Latihan Soal AcEPT UGM
Latihan Soal AcEPT UGM
vocabulary acept, soal grammar acept, soal reading comprehension, soal composing skill cara
    penilaian nilai atau skor acept penerimaan dan kelulusan mahasiswa pasca sarjana s2 s3 ugm
    universitas gadjah mada. Modul bimbel acept terbaik. soal latihan acept ugm, paket soal latihan
    acept ugm, tes accept ugm, tes acep ugm, kursus acept 1x lulus pelatihan acept dijamin lulus
    085729001945 pelatihan acept 1x lulus 085729001945 les acept pasti lulus pelatihan acept 1x
    lulus 085729001945 dijamin lulus puas diatas skor nilai 268
B. In this part you will hear five short talks. After each talk, two questions will be asked based
   on the information given. Answer the questions following the talk, by choosing A, B, C, or D
   which best answers the questions. Remember, you are not allowed to take notes or write in
   your test book.
15. A. Painting.
    B. Architecture.
    C. Photographing sculpture.
                                                    2
   D. Photographing people.
   On the night of 21 October 1931, millions of Americans took part in a coast-to-coast ceremony to
   commemorate the passing of a great man. Lights (1) ….. in homes and offices from New York to
   California. The ceremony (2) ….. the death of an inventor – indeed, to many people, the most
   important inventor of (3) ….. time: Thomas Alva Edison. Few inventors have (4) ….. an impact
   as great as his on everyday life. While most of his 1,000-plus inventions were devices we no (5)
   ….. use.
1 A. turned out
  B. came off
  C. went out
  D. put off
                                                       3
2 A. marked
  B. distinguished
  C. noted
  D. indicated
3 A. whole
  B. full
  C. entire
  D. all
4 A. put
  B. had
  C. served
  D. set
5 A. further
  B. later
  C. wider
  D. longer
   Many of the things Edison invented played a crucial (6) ….. in the development of modern
   technology, simply by showing what was possible. And one should never (7) ….. how amazing
   some of Edison’s inventions were. In so many ways, Edison is the perfect example of an
   inventor, by which I (8) ….. not just someone who (9) ….. up clever gadgets, but someone whose
   products transform the lives of millions. He possessed the key characteristics that an inventor
   needs to (10) ….. a success of inventions.
6 A. effect
  B. place
  C. role
  D. share
7 A. underestimate
  B. lower
  C. decrease
  D. mislead
8 A. mean
  B. think
  C. suppose
  D. express
9 A. creates
  B. shapes
  C. dreams
  D. forms
                                                4
10 A. gain
   B. make
   C. achieve
   D. get
     Sheer determination is certainly one of them. Edison famously tried thousands of materials while
     working (11) ….. a new type of battery, reacting to failure by cheerfully (12) ….. to his
     colleagues: ‘Well, (13) ….. we know 8,000 things that don’t work.’ Knowing when to take no
     (14) ….. of experts is also important. Edison’s proposal for electric lighting circuitry was (15)
     ….. with total disbelief by eminent scientists, until he lit up whole streets with his lights.
11      A. up
        B. through
        C. on
        D. to
12      A. announcing
        B. informing
        C. instructing
        D. notifying
13      A. by far
        B. at least
        C. even though
        D. for all
14      A. notice
        B. regard
        C. attention
        D. view
15      A. gathered
        B. caught
        C. drawn
        D. received
                                                   5
B. Choose the word or phrase in A, B, C, or D that best collocates (combines) with each of the
   underlined words or phrases in the following sentences.
16. There is a great diversity of frog and toads with over 2,000 ……………… adapted for life in
   habits which, apart from wet lands, include tropical forests, grassland, and even desert.
   a. specimens                b. organism            c. species             d. animals
21. So you say you’re going to invite me to Manilla ? I might ........... you to that !
    a. hold                   b. force              c. remind                   d. say
22. A stick insect is an example of an insect that .......... with its surroundings.
    a. combines               b. merges                 c. mingles              d. mixes
23. Getting that well-paid job was a bit of a ........... blessing : it means we’ll have to live away from
    home for a few years.
    a. confused                b. doubtful                 c. mixed               d. dizzy
26. Our plans were ........... by the sudden change in the weather.
a. overturned                     b. upset              c. unsettled            d. rioted
27. She got .......... in her feet when she got up after sitting cross-legged for so long.
    a. nettle and thistle          b. pins and needles    c. numbs and nimbs d. ping pong
30. The police need ......... proof of his guilt before they charge him.
    a. touchable                 b. substantial           c. tangible           d. real
                                                         6
                              Part III. Grammar and Structure
A. Sentence Completion
   For questions 1 – 15, choose the word or phrase in A, B, C, or D which best completes each
   of the following sentences.
