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Question ID:PT3 S2 Q12 Passage:Photovoltaic power plants produce electricity from sunlight. As a result of astonishing recent technological advances, the cost of producing electric power at photovoltaic power plants, allowing for both construction and operating costs, is one-tenth of what it was 20 years ago, whereas t... | PT3 S2 Q12 |
Question ID:PT3 S2 Q13 Passage:If that insect is a bee, it can only sting once. It only did sting once. So it is a bee. Stem:Which one of the following exhibits a pattern of reasoning most similar to that in the argument above? Correct Answer Choice:AChoice A:Spring is here. It has to be, because when it is spring, I c... | PT3 S2 Q13 |
Question ID:PT3 S2 Q14 Passage:Pamela: Physicians training for a medical specialty serve as resident staff physicians in hospitals.They work such long hours—up to 36 consecutive hours—that fatigue impairs their ability to make the best medical decisions during the final portion of their shifts. Quincy: Thousands of phy... | PT3 S2 Q14 |
Question ID:PT3 S2 Q15 Passage:When a group of children who have been watching television programs that include acts of violence is sent to play with a group of children who have been watching programs that do not include acts of violence, the children who have been watching violent programs commit a much greater numbe... | PT3 S2 Q15 |
Question ID:PT3 S2 Q16 Passage:It is repeatedly claimed that the dumping of nuclear waste poses no threat to people living nearby. If this claim could be made with certainty, there would be no reason for not locating sites in areas of dense population. But the policy of dumping nuclear waste only in the more sparsely p... | PT3 S2 Q16 |
Question ID:PT3 S2 Q17 Passage:A society’s infant mortality rate is an accepted indicator of that society’s general health status. Even though in some localities in the United States the rate is higher than in many developing countries, in the United States overall the rate has been steadily declining. This decline doe... | PT3 S2 Q17 |
Question ID:PT3 S2 Q18 Passage:Like a number of other articles, Ian Raghnall’s article relied on a recent survey in which over half the couples applying for divorces listed “money” as a major problem in their marriages. Raghnall’s conclusion from the survey data is that financial problems are the major problem in marri... | PT3 S2 Q18 |
Question ID:PT3 S2 Q19 Passage:Like a number of other articles, Ian Raghnall’s article relied on a recent survey in which over half the couples applying for divorces listed “money” as a major problem in their marriages. Raghnall’s conclusion from the survey data is that financial problems are the major problem in marri... | PT3 S2 Q19 |
Question ID:PT3 S2 Q20 Passage:In Brazil, side-by-side comparisons of Africanized honeybees and the native honeybees have shown that the Africanized bees are far superior honey producers. Therefore, there is no reason to fear that domestic commercial honey production will decline in the United States if local honeybees... | PT3 S2 Q20 |
Question ID:PT3 S2 Q21 Passage:The public is well aware that high blood cholesterol levels raise the risk of stroke caused by blood clots. But a recent report concludes that people with low blood cholesterol levels are at increased risk of the other lethal type of stroke—cerebral hemorrhage, caused when a brain artery ... | PT3 S2 Q21 |
Question ID:PT3 S2 Q22 Passage:Public reports by national commissions, governors’ conferences, and leadership groups have stressed the great need for better understanding of international affairs by the citizenry. If the country is to remain a leading nation in an era of international competitiveness, the need is unden... | PT3 S2 Q22 |
Question ID:PT3 S2 Q23 Passage:“DNA fingerprinting” is a recently-introduced biochemical procedure that uses a pattern derived from a person’s genetic material to match a suspect’s genetic material against that of a specimen from a crime scene. Proponents have claimed astronomically high odds against obtaining a match ... | PT3 S2 Q23 |
Question ID:PT3 S2 Q24 Passage:Anthropologists assert that cultures advance only when independence replaces dependence—that is, only when imposition by outsiders is replaced by initiative from within. In other words, the natives of a culture are the only ones who can move that culture forward. Non-natives may provide v... | PT3 S2 Q24 |
Question ID:PT3 S2 Q25 Passage:The public in the United States has in the past been conditioned to support a substantial defense budget by the threat of confrontation with the Eastern bloc. Now that that threat is dissolving, along with the Eastern bloc itself, it is doubtful whether the public can be persuaded to supp... | PT3 S2 Q25 |
