Sentence
stringlengths
135
5.03k
Video Title
stringlengths
9
14
Question ID:PT11 S2 Q20 Passage:A recent report on an environmental improvement program was criticized for focusing solely on pragmatic solutions to the large number of significant problems that plague the program instead of seriously trying to produce a coherent vision for the future of the program. In response the re...
PT11 S2 Q20
Question ID:PT11 S2 Q21 Passage:A recent report on an environmental improvement program was criticized for focusing solely on pragmatic solutions to the large number of significant problems that plague the program instead of seriously trying to produce a coherent vision for the future of the program. In response the re...
PT11 S2 Q21
Question ID:PT11 S2 Q22 Passage:Oil company representative: We spent more money on cleaning the otters affected by our recent oil spill than has been spent on any previous marine mammal rescue project. This shows our concern for the environment. Environmentalist: You have no such concern. Your real concern is evident i...
PT11 S2 Q22
Question ID:PT11 S2 Q23 Passage:A group of scientists studying calcium metabolism in laboratory rats discovered that removing the rats’ parathyroid glands resulted in the rats’ having substantially lower than normal levels of calcium in their blood. This discovery led the scientists to hypothesize that the function of ...
PT11 S2 Q23
Question ID:PT11 S2 Q24 Passage:Since Mayor Drabble always repays her political debts as soon as possible, she will almost certainly appoint Lee to be the new head of the arts commission. Lee has wanted that job for a long time, and Drabble owes Lee a lot for his support in the last election. Stem:Which one of the foll...
PT11 S2 Q24
Question ID:PT11 S2 Q25 Passage:The fact that tobacco smoke inhaled by smokers harms the smokers does not prove that the much smaller amount of tobacco smoke inhaled by nonsmokers who share living space with smokers harms the nonsmokers to some degree. Many substances, such as vitamin A, are toxic in large quantities b...
PT11 S2 Q25
Question ID:PT11 S2 Q26 Passage:Why should the government, rather than industry or universities, provide the money to put a network of supercomputers in place? Because there is a range of problems that can be attacked only with the massive data-managing capacity of a supercomputer network. No business or university has...
PT11 S2 Q26
Question ID:PT11 S3 Q1 Passage:Nearly every writer on the philosophy of civil rights activist Martin Luther King, Jr., makes a connection between King and Henry David Thoreau, usually via Thoreau’s famous essay, “Civil Disobedience” (1849). In his book Stride Toward Freedom (1958), King himself stated that Thoreau’s es...
PT11 S3 Q1
Question ID:PT11 S3 Q2 Passage:Nearly every writer on the philosophy of civil rights activist Martin Luther King, Jr., makes a connection between King and Henry David Thoreau, usually via Thoreau’s famous essay, “Civil Disobedience” (1849). In his book Stride Toward Freedom (1958), King himself stated that Thoreau’s es...
PT11 S3 Q2
Question ID:PT11 S3 Q3 Passage:Nearly every writer on the philosophy of civil rights activist Martin Luther King, Jr., makes a connection between King and Henry David Thoreau, usually via Thoreau’s famous essay, “Civil Disobedience” (1849). In his book Stride Toward Freedom (1958), King himself stated that Thoreau’s es...
PT11 S3 Q3
Question ID:PT11 S3 Q4 Passage:Nearly every writer on the philosophy of civil rights activist Martin Luther King, Jr., makes a connection between King and Henry David Thoreau, usually via Thoreau’s famous essay, “Civil Disobedience” (1849). In his book Stride Toward Freedom (1958), King himself stated that Thoreau’s es...
PT11 S3 Q4
Question ID:PT11 S3 Q5 Passage:Nearly every writer on the philosophy of civil rights activist Martin Luther King, Jr., makes a connection between King and Henry David Thoreau, usually via Thoreau’s famous essay, “Civil Disobedience” (1849). In his book Stride Toward Freedom (1958), King himself stated that Thoreau’s es...