1. The Komodo Dragon is the world’s largest lizard, which can grow to 3 meters long and
   ……………… more than 90 kilograms.
(A) is weighted
(B) weighted
(C) weighs
(D) weigh
3. The ancient Hopewell people of North America probably cultivated corn and ____crops, but
   hunting and gathering were still of critical importance in their economy.
A. another
B. the other's
C. other
D. other than
4. Lunar eclipses occur each time the Earth blocks the Sun's light from the Moon _________ the
   Moon's full phase.
A. during
B. whether
C. in which
D. whenever
6. Robert S. Duncanson was considered a painter of the Hudson River school, _____on scenes of
 America's untamed wilderness
A. which concentrated
B. which concentrated it
C. which it concentrated
D. and which concentrated
                                                  7
7._____ their senses, many-celled animals perceive what is happening in their environment.
A. Means of
B. By means of
C. Of the means by
D. By means
8. In central Georgia, archaeological evidence indicates that Native Americans first inhabited the
   area ____
A. since thirteen centuries
B. thirteen centuries ago
C. the previous thirteen centuries
D. thirteen centuries were before
9. The large compound eyes of the dragonfly _____ to see moving objects almost eighteen feet
   away.
A. to enable it
B. enabling it
C. it enables
D. enable it
10. Using many symbols makes _____ to put a large amount of information on a single map.
A. possible
B. it possible
C. it is possible
D. that possible
11. Anarchism is a term describing a cluster of doctrines an attitudes _______ principal uniting
    feature is the belief that government is both harmful and unnecessary.
A. and
B. whose
C. since
D. for
12. After the great blizzard of 1888 in the northeastern United States, it took some ______ the snow
    away from their homes.
A. days to shovel people several
B. people several days to shovel
C. several days people to shovel
D. people to shovel several days
13. Probably no man had more effect on the daily lives of most people in the United States _____
    Henry Ford a pioneer in automobile production.
A. as was
B. than was
C. than did
D. as did
                                                  8
14. In copper engravings and etchings _______caused by the edges of the plate is clearly visible on
    the paper.
A. the impression is
B. if the impression
C. impressions
D. the impression
15. Cora reefs have always been ______hazards to ships sailing in tropical seas.
A. one of the greatest
B. the greatest ones
C. ones greatest
D. the greatest were
B. Cloze Test
   For questions 16 – 25, choose the word or phrase in A, B, C, or D which best completes
   each blank space in the text.
    My grandparents have given me a pet dog as a birthday present this year. I called my pet Rex.
    My dog Rex (16)…........ too many accidents over the past year. For example, four months ago
    when he (17)........... with me, he accidentally (18)....... into a very deep hole in the forest and
    (19)......... one of his paws. But his worst accident (20 ........ while we (21)…..... our holidays in
    the country. Our grandpa who (22).......... to feed him that morning, found him lying on the
    road. A car (23)....... him the night before. Rex (24)....... his hind legs and his tail. We
    (25)…...... home immediately and took him to the vet's.
C. Error Identification
   For questions 26 – 40, choose the word or phrase A, B, C, or D which is wrong.
16. For a long time cotton ranked first between Alabama's crops, but today it accounts for only a
                                           A                      B                C
  fraction of the agricultural production.
                                  D
17. Margaret Fuller was not active in the women's-rights movement, but she asking for a fair
                             A                             B                   C
  chance for women in her book, Woman in the Nineteenth Century.
             D
                                                    9
18. Most cities major in the United States have at least one daily newspaper.
              A                              B      C         D
19. The survival of a forest depends not only on the amount of annual rainfall it receives, and
           A                                                     B                           C
  also on the seasonal distribution of the rain.
                            D
20. James Farmer, an American civil rights leader, he helped establish the Congress of Racial
                                   A                     B
  Equality, an organization that is dedicated to the principle of nonviolence.
