- UID
- 604786
- 在线时间
- 小时
- 注册时间
- 2011-2-11
- 最后登录
- 1970-1-1
- 主题
- 帖子
- 性别
- 保密
|
新手发帖啊……都是那只foxxy把我拖下水了哈哈……大家一起fighting了!!
精炼
Columnist: A democratic society cannot exist unless its citizens have established strong bonds of mutual trust. Such bonds are formed and strengthened only by participation in civic organizations, political parties, and other groups outside the family. It is obvious then that widespread reliance on movies and electronic media for entertainment has an inherently corrosive effect on democracy. Which one of the following is an assumption on which the columnist’s argument depends? (A) Anyone who relies on movies and electronic media for entertainment is unable to form a strong bond of mutual trust with a citizen. (B) Civic organizations cannot usefully advance their goals by using electronic media. (C) Newspapers and other forms of print media strengthen, rather than weaken, democratic institutions. (D) Relying on movies and electronic media for entertainment generally makes people less likely to participate in groups outside their families. (E) People who rely on movies and electronic media for entertainment are generally closer to their families than are those who do not
逻辑链
61The more frequently employees take time to exercise during working hours each week, the fewer sick days they take. Even employees who exercise only once a week during working hours take less sick time than those who do not exercise. Therefore, if companies started fitness programs, the absentee rate in those companies would decrease significantly.
Which of the following, if true, most seriously weakens the argument above?
(A) Employees who exercise during working hours occasionally fall asleep for short periods of time after they exercise. (B) Employees who are frequently absent are the least likely to cooperate with or to join a corporate fitness program. (C) Employees who exercise only once a week in their company's fitness program usually also exercise after work. (D) Employees who exercise in their company's fitness program use their working time no more productively than those who do not exercise. (E) Employees who exercise during working hours take slightly longer lunch breaks than employees who do not exercise.
62. (33903-!-item-!-188;#058&007604)
Recently a court ruled that current law allows companies to reject a job applicant if working in the job would entail a 90 percent chance that the applicant would suffer a heart attack. The presiding judge justified the ruling, saying that it protected both employees and employers. The use of this court ruling as part of the law could not be effective in regulating employment practices if which of the following were true?
(A) The best interests of employers often conflict with the interests of employees. (B) No legally accepted methods exist for calculating the risk of a job applicant's having a heart attack as a result of being employed in any particular occupation. (C) Some jobs might involve health risks other than the risk of heart attack. (D) Employees who have a 90 percent chance of suffering a heart attack may be unaware that their risk is so great. (E) The number of people applying for jobs at a company might decline if the company, by screening applicants for risk of heart attack, seemed to suggest that the job entailed high risk of heart attack. 63. (33951-!-item-!-188;#058&007609)
Guitar strings often go "dead"--become less responsive and bright in tone--after a few weeks of intense use. A researcher whose son is a classical guitarist hypothesized that dirt and oil, rather than changes in the material properties of the string, were responsible.
Which of the following investigations is most likely to yield significant information that would help to evaluate the researcher's hypothesis?
(A) Determining if a metal alloy is used to make the strings used by classical guitarists (B) Determining whether classical guitarists make their strings go dead faster than do folk guitarists (C) Determining whether identical lengths of string, of the same gauge, go dead at different rates when strung on various brands of guitars (D) Determining whether a dead string and a new string produce different qualities of sound (E) Determining whether smearing various substances on new guitar strings causes them to go dead
64. (33999-!-item-!-188;#058&007610)
To protect certain fledgling industries, the government of country Z banned imports of the types of products those industries were starting to make. As a direct result, the cost of those products to the buyers, several export-dependent industries in Z, went up, sharply limiting the ability of those industries to compete effectively in their export markets.
Which of the following can be most properly inferred from the passage about the products whose importation was banned?
(A) Those products had been cheaper to import than they were to make within country Z's fledgling industries. (B) Those products were the ones that country Z was hoping to export in its turn, once the fledgling industries matured. (C) Those products used to be imported from just those countries to which country Z's exports went. (D) Those products had become more and more expensive to import, which resulted in a foreign trade deficit just before the ban. (E) Those products used to be imported in very small quantities, but they were essential to country Z's economy. |
|