PT11 S3 Q5
Question ID:PT11 S3 Q6 Passage:Nearly every writer on the philosophy of civil rights activist Martin Luther King, Jr., makes a connection between King and Henry David Thoreau, usually via Thoreau’s famous essay, “Civil Disobedience” (1849). In his book Stride Toward Freedom (1958), King himself stated that Thoreau’s es...
PT11 S3 Q6
Question ID:PT11 S3 Q7 Passage:Nearly every writer on the philosophy of civil rights activist Martin Luther King, Jr., makes a connection between King and Henry David Thoreau, usually via Thoreau’s famous essay, “Civil Disobedience” (1849). In his book Stride Toward Freedom (1958), King himself stated that Thoreau’s es...
PT11 S3 Q7
Question ID:PT11 S3 Q8 Passage:In Democracy and its Critics, Robert Dahl defends both democratic values and pluralist democracies, or polyarchies (a rough shorthand term for Western political systems). Dahl argues convincingly that the idea of democracy rests on political equality—the equal capacity of all citizens to ...
PT11 S3 Q8
Question ID:PT11 S3 Q9 Passage:In Democracy and its Critics, Robert Dahl defends both democratic values and pluralist democracies, or polyarchies (a rough shorthand term for Western political systems). Dahl argues convincingly that the idea of democracy rests on political equality—the equal capacity of all citizens to ...
PT11 S3 Q9
Question ID:PT11 S3 Q10 Passage:In Democracy and its Critics, Robert Dahl defends both democratic values and pluralist democracies, or polyarchies (a rough shorthand term for Western political systems). Dahl argues convincingly that the idea of democracy rests on political equality—the equal capacity of all citizens to...
PT11 S3 Q10
Question ID:PT11 S3 Q11 Passage:In Democracy and its Critics, Robert Dahl defends both democratic values and pluralist democracies, or polyarchies (a rough shorthand term for Western political systems). Dahl argues convincingly that the idea of democracy rests on political equality—the equal capacity of all citizens to...
PT11 S3 Q11
Question ID:PT11 S3 Q12 Passage:In Democracy and its Critics, Robert Dahl defends both democratic values and pluralist democracies, or polyarchies (a rough shorthand term for Western political systems). Dahl argues convincingly that the idea of democracy rests on political equality—the equal capacity of all citizens to...
PT11 S3 Q12
Question ID:PT11 S3 Q13 Passage:In Democracy and its Critics, Robert Dahl defends both democratic values and pluralist democracies, or polyarchies (a rough shorthand term for Western political systems). Dahl argues convincingly that the idea of democracy rests on political equality—the equal capacity of all citizens to...
PT11 S3 Q13
Question ID:PT11 S3 Q14 Passage:In Democracy and its Critics, Robert Dahl defends both democratic values and pluralist democracies, or polyarchies (a rough shorthand term for Western political systems). Dahl argues convincingly that the idea of democracy rests on political equality—the equal capacity of all citizens to...
PT11 S3 Q14
Question ID:PT11 S3 Q15 Passage:The old belief that climatic stability accounts for the high level of species diversity in the Amazon River basin of South America emerged, strangely enough, from observations of the deep sea. Sanders discovered high diversity among the mud-dwelling animals of the deep ocean. He argued t...
PT11 S3 Q15
Question ID:PT11 S3 Q16 Passage:The old belief that climatic stability accounts for the high level of species diversity in the Amazon River basin of South America emerged, strangely enough, from observations of the deep sea. Sanders discovered high diversity among the mud-dwelling animals of the deep ocean. He argued t...
PT11 S3 Q16
Question ID:PT11 S3 Q17 Passage:The old belief that climatic stability accounts for the high level of species diversity in the Amazon River basin of South America emerged, strangely enough, from observations of the deep sea. Sanders discovered high diversity among the mud-dwelling animals of the deep ocean. He argued t...