                                        C              D
21. A merger is a combination of two or more businesses down below a single management.
                     A                   B                   C         D
22. In its simplest form, a transformer is composed of two coils of wire place together without no
     A                                        B                                   C        D
  wires actually in contact.
23. The greatest natural resource of the state of North Dakota is their fertile farmland.
                    A                      B                       C                D
24. The doctrine of eminent domain is based the legal tradition that all real property is subject to
                                        A                 B                    C
  the control of the state.
      D
25. In a controversial eating guide entitled Are You Hungry? Jane Hirschmann and Lela
            A                         B
   Zaphiropolous argue that children instinctively know what foods are good for selves.
                                                      C                          D
26. Bats rely to their hearing to navigate and to find food at night.
              A          B                          C       D
27. Once an important port of entry for immigrants to the United States, Ellis Island recent
      A                          B                                                     C
    reopened its great hall as a museum of immigration.
                            D
28. Every year Colorado is visited by millions of tourists who come for a variety of reason.
      A                                                    B        C                  D
29. The energy needed for animal grow is derived primarily from carbohydrates and fats.
                 A                B        C                 D
30. Countries tend to specialize in the production and export of those goods and services that it
                A                                                  B                           C
                                                   10
   can produce relatively cheaply.
                    D
31. Antique auctions have become popular in the United States because a steadily increasing
                           A                                     B
    awareness of the investment value of antiques.
       C                           D
32. Alike an insect, the crustacean is an arthropod, an animal with jointed legs and an
     A                                                                 B
    exoskeleton, a supportive covering for its body.
                                  C              D
33. Bricks are made from clay that is processed into a workable consistency, form to standard
                                                          A                   B        C
    sizes, and then fired in a kiln.
                D
34. Her speech at the World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago in 1893 brought Fannie Barrier
         A                                         B                    C
    Williams local and nation recognition.
                         D
35. A paragraph is a portion of a text consists of one or more sentences related to the same idea.
     A               B              C    D
36. A deficient of folic acid is rarely found in humans because the vitamin is contained in a wide
          A                          B                     C                              D
    variety of foods.
37. Industry utilize the gaseous element xenon when developing specialized flashlights and other
                A                   B                  C
    powerful lamps.
       D
38. Some types of ferns resemble trees and some are too small that they look like moss.
           A               B                        C                      D
39. Made of sealskin stretched over a framework of whalebone or driftwood, an Eskimo kayak is
      A
    completed enclosed except for the opening in which the paddler sits.
       B                    C                    D
40. Our urge to classify different life forms and give us names seems to be as old as the human race.
         A                                             B          C             D
                                                  11
                             Part IV. Reading Comprehension
Choose the best answer to each question based on the information which is stated or implied in
the text.
Text 1
            It reflects badly on the order of priorities in our society that schoolchildren can tell you
      the make of many cars on the road but cannot identify any but the most familiar trees and
      wildflowers. This is because generally speaking; the educational system of the United States
      is squeezed indoors to a degree that stifles young minds. Few schools take advantage of the
      vast classroom of the outdoors to teach the things that really matter-the basics of life on a
      threatened planet. Children study insect larvae and tadpoles in paper cups inside a classroom
      instead of having their knowledge filled out by examining the complex environment in which
      these creatures actually live.
            This is a pity, because a' child is normally nature's most avid student. Every parent
      knows the propensity of small children to bring home caterpillars, grasshoppers, toads, and
      other small living things. But parents rarely encourage this instinctive attraction by imparting
      knowledge of nature to their children. Too often, the interest of children in the natural world
      is -diverted by the example of their elders into a concentration on the inanimate objects that
      money will buy.
   1. It can be inferred from the passage that the author thinks the educational system of the United
      States is too
      A. strict
      B. defensive
      C. limited
      D. experimental
   2. Which of the following sentences best summarizes the author's main point?
      A. Children should learn to follow the example of their elders.
      B. Children should learn about financial responsibility by saving for the future.
      C. Children should study individual organisms in school laboratories that are better equipped.
      D. Children should be taken outside the classroom to study the natural sciences.
                                                  12
5. The author indicates that children imitate their parents
    A. pity for helpless creatures
    B. love of knowledge
    C. choice of professions
    D. interest in material possessions
Text 2
         The oldest living things on Earth are trees. Some of California's sequoias have for four
   thousand years looked down on the changes in the landscape and the comings and goings of
   humans. They sprouted from tiny seeds about the time the Egyptian pyramids were being
   built. Today these giant patriarchs seem as remote and inaccessible as the rocks and mountain
   cliffs on which they grow, like cathedral columns holding up the sky. It is hard to imagine
   them playing any part in the lives of mere humans or being in any way affected by the
   creatures that pass at their feet.
