填空 (恢复)9
国防生要求-春景图
單格填空
1. James Boswell’s Life of Samuel
Johnson is generally thought to have established
Boswell as the first great
modern biographer;
yet the claim of ______ could be made for Johnson
himself as author of a life of Richard
Savage.
(A) partisanship (C) precedence (E)
perseverance
(B) omniscience (D) opportunism
2. Most spacecraft are still at little
risk of collision with space debris during their
operational lifetimes, but
given the numbers
of new satellites launched each year, the orbital
environment in the future is likely to be less
______.
(A) crowded (C) protected (E)
benign
(B) invulnerable (D) polluted
3. The epidemiologist was worried: despite
______ signs of danger, few countries or companies
had taken the
possibility of a pandemic
seriously, and there was little interest in
developing a vaccine.
(A) erroneous (C)
token (E) residual
(B) mounting (D)
inconclusive
4. The author presents the
life of Zane Grey with ______ unusual in a
biographer: he is not even convinced
that Grey
was a good writer.
(A) a zeal (C) a
detachment (E) an imaginativeness
(B) a
deftness (D) an eloquence
5. The
book’s seemingly casually written, conversational
style masks ______ structure.
(A) a loosely
organized (C) an overly diffuse (E) an
unconventionally informal
(B) a somewhat
rambling (D) a shrewdly crafted
6.
This filmmaker is not outspoken on political
matters: her films are known for their aesthetic
qualities rather
than for their ______ ones.
(A) polemical (C) narrative (E) dramatic
(B) cinematic (D) commercial
7.
Burke is often on slippery ground when it comes to
her primary sources; especially ______ is the mode
by
which she gathered her oral evidence.
(A) crucial (C) dubious (E) ingenious
(B) passable (D) laudable
8.
Although grandiose urban railroad stations are
often viewed as glorious monuments to their
cities, they in
fact ______ the cities by
enabling the migration of city dwellers to the
suburbs.
(A) invigorate (C) enfeeble (E)
overshadow
(B) enlarge (D) delineate
雙格填空
1. The unironic representation of
objects from everyday life is (i) ______ serious
American art of the twentieth
century: “high”
artists ceded the straightforward depiction of the
(ii) ______ to illustrators, advertisers, and
packaging designers.
Blank (i)
(A)
missing from
(B) valued in
Blank (ii)
(D) beautiful
(E) commonplace
(C) crucial to (F) complex
2. Television promotes (i) ______ of emotion
in viewers through an unnatural evocation, every
five minutes,
of different and (ii) ______
feelings.
Blank (i)
(A) a withdrawal
(B) an obscuring
(C) a discontinuity
Blank (ii)
(D) incompatible
(E)
sympathetic
(F) interminable
3. The
current (i) ______ of format in electronic
scholarly publication will not last beyond the
point when
amateur burnout occurs and amateurs
are replaced by traditional publishing companies:
in an effort to reduce
costs through economies
of scale, publishing firms tend toward (ii) _____
in the format of their electronic
publication
projects.
Blank (i)
(A) diversity
(B)
monotony
(C) refinement
Blank (ii)
(D)
homogeneity
(E) sophistication
(F)
extremes
4. Because we assume the (i)
______ of natural design, nature can often (ii)
______ us: as the Wright
brothers noted, the
birds initially misled them in almost every
particular, but their Flyer eventually succeeded
by
being the least avian of the early flying
machines.
Blank (i)
(A) quirkiness
(B) preeminence
(C) maladroitness
Blank (ii)
(D) galvanize
(E) befriend
(F) beguile
5. Though somewhat less
(i) ______ than previous chapters and suffering
from a minor rash of academic
jargon, the
final chapter of the book is nonetheless (ii)
______ laypeople.
Blank (i)
(A) arcane
(B) coherent
(C) subjective
Blank (ii)
(D) largely ignored by
(E) accessible to
(F) impenetrable to
6. Although he
has long had a reputation for (i) ______, his
behavior toward his coworkers has always been (ii)
______, suggesting he may not be as insolent
as people generally think.
Blank (i)
(A)
inscrutability
(B) venality
(C) impudence
Blank (ii)
(D) brazen
(E) courteous
(F) predictable
7. The
Parisian Ecole des Beaux-Arts (School of Fine
Arts) was (i) ______ many nineteenth- and
twentieth-century artists, so that by 1930 the
associated term “academic art” had become a (ii)
______.
Blank (i)
(A) influential among
(B) ridiculed by
(C) attended by
Blank (ii)
(D) pejorative
(E)
conundrum
(F) misnomer
三格填空
1.