PT11 S3 Q17
Question ID:PT11 S3 Q18 Passage:The old belief that climatic stability accounts for the high level of species diversity in the Amazon River basin of South America emerged, strangely enough, from observations of the deep sea. Sanders discovered high diversity among the mud-dwelling animals of the deep ocean. He argued t...
PT11 S3 Q18
Question ID:PT11 S3 Q19 Passage:The old belief that climatic stability accounts for the high level of species diversity in the Amazon River basin of South America emerged, strangely enough, from observations of the deep sea. Sanders discovered high diversity among the mud-dwelling animals of the deep ocean. He argued t...
PT11 S3 Q19
Question ID:PT11 S3 Q20 Passage:The old belief that climatic stability accounts for the high level of species diversity in the Amazon River basin of South America emerged, strangely enough, from observations of the deep sea. Sanders discovered high diversity among the mud-dwelling animals of the deep ocean. He argued t...
PT11 S3 Q20
Question ID:PT11 S3 Q21 Passage:The old belief that climatic stability accounts for the high level of species diversity in the Amazon River basin of South America emerged, strangely enough, from observations of the deep sea. Sanders discovered high diversity among the mud-dwelling animals of the deep ocean. He argued t...
PT11 S3 Q21
Question ID:PT11 S3 Q22 Passage:Although surveys of medieval legislation, guild organization, and terminology used to designate different medical practitioners have demonstrated that numerous medical specialties were recognized in Europe during the Middle Ages, most historians continue to equate the term “woman medical...
PT11 S3 Q22
Question ID:PT11 S3 Q23 Passage:Although surveys of medieval legislation, guild organization, and terminology used to designate different medical practitioners have demonstrated that numerous medical specialties were recognized in Europe during the Middle Ages, most historians continue to equate the term “woman medical...
PT11 S3 Q23
Question ID:PT11 S3 Q24 Passage:Although surveys of medieval legislation, guild organization, and terminology used to designate different medical practitioners have demonstrated that numerous medical specialties were recognized in Europe during the Middle Ages, most historians continue to equate the term “woman medical...
PT11 S3 Q24
Question ID:PT11 S3 Q25 Passage:Although surveys of medieval legislation, guild organization, and terminology used to designate different medical practitioners have demonstrated that numerous medical specialties were recognized in Europe during the Middle Ages, most historians continue to equate the term “woman medical...
PT11 S3 Q25
Question ID:PT11 S3 Q26 Passage:Although surveys of medieval legislation, guild organization, and terminology used to designate different medical practitioners have demonstrated that numerous medical specialties were recognized in Europe during the Middle Ages, most historians continue to equate the term “woman medical...
PT11 S3 Q26
Question ID:PT11 S3 Q27 Passage:Although surveys of medieval legislation, guild organization, and terminology used to designate different medical practitioners have demonstrated that numerous medical specialties were recognized in Europe during the Middle Ages, most historians continue to equate the term “woman medical...
PT11 S3 Q27
Question ID:PT11 S4 Q1 Passage:Megatrash Co., the country’s largest waste-disposal company, has been sued by environmental groups who have accused the firm of negligent handling of hazardous waste. The fines and legal fees that have resulted from the legal attacks against Megatrash have cost the company substantial amo...
PT11 S4 Q1
Question ID:PT11 S4 Q2 Passage:Lewis: Those who do not learn from past mistakes —their own and those of others—are condemned to repeat them. In order to benefit from the lessons of history, however, we first have to know history. That is why the acquisition of broad historical knowledge is so important. Morris: The tro...
PT11 S4 Q2
Question ID:PT11 S4 Q3 Passage:A group of scientists who have done research on the health effects of food irradiation has discovered no evidence challenging its safety. Supporters of food irradiation have cited this research as certain proof that food irradiation is a safe practice. Stem:A flaw in the reasoning of the ...
