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Question ID:PT21 S3 Q5 Passage:Since Professor Smythe has been head of the department, the most distinguished member of the faculty has resigned, fewer new courses have been developed, student enrollment has dropped, and the reputation of the department has gone down. These facts provide conclusive evidence that Profes... | PT21 S3 Q5 |
Question ID:PT21 S3 Q6 Passage:Books about architectural works, unless they are not intended for a general audience, ought to include discussions of both the utility and the aesthetic appeal of each of the buildings they consider. If they do not, they are flawed. Morton’s book on Italian Baroque palaces describes these... | PT21 S3 Q6 |
Question ID:PT21 S3 Q7 Passage:Of all the photographs taken of him at his wedding, there was one that John and his friends sharply disagreed about. His friends all said that this particular picture did not much resemble him, but John said that on the contrary it was the only photograph that did. Stem:Which one of the f... | PT21 S3 Q7 |
Question ID:PT21 S3 Q8 Passage:Eva: A “smart highway” system should be installed, one that would monitor areawide traffic patterns and communicate with computers in vehicles or with programmable highway signs to give drivers information about traffic congestion and alternate routes. Such a system, we can infer, would r... | PT21 S3 Q8 |
Question ID:PT21 S3 Q9 Passage:Eva: A “smart highway” system should be installed, one that would monitor areawide traffic patterns and communicate with computers in vehicles or with programmable highway signs to give drivers information about traffic congestion and alternate routes. Such a system, we can infer, would r... | PT21 S3 Q9 |
Question ID:PT21 S3 Q10 Passage:The term “sex” and “gender” are often used interchangeably. But “sex” more properly refers to biological differences of male and female, while “gender” refers to society’s construction of a system that identifies what is masculine and feminine. Unlike the set of characteristics defining ... | PT21 S3 Q10 |
Question ID:PT21 S3 Q11 Passage:Raising the tax rate on essential goods—a traditional means of increasing government revenues—invariably turns low- and middle-income taxpayers against the government. Hence government officials have proposed adding a new tax on purchases of luxury items such as yachts, private planes, j... | PT21 S3 Q11 |
Question ID:PT21 S3 Q12 Passage:In a study of the relationship between aggression and television viewing in nursery school children, many interesting interactions among family styles, aggression, and television viewing were found. High aggression occurred in both high-viewing and lowviewing children and this seemed to ... | PT21 S3 Q12 |
Question ID:PT21 S3 Q13 Passage:One of the effects of lead poisoning is an inflammation of the optic nerve, which causes those who have it to see bright haloes around light sources. In order to produce the striking yellow effects in his “Sunflowers” paintings, Van Gogh used Naples yellow, a pigment containing lead. Sin... | PT21 S3 Q13 |
Question ID:PT21 S3 Q14 Passage:Politician: The mandatory jail sentences that became law two years ago for certain crimes have enhanced the integrity of our system of justice, for no longer are there two kinds of justice, the kind dispensed by lenient judges and the kind dispensed by severe ones.Public advocate: But wi... | PT21 S3 Q14 |
Question ID:PT21 S3 Q15 Passage:Politician: The mandatory jail sentences that became law two years ago for certain crimes have enhanced the integrity of our system of justice, for no longer are there two kinds of justice, the kind dispensed by lenient judges and the kind dispensed by severe ones.Public advocate: But wi... | PT21 S3 Q15 |
Question ID:PT21 S3 Q16 Passage:Researchers studying artificial sweeteners have long claimed that the perception of sweetness is determined by the activation of a single type of receptor on the tongue called a sweetness receptor. They have also claimed that any given individual molecule of substance can activate at mos... | PT21 S3 Q16 |
Question ID:PT21 S3 Q17 Passage:An editorial in the Grandburg Daily Herald claims that Grandburg’s voters would generally welcome the defeat of the political party now in control of the Grandburg City Council. The editorial bases its claim on a recent survey that found that 59 percent of Grandburg’s registered voters t... | PT21 S3 Q17 |
Question ID:PT21 S3 Q18 Passage:Prolonged exposure to nonionizing radiation— electromagnetic radiation at or below the frequency of visible light—increases a person’s chances of developing soft-tissue cancer. Electric power lines as well as such electrical appliances as electric blankets and video-display terminals are... | PT21 S3 Q18 |
