1.
Because the monkeys under study
are —— the presence of human beings,
they typically ——human observers
and go about their business
(A) ambivalent about …… welcome
(B) habituated to …… disregard
(C) pleased with …… snub
(D) inhibited by …… seek
(E) unaware of …… avoid
2. Give he previously expressed
interest and the ambitious tone
of her recent speeches, the
senator‘s attempt to convince
the public that she is not inter-
ested in running for a second
term is ——。
(A) laudable
(B) likely
(C) authentic
(D) futile
(E) sincere
3. Many of her followers remain
—— to her, and even those who
have rejected her leadership
are unconvinced of the —— of
replacing her during the current
turmoil.
(A) opposed…… urgency
(B) friendly…… harm
(C) loyal…… wisdom
(D) cool…… usefulness
(E) sympathetic…… disadvantage
4. Unlike many recent interpretations
of Beethoven‘s piano sonatas,
the recitalist’s performance
was a delightfully free and
introspective one; nevertheless,it
was also, seemingly paradoxically,
quite ——。
(A) appealing
(B) exuberant
(C) idiosyncratic
(D) unskilled
(E) controlled
5. Species with relatively
—— metabolic rates, including
hibernators, generally live
longer than those whose metabolic
rates are more rapid.
(A) prolific
(B) sedentary
(C) sluggish
(D) measured
(E) restive
6. Belying his earlier reputation
for —— as a negotiator,Morgan
had recently assumed a more
—— stance for which many of
his erstwhile critics praised
him.
(A) intransigence…… conciliatory
(B) impropriety…… intolerant
(C) inflexibility…… unreasonable
(D) success…… authoritative
(E) incompetence…… combative
7. Although Irish literature
continued to flourish after
the sixteenth century, a ——
tradition is ——in the visual
arts: we think about Irish culture
in terms of the word, not in
terms of pictorial images.
(A) rich…… superfluous
(B) lively…… found
(C) comparable…… absent
(D) forgotten…… apparent
(E) lost…… extant
8. SILVER: TARNISH::
(A) gold: burnish
(B) steel: forge
(C) iron: rust
(D) lead: cast
(E) tin: shear
9. DISLIKE: LOATHING::
(A) appreciation: gratification
(B) hunger: appetite
(C) void: dearth
(D) pleasure: bliss
(E) pain: ache
10. CRAVEN: HEROIC::
(A) unruly: energetic
(B) listless: attractive
(C) volatile: constant
(D) deft: trifling
(E) awkward: amusing
11. FILLY: HORSE::
(A) antennae: butterfly
(B) pullet: chicken
(C) gaggle: goose
(D) duck: drake
(E) wasp: bee
12. PITHINESS: APHORISM::
(A) craft: art
(B) detail: sketch
(C) illusion: story
(D) exaggeration: caricature
(E) sophistication: farce
13. EPHEMERAL: ENDURING::
(A) infirm: healing
(B) insensitive: cooperating
(C) inanimate: living
(D) interminable: continuing
(E) ineffectual: proceeding
14. POSTURER: UNAFFECTED::
(A) brat: insolent
(B) hypocrite: perceptive
(C) grouch: respected
(D) bigot: tolerant
(E) rogue: empathetic
15. FACETIOUS: SPEECH::
(A) precocious: learning
(B) unbecoming: color
(C) exemplary: conduct
(D) craven: timidity
(E) antic: behavior
16. VAGARY: PREDICT::
(A) quotation: misdirect
(B) investigation: confirm
(C) stamina: deplete
(D) turbulence: upset
(E) impossibility: execute
This is not to deny that the
Black gospel music of the early
twentieth century differed in
important ways from the slave
spirituals. Whereas spirituals
were created and dis- seminated
in folk fashion, gospel music
was composed,(5) published,
copyrighted, and sold by professionals.
Never- theless, improvisation
remained central to gospel music.
One has only to listen to the
recorded repertoire of gospel
songs to realize that Black
gospel singers rarely sang a
song precisely the same way
twice and never according to(10)its
exact musical notation. They
performed what jazz musi- cians
call "head arrangements"
proceeding from their own feelings
and from the way "the spirit"
moved them at the time. This
improvisatory element was reflected
in the man- ner in which gospel
music was published. Black gospel(15)composers
scored the music intended for
White singing groups fully,
indicating the various vocal
parts and the accompaniment,
but the music produced for Black
singers included only a vocal
line and piano accompaniment.
17.Which of the following
best describes "head arrange-
ment" as the term is used
in line 11?