PT11 S4 Q3
Question ID:PT11 S4 Q4 Passage:Cooking teacher: Lima beans generally need about an hour of boiling to reach the proper degree of doneness. The precise amount of time it takes depends on size: larger beans require a longer cooking time than smaller beans do. It is important that lima beans not be overcooked since overco...
PT11 S4 Q4
Question ID:PT11 S4 Q5 Passage:Large quantities of lead dust can be released during renovations in houses with walls painted with lead-based paint. Because the dust puts occupants at high risk of lead poisoning, such renovations should be done only in unoccupied houses by contractors who are experienced in removing all...
PT11 S4 Q5
Question ID:PT11 S4 Q6 Passage:Large quantities of lead dust can be released during renovations in houses with walls painted with lead-based paint. Because the dust puts occupants at high risk of lead poisoning, such renovations should be done only in unoccupied houses by contractors who are experienced in removing all...
PT11 S4 Q6
Question ID:PT11 S4 Q7 Passage:The scientific theory of evolution has challenged the view of human origin as divine creation and sees us as simply descended from the same ancestors as the apes. While science and technology have provided brilliant insights into our world and eased our everyday life, they have simultaneo...
PT11 S4 Q7
Question ID:PT11 S4 Q8 Passage:That long-term cigarette smoking can lead to health problems including cancer and lung disease is a scientifically well-established fact. Contrary to what many people seem to believe, however, it is not necessary to deny this fact in order to reject the view that tobacco companies should ...
PT11 S4 Q8
Question ID:PT11 S4 Q9 Passage:That long-term cigarette smoking can lead to health problems including cancer and lung disease is a scientifically well-established fact. Contrary to what many people seem to believe, however, it is not necessary to deny this fact in order to reject the view that tobacco companies should ...
PT11 S4 Q9
Question ID:PT11 S4 Q10 Passage:Lydia: Each year, thousands of seabirds are injured when they become entangled in equipment owned by fishing companies. Therefore, the fishing companies should assume responsibility for funding veterinary treatment for the injured birds. Jonathan: Your feelings for the birds are admirabl...
PT11 S4 Q10
Question ID:PT11 S4 Q11 Passage:Logging industry official: Harvesting trees from oldgrowth forests for use in manufacture can reduce the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, since when large old trees die in the forest they decompose, releasing their stored carbon dioxide. Harvesting old-growth forests would, mo...
PT11 S4 Q11
Question ID:PT11 S4 Q12 Passage:A survey of a group of people between the ages of 75 and 80 found that those who regularly played the card game bridge tended to have better short-term memory than those who did not play bridge. It was originally concluded from this that playing bridge can help older people to retain and...
PT11 S4 Q12
Question ID:PT11 S4 Q13 Passage:There are tests to detect some of the rare genetic flaws that increase the likelihood of certain diseases. If these tests are performed, then a person with a rare genetic flaw that is detected can receive the appropriate preventive treatment. Since it costs the health-care system less to...
PT11 S4 Q13
Question ID:PT11 S4 Q14 Passage:In the 1960s paranoia was viewed by social scientists as ungrounded fear of powerlessness, and the theme of paranoia as it relates to feelings of powerlessness was dominant in films of that period. In the 1970s paranoia instead was viewed by social scientists as a response to real threat...
PT11 S4 Q14
Question ID:PT11 S4 Q15 Passage:A certain experimental fungicide causes no harm to garden plants, though only if it is diluted at least to ten parts water to one part fungicide. Moreover, this fungicide is known to be so effective against powdery mildew that it has the capacity to eliminate it completely from rose plan...
PT11 S4 Q15
Question ID:PT11 S4 Q16 Passage:When glass products are made from recycled glass, the resulting products can be equal in quality to glass products made from quartz sand, the usual raw material. When plastics are recycled, however, the result is inevitably a plastic of a lower grade than the plastic from which it is der...
