Flyingoverseas 版 (精华区)
发信人: bonjovi (bonjovi), 信区: Flyingoverseas
标 题: GRE最新练习题9
发信站: 哈工大紫丁香 (2001年08月31日15:34:03 星期五), 站内信件
SECTION 1
Time-30minutes
38 Questions
1. There is hardly a generalization that can be made about people's social b
ehavior and the values informing it that cannot be ------from one or another
point of view, or even ------as simplistic or vapid.
(A) accepted…praised
(B) intuited…exposed
(C) harangued…retracted
(D) defended…glorified
(E) challenged…dismissed
2. Although any destruction of vitamins caused by food irradiation could be
------ the use of diet supplements, there may be no protection from carcinog
ens that some fear might be introduced into foods by the process.
(A) counterbalanced by
(B) attributed to
(C) inferred from
(D) augmented with
(E) stimulated by
3. Though he refused any responsibility for the failure of the negotiations,
Stevenson had no right to ------himself: it was his ------that had caused t
he debacle.
(A) blame… skill
(B) congratulate…modesty
(C) berate…largesse
(D) accuse…obstinacy
(E) absolve…acrimony
4. The prevailing union of passionate interest in detailed facts with equal
devotion to abstract ------is a hallmark of our present society; in the past
this union appeared, at best, ------and as if by chance.
(A) data…extensively
(B) philosophy…cyclically
(C) generalization…sporadically
(D) evaluation…opportunely
(E) intuition….selectively
5. A century ago the physician's word was ------ to doubt it was considered
almost sacrilegious
(A) inevitable
(B) intractable
(C) incontrovertible
(D) objective
(E) respectable
6. So much of modern fiction in the United States is autobiographical, and s
o much of the autobiography fictionalized, that the ------sometimes seem lar
gely------.
(A) authors…ignored
(B) needs…unrecognized
(C) genres…interchangeable
(D) intentions…misunderstood
(E) misapprehensions…uncorrected
7. Robin's words were not without emotion: they retained their level tone on
ly by a careful ------ imminent extremes.
(A) equipoise between
(B) embrace of
(C) oscillation between
(D) limitation to
(E) Subjection to
8. OIL : LUBRICATE::
(A) preservative : desiccate
(B) wine : ferment
(C) honey : pollinate
(D) antiseptic : disinfect
(E) soil : fertilize
9. CONSTRUCT : REMODEL::
(A) exhibit : perform
(B) compose : edit
(C) demolish : repair
(D) quantify : estimate
(E) predict : assess
10. SPOKE : HUB::
(A) radius : center
(B) parabola : equation
(C) line : point
(D) vector : direction
(E) slope : change
11. ILLUSTRATE : PICTURES::
(A) particularize : details
(B) abridge : texts
(C) parse : sentences
(D) regularize : inconsistencies
(E) economize: words
12. PANTRY : FOOD::
(A) museum : replicas
(B) ship : cargo
(C) office : business
(D) armory : weapons
(E) warehouse : storage
13. MIRTH : LAUGHTER::
(A) uncertainty : nod
(B) approval : applause
(C) danger : alarm
(D) labor : sweat
(E) love : respect
14. ABRADED : FRICTION::
(A) refined : combustion
(B) attenuated : coagulation
(C) diluted : immersion
(D) strengthened : compression
(E) desiccated : dehydration
15. PARSIMONY : MISER::
(A) temerity : despot
(B) belligerence: traitor
(C) remorse : delinquent
(D) equanimity : guardian
(E) rebelliousness: insurgent
16. NTTPICK : CRITICIZE::
(A) mock : imitate
(B) complain : argue
(C) interogate : probe
(D) fret : vex
(E) cavil : object
Directions: Each passage in this group is followed by questions based on its
content. After reading a passage, choose the best answer to each question.
Answer all questions following a passage on the basis of what is stated or i
mplied in that passage.
