Flyingoverseas 版 (精华区)
发信人: bonjovi (bonjovi), 信区: Flyingoverseas
标 题: GRE最新练习题8
发信站: 哈工大紫丁香 (2001年08月31日15:31:47 星期五), 站内信件
SECTION 1
Time -30 minutes
18 Questions
1. While many Russian composers of the
nineteenth century contributed to an emerging
national style, other composers did not----
idiomatic Russian musical elements, ---- instead
the traditional musical vocabulary of Western
European Romanticism.
(A) utilize ..rejecting
(B) incorporate.. preferring
(C) exclude.. avoiding
(D) repudiate.. expanding
(E) esteem.. disdaining
2. Because the painter Albert Pinkham Ryder was
obsessed with his ----perfection, he was rarely
----a painting, creating endless variations of a
scene on one canvas, one on top of another.
(A) quest for.. satisfied with
(B) insistence on .. displeased with
(C) contempt for.. disconcerted by
(D) alienation from.. immersed in
(E) need for.. concerned with
3. Objectively set standards can serve as a ----for
physicians, providing them ----unjustified
malpractice claims.
(A) trial.. evidence of
(B) model.. experience with
(C) criterion.. reasons for
(D) test.. questions about
(E) safeguard.. protection from
4. In spite of ----reviews in the press, the
production of her play was ----almost certain
oblivion by enthusiastic audiences whose
acumen was greater than that of the critics.
(A) lukewarm.. condemned to
(B) scathing.. exposed to
(C) lackluster.. rescued from
(D) sensitive.. reduced to
(E) admiring.. insured against
5. The passions of love and pride are often found
in the same individual, but having little in
common, they mutually ----, not to say destroy,
each other.
(A) reinforce
(B) annihilate
(C) enhance
(D) weaken
(E) embrace
6. The necessity of establishing discrete categories
for observations frequently leads to attempts to
make absolute ----when there are in reality
only----.
(A) analyses.. hypotheses
(B) correlations.. digressions
(C) distinctions.. gradations
(D) complications.. ambiguities
(E) conjectures.. approximations
7. A unique clay disk found at the Minoan site of
Phaistos is often ----as the earliest example of
printing by scholars who have defended its claim
to this status despite equivalent claims put
forward for other printing artifacts.
(A) questioned
(B) overlooked
(C) adduced
(D) conceded
(E) dismissed
8. EXEMPT: LIABILITY::
(A) flout: authority
(B) bestow: reward
(C) permit: request
(D) restrain: disorder
(E) pardon: penalty
9. FULL-BODIED: FLAVOR::
(A) penetrating: vision
(B) humorous: character
(C) salacious: language
(D) nostalgic: feeling
(E) resonant: sound
10. LEGACY: PREDECESSOR::
(A) gift: donor
(B) gratuity: service
(C) contribution: charity
(D) receipt: customer
(E) loan: collector
11. HERO: ADMIRABLE::
(A) critic: capricious
(B) braggart: surly
(C) eccentric: unconventional
(D) anarchist: powerful
(E) enemy: immoral
12. GALVANIZE: STIMULATE::
(A) agitate: occlude
(B) incubate: humidify
(C) sterilize: separate
(D) irrigate: flush
(E) purify: amalgamate
13. MANIFEST: PERCEIVE::
(A) porous: tear
(B) renovated: improve
(C) doubtful: assess
(D) brittle: break
(E) elite: qualify
14. LOOSE: CONFINEMENT::
(A) forgive: injury
(B) promulgate: rule
(C) disabuse: misconception
(D) redress: allegation
(E) disengage: independence
15. BLANDISHMENT: COAX::
(A) prevarication: deceive
(B) reverie: dream
(C) persuasion: coerce
(D) enticement: impoverish
(E) explanation: mislead
16. CONVULSION: CONTRACTION::
(A) aggression: attack
(B) sulkiness: punishment
(C) persistence: acquiescence
(D) frenzy: emotion
(E) indifference: greeting
Much of the research on hallucinogenic drugs such
as LSD has focused on the neurotransmitter serotonin,
a chemical that when released from a presynaptic
serotonin-secreting neuron causes the transmission of
(5) a nerve impulse across a synapse to an adjacent
postsynaptic, or target, neuron. There are two major
reasons for this emphasis. First, it was discovered
early on that many of the major hallucinogens have a
molecular structure similar to that of serotonin. In
(10) addition, animal studies of brain neurochemistry
following administration of hallucinogens invariably
reported changes in serotonin levels.