PT11 S4 Q16
Question ID:PT11 S4 Q17 Passage:Teacher: Journalists who conceal the identity of the sources they quote stake their professional reputations on what may be called the logic of anecdotes. This is so because the statements reported by such journalists are dissociated from the precise circumstances in which they were made...
PT11 S4 Q17
Question ID:PT11 S4 Q18 Passage:Teacher: Journalists who conceal the identity of the sources they quote stake their professional reputations on what may be called the logic of anecdotes. This is so because the statements reported by such journalists are dissociated from the precise circumstances in which they were made...
PT11 S4 Q18
Question ID:PT11 S4 Q19 Passage:The proposal to extend clinical trials, which are routinely used as systematic tests of pharmaceutical innovations, to new surgical procedures should not be implemented. The point is that surgical procedures differ in one important respect from medicinal drugs: a correctly prescribed dru...
PT11 S4 Q19
Question ID:PT11 S4 Q20 Passage:If the majority of the residents of the apartment complex complain that their apartments are infested with ants, then the management of the complex will have to engage the services of an exterminator. But the majority of the residents of the complex indicate that their apartments are vir...
PT11 S4 Q20
Question ID:PT11 S4 Q21 Passage:When the supply of a given resource dwindles, alternative technologies allowing the use of different resources develop, and demand for the resource that was in short supply naturally declines. Then the existing supplies of that resource satisfy whatever demand remains. Among the once-dwi...
PT11 S4 Q21
Question ID:PT11 S4 Q22 Passage:Paulsville and Longtown cannot both be included in the candidate’s itinerary of campaign stops. The candidate will make a stop in Paulsville unless Salisbury is made part of the itinerary. Unfortunately, a stop in Salisbury is out of the question. Clearly, then, a stop in Longtown can be...
PT11 S4 Q22
Question ID:PT11 S4 Q23 Passage:A study of adults who suffer from migraine headaches revealed that a significant proportion of the study participants suffer from a complex syndrome characterized by a set of three symptoms. Those who suffer from the syndrome experienced excessive anxiety during early childhood. As adole...
PT11 S4 Q23
Question ID:PT11 S4 Q24 Passage:Mainstream economic theory holds that manufacturers, in deciding what kinds of products to manufacture and what form those products should have, simply respond to the needs and desires of consumers. However, most major manufacturers manipulate and even create consumer demand, as anyone w...
PT11 S4 Q24
Question ID:PT10 S1 Q1 Passage:Educational television is a contradiction in terms. While a classroom encourages social interaction, television encourages solitude. School is centered on the development of language, but television depends upon constantly changing visual images. And in a classroom, fun is merely a means ...
PT10 S1 Q1
Question ID:PT10 S1 Q2 Passage:Switching to “low-yield” cigarettes, those that yield less nicotine, tar, and carbon monoxide than regular cigarettes when tested on a standard machine, does not, in general, reduce the incidence of heart attack. This result is surprising, since nicotine and carbon monoxide have been impl...
PT10 S1 Q2
Question ID:PT10 S1 Q3 Passage:Sally: I cannot study at a university where there is an alcohol problem, so unless something is done about the alcohol problem at this university, I’ll have to transfer to a university where there are no fraternities. Yolanda: I don’t agree that fraternities are responsible for the alcoho...
PT10 S1 Q3
Question ID:PT10 S1 Q4 Passage:Sally: I cannot study at a university where there is an alcohol problem, so unless something is done about the alcohol problem at this university, I’ll have to transfer to a university where there are no fraternities. Yolanda: I don’t agree that fraternities are responsible for the alcoho...
PT10 S1 Q4
Question ID:PT10 S1 Q5 Passage:Some people have questioned why the Homeowners Association is supporting Cooper’s candidacy for mayor. But if the Association wants a mayor who will attract more businesses to the town, Cooper is the only candidate it could support. So, since the Association is supporting Cooper, it must ...