(This passage is from a book published in 1960.)
When we consider great painters of the past, the
study of art and the study of illusion cannot always be
separated. By illusion I mean those contrivances of
line color, line, shape, and so forth that lead us to see
(5) marks on a flat surface as depicting three-dimensional
objects in space. I must emphasize that I am not
making a plea, disguised or otherwise, for the exer-
cise of illusionist tricks in painting today, although
I am, in fact, rather critical of certain theories of non-
(10) representational art. But to argue over these theories
would be to miss the point. That the discoveries and
effects of representation that were the pride of earlier
artists have become trivial today I would not deny for
a moment. Yet I believe that we are in real danger of
(15) losing contact with past masters if we accept the
fashionable doctrine that such matters never had
anything to do with art. The very reason why the
representation of nature can now be considered
something commonplace should be of the greatest
(20) interest to art historians. Never before has there been
an age when the visual image was so cheap in every
sense of the word. We are surrounded and assailed by
posters and advertisements, comics and magazine
illustrations. We see aspects of reality represented
(25) on television, postage stamps, and food packages.
Painting is taught in school and practiced as a
pastime, and many modest amateurs have mastered
tricks that would have looked like sheer magic to the
fourteenth-century painter Giotto. Even the crude
(30) colored renderings on a cereal box might have made
Giotto's contemporaries gasp. Perhaps there are
people who conclude from this that the cereal box is
superior to a Giotto; I do not. But I think- that the
victory and vulgarization of representational skills
(35) create a problem for both art historians and critics.
In this connection it is instructive to remember the
Greek saying that to marvel is the beginning of
knowledge and if we cease to marvel we may be in
danger of ceasing to know. I believe we must restore
(40) our sense of wonder at the capacity to conjure up by
forms, lines, shades, or colors those mysterious
phantoms of visual reality we call "pictures." Even
comics and advertisements, rightly viewed, provide
food for thought. Just as the study of poetry remains
(45) incomplete without an awareness of the language of
prose, so, I believe, the study of art will be increasingly
supplemented by inquiry into the "linguistics" of the
visual image. The way the language of art refers to
the visible world is both so obvious and so myste-
(50) rious that it is still largely unknown except to artist.
who use it as we use all language - without needing
to know its grammar and semantics.
17. The author of the passage explicitly, disagrees with which of the follow
ing statements'
(A) In modern society even nonartists can master techniques that great artis
ts of the fourteenth century did not employ.
(B) The ability to represent a three-dimensional object on a flat surface ha
s nothing to do with art.
(C) In modern society the victory of representational skills has created a p
roblem for art critics.
(D) The way that artists are able to represent the visible world is an area
that needs a great deal more study before it can be fully understood.
(E) Modern painters do not frequently make use of illusionist tricks in thei
r work.
18. The author suggests which of the following about art historians?
(A) They do not believe that illusionist tricks have become trivial.
(B) They generally spend little time studying contemporary artists.
(C) They have not given enough consideration to how the representation of na
ture has become commonplace.
(D) They generally tend to argue about theories rather than address substant
ive issues.
(E) They are less likely than art critics to study comics or advertisements.
19. Which of the following best states the author's attitude toward comics,
as expressed in the passage?
(A) They constitute an innovative art form.
(B) They can be a worthwhile subject for study.
(C) They are critically important to an under-standing of modem art.
(D) Their -visual structure is more complex than that of medieval art.
(E) They can be understood best if they are examined in conjunction with adv
ertisements.
20.The author's statement regarding how artists use the language of art (lin
es 48-52) implies that
(A)artists are better equipped than are art historians to provide detailed e
valuations of other artists' work
B) many artists have an unusually quick, intuitive understanding of language
(C)artists can produce works of art even if they cannot analyze their method
s of doing so
(D) artists of the past, such as Giotto, were better educated about artistic
issues than were artists of the author's time
(E) most artists probably consider the processes involved in their work to b
e closely akin to those involved in writing poetry
21. The passage asserts which of the following about commercial art?
(A) There are many examples of commercial art whose artistic merit is equal
to that of great works of art of the past.