(A) A published version of
a gospel song produced for use
by Black singers
(B) A gospel song based on
a slave spiritual
(C) A musical score shared
by a gospel singer and a jazz
musician
(D) An informally written
composition intended for use
by a gospel singer
(E) An improvised performance
inspired by the singer‘s emotions
18.The author mentions "folk
fashion" (line 4) most
likely in order to
(A) counter an assertion about
the role of improvi- sation
in music created by Black people
(B) compare early gospel music
with gospel music written later
in the twentieth century
(C) make a distinction between
gospel music and slave spirituals
(D) introduce a discussion
about the dissemination of slave
spirituals
(E) describe a similarity
between gospel music and slave
spirituals
19.The passage suggests which
of the following about Black
gospel music and slave spirituals?
(A) Both became widely known
in the early twentieth century.
(B) Both had an important
improvisatory element.
(C) Both were frequently performed
by jazz musicians.
(D) Both were published with
only a vocal line and piano
accompaniment.
(E) Both were disseminated
chiefly by Black singing groups.
20.Of the following sentences,
which is most likely to have
immediately preceded the passage?
(A) Few composers of gospel
music drew on traditions such
as the spiritual in creating
their songs.
(B) Spirituals and Black gospel
music were derived from the
same musical tradition.
(C) The creation and singing
of spirituals, practiced by
Black Americans before the Civil
War, continued after the war.
(D) Spirituals and gospel
music can be clearly distinguished
from one another.
(E) Improvisation was one
of the primary charac- teristics
of the gospel music created
by Black musicians.
About a century ago, the Swedish
physical scientist Arrhenius
proposed a law of classical
chemistry that relates chemical
reaction rate to temperature.
According to the Arrhenius equation,
chemical reaction are increasingly(5)
unlikely to occur as temperatures
approach absolute zero,and at
absolute zero (zero degrees
Kelvin, or minus 273 degrees
Celsius) reactions stop. However,
recent experi- mental evidence
reveals that although the Arrhenius
equa- tion is generally accurate
in describing the kind of chemical(10)reaction
that occurs at relatively high
temperatures, at tem- peratures
closer to zero a quantum- mechanical
effect known as tunneling comes
into play; this effect accounts
for chem- ical reactions that
are forbidden by the principles
of classi- cal chemistry. Specifically,
entire molecules can "tunnel"(15)through
the barriers of repulsive forces
from other mole- cules and chemically
react even though these molecules
do not have sufficient energy,
according to classical chemistry,to
overcome the repulsive barrier.
The rate of any chemical reaction,
regardless of the tem-(20)perature
at which it takes place, usually
depends on a very important
characteristic known as its
activation energy. Any molecule
can be imagined to reside at
the bottom of a so- called potential
well of energy. A chemical reaction
corre- sponds to the transition
of a molecule from the bottom
of(25)one potential well to
the bottom of another. In classical
chemistry, such a transition
can be accomplished only by
going over the potential barrier
between the wells, the height
of which remains constant and
is called the activa- tion energy
of the reaction. In tunneling,
the reacting mole-(30)cules
tunnel from the bottom of one
to the bottom of another well
without having to rise over
the barrier between the two
wells. Recently researchers
have developed the concept of
tunneling temperature: the temperature
below which tunneling transitions
greatly outnumber Arrhenius
transi-(35)tions, and classical
mechanics gives way to its quantum
counterpart. This tunneling
phenomenon at very low temperatures
suggested my hypothesis about
a cold prehistory of life:the
formation of rather complex
organic molecules in the(40)deep
cold of outer space, where temperatures
usually reach only a few degrees
Kelvin. Cosmic rays (high-energy
pro- tons and other particles)
might trigger the synthesis
of simple molecules, such as
interstellar formaldehyde, in
dark clouds of interstellar
dust. Afterward complex organic(45)molecules
would be formed, slowly but
surely, by means of tunneling.
After I offered my hypothesis,
Hoyle and Wickramasinghe argued
that molecules of interstellar
form- aldehyde have indeed evolved
into stable polysaccharides
such as cellulose and starch.
Their conclusions, although(50)strongly
disputed, have generated excitement
among inves- tigators such as
myself who are proposing that
the galactic clouds are the
places where the prebiological
evolution of compounds necessary
to life occurred.
21.The author of the passage
is primarily concerned with
(A) describing how the principles
of classical chem- istry were
developed
(B) initiating a debate about
the kinds of chemical reactions
required for the development
of life
(C) explaining how current
research in chemistry may be
related to broader biological
concerns
(D) reconciling opposing theories
about chemical reac- tions
(E) clarifying inherent ambiguities
in the laws of clas- sical chemistry
22.According to the passage,
classical chemical reactions
and tunneling reactions are
alike in which of the fol- lowing
ways?
