TOEFL Test GGG
TOEFL Test GGG
TOEFL Test GGG
1.
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(C) The garage took advantage of the woman.
(D) The car had serious problems.
(B) A textbook
(C) An assignment
(D) A movie
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
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(D) Buy some medicine
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32. (A) Now the weather on radio and TV is reported
exclusively in metrics.
(B) Road signs have miles marked on them, but not
kilometers.
(C) Both the English system and the metric system
are being used on signs, packages and weather
reports.
(D) Grocery stores use only metrics for their
packaging.
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(C) Orientation to San Fransisco
(D) Spesification of the Golden Gate Bridge
44. (A) Golden Gate
(B) San Fransisco de Asis Mission
(C) Military Post Seventy-six
(D) Yerba Buena
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(A) because they affect
(B) they are affected because
(C) affect them because
(D) because affecting them
(A) fewer
(B) fewer than
(C) as few as
(D) a few
4.
5.
6.
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(D) the ball rolls twice
14. William Hearst had five sons, _____ eventually
became executives in the Hearst newspaper
conglomerate.
(A) all of them
(B) of them all
(C) all of whom
(D) who of all
16. In summer, warm southern air carries moist north to the eastern and central United States.
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A
17. Billie Holiday became recognized as the most innovative jazz singer of her day and was admiration for her vocal
A
B
C
D
range.
18. To raise livestock succesfully, farmers must selecting cattle for breeding and apply a dietary regimen.
A
B
C
D
19. In the 1960s, urban renewal projects cleared land for commerce and offices building.
A
B
C
D
20. In 1868, Sioux leaders signed a treaty preventing whites from traveling through the Sioux territorial.
A
B
C
D
21. A number multiplied by zero is zero, and a number multiplied by one is the same as number.
A
B
C
D
22. Muscles aids in attaching portions of the skeletons to one another and ultimately shape the torso.
A
B
C
D
23. Thomas Moore, who fell into disfavor with the king, was a great English author, statesman, and scholars.
A
B
C
D
24. The first microprocessors were fabricated in 1971 for installation in handhold calculators.
A
B
C
D
25. If autisic children form an attachment, it predominantly was to inanimate objects.
A
B
C
D
26. Technology is define as the tools, skills, and methods that are necessary to produce goods.
A
B
C
D
27. Fruit flies do not have to leap to take off because of they become airborne solely by wing movement.
A
B
C
D
28. Historians postulate that Eskimos migrated from Alaska to Greenland in two greater movements.
A
B
C
D
29. Electric wires carry current for lighting and outlets designing for household appliances
A
B
C
D
30. Troops housing in Fort Bliss, Texas, train to operate aircraft equipment and artillery.
A
B
C
D
31. Charles Kettering patented the first success spark-based starter for automotive vehicles in 1911.
A
B
C
D
32. During the 1700s, public concerts proliferated when composers wrote music for their audiences enjoying.
A
B
C
D
33. The philosophers and artists of ancient Greece and Rome emphasized the study of human as fundamental to their
A
B
C
D
doctrine.
34. Computer graphics software has infinite application in a widely array of fields.
A
B
C
D
35. The planet Mercury rotates slow than any other planet except Venus.
A
B
C
D
36. Van Cliburn he studied piano from 1951 to 1954 and won multiple awards between 1958 and 1960.
A
B
C
D
37. Not only comics show a part of a story but they also convey the complete story.
A
B
C
D
38. How much information can be retained in short-term memory depends almost exclusively on how it arranged.
A
B
C
D
39. When readers contribute funds to private libraries, these readers are used the library without charge.
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A
40. Diagrams display informations in a conspicuous way and vividly show differences and similarities.
A
B
C
D
Questions 1-12
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Line
5
10
15
20
1.
Charles Lindbergh was born in Detroit, Michigan, in 1902 but was raised on a farm in Minnesota, where
his father was elected to the U.S. Congress in 1907. From then on, he spent his boyhood alternately in
Washington D.C, Detroit, and Little Falls, Minnesota. Because Lindbergh exhibited exceptional mechanical
talent, in 1921 he was admitted to the University of Wisconsin to study engineering. However, the young
man was seeking more challenging endeavors, and two years later he became a stunt pilot who performed
feats at county fairs and public assemblies. This unusual and dangerous undertaking paid off handsomely in
the sense that it allowed him to gain a diverse and well-rounded experience in aeronautics. He particularly
delighted in what he called wing-walking and parachute jumping.
