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INTENSIVE TOEFL

PREPARATION COURSE

Learning EnglishEverytime & Everywhere

TOEFL PREDICTION TEST


Bandung 2016
TOEFL Score Booster 2016©
Compiled By Englishforall.id Team

TOEFL Skills Handbook


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LISTENING
Question 1 C He will discuss the idea tomorrow.
A The gym doesn't open until tomorrow. D The next issue of the paper is already
B He's too busy to go to the gym. planned.
C There's a special project going on at the
gym. Question 9
D The gym is full of kids. A He'll have to pay a fine.
B He's taking good care of the book.
Question 2 C He returned the book to the library.
A Introduce the man to Jane soon. D He's worried about the book.
B Let the man have the book after Jane.
C Ask Jane what she thought of the book. Question 10
D Finish writing to Jane as soon as possible. A Take her to another exhibit.
B See the exhibit when it goes to another
Question 3 city.
A He knows about a larger apartment she C Go to the museum before it opens.
can rent. D Apply for a job at the museum.
B He's helping his neighbor move.
C It's difficult to get an apartment in his Question 11
building. A The bakery closed down a while ago.
D The woman should stay in her present B The bakery's business has doubled in a
building. year.
C She hasn't done much baking recently.
Question 4 D The bakery was busy last week.
A Check their flight schedule in the
morning. Question 12
B Change their vacation plans. A She wants the man to pay the cleaning
C Leave early for the airport. charge.
D Listen to the morning weather forecast. B She has done the same thing to someone
else.
Question 5 C She doesn't want another glass of orange
A Ask to see the man's driver's license. juice.
B Sell the man a new leather wallet. D She isn't upset about in the incident.
C Take a picture of the man.
D Show the man a wallet. Question 13
A He only wears blue jeans to exercise.
Question 6 B He hasn't bought new pants in a while.
A Go to the exhibit tonight. C He's gained weight lately.
B Stay at home and rest. D He used to be an athlete.
C Find out what time the exhibit opens.
D Help the man arrange his trip. Question 14
A Looking out the window.
Question 7 B Choosing a new desk.
A Offer to buy the car. C Building a bookcase.
B Find out how much the car costs. D Rearranging furniture.
C Try to sell his car before buying another
one. Question 15
D Write a check for the new car. A He hadn't heard about it.
B He's not enthusiastic about it.
Question 8 C He's curious to know how it works.
A He likes the woman's idea. D He hopes it has more than 500 channels.
B He can meet the woman in the afternoon.
Question 16 C The director likes his voice.
A He didn't get the clothes. D He won't be in the chorus.
B The store closed while he was cleaning
the car. Question 25
C He'll clean up when he has more time. A He disagrees with the woman.
D The clothes aren't ready. B He likes this king of weather.
C The weather doesn't interest him.
Question 17 D The weather is generally cooler and
A He has an ear infection. drier.
B He doesn't always listen.
C He's never missed a meeting. Question 26
D He had to attend another meeting. A Only some players spend a lot of time on
it.
Question 18 B It takes up a large amount of time.
A She hasn't seen John. C No one can be excused from it.
B She doesn't like John's new glasses. D Practice begins in a few minutes.
C John looks different.
D John has been away for quite a while. Question 27
A He doesn't have time to go to the movie.
Question 19 B He's taking the class as a diversion.
A Wait awhile to see if she feels better. C He wants to change his major.
B Go to bed early. D His chemistry class was canceled.
C Take some medicine.
D See a doctor. Question 28
A Read the article while she waits in line.
Question 20 B Have her copies made outside the library.
A He's eager to go to the auto show. C Use a different machine to make her
B He doesn't know a polite way to refuse copies.
the offer. D Look for a different magazine article.
C He'd like to repay the woman's kindness.
D He's sorry he can't accompany the Question 29
woman. A Help the woman with her resume.
B Fix the errors in the resume.
Question 21 C Send the resume right away.
A Use less soap. D Change his process of reviewing resumes.
B Rinse off the soap more thoroughly.
C Use a moisturizing cream. Question 30
D Switch brands of soap. A He's been putting off his work.
B He's been working harder than usual.
Question 22 C He should return the papers to the
A She didn't buy any bread. woman.
B The bread might not have been eaten. D He should take several days off.
C She ate the man's bread.
D The bread is in the refrigerator. Question 31
A The dances of a Native American dance
Question 23 troupe.
A She never gives people jewelry. B How Native American ceremonial dances
B She gives generous presents. are classified.
C She doesn't often give gifts. C Variations of a basic dance among Native
D She likes to receive expensive gifts. American tribes.
D How Native American artists are trained.
Question 24
A He missed the audition. Question 32
B He's been taking voice lessons. A To broadcast an awards ceremony.

