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Question ID:PT8 S2 Q16 Passage:Seven children are to be seated in seven chairs arranged in a row that runs from west to east. All seven children will face north. Four of the children are boys: Frank, Harry, Ivan, and Joel. Three are girls: Ruby, Sylvia, and Thelma. The children are assigned to chairs according to the f... | PT8 S2 Q16 |
Question ID:PT8 S2 Q17 Passage:Seven children are to be seated in seven chairs arranged in a row that runs from west to east. All seven children will face north. Four of the children are boys: Frank, Harry, Ivan, and Joel. Three are girls: Ruby, Sylvia, and Thelma. The children are assigned to chairs according to the f... | PT8 S2 Q17 |
Question ID:PT8 S2 Q18 Passage:The organisms W, X, Y, and Z respond to the antibiotics ferromycin, ganocyclene, and heptocillin in a manner consistent with the following: Each of the organisms responds to at least one of the antibiotics. No organism responds to all three antibiotics. At least two but not all four or th... | PT8 S2 Q18 |
Question ID:PT8 S2 Q19 Passage:The organisms W, X, Y, and Z respond to the antibiotics ferromycin, ganocyclene, and heptocillin in a manner consistent with the following: Each of the organisms responds to at least one of the antibiotics. No organism responds to all three antibiotics. At least two but not all four or th... | PT8 S2 Q19 |
Question ID:PT8 S2 Q20 Passage:The organisms W, X, Y, and Z respond to the antibiotics ferromycin, ganocyclene, and heptocillin in a manner consistent with the following: Each of the organisms responds to at least one of the antibiotics. No organism responds to all three antibiotics. At least two but not all four or th... | PT8 S2 Q20 |
Question ID:PT8 S2 Q21 Passage:The organisms W, X, Y, and Z respond to the antibiotics ferromycin, ganocyclene, and heptocillin in a manner consistent with the following: Each of the organisms responds to at least one of the antibiotics. No organism responds to all three antibiotics. At least two but not all four or th... | PT8 S2 Q21 |
Question ID:PT8 S2 Q22 Passage:The organisms W, X, Y, and Z respond to the antibiotics ferromycin, ganocyclene, and heptocillin in a manner consistent with the following: Each of the organisms responds to at least one of the antibiotics. No organism responds to all three antibiotics. At least two but not all four or th... | PT8 S2 Q22 |
Question ID:PT8 S2 Q23 Passage:The organisms W, X, Y, and Z respond to the antibiotics ferromycin, ganocyclene, and heptocillin in a manner consistent with the following: Each of the organisms responds to at least one of the antibiotics. No organism responds to all three antibiotics. At least two but not all four or th... | PT8 S2 Q23 |
Question ID:PT8 S2 Q24 Passage:The organisms W, X, Y, and Z respond to the antibiotics ferromycin, ganocyclene, and heptocillin in a manner consistent with the following: Each of the organisms responds to at least one of the antibiotics. No organism responds to all three antibiotics. At least two but not all four or th... | PT8 S2 Q24 |
Question ID:PT8 S3 Q1 Passage:After thirty years of investigation into cell genetics, researchers made startling discoveries in the 1960s and early 1970s which culminated in the development of processes, collectively known as recombinant deoxyribonucleic acid (rDNA) technology, for the active manipulation of a cell’s g... | PT8 S3 Q1 |
Question ID:PT8 S3 Q2 Passage:After thirty years of investigation into cell genetics, researchers made startling discoveries in the 1960s and early 1970s which culminated in the development of processes, collectively known as recombinant deoxyribonucleic acid (rDNA) technology, for the active manipulation of a cell’s g... | PT8 S3 Q2 |
Question ID:PT8 S3 Q3 Passage:After thirty years of investigation into cell genetics, researchers made startling discoveries in the 1960s and early 1970s which culminated in the development of processes, collectively known as recombinant deoxyribonucleic acid (rDNA) technology, for the active manipulation of a cell’s g... | PT8 S3 Q3 |
Question ID:PT8 S3 Q4 Passage:After thirty years of investigation into cell genetics, researchers made startling discoveries in the 1960s and early 1970s which culminated in the development of processes, collectively known as recombinant deoxyribonucleic acid (rDNA) technology, for the active manipulation of a cell’s g... | PT8 S3 Q4 |
Question ID:PT8 S3 Q5 Passage:After thirty years of investigation into cell genetics, researchers made startling discoveries in the 1960s and early 1970s which culminated in the development of processes, collectively known as recombinant deoxyribonucleic acid (rDNA) technology, for the active manipulation of a cell’s g... | PT8 S3 Q5 |
