ACCUPLACER TEST EXAM
ACCUPLACER ACTUAL EXAM LATEST
UPDATE QUESTIONS AND CORRECT
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- After three hours of walking the museum, the entire family felt in
- walking through the museum for three hours
- having walked through the museum for three hours
- and they walked through the museum for three hours
- despite having walked through the museum for threehours -
need of a rest. Rewrite, beginning with (The entire family felt in need of a rest) The next words will be
ANSWER-B
- The big celebration meal was over, and everyone began to feel
- and the big celebration meal
- before the big celebration meal
- after the big celebration meal
- although the big celebration meal -ANSWER-C
sleepy. Rewrite, beginning with (Everyone began to feel sleepy) The next words will be
- In the words of Thomas De Quincey, "It is notorious that the
memory strengthens as you lay burdens upon it." If, like most people, you have trouble recalling the names of those you have just met, try
this: The next time you are introduced, plan to remember the names.
Say to yourself, "I'll listen carefully; I'll repeat each person's name to be sure I've got it, and I will remember." You'll discover how effective
this technique is and probably recall those names for the rest of your life.The quotation from De Quincey indicates that the memory
- always operates at peak efficiency
- breaks down under great strain
- improves if it is used often
- becomes unreliable if it tires -ANSWER-C
- Unemployment was the overriding fact of life when Franklin D.
Roosevelt became president of the United States on March 4, 1933.At the time, the government did not systematically collect statistics of joblessness; actually it did not start doing so until 1940. The Bureau of Labor Statistics later estimated that 12,830,000 persons were out of work in 1933, about one-fourth of a civilian labor force of more than 51 million. Roosevelt signed the Federal Emergency Relief Act on May 12, 1933. The president selected Harry L. Hopkins, who headed the New York relief program, to run FERA. A gifted administrator, Hopkins quickly put the program into high gear. He gathered a small staff in Washington and brought the state relief organizations into the FERA system. While the agency tried to provide all the necessities, food came first. City dwellers usually got an allowance for fuel, and rent for one month was provided in cas -ANSWER-D
- With varying success, many women around the world today
struggle for equal rights. Historically, women have achieved greater equality with men during periods of social adversity. The following
factors initiated the greatest number of improvements for women:
violent revolution, world war, and the rigors of pioneering in an undeveloped land. In all three cases, the essential element that improved the status of women was a shortage of men, which required women to perform many of society's vital tasks.
We can conclude from the information in this passage that
- women today are highly successful in winning equal rights
- only pioneer women have been considered equal to men
- historically, women have only achieved equality
- historically, the principle of equality alone has not been enough to
through force
secure women equal rights -ANSWER-D
- All water molecules form six-sided structures as they freeze and
- a personal observation
- a solution to a problem
- factual information
- opposing scientific theories -ANSWER-C
become snow crystals. The shape of a snow crystal is determined by temperature, vapor, and wind conditions in the upper atmosphere. A snow crystal is always symmetrical because these conditions affect all six of its sides simultaneously.The purpose of the passage is to present
- In the words of Thomas De Quincey, "It is notorious that the
memory strengthens as you lay burdens upon it." If, like most people, you have trouble recalling the names of those you have just met, try
this: The next time you are introduced, plan to remember the names.
Say to yourself, "I'll listen carefully; I'll repeat each person's name to be sure I have it, and I will remember." You'll discover how effective this technique is and probably recall those names for the rest of your life.The passage suggests that people remember names best when they
- meet new people
- are intelligent
- decide to do so
- are interested in people -ANSWER-C
- Many people have owned, or have heard of, traditional "piggy
banks," coin banks shaped like pigs. A logical theory about how this tradition started might be that because pigs often symbolize greed, the object is to "fatten" one's piggy bank with as much money as possible.However, while this idea makes sense, it is not the correct origin of the term. The genesis of the piggy bank is the old English word "pygg," which was a common kind of clay hundreds of years ago in England.People used pots and jars made out of this red "pygg" clay for many different purposes in their homes. Sometimes they kept their money in one of the pots, and this was known as a pygg bank. Over the years, because "pygg" and "pig" sounded the same, glaziers began making novelty banks out of pottery in the shape of a pig as a kind of joke.These banks were given as gifts and exported to countries where people spoke other languages and where no -ANSWER-C
- The wheel is considered one of the most important mechanical
- is one of the world's oldest inventions
- forms the basis of so many later inventions
- can be traced to many ancient cultures
- is one the world's most famous inventions -ANSWER-B
inventions of all time. Many technologies since the invention of the wheel have been based on its principles, since the industrial revolution, the wheel has been a basic element of nearly every machine constructed by humankind. No one knows the exact time and place of the invention of the wheel, but its beginnings can be seen across many ancient civilizations.The passage suggests that the wheel is an important invention because it