Early investigators correctly reasoned that the
structural similarity to the serotonin molecule might
(15) imply that LSD's effects are brought about by an
action on the neurotransmission of serotonin in the
brain. Unfortunately, the level of technical expertise
in the field of brain research was such that this
hypothesis had to be tested on peripheral tissue
(20) (tissue outside the brain). Two different groups of
scientists reported that LSD powerfully blockaded
serotonin's action. Their conclusions were quickly
challenged, however. We now know that the action
of a drug at one site in the body does not necessarily
(25) correspond to the drug's action at another site,
especially when one site is in the brain and the other
is not.
By the 1960's, technical advances permitted the
direct testing of the hypothesis that LSD and related
(30) hallucinogens act by directly suppressing the activity
of serotonin-secreting neurons themselves-the so-
called presynaptic hypothesis. Researchers reasoned
that if the hllucinogenic drugs act by suppressing the
activity of serotonin-secreting neurons, then drugs
(35) administered after these neurons had been destroyed
should have no effect on behavior, because the
system would already be maximally suppressed.
Contrary to their expectations, neuron destruction
enhanced the effect of LSD and related hallucinogens
(40) on behavior. Thus, hallucinogenic drugs apparently
do not act directly on serotonin-secreting neurons.
However, these and other available data do support
an alternative hypothesis, that LSD and related drugs
act directly at receptor sites on serotonin target
(45) neurons (the postsynaptic hypothesis). The fact that
LSD elicits "serotonin syndrome" -that is, causes
the same kinds of behaviors as does the adminis-
tration of serotonin-in animals whose brains are
depleted of serotonin indicates that LSD acts directly
(50)on serotonin receptors, rather than indirectly through
the release of stores of serotonin. The enhanced effect
of LSD reported after serotonin depletion could be
due to a proliferation of serotonin receptor sites on
serotonin target neurons. This phenomenon often
(55) follows neuron destruction or neurotransmitter
depletion; the increase in the number of receptor sites
appears to be a compensatory response to decreased
input. Significantly, this hypothesis is supported by
data from a number of different laboratories.
17. According to the passage, which of the
following is one of the primary factors that led
researchers studying hallucinogenic drugs to
focus on serotonin?
(A) The suppression of the activity of serotonin-
secreting neurons by the administration of
hallucinogens
(B) The observed similarities in the chemical
structures of serotonin and hallucinogens
(C) The effects the administration of
hallucinogens has on serotonin production
in the human brain
(D) Serotonin-induced changes in the effects of
hallucinogens on behavior
(E) Hallucinogen-induced changes in the effects
of serotonin on behavior
18. It can be inferred that researchers abandoned the
presynaptic hypothesis because
(A) a new and more attractive hypothesis was
suggested
(B) no research was reported that supported the
hypothesis
(C) research results provided evidence to
counter the hypothesis
(D) the hypothesis was supported only by
studies of animals and not by studies of
human beings
(E) the level of technical expertise in the field of
brain research did not permit adequate
testing of the hypothesis
19. Which of the following best expresses the main
idea of the passage?
(A) Research has suggested that the
neurotransmitter serotonin is responsible for
the effects of hallucinogenic drogs on the
brain and on behavior.
(B) Researchers have spent an inadequate amount
of time developing theories concerning the way
in which the effects of hallucinogenic drugs occur.
(C) Research results strongly suggest that
hallucinogenic drugs create their effects by
acting on the serotonin receptor sites located
on target neurons in the brain.
(D) Researchers have recently made valuable
discoveries concerning the effects of
depleting the amount of serotonin in the
brain.
(E) Researchers have concluded that hallucinogenic
drugs suppress the activity of serotonin-secreting
neurons.
20. The research described in the passage is
primarily concerned with answering which of
the following questions?
(A) How can researchers control the effects that
LSD has on behavior?
(B) How are animals' reactions to LSD different
from those of human beings?
(C) What triggers the effects that LSD has on
human behavior?
(D) What technical advances would permit
researchers to predict more accurately the
effects of LSD on behavior?
(E) What relationship does the suppression of
neuron activity have to the occurrence of
"serotonin syndrome"?