Question ID:PT8 S3 Q6 Passage:After thirty years of investigation into cell genetics, researchers made startling discoveries in the 1960s and early 1970s which culminated in the development of processes, collectively known as recombinant deoxyribonucleic acid (rDNA) technology, for the active manipulation of a cell’s g... | PT8 S3 Q6 |
Question ID:PT8 S3 Q7 Passage:Gray marketing, the selling of trademarked products through channels of distribution not authorized by the trademark holder, can involve distribution of goods either within a market region or across market boundaries. Gray marketing within a market region (“channel flow diversion”) occurs ... | PT8 S3 Q7 |
Question ID:PT8 S3 Q8 Passage:Gray marketing, the selling of trademarked products through channels of distribution not authorized by the trademark holder, can involve distribution of goods either within a market region or across market boundaries. Gray marketing within a market region (“channel flow diversion”) occurs ... | PT8 S3 Q8 |
Question ID:PT8 S3 Q9 Passage:Gray marketing, the selling of trademarked products through channels of distribution not authorized by the trademark holder, can involve distribution of goods either within a market region or across market boundaries. Gray marketing within a market region (“channel flow diversion”) occurs ... | PT8 S3 Q9 |
Question ID:PT8 S3 Q10 Passage:Gray marketing, the selling of trademarked products through channels of distribution not authorized by the trademark holder, can involve distribution of goods either within a market region or across market boundaries. Gray marketing within a market region (“channel flow diversion”) occurs... | PT8 S3 Q10 |
Question ID:PT8 S3 Q11 Passage:Gray marketing, the selling of trademarked products through channels of distribution not authorized by the trademark holder, can involve distribution of goods either within a market region or across market boundaries. Gray marketing within a market region (“channel flow diversion”) occurs... | PT8 S3 Q11 |
Question ID:PT8 S3 Q12 Passage:Gray marketing, the selling of trademarked products through channels of distribution not authorized by the trademark holder, can involve distribution of goods either within a market region or across market boundaries. Gray marketing within a market region (“channel flow diversion”) occurs... | PT8 S3 Q12 |
Question ID:PT8 S3 Q13 Passage:Gray marketing, the selling of trademarked products through channels of distribution not authorized by the trademark holder, can involve distribution of goods either within a market region or across market boundaries. Gray marketing within a market region (“channel flow diversion”) occurs... | PT8 S3 Q13 |
Question ID:PT8 S3 Q14 Passage:Any study of autobiographical narratives that appeared under the ostensible authorship of African American writers between 1760 and 1865 inevitably raises concerns about authenticity and interpretation. Should an autobiography whose written composition was literally out of the hands of it... | PT8 S3 Q14 |
Question ID:PT8 S3 Q15 Passage:Any study of autobiographical narratives that appeared under the ostensible authorship of African American writers between 1760 and 1865 inevitably raises concerns about authenticity and interpretation. Should an autobiography whose written composition was literally out of the hands of it... | PT8 S3 Q15 |
Question ID:PT8 S3 Q16 Passage:Any study of autobiographical narratives that appeared under the ostensible authorship of African American writers between 1760 and 1865 inevitably raises concerns about authenticity and interpretation. Should an autobiography whose written composition was literally out of the hands of it... | PT8 S3 Q16 |
Question ID:PT8 S3 Q17 Passage:Any study of autobiographical narratives that appeared under the ostensible authorship of African American writers between 1760 and 1865 inevitably raises concerns about authenticity and interpretation. Should an autobiography whose written composition was literally out of the hands of it... | PT8 S3 Q17 |
Question ID:PT8 S3 Q18 Passage:Any study of autobiographical narratives that appeared under the ostensible authorship of African American writers between 1760 and 1865 inevitably raises concerns about authenticity and interpretation. Should an autobiography whose written composition was literally out of the hands of it... | PT8 S3 Q18 |
Question ID:PT8 S3 Q19 Passage:Any study of autobiographical narratives that appeared under the ostensible authorship of African American writers between 1760 and 1865 inevitably raises concerns about authenticity and interpretation. Should an autobiography whose written composition was literally out of the hands of it... | PT8 S3 Q19 |
Question ID:PT8 S3 Q20 Passage:Any study of autobiographical narratives that appeared under the ostensible authorship of African American writers between 1760 and 1865 inevitably raises concerns about authenticity and interpretation. Should an autobiography whose written composition was literally out of the hands of it... | PT8 S3 Q20 |