After a year of training as a military cadet, Lindbergh completed his program at the Brooks and Kelly
airfields at the top of his class and earned rank of captain. Robertson Aircraft Corporation of St. Louis,
Missouri offered him employment as a mail pilot to run the routes between St. Louis and Chicago, and
Lindbergh retained his position with company until 1927. During this period, he set out the Raymond B.
Orteig prize of $25,000 to be awarded to the first pilot to fly non-stop from New York to Paris. This ambition
would irreversibly change his life and accord him a prominent place in the history of aviation.
Embarking on the greatest adventure of his time, Lindbergh left Roosevelt field at 7:52 A.M. on May 20,
1927, and landed at Le Bourget Field at 5:24 P.M. the next day. Fearing that he would be unknown when he
arrived, Lindbergh carries letters of introduction to dignitaries in Paris, but when his plane came to stop, he
was overwhelmed by tremendous welcoming crowds. He was decorated in France, Great Britain, and
Belgium, and President Coolidge sent a specially designated cruiser, the Memphis to bring him back. His
accomplishments in aeronautics brought him more medals and awards than had ever been received by any
other person in private life.
2.
5.
6.
hearings
houses
gatherings
shows
7.
4.
honorably
handily
well
in time
3.
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8.
9.
forever
formerly
irresistibly
only
Twenty-one
Twenty-three
Twenty-four
Twenty-five
(A)
(B)
(C)
(D)
pilot
celebrity
mail carrier
army captain
study engineering
train as officers
go on exhibition tours
be elected to an office
Questions 13-21
Lithography is a planographic process that performs a significant function in illustration and offset
printing. It is based on the principle that water does not combine with grease-based substances, preventing
them from smearing an outline on an unpolished surface. The contour does not need to be engraved into the
Line plane, as in the case of gravure printing, or raised above the surface, as in the letterpress process. These
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laborious operations ensure that only the design to be printed catches and retains the ink transferred to the
paper.
In lithography, the artist draws on a leveled, grainy plate made of limestone, zinc, aluminum, or specially
treated paper with a grease pencil, a crayon, or tusche, a greasy liquid. After sketching the contour on the
plate, the artist coats both the drawn and the undrawn portions of the plate with an inking roller dipped in a
10 solution of nitric acid and gum arabic. The gum arabic envelops the greased surfaces and prevents ink from
penetrating into the greased areas. The artist dampens the surface with water, which is repelled by the
greased areas. Then the surface is covered with thick, oily ink and pressed onto the paper. The sheet picks up
the ink from the design while the damp stone around the pattern keeps the ink from spreading.
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In offset lithography, shiny sheets of zinc and aluminum are used instead of the heavy, hard-to-handle
stone plates. The metal plates are scoured by emery dust and marble chips to give them grained finish. The
subjects to be printed are laid down photographically, and rotary presses automatically moisten, ink, and
print hundreds of impressions per hour.
(A)
(B)
(C)
(D)
19. Where in the passage does the author point out the
advantages of lithography over other types of
printing?
(A)
(B)
(C)
(D)
Lines 1-2
Lines 3-4
Lines 7-8
Lines 16-18
contrast
content
outline
edge
elevated
low
flawed
flattened
sends
soils
coats
coils
originals
reproductions
photographs
plates
Questions 22-32
Although a few protozoans are multicellular, the simplest are unicellular organisms, such as amoebas,
bacteria, sarcodina, ciliates, flagellates, and sporozoans, which can be amorphous in shape and smaller than .
001 inch. Cytoplasm fills the cell membrane that encloses it and functions as a barrier between cells. The
Line membrane serves as the outer tissue, and any compound that may destroy the cell has to penetrate it to reach
5 the cytoplasm.
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Some types of organisms are termed colonial because they represent loosely assembled groups of
structurally similar and unifunctional cells. Colonial organisms maintain a symbiotic relationship with their
particular environments.
