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Passage I Since primitive times, societies have had their own 1 legends fictitious stories handed down by tradition 1 and popularly accepted as historical.. However, in a complex societ

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ENGLISH TEST

23 Minutes — 38 Questions

Directions: In the following three passages, certain

words and phrases have been underlined and

numbered You will find alternatives for each

underlined portion in the right-hand column Select

the one that best expresses the idea, that makes the

statement acceptable in standard written English, or

that is phrased most consistently with the style and

tone of the entire passage If you feel that the original

version is best, select “NO CHANGE.” You will also

find questions asking about a section of the passage

or about the entire passage For these questions,

decide which choice gives the most appropriate response to the given question For each question in the test, select the best choice and fill in the corresponding space on the answer sheet You may wish to read each passage through before you begin

to answer the questions associated with it Most answers cannot be determined without reading several sentences around the phrases in question Make sure to read far enough ahead each time you choose an alternative

Passage I

Since primitive times, societies have had their own

1

legends fictitious stories handed down by tradition

1

and popularly accepted as historical Even before the

development of written language, cultures would pass

down these popular stories orally While such tall tales

may appear merely whimsical in nature, they actually

perform a useful function Other things can be useful as

2

well Perhaps even more important than their

2

entertainment value and worth is the cohesive role that

3

legends play They provide the members of a society with

a common grounding, a story in which we recognize

amidst our differences the characteristic quirks that make us

members of a particular culture

However, in a complex society composed of many

cultural groups, legends may actually undermine their

traditional — that is to say, unifying role While a legend

4

may draw together members of one culture, it may also

alienate that group from others So what if substitute for

1 A. NO CHANGE

B. societies, have had their own legends

C. societies have had their own legends,

D. societies have had their own, legends

2 F. NO CHANGE

G. Other things have such functions

H. Although others are useful

J. OMIT the underlined portion

3 A. NO CHANGE

B. value is

C. value are

D. value, and worth, are

4 F. NO CHANGE

G. traditional unifying role

H. traditional, that is to say, unifying, role

J. traditional, that is to say, role of unification

5 A. NO CHANGE

B. can substitute

C. if substitution

D. OMIT the underlined portion

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traditional legends in providing members of a culturally

diverse society with a common core of identity? In our

technological society a new story form that is different

from other folk tales have emerged, it being the urban

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legend

6

Urban legends are those stories we are all familiar with

that are claimed to have really happened, but are never

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verifiable however Supposedly such incidents actually

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occurred, but the people involved can never be found

Researchers of the urban legend call the elusive participant

in such supposed “real-life” events a FOAF — a Friend

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Of A Friend

Urban legends have some characteristic features They

are often humorous in nature with a surprise ending and a

9

conclusion Urban legends, frequently based on an

9 10

amazing coincidence of some sort, or on the premise that

this is “a small world.” For example, the stranger on the

bus to whom the teenager is bragging about his “hot date”

turns out to be the girl’s father

One urban legend making the rounds tells of a couple

vacationing in a foreign land While they being dining at a

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sidewalk cafe, a small dog comes begging The people are

so charmed by the animal that they decide to keep him

Back in the States, they take their pet to a vet to find out

its breed The doctor takes one look at the animal and

6 F. NO CHANGE

G. have emerged: the urban legend

H. have emerged, the urban legend

J. has emerged: the urban legend

7 A. NO CHANGE

B. happened and also they are never verifiable

C. happened, although, but are never verifiable

D. happened, but are never verifiable

8 F. NO CHANGE

G. FOAF, therefore a

H. FOAF; however, a

J. FOAF that

9 A. NO CHANGE

B. a surprising final ending and a conclusion

C. an ending and a conclusion that are surprising

D. a surprise ending

10 F. NO CHANGE

G. legends, based typically and frequently

H. legends, are frequently based

J. legends are frequently based

11 A. NO CHANGE

B. had been

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asks them if it has ever barked “Why, no,” the husband

replies “No wonder,” the vet says, “your exotic dog is a

rat.” 12

12. Which of the following phrases best states the relationship between the first sentence in the paragraph and the remainder of the paragraph?