Question ID:PT8 S3 Q21 Passage:A conventional view of nineteenth-century Britain holds that iron manufacturers and textile manufacturers from the north of England became the wealthiest and most powerful people in society after about 1832. According to Marxist historians, these industrialists were the target of the work... | PT8 S3 Q21 |
Question ID:PT8 S3 Q22 Passage:A conventional view of nineteenth-century Britain holds that iron manufacturers and textile manufacturers from the north of England became the wealthiest and most powerful people in society after about 1832. According to Marxist historians, these industrialists were the target of the work... | PT8 S3 Q22 |
Question ID:PT8 S3 Q23 Passage:A conventional view of nineteenth-century Britain holds that iron manufacturers and textile manufacturers from the north of England became the wealthiest and most powerful people in society after about 1832. According to Marxist historians, these industrialists were the target of the work... | PT8 S3 Q23 |
Question ID:PT8 S3 Q24 Passage:A conventional view of nineteenth-century Britain holds that iron manufacturers and textile manufacturers from the north of England became the wealthiest and most powerful people in society after about 1832. According to Marxist historians, these industrialists were the target of the work... | PT8 S3 Q24 |
Question ID:PT8 S3 Q25 Passage:A conventional view of nineteenth-century Britain holds that iron manufacturers and textile manufacturers from the north of England became the wealthiest and most powerful people in society after about 1832. According to Marxist historians, these industrialists were the target of the work... | PT8 S3 Q25 |
Question ID:PT8 S3 Q26 Passage:A conventional view of nineteenth-century Britain holds that iron manufacturers and textile manufacturers from the north of England became the wealthiest and most powerful people in society after about 1832. According to Marxist historians, these industrialists were the target of the work... | PT8 S3 Q26 |
Question ID:PT8 S3 Q27 Passage:A conventional view of nineteenth-century Britain holds that iron manufacturers and textile manufacturers from the north of England became the wealthiest and most powerful people in society after about 1832. According to Marxist historians, these industrialists were the target of the work... | PT8 S3 Q27 |
Question ID:PT8 S4 Q1 Passage:The cafeteria at Acme Company can offer only four main dishes at lunchtime, and the same four choices have been offered for years. Recently mushroom casserole was offered in place of one of the other main dishes for two days, during which more people chose mushroom casserole than any other... | PT8 S4 Q1 |
Question ID:PT8 S4 Q2 Passage:When old-growth forests are cleared of tall trees, more sunlight reaches the forest floor. This results in a sharp increase in the population of leafy shrubs on which the mule deer depend for food. Yet mule deer herds that inhabit cleared forests are less well-nourished than are herds livi... | PT8 S4 Q2 |
Question ID:PT8 S4 Q3 Passage:Genevieve: Increasing costs have led commercial airlines to cut back on airplane maintenance. Also, reductions in public spending have led to air traffic control centers being underfunded and understaffed. For these and other reasons it is becoming quite unsafe to fly, and so one should av... | PT8 S4 Q3 |
Question ID:PT8 S4 Q4 Passage:All people residing in the country of Gradara approve of legislation requiring that certain hazardous wastes be disposed of by being burned in modern high-temperature incinerators. However, waste disposal companies planning to build such incinerators encounter fierce resistance to their ap... | PT8 S4 Q4 |
Question ID:PT8 S4 Q5 Passage:Elena: While I was at the dog show, every dog that growled at me was a white poodle, and every white poodle I saw growled at me. Stem:Which one of the following can be properly inferred from Elena’s statement? Correct Answer Choice:CChoice A:The only white dogs that Elena saw at the dog sh... | PT8 S4 Q5 |
Question ID:PT8 S4 Q6 Passage:Derek: We must exploit available resources in developing effective anticancer drugs such as the one made from mature Pacific yew trees. Although the yew population might be threatened, the trees should be harvested now, since an effective synthetic version of the yew’s anticancer chemical ... | PT8 S4 Q6 |
Question ID:PT8 S4 Q7 Passage:Derek: We must exploit available resources in developing effective anticancer drugs such as the one made from mature Pacific yew trees. Although the yew population might be threatened, the trees should be harvested now, since an effective synthetic version of the yew’s anticancer chemical ... | PT8 S4 Q7 |
