1、练习题十23999 年 4 月SECTION 1Time-30minutes30 Questions5y = 15x = 2y1. x 5O is the center of the circle and the perimeter of AOB is 6.2. The circumference of the 12 circleKens monthly take-home pay is w dollars. After he pays for food and rent, he has x dollars left3. x w x4. 13487154)2(yx5. 824yx6. 5.13
2、0102The operation is defined for all positive numbers r and t by rt= tr2)(7. 7137 37718. ABDBCD9. (250)(492) 40,9210. x y11. The number of prime The number of primenumbers between 70 numbers between 30and 76 and 366 x 7y = 812. 0.85yxKLNP is a square with perimeter 128.13. MQ 4214. 1+3x23x练习题十240The
3、 median salary for professional group A is $40,610. The median salary for professional group B is $40,810.15. The median salary for $40,710groups A and Bcombined16. The water level in a tank is lowered by 6 inches, then raised by inches, and then lowered by 4 inches. 218If the water level was x inch
4、es before the changes in level, which of the following represents the water level, in inches, after the changes?(A) 21x(B) (C) 216x(D) (E) 218x17. In the figure above, M, N, and P are midpoints of the sides of an equilateral triangle whose perimeter is 18. What is the perimeter of the shaded region?
5、(A) 2(B) 3(C) 214(D) 6(E) 918. Which of the following sets of number is has the greatest standard deviation?(A) 2, 3, 4(B) 2.5, 3, 3.5(C) 1, 1.25, 1.5(D) 2, 0, 2(E) 20, 21, 21.519. If x, y, and z represent consecutive integers, and x y z, which of the following equals y?. x + 1. 2z. 3y(A) only(B) an
6、d only(C) and only(D) and only(E) , and 20. When 9 students took a zoology quiz with a possible score of 0 to 10, inclusive, there average (arithmetic mean) score was 7.5. If a tenth student takes the same quiz, what will be the least possible average score on the quiz for all 10 students?(A) 6.5(B)
7、 6.75(C) 7.0(D) 7.25(E) 7.5练习题十241Questions 21-25 refer to the following graph.21. The two corporate sectors that increased their support for the arts from 1988 to 1991 made a total contribution in 1991 of approximately how many million dollars?(A) 112(B) 125(C) 200(D) 250(E) 31522. How many of the
8、six corporate sectors listed each contributed more than $60 million to the arts in both 1988 and 1991?(A) One (B) Two(C) three(D) Four(E) Five23. Approximately how many million dollars more did the wholesale sector contribute to the arts in 1988 than in 1991?(A) 10.4(B) 12.6(C) 14.0(D) 16.5(E) 19.22
9、4. From 1988 to 1991, which corporate sector decreased its support for the arts by the greatest dollar amount?(A) Services(B) Manufacturing(C) Retail(D) Wholesale(E) Other25. Of the retail sectors 1991 contribution to the arts, went to symphony orchestras and of the 4121remainder went to public tele
10、vision. Approximately how many million dollars more did to retail sector contribute to public television that year than to symphony orchestras?(A) 5.2(B) 6.3(C) 10.4(D) 13.0(E) 19.526. If x = a5 and y = a6, a 0, which of the following is equivalent to a13?(A) xy(B) x2y(C) 3练习题十242(D) yx4(E) x327. Th
11、e probabilities that each of two independent experiments will have a successful outcome are 158and , respectively. What is the probability that 32both experiments will have successful outcomes?(A) 54(B) 6(C) 152(D) 46(E) 2528. If x is 1, 2, or 3 and y is either 2 or 4, then the product xy can have h
12、ow many different possible values?(A) Three(B) Four(C) Five(E) Six(E) Seven29. If the radius of a circular region were decreased by 20 percent, the area of the circular region would decrease by what percent?(A) 16%(B) 20%(C) 36%(D) 40%(E) 44%30. Workers at Companies X and Y are paid the same base ho
13、urly rate. Workers at company X are paid 1.5 times the base hourly rate for each hour worked per week in excess of the first 37, while workers at Company Y are paid 1.5 times the base hourly rate for each hour worked per week in excess of the first 40. In a given week, how many hours must a Company
14、X worker work in order to receive the same pay as a company Y worker who works 46 hours?(A) 46(B) 45(C) 44(D) 43(E) 42练习题十243SECTION 2Time- 30 Minutes38 Questions1. As businesses become aware that their advertising must - the everyday concerns of consumers, their commercials will be characterized by
15、 a greater degree of -.(A) allay.pessimism(B) address.realism(C) evadeverisimilitude(D) engagefancy(E) change.sincerity2. Because the lawyers methods were found tobe -, the disciplinary committee - hisprivileges.(A) unimpeachable.suspended(B) ingenious.withdrew(C) questionable.expanded(D) unscrupulo
16、us.revoked(E) reprehensible.augmented3. People of intelligence and achievement can none-theless be so - and lacking in - that theygamble their reputations by breaking the law tofurther their own ends.(A) devious.propensity(B) culpable.prosperity(C) obsequious.deference(D) truculent. independence(E)
17、greedy. integrity4. A number of scientists have published articles- global warming, stating - that thereis no solid scientific evidence to support thetheory that the Earth is warming because ofincreases in greenhouse gases.(A) debunking.categorically(B) rejecting.paradoxically(C) deploring.optimisti