         Lesser trees, however, have played an intimate role in the lives of people since they first
   appeared on Earth. Trees fed the fires that warmed humans; they provided shelter, food and
   medicine and even clothing. They also shaped people's spiritual horizons. Trees expressed the
   grandeur and mystery of life, as they moved through the cycle of seasons, from life to death
   and back to life again. Trees were the largest living things around humans and they knew that
   some trees had been standing on the same spot in their parent's and grandparents' time, and
   would continue to stand long after they were gone. No wonder these trees became symbols of
   strength, fruitfulness, and everlasting life.
7. Which of the following is NOT mentioned in the passage as a way in which people have used
   trees?
   A. For furniture
   B. For fuel
   C. For housing
   D. For nourishment
8. In line 4, the phrase "giant patriarchs" could best be replaced by which of the following?
    A. tiny seeds
    B. important leaders
    C. towering trees
    D. Egyptian pyramids
                                               13
 10. The author implies that, compared with sequoias, other trees have
    A. been in existence longer
    B. adapted more readily to their environments
    C. been affected more by animals
    D. had a closer relationship with people
Text 3
12. According to the passage, which of the following most influenced Martha Graham’s dances
     and techniques?
  A. Her own experiences
  B. Exotic and idyllic themes
  C. Familiar classical stories
  D. The works of St. Denis and Duncan
                                                14
13. It can be inferred from the passage that Martha Graham had become famous by
  A. the beginning of the nineteenth century
  B. the end of the nineteenth century
  C. the early 1920's
  D. the early 1930's
14. In lines 12 - 13, the author uses the phrase "like whales on the beach" to indicate that Fokine
    and St. Denis were
A. good swimmers
B. physically large
C. out of place
D. very sick
15. In lines 13 - 16, what criticism does the author make of Martha Graham and her colleagues?
  A. They patterned much of their chorcographic style after vaudeville.
  B. They insisted that all dancers learn the same foreign choreographic style.
  C. They adopted the same dance values of the previous era without interjecting any new ideas.
  D. They prevented modern dance from expanding beyond their personal interpretations.
Text 4
         The invention of the incandescent light bulb by Thomas A. Edison in 1879 created a
   demand for a cheap, readily available fuel with which to generate large amounts of electric
   power. Coal seemed to fit the bill, and it fueled the earliest power stations (which were set up
   at the end of the nineteenth century by Edison himself). As more power plants were
   constructed throughout the country, the reliance on coal increased. Since the First World War,
   coal-fired power plants have accounted for about half of the electricity produced in the United
   States each year. In 1986 such plants had a combined generating capacity of 289,000
   megawatts and consumed 33 percent of the nearly 900 million tons of coal mined in the
   country that year. Given the uncertainty in the future growth of nuclear power and in the
   supply of oil and natural gas, coal-fired power plants could well provide up to 70 percent of
   the electric power in the United States by the end of the century.
         Yet, in spite of the fact that coal has long been a source of electricity and may remain
   one for many years (coal represents about 80 percent of United States fossil-fuel reserves), it
   has actually never been the most desirable fossil fuel for power plants. Coal contains less
   energy per unit of weight than natural gas or oil; it is difficult to transport, and it is associated
   with a host of environmental issues, among them acid rain. Since the late 1960’s problems of
   emission control and waste disposal have sharply reduced the appeal of coal-fired power
   plants. The cost of ameliorating these environmental problems, along with the rising cost of
   building a facility as large and complex as a coal-fired power plant, has also made such plants
   less attractive from a purely economic perspective.
         Changes in the technological base of coal fired power plants could restore their
   attractiveness, however. Whereas some of these changes are evolutionary and are intended
   mainly to increase the productivity of existing plants, completely new technologies for
   burning coal cleanly are also being developed.
                                                15
   A. Coal-fired plants are an important source of electricity in the United States and are likely
   to remain so.