Question ID:PT8 S4 Q8 Passage:The director of a secondary school where many students were having severe academic problems impaneled a committee to study the matter. The committee reported that these students were having academic problems because they spent large amounts of time on school sports and too little time stud... | PT8 S4 Q8 |
Question ID:PT8 S4 Q9 Passage:It can safely be concluded that there are at least as many trees in Seclee as there are in Martown. Stem:From which one of the following does the conclusion logically follow? Correct Answer Choice:BChoice A:More trees were planted in Seclee in the past two years than in Martown. Choice B:S... | PT8 S4 Q9 |
Question ID:PT8 S4 Q10 Passage:A distemper virus has caused two-thirds of the seal population in the North Sea to die since May 1988. The explanation for the deaths cannot rest here, however. There must be a reason the normally latent virus could prevail so suddenly: clearly the severe pollution of the North Sea waters... | PT8 S4 Q10 |
Question ID:PT8 S4 Q11 Passage:A distemper virus has caused two-thirds of the seal population in the North Sea to die since May 1988. The explanation for the deaths cannot rest here, however. There must be a reason the normally latent virus could prevail so suddenly: clearly the severe pollution of the North Sea waters... | PT8 S4 Q11 |
Question ID:PT8 S4 Q12 Passage:It is clear that none of the volleyball players at yesterday’s office beach party came to work today since everyone who played volleyball at that party got badly sunburned and no one at work today is even slightly sunburned. Stem:Which one of the following exhibits a pattern of reasoning ... | PT8 S4 Q12 |
Question ID:PT8 S4 Q13 Passage:The dean of computing must be respected by the academic staff and be competent to oversee the use of computers on campus. The only deans whom academics respect are those who hold doctoral degrees, and only someone who really knows about computers can competently oversee the use of compute... | PT8 S4 Q13 |
Question ID:PT8 S4 Q14 Passage:The dean of computing must be respected by the academic staff and be competent to oversee the use of computers on campus. The only deans whom academics respect are those who hold doctoral degrees, and only someone who really knows about computers can competently oversee the use of compute... | PT8 S4 Q14 |
Question ID:PT8 S4 Q15 Passage:Consumer advocate: Under the current absence of government standards for food product labeling, manufacturers are misleading or deceiving consumers by their product labeling. For example, a certain brand of juice is labeled “fresh orange juice,” yet the product is made from water, concent... | PT8 S4 Q15 |
Question ID:PT8 S4 Q16 Passage:Consumer advocate: Under the current absence of government standards for food product labeling, manufacturers are misleading or deceiving consumers by their product labeling. For example, a certain brand of juice is labeled “fresh orange juice,” yet the product is made from water, concent... | PT8 S4 Q16 |
Question ID:PT8 S4 Q17 Passage:Certain items—those with that hard-to-define quality called exclusivity—have the odd property, when they become available for sale, of selling rapidly even though they are extremely expensive. In fact, trying to sell such an item fast by asking too low a price is a serious error, since it... | PT8 S4 Q17 |
Question ID:PT8 S4 Q18 Passage:In order to control the deer population, a biologist has proposed injecting female deer during breeding season with 10 milligrams of a hormone that would suppress fertility. Critics have charged that the proposal poses health risks to people who might eat the meat of treated deer and ther... | PT8 S4 Q18 |
Question ID:PT8 S4 Q19 Passage:A recent survey conducted in one North American city revealed widespread concern about the problems faced by teenagers today. Seventy percent of the adults surveyed said they would pay higher taxes for drug treatment programs, and 60 percent said they were willing to pay higher taxes to i... | PT8 S4 Q19 |
Question ID:PT8 S4 Q20 Passage:So-called environmentalists have argued that the proposed Golden Lake Development would interfere with bird-migration patterns. However, the fact that these same people have raised environmental objections to virtually every development proposal brought before the council in recent years ... | PT8 S4 Q20 |
Question ID:PT8 S4 Q21 Passage:So-called environmentalists have argued that the proposed Golden Lake Development would interfere with bird-migration patterns. However, the fact that these same people have raised environmental objections to virtually every development proposal brought before the council in recent years ... | PT8 S4 Q21 |