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B To announce a meeting of the tribal B Ask questions frequently.
elders. C Vary tone, volume, and speed of speech.
C To celebrate the opening of a new D Limit the speech to fifteen minutes.
theater.
D To inform people about a performance. Question 40
A Always use a microphone.
Question 33 B Avoid large rooms.
A The elders must give approval to perform C Never vary the volume.
sacred dances. D Not to shout.
B The elders make sure the dances are
performed properly. Question 41
C The troupe is financed by the elders. A By pausing.
D The elders have substantial acting B By raising pitch.
experience. C By lowering register.
D By pointing to a chart.
Question 34
A The apartment is too far from the Question 42
campus. A To practice speaking slowly.
B The apartment needs a lot of repair work. B To record a voice from the television.
C She’s having trouble with the owner of C To play a speech by the professor.
the apartment. D To evaluate their own voices.
D Her roommate won’t share expenses.
Question 43
Question 35 A Overland transportation in the
A The women didn’t pay their rent on time. nineteenth century.
B She can’t find anyone to repair the B Historical aspects of mail delivery.
dishwasher. C Vehicles currently in use by the postal
C She had to buy a new dishwasher. service.
D Paula had some repairs done without her D The invention of the railroad.
permission.
Question 44
Question 36 A Boats used on rivers were extremely
A Find another apartment. crowded.
B Talk to Mr. Connors. B The current was too swift for boats to
C Ask Sam to repair the dishwasher. cross easily.
D Buy a new dishwasher for the owner. C Bridges were too weak to carry the
weight of a stagecoach.
Question 37 D Ferry service was infrequent.
A He has some knowledge of the law.
B He had the same problem. Question 45
C He knows the owner. A The era during which the railroad was
D He can bring a lawsuit against the owner. the dominant mode of transportation.
B The time during which mail was
Question 38 delivered by horse.
A Content of speech is more important than C The point at which airmail began to
tone of voice. constitute the bulk of United States mail.
B Voice quality has a strong effect on D The time period covered in the museum
listeners. exhibit.
C Effective speakers must use visual aids.
D Amplifying devices are essential in large Question 46
rooms. A Models of the first airplanes used for mail
delivery.
Question 39 B Replicas of railway mail cars.
A Speak very loudly. C Historical stamps.

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D Engravings of nineteenth-century D The natural colors of astronomical
railroad scenes. objects can be captured.

Question 47 Question 49
A They spend most of their time looking A To decrease the time it takes to
through telescopes. photograph objects.
B They are constantly analyzing data. B To avoid using a telescope.
C They often live near observatories. C To sharpen the color of what they
D They devote a lot of time to theoretical observe.
problems. D To obtain images of distant objects.

Question 48 Question 50
A The cost of equipment needed is reduced. A To spend less time at their telescopes.
B Fewer data need to be analyzed. B To overcome the problem of weak light.
C The images can be studied by different C To take more photographs.
astronomers. D To photograph astronomical objects
without using a telescope.