Question ID:PT3 S3 Q1 Passage:Until recently many astronomers believed that asteroids travel about the solar system unaccompanied by satellites. These astronomers assumed this because they considered asteroid-satellite systems inherently unstable. Theoreticians could have told them otherwise: even minuscule bodies in t... | PT3 S3 Q1 |
Question ID:PT3 S3 Q2 Passage:Until recently many astronomers believed that asteroids travel about the solar system unaccompanied by satellites. These astronomers assumed this because they considered asteroid-satellite systems inherently unstable. Theoreticians could have told them otherwise: even minuscule bodies in t... | PT3 S3 Q2 |
Question ID:PT3 S3 Q3 Passage:Until recently many astronomers believed that asteroids travel about the solar system unaccompanied by satellites. These astronomers assumed this because they considered asteroid-satellite systems inherently unstable. Theoreticians could have told them otherwise: even minuscule bodies in t... | PT3 S3 Q3 |
Question ID:PT3 S3 Q4 Passage:Until recently many astronomers believed that asteroids travel about the solar system unaccompanied by satellites. These astronomers assumed this because they considered asteroid-satellite systems inherently unstable. Theoreticians could have told them otherwise: even minuscule bodies in t... | PT3 S3 Q4 |
Question ID:PT3 S3 Q5 Passage:Until recently many astronomers believed that asteroids travel about the solar system unaccompanied by satellites. These astronomers assumed this because they considered asteroid-satellite systems inherently unstable. Theoreticians could have told them otherwise: even minuscule bodies in t... | PT3 S3 Q5 |
Question ID:PT3 S3 Q6 Passage:Until recently many astronomers believed that asteroids travel about the solar system unaccompanied by satellites. These astronomers assumed this because they considered asteroid-satellite systems inherently unstable. Theoreticians could have told them otherwise: even minuscule bodies in t... | PT3 S3 Q6 |
Question ID:PT3 S3 Q7 Passage:Until recently many astronomers believed that asteroids travel about the solar system unaccompanied by satellites. These astronomers assumed this because they considered asteroid-satellite systems inherently unstable. Theoreticians could have told them otherwise: even minuscule bodies in t... | PT3 S3 Q7 |
Question ID:PT3 S3 Q8 Passage:Historians attempting to explain how scientific work was done in the laboratory of the seventeenth-century chemist and natural philosopher Robert Boyle must address a fundamental discrepancy between how such experimentation was actually performed and the seventeenth-century rhetoric descri... | PT3 S3 Q8 |
Question ID:PT3 S3 Q9 Passage:Historians attempting to explain how scientific work was done in the laboratory of the seventeenth-century chemist and natural philosopher Robert Boyle must address a fundamental discrepancy between how such experimentation was actually performed and the seventeenth-century rhetoric descri... | PT3 S3 Q9 |
Question ID:PT3 S3 Q10 Passage:Historians attempting to explain how scientific work was done in the laboratory of the seventeenth-century chemist and natural philosopher Robert Boyle must address a fundamental discrepancy between how such experimentation was actually performed and the seventeenth-century rhetoric descr... | PT3 S3 Q10 |
Question ID:PT3 S3 Q11 Passage:Historians attempting to explain how scientific work was done in the laboratory of the seventeenth-century chemist and natural philosopher Robert Boyle must address a fundamental discrepancy between how such experimentation was actually performed and the seventeenth-century rhetoric descr... | PT3 S3 Q11 |
Question ID:PT3 S3 Q12 Passage:Historians attempting to explain how scientific work was done in the laboratory of the seventeenth-century chemist and natural philosopher Robert Boyle must address a fundamental discrepancy between how such experimentation was actually performed and the seventeenth-century rhetoric descr... | PT3 S3 Q12 |
Question ID:PT3 S3 Q13 Passage:Historians attempting to explain how scientific work was done in the laboratory of the seventeenth-century chemist and natural philosopher Robert Boyle must address a fundamental discrepancy between how such experimentation was actually performed and the seventeenth-century rhetoric descr... | PT3 S3 Q13 |
Question ID:PT3 S3 Q14 Passage:Historians attempting to explain how scientific work was done in the laboratory of the seventeenth-century chemist and natural philosopher Robert Boyle must address a fundamental discrepancy between how such experimentation was actually performed and the seventeenth-century rhetoric descr... | PT3 S3 Q14 |
Question ID:PT3 S3 Q15 Passage:Historians attempting to explain how scientific work was done in the laboratory of the seventeenth-century chemist and natural philosopher Robert Boyle must address a fundamental discrepancy between how such experimentation was actually performed and the seventeenth-century rhetoric descr... | PT3 S3 Q15 |