PT10 S1 Q5
Question ID:PT10 S1 Q6 Passage:Advertisement: Most power hedge trimmers on the market do an adequate job of trimming hedges, but many power hedge trimmers are dangerous to operate and can cause serious injury when used by untrained operators. Bolter Industries’ hedge trimmer has been tested by National Laboratories, th...
PT10 S1 Q6
Question ID:PT10 S1 Q7 Passage:Slash-and-burn agriculture involves burning several acres of forest, leaving vegetable ash that provides ample fertilizer for three or four years of bountiful crops. On the cleared land nutrients leach out of the soil, however, and the land becomes too poor to support agriculture. New lan...
PT10 S1 Q7
Question ID:PT10 S1 Q8 Passage:Of 2,500 people who survived a first heart attack, those who did not smoke had their first heart attack at a median age of 62. However, of those 2,500, people who smoked two packs of cigarettes a day had their first heart attack at a median age of 51. On the basis of this information, it ...
PT10 S1 Q8
Question ID:PT10 S1 Q9 Passage:Paleontologists have discovered fossils of centipedes that are 414 million years old. These fossils are at least 20 million years older than the earliest land-dwelling animals previously identified. The paleontologists are confident that these centipedes lived on land, even though the fos...
PT10 S1 Q9
Question ID:PT10 S1 Q10 Passage:Broadcaster: Our radio station has a responsibility to serve the public interest. Hence, when our critics contend that our recent exposé of events in the private lives of local celebrities was excessively intrusive, we can only reply that the overwhelming public interest in these matters...
PT10 S1 Q10
Question ID:PT10 S1 Q11 Passage:The fire that destroyed the Municipal Building started before dawn this morning, and the last fire fighters did not leave until late this afternoon. No one could have been anywhere in the vicinity of a fire like that one and fail to notice it. Thomas must have seen it, whatever he now sa...
PT10 S1 Q11
Question ID:PT10 S1 Q12 Passage:The fire that destroyed the Municipal Building started before dawn this morning, and the last fire fighters did not leave until late this afternoon. No one could have been anywhere in the vicinity of a fire like that one and fail to notice it. Thomas must have seen it, whatever he now sa...
PT10 S1 Q12
Question ID:PT10 S1 Q13 Passage:Editorial: In rejecting the plan proposed by parliament to reform the electoral process, the president clearly acted in the best interests of the nation. Anyone who thinks otherwise should remember that the president made this decision knowing it would be met with fierce opposition at ho...
PT10 S1 Q13
Question ID:PT10 S1 Q14 Passage:Once consumers recognize that a period of inflation has begun, there is generally an increase in consumer spending. This increase can be readily explained by consumers’ desire not to postpone purchases that will surely increase in price. But during protracted periods of inflation, consum...
PT10 S1 Q14
Question ID:PT10 S1 Q15 Passage:A favored theory to explain the extinction of dinosaurs, together with many other species, has been the globally catastrophic collision of a large asteroid with the Earth. Supporting evidence is an extraterrestrial chemical element in a layer of dust found worldwide at a geological level...
PT10 S1 Q15
Question ID:PT10 S1 Q16 Passage:A favored theory to explain the extinction of dinosaurs, together with many other species, has been the globally catastrophic collision of a large asteroid with the Earth. Supporting evidence is an extraterrestrial chemical element in a layer of dust found worldwide at a geological level...
PT10 S1 Q16
Question ID:PT10 S1 Q17 Passage:A contract, whether expressed or unexpressed, exists when two parties engage with each other for the reciprocal transfer of benefits. Thus, in accepting support from public funds, an artist creates at least an unexpressed contract between himself or herself and the public, and the public...
PT10 S1 Q17
Question ID:PT10 S1 Q18 Passage:People cannot be morally responsible for things over which they have no control. Therefore, they should not be held morally responsible for any inevitable consequences of such things, either. Determining whether adults have any control over the treatment they are receiving can be difficu...