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STRUCTURE AND WRITTEN EXPRESSION
1. Indianas Lost River______underground for D while all the energy is
a distance of 22 miles. 8. In the Antarctic Ocean ____ plankton and
A travels crustacean forms of life.
B travelling
C to tavel A an abudance of
D it tavels B is an abudance of
2. The 1980 explosion of ____ the first C it is abudant
volcanic eruption in the continental D an abudance is
United States in over 60 years.
9. Flintlock muskets ____ sharp bayonets
A Mount St. Helens
were standard weapons during the
B was Mount St. Helens American Revolution.
C it was Mount St. Helens A tip with
D Mount St. Helens was B tipped with
3. Static electricity _____ one cloud to C the tips of
another or between clouds and the D were tipped with
ground creates lightning.
10. Benjamin Franklin believed that the
A flows from
turkey rather than the eagle _____ of the
B the flow from United States.
C flowing from A should become the symbol
D is flowing from B the symbol becomes
4. The model T car, introduced in 1908, C should symbolize becoming
_____ $850. D becoming the symbol
A the price was
11. _____ to occur in the Earth's crust, push-
B a price of pull and shake waves would be generated
C to be priced at simultaneously.
D was priced at A Were a break
5. _____ reacts with a chlorine atom, an B If a break
electon is transferred from the outer C A break was
shell of the sodium atom to the outer D If broken
shell of the chlorine atom.
12. Fossil fuels like coal, oil, and gas produce
A A sodium atom
carbon dioxide when _____
B When a sodium atom A Were a break
C For a sodium atom B If a break
D It is a sodium atom C A break was
6. In 1858, the site _____ was to become the D If broken
city of Denver was settled as a way
13. Not until Nellie Tayloe Ross was elected
station for outfitting gold prospectors.
governor of Wyoming in 1924 _____ as
A it
governor of a U.S state.
B of it A a woman served
C what B a woman serving
D of what C to serve a woman
7. The light from an electrical lamp includes D did a moman serve
many different wavelengts, _____ in a laser
14. The temperatures _____ take place vary
is concentrated on only one wavelength.
widely foe different materials.
A all the energy
A which melting and freezing
B it is all the energy
B at which melting and freezing
C while all the energy
C which they melt and freeze

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D at which they melt and freeze C they
15. In general, the cells of large animals and D protection
plants are only slightly larger than _____ 22. The Cro-Magnons entered the
plants and animals. area that is today Europe
A smaller and quickly eliminated or
B are smaller absorbed theirs Neaderthal predecess
C those smaller ors.
D are those of smaller A that is
16. The music on a compact disk (CD) B quickly
is record by lasers C theirs
A The music D predecessors
Ba
23. The Spanish introduced not only
C record horses and also cattle to the North
D by American continent.
17. Alaska has more acrive slaciers as the A introduced
rest ofthe inhabited world combined.
B and
A as
C cattle
B the rest
D continent
C inhabited
24. The best-known members of the
D combined
cabbage
18. Aristotle believed that everithing in the
vegetable group includes head cabbag
universe were composed of
four basic elements: earth, water, air,
e, cauliflower, broccoli, kale, collard,
and fire. and brussels sprouts.
A believed A best-known
B were B group
C basic C includes
D fire D head
19. In the cold climate of the far 25. White blood cells are the largest of
north, mosquito red blood cells and are more varied in
eggs may remains dormant from size and in shape.
autumn untul late june. A are
A the B the largest
B mosquito eggs C more varied
C remains D in size
D dormant 26. An hiccup is a spasmodic contrction
20. Passangers have ridden the first of the diaphragm, which leads to a
Ferris wheel at the Columbian massive intake of air.
Exposition in Chicago in 1893. A An
A Passangers B spasmodic
B have ridden C which
C wheel D intake
D in 27. To make a lithograph, an artist used a
21. One type of Australian frog lays up to flat stone of a kind that will soak
25 eggs at a time and then up oil and water.
swallows they for protection. A To make
A lays B used
B at a time C a kind