18、cally(D) dismissing.hesitantly(E) proving.candidly5. The senators attempt to convince the public thatshe is not interested in running for a second termis as - as her opponents attempt to disguisehis intention to run against her.(A) biased(B) unsuccessful(C) inadvertent(D) indecisive(E) remote6. MacC
19、rorys conversation was -: she couldnever tell a story, chiefly because she alwaysforgot it, and she was never guilty of a witticism,unless by accident.(A) scintillating(B) unambiguous(C) perspicuous(D) stultifying(E) facetious7. Despite its many -, the whole-languagephilosophy of teaching reading co
20、ntinues togain - among educators.(A) detractors.notoriety (B) adherents.prevalence(C) criticscurrency(D) enthusiasts.popularity(E) practitioners credibility8. CENSUS: POPULATION:(A) interrogation : guilt(B) survey : price(C) interview : personality(D) questionnaire : explanation(E) inventory : stock
21、9. AUTHENTICITY : FRAUDULENT:(A) morality : utopian(B) intensity : vigorous(C) sincerity : hypocritical(D) particularity : unique(E) plausibility : narrated10. VARNISH : GLOSSY:(A) sharpen : blunt(B) measure : deep(C) sand : smooth(D) approximate : precise(E) anchor : unstable 练习题十24411. AMENITY : C
22、OMFORTABLE(A) tact : circumspect(B) nuisance : aggravated(C) honorarium :grateful(D) favorite : envious(E) lounge : patient12. PAIN : ANALGESIC:(A) energy : revitalization(B) interest : stimulation(C) symptom : palliative(D) despair : anxiety(E) reward : incentive13. VOICE:SHOUT:(A) ear : overhear(B
23、) eve : see(C) hand : clutch(D) nerve : feel(E) nose : inhale14. PONTIFICATE: SPEAK:(A) strut : walk(B) stare : look(C) patronize : frequent(D) eulogize : mourn(E) reciprocate : give15. BIBLIOPHILE : BOOKS:(A) environmentalist : pollution(B) zoologist : animals(C) gourmet : food(D) calligrapher : ha
24、ndwriting(E) aviator : aircraft16. INDIGENT : WEALTH:(A) presumptuous : independence(B) imperturbable : determination(C) inevitable : inescapability(D) indigestible : sustenance(E) redundant : indispensabilityThis passage is based on an article published in 1990. Eight times within the pat million y
25、ears, some-thing in the Earths climatic equation has changed.allowing snow in the mountains and the northernLine latitudes to accumulate from one season to the next (5) instead of melting away. Each time, the enormous ice sheets resulting from this continual buildup lasted tensof thousands of years
26、until the end of each particularglacial cycle brought a warmer climate. Scientistsspeculated that these glacial cycles were ultimately(10) driven by astronomical factors: slow, cyclic changes in the eccentricity of the Earths orbit and in the tilt and orientation of its spin axis. But up until aroun
27、d30 years ago, the lack of an independent record of ice-age timing made the hypothesis untestable.(15) Then in the early 1950s Emiliani produced thefirst complete record of the waxings and wanings of past glaciations. It came from a seemingly odd place. the seafloor. Single-cell marine organismscall
28、ed “foraminifera“ house themselves in shells made(20) from calcium carbonate. When the foraminifera die.sink to the bottom, and become part of seafloor sedi-ments, the carbonate of their shells preserves certaincharacteristics of the seawater they inhabited. Inparticular, the ratio of a heavy, isoto
29、pe of oxygen(25) (oxygen-18) to ordinary oxygen (oxygen- 16) in thecarbonate preserves the ratio of the two oxygens inwater molecules.It is now understood that the ratio of oxygen iso-topes in seawater closely reflects the proportion of(30) the worlds water locked up in glaciers and ice sheets.A kin
30、d of meteorological distillation accounts for thelink. Water molecules containing the heavier isotopetend to condense and fall as precipitation slightlysooner than molecules containing the lighter isotope.(35) Hence, as water vapor evaporated from warm oceansmoves away from its source. its oxygen -1
31、8 returnsmore quickly to the oceans than does its oxygen-16. What falls as snow on distant ice sheets and mountainglaciers is relatively depleted of oxygen -18. As the(40) oxygen-18-poor ice builds up the oceans becomerelatively enriched in the Isotope. The larger the icesheets grow, the higher the
32、proportion of oxygen-18becomes in seawater- and hence in the sediments.Analyzing cores drilled from seafloor sediments,(45) Emiliani found that the isotopic ratio rose and fell inrough accord with the Earths astronomical cycles.Since that pioneering observation, oxygen-isotope练习题十245measurements hav
33、e been made on hundreds of coresA chronology for the combined record enables scien-(50) tists to show that the record contains the very sameperiodicities as the orbital processes. Over the past800,000 years, the global ice volume has peakedevery 100,000 years, matching the period of theorbital eccen