21. Which of the following best defines "serotonin
syndrome" (line 46) as the term is used in the
passage?
(A) The series of behaviors, usually associated
with the administration of serotonin, that also
occurs when LSD is administered to animals
whose brains are depleted of serotonin
(B) The series of behaviors, usually associated
with the administration of LSD, that also
occurs when the amount of serotonin in the
brain is reduced
(C) The maximal suppression of neuron activity
that results from the destruction of serotonin-
secreting neurons
(D) The release of stores of serotonin from
serotonin-secreting neurons in the brain
(E) The proliferation of serotonin receptor sites
that follows depletion of serotonin supplies in
the brain
22. Which of the following best describes the
organization of the argument that the author of
the passage presents in the last two paragraphs?
(A) Two approaches to testing a hypothesis are
described, and the greater merits of one
approach are indicated.
(B) The assumptions underlying two hypotheses
are outlined, and evidence for and against
each hypothesis is discussed.
(C) A phenomenon is described, and hypotheses
concerning its occurrence are considered and
rejected.
(D) The reasoning behind a hypothesis is
summarized, evidence supporting the
hypothesis is presented, and research that
counters the supporting evidence is
described.
(E) A hypothesis is discussed, evidence
undermining the hypothesis is revealed, and a
further hypothesis based on the undermining
evidence is explained
23. The author's attitude toward early researchers'
reasoning concerning the implications of
similarities in the structures of serotonin and
LSD molecules can best be described as one of
(A) complete agreeement
(B) reluctant support
(C) subtle condescension
(D) irreverent dismissal
(E) strong opposition
When literary periods are defined on the basis of
men's writing, women's writing must be forcibly
assimilated into an irrelevant grid: a Renaissance that
is not a renaissance for women, a Romantic period in
(5) which women played very little part, a modernism
with which women conflict. Simultaneously, the
history of women's writing has been suppressed,
leaving large, mysterious gaps in accounts of the
development of various genres. Feminist criticism is
(10) beginning to correct this situation. Margaret Anne
Doody, for example, suggests that during "the period
between the death of Richardson and the appearance
of the novels of Scott and Austen," which has "been
regarded as a dead period." Late-eighteenth-century
(15) women writers actually developed "the paradigm
for women's fiction of the nineteenth century-
something hardly less than the paradigm of the
nineteenth-century novel itself." Feminist critics have
also pointed out that the twentieth-century writer
(20) Virginia Woolf belonged to a tradition other than
modernism and that this tradition surfaces in her
work precisely where criticism has hitherto found
obscurities, evasions, implausibilities, and
imperfections.
24. It can be inferred from the passage that the
author views the division of literature into
periods based on men's writing as an approach
that
(A) makes distinctions among literary periods
ambiguous
(B) is appropriate for evaluating only premodern
literature
(C) was misunderstood until the advent of
feminist criticism
(D) provides a valuable basis from which
feminist criticism has evolved
(E) obscures women's contributions to literature
25. The passage suggests which of the following
about Virginia Woolf's work?
Ⅰ. Nonfeminist criticism of it has been flawed.
Ⅱ. Critics have treated it as part of modernism.
Ⅲ. It is based on the work of late-eighteenth-
century women writers.
(A) Ⅰonly
(B) Ⅱonly
(C) Ⅰand Ⅱ only
(D) Ⅱand Ⅲ only
(E) Ⅰ, Ⅱand Ⅲ
26. The author quotes Doody most probably in order
to illustrate
(A) a contribution that feminist criticism can
make to literary criticism
(B) a modernist approach that conflicts with
women's writing
(C) writing by a woman which had previously
been ignored
(D) the hitherto overlooked significance of Scott's
and Austen's novels
(E) a standard system of defining literary periods
27. The passage provides information that answers
which of the following questions?
(A) In what tradition do feminist critics usually
place Virginia Woolf?
(B) What are the main themes of women's fiction
of the nineteenth century?
(C) What events motivated the feminist
reinterpretation of literary history?
(D) How has the period between Richardson's
death and Scott's and Ansten's novels
traditionally been regarded by critics?
(E) How was the development of the nineteenth-
century novel affected by women's fiction in
the same century?