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D soak up A Typical
28. Alike a bae magnet, the Earth has two B such as
magnetic poles. C consists of
A Alike D swellings
B magnet 35. The common octopus lives lone in a
C magnetic den just big enough for its body.
D poles. A lone
29. Not until Harvard Collage B just
was founded in C big enough
1630 was there any collages in D its
America. 36. The vaccum
A until tube did an important contribution to
B founded the early growth of radio and
C was television.
D any A The
30. Antelopes are gregarious animals that B did
travel in herds, ranging C important
in amount from D growth
a few to several thousand. 37. St. Agustine, FLorida, founded in
A gregarious 1565 by Pedro Menedez,
B amount was razing 21 years later by Francis
C few Drae.
D several A founded
31. A supersonic aieplane can fly faster B by
than a speed od sound. C razing
A supersonic D later
B fly 38. A bimetallic thermometer relies the
C faster than different rates of expansion of two
Da types of metal, usually brass and
32. In 1821, Emma Willard opened copper.
officially the doors of the first school A bimetallic
in the united States to offer collage- B relies
level courses for woman. C rates
A In D usually
B opened officially 39. An ice crystal in the nuclei on which a
C to offer hailstone is built.
D for A crystal
33. The B nuclei
first gummed postage stamps issued in C on which
New York City in 1842. D built
A gummed
40. Tremendous flooding during the
B stamps
summer of 1993 left 8 milion acres of
C issued nine midwestern states inundated
D in and proved both expensivelyand
34. Typical long bone such as the deadly.
femur consists of a long shaft A flooding B left
with swellings at each end. C expensively D deadly

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READING
Line Question 1- 7
Hotels were among the earliest facilities that bound the United States together. They
were both creatures and creators of communities, as well symptoms of the frenetic
quest for community. Even in the first part of the nineteenth century, Americans were
already forming the habit of gathering from all corners of the nation for both public and
(5) private, business and pleasure, purposes. Conventions were the new occasions, and
hotels were distinctively American facilities making conventions possible. The first
national convention of a major party to choose a candidate for President (that of the
National Republican party, which met on December 12, 1831, and nominated Henry
Clay for President) was held in Baltimore, at a hotel that was then reputed to be the
(10) best in the country. The presence in Baltimore of Barnum's City Hotel, a six-story
building with two hundred apartments, helps explain why many other early national
political conventions were held there.
In the longer run, American hotels made other national conventions not only
possible but pleasant and convivial. The growing custom of regularly assembling from
(15) afar the representatives of all kinds of groups – not only for political conventions, but
also for commercial, professional, learned, and avocations ones – in turn supported
the multiplying hotels. By the mid-twentieth century, conventions accounted for over a
third of the yearly room occupancy of all hotels in the nation; about eighteen thousand
different conventions were held annually with a total attendance of about ten million
(20) persons.
Nineteenth-century American hotelkeepers, who were no Ionger the genial,
deferential "hosts" of the eighteenth-century European inn, became leading citizens.
Holding a large stake in the community, they exercised power to make it prosper. As
owners or managers of the local "palace of the public,” they were makers and shapers
(25) of a principal community attraction. Travelers from abroad were mildly shocked by this
high social position.
1. The word "bound" in line 1 is closest in C kinds
meaning to D representatives
A led
B protected 5. The word "it" in line 23 refers to
C tied A European inn
D strengthened B host
C community
2. The National Republican party is D public
mentioned in line 8 as an example of a
group 6. It can be inferred from the passage that
A from Baltimore early hotelkeepers in the United States were
B of learned people A active politicians
C owning a hotel B European immigrants
D holding a convention C professional builders
D influential citizens
3. The word "assembling" in line 14 is
closest in meaning to 7. Which of the following statements about
A announcing early American hotels is NOT mentioned in
B motivating the passage?
C gathering A Travelers from abroad did not enjoy
D contracting staying in them.
B Conventions were held in them.
4. The word "ones" in line 16 refers to C People used them for both business and
A hotels pleasure.
B conventions D They were important to the community
Line Questions 8-17
Beads were probably the first durable ornaments humans possessed, and the
intimate relationship they had with their owners is reflected in the fact that beads are
among the most common items found in ancient archaeological sites. In the past, as
today, men, women, and children adorned themselves with beads. In some cultures
(5) still, certain beads are often worn from birth until death, and then are buried with their
owners for the afterlife. Abrasion due to daily wear alters the surface features of beads,
and if they are buried for long, the effects of corrosion can further change their
appearance. Thus, interest is imparted to the bead both by use and the effects of time.
Besides their wearability, either as jewelry or incorporated into articles of attire,
(10) beads possess the desirable characteristics of every collectible: they are durable,
portable, available in infinite variety, and often valuable in their original cultural
context as well as in today's market. Pleasing to look at and touch, beads come in
shapes, colors, and materials that almost compel one to handle them and to sort them.
Beads are miniature bundles of secrets waiting to be revealed: their history,
(15) manufacture, cultural context, economic role, and ornamental use are all points of
information one hopes to unravel. Even the most mundane beads may have traveled
great distances and been exposed to many human experiences. The bead researcher
must gather information from many diverse fields. In addition to having to be a
generalist while specializing in what may seem to be a narrow field, the researcher is
(20) faced with the problem of primary materials that have little or no documentation. Many
ancient beads that are of ethnographic interest have often been separated from their
original cultural context.
The special attractions of beads contribute to the uniqueness of bead research. While
often regarded as the "small change of civi lizations,” beads are a part of every culture,
(25) and they can often be used to date archaeological sites and to designate the degree of
mercantile, technological, and cultural sophistication.