(B) Commercial art is heavily influenced by whatever doctrines are fashionab
le in the serious art world of the time.
(C) The line between commercial art and great art lies primarily in how an i
mage is used, not in the motivation for its creation.
(D) The level of technical skill required to produce representational imager
y in commercial art and in other kinds of art cannot be compared.
(E) The pervasiveness of contemporary commercial art has led art historians
to undervalue representational skills.
22. Which of the following can be inferred from the passage, about the adher
ents of "certain theories of nonrepresentational art" (lines 9-10) ?
(A) They consider the use of illusion to be inappropriate in contemporary ar
t.
(B) They do not agree that marks on a flat surface can ever satisfactorily c
onvey the illusion of three-dimensional space.
(C) They do not discuss important works of art created in the past.
(D) They do not think that the representation of nature was ever the primary
goal of past painters.
(E) They concern themselves more with types art such as advertisements and m
agazine illustrations than with traditional art.
23. It can be inferred from the passage that someone who wanted to analyze t
he "grammar and semantics" (line52) of the language of art would most approp
riately comment on which of the following?
(A) The relationship between the drawings in a comic strip and the accompany
ing text
(B) The amount of detail that can be included in a tiny illustration on a po
stage stamp
(C) The sociological implications of the images chosen to advertise a partic
ular product
(D) The degree to which various colors used in different versions of the sam
e poster would attract the attention of passersby
(E) The particular juxtaposition of shapes in an illustration that makes one
shape look as though it were behind another
The 1973 Endangered Species Act made into legal
policy the concept that endangered species of wildlife
are precious as part of a natural ecosystem. The nearly
unanimous passage of this act in the United States
(5) Congress, reflecting the rising national popularity of
environmentalism, masked a bitter debate. Affected
industries clung to the former wildlife policy of
valuing individual species according to their economic
usefulness. They fought to minimize the law's impact
(10) by limiting definitions of key terms, but they lost on
nearly every issue. The act defined "wildlife" as
almost all kinds of animals-from large mammals to
invertebrates-and plants. "Taking" wildlife was
defined broadly as any action that threatened an
(15) endangered species; areas vital to a species' survival
could be federally protected as "critical habitats"
Though these definitions legislated strong environ-
mentalist goals, political compromises made in the
enforcement of the act were to determine just what
(20) economic interests would be set aside for the sake of
ecological stabilization.
24. According to the passage, which of the following does the Endangered Spe
cies Act define as a "critical habitat"?
(A) A natural ecosystem that is threatened by imminent development
(B) An industrial or urban area in which wildlife species have almost ceased
to live among humans
(C) A natural area that is crucial to the survival of a species and thus eli
gible for federal protection
(D) A wilderness area in which the "taking" of wildlife species is permitted
rarely and only under strict federal regulation
(E) A natural environment that is protected under law because its wildlife h
as a high economic value
25.According to the passage, which of the following is an explanation for th
e degree of support that the Endangered Species Act received in Congress?
(A) Concern for the environment had gained increasing national popularity.
(B) Ecological research had created new economic opportunities dependent on
the survival of certain species.
(C) Congress had long wanted to change the existing wildlife policy.
(D) The growth of industry had endangered increasing numbers of wildlife spe
cies.
(E) Legislators did not anticipate that the act could be effectively enforce
d.
26. It can be inferred from the passage that if business interests had won t
he debate on provisions of the 1973 Endangered Species Act, which of the fol
lowing would have resulted?
(A) Environmentalist concepts would not have become widely popular.
(B) The definitions of key terms of the act would have been more restricted.
(C) Enforcement of the act would have been more difficult.
(D) The act would have had stronger support from Congressional leaders.