Question ID:PT21 S3 Q19 Passage:In the first decade following the founding of the British Labour party, the number of people regularly voting for Labour increased fivefold. The number of committed Labour voters increased a further fivefold during the party’s second decade. Since the increase was thus the same in the fi... | PT21 S3 Q19 |
Question ID:PT21 S3 Q20 Passage:A number of seriously interested amateur astronomers have tested the new Exodus refractor telescope. With it, they were able to observe in crisp detail planetary features that were seen only as fuzzy images in their 8-inch (approximately 20-centimeter) Newtonian telescopes, even though t... | PT21 S3 Q20 |
Question ID:PT21 S3 Q21 Passage:A number of seriously interested amateur astronomers have tested the new Exodus refractor telescope. With it, they were able to observe in crisp detail planetary features that were seen only as fuzzy images in their 8-inch (approximately 20-centimeter) Newtonian telescopes, even though t... | PT21 S3 Q21 |
Question ID:PT21 S3 Q22 Passage:Anatomical bilateral symmetry is a common trait. It follows, therefore, that it confers survival advantages on organisms. After all, if bilateral symmetry did not confer such advantages, it would not be common. Stem:The pattern of reasoning in which one of the following arguments is most... | PT21 S3 Q22 |
Question ID:PT21 S3 Q23 Passage:Electrical engineers have repeatedly demonstrated that the best solid-state amplifiers are indistinguishable from the best vacuum-tube amplifiers with respect to the characteristics commonly measured in evaluating the quality of an amplifier’s musical reproduction. Therefore, those music... | PT21 S3 Q23 |
Question ID:PT21 S3 Q24 Passage:Explanation must be distinguished from justification. Every human action potentially has an explanation; that is, with sufficient knowledge it would be possible to give an accurate description of the causes of that action. An action is justified only when the person performing the action... | PT21 S3 Q24 |
Question ID:PT21 S3 Q25 Passage:At the company picnic, all of the employees who participated in more than four of the scheduled events, and only those employees, were eligible for the raffle held at the end of the day. Since only a small proportion of the employees were eligible for the raffle, most of the employees mu... | PT21 S3 Q25 |
Question ID:PT21 S4 Q1 Passage:Musicologists concerned with the “London Pianoforte school,” the group of composers, pedagogues, pianists, publishers, and builders who contributed to the development of the piano in London at the turn of the nineteenth century, have long encountered a formidable obstacle in the general u... | PT21 S4 Q1 |
Question ID:PT21 S4 Q2 Passage:Musicologists concerned with the “London Pianoforte school,” the group of composers, pedagogues, pianists, publishers, and builders who contributed to the development of the piano in London at the turn of the nineteenth century, have long encountered a formidable obstacle in the general u... | PT21 S4 Q2 |
Question ID:PT21 S4 Q3 Passage:Musicologists concerned with the “London Pianoforte school,” the group of composers, pedagogues, pianists, publishers, and builders who contributed to the development of the piano in London at the turn of the nineteenth century, have long encountered a formidable obstacle in the general u... | PT21 S4 Q3 |
Question ID:PT21 S4 Q4 Passage:Musicologists concerned with the “London Pianoforte school,” the group of composers, pedagogues, pianists, publishers, and builders who contributed to the development of the piano in London at the turn of the nineteenth century, have long encountered a formidable obstacle in the general u... | PT21 S4 Q4 |
Question ID:PT21 S4 Q5 Passage:Musicologists concerned with the “London Pianoforte school,” the group of composers, pedagogues, pianists, publishers, and builders who contributed to the development of the piano in London at the turn of the nineteenth century, have long encountered a formidable obstacle in the general u... | PT21 S4 Q5 |
Question ID:PT21 S4 Q6 Passage:Musicologists concerned with the “London Pianoforte school,” the group of composers, pedagogues, pianists, publishers, and builders who contributed to the development of the piano in London at the turn of the nineteenth century, have long encountered a formidable obstacle in the general u... | PT21 S4 Q6 |
Question ID:PT21 S4 Q7 Passage:Musicologists concerned with the “London Pianoforte school,” the group of composers, pedagogues, pianists, publishers, and builders who contributed to the development of the piano in London at the turn of the nineteenth century, have long encountered a formidable obstacle in the general u... | PT21 S4 Q7 |