Question ID:PT3 S3 Q16 Passage:One type of violation of the antitrust laws is the abuse of monopoly power. Monopoly power is the ability of a firm to raise its prices above the competitive level—that is, above the level that would exist naturally if several firms had to compete—without driving away so many customers as... | PT3 S3 Q16 |
Question ID:PT3 S3 Q17 Passage:One type of violation of the antitrust laws is the abuse of monopoly power. Monopoly power is the ability of a firm to raise its prices above the competitive level—that is, above the level that would exist naturally if several firms had to compete—without driving away so many customers as... | PT3 S3 Q17 |
Question ID:PT3 S3 Q18 Passage:One type of violation of the antitrust laws is the abuse of monopoly power. Monopoly power is the ability of a firm to raise its prices above the competitive level—that is, above the level that would exist naturally if several firms had to compete—without driving away so many customers as... | PT3 S3 Q18 |
Question ID:PT3 S3 Q19 Passage:One type of violation of the antitrust laws is the abuse of monopoly power. Monopoly power is the ability of a firm to raise its prices above the competitive level—that is, above the level that would exist naturally if several firms had to compete—without driving away so many customers as... | PT3 S3 Q19 |
Question ID:PT3 S3 Q20 Passage:One type of violation of the antitrust laws is the abuse of monopoly power. Monopoly power is the ability of a firm to raise its prices above the competitive level—that is, above the level that would exist naturally if several firms had to compete—without driving away so many customers as... | PT3 S3 Q20 |
Question ID:PT3 S3 Q21 Passage:Amsden has divided Navajo weaving into four distinct styles. He argues that three of them can be identified by the type of design used to form horizontal bands: colored stripes, zigzags, or diamonds. The fourth, or bordered, style he identifies by a distinct border surrounding centrally p... | PT3 S3 Q21 |
Question ID:PT3 S3 Q22 Passage:Amsden has divided Navajo weaving into four distinct styles. He argues that three of them can be identified by the type of design used to form horizontal bands: colored stripes, zigzags, or diamonds. The fourth, or bordered, style he identifies by a distinct border surrounding centrally p... | PT3 S3 Q22 |
Question ID:PT3 S3 Q23 Passage:Amsden has divided Navajo weaving into four distinct styles. He argues that three of them can be identified by the type of design used to form horizontal bands: colored stripes, zigzags, or diamonds. The fourth, or bordered, style he identifies by a distinct border surrounding centrally p... | PT3 S3 Q23 |
Question ID:PT3 S3 Q24 Passage:Amsden has divided Navajo weaving into four distinct styles. He argues that three of them can be identified by the type of design used to form horizontal bands: colored stripes, zigzags, or diamonds. The fourth, or bordered, style he identifies by a distinct border surrounding centrally p... | PT3 S3 Q24 |
Question ID:PT3 S3 Q25 Passage:Amsden has divided Navajo weaving into four distinct styles. He argues that three of them can be identified by the type of design used to form horizontal bands: colored stripes, zigzags, or diamonds. The fourth, or bordered, style he identifies by a distinct border surrounding centrally p... | PT3 S3 Q25 |
Question ID:PT3 S3 Q26 Passage:Amsden has divided Navajo weaving into four distinct styles. He argues that three of them can be identified by the type of design used to form horizontal bands: colored stripes, zigzags, or diamonds. The fourth, or bordered, style he identifies by a distinct border surrounding centrally p... | PT3 S3 Q26 |
Question ID:PT3 S3 Q27 Passage:Amsden has divided Navajo weaving into four distinct styles. He argues that three of them can be identified by the type of design used to form horizontal bands: colored stripes, zigzags, or diamonds. The fourth, or bordered, style he identifies by a distinct border surrounding centrally p... | PT3 S3 Q27 |
Question ID:PT3 S3 Q28 Passage:Amsden has divided Navajo weaving into four distinct styles. He argues that three of them can be identified by the type of design used to form horizontal bands: colored stripes, zigzags, or diamonds. The fourth, or bordered, style he identifies by a distinct border surrounding centrally p... | PT3 S3 Q28 |
Question ID:PT3 S4 Q1 Passage:The translator of poetry must realize that word-for-word equivalents do not exist across languages, any more than piano sounds exist in the violin. The violin can, however, play recognizably the same music as the piano, but only if the violinist is guided by the nature and possibilities of... | PT3 S4 Q1 |