Unlike colonial organisms, almost all species of animals and plants are multicellular and include various
10 types of specialized or somatic cells, each with its own nucleus, genetic code, and RNA. The overall size of a
multicellular body is contingent on the total number of cells that comprise it, not the size of individual cells.
The simplest multicellular animals are hydras, sponges, and jellyfish, which have well-defined tissues, a
cellular nucleus, and an element of cell functions. Sponges have a few specialized cells but largely assemble
colonial organism that can readily form a new individual group. If the cells of a sponge are separated, they
15 can rejoin and continue as a newly formed colonial organism.
One
One hundred
Many
An unknown number
outside force
outlying area
shell
cell
(A)
(B)
(C)
(D)
mutually dependent
mutually exclusive
mutually hostile
mutually resistant
the cell
any compound
the membrane
the cytoplasm
lively
naturally
freely
feebly
animals
species
cells
plants
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31. The author mentioned all of the following
EXCEPT:
(A)
(B)
(C)
(D)
procreative mechanisms
colonial organism
cell contents
specialized cells
Genetics
Anatomy
Biology
Biochemistry
Questions 33-42
When parchment, which was extraordinarily costly, was replaced by papyrus, it became feasible to
establish libraries. At the onset, they began as archives for record keeping and document storage. According
to second-hand reports, the most renowned library was the Alexandrian, founded by Alexander the Great
Line around 330 B.C. in Alexandria, Egypt. His successors as rulers of Egypt, Ptolemy I and Ptolemy II, expanded
5 the library into the greatest collection of scrolls in ancient world. To acquire this collection, the rulers
borrowed scrolls and manuscripts from libraries in Athens, Rome, and other localities and ordered them
duplicated. At times, the library employed more than 100 scribes an illustrators. Some historians claim that
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the Alexandrian library purchased entire lesser libraries to contribute to and enhance the quality of its
possessions.
The library owned a copy of every contemporary scroll known to the librarys administrators and
contained more than 400,000 items, all of which were classified and organized. The contents of the papyrus
scrolls were edited, and a bibliography of Greek literature was compiled and cross-referenced, reflecting the
emergence and dissemination of a highly developed Greek culture. Over time, a succession of leading
15 scholars directed this library, which was acclaimed for its scholarly undertakings it supported as well as for
the size of its collection. At one time, 72 scholars were engaged to translate religious testaments, historical
annals, and mercantile accounts. Although the library flourished, it was accessible to only a minority of the
population because in ancient times the vast majority of urban dwellers were illiterate. Because papyrus was
extremely perishable, not a trace of the Alexandrian library remains today, and archeologist have several
20 hypotheses as to what became of it.
practicable
easy
prestigious
ebullient
(A)
(B)
(C)
(D)
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(C) maintaining collections were fruitless
(D) the population should have been educated
42. In the last sentence, the phrase not a trace
most probably means
(A)
(B)
(C)
(D)
absolutely no one
absolutely nothing
not a penny
not a soul
Questions 43-50
Acoording to data obtained from radioactive dating, the oldest rocks found on earth are approximately
500 million to 4 billion years old. Similar ages have been determined for meteorites and the rocks gathered
from the moons surface. Different method of arriving at the earths age generate very similar results. Modern
Line theories about the formation, development and eventual burning out of stars suggest the sun is about 5 billion
5 years old. Experts contend that the earth and the sun were formed almost the same time from a cloud of dust
and gas resulting from a cosmic explosion. The present rate of expansion of the galaxies can be extrapolated
to suggest that, if the universe began with a big bang about 15 billion years ago, an age of 5 billion years
for both the earth and the sun can be considered plausible.
Long before radioactive dating was implemented, mythology and oral naratives alluded to a conjecture
10 that the earth was nearly 6000 years old. The methods of computation based on the analysis of genealogical
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trees in scant archeological findings provide evidence that can be difficult to date accurately. Today,
radioactive dating of particles and whole objects has rejected this figure of eraths age as unreliable.
ultimate
eventful
utter
enduring
reasonable
rational
relative
relational