Question ID:PT21 S4 Q8 Passage:Musicologists concerned with the “London Pianoforte school,” the group of composers, pedagogues, pianists, publishers, and builders who contributed to the development of the piano in London at the turn of the nineteenth century, have long encountered a formidable obstacle in the general u... | PT21 S4 Q8 |
Question ID:PT21 S4 Q9 Passage:What is “law”? By what processes do judges arrive at opinions, those documents that justify their belief that the “law” dictates a conclusion one way or the other? These are among the oldest questions in jurisprudence, debate about which has traditionally been dominated by representatives... | PT21 S4 Q9 |
Question ID:PT21 S4 Q10 Passage:What is “law”? By what processes do judges arrive at opinions, those documents that justify their belief that the “law” dictates a conclusion one way or the other? These are among the oldest questions in jurisprudence, debate about which has traditionally been dominated by representative... | PT21 S4 Q10 |
Question ID:PT21 S4 Q11 Passage:What is “law”? By what processes do judges arrive at opinions, those documents that justify their belief that the “law” dictates a conclusion one way or the other? These are among the oldest questions in jurisprudence, debate about which has traditionally been dominated by representative... | PT21 S4 Q11 |
Question ID:PT21 S4 Q12 Passage:What is “law”? By what processes do judges arrive at opinions, those documents that justify their belief that the “law” dictates a conclusion one way or the other? These are among the oldest questions in jurisprudence, debate about which has traditionally been dominated by representative... | PT21 S4 Q12 |
Question ID:PT21 S4 Q13 Passage:What is “law”? By what processes do judges arrive at opinions, those documents that justify their belief that the “law” dictates a conclusion one way or the other? These are among the oldest questions in jurisprudence, debate about which has traditionally been dominated by representative... | PT21 S4 Q13 |
Question ID:PT21 S4 Q14 Passage:What is “law”? By what processes do judges arrive at opinions, those documents that justify their belief that the “law” dictates a conclusion one way or the other? These are among the oldest questions in jurisprudence, debate about which has traditionally been dominated by representative... | PT21 S4 Q14 |
Question ID:PT21 S4 Q15 Passage:What is “law”? By what processes do judges arrive at opinions, those documents that justify their belief that the “law” dictates a conclusion one way or the other? These are among the oldest questions in jurisprudence, debate about which has traditionally been dominated by representative... | PT21 S4 Q15 |
Question ID:PT21 S4 Q16 Passage:What is “law”? By what processes do judges arrive at opinions, those documents that justify their belief that the “law” dictates a conclusion one way or the other? These are among the oldest questions in jurisprudence, debate about which has traditionally been dominated by representative... | PT21 S4 Q16 |
Question ID:PT21 S4 Q17 Passage:Since the early 1920s, most petroleum geologists have favored a biogenic theory for the formation of oil. According to this theory, organic matter became buried in sediments, and subsequent conditions of temperature and pressure over time transformed it into oil.pressure over time transf... | PT21 S4 Q17 |
Question ID:PT21 S4 Q18 Passage:Since the early 1920s, most petroleum geologists have favored a biogenic theory for the formation of oil. According to this theory, organic matter became buried in sediments, and subsequent conditions of temperature and pressure over time transformed it into oil.pressure over time transf... | PT21 S4 Q18 |
Question ID:PT21 S4 Q19 Passage:Since the early 1920s, most petroleum geologists have favored a biogenic theory for the formation of oil. According to this theory, organic matter became buried in sediments, and subsequent conditions of temperature and pressure over time transformed it into oil.pressure over time transf... | PT21 S4 Q19 |
Question ID:PT21 S4 Q20 Passage:Since the early 1920s, most petroleum geologists have favored a biogenic theory for the formation of oil. According to this theory, organic matter became buried in sediments, and subsequent conditions of temperature and pressure over time transformed it into oil.pressure over time transf... | PT21 S4 Q20 |
Question ID:PT21 S4 Q21 Passage:Since the early 1920s, most petroleum geologists have favored a biogenic theory for the formation of oil. According to this theory, organic matter became buried in sediments, and subsequent conditions of temperature and pressure over time transformed it into oil.pressure over time transf... | PT21 S4 Q21 |
Question ID:PT21 S4 Q22 Passage:Most studies of recent Southeast Asian immigrants to the United States have focused on their adjustment to life in their adopted country and on the effects of leaving their homelands. James Tollefson’s Alien Winds examines the resettlement process from a different perspective by investig... | PT21 S4 Q22 |