Question ID:PT3 S4 Q2 Passage:Behind the hope that computers can replace teachers is the idea that the student’s understanding of the subject being taught consists in knowing facts and rules, the job of a teacher being to make the facts and rules explicit and convey them to the student, either by practice drills or by ... | PT3 S4 Q2 |
Question ID:PT3 S4 Q3 Passage:If the city council maintains spending at the same level as this year’s, it can be expected to levy a sales tax of 2 percent next year. Thus, if the council levies a higher tax, it will be because the council is increasing its expenditures. Stem:Which one of the following exhibits a patter... | PT3 S4 Q3 |
Question ID:PT3 S4 Q4 Passage:The mind and the immune system have been shown to be intimately linked, and scientists are consistently finding that doing good deeds benefits one’s immune system. The bone marrow and spleen, which produce the white blood cells needed to fight infection, are both connected by neural pathwa... | PT3 S4 Q4 |
Question ID:PT3 S4 Q5 Passage:The high cost of production is severely limiting which operas are available to the public. These costs necessitate reliance on large corporate sponsors, who in return demand that only the most famous operas be produced. Determining which operas will be produced should rest only with ticket... | PT3 S4 Q5 |
Question ID:PT3 S4 Q6 Passage:When machines are invented and technologies are developed, they alter the range of choices open to us. The clock, for example, made possible the synchronization of human affairs, which resulted in an increase in productivity. At the same time that the clock opened up some avenues, it close... | PT3 S4 Q6 |
Question ID:PT3 S4 Q7 Passage:To become an expert on a musical instrument, a person must practice. If people practice a musical instrument for three hours each day, they will eventually become experts on that instrument. Therefore, if a person is an expert on a musical instrument, that person must have practiced for at... | PT3 S4 Q7 |
Question ID:PT3 S4 Q8 Passage:On the basis of incontestable proof that car safety seats will greatly reduce the number of serious injuries sustained by children in car accidents, laws have been passed mandating the use of these seats. Unexpectedly, it has since been found that a large number of children who are riding ... | PT3 S4 Q8 |
Question ID:PT3 S4 Q9 Passage:An easy willingness to tell funny stories or jokes about oneself is the surest mark of supreme self-confidence. This willingness, often not acquired until late in life, is even more revealing than is good-natured acquiescence in having others poke fun at one. Stem:Which one of the followin... | PT3 S4 Q9 |
Question ID:PT3 S4 Q10 Passage:Nature constantly adjusts the atmospheric carbon level. An increase in the level causes the atmosphere to hold more heat, which causes more water to evaporate from the oceans, which causes increased rain. Rain washes some carbon from the air into the oceans, where it eventually becomes pa... | PT3 S4 Q10 |
Question ID:PT3 S4 Q11 Passage:Nature constantly adjusts the atmospheric carbon level. An increase in the level causes the atmosphere to hold more heat, which causes more water to evaporate from the oceans, which causes increased rain. Rain washes some carbon from the air into the oceans, where it eventually becomes pa... | PT3 S4 Q11 |
Question ID:PT3 S4 Q12 Passage:The more television children watch, the less competent they are in mathematical knowledge. More than a third of children in the United States watch television for more than five hours a day; in South Korea the figure is only 7 percent. But whereas less than 15 percent of children in the U... | PT3 S4 Q12 |
Question ID:PT3 S4 Q13 Passage:The only way that bookstores can profitably sell books at below-market prices is to get the books at a discount from publishers. Unless bookstores generate a high sales volume, however, they cannot get discounts from publishers. To generate such volume, bookstores must either cater to mas... | PT3 S4 Q13 |
Question ID:PT3 S4 Q14 Passage:The only way that bookstores can profitably sell books at below-market prices is to get the books at a discount from publishers. Unless bookstores generate a high sales volume, however, they cannot get discounts from publishers. To generate such volume, bookstores must either cater to mas... | PT3 S4 Q14 |
Question ID:PT3 S4 Q15 Passage:Extinction is the way of nature. Scientists estimate that over half of the species that have ever come into existence on this planet were already extinct before humans developed even the most primitive of tools. This constant natural process of species emergence and extinction, however, i... | PT3 S4 Q15 |