While the cerulean warbler’s status maybe
particularly (i) ______, it is just one of the
many species of
migrant birds whose numbers
have been (ii) ______ for years. Increasingly,
biologists investigating the causes
of these
(iii) ______ are focusing on habitat loss in the
Tropics, where the birds spend the winter.
Blank (i)
(A) precarious
(B) secure
(C) representative
Blank (ii)
(D)
underreported
(E) falling
(F) copious
Blank (iii)
(G) pairings
(H)
migrations
(I) declines
2. The
recent publication of the painter Robert
Motherwell’s substantial body of writing, as well
as writings by
fellow Expressionist Barnett
Newman, (i) ______ Ann Gibson’s assertion that the
Abstract Expressionists were
reluctant to (ii)
______ issues of artistic meaning in their work
and suggests that this supposed reticence was
perhaps more artistic (iii) ______ than
historical fact.
Blank (i)
(A)
substantiates
(B) undermines
(C)
overlooks
Blank (ii)
(D) forgo
(E)
articulate
(F) conceal
Blank (iii)
(G) conscience
(H) focus
(I) posturing
3. If one could don magic
spectacles—with lenses that make the murky depths
of the ocean become
transparent—and look back
several centuries to an age before widespread
abuse of the oceans began, even the
most (i)
______ observer would quickly discover that fish
were formerly much more abundant. Likewise, many
now-depleted species of marine mammals would
appear (ii) ______. But without such special
glasses, the
differences between past and
present oceans are indeed hard to (iii) ______.
Blank (i)
(A) casual
(B) prescient
(C) clearheaded
Blank (ii)
(D)
threatened
(E) plentiful
(F) unfamiliar
Blank (iii)
(G) ignore
(H) discern
(I) dismiss
4. This book’s strengths
are the author’s breadth of knowledge and the
blending of ideas and findings from
many
disciplines, including history, the arts and the
sciences. Ideas from diverse perspectives are (i)
______ to
provide a historical and cross-
cultural understanding. But a weakness of the book
is its (ii) ______: sometimes
there are leaps
from one domain to another that (iii) ______ the
reader’s ability to synthesize a coherent view of
our current understanding of this subject.
Blank (i)
(A) hyperbolized
(B)
interwoven
(C) reversed
Blank (ii)
(D) organization
(E) intensity
(F)
uniformity
Blank (iii)
(G) exaggerate
(H) oversimplify
(I) undercut
5.
There is nothing that (i) ______ scientists more
than having an old problem in their field solved
by
someone from outside. If you doubt this
(ii) ______, just think about the (iii) ______
reaction of
paleontologists to the hypothesis
of Luis Alvarez—a physicist—and Walter Alvarez—a
geologist—that the
extinction of the dinosaurs
was caused by the impact of a large meteor on the
surface of the planet.
Blank (i)
(A)
amazes
(B) pleases
(C) nettles
Blank
(ii)
(D) exposition
(E) objurgation
(F) observation
Blank (iii)
(G)
contemptuous
(H) indifferent
(I) insincere
6. Historical research makes two
somewhat antithetical truths that sounded (i)
______ come to seem
profound: ______
knowledge of the past comes entirely from written
documents, giving written words great (ii)
______, and the more material you uncover, the
more (iii) ______ your subject becomes.
Blank
(i)
(A) deep
(B) portentous
(C)
banal
Blank (ii)
(D) consequence
(E)
antiquity
(F)simultaneity
Blank (iii)
(G) elusive
(H) contemporary
(I)
circumstantial
7. Moore was (i) ______
ill at ease. His (ii) ______ had always been a
distinguishing feature. It was what
made him a
good con artist and a good informant. He was one
of those men who accepted dares with an
easygoing smile and did outrageous things with
(iii) ______ that made him successful in the
dangerous world in
which he operated. But just
now he was not feeling very sure of himself.
