Questions
1-8 A bakery makes nine kinds
of cookies. Of these nine,three
kinds are fruit cookies—G, H,
and J; three kinds are nut cookies—K,
L, and O; and three kinds are
plain cookies—X, Y, and Z. Each
day of the week, Monday through
Sunday, the bakery will feature
a special price on exactly three
different kinds of cookies. The
three featured cookies will be
selected according to the following
rules:Each day at least one fruit
cookie must be featured,and each
day at least one nut cookie must
be featured. On any day on which
cookie J is featured, cookie L
cannot be featured. On any day
on which cookie k is featured,
cookie Y must also be featured.
No kind of cookie can be featured
more than three times in a week.
1.Which of the following lists
three cookies that can be featured
together?
(A) G, L, Z
(B) H, K, X
(C) J, L, Y
(D) J, O, Z
(E) K, O, Y
2. On a day on which both cookie
L and cookie Z are featured,
which of the following can be
the third kind of cookie featured?
(A) H
(B) J
(C) O
(D) X
(E) Y
3.A partial schedule of featured
cookies is shown below. Monday
Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday
L H O G Z According to this
schedule, which of the following
is a day on which cookie X CANNOT
be one of the featured cookies?
(A) Monday
(B) Tuesday
(C) Wednesday
(D) Thursday
(E) Friday
4.If cookie J is featured on
Friday, Saturday, and Sunday;
if cookie K is featured on Monday,
Tuesday,and Wednesday, and if
cookie G is featured only on
Thursday, then cookie L can
be featured on
(A) Monday only
(B) Thursday only
(C) Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday
only
(D) Friday, Saturday, and Sunday
only
(E) any two of the first four
days of the week
5. If each kind of nut cookie
is featured three times in one
week, what is the maximum number
or days on which plain cookies
can be featured during that
week?
(A) Three
(B) Four
(C) Five
(D) Six
(E) Seven
6.If cookie H and cookie Y
are each featured on Monday,
Tuesday, and Wednesday, and
if cookie G and cookie X are
each featured on Thursday, Friday
and Saturday, then the cookies
featured on Sunday must include
both(A) J and K
(B) J and L
(C) J and O
(D) K and L
(E) K and Z
7.If exactly seven kinds of
cookies are featured during
one week, which of the following
must be true about that week?
(A) X is the only kind of plain
cookie that is featured
(B) Y is the only kind of plain
cookie that is featured
(C) Z is the only kind of plain
cookie that is featured.
(D) On at least one day, both
cookie G and cookie Z are featured.
(E) On at least one day, both
cookie J and cookie X are featured.
8.If cookie X is featured exactly
twice and cookie Z is featured
exactly three times in one week,
which of the following must
be true?
(A)Cookie G is featured exactly
three times during the week.
(B)Cookie J is featured at
most twice during the week.
(C)Cookie K is featured at
most twice during the week.
(D)Cookie L is featured at
most twice during the week.
(E) Cookie Y is featured exactly
twice during the week.
9. In recent years, there has
been a dramatic decline in the
population of the shrike, a
predatory bird that inhabits
flat land, such as farms and
pastures. Some ornithologists
hypothesize that this decline
is due to the introduction of
new, more effective pesticides
to control the insect species
on which shrikes prey.
The answer to which of the
following questions is NOT relevant
to evaluating the ornithologists‘hypothesis?
(A) Was there a decline in
the shrike population before
the new pesticides were first
used?
(B) Have shrike populations
declined significantly in those
habitats where the new pesticides
have not been used?
(C) Have the new pesticides
more significantly reduced the
population of insect species
on which shrikes prey than did
the pesticides previously used?
(D) Are insects that have consumed
the new pesti- cides more toxic
to the shrikes that eat those
insects than were insects that
consumed the less effective
pesticides?
(E) Are the new pesticides
considered by most people to
be less harmful to the environment
than the old pesticides were
considered to be?
10. Census data for Prenland
show that unmarried Prenlandic
men in their thirties outnumber
unmarried Prenlandic women in
that age group by about ten
to One. Most of these men do
wish to marry. Clearly,however,
unless many of them marry women
who are not Prenlandic, all
but a minority will remain unmarried.
The argument makes which of
the following assump- tions?