28. GROUNDED:
(A) attendant
(B) flawless
(C) effective
(D) aloft
(E) noteworthy
29. DISCHARGE:
(A) retreat
(B) hire
(C) insist
(D) circulate
(E) pause
30. INTERMITTENT:
(A) compatible
(B) constant
(C) neutral
(D) unadulterated
(E) indispensable
31. APT:
(A) exceptionally ornate
(B) patently absurd
(C) singularly destructive
(D) extremely inappropriate
(E) fundamentally insensitive
32. JUSTIFY:
(A) misjudge
(B) ponder
(C) terminate
(D) argue against
(E) select from
33. TEDIOUS:
(A) intricate
(B) straightforward
(C) conspicuous
(D) entertaining
(E) prominent
34. INTEGRAL:
(A) profuse
(B) superfluous
(C) meritorious
(D) neutral
(E) displaced
35. COWED:
(A) unencumbered
(B) untired
(C) unversed
(D) unworried
(E) undaunted
36. CONCORD:
(A) continuance
(B) severance
(C) dissension
(D) complex relationship
(E) unrealistic hypothesis
37. FRIABLE:
(A) substantial
(B) inflexible
(C) easily contained
(D) slow to accelerate
(E) not easily crumbled
38. DERACINATE:
(A) illuminate
(B) quench
(C) amplify
(D) polish
(E) plant
SECTION 2
Time -30 minutes
25 Questions
Questions 1-7
A developer is assigning six rectangular building lots
in an industrial park to six companies-Handicorp,
Instantype, Kleentek, Linostyle, Messagex, and
Nanoware. Each company will be assigned a dif-
ferent one of the six lots, which are arranged in two
blocks-block 700 and block 800. Each block
includes three lots, numbered consecutively lot 1
through lot 3. Within each block, lot 1 is adjacent to
lot 2 and lot 2 is adjacent to lot 3; no other lots are
adjacent to each other. In assigning lots, the develo-
per will obey the following restrictions:
Instantype's lot cannot be in the same block as
Linostyle's lot.
Linostyle's lot must be adjacent to Messagex' lot.
Messagex' lot cannot be lot 2 of either block.
Nanoware's lot cannot be adjacent to
Handicorp's lot.
1. Which of the following is an acceptable
assignment of companies to block 700, listed
from lot 1 through lot 3?
(A) Instantype, Handicorp, Nanoware
(B) Instantype, Linostyle, Messagex
(C) Linostyle, Messagex, Kleentek
(D) Messagex, Linostyle, Nanoware
(E) Nanoware, Instantype, Messagex
2. If Messagex is assigned a lot in block 800, which
of the following must be assigned a lot in block
700?
(A) Handicorp
(B) Instantype
(C) Kleentek
(D) Linostyle
(E) Nanoware
3. If Handicorp and Nanoware are each assigned a
lot in block 700, which of the following must be
true?
(A) Instantype is assigned lot 2 in block 700.
(B) Instantype is assigned lot 3 in block 700.
(C) Kleentek is assigned lot 1 in block 800.
(D) Linostyle is assigned lot 3 in block 800.
(E) Messagex is assigned lot 1 in block 800.
4. If Nanoware is assigned lot 2 in block 700, which
of the following is a pair of companies that must
be assigned lots that are adjacent to each other?
(A) Handicorp and Instantype
(B) Handicorp and Messagex
(C) Instantype and Kleentek
(D) Kleentek and Nanoware
(E) Messagex and Nanoware
5. If Kleentek is assigned lot 2 in block 800, which
of the following can be true?
(A) Handicorp is assigned a lot that is adjacent to
the lot assigned to Instantype.
(B) Messagex is assigned a lot that is adjacent to
the lot assigned to Nanoware.
(C) Instantype is assigned a lot on block 700.
(D) Linostyle is assigned lot 1 on block 800.
(E) Messagex is assigned lot 1 on block 700.
6. If Instantype and Handicorp are assigned lots 1
and 2, respectively, in block 700, which of the
following must be true?
(A) Kleentek is assigned lot 3 on block 700.
(B) Linostyle is assigned lot 3 on block 700.
(C) Messagex is assigned lot 1 on block 800.
(D) Nanoware is assigned lot 3 on block 700.
(E) Nanoware is assigned lot 1 on block 800.
7. If Linostyle and Kleentek are assigned lots that
are on the same block as each other, which of the
following must be true?
(A) Handicorp is assigned lot 2 of one of the blocks.
(B) Instantype is assigned lot 2 of one of the blocks.