(E) The public would have boycotted the industries that had the greatest imp
act in defining the act.
27. The author refers to the terms "wildlife" (line 11), "taking" (line 13),
and "critical habitats" (line 16) most likely in order to
(A) illustrate the misuse of scientific language and concepts in political p
rocesses
(B) emphasize the importance of selecting precise language in transforming s
cientific concepts into law
(C) represent terminology whose definition was crucial in writing environmen
talist goals into law
(D) demonstrate the triviality of the issues debated by industries before Co
ngress passed the Endangered Species Act
(E) show that broad definitions of key terms in many types of laws resulted
in ambiguity and thus left room for disagreement about how the law should be
enforced
Since some of the questions require you to distinguish fine shades of meanin
g, be sure to consider all the choices before deciding which one is best.
28. SWERVE:
(A) maintain direction
(B) resume operation
(C) slow down
(D) divert
(E) orient
29. HUSBAND:
(A) rearrange
(B) alarm
(C) assist
(D) prize
(E) squander
30. DEACTIVATE:
(A) palpate
(B) alleviate
(C) inhale
(D) articulate
(E) potentiate
31. INTRANSIGENT:
(A) accustomed to command
(B) qualified to arbitrate
(C) open to compromise
(D) resigned to conflict
(E) opposed to violence
32. OCCLUDED:
(A) unvaried
(B) entire
(C) functional
(D) inverted
(E) unobstructed
33. ASSUAGE:
(A) intensify
(B) accuse
(C) correct
(D) create
(E) assert
34. QUIXOTIC:
(A) displaying consistently practical behavior
(B) considering several points of view
(C) expressing dissatisfaction
(D) suggesting uneasiness
(E) acting decisively
35. PELLUCID:
(A) stagnant
(B) murky
(C) glutinous
(D) noxious
(E) rancid
36. LACONISM:
(A) temerity
(B) vacuity
(C) dishonesty
(D) immaturity
(E) verbosity
37 REFRACTORY:
(A) active
(B) productive
(C) energetic
(D) responsive
(E) powerful
38. DEFINITIVE:
(A) prosaic
(B) convoluted
(C) unusual
(D) provisional
(E) vast
SECTION 2
Time -30 minutes
30 Questions
The square is inscribed in the circle.
1. The length of a The length of a
diameter of the diagonal of the
circle square
2. k
x-y=y-x
3. x-y 0
In a certain store, each record costs X dollars and each tape costs Y dollar
s. the total cost of 3 records and 2 tapes is $39.
4. The cost of 1 record The cost of 1 tape
The perimeter of rectangle RSTU is 750, and RS=350.
5. ST 50
6. 0.4
7. x 140
8. S
9. a -b
10. x 1
AB is a diameter of the circle.
11. The length of AB The average (arithmetic
mean) of the lengths of
AC and AD
0 < x < y < 1
12. 1 - y y - x
13. 1
14. The value of y 100
At a sale, the cost of each tie was reduced by
20 percent and the cost of each belt was reduced
by 30 percent.
15. The percent reduction 25%
on the total cost of
1 tie and 2 belts
16.
(A) 0.00522
(B) 0.03135
(C) 0.03762
(D) 0.0418
(E) 0.0627
17. What percent of the integers between 100 and 999, inclusive, have all th
ree digits the same?
(A) 1%
(B) 2%
(C) 3%
(D) 4%
(E) 5%
x y o
18. If (7, 3) is the center of the circle above, then the radius of the circ
le could be equal to which of the following?
(A) 2
(B) 3
(C) 5
(D) 7
(E) 9
19. If revenues $196,000 from division A of Company X represent 28 percent o
f the total revenues of Company X for the year, What ware the total revenues
of Company X for the year?
(A) $141,100
(B) $272,000
(C) $413,300
(D) $596,100
(E) $700,000
20. If xy 1 0, which of the following is equivalent to ?
(A) 2xy
(B) 8xy2
(C) 16x2y3
(D)
(E)
Questions 21-25 refer to the following graph.