PT10 S1 Q18
Question ID:PT10 S1 Q19 Passage:Fares on the city-run public buses in Greenville are subsidized by city tax revenues, but among the beneficiaries of the low fares are many people who commute from outside the city to jobs in Greenville. Some city councillors argue that city taxes should be used primarily to benefit the ...
PT10 S1 Q19
Question ID:PT10 S1 Q20 Passage:Government official: Clearly, censorship exists if we, as citizens, are not allowed to communicate what we are ready to communicate at our own expense or if other citizens are not permitted access to our communications at their own expense. Public unwillingness to provide funds for certa...
PT10 S1 Q20
Question ID:PT10 S1 Q21 Passage:The Japanese haiku is defined as a poem of three lines with five syllables in the first line, seven syllables in the second line, and five syllables in the third line. English poets tend to ignore this fact. Disregarding syllable count, they generally call any three-line English poem wit...
PT10 S1 Q21
Question ID:PT10 S1 Q22 Passage:No one knows what purposes, if any, dreams serve, although there are a number of hypotheses. According to one hypothesis, dreams are produced when the brain is erasing “parasitic connections” (meaningless, accidental associations between ideas), which accumulate during the day and which ...
PT10 S1 Q22
Question ID:PT10 S1 Q23 Passage:No one knows what purposes, if any, dreams serve, although there are a number of hypotheses. According to one hypothesis, dreams are produced when the brain is erasing “parasitic connections” (meaningless, accidental associations between ideas), which accumulate during the day and which ...
PT10 S1 Q23
Question ID:PT10 S1 Q24 Passage:The body of anyone infected by virus X will, after a week, produce antibodies to fight the virus; the antibodies will increase in number for the next year or so. There is now a test that reliably indicates how many antibodies are present in a person’s body. If positive, this test can be ...
PT10 S1 Q24
Question ID:PT10 S1 Q25 Passage:Large inequalities in wealth always threaten the viability of true democracy, since wealth is the basis of political power, and true democracy depends on the equal distribution of political power among all citizens. Stem:The reasoning in which one of the following arguments most closely ...
PT10 S1 Q25
Question ID:PT10 S2 Q1 Passage:On the basis of an examination, nine students—Fred, Glen, Hilary, Ida, Jan, Kathy, Laura, Mike, and Nick—are each placed in one of three classes. The three highest scorers are placed in the level 1 class; the three lowest scorers are placed in the level 3 class. The remaining three are pl...
PT10 S2 Q1
Question ID:PT10 S2 Q2 Passage:On the basis of an examination, nine students—Fred, Glen, Hilary, Ida, Jan, Kathy, Laura, Mike, and Nick—are each placed in one of three classes. The three highest scorers are placed in the level 1 class; the three lowest scorers are placed in the level 3 class. The remaining three are pl...
PT10 S2 Q2
Question ID:PT10 S2 Q3 Passage:On the basis of an examination, nine students—Fred, Glen, Hilary, Ida, Jan, Kathy, Laura, Mike, and Nick—are each placed in one of three classes. The three highest scorers are placed in the level 1 class; the three lowest scorers are placed in the level 3 class. The remaining three are pl...
PT10 S2 Q3
Question ID:PT10 S2 Q4 Passage:On the basis of an examination, nine students—Fred, Glen, Hilary, Ida, Jan, Kathy, Laura, Mike, and Nick—are each placed in one of three classes. The three highest scorers are placed in the level 1 class; the three lowest scorers are placed in the level 3 class. The remaining three are pl...
PT10 S2 Q4
Question ID:PT10 S2 Q5 Passage:On the basis of an examination, nine students—Fred, Glen, Hilary, Ida, Jan, Kathy, Laura, Mike, and Nick—are each placed in one of three classes. The three highest scorers are placed in the level 1 class; the three lowest scorers are placed in the level 3 class. The remaining three are pl...