(A) Emigration from Preland
is more common among women than
among men.
(B) A greater proportion of
Prelandic women in their thirties
than of Prenlandic men of the
same age would prefer to remain
unmarried.
(C) It is unlikely that many
of these unmarried Prenlandic
men will marry women more than
a few years older than themselves.
(D) Prenland has a high rate
of divorce.
(E) Most of the unmarried Prenlandic
men are unwilling to marry women
who are not Prenlandic.
11.Certain extremely harmful
bacteria found only in sewage
are difficult to detect directly.
Testing for E. coli, an easily
detected and less harmful type
of bacteria, in ocean water
would be a reliable way of determining
whether or not these more harmful
bac- teria are present, since
ocean water contains E. Coli
only if the water is contaminated
with sewage that contains the
harmful bacteria.
Which of the following, if
true, most seriously weakens
the argument?
(A) There are many different
strains of the E. coli bacteria,
and only some of these strains
are harmful.
(B) Some types of bacteria
found in sewage are neither
disease-causing nor difficult
to detect directly.
(C) Some of the types of bacteria
found in sewage along with E.
coli are not harmful to people
unless the bacteria are ingested
in large quantities.
(D) E. coli dies out much more
quickly than some of the more
harmful bacteria found in sewage
and then can no longer be easily
detected.
(E) Some of the types of bacteria
found in sewage along with E.
coli reproduce at a slower rate
than E. coli. Questions 12-17
A bank has exactly four cashier
windows, arranged in a row and
numbered consecutively 1through
4 from one end of the row to
the other. The bank has exactly
six cashiers: two supervisors
(Joan and Karim); and four trainees
(Lorraine, Mark, Nora, and patrick)。
Throughout a particular peak-hour
period, the stationing of cashiers
at windows is restricted as
follows:
There must be exactly one cashier
at each window. The cashier
at window 2 must be a supervisor.
Lorraine must be at a window
but cannot be at window 3. If
Mark is at one of the windows,
Joan must be at a window immediately
adjacent to it. The cashiers
at the windows must include
either Nora or Patrick, but
they cannot include both Nora
and Patrick.
12.Which of the following lists
the cashiers who can be stationed
at windows 1 through 4 during
this period?
1 2 3 4
(A) Joan Karim Mark Lorraine
(B) Joan Karim Nora Lorraine
(C) Karim Nora Joan Lorraine
(D) Mark Joan Lorraine Patrick
(E) Patrick Joan Nora Lorraine
13.Which of the following must
be true about the stationing
of the cashiers during this
period?
(A) Joan is at window 1 or
at window 2.
(B) Karim is at window 2 or
at window 4.
(C) Lorraine is at window 1
or window 4.
(D) Nora is at window 1 or
at window 3.
(E) Patrick is at window 3
or at window 4. sarily in that
order, are stationed at immediately
adjacent windows, which of the
following must be stationed
at window 4 during this period?
(A) Joan
(B) Karim
(C) Lorraine
(D) Mark
(E) Patrick
15.If during this period Lorraine
and Mark, not neces- sarily
in that order, are stationed
at immediately adjacent windows,
which of the following can be
stationed at window 1 during
this period?
(A) Joan
(B) Karim
(C) Lorraine
(D) Mark
(E) Nora
16.If during this period Lorrained
and Nora, not neces- sarily
in that order, are stationed
at immediately adjacent windows,
which of the following must
be true during this period?
(A) Joan is stationed at window
1.
(B) Joan is stationed at window
2.
(C) Karim is stationed at window
2
(D) Nora is stationed at windows
3.
(E) Patrick is stationed at
window 1.
17.If during this period Mark
is stationed at a window,which
of the following CANNOT be stationed
at a window during this period?
(A) Joan
(B) Karim
(C) Lorraine
(D) Nora
(E) Patrick
Questions 18-22 Seven photographs—three
landscapes: F, H, and J; and
four still lifes:Q, R, T and
W—will appear on the first seven
pages—numbered consecutively
from page 1 through page 7—of
an exhibit catalog. Each page
will contain exactly one of
the photographs. The ordering
of the photographs in the catalog
is governed by the following
conditions. J and W, not necessarily
in that order, must appear on
consecu- tively numbered pages.