(A) In both types of reactions,
reacting molecules have to rise
over the barrier between the
two wells.
(B) In both types of reactions,
a transition is made from the
bottom of one potential well
to the bottom of another.
(C) In neither type of reaction
does the height of the barrier
between the wells remain constant.
(D) In neither type of reaction
does the rate of a chemical
reaction depend on its activation
energy.
(E) In both types of reactions,
reacting molecules are able
to go through the barrier between
the two wells.
23. According to the Arrhenius
equation as discussed in the
passage, which of the following
statements about chemical reactions
is true?
(A) Chemical reactions are
less likely to occur at tem-
peratures close to absolute
zero.
(B) In some cases the rate
of a chemical reaction is related
to temperature and in other
cases it is not.
(C) Chemical reactions frequently
occur at a few degrees above
absolute zero, but they are
very unpredictable.
(D) The rate of a chemical
reaction depends on many other
factors besides temperature.
(E) Chemical reaction rate
and temperature are not related.
24.The author‘s attitude toward
the theory of a cold pre- history
of life can best be described
as
(A) neutral
(B) skeptical
(C) mildly positive
(D) very supportive
(E) pointedly critical
25.The author‘s hypothesis
concerning be cold prehistory
of life would be most weakened
if which of the follow- ing
were true?
(A)Cosmic rays are unlikely
to trigger the formation of
simple molecules.
(B)Tunneling occurs only in
a narrow band of tem- peratures
around zero degrees Kelvin.
(C)The synthesis of interstellar
formaldehyde can be activated
by means other than cosmic rays.
(D)Simple molecules can be
synthesized by means of tunneling.
(E)Classical chemical reactions
do not occur at tem- peratures
close to absolute zero.
26.Which of the following
best describes the hypothesis
of Hoyle and Wickramasinghe
as it is presented in the passage?
(A) Cosmic rays can directly
synthesize complex organic molecules.
(B) The galactic clouds are
the places where prebio- logical
evolution of compounds necessary
to life occurred.
(C) Interstellar formaldehyde
can be synthesized by tunneling.
(D) Molecules of interstellar
formaldehyde can evolve into
complex organic molecules.
(E) Complex organic molecules
can be synthesized from stable
polysaccharides such as cellulose
and starch.
27.Which of the following
best describes the organization
of the first two paragraphs
of the passage?
(A) The author cites a basic
principle of classical chemistry
and then describes the research
from which that principle was
developed.
(B) The author cites an apparent
contradiction to the principles
of classical chemistry and then
explains the process of a chemical
reaction to show there is in
fact no contradiction.
(C) the author describes the
role of heat in chemical reactions
and then offers a detailed explanation
of its function.
(D) The author presents a
law of classical chemistry in
order to introduce a kind of
chemical reaction that differs
from it and then explains the
essen- tial difference between
the two.
(E) The author presents the
fundamental rules of clas- sical
chemistry in order to introduce
an explana- tion of a specific
chemical reaction.
28. PREFACE:
(A) improvisation
(B) burlesque
(C) epilogue
(D) tangent
(E) backdrop
29. DEBILITATE:
(A) implicate
(B) invigorate
(C) obfuscate
(D) realign
(E) encumber
30. TASTY:
(A) uninteresting
(B) unfamiliar
(C) unexpected
(D) understated
(E) undervalued
31. ABNEGATE:
(A) refresh
(B) reaffirm
(C) relieve
(D) react
(E) reform
32. SERRIED:
(A) partially formed
(B) widely separated
(C) narrowly missed
(D) extremely grateful
(E) reasonably clean
33. BOMBASTIC:
(A) unflappable
(B) uninspired
(C) unpretentious
(D) inscrutable
(E) incisive
34. BANAL:
(A) comfortable
(B) novel
(C) equal
(D) fatal
(E) competent
35. LANGUISH:
(A) agitate
(B) wander
(C) relieve
(D) discomfit
(E) thrive
36. ENNUI:
(A) intimidation
(B) sleaze
(C) faint recollection
(D) keen interest
(E) deep reservation
37.DAUNTLESS:
(A) sophomoric
(B) trifling
(C) pusillanimous
(D) specious
(E) parsimonious
38.TEMERITY:
(A) credibility
(B) authority
(C) celebrity
(D) acrimony
(E) circumspection