(C) Kleentek is assigned lot 1 of one of the blocks.
(D) Linostyle is assigned lot 1 of one of the blocks.
(E) Messagex is assigned lot 3 of one of the blocks.
8. Auditor from Acme Industries: Last week at
Acme Bakery, about six percent of the pastries
baked during the night shift were found to be
imperfect, but no imperfect pastries were found
among those baked during the day shift. Pastries
are inspected during the same shift in which they
are baked, so clearly the night-shift quality control
inspectors were more alert, despite their nighttime
work hours, than the dayshift quality control
inspectors.
The argument depends on the assumption that
(A) at least some imperfect pastries were baked
during the day shift at Acme Bakery last
week
(B) not all of the pastries that the night-shift
quality control inspectors judged to be
imperfect were in fact imperfect
(C) the night-shift quality control inspectors
received more training in quality control
procedures than did the day-shift quality
control inspectors
(D) in a normal week, fewer than six percent of
the pastries baked during the night shift at
Acme Bakery are found to be imperfect
(E) there are only two shifts per day at Acme
Bakery, a day shift and a night shift
9. Spiders of many species change color to match
the pigmentation of the flowers they sit on. The
insects preyed on by those spiders, unlike human
beings, possess color discrimination so acute that
they can readily see the spiders despite the
seeming camouflage. Clearly, then, it must be in
evading their own predators that the spiders'
color changes are useful to them.
Which of the following, if true, most strengthens
the argument?
(A) Among the animals that feed on color-
changing spiders are a few species of bat,
which find their prey through sound echoes.
(B) Certain animals that feed on color-changing
spiders do so only sparingly in order to keep
from ingesting harmful amounts of spider
venom.
(C) Color-changing spiders possess color
discrimination that is more acute than that of
spiders that lack the ability to change color.
(D) Color-changing spiders spin webs that are
readily seen by the predators of those spiders.
(E) The color discrimination of certain birds that
feed on color-changing spiders is no more
acute than that of human beings.
10. Which of the following most logically completes
the argument below?
Each year every employee of SAI Corporation
must enroll in one of the two health insurance
plans offered by SAI. One plan requires a
sizable monetary contribution from employees;
the other plan is paid for entirely by SAI. Many
SAI employees enroll in the plan requiring
employee contributions. This fact does not show
that they feel that this plan's benefits are
superior to those provided by the plan requiring
no employee contribution since----.
(A) the plan that requires an employee contribution
costs and enrolled employee significantly less
per year than do typical health insurance
plans offered by corporations other than SAI
(B) only SAI employees who have worked for
SAI for at least fifteen years are eligible to
enroll in the plan paid for entirely by SAI
(C) the two health insurance plans currently
offered by SAI are substantially the same
plans SAI has offered for the past ten years
(D) most of the SAI employees enrolled in the
plan paid for entirely by SAI are under 50
years old
(E) both plans offered by SAI provide benefits
not only for employees of SAI but also for
children and spouses of enrolled employees
Questions 11-17
Frank, Greg, Julia, Laura, Magda, and Nick will be
the speakers at an all-day meeting of a local
astronomy club. Each speaker will speak once, for
one hour, with no other speakers in that hour. Three
speakers will be scheduled to speak before lunch
and three will be scheduled to speak after lunch.
The following conditions must be observed in
planning the schedule for the meeting:
Greg must speak before lunch.
There must be exactly one speaker scheduled
to speak between Magda and Nick, whether
or not Magda is earlier in the order of
speakers than Nick, and whether or not lunch
intervenes between Magda's and Nick's
speeches.
Frank must speak either first or third.
11. Which of the following is an acceptable order of
the speakers from first to last?
1 2 3 4 5 6
(A) Frank Greg Magda Nick Julia Laura
(B) Frank Julia Greg Nick Magda Laura
(C) Greg Julia Frank Nick Laura Magda
(D) Julia Laura Frank Magda Greg Nick
(E) Nick Julia Greg Frank Magda Laura
12. If Julia is the first speaker, which of the
following must be the second speaker?
(A) Frank
(B) Greg
(C) Laura
(D) Magda
(E) Nick
13. If Julia speaks fourth, the third speaker must be
either
(A) Frank or Greg
(B) Frank or Magda
(C) Greg or Laura
(D) Laura or Nick
(E) Magda or Nick
14. If Laura speaks in the morning and Magda is
not the sixth speaker, which of the following
must be the next speaker after Magda?
