winterschool wrote:
Q1. Policy initiatives to make students feel safe from attacks by peers in school, an aim the Clinton administration took very seriously, has significantly reduced the percentage of students reporting fearing attack in school. (A) has significantly reduced the percentage of students reporting fearing (B) has been significant in reducing the percentage of students reporting fearing (C) has made a significant reduction in the percentage of students reporting fearing (D) have significantly reduced the percentage of students that report fearing (E) have been significant in yielding a reduction of the percentage of students that are reporting fearing
winterschool wrote:
Q2. Until recently, athletes who had received remuneration for any activity that has a link to their athletic prowess is barred from the Olympics. (A) that has a link to their athletic prowess is (B) with links to their athletic prowess has been (C) linked to their athletic prowess were (D) linked to their athletic prowess was (E) with a link to their athletic prowess is to be
winterschool wrote:
Q1. Even though trading in ivory has been outlawed by international agreement, some piano makers still use ivory, often obtained illegally, to cover piano keys. Recently, experts have devised a synthetic ivory that, unlike earlier ivory substitutes, has found favor with concert pianists throughout the world. But piano development of the synthetic ivory will probably do little to help curb the killing of elephants, from whose tusks most natural ivory is obtained. Which one of the following, if true, most helps to strengthen the argument? (A) Most people who play the piano but are not concert pianists can nonetheless easily distinguish between the new synthetic ivory and inferior ivory substitutes. (B) The new synthetic ivory can be manufactured to resemble in color and surface texture any of the various types of natural ivory that have commercial uses. (C) Other natural products such as bone or tortoise shell have not proven to be acceptable substitutes for natural ivory in piano keys. (D) The most common use for natural ivory is in ornamental carvings, which are prized not only for the quality of their workmanship but also for the authenticity of their materials. (E) It costs significantly less to produce the new synthetic ivory than it does to produce any of the ivory substitutes that scientists had developed previously.
winterschool wrote:
Q2. The government of Golado has recently increased the taxes imposed on the retail sale of all alcoholic beverages in Golado. While, by effectively increasing the cost of alcoholic beverages, the government expects the tax increase to result in significantly reduced consumption of alcohol in Golado, the government’s primary purpose in increasing the taxes is actually to reduce Golado’s government budget gap. Which of the following, if true, provides evidence suggesting that increasing the taxes on sales of alcohol will result in the government’s achieving its goal? (A) Alcohol consumption is second only to cigarette smoking in causing preventable health problems in citizens of Golado. (B) In Golado, all the organizations involved in dealing with health problems resulting from the consumption of alcohol are funded by the government. (C) Soon after increasing the taxes on sales of alcoholic beverages, the government of Golado also imposed a tax on retail sales of cigarettes. (D) The reduced consumption of alcohol in Golado resulting from the tax increase is expected to result in a reduction in duties the government collects from importers of alcohol. (E) Golado’s government budget gap is much smaller than it was before the government enacted austerity measures three years ago.
SC Questions February - 15 :Q1. Two years after
it was stolen from the Louvre Museum in Paris, ‘The Mona Lisa’, Leonardo da Vinci’s masterpiece, recovered in Florence inside an Italian waiter Vincenzo Peruggia’s hotel room, who while working at the Louvre had participated in the heist with a group of accomplices dressed as Louvre janitors on the morning of August 21, 1911.
A. it was stolen from the Louvre Museum in Paris, ‘The Mona Lisa’, Leonardo da Vinci’s masterpiece, recovered in Florence inside an Italian waiter Vincenzo Peruggia’s hotel room, who while working at the Louvre had participated
B. it was stolen from the Louvre Museum in Paris, Leonardo da Vinci’s masterpiece ‘The Mona Lisa’ was recovered in Florence inside the hotel room of an Italian waiter Vincenzo Peruggia, who had worked at the Louvre to participate
C. being stolen in Paris from the Louvre Museum, ‘The Mona Lisa’, Leonardo da Vinci’s masterpiece, was recovered inside an Italian waiter’s, Vincenzo Peruggia, hotel room in Florence, who by working at the Louvre participated
D. it was stolen in Paris from the Louvre Museum, ‘The Mona Lisa’, Leonardo da Vinci’s masterpiece, was recovered in Florence inside the hotel room of an Italian waiter Vincenzo Peruggia, who worked at the Louvre and participated
E. it was stolen from the Louvre Museum in Paris, Leonardo da Vinci’s masterpiece ‘The Mona Lisa’ was recovered in Florence inside the hotel room of an Italian waiter Vincenzo Peruggia, who while working at the Louvre had participated
Q2. John Maynard Keynes, the British economist whose ideas shaped the theory and practice of modern
macroeconomics, influenced public opinion on critically important areas like monetary policy of the central bank and relative merits of public vs. private investment, thereby advocating a mixed economy.
(A) macroeconomics, influenced public opinion on critically important areas like monetary policy of the central bank and relative merits of public vs. private investment, thereby advocating
(B) macroeconomics and influenced public opinion on critically important areas such as monetary policy of the central bank and relative merits of public vs. private investment, thereby advocating
(C) macroeconomics, influenced public opinion on such critically important areas as monetary policy of the central bank and relative merits of public vs. private investment, thereby advocating
(D) macroeconomics, influenced public opinion on such critically important areas that monetary policy of the central bank and relative merits of public vs. private investment advocated
(E) macroeconomics, influencing public opinion on such critically important areas as monetary policy of the central bank and relative merits of public vs. private investment, thereby advocating
CR Questions February - 15 :Q1. A local medical software company suffers from understaffing; one cause is the high turnover rate among programmers, most of whom quit within their first two years of working for the company. The results of the last three annual employee satisfaction surveys have suggested that the programmers would stay longer with the company if they had more spacious offices and were better paid. Nevertheless, the company’s difficulty with understaffing would only be aggravated if the company took steps to improve programmer salaries and allot programmers more office space.
Which of the following, if true, provides the strongest support for the argument’s conclusion?
(A) The annual employee satisfaction surveys, which are optional, are more likely to be completed by employees who are unsatisfied with their jobs than by those who are satisfied.
(B) If the programmer positions became more attractive, then many of the company’s middle managers, a position which is particularly difficult to fill, would demote themselves to programmers.
(C) The company already pays its programmers five percent more, on average, than other medical software companies do.
(D) Most of the company’s programmers have to share an office with at least one other programmer, whereas the majority of programmers in the medical software industry have their own offices.
(E) Presently, the cost of providing training to new programmers is lower than the cost of providing larger offices and higher salaries to current programmers.
Difficulty - Hard
Q2. An American manufacturer of racing bikes reported a 1996 second-quarter gross income of $18 million, compared with $11.5 million in the second quarter of 1995. This increase was realized despite a drop in U.S. sales of racing bikes in 1996 compared with 1995, which was partly attributable to the unusually high sales in 1995 as a result of the unprecedented success of an American cyclist in a high-profile international race.
Which of the following, if true, would contribute most to an explanation of the increase in the manufacturer’s gross income in 1996?
A. Foreign manufacturers of racing bikes announced increased sales of their products in Europe in 1996 compared with 1995.
B. In the first quarter of 1996, the American cyclist who won the high-profile international race in 1995 announced that he was switching to the racing bike made by the manufacturer in question.
C. In the first quarter of 1995, the manufacturer in question first began selling its top-of-the-line “Titanium Extreme” model.
D. In the second quarter of 1996, the manufacturer announced that it would begin production of skateboarding equipment in the following quarter.
E. Intense competition in the racing bike market forced a competitor of the manufacturer to go out of business in the fourth quarter of 1996.
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