Question ID:PT8 S4 Q22 Passage:Psychologists today recognize childhood as a separate stage of life which can only be understood in its own terms, and they wonder why the Western world took so long to see the folly of regarding children simply as small, inadequately socialized adults. Most psychologists, however, persis... | PT8 S4 Q22 |
Question ID:PT8 S4 Q23 Passage:Sabina: The words used in expressing facts affect neither the facts nor the conclusions those facts will support. Moreover, if the words are clearly defined and consistently used, the actual words chosen make no difference to an argument’s soundness. Thus, how an argument is expressed can... | PT8 S4 Q23 |
Question ID:PT8 S4 Q24 Passage:Most disposable plastic containers are now labeled with a code number (from 1 to 9) indicating the type or quality of the plastic. Plastics with the lowest code numbers are the easiest for recycling plants to recycle and are thus the most likely to be recycled after use rather than dumped... | PT8 S4 Q24 |
Question ID:PT8 S4 Q25 Passage:Despite a steady decrease in the average number of hours worked per person per week, the share of the population that reads a daily newspaper has declined greatly in the past 20 years. But the percentage of the population that watches television daily has shown a similarly dramatic increa... | PT8 S4 Q25 |
Question ID:PT7 S1 Q1 Passage:Before the printing press, books could be purchased only in expensive manuscript copies. The printing press produced books that were significantly less expensive than the manuscript editions. The public’s demand for printed books in the first years after the invention of the printing press... | PT7 S1 Q1 |
Question ID:PT7 S1 Q2 Passage:Bevex, an artificial sweetener used only in soft drinks, is carcinogenic for mice, but only when it is consumed in very large quantities. To ingest an amount of Bevex equivalent to the amount fed to the mice in the relevant studies, a person would have, to drink 25 cans of Bevex-sweetened ... | PT7 S1 Q2 |
Question ID:PT7 S1 Q3 Passage:Harry: Airlines have made it possible for anyone to travel around the world in much less time than was formerly possible. Judith: That is not true. Many nights are too expensive for all but the rich. Stem:Judith’s response shows that she interprets Harry’s statement to imply that Correct A... | PT7 S1 Q3 |
Question ID:PT7 S1 Q4 Passage:Nutritionists have recommended that people eat more fiber. Advertisements for a new fiber-supplement pill state only that it contains “44 percent fiber.” Stem:The advertising claim is misleading in its selection of information on which to focus if which one of the following is true? Correc... | PT7 S1 Q4 |
Question ID:PT7 S1 Q5 Passage:Many environmentalists have urged environmental awareness on consumers, saying that if we accept moral responsibility for our effects on the environment, then products that directly or indirectly harm the environment ought to be avoided. Unfortunately it is usually impossible for consumers... | PT7 S1 Q5 |
Question ID:PT7 S1 Q6 Passage:Advertisement: Anyone who exercises knows from firsthand experience that exercise leads to better performance of such physical organs as the heart and the lungs, as well as to improvement in muscle tone. And since your brain is a physical organ, your actions can improve its performance, to... | PT7 S1 Q6 |
Question ID:PT7 S1 Q7 Passage:Coherent solutions for the problem of reducing health-care costs cannot be found within the current piecemeal system of paying these costs. The reason is that this system gives health-care providers and insurers every incentive to shift, wherever possible, the costs of treating illness ont... | PT7 S1 Q7 |
Question ID:PT7 S1 Q8 Passage:Coherent solutions for the problem of reducing health-care costs cannot be found within the current piecemeal system of paying these costs. The reason is that this system gives health-care providers and insurers every incentive to shift, wherever possible, the costs of treating illness ont... | PT7 S1 Q8 |
Question ID:PT7 S1 Q9 Passage:The commercial news media emphasize exceptional events such as airplane crashes at the expense of those such as automobile accidents, which occur far more frequently and represent a far greater risk to the public. Yet the public tends to interpret the degree of emphasis the news media give... | PT7 S1 Q9 |
Question ID:PT7 S1 Q10 Passage:A large group of hyperactive children whose regular diets included food containing large amounts of additives was observed by researchers trained to assess the presence or absence of behavior problems. The children were then placed on a low-additive diet for several weeks, after which the... | PT7 S1 Q10 |
Question ID:PT7 S1 Q11 Passage:In 1990 major engine repairs were performed on 10 percent of the cars that had been built by the National Motor Company in the 1970s and that were still registered. However, the corresponding figure for the cars that the National Motor Company had manufactured in the 1960s was only five p... | PT7 S1 Q11 |
