one in each color; and on... | PT29 S3 Q8 |
Question ID:PT29 S3 Q9 Passage:Two mannequins‚ 1 and 2‚ will be dressed for display in outfits chosen from ten articles of clothing. Each article is in exactly one of three colors: navy, red, or yellow. There are three hats‚ one in each color; three jackets‚ one in each color; three skirts‚ one in each color; and on... | PT29 S3 Q9 |
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.