Pass the Admission Tests Graduate Record Examinations GRE Questions and answers with CertsForce

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Viewing questions 21-30 out of questions
Questions # 21:

Since scientific truths must be discovered, and since many, probably most, are far from (i)_________. Futile investigations are (ii)_________. Thus, the path to the truth is decidedly a (iii)_________one.

Options:

A.

intuitively obvious


B.

routinelv acelauned


C.

hie vi table


D.

sinuous


E.

potentially useful


F.

auspicious


G.

ne eligible


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Questions # 22:

Female Australian Duiiatothrip.% (small, sap-sucking insects] create tent-like structures on the surface of leaves to protect themselves and their eggs and larvae from desiccation in the arid Australian climate. Bono and Crespi compared survival and reproduction of tlirips that founded structures alone with those in groups of two or more individuals. They found that although per capita egg production fell with increasing group size, foundresses were more likely to survive and lay eggs in groups than when alone. Several studies of other species of nest-building insects have concluded that foundress associations are beneficial to all parties. It is likely that the relative success of groups is at least in part accounted for by a reduction of energy use in the modification of a shared nest.

The author would most likely agree with which of the following claims about Australian Drmatolhrips ?

Options:

A.

Their offspring survival rates increase when larger groups cooperate to modify nests.


B.

Their effect on the leaves used to support their tent-like structures is not necessarily permanent


C.

They expend as much energy to create tent-like structures as they do to produce broods.


D.

They exhibit an effect from collective activity that is also found in certain other insect species.


E.

They modify nests in different ways depending on what other species are present in their vicinity.


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Questions # 23:

The appropriateness of_________with those to whom one owes loyalty is evident in the Confucian view

that rulers who are not living up to their roles should be urged to rectify their behavior.

Options:

A.

commiserating


B.

collaborating


C.

negotiating


D.

expostulating


E.

sympathizing


F.

remonstrating


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Questions # 24:

Scholars generally estimate subscribers to Freedom s Journal (1827-1829), the United States" first African American newspaper, at around 800. based on subscriptions to the Rights of AIL an African American newspaper founded in 1829 as a successor to Freedom s Journal by a former editor of that newspaper. But Gross argues that many more than 800 readers probably subscribed to Freedom s Journal because many of its subscribers, dissatisfied with the direction ultimately taken by the paper, refused to subscribe to the Rights of All. In any case, the figure of 800 subscribers would make the circulation of Freedom s Journal close to that of other weekly papers of the time Its number of readers, however, would have been much larger: copies were often shared. and African American organizations subscribed to Freedom s Journal, providing nonsubscribers access to the paper

African American organizations' subscriptions to Freedom s Journal are mentioned in the passage primarily in order to.

Options:

A.

dispute Gross's claim about the probable number of readers of Freedom S Journal


B.

identify the primary subscribers to both Freedom s Journal and The Rights of All


C.

help account for a possible difference between the number of subscribers to Freedom s Journal and to The Rights of All.


D.

cite a factor that casts doubt on most scholars assumptions about the number of subscribers to Freedom $ Journal


E.

illustrate why the readership numbers for Freedom s Journal should be distinguished from the subscription numbers


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Questions # 25:

Though humanitarian emergencies are frequent features of television news, such exposure seldom_________the public, which rather seems resigned to a sense of impotency.

Options:

A.

paralyzes


B.

demoralizes


C.

assuages


D.

galvanizes


E.

exasperates


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Questions # 26:

Birds that prey on sage grouse generally hunt by circling over sagebrush and pouncing on sage grouse that come out into the open. Where there are power lines, however, these predators often survey the ground while sitting on the power lines. Although the area they can survey is smaller, predators sitting on power lines are more likely to catch sage grouse than are predators circling in the air. because_________,

The primary purpose of the passage is to

Options:

A.

explain why certain scientists rejected a particular hypothesis


B.

show how a conventional theory was weakened by a new discovery


C.

discuss a shift in an approach to explaining a natural phenomenon


D.

account for the widespread influence of a scientific theory


E.

trace the origins of a scientific dispute


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Questions # 27:

The importance of the Bill of Rights in twentieth-century United States law and politics has led some historians to search for the "original meaning" of its most controversial clauses. This approach. known as "originalism." presumes that each right codified in the Bill of Rights had au independent history that can be studied in isolation from the histories of other rights, and its proponents ask how formulations of the Bill of Rights in 1791 reflected developments in specific areas of legal thinking at that time. Legal and constitutional historians, for example, have found originalism especially useful in the study of provisions of the Bill of Rights that were innovative by eighteenth-century standards, such as the Fourth Amendment's broadly termed protection against "unreasonable searches and seizures." Recent calls in the legal and political arena for a return to a "jurisprudence of original intention." however, have made it a matter of much more than purely scholarly interest when originalists insist that a clause's true meaning was fixed at the moment of its adoption, or maintain that only those rights explicitly mentioned in the United States Constitution deserve constitutional recognition and protection. These two claims seemingly lend support to the notion that an interpreter must apply fixed definitions of a fixed number of rights to contemporary issues, for the claims imply that the central problem of rights in the Revolutionary era was to precisely identity, enumerate, and define those rights that Americans felt were crucial to protecting their liberty.