8. What is the main subject of the passage? 12. According to the passage, all of the
A Materials used in making beads following are factors that make people want
B How beads are made to touch beads EXCEPT the
C The reasons for studying beads A shape
D Different types of beads B color
C material
9. The word "adorned" in line 4 is closest in D odor
meaning to
A protected 13. The word "unravel" in line 16 is closest
B decorated in meaning to
C purchased A communicate
D enjoyed B transport
C improve
10. The word "attire" in line 9 is Closest in D discover
meaning to
A ritual 14. The word "mundane" in line 16 is
B importance closest in meaning to
C clothing A carved
D history B beautiful
C ordinary
11. All of the following are given as D heavy
characteristics of collectible objects EXCEPT
A durability 15. It is difficult to trace the history of
B portability certain ancient beads because they
C value A are small in size
D scarcity B have been buried underground
C have been moved from their original
locations
D are frequently lost

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16. Knowledge of the history of some beads 17. Where in the passage does the author
may be useful in the studies done by which describe why the appearance beads may
of the following? change?
A Anthropologist A Lines 3-4
B Agricultural experts B Lines 6-8
C Medical researchers C Lines 12-13
D Economists D Lines 20-22

Line Questions 18-31


In the world of birds, bill design is a prime example of evolutionary fine-tuning.
Shorebirds such as oystercatchers use their bills to pry open the tightly sealed shells of
their prey; hummingbirds have stiletto-like bills to probe the deepest nectar-bearing
flowers; and kiwis smell out earthworms thanks to nostrils located at the tip of their
(5) beaks. But few birds are more intimately tied to their source of sustenance than are
crossbills. Two species of these finches, named for the way the upper and lower parts
of their bills cross, rather than meet in the middle, reside in the evergreen forests of
North America and feed on the seeds held within the cones of coniferous trees.
The efficiency of the bill is evident when a crossbill locates a cone. Using a lateral
(10) motion of its lower mandible, the bird separates two overlapping scales on the cone and
exposes the seed. The crossed mandibles enable the bird to exert a powerful biting
force at the bill tips, which is critical for maneuvering them between the scales and
spreading the scales apart. Next, the crossbill snakes its long tongue into the gap and
draws out the seed. Using the combined action of the bill and tongue, the bird cracks
(15) open and discards the woody seed covering and swallows the nutritious inner kernel.
This whole process takes but a few seconds and is repeated hundreds of times a day.
The bills of different crossbill species and subspecies vary – some are stout and
deep, others more slender and shallow. As a rule, large-billed crossbills are better at
securing seeds from large cones, while small-billed crossbills are more deft at
(20) removing the seeds from small, thin-scaled cones. Moreover, the degree to which cones
are naturally slightly open or tightly closed helps determine which bill design is the
best.
One anomaly is the subspecies of red crossbill known as the Newfoundland
crossbill. This bird has a large, robust bill, yet most of Newfoundland's conifers have
small cones, the same kind of cones that the slender-billed white-wings rely on.