Blank (i)
(A)
uncharacteristically
(B) predictably
(C) naturally
Blank
(ii)
(D) disquietude
(E) magnanimity
(F) aplomb
Blank (iii)
(G) an obvious
clumsiness
(H) a
fearlessness
sophisticated
(I) a wary vigilance
8. The journalism professor’s first lecture
tackled (i) ______ itself, challenging the
journalistic trope that an
article has to
represent all sides—no matter how
marginal—equally. Instead, the professor argued
that this
impulse to (ii) ______ even
obviously (iii) ______ views in order to furnish
opposing perspectives is harmful
to basic
accuracy.
Blank (i)
(A) marketability
(B) objectivity
(C) partisanship
Blank
(ii)
(D) approve
(E) present
(F)denigrate
Blank (iii)
(G)
controversial
(H) fringe
(I)
straightforward
9. An esteemed literary
critic, Mr. Wood has put together a (i) ______
volume about literary technique, his
playful
exuberance (ii) ______ the dry, jargon-strewn
tradition of academic criticism. Mr. Wood can’t
claim to
be (iii) ______; he has restricted
himself to citations available in his personal
library. Nor does he attempt to be
methodical,
as chapters proceed in higgledy-piggledy fashion.
But few books about novel writing provide such
insights into the craft.
Blank (i)
(A) deft
(B) pretentious
(C)
comprehensive
Blank (ii)
(E) heavily
influenced by
(F) largely superseded by
Blank (iii)
(H) accessible
(I)
thorough
(D) wonderfully at odds with (G)
entertaining
句子等價
1. The spy’s
repeated bungling was, above all else, ______
those who wished to thwart her efforts, since it
was
so unpredictable as to obscure any pattern
that might otherwise lead to her capture.
(A)
an obstacle to (C) a hindrance to (E) a snare
for
(B) a signal to (D) an indication for
(F) a boon to
2. Female video artists’
rise to prominence over the past 30 years has
______ the ascent of video as an art
form: it
is only within the past three decades that video
art has attained its current, respected status.
(A) matched (B) politicized (C) paralleled
(D) obviated (E) accelerated (F)
forestalled
3. Although the film is
rightly judged imperfect by most of today’s
critics, the films being created today are
______ it, since its release in 1940 provoked
sufficient critical discussion to enhance the
intellectual
respectability of cinema
considerably.
(A) beholden to (C) derivative
of (E) distinguishable from
(B) indebted to
(D) based on (F) biased against
4.
The detective’s conviction that there were few
inept crimes in her district led her to impute
some degree of
______ to every suspect she
studied.
(A) deceit (C) duplicity (E)
evasiveness
(B) acumen (D) shrewdness (F)
equivocation
5. Alkan steadfastly
refused to ______ her responsibilities as an
author: for her an author had to be fearless
and committed, and she was always both.
(A) undertake (C) disclose (E) rationalize
(B) shirk (D) reveal (F) neglect
6. If emissions of heat-trapping gases
continue to accumulate in the atmosphere at the
current rate, Earth
could experience global
transformations, and while some of these changes
might be ______ many could be
downright
disruptive.
(A) catastrophic (C) intolerable
(E) modest
(B) calamitous (D) irremediable
(F) unremarkable
7. It may be that
most of this film footage was shown somewhere, but
the documentary is designed to make
audiences
feel that this footage has never been seen, or
that, having been seen, it was deliberately
______.
(A) censored (C) suppressed (E)
counterfeited
(B) imitated (D) underscored
(F) misrepresented
8. Philby secretly
loathed the host of the party that he was
attending, but it seemed ______ to say so
publicly.
(A) recondite (C) clever (E) deft
(B) tactless (D) malign (F) impolitic
9. The slower-learning monkeys searched
______ but unintelligently: although they worked
closely together,
they checked only the most
obvious hiding places.
(A) competitively (C)
cooperatively (E) craftily
(B) impulsively
(D) deviously (F) harmoniously
10.
The report’s most significant weakness is its
assumption that the phenomenon under study is
______,
when in reality it is limited to a
specific geographic area.
(A) unusual (C)
ubiquitous (E) universal
(B) exceptional
(D) absolute (F) restricted
11. By
about age eight, children’s phonetic capacities
are fully developed but still ______; thus
children at that
age can learn to speak a new
language with a native speaker’s accent.
(A)
plastic (C) inarticulate (E) nascent
(B)
vestigial (D) unformed (F) malleable
12. Each member of the journalistic pair
served as ______ the other: each refrained from
publishing a given
piece if the other
doubted that it was ready to be printed.