Question ID:PT21 S4 Q23 Passage:Most studies of recent Southeast Asian immigrants to the United States have focused on their adjustment to life in their adopted country and on the effects of leaving their homelands. James Tollefson’s Alien Winds examines the resettlement process from a different perspective by investig... | PT21 S4 Q23 |
Question ID:PT21 S4 Q24 Passage:Most studies of recent Southeast Asian immigrants to the United States have focused on their adjustment to life in their adopted country and on the effects of leaving their homelands. James Tollefson’s Alien Winds examines the resettlement process from a different perspective by investig... | PT21 S4 Q24 |
Question ID:PT21 S4 Q25 Passage:Most studies of recent Southeast Asian immigrants to the United States have focused on their adjustment to life in their adopted country and on the effects of leaving their homelands. James Tollefson’s Alien Winds examines the resettlement process from a different perspective by investig... | PT21 S4 Q25 |
Question ID:PT21 S4 Q26 Passage:Most studies of recent Southeast Asian immigrants to the United States have focused on their adjustment to life in their adopted country and on the effects of leaving their homelands. James Tollefson’s Alien Winds examines the resettlement process from a different perspective by investig... | PT21 S4 Q26 |
Question ID:PT21 S4 Q27 Passage:Most studies of recent Southeast Asian immigrants to the United States have focused on their adjustment to life in their adopted country and on the effects of leaving their homelands. James Tollefson’s Alien Winds examines the resettlement process from a different perspective by investig... | PT21 S4 Q27 |
Question ID:PT20 S1 Q1 Passage:French divers recently found a large cave along the coast of the Mediterranean Sea. The cave is accessible only through an underwater tunnel. The interior of the cave is completely filled with seawater and contains numerous large stalagmites, which are stony pillars that form when drops... | PT20 S1 Q1 |
Question ID:PT20 S1 Q2 Passage:A director of the Rexx Pharmaceutical Company argued that the development costs for new vaccines that the health department has requested should be subsidized by the government, since the marketing of vaccines promised to be less profitable than the marketing of any other pharmaceutical p... | PT20 S1 Q2 |
Question ID:PT20 S1 Q3 Passage:Manager: Our new computer network, the purpose of which is to increase productivity, can be installed during the day, which would disrupt our employees' work, or else at night, which would entail much higher installation charges. Since saving money is important, we should have the networ... | PT20 S1 Q3 |
Question ID:PT20 S1 Q4 Passage:An ingredient in marijuana known as THC has been found to inactivate herpesviruses in experiments. In previous experiments researchers found that inactivated herpesviruses can convert healthy cells into cancer cells. It can be concluded that the use of marijuana can cause cancer. Stem:W... | PT20 S1 Q4 |
Question ID:PT20 S1 Q5 Passage:Archaeologist: A large corporation has recently offered to provide funding to restore an archaeological site and to construct facilities to make the site readily accessible to the general public. The restoration will conform to the best current theories about how the site appeared at th... | PT20 S1 Q5 |
Question ID:PT20 S1 Q6 Passage:Besides laying eggs in her own nest, any female wood duck will lay an egg in the nest of another female wood duck if she sees the other duck leaving her nest. Under natural nesting conditions, this parasitic behavior is relatively rare because the ducks' nests are well hidden. However, ... | PT20 S1 Q6 |
Question ID:PT20 S1 Q7 Passage:The crux of creativity resides in the ability to manufacture variations on a theme. If we look at the history of science, for instance, we see that every idea is built upon a thousand related ideas. Careful analysis leads us to understand that what we choose to call a new theme or a new... | PT20 S1 Q7 |
Question ID:PT20 S1 Q8 Passage:Millions of female bats rear their pups in Bracken Cave. Although the mothers all leave the cave nightly, on their return each mother is almost always swiftly reunited with her own pup. Since the bats' calls are their only means of finding one another, and a bat pup cannot distinguish t... | PT20 S1 Q8 |
Question ID:PT20 S1 Q9 Passage:Someone who gets sick from eating a meal will often develop a strong distaste for the one food in the meal that had the most distinctive flavor, whether or not that food caused the sickness. This phenomenon explains why children are especially likely to develop strong aversions to some f... | PT20 S1 Q9 |