(A) Frank
(B) Greg
(C) Julia
(D) Laura
(E) Nick
15. If lunch intervenes between Magda's and
Nick's speeches, which of the following lists all
the speakers who can be the speaker scheduled
between Magda and Nick?
(A) Frank, Greg
(B) Greg, Julia
(C) Julia, Laura
(D) Frank, Greg, Julia
(E) Frank, Greg, Julia, Laura
16. If Julia is scheduled to speak at some time before
Frank, in which of the following positions in the
order of speakers can Nick be scheduled to speak?
(A) First
(B) Second
(C) Third
(D) Fourth
(E) Fifth
17. If Laura is scheduled to be the next speaker after
Julia, how many speakers in total must be scheduled
to speak before Laura?
(A) One
(B) Two
(C) Three
(D) Four
(E) Five
Questions 18-22
A kennel worker must both walk and groom each of three dogs-Lucky, Muffin
, and Rover. The worker is scheduling these activities into exactly six time
slots-slot 1 through slot 6. During each time slot, the worker will be sche
duled to perform only one activity, either walking or grooming, with only on
e dog. The following conditions also apply to the schedule:
Neither Lucky nor Muffin can be walked until both of them have been groome
d.
Rover must be walked at some time before being groomed.
The worker cannot perform the same activity, either walking or grooming, f
or more than two consecutive time
slots.
18. Which of the following is an acceptable schedule for the first four time
slots?
Slot 1 Slot 2 Slot 3 Slot 4
(A) Grooming Lucky Grooming Muffin Walking Lucky Grooming Rover
(B) Grooming Lucky Walking Muffin Walking Lucky Grooming Muffin
(C) Grooming Muffin Walking Rover Grooming Lucky Walking Rover
(D) Grooming Muffin Walking Rover Grooming Lucky Walking Muffin
(E) Walking Rover Grooming Muffin Groming Rover Grooming Lucky
19. The earliest time slot for which Muffin can be
scheduled for walking is slot
(A) 2 (B) 3 (C) 4 (D) 5 (E) 6
20. If Rover is scheduled for walking in the time
slot immediately before the time slot for which
Muffin is scheduled for walking, then which
of the following must be scheduled for slot 5?
(A) Grooming Lucky
(B) Grooming Rover
(C) Walking Lucky
(D) Walking Muffin
(E) Walking Rover
21. If Lucky is scheduled for walking in the time
slot immediately before the time slot for which
Rover is scheduled for walking, then which of
the following must be true?
(A) Grooming is scheduled for slot 3.
(B) Walking is scheduled for slot 2.
(C) Walking is scheduled for slot 6.
(D) Lucky is scheduled for grooming in slot 1.
(E) Muffin is scheduled for walking in slot 4.
22. If Rover is scheduled for walking in slot 1,
which of the following must be true?
(A) Grooming is scheduled for slot 5.
(B) Walking is scheduled for slot 2.
(C) Walking is scheduled for slot 4.
(D) Muffin is scheduled for grooming in slot 3.
(E) Rover is scheduled for grooming in slot 6.
23. V-shaped walled structures in central Asia
were used by prehistoric hunters who drove
hoofed animals into an enclosure at the point
of the V. The central Asians who built these
structures probably learned this hunting
technique from invaders from southwest Asia,
because the arrival of invaders from a region
in southwest Asia where similar structures had
long been used coincides roughly with the
building of the earliest of such structures in
central Asia.
Which of the following, if true, most strengthens
the argument?
(A) Excavations in the central Asian region do
not indicate whether invaders from
southwest Asia settled permanently in
central Asia.
(B) The V-shaped structures in central Asia
were roughly 70 meters long, whereas the
similar structures in southwest Asia were
usually over 300 meters long.
(C) The walls of the structures in central Asia
were made from earth, whereas the walls
of the structures in southwest Asia
were made of rock.
(D) The earliest examples of V-shaped walled
structures in central Asia were of an
advanced design.
(E) Some of the walled structures used for
hunting in southwest Asia were built well
after the earliest such structures were built
in central Asia.
24. Which of the following most logically
completes the argument?
Virtually all respondents to a recent voter
survey reported allegiance to one of the two
major political parties. But over a third of the
voters from each part
--
过去太遥远,未来太迷茫。
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