Question ID:PT7 S1 Q12 Passage:No mathematician today would flatly refuse to accept the results of an enormous computation as an adequate demonstration of the truth of a theorem. In 1976, however, this was not the case. Some mathematicians at that time refused to accept the results of a complex computer demonstration o... | PT7 S1 Q12 |
Question ID:PT7 S1 Q13 Passage:If you climb mountains, you will not live to a ripe old age. But you will be bored unless you climb mountains. Therefore, if you live to a ripe old age, you will have been bored. Stem:Which one of the following most closely parallels the reasoning in the argument above? Correct Answer Cho... | PT7 S1 Q13 |
Question ID:PT7 S1 Q14 Passage:Marine biologists had hypothesized that lobsters kept together in lobster traps eat one another in response to hunger. Periodic checking of lobster traps, however, has revealed instances of lobsters sharing traps together for weeks. Eight lobsters even shared one trap together for two mon... | PT7 S1 Q14 |
Question ID:PT7 S1 Q15 Passage:Eight years ago hunting was banned in Greenfield County on the grounds that hunting endangers public safety. Now the deer population in the county is six times what it was before the ban. Deer are invading residential areas, damaging property and causing motor vehicle accidents that resul... | PT7 S1 Q15 |
Question ID:PT7 S1 Q16 Passage:Comets do not give off their own light but reflect light from other sources, such as the Sun. Scientists estimate the mass of comets by their brightness: the greater a comet’s mass, the more light that comet will reflect. A satellite probe, however, has revealed that the material of which... | PT7 S1 Q16 |
Question ID:PT7 S1 Q17 Passage:Office manager: I will not order recycled paper for this office. Our letters to clients must make a good impression, so we cannot print them on inferior paper. Stationery supplier: Recycled paper is not necessarily inferior. In fact, from the beginning, the finest paper has been made of r... | PT7 S1 Q17 |
Question ID:PT7 S1 Q18 Passage:When Alicia Green borrowed a neighbor’s car without permission, the police merely gave her a warning. However, when Peter Foster did the same thing, he was charged with automobile theft. Peter came to the attention of the police because the car he was driving was hit by a speeding taxi. A... | PT7 S1 Q18 |
Question ID:PT7 S1 Q19 Passage:When Alicia Green borrowed a neighbor’s car without permission, the police merely gave her a warning. However, when Peter Foster did the same thing, he was charged with automobile theft. Peter came to the attention of the police because the car he was driving was hit by a speeding taxi. A... | PT7 S1 Q19 |
Question ID:PT7 S1 Q20 Passage:According to sources who can be expected to know, Dr. Maria Esposito is going to run in the mayoral election. But if Dr. Esposito runs, Jerome Krasman will certainly not run against her. Therefore Dr. Esposito will be the only candidate in the election. Stem:The flawed reasoning in the ar... | PT7 S1 Q20 |
Question ID:PT7 S1 Q21 Passage:The initial causes of serious accidents at nuclear power plants have not so far been flaws in the advanced-technology portion of the plants. Rather, the initial causes have been attributed to human error, as when a worker at the Browns Mills reactor in the United States dropped a candle a... | PT7 S1 Q21 |
Question ID:PT7 S1 Q22 Passage:There is a widespread belief that people can predict impending earthquakes from unusual animal behavior. Skeptics claim that this belief is based on selective coincidence: people whose dogs behaved oddly just before an earthquake will be especially likely to remember that fact. At any giv... | PT7 S1 Q22 |
Question ID:PT7 S1 Q23 Passage:Defendants who can afford expensive private defense lawyers have a lower conviction rate than those who rely on court-appointed public defenders. This explains why criminals who commit lucrative crimes like embezzlement or insider trading are more successful at avoiding conviction than ar... | PT7 S1 Q23 |
Question ID:PT7 S1 Q24 Passage:Many major scientific discoveries of the past were the product of serendipity, the chance discovery of valuable findings that investigators had not purposely sought. Now, however, scientific research tends to be so costly that investigators are heavily dependent on large grants to fund th... | PT7 S1 Q24 |
Question ID:PT7 S1 Q25 Passage:Police statistics have shown that automobile antitheft devices reduce the risk of car theft, but a statistical study of automobile theft by the automobile insurance industry claims that cars equipped with antitheft devices are, paradoxically, more likely to be stolen than cars that are no... | PT7 S1 Q25 |