(A)
a check on (C) an impediment to (E) an apologist
for
(B) an advocate for (D) a brake on (F)
an intermediary for
13. That the
book’s argument was ______ became clear as soon as
reviews appeared: there were holes, and
reviewers delighted in pointing them out.
(A) wanting (C) unintelligible (E) flawed
(B) convoluted (D) penetrating (F) complex
14. Some researchers worry that if there is a
causal relationship between warming tropical sea
surface
temperatures and the marked increase
in Atlantic hurricane activity since the early
1990s, this connection could
______ larger
changes.
(A) presage (C) obscure (E)
portend
(B) exacerbate (D) avert (F)
forestall
15. The dog’s appearance of
______ became increasingly irritating; his whines
became more wheedling, his
manner more
imploring.
(A) supplication (C) insolence
(E) willfulness
(B) gratification (D)
entreaty (F) contentment
16. The
demands of ______ notwithstanding, a page or two
in Dahl’s recent book on democracy that
considered what public-choice economics has to
say about “democratic failure”—or at least a clear
signpost to
that literature—would have been
very well spent.
(A) clarity (C)
comprehensiveness (E) cogency
(B) brevity
(D) economy (F) thoroughness
單格填空1. c
2.e 3.b 4.c 5.d 6.a 7.c 8.c
雙格填空解答 1. AE
三格填空1. AEI 3. AEH 5. CFG
句子等價解答
16.
BD
Section 4 (0806)
1. Since
one of Professor Roche's oft-repeated adages was
that familiarity leads to ________, his students
were quite surprised to find him so _______
Return of the Native, a novel he had taught for
over 30 years.
A. love...enthusiastic over
C. knowledge...conversant with E.
admiration...confused by
B.
contempt...disdainful of D. boredom...excited
by
2. Reason was once believed to be
_______ human, but lately this assumption of
intellectual superiority has
come under
increasingly skeptical scrutiny: most researchers
now at least _______ the notion that some
animals can think.
A.
logically…ridicule C. scarcely…embrace E.
peculiarly…scoff at
B. unique…entertain
D. quintessentially…balk at
3.
Powerful as they are, the _______ songs the artist
is best known for might sting more and have even
greater emotional complexity if one felt that
his criticisms were aimed at himself as well as at
his unnamed foes.
A. accusatory C.
mournful E. humble
B. altruistic D.
simplistic
4. In her love the
sea is _______ symbol: to the narrator it clearly
represents everything that is destructive in
nature, but at other times it seems to stand
for everything in nature that is serenely
beautiful.
A. an enduring C. a
coherent E. a discrete
B. an ambiguous
D. an obtrusive
5. Despite their
extensive efforts to determine the mode of oil
_______ , scientists still have not _______ the
process by which oil is produced.
A
dispersion…excluded C creation…investigated E
genesis…established
B synthesis…rejected D
recovery…condoned
6. Compared with
their parties, politicians are _______ : they are
considerably less enduring than the
organizations in which they function.
A
ubiquitous C fickle E transitory
B
autonomous D immutable
7. Chavez’
account of her supervisors’ _______ decision
making belies the agency’s image as little more
than _______bureaucracy.
A cautious…a
staid C reckless…an incompetent E
headlong…a timorous
B ill-informed…a
disorganized D systematic…a methodical
8. The cause of the disease is fairly simple
and has been understood for over a century; by
contrast, its
symptoms and effects are
_______.
A straightforward C severe E
perplexing
B illuminating D well
researched
9. Throughout the artist’s
work there runs a thread of psychic darkness
strong enough to unnerve the most
added
sensibility: even her drawings from the
comparatively _______ months of her visit to
Rome_______
violence secrecy, and despair.
A tranquil…emanate C languid…eschew E
felicitous…shun
B morbid…convey D
disturbed…express
10. Even among the
staid, unemotional denominations of the 1830s and
1840s, the renewal of religious fervor
and the
necessity of competing with more _______ clerics
inevitably led to a greater _______ ministerial
showmanship.
A charismatic…cultivation
of C well-known…disdain for E
empathetic…distrust of
B
reserved…attraction to D conservative…appeal
for
11. Tuberculosis has long been
_______ and _______ disease: for thousands of
years, it has continued to
afflict humankind
without regard for sex, class, occupation, or
race.
A an unremitting…selective C a
sporadic…capricious E a virulent…preventable
B an unpredictable…limitable D a
relentless…egalitarian
12. He found
his new acquaintance to be _______: trying to
understand her personality was like peering
into an unknown dimension.