Both claims, however, are questionable from the perspective of a strictly historical inquiry, however sensible they may seem from the vantage point of contemporary jurisprudence. Even though originalists are correct in claiming that the search for original meaning is inherently historical, historians would not normally seek.

It can be inferred that the author of the passage would be most likely to agree with which of the following statements about the Bill of Rights?

Options:

A.

The Bill of Rights' importance in twentieth-century United States law 3iid politics has been overemphasized by some scholars.


B.

The diversity of views among the Bill of Rights" framers and ratifiers makes the search for any right's original meaning inherently problematic.


C.

The omission of certain rights by the framers and ratifiers should limit the number of constitutionally recognized and protected rights today.


D.

Establishing the original meaning of each clause will enable controversial issues to be settled according to the intentions of its framers.


E.

Originalists have exaggerated the contributions of certain framers and ratifiers of the Bill of Rights while downplaying the contributions of others.


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Questions # 28:

There is a long-standing historical presumption that social custom during ihe early years of the United States forbade women from public speaking. In fact, though, the standard mode of education of the 1790s and early 1800s. which emphasized oral recitation and performance, taught girls that educated and well-spoken women had an important role to play in American society. By depicting skilled speech as a necessary talent for women in a civilized society, elocutionary education encouraged a certain degree of female ambition and even political involvement. Transmitted via standard, inexpensive schoolbooks. this message reached virtually all who read schoolbooks or attended schools. This environment did not last long, however: even by the 1S10s. attitudes about women's education had changed considerably.

The passage suggests that women's education during the IS 10s differed from women's education during the 1790s and early 1800s in that women's education during the 1810s

Options:

A.

placed less emphasis on public speaking


B.

emphasized the relationship between rhetorical skills and civic virtue


C.

assumed that women could become politically active


D.

was based on a more modem vision of what constituted civilized society


E.

suffered from the reduced availability of inexpensive textbooks


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Questions # 29:

Harriet Monroe, who founded Poetry: A Magazine of Verse in 1912. argued that the more heterogeneous and sprawling the modem world became, the more poetry needed "an entrenched place, a voice of power." But this goal could only be realized if poets were valued in ways that encouraged them to participate in the world and made writing verse economically viable. Monroe argued that poets needed sites of institutional opportunity like those that had been developed for visual artists, architects, and musicians. She believed that the hand-wringing anticapitalism dominating genteel literary* culture—particularly the idea that poetry ought to be removed from "sordid" pecuniary considerations—brought no economic and only illusory aesthetic benefits, instead severing poets from meaningful participation in the modern world.

The author mentions "visual artists, nrchitecis. and musicians" primarily lo

Options:

A.

note a challenge that Monroe faced when attempting to implement her ideas


B.

highlight what Monroe regarded as a contrast between the economic needs of poets and those of other artists


C.

explain Monroe's ideas about measures that would advance poetry


D.

acknowledge that anticapitalism had not hail undesirable consequences for all art forms


E.

illustrate the point that some art forms are inherently more economically viable than others


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Questions # 30:

In 1995 the United States National Park Service reintroduced wolves into Yellowstone National Park, from which they had been eliminated decades before by overhunting. Biologists hoped the reintroduction would return the park's mix of animals to a more natural state. After the wolves disappearance, the population of their onetime prey, the elk. had burgeoned. Subsequently, new tree growth declined as multiplying elk browsed young trees, denuding certain areas of the park. Following the wolves" return, the elk population declined and young trees rebounded. Most scientists attribute the vegetation changes to the wolves1 return. However. Ration observes that Yellowstone has not had a harsh winter since wolf numbers reached high levels and suggests that elk may not have needed to resort to trees for food.

It can be inferred from the passage that the scientists would he most likely to cite which of the following in support of their view?

Options:

A.

The correlation between the reintroduction of wolves into Yellowstone and the decline of the elk population


B.

The correlation between wolves' disappearance from Yellowstone and the growth of the elk population


C.

The correlation between the rebounding of Yellowstone's trees and the pattern of its winters since 1995


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