21. What was the savings rate for the country that had the greatest real GNP
growth rate?
(A) 25%
(B) 20%
(C) 18%
(D) 12.5%
(E) 4.5%
22. For which country was the ratio of its savings rate to its real GNP grow
th rate greatest?
(A) Japan
(B) Canada
(C) Australia
(D) Italy
(E) Switzerland
23. The savings rate for Canada was approximately how many times that of the
United States?
(A)
(B) 2
(C)
(D) 3
(E)
24. For how many of the countries shown was the savings rate more than 5 tim
es the real GNP growth rate?
(A) Five
(B) Four
(C) Three
(D) Two
(E) One
25. Which of the following statement can be inferred from the graph?
Ⅰ. On the average, people in the United States saved about the same amount
as people in the United Kingdom.
Ⅱ. The median of the savings rates for the eight countries was greater than
11 percent
Ⅲ. Only two of the countries had a higher savings rate than Italy.
(A) Ⅰ only
(B) Ⅱ only
(C) Ⅲ only
(D) Ⅰand Ⅱ
(E) Ⅱand Ⅲ
26. In the figure above, if PQRS is a parallelogram, then x =
(A) 35
(B) 65
(C) 75
(D) 80
(E) 100
27. A certain doctor suggests that an individual's daily water intake be ou
nce per pound of body weight plus 8 ounces for every 25 pounds by which the
individual exceeds his or her ideal weight. If this doctor suggests a daily
water intake of 136 ounces for a particular 240-pound individual, how many p
ounds above his or her ideal weight is that individual?
(A)
(B) 16
(C) 30
(D) 50
(E) 120
28. A political poll showed that 80 percent of those polled said they would
vote for proposition P. Of those who said they would vote for proposition P
70 percent actually voted for P, and of those who did not say they would vot
e for P, 20 percent actually voted for P. What percent of those polled voted
for P?
(A) 56%
(B) 60%
(C) 64%
(D) 76%
(E) 90%
29. If x1 1 and x10, then is equivalent to
(A)
(B) x
(C)
(D)
(E)
30. In a group of 80 students, 24 are enrolled in geometry, 40 in biology, a
nd 20 in both. If a student were randomly selected from the 80 students, wha
t is the probability that the student selected would not be enrolled in eith
er course?
(A) 0.20
(B) 0.25
(C) 0.45
(D) 0.55
(E) 0.60
SECTION 3
Time - 30 Minutes
25 questions
Questions 1-7
Seven flags will be flown on seven poles, one flag per pole. The poles are a
rranged in a row and numbered consecutively 1 through 7. Three flags are gre
en, two are white, and two are yellow. The arrangement of flags will conform
to the following conditions:
No two green flags can be flown on poles that are next to each other.
None of the green flags can be flown on pole 3.
Neither yellow flag can be flown on pole 5.
1. If the two yellow flags are flown on poles that are next to each other an
d the two white flags are flown on poles that are next to each other, then t
he flags flown on poles 2 and 6 must be
(A) both green
(B green and white, respectively
(C) White and green, respectively
(D) yellow and green, respectively
(E) yellow and white, respectively
2. If the white flags are flown on poles 2 and 3, which of the following mus
t be true?
(A) A green flag is flown on pole 4.
(B) A green flag is flown on pole 6.
(C) A green flag is flown on pole 7.
(D) A yellow flag is flown on pole 1.
(E) A yellow flag is flown on pole 7.
3. Which of the following, CANNOT be true?
(A) Green flags are flown on poles 1 and 4.
(B) White flags are flown on poles 1 and 7.
(C) Yellow flags are flown on poles 1 and 7.
(D) A green flag is flown on pole 1 and a yellow flag is flown on pole 7.
(E) a white flag is flown on pole 1 and a yellow flag is flown on pole 7.