Question ID:PT20 S1 Q10 Passage:Premiums for automobile accident insurance are often higher for red cars than for cars of other colors. To justify these higher charges, insurance companies claim that, overall, a greater percentage of red cars are involved in accidents than are cars of any other color. If this claim i... | PT20 S1 Q10 |
Question ID:PT20 S1 Q11 Passage:A certain credit-card company awards its customers bonus points for using its credit card. Customers can use accumulated points in the purchase of brand name merchandise by mail at prices lower than the manufacturers' suggested retail prices. At any given time, therefore, customers who ... | PT20 S1 Q11 |
Question ID:PT20 S1 Q12 Passage:It is probably not true that colic in infants is caused by the inability of those infants to tolerate certain antibodies found in cow's milk, since it is often the case that symptoms of colic are shown by infants that are fed breast milk exclusively. Stem:Which one of the following, if t... | PT20 S1 Q12 |
Question ID:PT20 S1 Q13 Passage:Yolanda: Gaining access to computers without authorization and manipulating the data and programs they contain is comparable to joyriding in stolen cars; both involve breaking into private property and treating it recklessly. Joyriding, however, is the more dangerous crime because it p... | PT20 S1 Q13 |
Question ID:PT20 S1 Q14 Passage:Yolanda: Gaining access to computers without authorization and manipulating the data and programs they contain is comparable to joyriding in stolen cars; both involve breaking into private property and treating it recklessly. Joyriding, however, is the more dangerous crime because it p... | PT20 S1 Q14 |
Question ID:PT20 S1 Q15 Passage:A report of a government survey concluded that Center City was among the ten cities in the nation with the highest dropout rate from its schools. The survey data were obtained by asking all city residents over the age of 19 whether they were high school graduates and computing the propo... | PT20 S1 Q15 |
Question ID:PT20 S1 Q16 Passage:Brown dwarfs‚ dim red stars that are too cool to burn hydrogen‚ are very similar in appearance to red dwarf stars, which are just hot enough to burn hydrogen. Stars, when first formed, contain substantial amounts of the element lithium. All stars but the coolest of the brown dwarfs are... | PT20 S1 Q16 |
Question ID:PT20 S1 Q17 Passage:Whenever a company loses a major product-liability lawsuit, the value of the company's stocks falls significantly within hours after the announcement. Cotoy has long been involved in a major product-liability lawsuit, and its stocks fell significantly in value today. Therefore, we can ... | PT20 S1 Q17 |
Question ID:PT20 S1 Q18 Passage:In recent years the climate has been generally cool in northern Asia. But during periods when the average daily temperature and humidity in northern Asia were slightly higher than their normal levels the yields of most crops grown there increased significantly. In the next century, the... | PT20 S1 Q18 |
Question ID:PT20 S1 Q19 Passage:No one in the French department to which Professor Alban belongs is allowed to teach more than one introductory level class in any one term. Moreover, the only language classes being taught next term are advanced ones. So it is untrue that both of the French classes Professor Alban wil... | PT20 S1 Q19 |
Question ID:PT20 S1 Q20 Passage:Some people have been promoting a new herbal mixture as a remedy for the common cold. The mixture contains, among other things, extracts of the plants purple coneflower and goldenseal. A cold sufferer, skeptical of the claim that the mixture is an effective cold remedy, argued, "Suppos... | PT20 S1 Q20 |
Question ID:PT20 S1 Q21 Passage:Some people have been promoting a new herbal mixture as a remedy for the common cold. The mixture contains, among other things, extracts of the plants purple coneflower and goldenseal. A cold sufferer, skeptical of the claim that the mixture is an effective cold remedy, argued, "Suppos... | PT20 S1 Q21 |
Question ID:PT20 S1 Q22 Passage:To hold criminals responsible for their crimes involves a failure to recognize that criminal actions, like all actions, are ultimately products of the environment that forged the agent's character. It is not criminals but people in the law-abiding majority who by their actions do most t... | PT20 S1 Q22 |
Question ID:PT20 S1 Q23 Passage:Chronic back pain is usually caused by a herniated or degenerated spinal disk. In most cases the disk will have been damaged years before chronic pain develops, and in fact an estimated one in five people over the age of 30 has a herniated or degenerated disk that shows no chronic sympt... | PT20 S1 Q23 |
Question ID:PT20 S1 Q24 Passage:Each December 31 in Country Q, a tally is made of the country's total available coal supplies‚ that is, the total amount of coal that has been mined throughout the country but not consumed. In 1991 that amount was considerably lower than it had been in 1990. Furthermore, Country Q has n... | PT20 S1 Q24 |