A puerile
C cosmopolitan E obdurate
B
imperturbable D inscrutable
13.
The writer has gained such popularity with his
readers that even his inanities are now
considered_______.
A vacuous B tedious
C speculative
D allusive E
trenchant
14. The biographer’s intense
emotional involvement with his subject did not
_______ objectivity, since the
passionate
engagement fostered deep knowledge that was
ultimately necessary for truly _______ judgment.
A preclude…disinterested C
impede…partisan E admit…reasonable
B
encourage…fair D advance…pragmatic
Section 6 (0211, 0606)
1. Although she
gives badly _______titles to her musical
compositions, they _________ unusual
combinations of materials including Gregorian
chant, Asian scale patterns and rhythms,
electronic sounds, and
bird songs.
A.
exotic … belie C. traditional … exclude E.
conventional … incorporate
B. eccentric …
deploy D. imaginative … disguise
2.
Even though the folktales Perroult collected and
retold were not solely French in origin, his
versions of them
were so decidedly French in
style that later anthologizes of French folktales
have never them.
A. excluded C.
collected E. comprehended
B. admired D.
promoted
3. In arguing against
assertions that environmental catastrophe is
imminent, her book does not ridicule all
predictions of doom but rather claims that the
risks of harm have in many cases been .
A. exaggerated C. scrutinized E. increased
B. ignored D. derided
4. There
seems to be no the reading public’s thirst
for books about the 1960’s: indeed, the normal
level of
interest has recently because of
a spate of popular television documentaries.
A. quenching … moderated C. curtailing …
warned E. slaking … increased
B. whetting
… mushroomed D. ignoring … transformed
5. Despite a tendency to be overtly ,
the poetry of the Middle Ages often sparks the
imagination and
provides lively entertainment,
as well as pious sentiments.
A. diverting C.
didactic E. whimsical
B. emotional D.
romantic
6. One of the first of
reduced burning in Amazon rain forests was the
chestnut industry: smoke tends to
drive out
the insect that, by pollinating chestnut tree,
allow chestnuts to develop.
A. reformers
C. casualties E. beneficiaries
B.
discoveries D. critics
7. The
research committee urged the archaeologist to
her claim that the tomb she has discovered was
that of Alexander the Great, since her initial
report has been based only on .
A.
disseminate … supposition C. undercut … caprice
E. downplay … facts
B. withdraw … evidence
D. document … conjecture
8. The
scientist found it puzzling that his theory
encountered despite widespread agreement
that it
was .
A. respect … crucial
C. skepticism … unfathomable E. acceptance …
comprehensive
B. dismissal … simplistic D.
opposition … indisputable
9.
The rate at which soil can absorb water with
continuous wetting, so the longer a lasts, or
the
greater the rate of precipitation, the
higher the percentage of water that will flow
across the ground as runoff and
enter stream
channels.
A. rises … deluge C. increases …
shower E. stabilizes … thaw
B. diminishes …
drought D. decreases … rainstorm
10. The ideas expressed in the art
historian’s book are more than one would
expect or the basis of her
rather
treatment of her subject in the opening pages.
A. compelling … intriguing C. hidebound …
reactionary E. dispassionate … evenhanded
B. accessible … recondite D. insightful …
innovative
11. The meeting on
environmental issues produced discussion but
no commitment on a plan of action:
the many
uncertainties surrounding global climatic change
and the huge cost of efforts to limit it made the
policymakers .
A. little … voluble
C. cordial … quarrelsome E. interminable …
businesslike
B. heated … contentious D.
frustrating … affable
12. Art that
endures often makes an initially disturbing
impact: the profound experience that such art
seeks to
provoke necessarily engenders a
certain .
A. familiarity C. upheaval
E. tranquility
B. ennui D. intimacy
13. The history of film reflects the
inherent in the medium itself: film combines still
photographs to
represent continuous motion
and, while seeming to present life itself, can
also offer impossible and dreamlike
unrealities.
A. trivialities C.
constraints E. liabilities
B. biases D.
paradoxes
14. The with which
the politician peppers her speeches are so
memorable that many people think of her
as
being far more than she in fact is.