18. What does the passage mainly discuss? 20. Why does the author mention
A The importance of conifers in evergreen oystercatchers, hummingbirds, and kiwis in
forests lines 2-4?
B The efficiency of the bill of the crossbill A They are examples of birds that live in
C The variety of food available in a forest the forest.
D The different techniques birds use to B Their beaks are similar to the beak of the
obtain food crossbill.
C They illustrate the relationship between
19. Which of the following statements best bill design and food supply.
represents the type of “evolutionary fine- D They are closely related to the crossbill.
tuning" mentioned in line 1?
A Different shapes of bills have evolved 21. Crossbills are a type of
depending on the available food supply. A shorebird
B White-wing crossbars have evolved from B hummingbird
red crossbills. C kiwi
C Newfoundland's conifers have evolved D finch
small cones.
D Several subspecies of crossbills have
evolved from two species.

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22. Which of the following most closely
resembles the bird described in lines 6-8? 26. The word "others" in line 18 refers to
A A bills
B species
C seeds
D cones

27. The word "deft" in line 19 is closest in


meaning to
A hungry
B
B skilled
C tired
D pleasant

28. The word "robust" in line 24 is closest in


meaning to
C A strong
B colorful
C unusual
D sharp

29. In what way is the Newfoundland


D crossbill an anomaly?
A It is larger than the other crossbill
species.
B It uses a different technique to obtain
food.
C The size of its bill does not fit the size of
its food source.
23. The word "which" in line 12 refers to D It does not live in evergreen forests.
A seed
B bird 30. The final paragraph of the passage will
C force probably continue with a discussion of
D bill A other species of forest birds
B the fragile ecosystem of newfoundland
24. The word "gap" in line 13 is closest in C what mamals live in the forests of North
meaning to America
A opening D how the newfoundland crossbill survives
B flower with a large bill
C mouth
D tree 31. where in the passage does the author
desribe how a crossbill removes a seed
25. The word "discards" in line 15 is closest from its cone?
in meaning to A The first paragraph
A eats B The second paragraph
B breaks C The third paragraph
C finds out D The fourth paragraph
D gets rid of

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Line Questions 32-38
If you look closely at some of the early copies of the Declaration or Independence,
beyond the flourished signature of John Hancock and the other fifty-five men who
signed it, you will also find the name of one woman, Mary Katherine Goddard. It was
she, a Baltimore printer, who published the first official copies of the Declaration, the
(5) first copies that included the names of its signers and therefore heralded the support of
all thirteen colonies.
Mary Goddard first got into printing at the age of twenty-four when her brother
opened a printing shop in Providence, Rhode Island, in 1762. When he proceeded to
get into trouble with his partners and creditors. it was Mary Goddard and her mother
(10) who were left to run the shop. In 1765 they began publishing the Providence Gazette, a
weekly newspaper. Similar problems seemed to follow her brother as he opened
businesses in Philadelphia and again in Baltimore. Each time Ms. Goddard was
brought in to run the newspapers. After starting Baltimore's first newspaper, The
Maryland Journal, in 1773, her brother went broke trying to organize a colonial postal
service. While he was in debtor's prison, Mary Katherine Goddard's name appeared on
(15) the newspaper's masthead for the first time.
When the Continental Congress fled there from Philadelphia in 1776, it
commissioned Ms. Goddard to print the first official version of the Declaration of
Independence in January 1777. After printing the documents, she herself paid the post
(20) riders to deliver the Declaration throughout the colonies.
During the American Revolution, Mary Goddard continued to publish Baltimore's
only newspaper, which one historian claimed was "second to none among the
colonies." She was also the city's Postmaster from 1775 to 1789 – appointed by
Benjamin Franklin – and is considered to be the first woman to hold a federal position.