PT10 S2 Q5
Question ID:PT10 S2 Q6 Passage:Six reviewers—Frank, George, Hilda, Jackie, Karl, and Lena—will review four movies—Mystery, Retreat, Seasonings, and Wolves—according to the following conditions: Each reviewer reviews exactly one movie, and each movie is reviewed by at least one of the six reviewers. Hilda reviews the sa...
PT10 S2 Q6
Question ID:PT10 S2 Q7 Passage:Six reviewers—Frank, George, Hilda, Jackie, Karl, and Lena—will review four movies—Mystery, Retreat, Seasonings, and Wolves—according to the following conditions: Each reviewer reviews exactly one movie, and each movie is reviewed by at least one of the six reviewers. Hilda reviews the sa...
PT10 S2 Q7
Question ID:PT10 S2 Q8 Passage:Six reviewers—Frank, George, Hilda, Jackie, Karl, and Lena—will review four movies—Mystery, Retreat, Seasonings, and Wolves—according to the following conditions: Each reviewer reviews exactly one movie, and each movie is reviewed by at least one of the six reviewers. Hilda reviews the sa...
PT10 S2 Q8
Question ID:PT10 S2 Q9 Passage:Six reviewers—Frank, George, Hilda, Jackie, Karl, and Lena—will review four movies—Mystery, Retreat, Seasonings, and Wolves—according to the following conditions: Each reviewer reviews exactly one movie, and each movie is reviewed by at least one of the six reviewers. Hilda reviews the sa...
PT10 S2 Q9
Question ID:PT10 S2 Q10 Passage:Six reviewers—Frank, George, Hilda, Jackie, Karl, and Lena—will review four movies—Mystery, Retreat, Seasonings, and Wolves—according to the following conditions: Each reviewer reviews exactly one movie, and each movie is reviewed by at least one of the six reviewers. Hilda reviews the s...
PT10 S2 Q10
Question ID:PT10 S2 Q11 Passage:Six reviewers—Frank, George, Hilda, Jackie, Karl, and Lena—will review four movies—Mystery, Retreat, Seasonings, and Wolves—according to the following conditions: Each reviewer reviews exactly one movie, and each movie is reviewed by at least one of the six reviewers. Hilda reviews the s...
PT10 S2 Q11
Question ID:PT10 S2 Q12 Passage:Six reviewers—Frank, George, Hilda, Jackie, Karl, and Lena—will review four movies—Mystery, Retreat, Seasonings, and Wolves—according to the following conditions: Each reviewer reviews exactly one movie, and each movie is reviewed by at least one of the six reviewers. Hilda reviews the s...
PT10 S2 Q12
Question ID:PT10 S2 Q13 Passage:In a game, “words” (real or nonsensical) consist of any combination of at least four letters of the English alphabet. Any “sentence” consists of exactly five words and satisfies the following conditions: The five words are written from left to right on a single line in alphabetical order...
PT10 S2 Q13
Question ID:PT10 S2 Q14 Passage:In a game, “words” (real or nonsensical) consist of any combination of at least four letters of the English alphabet. Any “sentence” consists of exactly five words and satisfies the following conditions: The five words are written from left to right on a single line in alphabetical order...
PT10 S2 Q14
Question ID:PT10 S2 Q15 Passage:In a game, “words” (real or nonsensical) consist of any combination of at least four letters of the English alphabet. Any “sentence” consists of exactly five words and satisfies the following conditions: The five words are written from left to right on a single line in alphabetical order...
PT10 S2 Q15
Question ID:PT10 S2 Q16 Passage:In a game, “words” (real or nonsensical) consist of any combination of at least four letters of the English alphabet. Any “sentence” consists of exactly five words and satisfies the following conditions: The five words are written from left to right on a single line in alphabetical order...
PT10 S2 Q16
Question ID:PT10 S2 Q17 Passage:In a game, “words” (real or nonsensical) consist of any combination of at least four letters of the English alphabet. Any “sentence” consists of exactly five words and satisfies the following conditions: The five words are written from left to right on a single line in alphabetical order...
PT10 S2 Q17