F. Question and instruction

G. Argument and digression

H. Statement and illustration

J. Point and counterpoint

Item 13 poses a question about Passage I as a whole

13. In which of the following ways does the writer’s use

of dialogue affect how the reader reacts to the narrative?

A. It emphasizes the fact that the story of the vacationing couple is not a folk tale

B. It creates a sense of dramatic immediacy in the writer’s surprising conclusion

C. It demonstrates that the writer actually witnessed the incident as a bystander

D. It leaves the reader in a state of confusion since the previous paragraphs contain no dialogue

Passage II

White water rafting has been a favorite pastime of

mine for several years I have drifted down many of the

most challenging North American rivers, including the

Snake, the Green, and the Salmon, and there are many

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other rivers in America as well I have spent some of my

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best moments in dangerous rapids, yet nothing has

matched the thrill I experienced facing my first rapids, on

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the Deschutes River in Central Oregon

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My father and I spent the morning floating down a

calm and peaceful stretch of the Deschutes in his

14 F. NO CHANGE

G. Salmon — not to mention all the rivers I have not encountered

H. Salmon; many other rivers exist in North America

J. Salmon

15 A. NO CHANGE

B. rapids on Deschutes River, central Oregon

C. rapids; on the Deschutes River in central Oregon

D. rapids on the Deschutes River; in central Oregon

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MacKenzie river boat Rapids are rated on a uniform scale

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of relative difficulty This trip it being the wooden boat's

16 17

first time down rapids, as well as mine It was such a

peaceful summer day that it was hard to believe dangerous

rapids awaited us downstream

I could hear the water roar as we approached

Whitehorse rapids I felt much like a novice skier peering

down her first steep slope: scared, but even more excited

It churned, covering me with a refreshing spray My

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father, towards the stern, controlled the oars The carefree

expression he usually wore on the river had been replaced

and instead he adopted a look of intense concentration as

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he maneuvered around boulders dotting our path To

release tension, we began to holler like kids on a roller

coaster, echoing across the water as we lurched violently

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about

Suddenly we came to a jarring halt and we stopped ;

21

the left side of the bow was wedged on a large rock A

whirlpool whirled around us; if we capsized we would be

sucked into the undertow Instinctively, I threw all of my

ninety-eight pounds towards the right side of the tilting

boat Luckily, it was just enough force to dislodge us, and

22

we continued on down for about ten more minutes of

spectacular rapids

Later that day we went through Buckskin Mary

rapids and the Boxcar rapids When we pulled up on the

16 F. NO CHANGE

G. Rapids are rated according to a uniform scale of relative difficulty

H. (Rapids are rated according to a uniform scale

of relative difficulty.)

J. OMIT the underlined portion

17 A. NO CHANGE

B. it happened that it was

D. being

18 F. NO CHANGE

G. Churning, it covered me

H. Covering me, it churned

J. The water churned, covering me

19 A. NO CHANGE

C. by another countenance altogether:

D. instead with some other expression;

20 F. NO CHANGE

G. coaster, as echoing

H. coaster, our voices echoing

J. coaster, while echoing

21 A. NO CHANGE

B. which stopped us

C. and stopped

D. OMIT the underlined portion

22 F. NO CHANGE

G. it’s

H. it is

J. its

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bank that evening we saw that the boat had received its

first scar: a small hole on the upper bow from the boulder

we had wrestled with In the years to come, we went down

many rapids and the boat receiving many bruises, but

23

Whitehorse rapids is the most memorable one of all 24

23 A. NO CHANGE

B. received many

C. received much

D. receives many

24. Which of the following concluding sentences would most effectively emphasize the final point made in this paragraph while retaining the style and tone of the narrative as a whole?

F. The brutal calamities that it presented the unwary rafter were more than offset by its beguiling excitement

G. Perhaps it is true after all that one’s first close encounter with white water is likely to be one’s most intense

H. Or, if not the most memorable, then at least a very memorable one!

J. Call me crazy or weird if you want, but white water rafting is the sport for me

25. The writer has been assigned to write an essay that focuses on the techniques of white water rafting Would this essay meet the requirements of that assignment?