Question ID:PT20 S1 Q25 Passage:Tom: Employers complain that people graduating from high school too often lack the vocational skills required for full-time employment. Therefore, since these skills are best acquired on the job, we should require high school students to work at part-time jobs so that they acquire the ... | PT20 S1 Q25 |
Question ID:PT20 S2 Q1 Passage:The career of trumpeter Miles Davis was one of the most astonishingly productive that jazz music has ever seen. Yet his genius has never received its due. The impatience and artistic restlessness that characterized his work spawned one stylistic turn after another and made Davis anathema ... | PT20 S2 Q1 |
Question ID:PT20 S2 Q2 Passage:The career of trumpeter Miles Davis was one of the most astonishingly productive that jazz music has ever seen. Yet his genius has never received its due. The impatience and artistic restlessness that characterized his work spawned one stylistic turn after another and made Davis anathema ... | PT20 S2 Q2 |
Question ID:PT20 S2 Q3 Passage:The career of trumpeter Miles Davis was one of the most astonishingly productive that jazz music has ever seen. Yet his genius has never received its due. The impatience and artistic restlessness that characterized his work spawned one stylistic turn after another and made Davis anathema ... | PT20 S2 Q3 |
Question ID:PT20 S2 Q4 Passage:The career of trumpeter Miles Davis was one of the most astonishingly productive that jazz music has ever seen. Yet his genius has never received its due. The impatience and artistic restlessness that characterized his work spawned one stylistic turn after another and made Davis anathema ... | PT20 S2 Q4 |
Question ID:PT20 S2 Q5 Passage:The career of trumpeter Miles Davis was one of the most astonishingly productive that jazz music has ever seen. Yet his genius has never received its due. The impatience and artistic restlessness that characterized his work spawned one stylistic turn after another and made Davis anathema ... | PT20 S2 Q5 |
Question ID:PT20 S2 Q6 Passage:The career of trumpeter Miles Davis was one of the most astonishingly productive that jazz music has ever seen. Yet his genius has never received its due. The impatience and artistic restlessness that characterized his work spawned one stylistic turn after another and made Davis anathema ... | PT20 S2 Q6 |
Question ID:PT20 S2 Q7 Passage:By the mid-fourteenth century, professional associations of canon lawyers (legal advocates in Christian ecclesiastical courts, which dealt with cases involving marriage, inheritance, and other issues) had appeared in most of Western Europe, and a body of professional standards had been de... | PT20 S2 Q7 |
Question ID:PT20 S2 Q8 Passage:By the mid-fourteenth century, professional associations of canon lawyers (legal advocates in Christian ecclesiastical courts, which dealt with cases involving marriage, inheritance, and other issues) had appeared in most of Western Europe, and a body of professional standards had been de... | PT20 S2 Q8 |
Question ID:PT20 S2 Q9 Passage:By the mid-fourteenth century, professional associations of canon lawyers (legal advocates in Christian ecclesiastical courts, which dealt with cases involving marriage, inheritance, and other issues) had appeared in most of Western Europe, and a body of professional standards had been de... | PT20 S2 Q9 |
Question ID:PT20 S2 Q10 Passage:By the mid-fourteenth century, professional associations of canon lawyers (legal advocates in Christian ecclesiastical courts, which dealt with cases involving marriage, inheritance, and other issues) had appeared in most of Western Europe, and a body of professional standards had been d... | PT20 S2 Q10 |
Question ID:PT20 S2 Q11 Passage:By the mid-fourteenth century, professional associations of canon lawyers (legal advocates in Christian ecclesiastical courts, which dealt with cases involving marriage, inheritance, and other issues) had appeared in most of Western Europe, and a body of professional standards had been d... | PT20 S2 Q11 |
Question ID:PT20 S2 Q12 Passage:By the mid-fourteenth century, professional associations of canon lawyers (legal advocates in Christian ecclesiastical courts, which dealt with cases involving marriage, inheritance, and other issues) had appeared in most of Western Europe, and a body of professional standards had been d... | PT20 S2 Q12 |
Question ID:PT20 S2 Q13 Passage:By the mid-fourteenth century, professional associations of canon lawyers (legal advocates in Christian ecclesiastical courts, which dealt with cases involving marriage, inheritance, and other issues) had appeared in most of Western Europe, and a body of professional standards had been d... | PT20 S2 Q13 |