   B. Generating electricity from coal is comparatively recent in the United States.
   C. Coal is a more economical fuel than either oil or nuclear power.
   D. Coal is a safer and more dependable fossil fuel than oil or gas.
18. It can be inferred from the passage that coal became the principal source of electricity in the
    United States, because it
     A. required no complicated machinery
     B. was comparatively plentiful and inexpensive
     C. was easy to transport
     D. burned efficiently
19.In the author’s opinion, the importance of coal-generated electricity could increase in the
    future for which of the following reasons?
    A. The possible substitutes are too dangerous.
    B. The cost of changing to other fuels is too great.
    C. The future availability of other fuels is uncertain.
    D. Other fuels present too many environmental problems.
20. Acid rain is mentioned in the passage for which of the following reasons?
    A. It reduces the efficiency of coal-fired plants
    B. It increases the difficulty of transporting coal
    C. It is an environmental problem associated with coal use
    D. It contains less energy per unit of weight than coal does
Text 5
        Despite the road improvements of the turnpike era (1790-1830). Americans continued as
   in colonial times to depend wherever possible on water routes for travel and transportation.
   The larger rivers, especially the Mississippi and the Ohio, became increasingly useful as
   steamboats grew in number and improved in design.
        River boats carried to New Orleans the corn and other crops of northwestern farmers, the
   cotton and tobacco of southwestern planters. From New Orleans, ships took the cargoes on to
   eastern seaports. Neither the farmers of the west nor the merchants of the east were
   completely satisfied with this pattern of trade. Farmers could get better prices for their crops if
   the alternative existed of sending them directly eastward to market and merchants could sell
   larger quantities of their manufactured goods if these could be transported more directly and
   more economically to the west.
        New waterways were needed. Sectional jealousies and constitutional scruples stood in the
   way of action by the federal government and necessary expenditures were too great for
   private enterprise. If extensive canals were to be dug, the job would be up to the various
   states.
                                               16
        New York was the first to act. It had the natural advantage of a comparatively level route
   between the Hudson River and Lake Erie, through the only break in the entire Appalachian
   Mountain chain. Yet the engineering tasks were imposing. The distance was more than 350
   miles and there were ridges to cross and a wilderness of woods and swamps to penetrate. The
   Erie Canal begun in 1817 and completed in 1825, was by far the greatest construction job that
   Americans had ever undertaken. It quickly proved a financial success as well. The prosperity
   of the Erie encouraged the state to enlarge its canal system by building several branches.
        The range of the New York canal system was still further extended when the states of
   Ohio and Indiana, inspired by the success of the Erie Canal, provided water connections
   between Lake Erie and the Ohio River.
21. What does the passage suggest was the principal route for transporting crops to the east prior
    in 1825?
A. River to road
B. Canal to river
C. River to ocean
D. Road to canal.
22. It can be inferred from the passage that shipping cargo east by way of New Orleans was
A. Advantageous for manufactures
B. Inexpensive for merchants
C. Not economical for farmers
D. Considered economical by the government
25. Which of the following products would a northwestern farmer in the early nineteenth century
    be most likely to purchase from the east?
A. Grain
B. Vegetables
C. Textiles
D. Fruit.
26. According to the passage, where was the Erie Canal located?
A. Between Ohio and Indiana.
B. Along the Appalachian Mountains
C. Between Lake Erie and the Ohio River
D. Across New York State.
                                               17
A.   impractical
B.   successful
C.   demanding
D.   misleading
Text 6
          Stars may be spheres, but not every celestial object is spherical. Objects in the universe
     show a variety of shapes: round planets (some with rings), tailed comets, wispy cosmic gas
     and dust clouds, ringed nebulae, pinwheel-shaped spiral galaxies, and so on. But none of the
     shapes on this list describes the largest single entities in the universe. These are the double
     radio sources, galaxies with huge clouds of radio emission that dwarf the visible galaxies,
     sometimes by a factor of a hundred or more. Stretching over distances greater than a million
     light-years, these radio-emitting regions resemble twin turbulent gas clouds, typically forming
     dumbbell-like shapes with the visible galaxy (when it is visible) in the center.
          These double radio sources present astronomers with a puzzle. Their radio emission
     arises from the synchrotron process, in which electrons accelerated to nearly the speed of light
     move through magnetic fields. However, in view of the rate at which the radio sources emit
     energy, they should disappear in a few million years as their electrons slow down and cease
     producing radiation. Somehow new electrons must be continually accelerated to nearly the
     speed of light, otherwise, by now almost none of the double radio sources would be observed.
