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天冷大家注意身体~ 跟帖做题方法请见: http://forum.chasedream.com/GMAT_CR/thread-613902-1-1.html 【精练】 1. People with high blood pressure are generally more nervous and anxious than people who do not have high blood pressure. This fact show that this particular combination of personality traits—the socalled hypertensive personality—is likely to cause a person with these traits to develop high blood pressure. The reasoning in the argument is most vulnerable to criticism on the grounds that the argument ----------Cause and Effect Problems
(A) fails to define the term “hypertensive personality” (B) presupposes that people have permanent personality traits (C) simply restates the claim that there is a “hypertensive personality” without providing evidence to support that claim. (D) takes a correlation between personality traits and high blood pressure as proof that the traits cause high blood pressure. (E) focuses on nervousness and anxiety only, ignoring other personality traits that people with high blood pressure might have
【逻辑链】 45. (33847-!-item-!-188;#058&007123) A major impediment to wide acceptance of electric vehicles even on the part of people who use their cars almost exclusively for commuting is the inability to use electric vehicles for occasional extended trips. In an attempt to make purchasing electric vehicles more attractive to commuters, one electric vehicle producer is planning to offer customers three days free rental of a conventional car for every 1,000 miles that they drive their electric vehicle. Which of the following, if true, most threatens the plan's prospects for success? (A) Many electric vehicles that are used for commercial purposes are not needed for extended trips. (B) Because a majority of commuters drive at least 100 miles a week, the cost to the producer of making good the offer would add considerably to the already high price of electric vehicles. (C) The relatively long time it takes to recharge the battery of an electric vehicle can easily be fitted into the regular patterns of car use characteristic of commuters. (D) Although electric vehicles are essentially emission-free in actual use, generating the electricity necessary for charging an electric vehicle's battery can burden the environment. (E) Some family vehicles are used primarily not for commuting but for making short local trips, such as to do errands. 46. (33987-!-item-!-188;#058&007200) Archaeologists in Michigan have excavated a Native American camp near Dumaw Creek. Radiocarbon dating of animal bones found at the site indicates that the camp dates from some time between 1605 and 1755. However, the camp probably dates to no later than 1630, since no European trade goods were found at the site, and European traders were active in the region from the 1620's onward. Which of the following, if true, most strengthens the argument? (A) Due to trade among Native Americans, some European trade goods would have reached the area before the European traders themselves did. (B) At all camps in the region that have been reliably dated to the late 1620's, remains of European trade goods have been found. (C) The first European trade goods to reach the area would have been considered especially valuable and preserved as much as possible from loss or destruction. (D) The first European traders in the area followed soon after the first European explorers. (E) The site is that of a temporary camp that would have been used seasonally for a few years and then abandoned. 47. (34035-!-item-!-188;#058&007207) Automobile emissions are a significant source of air pollutants, and cars over five years old typically generate significantly greater amounts of pollutants than newer cars. In Torinia, which has recently built its first automobile manufacturing plant, most cars are over five years old. Aiming to boost Torinia's economy and reduce air pollution, the government plans to introduce incentives for Torinians to scrap their old cars every five years and replace them with new ones. Which of the following, if true, most seriously undermines the likelihood that the planned incentives, if implemented, will achieve both of the cited aims? (A) Without the implementation of the planned incentives, most Torinians who own an old car would be unlikely to buy a new car. (B) Torinia's automobile plant manufactures car models that typically generate smaller amounts of air pollutants than most similarly sized car models manufactured elsewhere. (C) The new cars produced in Torinia are not likely to be exported to other countries. (D) The largest source of atmospheric pollutants in Torinia is not automobile emissions, but emissions from power plants. (E) The manufacture and the scrapping of cars each generate significant amounts of air pollutants. 48. (34221-!-item-!-188;#058&007550) Parasitic wasps lay their eggs directly into the eggs of various host insects in exactly the right numbers for any suitable size of host egg. If they laid too many eggs in a host egg, the developing wasp larvae would compete with each other to the death for nutrients and space. If too few eggs were laid, portions of the host egg would decay, killing the wasp larvae. Which of the following conclusions can properly be drawn from the information above? (A) The size of the smallest host egg that a wasp could theoretically parasitize can be determined from the wasp's egg-laying behavior. (B) Host insects lack any effective defenses against the form of predation practiced by parasitic wasps. (C) Parasitic wasps learn from experience how many eggs to lay into the eggs of different host species. (D) Failure to lay enough eggs would lead to the death of the developing wasp larvae more quickly than would laying too many eggs. (E) Parasitic wasps use visual clues to calculate the size of a host egg. |
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