Question ID:PT20 S2 Q14 Passage:By the mid-fourteenth century, professional associations of canon lawyers (legal advocates in Christian ecclesiastical courts, which dealt with cases involving marriage, inheritance, and other issues) had appeared in most of Western Europe, and a body of professional standards had been d... | PT20 S2 Q14 |
Question ID:PT20 S2 Q15 Passage:Many birds that form flocks compete through aggressive interaction for priority of access to resources such as food and shelter. The result of repeated interactions between flock members is that each bird gains a particular social status related to its fighting ability, with priority of ... | PT20 S2 Q15 |
Question ID:PT20 S2 Q16 Passage:Many birds that form flocks compete through aggressive interaction for priority of access to resources such as food and shelter. The result of repeated interactions between flock members is that each bird gains a particular social status related to its fighting ability, with priority of ... | PT20 S2 Q16 |
Question ID:PT20 S2 Q17 Passage:Many birds that form flocks compete through aggressive interaction for priority of access to resources such as food and shelter. The result of repeated interactions between flock members is that each bird gains a particular social status related to its fighting ability, with priority of ... | PT20 S2 Q17 |
Question ID:PT20 S2 Q18 Passage:Many birds that form flocks compete through aggressive interaction for priority of access to resources such as food and shelter. The result of repeated interactions between flock members is that each bird gains a particular social status related to its fighting ability, with priority of ... | PT20 S2 Q18 |
Question ID:PT20 S2 Q19 Passage:Many birds that form flocks compete through aggressive interaction for priority of access to resources such as food and shelter. The result of repeated interactions between flock members is that each bird gains a particular social status related to its fighting ability, with priority of ... | PT20 S2 Q19 |
Question ID:PT20 S2 Q20 Passage:Many birds that form flocks compete through aggressive interaction for priority of access to resources such as food and shelter. The result of repeated interactions between flock members is that each bird gains a particular social status related to its fighting ability, with priority of ... | PT20 S2 Q20 |
Question ID:PT20 S2 Q21 Passage:Many birds that form flocks compete through aggressive interaction for priority of access to resources such as food and shelter. The result of repeated interactions between flock members is that each bird gains a particular social status related to its fighting ability, with priority of ... | PT20 S2 Q21 |
Question ID:PT20 S2 Q22 Passage:In The Dynamics of Apocalypse, John Lowe attempts to solve the mystery of the collapse of the Classic Mayan civilization. Lowe bases his study on a detailed examination of the known archaeological record. Like previous investigators, Lowe relies on dated monuments to construct a step-by-... | PT20 S2 Q22 |
Question ID:PT20 S2 Q23 Passage:In The Dynamics of Apocalypse, John Lowe attempts to solve the mystery of the collapse of the Classic Mayan civilization. Lowe bases his study on a detailed examination of the known archaeological record. Like previous investigators, Lowe relies on dated monuments to construct a step-by-... | PT20 S2 Q23 |
Question ID:PT20 S2 Q24 Passage:In The Dynamics of Apocalypse, John Lowe attempts to solve the mystery of the collapse of the Classic Mayan civilization. Lowe bases his study on a detailed examination of the known archaeological record. Like previous investigators, Lowe relies on dated monuments to construct a step-by-... | PT20 S2 Q24 |
Question ID:PT20 S2 Q25 Passage:In The Dynamics of Apocalypse, John Lowe attempts to solve the mystery of the collapse of the Classic Mayan civilization. Lowe bases his study on a detailed examination of the known archaeological record. Like previous investigators, Lowe relies on dated monuments to construct a step-by-... | PT20 S2 Q25 |
Question ID:PT20 S2 Q26 Passage:In The Dynamics of Apocalypse, John Lowe attempts to solve the mystery of the collapse of the Classic Mayan civilization. Lowe bases his study on a detailed examination of the known archaeological record. Like previous investigators, Lowe relies on dated monuments to construct a step-by-... | PT20 S2 Q26 |
Question ID:PT20 S3 Q1 Passage:Each of seven travelers‚ Norris, Oribe, Paulsen, Rosen, Semonelli, Tan, and Underwood‚ will be assigned to exactly one of nine airplane seats. The seats are numbered from 1 through 9 and arranged in rows as follows:Front row:1 2 3Middle row:4 5 6Last row:7 8 9Only seats in the same... | PT20 S3 Q1 |
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