Question ID:PT3 S4 Q16 Passage:The public is aware of the possibility of biases in the mass media and distrusts the media as too powerful. The body of information against which the public evaluates the plausibility of each new media report comes, however, from what the public has heard of through the mass media. Stem:I... | PT3 S4 Q16 |
Question ID:PT3 S4 Q17 Passage:In a bureaucracy, all decisions are arrived at by a process that involves many people. There is no one person who has the authority to decide whether a project will proceed or not. As a consequence, in bureaucracies, risky projects are never undertaken. Stem:In a bureaucracy, all decision... | PT3 S4 Q17 |
Question ID:PT3 S4 Q18 Passage:“Physicalists” expect that ultimately all mental functions will be explainable in neurobiological terms. Achieving this goal requires knowledge of neurons and their basic functions, a knowledge of how neurons interact, and a delineation of the psychological faculties to be explained. At p... | PT3 S4 Q18 |
Question ID:PT3 S4 Q19 Passage:Because a large disparity in pay between the public and private sectors has developed in recent years, many experienced and extremely capable government administrators have quit their posts and taken positions in private-sector management. Government will be able to recapture these capabl... | PT3 S4 Q19 |
Question ID:PT3 S4 Q20 Passage:Politician: Homelessness is a serious social problem, but further government spending to provide low-income housing is not the cure for homelessness. The most cursory glance at the real-estate section of any major newspaper is enough to show that there is no lack of housing units availabl... | PT3 S4 Q20 |
Question ID:PT3 S4 Q21 Passage:Leona: If the average consumption of eggs in the United States were cut in half, an estimated 5,000 lives might be saved each year. Thomas: How can that be? That would mean that if people adopt this single change in diet for ten years, the population ten years from now will be greater by ... | PT3 S4 Q21 |
Question ID:PT3 S4 Q22 Passage:The United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) regulates the introduction of new therapeutic agents into the marketplace. Consequently, it plays a critical role in improving health care in the United States. While it is those in the academic and government research communities who e... | PT3 S4 Q22 |
Question ID:PT3 S4 Q23 Passage:In a new police program, automobile owners in some neighborhoods whose cars are not normally driven between 1 A.M. and 5 A.M. can display a special decal in the cars’ windows and authorize police to stop the cars during those hours to check the drivers’ licenses. The theft rate for cars b... | PT3 S4 Q23 |
Question ID:PT3 S4 Q24 Passage:It has been claimed that an action is morally good only if it benefits another person and was performed with that intention; whereas an action that harms another person is morally bad either if such harm was intended or if reasonable forethought would have shown that the action was likely... | PT3 S4 Q24 |
Question ID:PT2 S1 Q1 Passage:There is substantial evidence that by 1926, with the publication of The Weary Blues, Langston Hughes had broken with two well-established traditions in African American literature. In The Weary Blues, Hughes chose to modify the traditions that decreed that African American literature must ... | PT2 S1 Q1 |
Question ID:PT2 S1 Q2 Passage:There is substantial evidence that by 1926, with the publication of The Weary Blues, Langston Hughes had broken with two well-established traditions in African American literature. In The Weary Blues, Hughes chose to modify the traditions that decreed that African American literature must ... | PT2 S1 Q2 |
Question ID:PT2 S1 Q3 Passage:There is substantial evidence that by 1926, with the publication of The Weary Blues, Langston Hughes had broken with two well-established traditions in African American literature. In The Weary Blues, Hughes chose to modify the traditions that decreed that African American literature must ... | PT2 S1 Q3 |
Question ID:PT2 S1 Q4 Passage:There is substantial evidence that by 1926, with the publication of The Weary Blues, Langston Hughes had broken with two well-established traditions in African American literature. In The Weary Blues, Hughes chose to modify the traditions that decreed that African American literature must ... | PT2 S1 Q4 |
Question ID:PT2 S1 Q5 Passage:There is substantial evidence that by 1926, with the publication of The Weary Blues, Langston Hughes had broken with two well-established traditions in African American literature. In The Weary Blues, Hughes chose to modify the traditions that decreed that African American literature must ... | PT2 S1 Q5 |
Question ID:PT2 S1 Q6 Passage:There is substantial evidence that by 1926, with the publication of The Weary Blues, Langston Hughes had broken with two well-established traditions in African American literature. In The Weary Blues, Hughes chose to modify the traditions that decreed that African American literature must ... | PT2 S1 Q6 |