4. If a green flag is flown on pole 5, which of the following must be true?
(A) a green flag is flown on pole 1.
(B) a green flag is flown on pole 2.
(C) A green flag is flown on pole 7.
(D) a white flag is flown on pole 3.
(E) A white flag is flown on pole 4.
5. If the yellow flags are flown on poles 1 and 6, which of the following mu
st be true?
(A) A green flag is flown on pole 4.
(B) A green flag is flown on pole 5.
(C) The white flags are flown on poles that are next to each other.
(D) A white flag and a yellow flag are flown on poles that are next to each
other.
(E) Each white flag is flown on a pole that is next to a pole on which a gre
en flag is flown.
6. If green flags are flown on poles 2 and 6, which of the following can be
true?
(A) A green flag is flown on pole 1.
(B) A green flag is flown on pole 5.
(C) A white flag is flown on pole 3.
(D) A white flag is flown on pole 4.
(E) A yellow flag is flown on pole 4.
7. If the yellow flags are flown on poles 2 and 4, which of the following mu
st be true?
(A) The white flags are flown on poles that are next to each other.
(B) a green flag is flown on pole that is next to two poles on which white f
lags are flown.
(C) A white flag is flown on a pole that is next to a pole on which a green
flag is flown, and also next to a apple on which a yellow flag is flown.
(D) Each green flag is flown on a pole that is next to a pole on which a whi
te flag is flown.
(E) Each yellow flag is flown on a pole that is next to a pole on which a gr
een flag is flown.
8. At the Shadybrook dog kennel, all the adult animals were given a new medi
cation designed to reduce a dog's risk of contracting a certain common infec
tion. Several days after the medication was administered, most of the puppie
s of these dogs had elevated temperatures. Since raised body temperature is
a side effect of this medication, the kennel owner hypothesized that the pup
pies' elevated temperatures resulted from the medication's being passed to t
hem through their mothers' milk.
Which of the following, if true, provides the most support for the kennel ow
ner's hypothesis?
(A) Some puppies have been given the new medication directly but have not su
ffered elevated temperatures as a side effect.
(B) The new medication has been well received by dog breeders as a safe and
effective way of preventing the spread of certain common canine infections.
(C) None of the four puppies in the kennel who had been bottle-fed with form
ula had elevated temperatures.
(D) an elevated temperature is a side effect of a number of medications for
dogs other than the new medication administered at the kennel.
(E) Elevated temperatures such as those suffered by most of the puppies in t
he kennel rarely have serious long-term effects on a puppy's health.
9. Which of the following most logically completes the argument?
Alivia's government has approved funds for an electricity-generation project
based on the construction of a pipeline that will carry water from Lake Cyl
us, in the mountains, to the much smaller Lake Tifele, in a nearby valley. T
he amount of electricity generated will be insufficient by itself to justify
the project's cost, even if the price of imported oil-Alivia's primary sour
ce of electricity-increases sharply. Nonetheless, the pipeline project is wo
rth its cost, because --
(A) the price of oil, once subject to frequent sharp increases, has fallen s
ignificantly and is now fairly stable
(B) the project could restore Lake Tifele, which is currently at risk of dry
ing up and thus of being lost as a source of recreation income for Alivia
(C) the government of Alivia is currently on excellent terms with the govern
ments of most of the countries from which it purchases oil
(D) it would cost less to generate electricity by moving water from Lake Cyl
us to lake Tifele than to do so by moving water from Lake Cylus to another v
alley lake
(E) Alivian officials do not expect that the amount of electricity used in A
livia will increase substantially within the next ten years
10. Amusement rides at permanent fairgrounds are dismantled once a year for
safety inspections by independent consultants. Traveling fairs, which reloca
te each month, can slip past the net of safety inspections and escape indepe
ndent inspection for several years. Therefore, the rides at traveling fairs
are less safe than the rides at permanent fairs.