34、tricity variation. In addition, “wrinkles”(55) superposed on each cycle small decreases or surges in ice volume have come at intervals of roughly 23,000 and 41,000 years, in keeping with the pre-cession and tilt frequencies of the Earths spin axis.17. Which of the following best expresses the main i
35、dea of the passage?(A) Marine sediments have allowed scientists to amass evidence tending to confirm that astronomical cycles drive the Earths glacial cycles.(B) the ratio between two different isotopes of oxygen in seawater correlates closely with the size of the Earths ice sheets.(C) Surprisingly,
36、 single-cell marine organisms provide a record of the Earths ice ages.(D) The Earths astronomical cycles have recently been revealed to have an unexpectedly large impact on the Earths climate.(E) The earth has experienced eight periods of intense glaciation in the past million years, primarily as a
37、result of substantial changes in its orbit.18. The passage asserts that one reason that oceans become enriched in oxygen 18 as ice sheets grow is because(A) water molecules containing oxygen 18 condense and fall as precipitation slightly sooner than those containing oxygen 16(B) the ratio of oxygen-
38、 18 to oxygen- 16 in water vapor evaporated from oceans is different from that of these isotopes in seawater(C) growing ice sheets tend to lose their oxygen- I 8 as the temperature of the oceans near them gradually decreases(D) less water vapor evaporates from oceans during glacial periods and there
39、fore less oxygen-18 is removed from the seawater(E) the freezing point of seawater rich in oxygen-18 is slightly lower than that of seawater poor in oxygen- 1819. According to the passage. the large ice sheetstypical of glacial cycles are most directlycaused by(A) changes in the average temperatures
40、 in thetropics and over open oceans(B) prolonged increases in the rate at which waterevaporates from the oceans(C) extreme seasonal variations in temperature innorthern latitudes and in mountainous areas(D) steadily increasing precipitation rates innorthern latitudes and in mountainous areas(E) the
41、continual failure of snow to melt completely during the warmer seasons in northern latitudes and in mountainous areas20. It can be inferred from the passage that which of the following is true of the water locked in glaciers and ice sheets today?(A) It is richer in oxygen- 18 than frozen water was d
42、uring past glacial periods.(B) It is primarily located in the northern latitudes of the Earth.(C) Its ratio of oxygen isotopes is the same as that prevalent in seawater during the last ice age.(D) It is steadily decreasing in amount due to increased thawing during summer months.(E) In comparison wit
43、h seawater, it is relativelypoor in oxygen-18. 21. The discussion of the oxygen-isotope ratios in paragraph three of the passage suggests that which of the following must be assumed if the conclusions described in lines 49-58 are to be validly drawn?(A) The Earths overall annual precipitation rates
44、do not dramatically increase or decrease over time.(B) The various chemicals dissolved in seawater have had the same concentrations over the past million years.(C) Natural processes unrelated to ice formation do not result in the formation of large quantities of oxygen- 18. (D) Water molecules falli
45、ng as precipitation usually 练习题十246fall on the open ocean rather than on continents or polar ice packs.(E) Increases in global temperature do not increase the amount of water that evaporates from the oceans.22. The passage suggests that the scientists who first constructed a coherent. continuous pic
46、ture of past variations in marine-sediment isotope ratios did which of the following?(A) Relied primarily on the data obtained from the analysis of Emilianis core samples.(B) Combined data derived from the analysis of many different core samples.(C) Matched the data obtained by geologists with that
47、provided by astronomers.(D) Evaluated the isotope-ratio data obtained in several areas in order to eliminate all but the most reliable data.(E) Compared data obtained from core samples in many different marine environments with data samples derived from polar ice caps.23. The passage suggests that t
48、he scientists mentioned in line 8 considered their reconstruction of past astronomical cycles to be (A) unreliable because astronomical observations have been made and recorded for only a few thousand years(B) adequate enough to allow that reconstructions use in explaining glacial cycles if a record
49、 of the latter could be found(C) in need of confirmation through comparison with an independent source of information about astronomical phenomena(D) incomplete and therefore unusable for the purposes of explaining the causes of ice ages(E) adequate enough for scientists to support conclusively the idea that ice ages were caused by astronomical changesAlthough Victor Turners writings have proved fruitful for fields beyond anthropology, his defi