Question ID:PT2 S1 Q7 Passage:Historians generally agree that, of the great modern innovations, the railroad had the most far-reaching impact on major events in the United States in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, particularly on the Industrial Revolution. There is, however, considerable disagreement amon... | PT2 S1 Q7 |
Question ID:PT2 S1 Q8 Passage:Historians generally agree that, of the great modern innovations, the railroad had the most far-reaching impact on major events in the United States in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, particularly on the Industrial Revolution. There is, however, considerable disagreement amon... | PT2 S1 Q8 |
Question ID:PT2 S1 Q9 Passage:Historians generally agree that, of the great modern innovations, the railroad had the most far-reaching impact on major events in the United States in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, particularly on the Industrial Revolution. There is, however, considerable disagreement amon... | PT2 S1 Q9 |
Question ID:PT2 S1 Q10 Passage:Historians generally agree that, of the great modern innovations, the railroad had the most far-reaching impact on major events in the United States in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, particularly on the Industrial Revolution. There is, however, considerable disagreement amo... | PT2 S1 Q10 |
Question ID:PT2 S1 Q11 Passage:Historians generally agree that, of the great modern innovations, the railroad had the most far-reaching impact on major events in the United States in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, particularly on the Industrial Revolution. There is, however, considerable disagreement amo... | PT2 S1 Q11 |
Question ID:PT2 S1 Q12 Passage:Historians generally agree that, of the great modern innovations, the railroad had the most far-reaching impact on major events in the United States in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, particularly on the Industrial Revolution. There is, however, considerable disagreement amo... | PT2 S1 Q12 |
Question ID:PT2 S1 Q13 Passage:Historians generally agree that, of the great modern innovations, the railroad had the most far-reaching impact on major events in the United States in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, particularly on the Industrial Revolution. There is, however, considerable disagreement amo... | PT2 S1 Q13 |
Question ID:PT2 S1 Q14 Passage:Three basic adaptive responses—regulatory, acclimatory, and developmental—may occur in organisms as they react to changing environmental conditions. In all three, adjustment of biological features (morphological adjustment) or of their use (functional adjustment) may occur. Regulatory res... | PT2 S1 Q14 |
Question ID:PT2 S1 Q15 Passage:Three basic adaptive responses—regulatory, acclimatory, and developmental—may occur in organisms as they react to changing environmental conditions. In all three, adjustment of biological features (morphological adjustment) or of their use (functional adjustment) may occur. Regulatory res... | PT2 S1 Q15 |
Question ID:PT2 S1 Q16 Passage:Three basic adaptive responses—regulatory, acclimatory, and developmental—may occur in organisms as they react to changing environmental conditions. In all three, adjustment of biological features (morphological adjustment) or of their use (functional adjustment) may occur. Regulatory res... | PT2 S1 Q16 |
Question ID:PT2 S1 Q17 Passage:Three basic adaptive responses—regulatory, acclimatory, and developmental—may occur in organisms as they react to changing environmental conditions. In all three, adjustment of biological features (morphological adjustment) or of their use (functional adjustment) may occur. Regulatory res... | PT2 S1 Q17 |
Question ID:PT2 S1 Q18 Passage:Three basic adaptive responses—regulatory, acclimatory, and developmental—may occur in organisms as they react to changing environmental conditions. In all three, adjustment of biological features (morphological adjustment) or of their use (functional adjustment) may occur. Regulatory res... | PT2 S1 Q18 |
Question ID:PT2 S1 Q19 Passage:Three basic adaptive responses—regulatory, acclimatory, and developmental—may occur in organisms as they react to changing environmental conditions. In all three, adjustment of biological features (morphological adjustment) or of their use (functional adjustment) may occur. Regulatory res... | PT2 S1 Q19 |
Question ID:PT2 S1 Q20 Passage:Three basic adaptive responses—regulatory, acclimatory, and developmental—may occur in organisms as they react to changing environmental conditions. In all three, adjustment of biological features (morphological adjustment) or of their use (functional adjustment) may occur. Regulatory res... | PT2 S1 Q20 |