Question ID:PT7 S2 Q1 Passage:Seven consecutive time slots for a broadcast, numbered in chronological order 1 through 7, will be filled by six song tapes—G, H, L, O, P, S—and exactly one news tape. Each tape is to be assigned to a different time slot, and no tape is longer than any other tape. The broadcast is subject ... | PT7 S2 Q1 |
Question ID:PT7 S2 Q2 Passage:Seven consecutive time slots for a broadcast, numbered in chronological order 1 through 7, will be filled by six song tapes—G, H, L, O, P, S—and exactly one news tape. Each tape is to be assigned to a different time slot, and no tape is longer than any other tape. The broadcast is subject ... | PT7 S2 Q2 |
Question ID:PT7 S2 Q3 Passage:Seven consecutive time slots for a broadcast, numbered in chronological order 1 through 7, will be filled by six song tapes—G, H, L, O, P, S—and exactly one news tape. Each tape is to be assigned to a different time slot, and no tape is longer than any other tape. The broadcast is subject ... | PT7 S2 Q3 |
Question ID:PT7 S2 Q4 Passage:Seven consecutive time slots for a broadcast, numbered in chronological order 1 through 7, will be filled by six song tapes—G, H, L, O, P, S—and exactly one news tape. Each tape is to be assigned to a different time slot, and no tape is longer than any other tape. The broadcast is subject ... | PT7 S2 Q4 |
Question ID:PT7 S2 Q5 Passage:Seven consecutive time slots for a broadcast, numbered in chronological order 1 through 7, will be filled by six song tapes—G, H, L, O, P, S—and exactly one news tape. Each tape is to be assigned to a different time slot, and no tape is longer than any other tape. The broadcast is subject ... | PT7 S2 Q5 |
Question ID:PT7 S2 Q6 Passage:Seven consecutive time slots for a broadcast, numbered in chronological order 1 through 7, will be filled by six song tapes—G, H, L, O, P, S—and exactly one news tape. Each tape is to be assigned to a different time slot, and no tape is longer than any other tape. The broadcast is subject ... | PT7 S2 Q6 |
Question ID:PT7 S2 Q7 Passage:Seven consecutive time slots for a broadcast, numbered in chronological order 1 through 7, will be filled by six song tapes—G, H, L, O, P, S—and exactly one news tape. Each tape is to be assigned to a different time slot, and no tape is longer than any other tape. The broadcast is subject ... | PT7 S2 Q7 |
Question ID:PT7 S2 Q8 Passage:Doctor Yamata works only on Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Fridays, and Saturdays. She performs four different activities—lecturing, operating, treating patients, and conducting research. Each working day she performs exactly one activity in the morning and exactly one activity in the afte... | PT7 S2 Q8 |
Question ID:PT7 S2 Q9 Passage:Doctor Yamata works only on Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Fridays, and Saturdays. She performs four different activities—lecturing, operating, treating patients, and conducting research. Each working day she performs exactly one activity in the morning and exactly one activity in the afte... | PT7 S2 Q9 |
Question ID:PT7 S2 Q10 Passage:Doctor Yamata works only on Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Fridays, and Saturdays. She performs four different activities—lecturing, operating, treating patients, and conducting research. Each working day she performs exactly one activity in the morning and exactly one activity in the aft... | PT7 S2 Q10 |
Question ID:PT7 S2 Q11 Passage:Doctor Yamata works only on Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Fridays, and Saturdays. She performs four different activities—lecturing, operating, treating patients, and conducting research. Each working day she performs exactly one activity in the morning and exactly one activity in the aft... | PT7 S2 Q11 |
Question ID:PT7 S2 Q12 Passage:Doctor Yamata works only on Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Fridays, and Saturdays. She performs four different activities—lecturing, operating, treating patients, and conducting research. Each working day she performs exactly one activity in the morning and exactly one activity in the aft... | PT7 S2 Q12 |
Question ID:PT7 S2 Q13 Passage:Each of seven judges voted for or else against granting Datalog Corporation’s petition. Each judge is categorized as conservative, moderate, or liberal, and no judge is assigned more than one of those labels. Two judges are conservatives, two are moderates, and three are liberals. The fol... | PT7 S2 Q13 |
Question ID:PT7 S2 Q14 Passage:Each of seven judges voted for or else against granting Datalog Corporation’s petition. Each judge is categorized as conservative, moderate, or liberal, and no judge is assigned more than one of those labels. Two judges are conservatives, two are moderates, and three are liberals. The fol... | PT7 S2 Q14 |
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