Which of the following, if true about traveling fairs, most seriously weaken
s the argument?
(A) Before each relocation, the operators dismantle their rides, observing a
nd repairing potential sources of danger, such as worn ball bearings.
(B) their managers have less capital to spend on the safety and upkeep of th
e rides than do managers of permanent fairs.
(C) Since they can travel to new customers, they rely less on keeping up a g
ood reputation for safety.
(D) While they are traveling, the fairs do not receive notices of equipment
recalls sent out by the manufacturers of their rides.
(E) The operators of the rides often do not pay careful attention to the ins
tructions for operating their rides.
Questions 11-15
A candidate for mayor will visit six institutions-a factory, a hospital, a m
ail, a police station, a shelter, and a university - on six consecutive days
. On each day, the candidate will visit exactly one of the institutions. The
visits will conform to the following restrictions:
The visit to the factory must occur on some day before the visit to the univ
ersity.
The visit to the hospital must occur on the second day after the visit to th
e university.
Visits to exactly two of the institutions must occur between the visit to th
e police station and the visit to the shelter, whether the visit to the poli
ce station occurs before or after the visit to the shelter.
11. Which of the following is an acceptable order in which the institutions
can be visited?
(A) Factory, shelter, university, hospital, police station, mall
(B) Factory, university, shelter, hospital, police station, mall
(C) Shelter, factory, university, mall, police station, hospital
(D) Shelter, factory, university, police station, hospital, mall.
(E) University, shelter, hospital, factory, police station, mall.
12. If the university is visited on the second day, then the mall must be vi
sited on the
(A) first day
(B) third day
(C) fourth day
(D) fifth day
(E) sixth day
13. If the factory is not visited on the day immediately preceding the visit
to the university, then the police station can be visited on the
(A) first day
(B) second day
(C) third day
(D) fourth day
(E) sixth day
14. If the mall is visited either on the da immediately preceding or on the
day immediately following the visit to the shelter, which of the following m
ust be true?
(A) The factory is visited on the day immediately preceding the visit to the
police station.
(B) The factory is visited on the day immediately preceding the visit to the
shelter.
(C) The factory is visited on the day immediately preceding the visit to the
university.
(D) The hospital is visited on the day immediately preceding the visit to th
e shelter.
(E) The university is visited on the day immediately preceding the visit to
the police station.
15. If the hospital is visited on the day immediately preceding the visit to
the mall, which of the following can be true?
(A) The factory is visited on the second day.
(B) The factory is visited on the third day.
(C) The mall is visited on the third day.
(D) the mall is visited on the fourth day.
(E) The university is visited on the fourth day.
Questions 16-22
The organizer of a publishing conference is scheduling workshops to be given
on three days-Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday. On each day, three day-long
workshops-Graphics, Marketing, and Research-will be given in three rooms-roo
m I through room 3-subject to the following constraints:
On each day, there is one workshop given per room.
Over the course of the three days, each workshop is
given in each of the three rooms.
16. Which of the following can be the workshops given in room 1 and room 2 o
n each of the three days?
Wednesday Thursday Friday
(A) 1: Graphics Marketing Graphics
2: Research Graphics Marketing
(B) 1: Graphics Research Marketing
2: Marketing Marketing Research
(C) 1: Marketing Graphics Research
2: Graphics Research Marketing
(D) 1: Marketing Research Graphics
2: Research Marketing Graphics
(E) 1: Research Marketing Research
2: Graphics Research Marketing
17. If Graphics is scheduled for room I on Wednesday and Marketing is schedu
led for room 2 on Thursday, then which of the following must be scheduled fo
r Friday?
(A) Graphics in room 3
(B) Marketing in room 1
(C) Marketing in room 3
(D) Research in room 1
(E) Research in room 2
18.If Graphics is scheduled for room I on Wednesday and Market
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过去太遥远,未来太迷茫。
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