Question ID:PT2 S1 Q21 Passage:Three basic adaptive responses—regulatory, acclimatory, and developmental—may occur in organisms as they react to changing environmental conditions. In all three, adjustment of biological features (morphological adjustment) or of their use (functional adjustment) may occur. Regulatory res... | PT2 S1 Q21 |
Question ID:PT2 S1 Q22 Passage:The Constitution of the United States does not explicitly define the extent of the President’s authority to involve United States troops in conflicts with other nations in the absence of a declaration of war. Instead, the question of the President’s authority in this matter falls in the h... | PT2 S1 Q22 |
Question ID:PT2 S1 Q23 Passage:The Constitution of the United States does not explicitly define the extent of the President’s authority to involve United States troops in conflicts with other nations in the absence of a declaration of war. Instead, the question of the President’s authority in this matter falls in the h... | PT2 S1 Q23 |
Question ID:PT2 S1 Q24 Passage:The Constitution of the United States does not explicitly define the extent of the President’s authority to involve United States troops in conflicts with other nations in the absence of a declaration of war. Instead, the question of the President’s authority in this matter falls in the h... | PT2 S1 Q24 |
Question ID:PT2 S1 Q25 Passage:The Constitution of the United States does not explicitly define the extent of the President’s authority to involve United States troops in conflicts with other nations in the absence of a declaration of war. Instead, the question of the President’s authority in this matter falls in the h... | PT2 S1 Q25 |
Question ID:PT2 S1 Q26 Passage:The Constitution of the United States does not explicitly define the extent of the President’s authority to involve United States troops in conflicts with other nations in the absence of a declaration of war. Instead, the question of the President’s authority in this matter falls in the h... | PT2 S1 Q26 |
Question ID:PT2 S1 Q27 Passage:The Constitution of the United States does not explicitly define the extent of the President’s authority to involve United States troops in conflicts with other nations in the absence of a declaration of war. Instead, the question of the President’s authority in this matter falls in the h... | PT2 S1 Q27 |
Question ID:PT2 S1 Q28 Passage:The Constitution of the United States does not explicitly define the extent of the President’s authority to involve United States troops in conflicts with other nations in the absence of a declaration of war. Instead, the question of the President’s authority in this matter falls in the h... | PT2 S1 Q28 |
Question ID:PT2 S2 Q1 Passage:Some people believe that witnessing violence in movies will discharge aggressive energy. Does watching someone else eat fill one’s own stomach? Stem:In which one of the following does the reasoning most closely parallel that employed in the passage? Correct Answer Choice:DChoice A:Some peo... | PT2 S2 Q1 |
Question ID:PT2 S2 Q2 Passage:Ann: All the campers at Camp Winnehatchee go to Tri-Cities High School. Bill: That’s not true. Some Tri-Cities students are campers at Camp Lakemont. Stem:Bill’s answer can be best explained on the assumption that he has interpreted Ann’s remark to mean that Correct Answer Choice:EChoice A... | PT2 S2 Q2 |
Question ID:PT2 S2 Q3 Passage:More than a year ago, the city announced that police would crack down on illegally parked cars and that resources would be diverted from writing speeding tickets to ticketing illegally parked cars. But no crackdown has taken place. The police chief claims that resources have had to be dive... | PT2 S2 Q3 |
Question ID:PT2 S2 Q4 Passage:Dried grass clippings mixed into garden soil gradually decompose, providing nutrients for beneficial soil bacteria. This results in better-than-average plant growth. Yet mixing fresh grass clippings into garden soil usually causes poorer-than-average plant growth. Stem:Which one of the fol... | PT2 S2 Q4 |
Question ID:PT2 S2 Q5 Passage:A gas tax of one cent per gallon would raise one billion dollars per year at current consumption rates. Since a tax of fifty cents per gallon would therefore raise fifty billion dollars per year, it seems a perfect way to deal with the federal budget deficit. This tax would have the additi... | PT2 S2 Q5 |
Question ID:PT2 S2 Q6 Passage:As symbols of the freedom of the wilderness, bald eagles have the unique capacity to inspire people and foster in them a sympathetic attitude toward the needs of other threatened species. Clearly, without that sympathy and the political will it engenders, the needs of more obscure species ... | PT2 S2 Q6 |
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