32. With which of the following subjects is A was appointed by Benjamin Franklin
the passage mainly concerned? B signed the Declaration of Independence
A The accomplishments of a female C took over her brother's printing shop
publisher D moved to Baltimore
B The weaknesses of the newspaper
industry 36. The word "there" in line 17 refers to
C The rights of a female publisher A the colonies
D The publishing system in colonial B the print shop
America C Baltimore
D Providence
33. Mary Goddard's name appears on the
Declaration of Independence because 37. It can be inferred from the passage that
A she helped write the original document Mary Goddard was
B she published the document A an accomplished businesswoman
C she paid to have the document printed B extremely wealthy
D her brother was in prison C a member of the Continental congress
D a famous writer
34. The word "heralded" in line 5 is closest
in meaning to 38.The word "position" in line 24 is closest
A influenced in meaning to
B announced A job
C rejected B election
D ignored C document
D location
35. According to the passage, Mary Goddard
first became involved in publishing when
she

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Line Question 39-50
Galaxies are the major building blocks of the universe. A galaxy is a giant family of
many millions of stars, and it is held together by its own gravitational field. Most of the
material universe is organized into galaxies of stars, together with gas and dust.
There are three main types of galaxy: spiral, elliptical, and irregular. The Milky
(5) Way is a spiral galaxy: a flattish disc of star with two spiral arms emerging from its
central nucleus. About one-quarter of all galaxies have this shape. Spiral galaxies are
well supplied with the interstellar gas in which new stars form; as the rotating spiral
pattern sweeps around the galaxy it compresses gas and dust, triggering the formation
of bright young stars in its arms. The elliptical galaxies have a symmetrical elliptical or
(10) spheroidal shape with no obvious structure. Most of their member stars are very old
and since ellipticals are devoid of interstellar gas, no new stars are forming in them.
The biggest and brightest galaxies in the universe are ellipticals with masses of about
1013 times that of the Sun; these giants may frequently be sources of strong radio
emission, in which case they are called radio galaxies. About two-thirds of all galaxies
(15) are elliptical. Irregular galaxies comprise about one-tenth of all galaxies and they come
in many subclasses.
Measurement in space is quite different from measurement on Earth. Some
terrestrial distances can be expressed as intervals of time: the time to fly from one
continent to another or the time it takes to drive to work, for example. By comparison
(20) with these familiar yardsticks, the distances to the galaxies are incomprehensibly large,
but they too are made more manageable by using a time calibration, in this case, the
distance that light travels in one year. On such a scale the nearest giant spiral galaxy,
the Andromeda galaxy, is two million light years away. The most distant luminous
objects seen by telescopes are probably ten thousand million light years away. Their
(25) light was already halfway here before the Earth even formed. The light from the nearby
Virgo galaxy set out when reptiles still dominated the animal world.expressed.

39. The word "major" in line 1 is closest in 43. The word "symmetrical" in line 9 is
meaning to closest in meaning to
A intense A proportionally balanced
B principal B commonly seen
C huge C typically large
D unique D steadily growing

40. What does the second paragraph mainly 44. The word "obvious" in line 10 is closest
discuss? in meaning to
A The Milky Way A discovered
B Major categories of galaxies B apparent
C How elliptical galaxies are formed C understood
D Differences between irregular and spiral D simplistic
galaxies
45. According to the passage, which of the
41. The word "which" in line 7 refers to following is NOT true of elliptical galaxies?
A dust A They are the largest galaxies.
B gas B They mostly contain old stars.
C pattern C They contain a high amount of
D galaxy interstellar gas.
D They have a spherical shape.
42. According to the passage, new stars are
formed in spiral galaxies due to 46. Which of the following characteristics of
A an explosion of gas radio galaxies is mentioned in the passage?
B the compression of gas and dust A They are a type of elliptical galaxy.
C the combining of old stars B They are usually too small to be seen
D strong radio emissions with a telescope.

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C They are closely related to irregular 49. Why does the author mention the Virgo
galaxies. galaxy and Andromeda galaxy in the third
D They are not as bright as spiral galaxies. paragraph?
A To describe the effect that distance has
47. Which precentage og galaxies is on visibility
irreguler? B To compare the ages of two relatively
A 10% young galaxies
B 25% C To emphasize the vast distances of
C 50% galaxies from earth
D 75% D To explain why certain galaxies cannot be
seen by a telescope
48. The word “they” in line 21 refers to
A intervals 50. The word “dominate” in line 26 is coset
B yardsticks meaning to
C distances A threatened
D galaxies B replaced
C were developing in
D were prevalent in

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