          With the advent of high-resolution radio interferometers during the late 1970's, part of the
     answer became clear: the electrons are produced in jets that are shot out in opposite directions
     from the center of galaxy. Remarkably narrow and highly directional, the jets move outward
     at speeds close to the speed of light. When the jets strike the highly rarefied gas that
     permcales intergalactic space, the fast-moving electrons lose their highly directional motion
     and form vast clouds of radio-emitting gas.
          Cosmic jets have ranked among the hottest topics of astronomical research in recent years
     as astronomers strive to understand where they come from. Why should a galaxy eject matter
     at such tremendous speeds in two narrow jets? And why are such jets not seen in the Milky
     Way?
                                                18
31. The word "celestial" in line 1 could best be replaced by
A. visible
B. astronomical
C. glowing
D. scientific
33. In the first paragraph, the author describes objects in the universe in terms of their
A. color
B. origin
C. location
D. shape
34. According to the passage, scientists do not fully understand why double radio sources
A. have not eventually disappeared
B. cannot be observed with a telescope
C. are beginning to slow down
D. are not as big as some planets and stars
36. According to the passage, what happens when electrons and gas collide in space?
A. The gas becomes more condensed
B. The gas becomes less radiated
C. The electrons disperse
D. The electrons become negatively charged
37. The author suggests that astronomers consider the study of cosmic jets to be
A. an obsolete scientific field
B. an unprofitable venture
C. an intriguing challenge
D. a subjective debate
38. In what lines does the passage compare the size of double radio sources with that of other
    galaxies?
A. Lines 4-6
B. Lines 12-14
C. Lines 19-20
D. Lines 23-24
                                                19
   39. Where in the passage does the author mention a technology that aided in the understanding of
       double radio sources?
   A. Line 2
   B. Line 7
   C. Line 17
   D. Line 21
A. Numbers 1 – 10 contain complete and correct sentences. For each number, you are
   required to choose the most appropriate paraphrased sentence closest in meaning to the
   original one.
   1. Plankton is the basic foodstuff for everything that lives in the ocean. Plankton is the collective
       name for minute marine animals and plants.
   A. Plankton, the collective name for minute marine animals and plants, is the basic foodstuff for
       everything that lives in the ocean.
   B. Plankton is the basic foodstuff for everything that lives in the ocean, which is the collective
       name for minute marine animals and plants.
   C. Plankton, the name collecting minute marine animals and plants, is the basic foodstuff for
       everything that lives in the ocean.
   D. Plankton, the basic foodstuff for everything that lives in the ocean, collects the name for
       minute marine animals and plants.
                                                   20
4. She enjoyed herself immensely at the party.
A. She had a terrible time at the party
B. She had a horrible time at the party
C. She had a terrific time at the party
D. She had a terrifying time at the party.
5. We must take steps to preserve natural resources; otherwise the planet will be in danger.
A. Unless we take steps to preserve natural resources, the planet will be in danger.
B. Unless we take steps to preserve natural resources,the planet will not be in danger.
C. If we take steps to preserve natural resources, the planet would be in danger.
D. If we take steps to preserve natural resources,the planet will be in danger.
6. He didn’t take his father’s advice. That’s why he is out of work now.
A. If he had taken his father’s advice, he would not be out of work now.
B. If he had taken his father’s advice, he would not have been out of work.
C. If he took his father’s advice, he would not be out of work.
D. If he takes his father’s advice, he will not be out of work..
                                              21
B. Numbers 11 – 20 contain incorrect sentences. The incorrect part of the sentence has been
   identified for you. You are required to find the correct option to replace the underlined
   part.
11. Milk is pasteurized by raising its temperature to about 630 centigrade for thirty minutes. Rapidly
    cooling it, and then to be stored at a temperature below 100 centigrade.
(A) and then storing it.
(B) and then it is stored
(C) and then store it
(D) and then it is to b stored
12. After discussing things with my friends, we decided that the English exam was not only long but
    as well as difficult.
A. was not only long but as well as difficult
B. was not only long but also quite difficult
C. was very long and much difficult
D. was extremely long and well as difficult
13. Since her report was due on Monday, Tracy decided that she had better work on it this weekend
    instead of going to the lake with her friends.