A.
superlatives … egalitarian C. examples …
soporific E. malapropisms …
B. pejoratives
… optimistic D. diatribes … censorious
straightforward
15. Although Heron is
well known for the broad comedy in the movies she
has directed previously, her new film
is less
inclined to : the gags are fewer and subtler.
A. understatement C. symbolism E. melodrama
B. preciosity D. buffoonery
16.
Bebop’s legacy is one: bebop may have won
jazz the right to be taken seriously as an art
form, but it
jazz’s mass audience, which
turned to other forms of music such as rock and
pop.
A. a mixed……..alienated C. an D. a
valuable…….refined
B. a troubled……..seduced
ambiguous……….aggrandized E. a noble………pleased
17. The exhibition’s importance lies in
its : curators have gathered a diverse array
of significant works
from many different
museums.
A. homogeneity C. scope E.
insularity
B. sophistry D. farsightedness
18. Despite the fact that the
commission’s report treats a vitally important
topic, the report will be read
because its prose is so that
understanding it requires an enormous effort.
A. seldom…….transparent C. little……….turgid
E. widely…….prolix
B. carefully……..pellucid
D. eagerly……..digressive
19. Carleton
would still rank among the great of
nineteenth-century American art event if the
circumstance of her life and career were less
than they are.
A. celebrities……….obscure C.
charlatans……impeccable E. success……….ignominious
B. failures……..illustrious D.
enigmas……mysterious
20. Although based
on an actual event, the film lacks : the
director shuffles events, simplifies the tangle
of relationships, and documentary truth
for dramatic power.
A. conviction……..embraces
C. verisimilitude…….sacrifices E.
coherence……..utilizes
B.
expressiveness…..exaggerates D.
realism……….substitutes
21. When Adolph
Ochs became the publisher of The New York Times,
he endowed the paper with a uniquely
tone,
avoiding the editorials that characterized
other major papers of the time.
A.
abstruse….scholarly C.
argumentative…….tendentious E.
cosmopolitan…….timely
B.
dispassionate……..shrill D. whimsical…..capricious
22. Despite the fact that the amateur
runner trained rigorously for six months before
the race, he failed to
it: the course
was so that even professional runners
struggled to finish.
A. complete……..demanding
C. master…….short E. underestimate…..unusual
B. win………manageable D. concede…….formidable
23. In linking geographically
disparate people, the Internet is arguably helping
millions of spontaneous
communities to bloom:
communities defined by common interests rather
than by the accident of .
A.
compatibility C. reciprocity E. proximity
B. affluence D. contemporaneousness
24. It is as if Woodward could not bear to
leave anything out; if he had some of his
material, the resulting
increase in focus
would have more than any loss in
comprehensiveness.
A. elaborated…….justified
C. expanded………offset E. pruned……..compensated for
B. condensed………exaggerated D.
edited……..pointed up
25. The hesitancy
of many countries to embrace market reform is
unfortunate, because many national success
stories suggest that far from such
reform, countries should be eager to its
benefits.
A. implementing…….document C.
eschewing……..reap E. understanding…….question
B. pursuing…………seek D. needing……..realize
26. Contemporary lawmakers’
preoccupation with regulating the Internet is
__________ the way lawmakers
treated many
young industries in the past; United States
railroads, for instance, were in business for 60
years
before the federal government _______
regulations.
A. antithetical to……….eased C.
reminiscent of……..enforced E. at odds
with…….introduced
B. faithful to……..levied
D. in conflict with ….lifted
27.
Despite the fact that the book’s title suggests
, the author is not a charlatan claiming to offer
a
rather, her book assessed all
possible treatments of certain diseases without
identifying any cures.
A. fraud……critique B.
sincerity…….nostrum C. hyperbole…..warning
D. expertise…….prescription E.
quackery……panacea
28. The profits that
the corporation earns from the exclusive-supplier
agreements with the universities
are ,
because the terms of agreements that they are
inclined to protect the universities’ interests
are
generally .
A.
inexplicable……..flouted C.
predictable……….scrutinized E.
surprising…..enforced
B. unclear……….publicized
D. declining…….ignored
Section 4 1.D 2.B
3.A 4.B 5.E 6.E 7.E 8.E 9.A 10.A 11.D 12.D 13.E
14.A
Section 6 1E 2A 3A 4E 5C 6E 7D 8D
9D 10B 11B 12C 13D 14D 15D 16A 17C 18C
19D 20C 21B 22A 23E 24E 25C 26E 27E
28C