A. No, because the essay’s prime focus is on a particular experience, not on techniques

B. No, because the essay mostly deals with the relationship between father and daughter

C. Yes, because specific rafting techniques are the essay’s main focus

D. Yes, because it presents a dramatic story of a day’s white water rafting

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Passage III

The following paragraphs may or may not be in the

most logical order Each paragraph is numbered in

parentheses, and item 38 will ask you to choose

the sequence of paragraph numbers that is in the

most logical order

[1]

Taws, alleys, flints, cat’s eyes: perhaps these words

26

will remind you of your childhood They are the names of

particular kinds of marbles The names of marbles may

derive from their appearance, as in “cloudies”; their use, as

in “shooters”; or their original material “Alleys,” for

example, were once made of alabaster Marbles, which are

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round , may be made from many different materials In the

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eighteenth century, marbles were actually made from

marble chips Nowadays marbles may consist of glass,

baked clay, steel, onyx, plastic, or agate, and are as

colorful as their names Perhaps the key word regarding

marbles is “variety.”

[2]

The popularity of marbles, however, spans centuries

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and oversteps cultural boundaries The first marble games

took place in antiquity They were played with nuts, fruit

pits, or pebbles Even the great Augustus Caesar, along

with his Roman playmates, was known to have played

marble games as a child In North America, engraved

marbles has been recovered in earthen mounds left by

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some Indian tribes During Passover, Jewish children have

26 F. NO CHANGE

G. eyes: will remind you by these words

H. eyes, perhaps, these words

J. eyes perhaps these words

27 A. NO CHANGE

B. Marbles

C. Marbles, round in shape,

D. Marbles (but not dice)

28 F. NO CHANGE

G. span centuries

H. spanning centuries

J. spans hundreds of years

29 A. NO CHANGE

B. have been

C. being

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customarily used filberts as marbles Chinese children

show a long history of marble games

[3]

Marbles can be manipulated in a variety and

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assortment of ways Knuckling is a technique in which

30

the forefinger, or bottom of the hand, is balanced against

the ground while a marble placed against a forefinger is

shot outward with the thumb Marbles can also be

31

thrown, rolling, dropped, and even kicked

31

[4]

So while marbles may be considered a children’s

game, it actually has a complex history (Backgammon

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also has a complex history.) And if anyone happens to

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accuse you of having marbles in your head, you might ask

them what kind

[5]

Their are also many varieties of marble games

33

The most common American version is to win

opponents’ marbles by knocking them out of a designated

area with one’s own marbles Another popular game is

taw—also known as ringtaw or ringer, the object of which

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is to shoot marbles arranged like a cross out of a large,

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sizable, ring Players, in a pot game such as moshie,

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tries to knock one another’s marbles into a hole In

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nineholes or bridgeboard, players shoot their marbles

through numbered arches on a board

30 F. NO CHANGE

G. an assortment, as well as variety,

H. a variety

J. a variety (assortment)

31 A. NO CHANGE

B. are used for throwing, rolling, dropping, and are even kicked

C. can also be thrown, rolled, dropped, and even kicked

D. can also throw, roll, drop, and kick

32 F. NO CHANGE

G. (Another game with a complex history is backgammon.)

H. (As for complex histories, there is also backgammon.)

J. OMIT the underlined portion

33 A. NO CHANGE

B. They’re are

C. There our

D. There are

34 F. NO CHANGE

G. taw, also known as ringtaw or ringer —

H. taw — also known as ringtaw or ringer —

J. taw: also known as ringtaw or ringer

35 A. NO CHANGE

B. large ring

C. large, indeed, sizable, ring

D. large, sizable ring

36 F. NO CHANGE

G. trying

J. tried

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Items 37-38 pose questions about the passage as a whole

37. Readers are likely to regard the passage as best

described by which of the following terms?

A. Genuinely concerned

B. Openly incredulous

C. Straightforwardly instructive

D. Sentimentally nostalgic

38. Choose the sequence of paragraph numbers that will make the essay’s structure most logical

F. NO CHANGE

G. 1, 3, 5, 2, 4

H. 4, 3, 2, 1, 5

J. 5, 2, 3, 4, 1

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