A. had better work on it this weekend instead of going
B. should have had to work on it this weekend instead of going
C. might ought to work on it this weekend besides to go
D. better have worked on it this weekend and not going
14. I don’t feel like going to the library this afternoon, but should be rather going to the shopping
    mall.
A. should be rather going to the shopping mall
B. would rather be going to the shopping mall
C. to the shopping mall should rather go
D. must rather go shopping at the mall
15. Timothy should have been really sick for him not to be at work on such an important day.
A. should have been really sick
B. ought to be very sick
C. might happen to be really sick
D. must have been very sick
16. Even though the nightclub was very pleasant, I had a horrible time last night because the woman
    stepped on my toe I was dancing with.
A. the woman stepped on my toe I was dancing with
B. the woman I was dancing with on my toe she stepped
C. on my toe a woman stepped that I was dancing with
D. the woman I was dancing with kept stepping on my toe
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17. Since the library carries catalogues of most of the universities in the U.S., you ought be able to
    find information there.
A. you ought be able to find
B. this is where you should be able to find
C. you should be able to locate
D. you could possibly be able to locate
18. My boss would love to hire Chris as his assistant, but he may already been offered a position
    from the other company where he interviewed.
A. he may already been offered a position
B. already he could be offered a position
C. a position which Chris might had been offered
D. maybe he had been offered a position
19. Because they are extremely brittle, scientists could also want to be careful when handling ancient
    manuscripts.
A. could also want to be careful
B. must take great care
C. should want to be really careful
D. ought to preferably take careful
20. With global warming causing so much havoc with weather patterns recently, many farmers hope
    that their crops are producing more.
A. hope that their crops are producing more
B. are wishing that their crops ought to produce more
C. are hoping that that their crops will be producing more
D. wishes the production of their crops was more
   24. A) The thoughts which Ted presented at the meeting were so worthwhile.
       B) The thoughts, which Ted presented at the meeting, were so worthwhile.
       C) The thoughts that Ted presented at the meeting were so worthwhile.
                                                   23
        D) The thoughts, that Ted presented at the meeting, were so worthwhile.
   25. A) The thoughts that Ted presented, that were about shifting national priorities, were well
       received.
       B) The thoughts that Ted presented, were well received.
       C) The thoughts, that Ted presented, were well received.
       D) The thoughts that Ted presented, which were about shifting national priorities, were well
          received.
   29. A) Lisa did so well on the test that she was allowed to accelerate to the next level.
       B) Lisa did so well on the test that she were allowed to accelerate to the next level.
       C) Lisa did so good on the test that she was allowed to accelerate to the next level.
       D) Lisa did so good on the test that she accelerated to the next level.
D. Numbers 31 – 36 contain jumbled sentences. One of the sentences has been underlined. You
   are required to choose the next sentence which logically follows the underlined one.
31. (1) Although there is approximately 120 intensive language institutes in the United Stated in
         1970, there are more than twice as may now.
    (2) Although there are approximately 120 intensive language institutes
    (3) Although there were approximately 120 intensive language institutes
    (4) Although there have been approximately 120 intensive language institutes
    (5) Although there had been approximately 120 intensive language institutes.
   A.   2
   B.   3
   C.   4
   D.   5
                                                  24
32. (1)    There are 100 schools in the country
    (2).   Never look at the field to choose the school as long as the opportunity to see
    (3).   To see what facilities around the school and the like
    (4).   Because these facilities will help your life
    (5).   In addition to your school will help later
    A.   2
    B.   3
    C.   4
    D.   5
33. (1). It depends on how specialised they have become during the course of evolution
    (2). The non-specialists however in the opportunist of the animal world can never afford to relax
    (3). So long as the anteater has its ants and the koala bear his family is then they are satisfied and
          the Livin is easy
    (4). All animals have a strong exploratory urge but for some it is more crucial than others
    (5). If they have put all that effort into Perfection of the one survival tree and ignore folder so
          much with the general complexities of the world around them.