The three landscapes cannot
appear on-consecutively numbered
pages. Neither page 2 not page
4 is a page on which a landscape
can appear. A landscape must
appear on page 7 18.Which of
the following is an acceptable
ordering of the photographs
in the catalog?
Page 1 Page 2 page 3 Page 4
page 5 page 6 page 7
(A) F T H Q W R J
(B) H Q J W R F T
(C) J W H R T Q F
(D) Q T R W J F H
(E) T F Q W J R H
19.Any of the following can
appear on page 3 EXCEPT
(A) J
(B) Q
(C) R
(D) T
(E) W
20. If F appears on page 6,
H must appear on page
(A) 1
(B) 2
(C) 3
(D) 5
(E) 7
21.If the still lifes all appear
on consecutive pages,which of
the following must be true?
(A) A still life appears on
page 1.
(B) A still life appears on
page 5.
(C) J appears on page 6.
(D) T appears on page 4.
(E) W appears on page 5
22.If F and H, not necessarily
in that order, appear on consecutive
pages, which of the following
can be true?
(A) J appears on page 1
(B) J appears on page 5
(C) R appears on page 6
(D) W appears on page 1
(E) W appears on page 5
23.The organizers of tomorrow‘s
outdoor concert announced that
it will go on tomorrow on schedule
unless bad weather is forecast
or too few advance tickets are
sold. If the concert is canceled,
refunds will be made to ticket
holders. Since some ticket holders
have already been issued refunds
even though more than enough
advance tickets were sold, it
must be the case that bad weather
is forecast.
Which of the following is an
error of reasoning con- tained
in the argument?
(A) It proceeds as if a condition,
which by itself is enough to
guarantee a certain result,
is the only condition under
which that result would occur.
(B) It bases a conclusion that
is known to require two conditions
on evidence that bears on only
one of those conditions.
(C) It explains one event as
being caused by another event,
even though both events must
actually have been caused by
some third, unidentified event.
(D) It treats evidence for
the absence of one condi- tion
under which a circumstance would
occur as conclusive evidence
that that circumstance will
not occur.
(E) Evidence given to support
the conclusion actually undermines
it.
24. Although the prevailing
supposition has been that it
is too hot for microorganisms
to survive deep below the Earth‘s
surface, some scientists argue
that there are living communities
of microorganisms there that
have been cut off from surface
life for millions of years.
These scientists base their
argument on the discovery of
living microorganisms in samples
of material that were taken
from holes drilled as deep as
1.74 miles.
The scientists‘ argument depends
on which of the fol- lowing
assumptions?
(A)The microorganisms brought
up were of a species that is
related to those previously
known to science.
(B)No holes have been drilled
into the Earth‘s surface to
a distance deeper than 1.74
miles
(C)The microorganisms did not
come from surface soil that
came into contact with the drilling
equipment.
(D) The stratum from which
the samples came has been below
the surface of the Earth ever
since the Earth came into existence.
(E) The temperature at the
bottom of the holes drilled
was not significantly hotter
than that of the hottest spots
on the Earth‘s surface.
25. For 20 years all applicants
for jobs as technicians at EquipCorp
were required to demonstrate
that they could operate and
repair the machinery that was
central to EquipCorp‘s manufacturing
business. Now, however,that
particular machinery is obsolete,
and very different machinery
fills the central role. Therefore,
the old requirement is no longer
a useful method for evaluating
whether applicants for jobs
as technicians at EquipCorp
have the skills necessary for
the job.
Which of the following, if
true, most strengthens the argument?
(A) The machinery that is now
obsolete was used by a large
number of manufacturing companies
before it became obsolete.
(B) Among the people already
holding jobs as tech- nicians
at Equip Corp, those who are
most skillful at operating the
new machinery had been some
of the least skillful at operating
the old machinery
(C) Most people applying for
jobs as technicians today have
much broader skills than did
people applying for jobs as
technicians 20 years ago.
(D) The skills required to
operate and repair the obsolete
machinery are useful in operating
and maintaining many other types
of machinery at EquipCorp that
are not obsolete.
(E) Much of the machinery that
EquipCorp now uses in manufacturing
is very likely to become obsolete
within the next 20 years.