    A.   2
    B.   3
    C.   4
    D.   5
34. (1). While there may be the extremely rare example of scientific dishonesty which will be seized
          up on by the news organisations the role of signs will in modern Society females valuable\
    (2). I would not wish us to go back to the Dark Ages
    (3). In other words I firmly believe that the development of science and extension of
          understanding is a public good
    (4). All development will have a staff site but mobile phones can save lives in 999 call from
          remote location on a Dark Knight
    (5). I think we should be wary of the reporting of science it is often over dramatised an order to
          secure an audience but not of science itself
    A.   2
    B.   3
    C.   4
    D.   5
                                                     25
35. (1). But it has also placed us in that unique position of being able to destroy ourselves
    (2). This evidence at the cat that it's their mental training to the cell phone conversation and not
         simply holding or operating the cell phones that impairs driving skill
    (3). A new study suggests that doing things that we were thinking like talking on a cell phone
         could in fact this to your attention away from the road and let to accident
    (4). Science and technology have had a major impact on society.
    (5). The impact is growing back drastically changing a means of communication the way we
         work or a housing clothes and food are methods of transportation.
   A.   2
   B.   3
   C.   4
   D.   5
36. (1). Others however believe that the fossil evidence suggests that at various stages in the history
         of life Evolution progress rapidly in spots at their major changes Auckland at this point
    (2). An evolving group may have reached a stage at which it had an advantage over the group so
         and was able to exploit new Nisha signature Climate change may also have produced a spot
         as might the extinction of other groups or species leaving many niches vacant
    (3). Today many years later many believe that Evolution has progress at the same steady rate and
         that the absence of transitional forms can be explained by Darwin's argument that
    (4). Paleontologist still argue about the origins of major groups do near fossil finds since
         Darwin's time have cleared up many of the disparities in the fossil record even do in Darwin
         slight time some transitional forms were found’
    (5). There are huge gaps in the fossil record and transition usually offered in one restricted
         locality
   A.   2
   B.   3
   C.   4
   D.   5
E. Numbers 37 – 40 contain jumbled sentences. You are required to identify the correct order
   to form a good paragraph.
37. (1). Moreover, as software is often built on the achievements of others, writing code could
         become a legal hurdle race.
    (2). Critics claim that such intellectual monopolies hinder innovation because software giants can
        use them to attack fledgling competitors.
    (3). By analogy, if Haydn had patented the symphony form, Mozart would have been in trouble.
    (4). The issue of patents for software and business methods has been causing a stir in America
        ever since the Patents and Trademark Office started issuing patents on internet methods in
        1998, most famously that for one-click shopping.
    (5) . Proponents argue that these patents provide the necessary incentive to innovate at a time
        when more inventions are the computer related.
                                                   26
   A. 2-3-5-4-1
   B. 2-4-5-1-3
   C. 4-3-5-1-2
   D. 4-1-5-3-2
38. (1). Clearly, a number of factors have contributed to its remarkable appearance.
    (2). The result is a unique story of land collisions and erosions, and of rising and falling water
         levels.
    (3). Experts who have analyzed the rock formations say that, historically, it goes back nearly two
         billion years.
    (4). Anyone who has ever visited the Grand Canyon will agree that it is one of the most
         incredible sights in the world.
    (5). The geological processes that have taken place since then are exposed for everyone to see,
         not hidden beneath vegetation or a fast-flowing water course.
   A. 2-3-5-4-1
   B. 2-4-5-1-3
   C. 5-3-4-1-2
   D. 5-1-3-4-2
39. (1). As officials, their vision of a country shouldn’t run too far beyond that of the local people
        with whom they have to deal.
    (2). Ambassadors have to choose their words.
    (3). To say what they feel they have to say, they appear to be denying or ignoring part of what
         they know.
    (4). So, with ambassadors as with other expatriates in black Africa, there appears at a first
         Meeting a kind of ambivalence.
    (5). They do a specialized job and it is necessary for them to live ceremonial lives.
   A. 3-2-5-4-1
   B. 3-4-5-1-2
   C. 5-3-4-1-2
   D. 5-1-4-3-2
40. (1). Then two astronomers-the German, Johannes Kepler, and the Italian, Galileo Galilei-started
        publicly to support the Copernican theory.
  (2). The orbits it predicted did not quite match the ones observed.
  (3). His idea was that the sun was stationary at the centre and that the earth and the planets move
       in circular orbits around the sun.
  (4). A simple model was proposed in 1514 by a Polish priest, Nicholas Copernicus.
  (5). Nearly a century passed before this idea was taken seriously.
   A. 5-3-5-2-1
   B. 5-4-1-3-2
   C. 4-3-5-1-2
   D. 4-1-5-3-2
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